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<pb facs="00057552_0001"/>
ufte fEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.$T ?n<lb/>
Tuesday, April 19,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
SGA Appropriations<lb/>
Funds For Campus Groups Total $80,986<lb/>
COURTSHIP IN 'OUR TOWN' - A nostalgic look at a soda fountain courtship in small-town America is provided by this scene<lb/>
from the ECU Playhouse production of Thornton Wilder's "Our Town The pair of lovers are Emily Webb and George Gibbs,<lb/>
played by Donna Lynn Cooper of Yanceyville and Jeffrey Bennighofen of Charlotte. Both are students at ECU. The production<lb/>
is scheduled for April 14-19.<lb/>
SEE OUR TOWN Pg. 8<lb/>
Ptiolo By CARLTON BENZ<lb/>
Gardner Leaves Student Life<lb/>
By GREG HIDEOUT<lb/>
NmFJlM<lb/>
After a short debate, the SGA<lb/>
Legislature approved their<lb/>
1983-84 budget Monday night<lb/>
with a minimum of hassle. Only<lb/>
two bills were contested out of 30.<lb/>
The annual appropriations pro-<lb/>
cess earmarked $80,986 for<lb/>
various campus organizations.<lb/>
According to Speaker of the<lb/>
House Gary Williams, each group<lb/>
that requested funds had their<lb/>
budgets cut several times before<lb/>
the process was complete. The<lb/>
total amount asked for by the 31<lb/>
groups totaled more than<lb/>
$220,000.<lb/>
A $1,000 appropriation to the<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council was the<lb/>
first contested bill of the evening.<lb/>
A motion was made by the bill's<lb/>
sponsor, John Greer, to shift the<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Assistant to the Vice Chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life John Gardner<lb/>
resigned last week. He intends to<lb/>
further his education and work<lb/>
harder for world peace.<lb/>
Gardner, who has been with the<lb/>
university two years, has been in-<lb/>
volved primarily in budget work<lb/>
for the division of housing and<lb/>
other areas. "We're extremely<lb/>
sorry to see John leave said Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Elmer<lb/>
Meyer. "He has done very much<lb/>
for the university and the Division<lb/>
of Student Life<lb/>
Gardner has decided to pursue<lb/>
a doctoral degree in marketing,<lb/>
which he hopes to use in further-<lb/>
ing the cause of world peace.<lb/>
"Marketing is an area that is<lb/>
neglected Gardner said, adding<lb/>
that peace organizations need to<lb/>
research public opinions of securi-<lb/>
ty. "The need is here for any<lb/>
organized activity to look at<lb/>
marketing he said, "not just<lb/>
business<lb/>
Gardner has been involved in<lb/>
peace issues for several years,<lb/>
dating back to his days as an ECU<lb/>
graduate student. Last year, he<lb/>
took a six-month leave of absence<lb/>
to devote his energies to reversing<lb/>
the nuclear arms race, an issue<lb/>
which he said, "overrides every<lb/>
other issue it makes all other<lb/>
issues moot Gardner said.<lb/>
Gardner said his resignation,<lb/>
which takes effect May 31, will<lb/>
allow him to work more directly<lb/>
with students and spend more<lb/>
time on issues that don't "pay off<lb/>
in dollars<lb/>
Meyer praised Gardner for his<lb/>
knowledge of finances and com-<lb/>
puters. "His knowledge has<lb/>
been invaluable in making deci-<lb/>
sions of benefit to the students<lb/>
Meyer said.<lb/>
Meyer said Gardner was in-<lb/>
strumental in helping the universi-<lb/>
ty obtain a $242,000 loan at three<lb/>
percent interest from the College<lb/>
Housing Program. The loan was<lb/>
used to make residence halls<lb/>
energy efficient.<lb/>
"In the past two years, he has<lb/>
helped the students save over<lb/>
$15,000 through energy conserva-<lb/>
tion in the residence halls Meyer<lb/>
said, referring to Gardner's work<lb/>
with the Student Resident<lb/>
Association's energy contests.<lb/>
According to Meyer, Gardner<lb/>
has also done an excellent job as<lb/>
financial advisor to the Student<lb/>
Union, the media board and the<lb/>
Student Government Association.<lb/>
"His financial analysis informa-<lb/>
tion has helped make better<lb/>
decisions to all of our benefit<lb/>
Meyer said. "He will be difficult,<lb/>
if not impossible, to replace<lb/>
Gardner said that the "hardest<lb/>
thing" about leaving his job was<lb/>
leaving all the "great people" he<lb/>
has worked with. "1 think it's<lb/>
been great to work with all these<lb/>
people Gardner said.<lb/>
money from an honorarium to be<lb/>
used for a leadership conference<lb/>
to the printing of a pro-Greek<lb/>
handbook which would describe<lb/>
fraternity life to incoming<lb/>
freshmen.<lb/>
Jim Ensor, a member of the ap-<lb/>
propriations committee, called the<lb/>
book "propaganda" for the<lb/>
Greek system. He said student<lb/>
money would be spent more fairlv<lb/>
on a conference which would pro-<lb/>
mote the whole school instead of<lb/>
just one part of it. After a friendly<lb/>
amendment first switched the<lb/>
money to printing costs, the<lb/>
legislature voted 14-10 to put in<lb/>
back as an honorarium.<lb/>
The second contention was<lb/>
shortlived as one legislator tried to<lb/>
pull the executive council budget<lb/>
from the total budget package.<lb/>
The motion as soundly defeated.<lb/>
Most grdups received far less<lb/>
than they asked for. including the<lb/>
normally big-getters, the Visual<lb/>
Arts Forum, the Student Forum<lb/>
for Musical Organizations, the<lb/>
Marching Pirates and the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse. The Visual Arts<lb/>
Forum received $7,800 out of a<lb/>
total request for $43,000. The<lb/>
musical forum got $9,000 of the<lb/>
$50,472 it wanted, with all monev<lb/>
for travel being cut. The Mar-<lb/>
ching Pirates raked in $5,050 of<lb/>
the $16.95 it asked for and the<lb/>
Playhouse got $4,000 of the<lb/>
$20,000 requested<lb/>
Speaker of the House Williams<lb/>
said no money was appropriated<lb/>
for travel because of a bylaw pro-<lb/>
hibiting the use of SGA funds for<lb/>
travel.<lb/>
Williams said this year's ap-<lb/>
propriations committee did an ex-<lb/>
cellent job on the 83-84 budget.<lb/>
David Whitley. chairman of the<lb/>
appropriations committee, said<lb/>
the consideration and subsequent<lb/>
cuts of the bills before them were<lb/>
based on need, service to the<lb/>
school, size of the group and who<lb/>
uses .the service offered.<lb/>
Williams said the total ap-<lb/>
propriations left the mandated<lb/>
17.5 percent reserve, which totals<lb/>
about $15,000. He said after<lb/>
money that went unspent during<lb/>
this year's legislature revert back<lb/>
and interest income is added,<lb/>
S30.000 will be left.<lb/>
Students Not Sure Of<lb/>
Accreditation Problems<lb/>
John Gardner<lb/>
Group Walks For Hunger Relief Fund<lb/>
Bv STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
While most of Greeville slept<lb/>
away the chilly morning hours<lb/>
Saturday, an estimated 175 ECU<lb/>
students and Greeville residents<lb/>
participated in Greenville's<lb/>
12th annual CROP Walk for<lb/>
Humanity.<lb/>
The 20 kilometer (12.4 mile)<lb/>
trek for world and local hunger<lb/>
began at 9 a.m. at Green Springs<lb/>
Park on East Fifth Street. The<lb/>
walkers wound their way through<lb/>
the streets of Greenville, stopping<lb/>
at varioius checkpoints manr;d<lb/>
by volunteers to verify their pro-<lb/>
gress.<lb/>
The first of the few diehards<lb/>
who ran the entire route arrived at<lb/>
the last stop, the Baptist Student<lb/>
Center on East 10th Street, at<lb/>
about 10:20 a.m. The last walkers<lb/>
finished around 2 p.m. One per-<lb/>
son walked the route on four-foot<lb/>
stilts.<lb/>
It is estimated that over 150 of<lb/>
the appioximately 175 par-<lb/>
ticipants completed the entire<lb/>
walk.<lb/>
CROP, the Community Hunger<lb/>
Appeal of Church World Service,<lb/>
the promotional organization<lb/>
behind the walk, promotes many<lb/>
similar walks throughout the U.S.<lb/>
for hunger relief.<lb/>
Walkers were asked to obtain<lb/>
sponsorships (which were tax<lb/>
deductible) per kilometer walked.<lb/>
Seventy-five percent of the money<lb/>
raised will be donated to CWS. It<lb/>
will help fund national and inter-<lb/>
national relief and development<lb/>
projects for the needy.<lb/>
The remaining 25 percent of the<lb/>
funds will be donated to Church<lb/>
Ministries United, a fund created<lb/>
by 14 local churches that donate<lb/>
money to poor residents of Pitt<lb/>
County, according to Catholic<lb/>
Campus Minister Sister Helen<lb/>
Shondell, who helped organize the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Sponsors had the option of<lb/>
designating their donations to any<lb/>
of 13 international hunger relief<lb/>
agencies other than CWS, such as<lb/>
CARE, the Southern Baptist<lb/>
Foreign Mission Board, Catholic<lb/>
Relief Services, and Project<lb/>
HOPE.<lb/>
According to Sister Shondell,<lb/>
the final figures on the money<lb/>
raised through the walk will not<lb/>
be available until July or August.<lb/>
However, she estimated that this<lb/>
year's CROP Walk had "a few<lb/>
less" participants than last year's.<lb/>
"Some people who had planned<lb/>
to walk didn't Shondell told<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
"The spirit was great (during<lb/>
the walking) Shondell said. We<lb/>
wish we could get a bigger<lb/>
crowd<lb/>
Last year, about $5,000 was<lb/>
raised through the CROP walk.<lb/>
Shondell said that growing<lb/>
numbers of people are requesting<lb/>
financial and social relief from the<lb/>
government but are not able to get<lb/>
help. "Because of the economy<lb/>
more poeple are asking for<lb/>
emergency funds. They don't<lb/>
qualify for social services, yet they<lb/>
have real needs She added that<lb/>
the United Nations estimates ap-<lb/>
proximately 50,000 people starve<lb/>
to death each day.<lb/>
The concept of having a "Walk<lb/>
for Humanity" is a sign of<lb/>
solidarity with the thousands of<lb/>
people who have to walk over 20<lb/>
miles a day to obtain water. Many<lb/>
of the relief and development pro-<lb/>
jects CWS helps are designed to<lb/>
make better irrigation and water<lb/>
resourse systems.<lb/>
Greenville police were on hand<lb/>
to help with any problems along<lb/>
the route.<lb/>
Also, food and refreshments<lb/>
were provided for the walkers by<lb/>
Jarvis Memorial Church and St.<lb/>
Gabriel's Catholic church.<lb/>
The walk was organized by the<lb/>
ECU-Greenville Hunger coalition<lb/>
and was also promoted by local<lb/>
churches, schools and organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Shondell encourages all those<lb/>
who walked to collect the dona-<lb/>
tions as soon as possible. AH<lb/>
donations may be deposited in the<lb/>
Greenville CROP Walk for<lb/>
Humanity account at local<lb/>
Wachovia bank branches or at the<lb/>
ECU Newman Center at 953 East<lb/>
Tenth Street.<lb/>
A random interview of several<lb/>
ECU education students has rais-<lb/>
ed questions regarding efforts by<lb/>
university officials to provide ac-<lb/>
curate information to students<lb/>
concerned about last month's ac-<lb/>
creditation denial by the National<lb/>
Council for Accreditation of<lb/>
Teacher Educuon.<lb/>
"I feel like I should have been<lb/>
informed about what was going<lb/>
on instead of just reading it in the<lb/>
paper said ECU art education<lb/>
student Shari Phelps. "I feel like<lb/>
it's an important part of mv<lb/>
future<lb/>
Patti Collins, a senior in<lb/>
elementary education, said that<lb/>
she felt the situation had been<lb/>
adequately explained to her by<lb/>
Dr. Beverly Swenson, one oi her<lb/>
instructors. "She cleared my mind<lb/>
pretty well Collins said.<lb/>
Several students refused to<lb/>
allow their names to be printed<lb/>
with their comments and others<lb/>
refused to comment at all. Most<lb/>
claimed that they didn't want to<lb/>
risk being criticized for speaking<lb/>
out.<lb/>
The NCATE denial centered on<lb/>
the administrative organization of<lb/>
the ECU . education program<lb/>
which is splintered among several<lb/>
ECU departments. Eleven<lb/>
disciplines at ECU fall under the<lb/>
jurisdiction of the School of<lb/>
Education. NCATE denied ac-<lb/>
creditation because of the lack of<lb/>
a central coordinating agency to<lb/>
oversee the 11 departments.<lb/>
ECU officials have been very<lb/>
optimistic that accreditation will<lb/>
be restored during the next<lb/>
academic year. They have told<lb/>
students not to worry, assuring<lb/>
them that the denial by NCATE<lb/>
will not have a negative impact on<lb/>
their careers. The N.C Board of<lb/>
Education has also put ECU's<lb/>
teacher education program on<lb/>
two-year probation.<lb/>
"Why didn't they do something<lb/>
about it fne years ago. that's<lb/>
what we want to know,1 said<lb/>
ECU special education student<lb/>
Debbie Feldhaus.<lb/>
"When we go out to get a job<lb/>
they're going to remember all<lb/>
this said another special educa-<lb/>
tion student who asked not to be<lb/>
identified in this story. "They<lb/>
knew about this five years ago ?<lb/>
they knew about it 10 years ago<lb/>
Another student in elementary<lb/>
education who also asked that her<lb/>
name not be used said she felt<lb/>
faculty members had done an<lb/>
honest job of explaining the situa-<lb/>
tion. "They've tried to tell us as<lb/>
See STUDENTS, Page 3<lb/>
U.S. Embassy In Lebanon Blown Up; 28 Die<lb/>
BEIRUT, Lebanon (UPI) ? A<lb/>
bomb blew apart the U.S. Em-<lb/>
bassy Monday and collapsed the<lb/>
reinforced concrete floors on<lb/>
employees, killing at least 28 peo-<lb/>
ple, including six U.S. Marines,<lb/>
hospital officials said.<lb/>
A doctoi at the American<lb/>
University Hospital said another<lb/>
100 people were injured by the<lb/>
blast. The 28 dead included six<lb/>
Marines and two Lebanese<lb/>
policemen, the doctor said.<lb/>
The entire front of the building<lb/>
was ripped off and the floor col-<lb/>
lapsed like cards on those working<lb/>
in front of the building.<lb/>
A group calling itself the<lb/>
Islamic Struggle Organization<lb/>
called a local news organization<lb/>
immediately after the blast to<lb/>
claim responsibility. The com-<lb/>
mander of the Marines had warn-<lb/>
ed earlier in the day that he ex-<lb/>
pected more Moslem Shiite at-<lb/>
tacks on his force.<lb/>
"It ripped out eight front of-<lb/>
fices and the snack bar, which<lb/>
must have had 15 or 20 people in<lb/>
it said Kurt Shafer, a foreign<lb/>
aid officer who was knocked from<lb/>
his chair on the back of the<lb/>
seventh floor. "It was bad that it<lb/>
happened at lunchtime<lb/>
The bomb went off shortly<lb/>
after 1 p.m. either just in front of<lb/>
the mission or just inside the front<lb/>
door. Some reports said the explo-<lb/>
sion was caused by a car bomb.<lb/>
The highway outside the<lb/>
building was jammed with midday<lb/>
traffic.<lb/>
Ambassador Robert Dillon was<lb/>
in the bulding at the time, but was<lb/>
reported to be "all right" by<lb/>
political officer Ryan Crocker,<lb/>
who stood on the wreckage-<lb/>
strewn sidewalk directing<lb/>
Marines.<lb/>
U.S. envoys Philip Habib and<lb/>
Morris Draper, in Beirut for troop<lb/>
withdrawal talks between Israel<lb/>
and Lebanon, were not at the em-<lb/>
bassy and were safe, a White<lb/>
House spokesman said.<lb/>
"The hospital is a disaster area.<lb/>
Casualties are being brought in<lb/>
every minute UPI free-lance<lb/>
photographer Pierre Sabbagh said<lb/>
from American University<lb/>
Hospital.<lb/>
"The whole facade of the<lb/>
seven-story building is ripped<lb/>
apart. It's a mess of concrete and<lb/>
metal rubble UPI correspon-<lb/>
dent Peyman Pezman reported<lb/>
from the scene of the burning em-<lb/>
bassy.<lb/>
The body of one man, cut in<lb/>
half, lay in the middle of the street<lb/>
? so blackened most people ran<lb/>
by without noticing. A Lebanese<lb/>
Red Cross worker placed a<lb/>
blanket over the remains.<lb/>
A Lebanese military officer,<lb/>
stumbling out of the wreckage,<lb/>
screamed uncontrollably at what<lb/>
he had seen inside. Ten am-<lb/>
bulances sped off with casualties.<lb/>
Survivors on the top floor of<lb/>
the burning building were calling<lb/>
for help and lowering attache<lb/>
cases of vital papers to Marines<lb/>
who rushed to the scene.<lb/>
Relatives of U.S. Embassy<lb/>
employees ? most of them<lb/>
Lebanese ? collapsed on the<lb/>
glass-covered sidewalks when they<lb/>
saw the wreckage. Black smoke<lb/>
billowed from the fires on the<lb/>
ground floor and the charred cars<lb/>
around the building.<lb/>
Almost 100 Marines, rushed in-<lb/>
to the area from their base in the<lb/>
south of Beirut, formed a ring<lb/>
around the smoking ruins.<lb/>
Handicap A wareness<lb/>
r CIMOV WALL.<lb/>
A student simulates the handicap of blindness as part of Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week held test week at ECU.<lb/>
 -<lb/>
?? ??<lb/>
-<lb/>
r6<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 19 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed m the announcement<lb/>
column please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and s?nd 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 handwnt<lb/>
 -opy on odd sued 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 tnat your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want and suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column for<lb/>
publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor an<lb/>
nouncements 3 p m Monday<lb/>
?or me Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m Weonesdayy tor the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcements<lb/>
received atter these deadlines<lb/>
wiH be printed<lb/>
This space is available to an<lb/>
ijmpus organi rations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
HEY BUD, LETS<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
The Last B-g Bash s<lb/>
ere 'he second annual<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA PARTY soon<lb/>
sored by Budweiser and<lb/>
nawa'ian Tropic The Party is<lb/>
on Monday April 25 (the day<lb/>
rtore reading day a' 'he Kap<lb/>
pa Sigma House and begins at<lb/>
3 00 pm1 Tickets are on sale<lb/>
ngh now tor S3 00 and entitle<lb/>
YOU to see trte MISS<lb/>
HAWAIIAN TROPIC BIKINI<lb/>
CONTEST a Hawaiian Tropic<lb/>
viser a Budweiser mug. and<lb/>
best of an an afternoon of<lb/>
s'en.ng to the SUPER GRIT<lb/>
BAND while en,oying 30 KEGS<lb/>
OF BEER  The winner of the<lb/>
bikir contest wins an all<lb/>
exense paid trip to DAYTONA<lb/>
PEACH to compete in the na<lb/>
onat competition a chance to<lb/>
.v n a PORSCHE and be launch<lb/>
eo on a modeling career! So,<lb/>
SjirH il may be worth while to<lb/>
enterilf interested call RANDY<lb/>
EVANS at 752 8125) Ticket<lb/>
sales are limited so purchase<lb/>
, our tickets NOW in front of the<lb/>
uden' store1 For more intor<lb/>
"a'ion call 752 553<lb/>
BUCCANEER BABES<lb/>
There will be mtervies to<lb/>
select the 1983 8 Buccaneer<lb/>
? wsonWefl April 20 at 7 00 in<lb/>
-A'es Pieiohouse<lb/>
AKA BAKE SALE<lb/>
The Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority will hav? a bake Ml<lb/>
April 20, 193 in the lobby of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store from<lb/>
? 002 00<lb/>
WEST AREACAMPUS<lb/>
Wes' Area Gets High" on<lb/>
Aecnesoay April 20th from 1 5<lb/>
pm in the park.ng lot adiacent to<lb/>
Clement and White dorms<lb/>
Come iOin us and find our what<lb/>
The Alternat ve really s<lb/>
MUSICALE<lb/>
Sigma Alpha lota presents its<lb/>
annual Composers Musical on<lb/>
Tuesday, April 19 at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
the A J Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The program will consist of<lb/>
works composed by ECU<lb/>
students and alumni Selections<lb/>
to be presented include elec<lb/>
tronic. vocal, and instrumental<lb/>
compositions<lb/>
YHDL<lb/>
The Young Home Designers<lb/>
League meets Tuesday the 19th<lb/>
at 5 00 at Plain Jane's<lb/>
Restaurant<lb/>
DARRYL'S SOCIAL<lb/>
The ASPA members will have<lb/>
an end of the year get together<lb/>
on Wednesday the 20th at 4 00<lb/>
p m See va' there1<lb/>
COLORGUARD<lb/>
TRYOUTS<lb/>
Flag and rifle tryouts for the<lb/>
ECU Marching Pirates will be<lb/>
held on April 23, May 7 and 14<lb/>
from 10 00 to 5 00 m the Music<lb/>
building lobby Please bring own<lb/>
equipment if possible (bring<lb/>
practice flag it you have one)<lb/>
Dress accordingly<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
Dr Werner Heri, Department<lb/>
of Chemistry Florida State<lb/>
University will present a<lb/>
seminar entitled "Recent<lb/>
Aspects of Sesquiterpene Lac<lb/>
tone Chemistry on Friday.<lb/>
April 15 1983 at 2 00 pm in<lb/>
Flanagan Buiioing room 201<lb/>
Refreshments will be served in<lb/>
room 204 following the seminar<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/>
AMBASSADOR PARTY<lb/>
The Ambassador's end of the<lb/>
year part is scheduled for Sun<lb/>
day, April 24. 1983 at 6:00. the<lb/>
Vice Chancellor and hiswifewill<lb/>
be hosting the party and maps to<lb/>
their home can be picked up at<lb/>
he Alumni Center If you plan to<lb/>
attend you must sign up by<lb/>
Wed . April 20th in 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/>
time We will look forward to<lb/>
seeing everyone there.<lb/>
FOREIGN<lb/>
LANGUAGES<lb/>
LECTURE<lb/>
The East Carolina university<lb/>
Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literatures joins<lb/>
with the Sigma Upsiion Chapter<lb/>
of Phi Sigma lota in announcing<lb/>
the, second lecture in their series<lb/>
of lectures for 1982 ?3<lb/>
Professor Nancy Mayberry<lb/>
will rod a paper, "The Doctrine<lb/>
of the immaculate Conception in<lb/>
European Art and Literature<lb/>
from the Middle Ages to the<lb/>
Baroque on 19 April 1983, to<lb/>
begin at 7 30 pm in the coffee<lb/>
House of Mendenhaii Student<lb/>
Center A reception will follow<lb/>
INDT STUDENTS<lb/>
The INDT Club is holding a<lb/>
Spaghetti and Beer Supper on<lb/>
Thursday April 21, at 6:00 pm It<lb/>
will be held at the Tar River Apt.<lb/>
Clubhouse Students interested<lb/>
in attending should see any IN<lb/>
DT. Club member for tickets<lb/>
You must purchase your tickets<lb/>
by 4:00 pm on April 20<lb/>
ALPHAOMICRONPI<lb/>
BIG BROTHERS<lb/>
The Big Brothers of Alpha<lb/>
Omicron Pi will have a meeting<lb/>
on Tuesday, April 19 at 4 30 pm<lb/>
All Big Brothers are encouraged<lb/>
to attend this meeting The Big<lb/>
Brother Banquet will be held on<lb/>
Monday, April 25.<lb/>
NO JOB, NOW WHAT?<lb/>
On April 19 at 3:00 p.m. In<lb/>
Mendenhaii 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 tor college graduates.<lb/>
Other job search considerations<lb/>
will also be discussed.<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 1000 am on<lb/>
Thursday, April 26, 1983 for 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/>
MUSICALE<lb/>
Sigma Alpha iota presents its<lb/>
annual composers Musicale on<lb/>
Tuesday. April 19 at 730 p.m. in<lb/>
the A J Fletcher Recital Hall<lb/>
The program will consist of<lb/>
works compossed by ECU<lb/>
students and alumni. Selections<lb/>
to be plerformed include eloc<lb/>
tronic. vocal, and instrumental<lb/>
compostions<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may um ttit form at rtfltf or<lb/>
u?o ? separata snoot of popor If<lb/>
you nootf moro lino. Thoro art 33<lb/>
units por lino. Each lottor, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word spaco<lb/>
counts as ono unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
nyphonato words proporly. Loavo<lb/>
space at ond of lino if word<lb/>
dotsn't fit. No ads wilt bo ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone We<lb/>
reserve the right to reiect any ad.<lb/>
AN ads must bo prepaid. Endow<lb/>
75? per line or fraction of a hoc.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case tellers.<lb/>
ftetara to THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office by 3:?t Toesdoy before<lb/>
Woi(M??a,<lb/>
ECU POM-PON<lb/>
SQUADTRYOUTS<lb/>
The ECU Pom Pon squad will<lb/>
begin tryouts on the 23rd of<lb/>
April Actual auditions on the<lb/>
24th Must be present at both<lb/>
days of practice to audition<lb/>
Meet Saturday at 10 a m in Flet<lb/>
Cher Music Building lobby ready<lb/>
to practice<lb/>
PRE MED STUDENTS<lb/>
The Kaplan Course, a<lb/>
preparatory corse for the<lb/>
MCAT, will be taught at ECU<lb/>
this summer beginning the last<lb/>
week in June. This course has<lb/>
been proven to raise MCAT<lb/>
scores by as much as 2 to 3<lb/>
points. We need 20 interested<lb/>
persons to sign up in order for<lb/>
the service to be at ECU this<lb/>
summer The course is once a<lb/>
week for 8 weeks. Anyone in<lb/>
terested must signup in the<lb/>
Biology office or call the Biology<lb/>
club at 757 6286 or 758 6775 for<lb/>
more information A deposite<lb/>
should be sent in within 2 weeks.<lb/>
Due to limited space, we can-<lb/>
nont reserve your seat without a<lb/>
deposit information packets ex<lb/>
plaining the course curriculum<lb/>
are available in the main<lb/>
Biology office<lb/>
FOREIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
LECTURE SERIES<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Department of Foreign<lb/>
Languages and Literatures joins<lb/>
with the Sigma Upsiion Chapter<lb/>
of Phi Sigma lota in announcing<lb/>
the second lecture in their series<lb/>
of lectures for 1982 83<lb/>
Professor Nancy Mayberry<lb/>
will read a paper, "The Doctrine<lb/>
of the Immaculate Conception in<lb/>
European Art and Literature<lb/>
from the Middle Ages to the<lb/>
Baroque on 19 April 1983, to<lb/>
begin at 7 X pm in the Coffee<lb/>
House of Mendenhaii student<lb/>
Center A reception will follow.<lb/>
ECU BAHAI CLUS<lb/>
The Bahai Club of ECU will<lb/>
have its final meeting of this<lb/>
semester Tuesday April 19 in 241<lb/>
Mendenhaii from 11 until noon<lb/>
Bahai s believe that human be<lb/>
ings nave been created to know<lb/>
and to worship God, the<lb/>
Almighty and the Loving and the<lb/>
Provider of all mankind.<lb/>
Baha'u'llah (the prophet<lb/>
founder of the Bahai faith)<lb/>
teaches that God is the ever<lb/>
forgiving and the Most Compas<lb/>
sionate<lb/>
SOCIAL WORK<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
cepted for the David B. and<lb/>
Willa H Stevens Scholarship for<lb/>
undergraduates enrolled in the<lb/>
Division of Social Work The<lb/>
$500 00 Scholarship will be<lb/>
awarded for the fall semester of<lb/>
1983. The recipient will be<lb/>
selected on the basis of<lb/>
academic excellence, financial<lb/>
need, good citizenship, and<lb/>
dedication to the Social Work<lb/>
andor Criminal Justice profes<lb/>
sions Applications are available<lb/>
(and should be returned to) in<lb/>
the Division of Social Work,<lb/>
room 314, Allied Health building.<lb/>
Deadline: April 20, 1983. For<lb/>
more information call 757 6961<lb/>
Ext 219.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
Congratulations to our new<lb/>
brothers! We look forward to a<lb/>
great Fall with you Thanks goes<lb/>
to Pam Howard for her work on<lb/>
the Formal. Don't forget Gold<lb/>
Rush and Barefoot on the Mall<lb/>
Help APO help the Easter Seals<lb/>
Thursday on the Mall<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
Scuba Diving Travel Adven<lb/>
ture's Dive Coiumei. Mexico on<lb/>
the beautiful Yucatan peninsula<lb/>
Aug 3, 1983 to Aug 10, 1983<lb/>
Group trip for certified divers,<lb/>
two boat dives daily and<lb/>
unlimited shore diving, meals,<lb/>
lodging and air tare from<lb/>
Raleigh. Non divers welcome<lb/>
Call Ray Scharf at 757 6441<lb/>
ECU LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
ECU Law Society final<lb/>
meeting Election of new of<lb/>
ficers Thursday. April 21st,<lb/>
Mendenhaii, Room 248 at 7.30<lb/>
p m<lb/>
ECU RUGBY<lb/>
Rugby game this weekend.<lb/>
Saturday, April 23, agamst Fort<lb/>
Bragg RFC, at 1 00 Last game<lb/>
of the year, behind the allied<lb/>
Health building. Don't miss the<lb/>
action.<lb/>
NOT TIME TO REST?<lb/>
With finals approching. you<lb/>
are probably on the go constant<lb/>
ly Take a little time out to slow<lb/>
your pace down Come sing.<lb/>
share, and study the word of<lb/>
God inter varsity meets on<lb/>
Wednesday nights at 6 30 ir<lb/>
Biology N102<lb/>
STAN LANDERS<lb/>
ECUS own Stan Landers w.n be<lb/>
signing autographs Wednesday<lb/>
,n a the second floor bathroom<lb/>
DUNKING BOOTH<lb/>
FOR RENT<lb/>
Ounking booth tor re a-<lb/>
S25 day or $100 ween B G<lb/>
vONEY MAKER Con'ac'Ad-<lb/>
ien Co Jaycees, P O Bo? 63<lb/>
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(919) 257 1921 or 257 1710<lb/>
RAGG TYME MARKETING, INC<lb/>
1001 S.PITT STREET<lb/>
752-4450<lb/>
INVITES YOU TO ENJOY<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Strung ihe campus community<lb/>
sinct 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Weoiesday during the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the<lb/>
official newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $20yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located m the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
dress changes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Old South<lb/>
Building, ECU Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
rJ&amp;O &amp;? Calvin Klein<lb/>
W JOROACHE<lb/>
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LAB COATS lROBfcKT SlMrW ??<lb/>
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HOODED SWEATS - ?<lb/>
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Student:<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEILL,<lb/>
Staff ?nm<lb/>
lsiting ECL<lb/>
lasi six days si<lb/>
Jason Adkins, a to hundre<lb/>
representative from students aba<lb/>
the Washington office possibility of<lb/>
of the national Public ing a PJRG<lb/>
Interest Research on campus.<lb/>
Group, has been Adkins waj<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Coot. From Page 1<lb/>
honestly as they can where we<lb/>
stand. They've told us what they<lb/>
know she said.<lb/>
"I think East Carolina is a very<lb/>
qualified school for education<lb/>
said Collins. "It's always been top<lb/>
quality Collins said she felt con-<lb/>
fident that the quality of ECl 's<lb/>
teacher education program a<lb/>
never questioned and that she w a<lb/>
not worried about the situation.<lb/>
Collins admitted that if she<lb/>
were not a senior she would pro-<lb/>
bably be more concerned about<lb/>
the denial NCATE's denial doe<lb/>
not impart on students who are<lb/>
graduating next month. "I trunk<lb/>
the administration is doing all<lb/>
Final Tax Z<lb/>
Demonstrate<lb/>
"For one shining momer the<lb/>
IRS tax machine stalled satJ<lb/>
anchorwoman on the ever. -<lb/>
news Friday. While many Gu.<lb/>
ville residents were laboring<lb/>
diligently to file their last-minute<lb/>
tax returns, a group of ECU<lb/>
students and Greenville residents<lb/>
decided to block the entrance of<lb/>
the Internal Revenue Service of-<lb/>
fice, protesting the amount of taut<lb/>
dollars being used for military<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
Group leaders called the action<lb/>
"an interruption of busmes- as<lb/>
usual at the Internal Revenue Sei<lb/>
vice Shortly before 12:15 p m<lb/>
eight of the demonstrat<lb/>
separated from the group and<lb/>
joined together to block the t<lb/>
trance of the IRS building located<lb/>
at the corner of First and Evans<lb/>
streets. The blockade lasted three<lb/>
minutes and prevented any<lb/>
from coming in or out of the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
One ECL student. English ma-<lb/>
jor Keith Hoggard. said he par<lb/>
ticipated in the blockade to "raise<lb/>
people's awareness that nuc<lb/>
weapons can be limited<lb/>
"I went to express my d;<lb/>
proval of the large percentage<lb/>
mv tax money going for mih<lb/>
spending said Dr. Amy H.<lb/>
non, a Greenville mother ol three<lb/>
children who took part in the<lb/>
blockade. "Because I ha<lb/>
children, it makes me more c<lb/>
cerned for the future of the wot<lb/>
I have more of a stake in it<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Like Hoggard. Hannon aid the<lb/>
proliferation of the nuclear arms<lb/>
race was her main reason for pa-<lb/>
ticipating.<lb/>
The demonstration wa not<lb/>
sponsored by a particular group.<lb/>
COUSIN'S<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. COi<lb/>
758-5616 FREE &amp; C<lb/>
NOWDAYS EVERY<lb/>
PROCLAIM THAT <lb/>
THEY ARE THE B<lb/>
RATHER CONFLS<lb/>
TAUGHT THAT TH<lb/>
ONE, NOT HINDR1<lb/>
FEEL THAT THE<lb/>
NEED TO BE BRAIN<lb/>
DECIDE. ALL WE C<lb/>
ITALIAN FOOD, A R<lb/>
AND LOW, LOW P<lb/>
SERVICE IS PROMF<lb/>
EVERY ORDER IS PI<lb/>
CARE. SO CALL OR<lb/>
GREAT TO MEET N!<lb/>
COL SIN<lb/>
WE MAY BE'<lb/>
BLTNOTINTHl<lb/>
 $1.00 off any Spaghetti<lb/>
11 Dinner - Served wSalad<lb/>
If and garlic bread<lb/>
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I.00 off Cheese Manicoi<lb/>
j wSakkdandgarlkbreaA<lb/>
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I Oaetfr<lb/>
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I TO REST'<lb/>
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? q oooth tor rent at<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL if 13<lb/>
Students Respond With Support For PIRG<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
SUfl Writer<lb/>
Jason Adkins, a<lb/>
representative from<lb/>
the Washington office<lb/>
of the national Public<lb/>
Interest Research<lb/>
Group, has been<lb/>
visiting ECU for the<lb/>
last six days speaking<lb/>
to hundreds of<lb/>
students about the<lb/>
possibility of beginn-<lb/>
ing a PIRG chapter<lb/>
on campus.<lb/>
Adkins was sent to<lb/>
ECU by Ralph Nader,<lb/>
the founder of PIRG.<lb/>
Nader, who visited<lb/>
ECU last month,<lb/>
found enough interest<lb/>
and support amoung<lb/>
the administration<lb/>
and students to send<lb/>
Adkins to help lay the<lb/>
groundwork for an<lb/>
ECU PIRG Chapter.<lb/>
"The ECU student<lb/>
body and faculty has<lb/>
enthusiastically<lb/>
responded to the<lb/>
PIRG concept<lb/>
Adkins said. "An ac-<lb/>
tive group of 30<lb/>
students has been pro-<lb/>
moting the idea of<lb/>
establishing the non-<lb/>
partisan, student-run<lb/>
public research and<lb/>
advocacy organiza-<lb/>
tion on ECU's cam-<lb/>
pus<lb/>
PIRG's are involv-<lb/>
ed in consumer pro-<lb/>
tection, environmen-<lb/>
tal preservation,<lb/>
political reform,<lb/>
energy policy and<lb/>
Students Lack Information<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1<lb/>
honestly as they can where we<lb/>
stand. They've told us what they<lb/>
know she said.<lb/>
"1 think East Carolina is a very<lb/>
qualified school for education<lb/>
said Collins. "It's always been top<lb/>
quality Collins said she felt con-<lb/>
fident that the quality of ECU's<lb/>
teacher education program was<lb/>
never questioned and that she was<lb/>
not worried about the situation.<lb/>
Collins admitted that if she<lb/>
were not a senior she would pro-<lb/>
bably be more concerned about<lb/>
the denial. NCATE's denial does<lb/>
not impart on students who are<lb/>
graduating next month. "I think<lb/>
the administration is doing all<lb/>
they can to improve their pro-<lb/>
grams Collins said.<lb/>
"I don't think they're telling us<lb/>
enough about it said Feldhaus.<lb/>
"They're just telling us not to<lb/>
worry Feldhaus said that Dr.<lb/>
David Powers, one of her instruc-<lb/>
tors had done a "good job" of ex-<lb/>
plaining the situation.<lb/>
"I graduate in December<lb/>
Feldhaus said. "What if we're not<lb/>
re-accredited by then?"<lb/>
"I feel like this is an important<lb/>
part of my life said Phelps. "I<lb/>
was told in one of my art classes<lb/>
that it would not have an effect on<lb/>
my teacher certification, that<lb/>
relieved some of the tension, but I<lb/>
still want to know more<lb/>
Phelps suggested that the<lb/>
Final Tax Day Brings<lb/>
Demonstration At IRS<lb/>
"For one shining moment the<lb/>
IRS tax machine stalled said the<lb/>
anchorwoman on the evening<lb/>
news Friday. While many Green-<lb/>
ville residents were laboring<lb/>
diligently to file their last-minute<lb/>
tax returns, a group of ECU<lb/>
students and Greenville residents<lb/>
decided to block the entrance of<lb/>
the Internal Revenue Service of-<lb/>
fice, protesting the amount of tax<lb/>
dollars being used for military<lb/>
purposes.<lb/>
Group leaders called the action<lb/>
"an interruption of business as<lb/>
usual at the Internal Revenue Ser-<lb/>
vice Shortly before 12:15 p.m<lb/>
eight of the demonstrators<lb/>
separated from the group and<lb/>
joined together to block the en-<lb/>
trance of the IRS building located<lb/>
at the corner of First and Evans<lb/>
streets. The blockade lasted three<lb/>
minutes and prevented anyone<lb/>
from coming in or out of the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
One ECU student, English ma-<lb/>
jor Keith Hoggard, said he par-<lb/>
ticipated in the blockade to "raise<lb/>
people's awareness that nuclear<lb/>
weapons can be limited<lb/>
"I went to express my disap-<lb/>
proval of the large percentage of<lb/>
my tax money going for military<lb/>
spending said Dr. Amy Han-<lb/>
non, a Greenville mother of three<lb/>
children who took part in the<lb/>
blockade. "Because I have<lb/>
children, it makes me more con-<lb/>
cerned for the future of the world.<lb/>
I have more of a stake in it she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Like Hoggard, Hannon said the<lb/>
proliferation of the nuclear arms<lb/>
race was her main reason for par-<lb/>
ticipating.<lb/>
The demonstration was not<lb/>
sponsored by a particular group,<lb/>
but several ECU students were in-<lb/>
volved in promoting the event.<lb/>
No police were present during<lb/>
the sit-in and the three-minute in-<lb/>
terruption was not broken up.<lb/>
One woman, who was<lb/>
prevented from entering the IRS<lb/>
during the sit-in, smiled and in-<lb/>
formed the group that she "didn't<lb/>
mind at all having to wait a few<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
Others who visited the building<lb/>
during the demonstration shook<lb/>
their heads in approval of the<lb/>
signs being held by the<lb/>
demonstrators. Only a few people<lb/>
opted to ignore the group.<lb/>
When police arrived on the<lb/>
scene, they ordered the<lb/>
demonstrators to disperse because<lb/>
they didn't have a permit. The<lb/>
demonstrators said they didn't<lb/>
think a permit was needed to<lb/>
assemble on federal property, but<lb/>
the police disagreed.<lb/>
"I believe the ideas we were<lb/>
representing are ideas that need to<lb/>
be presented to the public on a<lb/>
regular basis said ECU en-<lb/>
vironmental health graduate stu-<lb/>
dent Larry Martin, one of the<lb/>
demonstrators. "They (the<lb/>
public) shouldn't lose sight of it<lb/>
Martin said the primary issue of<lb/>
the IRS demonstration was to<lb/>
protest the amount of money be-<lb/>
ing spent on "destructive causes"<lb/>
when there's so much need for<lb/>
other 'non-destructive" uses of<lb/>
the money. "Nothing constructive<lb/>
comes from military expen-<lb/>
ditures" Martin said.<lb/>
The group claimed that their<lb/>
demonstration was only one of<lb/>
many held throughout the nation<lb/>
on Friday.<lb/>
COUSIN'S PIZZERIA<lb/>
321 E. 10th St. CORNER OF CHARLES<lb/>
758-5616 FREE &amp; QUICK DELIVERIES<lb/>
758-5982<lb/>
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TAUGHT THAT THE BEST CAN ONLY BE<lb/>
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COUSIN'S PIZZERIA<lb/>
WE MAY BE NEW IN TOWN,<lb/>
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 $1.00 off any Spaghetti<lb/>
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School of Education hold a public<lb/>
meeting and invite speakers to<lb/>
discuss the NCATE denial in<lb/>
depth. "I'm kind of at a stand-<lb/>
still Phelps said. "I don't know<lb/>
enough about it to have an opi-<lb/>
nion one way or the other<lb/>
Fledhaus also said she wants to<lb/>
know "the play-by-play" of the<lb/>
situation and what's being done to<lb/>
correct it. "I'm sure they know<lb/>
what they're talking about<lb/>
Feldhaus said. "(But) we should<lb/>
be more informed. We shouldn't<lb/>
have to just put our faith in<lb/>
them<lb/>
"I feel left out in the dark<lb/>
said Phelps, "There's really<lb/>
nothing I can do about it.<lb/>
Everything I've learned, I've<lb/>
learned in The East Carolinian<lb/>
Coffee Break<lb/>
social justice.<lb/>
During his visit,<lb/>
Adkins has maintain-<lb/>
ed a steady presence<lb/>
at a table set up out-<lb/>
side the Student Supp-<lb/>
ly Store. He has given<lb/>
numerous ECU<lb/>
classes a short presen-<lb/>
tation on PIRG,<lb/>
distributed literature<lb/>
to students and held<lb/>
several meetings to ex-<lb/>
plain the PIRG con-<lb/>
cept.<lb/>
PIRGs are funded<lb/>
by student activity<lb/>
fees, which amount<lb/>
usually to $2 or $3 a<lb/>
student per semester.<lb/>
A referendum must<lb/>
first be passed by the<lb/>
students authorizing<lb/>
the expenditure. The<lb/>
fee is refundable to<lb/>
any student not desir-<lb/>
ing to support PIRG's<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Adkins and a<lb/>
number of ECU<lb/>
students have been<lb/>
showing a 15-minute<lb/>
PIRG film at various<lb/>
places on campus.<lb/>
The film gives an<lb/>
overview of PIRG's<lb/>
work in several cities<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
PIRG chapters arc<lb/>
currently active in 25<lb/>
states, Canada and<lb/>
Australia.<lb/>
Adkins, who has<lb/>
also visited with<lb/>
several ECU ad-<lb/>
ministrators and<lb/>
faculty members, said<lb/>
that he has three main<lb/>
objectives for his<lb/>
visit: To educate the<lb/>
student body about<lb/>
the work of PIRG, to<lb/>
set up a core of in-<lb/>
terested students to<lb/>
begin an ECU-PIRG<lb/>
chapter and to involve<lb/>
ECU faculty and the<lb/>
entire Greenville com-<lb/>
munity in PIRG's<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Adkins hopes that<lb/>
this late-semester<lb/>
drive will culminate<lb/>
with a referendum<lb/>
and petition drive<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
Adkins hopes a<lb/>
core group of students<lb/>
will work on campus<lb/>
this summer to plan<lb/>
outreach strategies in<lb/>
preparation for a ma-<lb/>
jor push in the fall.<lb/>
'PIRG's offer<lb/>
students the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to work on<lb/>
issues of real<lb/>
significance to the<lb/>
local and universitv<lb/>
communities<lb/>
Adkins said.<lb/>
ECU geology stu-<lb/>
dent Eliza Godwin<lb/>
has been an active stu-<lb/>
dent for the PIRG<lb/>
project. "Being<lb/>
science-minded. lm<lb/>
interested in en-<lb/>
vironmental pro-<lb/>
blems Godwin said<lb/>
She added that<lb/>
Nader's lectures gave<lb/>
her the drive to work<lb/>
on the project.<lb/>
Godwin said she<lb/>
felt confident that a<lb/>
PIRG chapter would<lb/>
be started next fall at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
-Ktt-Stt?<lb/>
2<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/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tr ,sed Salad may be substituted<lb/>
forS' w3M extra<lb/>
ITALIAN N1TE<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/>
3<lb/>
99<lb/>
3g:<lb/>
it? w$:<lb/>
.ir4 ?J<lb/>
EVERY WEDS.<lb/>
5PM-10PM<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
<lb/>
- - ? -iiU'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0004"/><lb/>
QUje lEttBt (Earnltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, Gwai??<lb/>
Mike Hughes. ??<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. n.?o, of M ClNDY PLEASANTS. spons ?d?o,<lb/>
Scott Lindley. m. m Greg R?deout. - ?"<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH. M ???? SlEVE BaCHNER? ??-? <lb/>
STEPHANIE GROON. mh. JULIANA FAHRBACH. M-r<lb/>
Clay Thornton, mm sw ToDD EVANS- ????? <lb/>
April 19. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
bility<lb/>
A 'Golden Opportunity'For ECU<lb/>
As reported last week, ECU may Needless to say this is an ex-<lb/>
become the first public university cellent opportunity for ECU<lb/>
in North Carolina to host a Public students to increase their input in<lb/>
interest Research Group (P1RG) local legislative tconstldKera0QnnsH<lb/>
- a student-run, student-funded Many of us like to sit back and<lb/>
organization that works on public complain about how rules and<lb/>
nolicv issues of interest to students regulations are made every year<lb/>
and the surrounding community. with little or no consideration for<lb/>
Started bv consumer advocate student welfare. Not that we don t<lb/>
Ralph Nader in 1970, PIRGs are have good reason to gripe at times,<lb/>
concerned with a wide range of especially those times when we see<lb/>
issues, including consumer protec- the apparent nonchalance ex-<lb/>
tion political reform, social hibited by our legislators. But sad<lb/>
justice energy policy and en- to say, issuing random complaints<lb/>
vironmental preservation. In accomplishes nothing at all, except<lb/>
several states ? PIRGs are active to reinforce those ignorant tenden-<lb/>
in 25 states as well as Canada and cies we've grown used to<lb/>
Australia - they have been It may well not be chic for<lb/>
responsible for the passage and students to get involved in a discus-<lb/>
defeat of laws involving these and sionaction group like a PIRG We<lb/>
other issues, and PIRG surveys much prefer to sit back and let life<lb/>
and studies are often published in pass us by, with as little effort ex-<lb/>
regional, state or national publica- pended as possible. Indeed, that s<lb/>
tions. much easier' much more col<lb/>
legiate.<lb/>
PIRGs are funded through stu- But as previously mentioned,<lb/>
dent activity fees and are controll- this is certainly a "golden" oppor-<lb/>
ed by a student board of directors tunity, one that in this paper s opi-<lb/>
who oversee all of the organiza- nion, students should not pass up.<lb/>
tion's activities.<lb/>
When Nader lectured at ECU<lb/>
last month, he found on campus<lb/>
what he considered adequate in-<lb/>
terest and support among ad-<lb/>
ministration and students to justify<lb/>
sending a representative from <lb/>
Washington to aide in the forma- Duke University, will be available<lb/>
tion of a local ECU-Greenville to discuss PIRG activities in the<lb/>
PIRG. state.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
I'm Talking About FAT People!<lb/>
Dealing With Porkers<lb/>
Remember the good ol' days, when<lb/>
people were fat, and no one had<lb/>
cellulite? Well, need 1 say it, those days<lb/>
are gone. Nowadays, people are still just<lb/>
as fat, but we have a 1,001 different<lb/>
names to call them. It isn't so much that<lb/>
society's any nicer ? not by any<lb/>
"stretch" of the imagination. But never-<lb/>
theless, it does reflect a changing at-<lb/>
titude on society's part toward fat and<lb/>
fatness.<lb/>
 AAIKE HUGHES<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Jason Adkins, who works for<lb/>
Nader in Washington, will be on<lb/>
campus today showing films and<lb/>
discussing the purpose and need<lb/>
for PIRGs. In addition, Ruffin<lb/>
Slater, representing the PIRG at<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
We're All Dolts, Larry<lb/>
When I returned to East Carolina to<lb/>
find that the ?'FOUNTA1NHEAE ?A,srW-<lb/>
had regressed to the uninspiredjtatus oc " ? j<lb/>
of the EAST CAROUNIANfTs  "A <lb/>
disappointed, although not fclFpn4'e3l 1<lb/>
Plfr<lb/>
puAcT<lb/>
had been of the opinion that the tenets<lb/>
and inpiratinn which had spawned the<lb/>
hannerTFOUNTAlNHEAIfor ECU's<lb/>
newspaper had been on the decline.<lb/>
The simple premise of questioning<lb/>
authority (or status quo, or powers<lb/>
thatbe, or what "isrytc.) and con-<lb/>
7Cfar social issues-and individual<lb/>
freedoms that were major themes of<lb/>
NtAttd &amp;r<lb/>
Alt cjs.<lb/>
'HSifHtd<lb/>
Pork -A Beans<lb/>
No pun intended, but fat is big<lb/>
business. And although no one really<lb/>
wants to be fat, everybody and his<lb/>
brother wants a slice of the fatness pie.<lb/>
Think about it. We've got clothing<lb/>
stores dedicated solely to "the portly<lb/>
customer sugar-free anything and<lb/>
everything and enough "amazing new<lb/>
diet plans" to make anyone vomit. But<lb/>
try as we may to make the world a more<lb/>
sightly place in which to live, every sum-<lb/>
mer, the oceanside is filled (overfilled)<lb/>
with scores of bright pink beached<lb/>
whales and grounded blimps.<lb/>
Now, I'm not talking about your<lb/>
"slightly overweight" people, you<lb/>
know, those saddle-baggers who just<lb/>
seem to enjoy food. No, I'm talking<lb/>
about the real porkers, the kind of peo-<lb/>
ple who just like being fat, people who<lb/>
have to rent a U-Haul once a week just<lb/>
to go to the A&amp;P. I'm talking about peo-<lb/>
ple who sweat profusely watching slow-<lb/>
motion football replays on Sunday<lb/>
afternoon TV. I'm talking about people<lb/>
who just don't care, people who serve<lb/>
Dexatrim hors d'oeuvres smothered in<lb/>
Swiss cheese and bacon at dinner par-<lb/>
ties. I'm talking about people who spend<lb/>
a fortune every year on new upholstery,<lb/>
sofa springs and bed slats. People who<lb/>
go to costume parties dressed as<lb/>
buildings, islands or the entire Walton<lb/>
family. People who've forgotten what<lb/>
their feet look like. People who make<lb/>
"reservations for two" when dining<lb/>
alone. People who could smuggle<lb/>
anything they want into the country<lb/>
because they know no one would ever<lb/>
frisk them. People who know pizza<lb/>
delivery boys by name and give them<lb/>
special Christmas tips every year. People<lb/>
who commission a team of muralists to<lb/>
do their family portraits. People who<lb/>
never drive with seat belts because<lb/>
they're held plenty secure by the<lb/>
dashboard. People who carry com-<lb/>
prehensive lunchbox insurance.<lb/>
I'm talking about people who punish<lb/>
their children by sending them to bed<lb/>
without seconds on dessert. People who<lb/>
think aerobics is a new kind of Chinese<lb/>
food served over rice. People who buy a<lb/>
side of beef when relatives come for the<lb/>
weekend. People whose entire wardrobe<lb/>
(polyester, incidentally) is spotted with<lb/>
barbecue sauce and spicy mustard. Peo-<lb/>
ple who phone-in their orders before go-<lb/>
ing to McDonald's. People who smell<lb/>
worse after a shower than they did<lb/>
before. People whose belly buttons ac-<lb/>
tually show emotion. People whose<lb/>
butts and thighs look like they were<lb/>
chiselled out of marble by a near-sighted<lb/>
stone mason with a jack-hammer.<lb/>
I'm talking about people who request<lb/>
special group rates when flying alone.<lb/>
People who name their children after<lb/>
mountain ranges or continents. People<lb/>
who "run over to Fast Fare for a gallon<lb/>
of milk and come back an hour later<lb/>
with four bags of groceries and potato<lb/>
chip crumbs on their (double, sometimes<lb/>
triple) chins. People who always look<lb/>
like they're aching to take a bite out of<lb/>
your furniture. People who give kids a<lb/>
thrill simply by diving into a swimming<lb/>
pool. People whose pants and shirts<lb/>
come with stakes, poles and lie-downs<lb/>
People who freshen their breath after a<lb/>
big meal with a half gallon of mint chip<lb/>
ice cream and a box of York peppermint<lb/>
patties. People who carry a picture of<lb/>
Orson Welles in their wallets and think<lb/>
Liz Taylor looks sexier now than eer<lb/>
People who you'd like to hide under<lb/>
during an air raid. People who make<lb/>
playhouses for their kids out of old<lb/>
clothing boxes. People whose furniture<lb/>
and cars you actually feel sorry for. Peo-<lb/>
ple doomed to resemble the infamous<lb/>
"Before" pictures their entire lives.<lb/>
I'm talking about people who sit on<lb/>
tacks and find out about it three days<lb/>
later in the shower. People who never<lb/>
have to worry about closing an overstuf-<lb/>
fed suitcase. People who are constant!)<lb/>
mistaken for the Michelin tire man Peo-<lb/>
pie who take seven hours to play a round<lb/>
of golf because every time thes gel out<lb/>
of the cart, they have to replace at least<lb/>
two big divots. People who frighten pool<lb/>
lifeguards by swimming in the deep end<lb/>
and small children and their mothers bv<lb/>
swimming in the shallow end. People<lb/>
who fast for three hours and lose five<lb/>
pounds. People who play the Roman ar<lb/>
my in Julius Caesar.<lb/>
1 guess what I'm trying to say is these<lb/>
people arc, well FAT<lb/>
Oh, damn now I forgot what 1 was<lb/>
going to say about them.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, who<lb/>
likes belching under water to analyze the<lb/>
different bubble formations, once<lb/>
weighed a hefty 166 pounds but is no a<lb/>
fit 158. He hopes there aren 7 as man<lb/>
fat people on campus as there are Mor-<lb/>
mons.<lb/>
. p jnoreidea7StimulatedctionToriented<lb/>
i ? student bodies of the past has been<lb/>
 <lb/>
pit<lb/>
ro rttd<lb/>
Larry<lb/>
r<lb/>
D<lb/>
?<lb/>
wanting, in my opinion.<lb/>
This is my final semester at ECU,<lb/>
and I'm going to miss the school paper<lb/>
'cause I ain't payffn) for it). I have not<lb/>
een disappointed, though somewhat<lb/>
-urprizjeJ to find the spirit of the<lb/>
jFCnJNTAINHEAD persevenn<lb/>
ft ' through the efforts ofa?coji?i5<lb/>
hi T? u dedicated iconoclaststhaFcontribute to<lb/>
the paper regularly. The exposure to<lb/>
significant issuesjsuch as the peace ef-<lb/>
li tir fort' imbalancc of resourcesclass ex-<lb/>
1 ? " ploitation, nuclear insanity, civil<lb/>
righjs'and war that these writers have<lb/>
provided are a major service to the in-<lb/>
habitants of ECU. As world citizenship M fc<lb/>
is our duty to develop perspectives on jiJJJJ - f<lb/>
these issues that will shape our future, pV ?jt<lb/>
so that we can contribute appreciation. so jpr<lb/>
I hope the spirit of theCFOUN- j <lb/>
f AINHEAD endures, despite a succcs-  ?7 fV<lb/>
sionoT inept, inspirationallyrbarren yTJ'<lb/>
AFROTC: Enhancing Education?<lb/>
Or Just Intimidating Free Speech?<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
-TV"<lb/>
'6<lb/>
or-<lb/>
sion oi inept, inspir?uunuiy? uoj.vm.<lb/>
doltswfiicK have passed for feditorial<lb/>
staffTwith the noted(exceptiohU<lb/>
Larry Martin<lb/>
GRADEHLT<lb/>
readers should be informed that<lb/>
thYeditors will mix up thepunctuation<lb/>
in letters they don't like scuo discredit<lb/>
lit ivuvia w??j .w. - ?- ?-m?<lb/>
.r the writer. Don't be looted by their<lb/>
X . i vVbphmorisR (no ffenceV prank<lb/>
l-iji another'oneistoomitawordjiojeith-<lb/>
0L<lb/>
rdJiojSt<lb/>
change the meaning of a lineTorhave it<lb/>
appear the writer can't complete a<lb/>
though) like he is some kind of drug<lb/>
abuser.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Being an inept dolt,<lb/>
and being that you "found out" about<lb/>
how we "mix up the punctuation in let-<lb/>
ters (we) don't like" (please don't tell<lb/>
anyone about it), I thought it best to<lb/>
run yours just as you wrote it, with a<lb/>
few minor "marginal" suggestions.<lb/>
Cjm?&amp; $(AJe<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
Last Tuesday, 1 was granted permis-<lb/>
sion to observe a debate on the nuclear<lb/>
freeze-arms race in the Policy and Issues<lb/>
class of Associate Professor Homer<lb/>
Yearick.<lb/>
Jeffrey Wickersham, an ECU ROTC<lb/>
student, was a participant in the debate.<lb/>
When Wickersham saw me, he im-<lb/>
mediately asked Yearick to have me<lb/>
removed from the classroom. After<lb/>
some discussion among Yearick,<lb/>
Wickersham and myself, I was denied<lb/>
access to the debate.<lb/>
During the course of this discussion,<lb/>
Wickeisham informed us that he was<lb/>
"going out on a limb and "it could<lb/>
mean his career" if it was reported that<lb/>
he was involved in the debate. Incident-<lb/>
ly, Wickersham was debating "against"<lb/>
the nuclear arms freeze, a position clear-<lb/>
ly in line with that of most United States<lb/>
military officials.<lb/>
From the hallway outside the<lb/>
classroom, I was still able to hear some<lb/>
of the debate. Before Wickersham spoke<lb/>
to the class, he clearly qualified that his<lb/>
statements were "strictly" his personal<lb/>
opinion and that he was not speaking as<lb/>
a representative of the U.S. Air Force or<lb/>
the ROTC. Again, Wickersham, said he<lb/>
was risking his career by debating this<lb/>
issue. "We're not supposed to speak<lb/>
out he told the class.<lb/>
Yearick interjected a question to<lb/>
Wickersham asking him why he was so<lb/>
concerned about losing his career in light<lb/>
of the fact that he was debating from a<lb/>
position most military personnel would<lb/>
agree with. Wickersham gave a vague<lb/>
response.<lb/>
This situation raises a number of<lb/>
questions regarding the role of ROTC<lb/>
on this campus. Certainly, I respect the<lb/>
position of Yearick. He did the right<lb/>
thing in honoring his student's request.<lb/>
But what if I had been a student in that<lb/>
class? Would Wickersham have refused<lb/>
to participate in the debate and taken an<lb/>
"F?" Why did Wickersham feel his<lb/>
career was in jeopardy for participating<lb/>
in assigned class work? Does his belong-<lb/>
ing in ROTC mean that he's denied his<lb/>
constitutional rights of free expression?<lb/>
Of course, ROTC officials have<lb/>
denied that Wickersham's career was<lb/>
ever in jeopardy. What else could they<lb/>
say? <lb/>
It seems to me that participation in<lb/>
ROTC should enhance (if that's possi-<lb/>
ble) a student's education, not stifle it.<lb/>
But if so, then why did Wickersham feel<lb/>
his career was in jeopardy? Is there an<lb/>
unwritten ROTC policy that keeps its<lb/>
cadets from fully participating in their<lb/>
school work?<lb/>
1 don't believe that Wickersham just<lb/>
misunderstood ROTC policy, because<lb/>
this is not the first time a situation like<lb/>
this has occurred.<lb/>
Earlier this semester, another ROTC<lb/>
student Dorothy Baker wanted to write a<lb/>
paper for one of her ROTC classes on<lb/>
the Greenville Peace Committee. After<lb/>
attending one GPC meeting, Baker was<lb/>
told her topic was unacceptable for the<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
When 1 contacted Baker about<lb/>
possibly writing a news story on the<lb/>
situation, she refused to elaborate. She<lb/>
denied being advised not to attend GPC<lb/>
meetings. But she, like Wickersham,<lb/>
believed her career would be in jeopardy<lb/>
if the situation were reported in the cam-<lb/>
pus newspaper.<lb/>
Following our conversation, Baker<lb/>
telephoned The East Carolinian and ask-<lb/>
ed News Editor Greg Rideout not to<lb/>
print a story about the incident. She also<lb/>
contacted the Media Board to stop the<lb/>
presses.<lb/>
The story was never written, because<lb/>
the facts were speculative, but both ot<lb/>
these incidents bring certain ROTC<lb/>
policies (written or unwritten) into ques-<lb/>
tion. It would appear that at least two<lb/>
ROTC cadets are afraid to express their<lb/>
opinions to their own campus<lb/>
newspaper. This fact alone makes me<lb/>
wonder about the censorship policies of<lb/>
the U.S. military.<lb/>
It's no secret that former Vietnam<lb/>
Commanding General William<lb/>
Westmoreland, now touring the college<lb/>
lecture circuit, blames the media for the<lb/>
United States' loss in that conflict.<lb/>
Westmoreland has even gone so far as to<lb/>
call for a "blackout" of the press in the<lb/>
event that the U.S. should involve itself<lb/>
in a similar conflict. I'm sure many U.S.<lb/>
military leaders are of the same opinion.<lb/>
Westmoreland's suggestion raises an<lb/>
almost unlimited number of questions.<lb/>
It's frightening, to say the least. Would<lb/>
he go so far as to jail reporters? Close<lb/>
down newspapers?<lb/>
Could it be that our own campus<lb/>
ROTC is echoing a position similar to<lb/>
Westmoreland's?<lb/>
It's a shame that Wickersham and<lb/>
Baker feel they've signed away their<lb/>
right to free expression, but it's more a<lb/>
shame that the ECU ROTC has instilled<lb/>
fear in its students and has created a<lb/>
schism between them and their campus<lb/>
-? .J. B .? -<lb/>
Alcohol<lb/>
The V esi Area<lb/>
Residence Council<lb/>
and the Campu<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program will be co-<lb/>
sponsoring an<lb/>
Alcohol Aarene<lb/>
Fair edneda to<lb/>
gue studentv sugges-<lb/>
tions on responsible<lb/>
alcohol consumption.<lb/>
The tair. hich<lb/>
arts at 1 p m. in the<lb/>
parK.ng lot a I<lb/>
to Clement and White<lb/>
Residence Halls, is<lb/>
tilled ?'We Vea<lb/>
Gets H j The<lb/>
pnmar goal<lb/>
fair is '??<lb/>
responsib<lb/>
ing sd.d Rol<lb/>
Sm. v<lb/>
Residence H<lb/>
tor. ho is h<lb/>
.ame th<lb/>
Smith is worl<lb/>
est area CO<lb/>
Janet Johns<lb/>
the other<lb/>
.e b.<lb/>
prej<lb/>
? .? ' l<lb/>
f air wi<lb/>
a serit<lb/>
including e.<lb/>
booths Bn<lb/>
Hollings Th<lb/>
For '84 De<lb/>
COLUMBIA. -<lb/>
(LPb ? Sen En<lb/>
Hoihrtt. pledg -<lb/>
put merica ?cl<lb/>
to work and b<lb/>
the nation's<lb/>
world trade<lb/>
n o u n c e d<lb/>
didaq ?<lb/>
Dem cratic pr lei<lb/>
tial<lb/>
Under the glare<lb/>
TV lights &amp;i ping<lb/>
flashb . b<lb/>
accused<lb/>
Reaga<lb/>
. H<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
:atei -<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
- i ?<lb/>
rd i s '<lb/>
?<lb/>
D:<lb/>
Discrimin<lb/>
tCPSi - V<lb/>
. an ha ruled thai a<lb/>
predom<lb/>
Georgia college<lb/>
fairly disci m<lb/>
aga;n: a white facu<lb/>
member<lb/>
Saannah Sta<lb/>
College now a<lb/>
federal appeals ce irt<lb/>
to reconsider<lb/>
February decis<lb/>
favor rf Dr r<lb/>
Lincoln, a former<lb/>
home econ re -<lb/>
teacher at the <lb/>
Lincoln contends<lb/>
that Saanr? State<lb/>
didn't renew hei -<lb/>
tract in 1978-79<lb/>
because she is white<lb/>
r wo-thirds<lb/>
school's stafl  - <lb/>
dent bod are b w ?<lb/>
Last year aGf<lb/>
district court -greed<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
? he . -<lb/>
C<lb/>
'?We'<lb/>
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Sys<lb/>
t<lb/>
0<lb/>
THE<lb/>
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IS NOW A<lb/>
For 2 Da<lb/>
You<lb/>
Wt"<lb/>
unti<lb/>
<lb/>
-?<lb/>
, <lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL ?. 193<lb/>
P&amp;<lb/>
il<lb/>
e!<lb/>
 Porkers<lb/>
hered in<lb/>
? end<lb/>
ter).<lb/>
ple who<lb/>
-ed as<lb/>
v a<lb/>
i j<lb/>
10 make<lb/>
dining<lb/>
smuggle<lb/>
country<lb/>
aid ever<lb/>
 pizza<lb/>
e them<lb/>
pie<lb/>
because<lb/>
h<lb/>
v Cl<lb/>
to bed<lb/>
ople who<lb/>
t Chinese<lb/>
o buy a<lb/>
I<lb/>
did<lb/>
ons ac-<lb/>
i whose<lb/>
) ?ere<lb/>
-lhted<lb/>
lo request<lb/>
ng alone.<lb/>
jren after<lb/>
Is People<lb/>
r i -allon<lb/>
)ur later<lb/>
id potato<lb/>
ometimes<lb/>
triple) chins. People who always look<lb/>
like they're aching to take a bite out of<lb/>
our furniture. People who give kids a<lb/>
thrill simply by diving into a swimming<lb/>
pool People whose pants and shirts<lb/>
come with stakes, poles and tie-downs.<lb/>
People who freshen their breath after a<lb/>
big meal with a half gallon of mint chip<lb/>
ice cream and a box of York peppermint<lb/>
patties. People who carry a picture of<lb/>
Orson Welles in their wallets and think<lb/>
11 Taylor looks sexier now than ever.<lb/>
People who you'd like to hide under<lb/>
during an air raid. People who make<lb/>
playhouses for their kids out of old<lb/>
clothing boxes. People whose furniture<lb/>
and cars you actually feel sorry for. Peo-<lb/>
ple doomed to resemble the infamous<lb/>
"Before" pictures their entire lives.<lb/>
I'm talking about people who sit on<lb/>
:ks and find out about it three days<lb/>
later in the shower. People who never<lb/>
have to worry about closing an overstuf-<lb/>
fed suitcase. People who are constantly<lb/>
mistaken for the Michelin tire man. Peo-<lb/>
ple who take seven hours to play a round<lb/>
of golf because even time they get out<lb/>
of the cart, they have to replace at least<lb/>
two big divots. People who frighten pool<lb/>
lifeguards bv swimming in the deep end<lb/>
and small children and their mothers by<lb/>
swimming in the shallow end. People<lb/>
who fast for three hours and lose five<lb/>
pounds. People who play the Roman ar-<lb/>
my in Julius Caesar.<lb/>
1 guess what I'm trying to say is these<lb/>
people are, well FAT<lb/>
Oh, damn now I forgot what I was<lb/>
going to say about them.<lb/>
Editor's Sole: Mike Hughes, who<lb/>
likes belching under water to analyze the<lb/>
different bubble formations, once<lb/>
weighed a hefty 166 pounds but is now a<lb/>
Jit 158. He hopes there aren't as many<lb/>
fat people on campus as there are Mor-<lb/>
mons.<lb/>
g Education?<lb/>
Free Speech?<lb/>
imber of<lb/>
lot" ROTC<lb/>
espect the<lb/>
the right<lb/>
is request<lb/>
ml in that<lb/>
e refused<lb/>
taken an<lb/>
feel his<lb/>
rticipating<lb/>
lis belong-<lb/>
demed his<lb/>
cpression?<lb/>
hals have<lb/>
ireer was<lb/>
:ould they<lb/>
hpation in<lb/>
it's possi-<lb/>
t stifle it.<lb/>
Irsham feel<lb/>
s there an<lb/>
keeps its<lb/>
?g in their<lb/>
fsham just<lb/>
because<lb/>
lation like<lb/>
ler ROTC<lb/>
to write a<lb/>
classes on<lb/>
ftee. After<lb/>
Jaker was<lb/>
jle for the<lb/>
ler about<lb/>
ry on the<lb/>
rate. She<lb/>
Uend GPC<lb/>
ckersham,<lb/>
jeopardy<lb/>
if the situation were reported in the cam-<lb/>
pus newspaper.<lb/>
Following our conversation, Baker<lb/>
telephoned The East Carolinian and ask-<lb/>
ed News Editor Greg Rideout not to<lb/>
print a story about the incident. She also<lb/>
contacted the Media Board to stop the<lb/>
presses.<lb/>
Tht story was never written, because<lb/>
the facts were speculative, but both of<lb/>
these incidents bring certain ROTC<lb/>
policies (written or unwritten) into ques-<lb/>
tion, it would appear that at least two<lb/>
ROTC cadets are afraid to express their<lb/>
opinions to their own campus<lb/>
newspaper. This fact alone makes me<lb/>
wonde- about the censorship policies of<lb/>
the U.S. military.<lb/>
It's no secret that former Vietnam<lb/>
Commanding General William<lb/>
Westmoreland, now touring the college<lb/>
ecture circuit, blames the media for the<lb/>
United States loss in that conflict.<lb/>
Westmoreland has even gone so far as to<lb/>
call for a "blackout" of the press in the<lb/>
event that the U.S. should involve itself<lb/>
in a similar conflict. I'm sure many U.S.<lb/>
military leaders are of the same opinion.<lb/>
Westmoreland's suggestion raises an<lb/>
almost unlimited number of questions.<lb/>
" s tn8htenmg, to say the least. Would<lb/>
ne go so far as to jail reporters? Close<lb/>
down newspapers?<lb/>
Could it be that our own campus<lb/>
wll 1S f a Position similar to<lb/>
Westmoreland's?<lb/>
It's a shame that Wickersham and<lb/>
ri!hfr,thcy'vc "Sned away their<lb/>
IhVm l?Kfr ?Pre?ionf but it's more a<lb/>
shame that the ECU ROTC has instilled<lb/>
Su? S studenls ?? h? ere0 a<lb/>
?m ta" them and tfieir campus<lb/>
newspaper.<lb/>
U-<lb/>
Alcohol Fair Offers Information, Samples<lb/>
The West Area<lb/>
Residence Council<lb/>
and the Campus<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program will be co-<lb/>
sponsoring an<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness<lb/>
Fair Wednesday to<lb/>
give students sugges-<lb/>
tions on responsible<lb/>
alcohol consumption.<lb/>
The fair, which<lb/>
starts at 1 p.m. in the<lb/>
parking lot adjacent<lb/>
to Clement and White<lb/>
Residence Halls, is<lb/>
titled "West Area<lb/>
Gets High The<lb/>
primary goal of the<lb/>
fair is "to promote<lb/>
responsible drink-<lb/>
ing said Rose Mary<lb/>
Smith, Clement<lb/>
Residence Hall direc-<lb/>
tor, who is helping to<lb/>
organize the event.<lb/>
Smith is working with<lb/>
west area coordinator<lb/>
Janet Johnson, and<lb/>
the other west-area<lb/>
residence hall direc-<lb/>
tors to present the<lb/>
four-hour fair.<lb/>
The fair will feature<lb/>
a series of activities<lb/>
including educational<lb/>
booths, Breathalyzer<lb/>
tests, coordination<lb/>
drills and films. The<lb/>
Breathalyzer tests will<lb/>
be administered by<lb/>
the N.C. Highway<lb/>
Patrol and the ECU<lb/>
Campus Police. Some<lb/>
of the students who<lb/>
participate in the tests<lb/>
will be drinking beer<lb/>
in controlled amounts<lb/>
and competing in<lb/>
events with those who<lb/>
have not had any<lb/>
alcohol.<lb/>
The coordination<lb/>
drills will include<lb/>
several games to test<lb/>
participants<lb/>
manipulative skills<lb/>
such as a ring toss and<lb/>
peg game. An<lb/>
obstacle course which<lb/>
will include running,<lb/>
jump roping and a<lb/>
tricycle race around<lb/>
cones will be ad-<lb/>
ministered to both<lb/>
alcohol and non-<lb/>
alcohol drinking par-<lb/>
ticipants.<lb/>
For non-alcohol<lb/>
drinkers the fair will<lb/>
offer a bar serving<lb/>
alternative non-<lb/>
alcoholic beverages.<lb/>
The recipes for the<lb/>
drinks will come from<lb/>
a booklet titled "It's<lb/>
Party Time which<lb/>
was prepared by the<lb/>
Virginia Polytechnic<lb/>
Institute and State<lb/>
Hollings Throws Hat Into Ring<lb/>
For '84 Democratic Nomination<lb/>
COLUMBIA, S.C.<lb/>
(UPI) - Sen. Ernest<lb/>
Hollings, pledging to<lb/>
put Americans back<lb/>
to work and bolster<lb/>
the nation's role in<lb/>
world trade, today an-<lb/>
nounced his can-<lb/>
didacy for the 1984<lb/>
Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial nomination.<lb/>
Under the glare of<lb/>
TV lights and popping<lb/>
flashbulbs, Hollings<lb/>
accused President<lb/>
Reagan of catering to<lb/>
University. Copies of<lb/>
the booklet will be<lb/>
distributed at the fair.<lb/>
The booklet also<lb/>
gives students several<lb/>
suggestions on<lb/>
hosting and planning<lb/>
parties that will in-<lb/>
clude reponsible<lb/>
drinking. The booklet<lb/>
points out that a ma-<lb/>
jor part of being a<lb/>
responsible host is to<lb/>
provide for the safety<lb/>
of your party.goers. It<lb/>
suggests that special<lb/>
attention be given to<lb/>
the travel ar-<lb/>
rangements of party<lb/>
goers who consume<lb/>
alcohol. It also sug-<lb/>
gests that the host<lb/>
provide an assortment<lb/>
of "attractive" non-<lb/>
alcoholic beverages<lb/>
and not pressure non-<lb/>
drinkers to imbibe.<lb/>
"selfish, individual<lb/>
interests at the ex-<lb/>
pense of the common<lb/>
good" and criticized<lb/>
the Democratic Party<lb/>
for "losing the faith<lb/>
of the American peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
"Every time a pro-<lb/>
blem arose, we of-<lb/>
fered a single solution<lb/>
? spend more<lb/>
money he said.<lb/>
"For generations,<lb/>
Democrats appealed<lb/>
to the American peo-<lb/>
ple as a majority<lb/>
Hollings said. "For<lb/>
generations,<lb/>
Democrats managed<lb/>
the economy respon-<lb/>
sibly. We will not be<lb/>
returned to the White<lb/>
House until we prove<lb/>
we can do this again<lb/>
Hollings told a<lb/>
crowd of about 300<lb/>
chanting supporters<lb/>
that one of the coun-<lb/>
try's biggest<lb/>
challenges is "our<lb/>
need to prepare<lb/>
America for survival<lb/>
and success in the<lb/>
global economic con-<lb/>
test<lb/>
"We have the<lb/>
resources to win he<lb/>
said at a technical col-<lb/>
lege he helped<lb/>
establish as governor<lb/>
of South Carolina.<lb/>
"We have the human<lb/>
ingenuity, the in-<lb/>
dustrial muscle, the<lb/>
iscientific imagination<lb/>
and the financial<lb/>
strength<lb/>
Discrimination Suit Upheld<lb/>
(CPS) ? Another<lb/>
court has ruled that a<lb/>
predominatly-black<lb/>
Georgia college un-<lb/>
fairly discriminated<lb/>
against a white faculty<lb/>
member.<lb/>
Savannah State<lb/>
College now wants a<lb/>
federal appeals court<lb/>
to reconsider its<lb/>
February decision in<lb/>
favor of Dr. Anita<lb/>
Lincoln, a former<lb/>
home economics<lb/>
teacher at the school.<lb/>
Lincoln contends<lb/>
that Savannah State<lb/>
didn't renew her con-<lb/>
tract in 1978-79<lb/>
because she is white.<lb/>
Two-thirds of the<lb/>
school's staff and stu-<lb/>
dent body are black<lb/>
Last year a Georgia<lb/>
district court agreed<lb/>
that Lincoln's con-<lb/>
tract would have been<lb/>
renewed "but for<lb/>
discrimination and<lb/>
ordered the college to<lb/>
pay her back salary<lb/>
and court costs.<lb/>
The University<lb/>
System of Georgia,<lb/>
which runs the col-<lb/>
lege, then appealed to<lb/>
the U.S. Eleventh Cir-<lb/>
cuit Court of Ap-<lb/>
peals, which ruled in<lb/>
Lincoln's favor in<lb/>
February.<lb/>
"We're asking for a<lb/>
re-hearing now in<lb/>
order to get due pro-<lb/>
cess says University<lb/>
System of Georgia at-<lb/>
torney Al Evans. "If<lb/>
we don't get recon-<lb/>
sideration, I suspect<lb/>
we'll ask for a (U.S.)<lb/>
Supreme Court<lb/>
review.<lb/>
Evans says Savan-<lb/>
nah State ad-<lb/>
ministrators were not<lb/>
guilty of race<lb/>
discrimination in<lb/>
refusing to renew Lin-<lb/>
coln's contract.<lb/>
Among other things,<lb/>
he charges, Lincoln's<lb/>
defense was unfairly<lb/>
weighted by testimony<lb/>
from former Savan-<lb/>
nah State President<lb/>
Prince Jackson.<lb/>
Jackson "has made<lb/>
it a point to testify<lb/>
against the college in a<lb/>
number of other court<lb/>
cases" since resigning<lb/>
his post, Evans says.<lb/>
"We always see an<lb/>
increase in sex and<lb/>
race discrimination<lb/>
suits during reces-<lb/>
sionary time Evans<lb/>
adds. "But we win 90<lb/>
percent of the time<lb/>
because the courts<lb/>
realize instructors are<lb/>
reaching for anything<lb/>
to defend their jobs<lb/>
Gil Stacy, Lincoln's<lb/>
attorney, expects the<lb/>
appeals court to deny<lb/>
the request for a re-<lb/>
hearing, and says his<lb/>
client is satisfied with<lb/>
the outcome of the<lb/>
three-year-old case.<lb/>
"I think we proved<lb/>
our main point: that<lb/>
race was the critical<lb/>
issue in not renewing<lb/>
her contract Stacy<lb/>
adds. "It just goes to<lb/>
show that racism<lb/>
doesn't have any col-<lb/>
or boundries<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE STUDENT UNION<lb/>
BOARD OF DIRECTORS <lb/>
IS NOW ACCEPTING APPLICATIONS<lb/>
For 2 Day Representatives for 1983-84<lb/>
You can pick up applications at<lb/>
MendenhalVs information desk<lb/>
until April 19,1983 at 5:00p.m.<lb/>
??<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
Presents In Concert<lb/>
NITTY GRITTYI<lb/>
DIRT BAND<lb/>
afcasv<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
APRIL 22<lb/>
Extra Added Attraction<lb/>
SUPER GRIT COWBOY BAND<lb/>
ADVANCE TICKETS<lb/>
$9.00 PER PERSON<lb/>
ADVANCE TICKET LOCATIONS<lb/>
MMMMM vitm mik , uuiMim not ?<lb/>
KKO?l' ? K r " I U <lb/>
FOR FURTHER INFORMATION<lb/>
CALL 750-3943<lb/>
,M A <lb/>
4444444<lb/>
According to Smith<lb/>
several educational<lb/>
booths will be set-up<lb/>
and "lots of free<lb/>
literature" will be<lb/>
available. The ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine<lb/>
will have two booths<lb/>
set-up dealing with<lb/>
the health related<lb/>
aspects of alcohol<lb/>
consumption. The<lb/>
medical schools'<lb/>
booths will deal with<lb/>
fetal alcohol syn-<lb/>
drome, a disease that<lb/>
effects unborn infants<lb/>
of pregnant mothers<lb/>
who drink, and the ef-<lb/>
fects of alcohol on the<lb/>
brain.<lb/>
The Student Health<lb/>
Center will also set-up<lb/>
a booth that will help<lb/>
students to identify<lb/>
"the invisable<lb/>
alcoholic" among<lb/>
their friends and<lb/>
classmates. This per-<lb/>
son may have a drink-<lb/>
ing problem that no<lb/>
one else is aware of.<lb/>
Smith claims that<lb/>
Alcohol Awareness<lb/>
Fairs are nothing new<lb/>
to N.C. college cam-<lb/>
puses. She claims that<lb/>
N.C. State and UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro have<lb/>
recently held similar<lb/>
events. "Any college<lb/>
campus is going to<lb/>
have drinking and we<lb/>
just want to present<lb/>
the facts to the<lb/>
students Smith<lb/>
said. "We're not be-<lb/>
ing prohibitionists;<lb/>
we're just trying to<lb/>
promote responsible<lb/>
drinking Smith<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The fair is open to<lb/>
the entire campus<lb/>
community. Johnson<lb/>
said all students are<lb/>
encouraged to come<lb/>
out and try one of the<lb/>
alternative beverages<lb/>
or visit the booths.<lb/>
"I'd love to see a<lb/>
large turnout she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
"If drinking is go-<lb/>
ing to occur on college<lb/>
campuses then we<lb/>
want our students<lb/>
-western<lb/>
Sizzlm<lb/>
TV<lb/>
Weekend<lb/>
Greenville.N.C.<lb/>
Special<lb/>
April 22,23 &amp; 24<lb/>
Bay 8oz. N.Y. Strip Reg. Price $5.89<lb/>
Pay only price S2.9S 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/>
Featuring Prime Rib<lb/>
Every FriSot. Night<lb/>
Now Serving 14ozT-Bone<lb/>
April Lunch Specials Mon-Sat 11-2<lb/>
Jr. Sirloin $2.19 wsalad oar $3.19<lb/>
Chopped Sirloin $2.49<lb/>
wsalad bar $3.49<lb/>
jflb. Hamburger wBaked Pot. $1.89<lb/>
wsalad bar $2.89<lb/>
Baked Potato wsalad bar $2.50<lb/>
2903 EL 10th St. 759-2712<lb/>
500 w. GrenvMt Blvd. 736-0040<lb/>
SOPHIES CHOICE<lb/>
Plaza<lb/>
cinema<lb/>
here at East Carolina<lb/>
to be among the<lb/>
responsible<lb/>
drinkers said<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Helping Smith and<lb/>
Johnson are Kathleen<lb/>
Braswell, Dawn<lb/>
Carpenter, Susan<lb/>
Kennedy and Vanessa<lb/>
Higdon, the other<lb/>
West Area residence<lb/>
hall coordinators.<lb/>
The fair is slated to<lb/>
end at 5 p.m. and in<lb/>
the event of ram<lb/>
snow) the fair will be<lb/>
moved into the lob-<lb/>
bies of Clement and<lb/>
White Hails.<lb/>
- CciWlUE<lb/>
A cod my<lb/>
A word Winner<lb/>
Best Actress<lb/>
Mofyl Snttp<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
7:30 only<lb/>
SAT. &amp; SUN<lb/>
(R) 2:45-5:30-8:15<lb/>
756-0088<lb/>
PITT-PLAZA SHOPPING CENTER<lb/>
Register For<lb/>
Three days &amp; two<lb/>
nights at Myrtle<lb/>
Beach, Plus<lb/>
$104.00<lb/>
In<lb/>
Cash<lb/>
f<lb/>
All<lb/>
Seats<lb/>
$2.00<lb/>
First<lb/>
Show<lb/>
Held Over<lb/>
4th<lb/>
Big Week!<lb/>
Like its really,<lb/>
totally, the most fun<lb/>
a couple of bodies<lb/>
can have. You know?<lb/>
MonFri. 3:00-7:05-9:00<lb/>
Sot.A Sun 3:15-5:10-7.05-9:00<lb/>
E.C.IL Major Attractions<lb/>
Committee Presents:<lb/>
Wh0: Evelyn King wSpecial guest<lb/>
DazzBand<lb/>
when- Saturday,April 23,8:00pm<lb/>
Where: Minges 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/>
A t The Door<lb/>
$9.50<lb/>
i4?i <lb/>
?tejjfj<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0006"/><lb/>
6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 19, 1983<lb/>
1<lb/>
Handicap A wareness Week Proves Successful<lb/>
Despite low atten-<lb/>
dance, the activities of<lb/>
Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week were<lb/>
a success, claims ECU<lb/>
graduate student<lb/>
Kathy Wilson, a<lb/>
member of the com-<lb/>
mittee that organized<lb/>
the three-day event<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
"Wising up on the<lb/>
Handicapped was<lb/>
the theme of the event<lb/>
with activities co- the problems and<lb/>
sponsored by the Stu- capabilities of the<lb/>
dent Government handicapped as well<lb/>
Association and the as resources available<lb/>
Pitt County Commit- to them. Wilson add-<lb/>
throughout the week<lb/>
and Thursday. She Choir, a choir con- tions working with the Matching Game: XVhree students arc<lb/>
also said the evening prised of severely- to handicapped in the Handicapped People nm graduate<lb/>
events drew greater<lb/>
participation.<lb/>
Wilson said the<lb/>
profoundly-retarded<lb/>
members, many of<lb/>
whom also have<lb/>
tee for Employment ed that the purpose of Tuesday evening pro- multiple physical han-<lb/>
.?. i ? ? II J: llli 1<lb/>
Pitt County area, and Jobs" was<lb/>
Students were also presented by Dr.<lb/>
able to participate in Stephen Thomas, an<lb/>
simulation activities ECU assistant pro<lb/>
of the Handicapped<lb/>
Wilson said the<lb/>
purpose of Handicap<lb/>
Awareness Week was<lb/>
to stimulate, within<lb/>
the ECU Campus and<lb/>
Greenville communi-<lb/>
tv, an awareness of<lb/>
the event was achiev-<lb/>
ed for those who par-<lb/>
ticipated.<lb/>
The first day of the<lb/>
program was the<lb/>
slowest, Wilson said,<lb/>
but things "picked<lb/>
up" on Wednesday<lb/>
gram was especially dicapps. "It was just<lb/>
good. She praised remarkable to be able<lb/>
ECU attorney David to see a group so han-<lb/>
Stevens and keynote dicapped preforming<lb/>
speaker Chet Motter- the way they did<lb/>
Lanier Advises 'People<lb/>
For The American Way'<lb/>
shead for their<lb/>
remarks. Mottershead<lb/>
is N.C. Liaison for<lb/>
the International Year<lb/>
of Disabled Persons.<lb/>
Wilson said the<lb/>
highlight of the even<lb/>
Wilson said. "1 think<lb/>
the people who saw<lb/>
their performance<lb/>
really had their eyes<lb/>
opened<lb/>
The activities of the<lb/>
week also featured<lb/>
was a perfor- booth exhibits set up<lb/>
mance by the Caswell by various organiza-<lb/>
doing their graduate<lb/>
work in the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Rehabilita-<lb/>
tion Counseling<lb/>
Wilson said the<lb/>
Thursday evening per-<lb/>
evaiuanon. inu?r nf canias<lb/>
five PCOP.C induding ?!????&amp;<lb/>
Greenville Mayor Per- tcu st " ? <lb/>
cy Cox attended known ' song to sign<lb/>
Thomas' workshop. acting troupe -as a<lb/>
Wilson said the "great success and<lb/>
other members of the drew a laycdio<lb/>
panel, ECU graduate Wright Auditor unv<lb/>
students Sandy Fantasy haome<lb/>
Jackson and Betty ?JZ<lb/>
i mpioyer-inausma. Waters, were also musical interprc<lb/>
Workshop entitled disappointed with the of songs through sign<lb/>
"The Computerized lack of participation language.<lb/>
that allowed them to<lb/>
experience handicaps<lb/>
such as blindness,<lb/>
deafness and confine-<lb/>
ment to a wheelchair.<lb/>
Numerous lectures<lb/>
and films were held as<lb/>
part of the educa-<lb/>
tional activities of the<lb/>
week. On Wednesday<lb/>
morning an<lb/>
Employer-Industrial<lb/>
fessor in vocational<lb/>
evaluation. Thirty-<lb/>
C. C. Rowe. dire.<lb/>
lor of handicapp su<lb/>
dent services, agre<lb/>
with the commute?<lb/>
that participation jv<lb/>
low, but he praised<lb/>
this year's event as the<lb/>
best Handicapp<lb/>
Awareness Week<lb/>
gram of the three thai<lb/>
have been held<lb/>
was a very complete<lb/>
program, perhaps<lb/>
best we've ever had.<lb/>
Rowe said <lb/>
never have the k<lb/>
participation . . j<lb/>
like to have U<lb/>
bit low but overall<lb/>
it went ver e<lb/>
Laing Selected<lb/>
Evaluate Progrj<lb/>
Of Ca. Art Scl<lb/>
Dr. Gene Lanier of<lb/>
the East Carolina<lb/>
I niversity library<lb/>
science faculty,<lb/>
recognized as a<lb/>
spokesman for first<lb/>
amendment<lb/>
freedoms, has been<lb/>
appointed to the ad-<lb/>
visory group of the<lb/>
new North Carolina<lb/>
office of People for<lb/>
the American Way.<lb/>
The national, non-<lb/>
profit organization<lb/>
was founded three<lb/>
years ago by telev ision<lb/>
writer-producer Nor-<lb/>
man Lear and others<lb/>
to promote and pro-<lb/>
tect individual rights<lb/>
and freedoms.<lb/>
The<lb/>
10 0,000-member<lb/>
orgainzation has<lb/>
become known na-<lb/>
tionally for work on<lb/>
behalf of religious<lb/>
tolerance and free<lb/>
speech and against<lb/>
censorship in schools<lb/>
and libraries.<lb/>
According to Barry<lb/>
Hager of Winston-<lb/>
Salem, director of the<lb/>
N.C. office. North<lb/>
Carolina was the fifth<lb/>
state selected to have<lb/>
its own office because<lb/>
it was regarded as<lb/>
"one of the states<lb/>
where we see threats<lb/>
to constitutional<lb/>
freedoms as being<lb/>
particularly visible<lb/>
The state office was<lb/>
established with the<lb/>
aid of a $90,000 grant<lb/>
fromt he Z. Smith<lb/>
Reynolds Founda-<lb/>
tion. It will work<lb/>
closely with the N.C.<lb/>
Association of<lb/>
Educators and the<lb/>
N.C. Library Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Other advisory<lb/>
group appointees in-<lb/>
clude Rev. Claude<lb/>
Broach, former direc-<lb/>
tor of the Ecumenical<lb/>
Institute of Wake<lb/>
Forest University;<lb/>
Greensboro teacher<lb/>
Cecil Banks; Dr. K.<lb/>
Z. Chavis, associate<lb/>
executive secretary of<lb/>
the N.C. Association<lb/>
of Educators; Rev.<lb/>
Collins Kilburn, ex-<lb/>
ecutive director of the<lb/>
N.C. Council of<lb/>
Churches; Elizabeth<lb/>
Duncan Koontz,<lb/>
former Assistant State<lb/>
Superintendent of<lb/>
Public Instruction;<lb/>
Martha McKay,<lb/>
former chairperson<lb/>
for the N.C.<lb/>
Women's Political<lb/>
Caucus; Grace<lb/>
Rohrer, former N.C.<lb/>
Secretary of Human<lb/>
Resources and<lb/>
Greensboro attorney<lb/>
McNeill Smith.<lb/>
JOLLY'S PAWN SHOP<lb/>
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stretch it out over the summer . . . fill m on your academic weakness<lb/>
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you're in Charlotte this summer, even if you're working. Classes for<lb/>
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Short terms May 16-June 3. June 6-24. June 27-July 16 Long term June 6-July 16<lb/>
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Just in time tor finalsNo coupon to hassle<lb/>
Domino's Pizza announceswith Now. through May<lb/>
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with real pizza, our<lb/>
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Enjoy our specials now<lb/>
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?1983 Domino's Ptaza, tat<lb/>
??Mi<lb/>
Dr Richard H I a<lb/>
ing, dean off the ECl<lb/>
School of V will<lb/>
travel to southern<lb/>
California next month<lb/>
to evaluate three ?<lb/>
universitv art de;<lb/>
ments and to advise<lb/>
California's Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education<lb/>
concerning which two<lb/>
of the three scl<lb/>
should offer the<lb/>
Master r Fine '?<lb/>
degree<lb/>
The<lb/>
tie wi<lb/>
U n i v?<lb/>
iifornia at<lb/>
Angeles, Full<lb/>
and San Diego I<lb/>
elected<lb/>
three :<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
mender I<lb/>
ai V<lb/>
Sch- ?. fj<lb/>
1 aing<lb/>
four d<lb/>
visitor<lb/>
analvzing<lb/>
hie<lb/>
in the<lb/>
Walesa Ti<lb/>
WARSAW <lb/>
( L P1?<lb/>
Wales i<lb/>
t h? bam<lb/>
S iai<lb/>
by I<lb/>
while<lb/>
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W aksa -<lb/>
into custod<lb/>
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?<lb/>
had let: <lb/>
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194? ret<lb/>
Nazi - -<lb/>
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CUS1 ,v<lb/>
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militia<lb/>
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bur released<lb/>
tha two<lb/>
Police ill<lb/>
said Wak<lb/>
<lb/>
Air crican clevis<lb/>
of him 1<lb/>
.<lb/>
v a 1 e ? a " -<lb/>
. . . its<lb/>
Witnesses<lb/>
(Treatthe<lb/>
the<lb/>
1<lb/>
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Mon<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
Two pizzas for th<lb/>
P.T.A.<lb/>
Call<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 19, 1983<lb/>
ccessful<lb/>
out the ?eek<lb/>
ee students trt<lb/>
hcii graduate<lb/>
the Dtp<lb/>
Rehabilita<lb/>
tinseling<lb/>
n said the<lb/>
U evening per<lb/>
k- o I antasy,<lb/>
?alls<lb/>
sign"<lb/>
a as a<lb/>
and<lb/>
vd 10<lb/>
?.um.<lb/>
ome<lb/>
: heir<lb/>
P B '<lb/>
1<lb/>
C C. Rowe, direc-<lb/>
tor of handicapp stu-<lb/>
dent services, agreed<lb/>
vuth the committee<lb/>
that participation was<lb/>
tow. but he praised<lb/>
this ear's event as the<lb/>
host H a n d i c a p p<lb/>
wareness Week pro<lb/>
k:iam of the three that<lb/>
have been held. "It<lb/>
?av a ver complete<lb/>
program, perhaps the<lb/>
best we've ever had<lb/>
Rowe said. "You<lb/>
never have the level of<lb/>
participation you'd<lb/>
like to have. It was a<lb/>
bit low but overall<lb/>
it went verv wel' "<lb/>
TM<lb/>
9 Center<lb/>
Laing Selected To<lb/>
Evaluate Programs<lb/>
Of Ca. Art Schools<lb/>
Dr. Richard H. La-<lb/>
ing, dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art, will<lb/>
travel to southern<lb/>
California next month<lb/>
to evaluate three state<lb/>
university art depart-<lb/>
ments and to advise<lb/>
California's Depart-<lb/>
ment of Education<lb/>
concerning which two<lb/>
of the three schools<lb/>
should offer the<lb/>
Master of Fine Arts<lb/>
degree.<lb/>
The three campuses<lb/>
he will visit are the<lb/>
Universities of<lb/>
California at Los<lb/>
Angeles, Fullerton<lb/>
and San Diego. Laing<lb/>
was selected by all<lb/>
three from a national<lb/>
list of possible<lb/>
evaluators recom-<lb/>
mended by the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of<lb/>
Schools of Art and<lb/>
Design.<lb/>
Laing will spend<lb/>
four days as the sole<lb/>
visitor for the project,<lb/>
analyzing the current<lb/>
support systems for<lb/>
offering the MFA, the<lb/>
highest studio degree<lb/>
in the art field.<lb/>
In addition to his<lb/>
career as an art<lb/>
educator and active<lb/>
exhibitor of his own<lb/>
work, Laing has been<lb/>
an art curriculum ad-<lb/>
ministrator at North<lb/>
Ford Guilty Of Non-Registration<lb/>
Dean Richard Laing<lb/>
Texas State Universi-<lb/>
ty, Ball State Univer-<lb/>
sity and Edinboro<lb/>
(Pa.) State College, as<lb/>
well as at ECU.<lb/>
He has also served<lb/>
as a consultant for<lb/>
numerous art educa-<lb/>
tion programs<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
Walesa Taken In Custody<lb/>
WARSAW, Poland<lb/>
(UPI) Lech<lb/>
Walesa, forniwr leader<lb/>
of the banned<lb/>
Solidarity trade<lb/>
union, was arrested<lb/>
by Polish police today<lb/>
while driving to War-<lb/>
saw to take part in<lb/>
memorial ceremonies<lb/>
for victims of a<lb/>
Jewish ghetto upris-<lb/>
ing, witnesses said.<lb/>
Walesa was taken<lb/>
into custody near<lb/>
Olsztyn, 130 miles<lb/>
north of Warsaw. He<lb/>
had left his home in<lb/>
Gdansk by car earlier<lb/>
in the dav to pay<lb/>
tribute to the 60.000<lb/>
Jews who died in the<lb/>
1943 rebellion against<lb/>
Nazi occupation<lb/>
forces.<lb/>
A CBS-TV news<lb/>
crew behind Walesa in<lb/>
a separate car also<lb/>
was taken into<lb/>
custody. Witnesses<lb/>
said they were taken<lb/>
to militia head-<lb/>
quarters in Olsztyn.<lb/>
but released more<lb/>
than two hours later.<lb/>
Police in Olsztyn<lb/>
said Walesa also had<lb/>
been released, but the<lb/>
American television<lb/>
crew said they saw no<lb/>
sign of him. There<lb/>
was no other word on<lb/>
Walesa's<lb/>
whereabouts.<lb/>
Witnesses said a<lb/>
Catholic priest who<lb/>
was riding with<lb/>
Walesa, the Rev.<lb/>
Henryk Jankowski of<lb/>
Gdansk, also was ar-<lb/>
rested. Witnesses said<lb/>
they were riding in<lb/>
Jankowski's car when<lb/>
it was stopped.<lb/>
It was the second<lb/>
time in a week Polish<lb/>
police detained<lb/>
Walesa. On Wednes-<lb/>
day, Walesa was<lb/>
taken from his Gdan-<lb/>
sk home and ques-<lb/>
tioned for five hours<lb/>
about his secret<lb/>
meetings with leaders<lb/>
of the Solidarity<lb/>
underground.<lb/>
Danuta Walesa was<lb/>
detained the following<lb/>
day for 2 hours, but<lb/>
said she refused to<lb/>
answer questions<lb/>
about her husband's<lb/>
contacts with the<lb/>
fugitive Solidarity<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Walesa was travel-<lb/>
ing to Warsaw to<lb/>
place flowers at two<lb/>
of the memorial sites<lb/>
honoring the Jewish<lb/>
martyrs.<lb/>
"I respect those<lb/>
people who fell for<lb/>
ideals similar to those<lb/>
many of us hold<lb/>
dear Walesa said<lb/>
Saturday. "I am not<lb/>
giving up. I'll lay<lb/>
flowers and a wreath<lb/>
with a ribbon<lb/>
Poland's com-<lb/>
munist ruler, Gen.<lb/>
Wojciech Jaruzelski,<lb/>
met visiting Jewish<lb/>
leaders and pledged to<lb/>
curb anti-Semitism in<lb/>
Poland, a participant<lb/>
in the meeting said.<lb/>
Rabbi Moshe<lb/>
Rosen, the chief<lb/>
Jewish clergyman of<lb/>
Romania, disclosed<lb/>
the meeting in a<lb/>
speech during<lb/>
ceremonies re-<lb/>
dedicating the War-<lb/>
saw synagogue,<lb/>
restored by the regime<lb/>
as part of observances<lb/>
of the anniversary of<lb/>
the Jewish ghetto<lb/>
uprising.<lb/>
"The Polish<lb/>
government is<lb/>
fighting anti-<lb/>
Semitism, the premier<lb/>
assured us1 Rosen<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Israeli sources said<lb/>
Jaruzelski met with<lb/>
Stefan Grayek, a<lb/>
leading member of the<lb/>
Israeli delegation of<lb/>
350 visiting Warsaw<lb/>
for the ghetto obser-<lb/>
vances, and Rabbi<lb/>
Yitzhak Frenkel of<lb/>
Tel Aviv.<lb/>
More than 1,000<lb/>
Solidarity supporters<lb/>
gathered at the monu-<lb/>
ment Sunday for a<lb/>
peaceful demonstra-<lb/>
tion despite police op-<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"If the heroes of<lb/>
the ghetto were alive<lb/>
today, I am sure they<lb/>
would join us in our<lb/>
fight for freedom,<lb/>
truth and human<lb/>
dignity said Janusz<lb/>
Onyszkiewicy, a<lb/>
former Solidarity of-<lb/>
ficial interned for a<lb/>
year during martial<lb/>
law.<lb/>
Onyszkiewicy was<lb/>
arrested after Sun-<lb/>
day's demonstration,<lb/>
but no other arrests<lb/>
were known to have<lb/>
been made on Sun-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Scores of uniform-<lb/>
ed police and several<lb/>
busloads of<lb/>
plainclothes officers<lb/>
watched the<lb/>
demonstration, adver-<lb/>
tised in advance by<lb/>
underground hand-<lb/>
bills simply as a<lb/>
imemorial service.<lb/>
It was not clear why<lb/>
authorities felt it<lb/>
necessary to try to<lb/>
disperse the crowd.<lb/>
Jewish delegations<lb/>
have arrived in<lb/>
Poland from the<lb/>
United States, Israel<lb/>
and other countries<lb/>
for official<lb/>
ceremonies and ex-<lb/>
hibits organized by<lb/>
the Polish govern-<lb/>
ment for this week's<lb/>
40th anniversary of<lb/>
the uprising.<lb/>
Draft registration<lb/>
resister Russell Ford<lb/>
was convicted Thurs-<lb/>
day in a Federal Court<lb/>
on charges of failing<lb/>
to register for the<lb/>
military draft. The<lb/>
jury deliberated 10<lb/>
minutes before<lb/>
deciding. Ford is the<lb/>
first American since<lb/>
the Vietnam war to<lb/>
spend time in prison<lb/>
for draft registration<lb/>
refusal.<lb/>
Ford visited ECU in<lb/>
February at the invita-<lb/>
tion of the Greenville<lb/>
Peace Committee.<lb/>
After the convic-<lb/>
tion was announced, a<lb/>
number of Ford's<lb/>
supporters were<lb/>
cleared from tho cour-<lb/>
troom by Judge M.<lb/>
Joseph Blumenfeld<lb/>
for disruption.<lb/>
No date has been<lb/>
set for sentencing.<lb/>
Ford's supporters<lb/>
held rallies outside the<lb/>
courtroom<lb/>
throughout the trial.<lb/>
Some protestors had<lb/>
to be carried from the<lb/>
premises after refus-<lb/>
ing to leave.<lb/>
During a short pre-<lb/>
trial conference with<lb/>
the judge, Ford was<lb/>
denied a motion to<lb/>
dismiss the charges<lb/>
against him on the<lb/>
grounds that<lb/>
resistance to war is<lb/>
not a crime. "He<lb/>
denied that without<lb/>
even reading the mo-<lb/>
tion Ford said.<lb/>
Ford acted as his<lb/>
own attorney,<lb/>
although he received<lb/>
legal advice during the<lb/>
trial. He was given the<lb/>
opportunity to cross-<lb/>
examine witnesses at<lb/>
length including the<lb/>
U.S. attorney for the<lb/>
prosecution, an FBI<lb/>
agent and a represen-<lb/>
tative of the Selective<lb/>
Service System.<lb/>
"Almost all of the<lb/>
questions 1 raised<lb/>
were ruled irrelevant<lb/>
through the courts'<lb/>
refusal to deal with<lb/>
these questions<lb/>
Ford said, adding that<lb/>
he had prepared five<lb/>
pages of questions.<lb/>
"We were still able<lb/>
to bring a lot out<lb/>
through the ques-<lb/>
tions Ford said,<lb/>
"even though they<lb/>
weren't answered<lb/>
On his own behalf<lb/>
Ford invited two<lb/>
other "public non-<lb/>
registrants" who are<lb/>
also openly opposing<lb/>
the federal draft<lb/>
registration law. One<lb/>
of the resisters, John<lb/>
Bach, had been con-<lb/>
victed for draft<lb/>
refusal in<lb/>
Blumerfeld's cour-<lb/>
troom in 1969. Ford<lb/>
said Bach was "an in-<lb/>
spiration" to him dur-<lb/>
ing his ordeal.<lb/>
Ford, 19, faces a<lb/>
maximum of five<lb/>
years in prison and a<lb/>
$10,000 fine.<lb/>
Since Ford's indict-<lb/>
ment, several other<lb/>
draft registration<lb/>
resisters have been<lb/>
convicted and some<lb/>
have served prison<lb/>
time. Most are cur-<lb/>
rently free on appeal<lb/>
00<lb/>
bonds.<lb/>
During his<lb/>
February visit to<lb/>
ECU, Ford spoke to<lb/>
several hundred ECU<lb/>
students. He vistied<lb/>
ECU classrooms and<lb/>
several local schools.<lb/>
Ford told ECU<lb/>
students that he<lb/>
believed draft<lb/>
registration was only<lb/>
the first step in the<lb/>
government's plan to<lb/>
impose full scale con-<lb/>
scription and possibly<lb/>
get involved in a war.<lb/>
? ?i ??: ?<lb/>
$15tw OFFANY<lb/>
COMPLETE PAIR OF<lb/>
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Budweiser<lb/>
and<lb/>
Every<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
i<lb/>
j Treat the crew<lb/>
I "<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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and we'll treat youl<lb/>
Hawaiian Tropic<lb/>
Present<lb/>
The 2nd Annual<lb/>
Bahama Mama Party<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Tuesday<lb/>
Night<lb/>
No Coupon Necessary<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
II<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 tor 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 less.<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/>
wnen it comes to pizza, pta comes to you.<lb/>
Not qoofj with any other special<lb/>
The SUPER GRIT BAND and the<lb/>
Miss Hawaiian Tropic Bikini Contest!<lb/>
Monday, April 25 3:00 pm At<lb/>
The KAPPA SIGMA HOUSE<lb/>
P.T.A. "Had a piece lately" t-ShirtS<lb/>
now on sale<lb/>
Get yours today!<lb/>
Call P.T.A. for your order.<lb/>
QDffBaU)<lb/>
Coll 752-5543<lb/>
c-jfiaSas<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
APRIL 19. 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Production Of<lb/>
'Our Town'<lb/>
Huge Success<lb/>
Critically Acclaimed Comedy, 'My Favorite Year Showing Soon<lb/>
It's Comedy Cavalcade time when Peter O'Toole, as matinee Bruns looks on in 1982's critically acclaimed comedy My<lb/>
idol Alan Swann is a television guest on the top-rated live show, Favorite Year. The film will be shown at Hendrix Theatre this<lb/>
with host comedy star "King" Kaiser (Joseph Bologna, right) Thursday at 7 p.m. and this Friday and Saturday at 5, 7 and 9<lb/>
and "second banana" John Welsh (left), while "bit player" Phil p.m.<lb/>
Townshend Gives Us 'Scoop'<lb/>
By STEVE DEAR<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Pete Townshend<lb/>
Scoop<lb/>
Very few composers would be<lb/>
able to do what PeteTownshend<lb/>
has done on his new release,<lb/>
Scoop, a double-album con-<lb/>
sisting entirely of home and<lb/>
studio recordings. The album<lb/>
presents a fascinating collage of<lb/>
the origins of many of his own<lb/>
original, innovative musical crea-<lb/>
tions written between 1965 and<lb/>
1982.<lb/>
These twenty-six selections give<lb/>
an intimate look at Townshend's<lb/>
musical genius and the process<lb/>
that his songs went through<lb/>
before being either adapted and<lb/>
polished by the Who or simply<lb/>
abandoned. Originally, these<lb/>
recordings were "never intended<lb/>
to be heard by a wide audience<lb/>
as Townshend states in the liner<lb/>
notes. But the album does emerge<lb/>
as being a fine example "of how<lb/>
home recordings produce moods<lb/>
and music, innocence and naivete<lb/>
that could be arrived at in no<lb/>
other way<lb/>
His experiments with different<lb/>
sounds and a wide variety of in-<lb/>
struments (with a few exceptions,<lb/>
he plays all the instruments)<lb/>
heard in these recordings provide<lb/>
the basis for the powerful Who<lb/>
renditions. Upon listening to<lb/>
Townshend's original versions of<lb/>
"Behind Blue Eyes Magic<lb/>
Bus and "Love Reign O'er<lb/>
Me" it's easy to see how the<lb/>
music of the Who almost com-<lb/>
pletely depends on Townshend's<lb/>
own creativity and experimenta-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
This album dqes more than<lb/>
just give samples of original<lb/>
demos intended for the Who, it<lb/>
gives a "scoop" of what the real<lb/>
Pete Townshend, creative com-<lb/>
poser, is like ? not just "the"<lb/>
PeteTownshend, acrobatic lead<lb/>
guitarist for the Who.<lb/>
With examples of Townshend's<lb/>
instrumental such as his jazz<lb/>
guitar playing on "To Barney<lb/>
Kessel" (a guitarist extraor-<lb/>
dinaire) to the synthesizers on<lb/>
"Initial Machine Experiments<lb/>
Townshendprovides a wide varie-<lb/>
ty of enjoyable musical ex-<lb/>
periments.<lb/>
This is a unique and enjoyable<lb/>
album, but recommended for on-<lb/>
ly those who enjoy creative<lb/>
musical experimentation, not<lb/>
finely polished rock and roll.<lb/>
Madness<lb/>
Madness<lb/>
With the first U.S. release of<lb/>
their self-titled LP on Geffen<lb/>
Records, the young British group<lb/>
Madness is among the new<lb/>
groups fusing "new wave" and<lb/>
reggae styles with very upbeat<lb/>
pop arrangements. (That's right,<lb/>
"ska) And they're succeeding.<lb/>
While these days, so much of<lb/>
the rockpop establishment is<lb/>
trying to synthesize everything<lb/>
from the percussion to vocals,<lb/>
(for example, the new Neil Young<lb/>
and Styx albums). Madness pro-<lb/>
vides a neat arrangement of<lb/>
horns, guitars, percussion,<lb/>
keyboard (mostly piano) and<lb/>
straightforward vocals.<lb/>
This is the type of album that<lb/>
sounds better and better with suc-<lb/>
cessive listenings. No one could<lb/>
listen to this collection of twelve<lb/>
very catchy tunes and not find his<lb/>
or her toes tapping.<lb/>
The album's highlights are the<lb/>
moderately successful single<lb/>
"Our House, House of Fun" and<lb/>
the jazz tinged "Madnesr (Is All<lb/>
in the Mind)<lb/>
Essentially a collection of<lb/>
previously released songs in Bri-<lb/>
tain, Madness is full of fresh<lb/>
sounds. This seven member<lb/>
group is obviously taking a dif-<lb/>
ferent approach to ska music<lb/>
than many of their colleagues<lb/>
who may be struggling to stay<lb/>
successful. Madness might be an<lb/>
indication of the new direction<lb/>
ska is taking ? one for the bet-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Pink Floyd<lb/>
The Final Cut<lb/>
It is hard to imagine a more<lb/>
lyrically insightful or more<lb/>
REVIEWS<lb/>
dramatically performed art rock<lb/>
album being released anytime in<lb/>
the near future than Pink Floyd's<lb/>
career finale, The Final Cut. The<lb/>
brainchild of lead singerbassist<lb/>
Roger Waters, this artistic<lb/>
achievement elaborates on many<lb/>
of the themes that Pink Floyd's<lb/>
previous album The Wall in-<lb/>
itiated. Moreover, it takes them<lb/>
one step further.<lb/>
See FLOYD'S, Page 9<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Have you seen the ECU<lb/>
Playhouse production of Our<lb/>
Town yet? Well, hurry up and get<lb/>
a ticket ? tonight's the closing!<lb/>
The Pulitzer Prize winner by<lb/>
Thornton Wilder just gets better<lb/>
every time ? this production is<lb/>
no exception.<lb/>
The messages offered by the<lb/>
play are unlimited; the acting is<lb/>
grand ? there's not one weak<lb/>
performance in the crowd of<lb/>
leads.<lb/>
Our Town offers the viewer an<lb/>
opportunity to appreciate, to live<lb/>
each day as if it were your last.<lb/>
This appreciation of life is<lb/>
displayed from the most simple<lb/>
of human levels. The typical Our<lb/>
Towner reaps joy from the light<lb/>
of the moon and the fragrance of<lb/>
heliotropes in the air.<lb/>
The Cartwrights are the rich<lb/>
family in the fictitious New<lb/>
Hampshire town of Grovers Cor-<lb/>
ners (Population 3,149, including<lb/>
the rural folks), but they live up<lb/>
on the hill in a big white house.<lb/>
The audience is never introduced<lb/>
to the Cartwright clan, they're<lb/>
not supposed to be. Our Town is<lb/>
about real people ? people who<lb/>
live in the valley.<lb/>
Our Town is not a fantasy<lb/>
town. It's people that don't live<lb/>
happily ever after, they just go<lb/>
on. The play begins with the stage<lb/>
manager (a role, in this case, and<lb/>
a well done one by Bob Myers)<lb/>
telling the audience a little bit of<lb/>
information about Our Town.<lb/>
Throughout the play he interjects<lb/>
at intervals to give us additional<lb/>
tid-bits of information. Dr.<lb/>
Gibbs (Paul Jarrett) has just<lb/>
delivered twins in Polish Town<lb/>
(that's where the immigrants live<lb/>
? a sort of "other side of the<lb/>
tracks") and he's been up all<lb/>
night on a house call. Incidental-<lb/>
ly, the doctors family isn't rich<lb/>
which might give some indication<lb/>
of the rates he charges for house<lb/>
calls.<lb/>
Gibbs gets his morning paper<lb/>
from Joe Crowell (Christy Gar-<lb/>
Cooper and Bennighofen.<lb/>
rison). Crowell later graduates<lb/>
from MIT at the "head of his<lb/>
class but then is killed in World<lb/>
War I, "all that education for<lb/>
nothing the stage manager tells<lb/>
us adding that he can't unders-<lb/>
tand why Crowell wanted to go<lb/>
and pick a fight with the Ger-<lb/>
mans anyway.<lb/>
George Gibbs (Jeffrey Benn-<lb/>
inghofen) falls in love with the<lb/>
girls next door Emily Webb<lb/>
(Donna Lynn Cooper). Webb ex-<lb/>
pects a man to be perfect but for<lb/>
the most part her needs are sim-<lb/>
ple. She considers both her father<lb/>
and George's to be perfect. Mrs.<lb/>
Gibbs (Allison Thompson) longs<lb/>
to see Paris. She's the most ex-<lb/>
travagent character we meet. A<lb/>
person should get a chance once<lb/>
in their life to go some place<lb/>
where the people don't speak<lb/>
English. Gibbs tells her neighbor<lb/>
She dies too soon to make the trip<lb/>
of her dreams.<lb/>
At one point, the audience gets<lb/>
a big surprise. First the stage<lb/>
manager invites questions from<lb/>
the audience to be directed to<lb/>
editor Webb (Gregory Alan<lb/>
Watkins) of the Grovers Corners<lb/>
Chronical. Several actors and ac-<lb/>
tresses situated around the<lb/>
theatre make some inquiries. "Is<lb/>
there much interest in culture and<lb/>
the arts in Grovers Corners<lb/>
asks one women in the audience.<lb/>
Webb responds that Grovers<lb/>
Corners people enjoy the sun<lb/>
coming over their mountain and<lb/>
the songs sung by the town's<lb/>
birds.<lb/>
Act II takes place 1,000 days<lb/>
Se? OLR TOWN. Page 9<lb/>
Culture Keeper<lb/>
He's Ageless And Elegant<lb/>
By ALICE STEIN BACH<lb/>
Tae BaMaarc Saa<lb/>
NEW YORK ? "Me? Oh, you know, I'm just a<lb/>
saloon singer Bobby Short says with a husky<lb/>
laugh, his foot tapping out a staccato message<lb/>
against the glowing parquet floor of his apartment<lb/>
overlooking 57th Street.<lb/>
Uh huh. And Fleet wood Mac is just another<lb/>
Cadillac dealer.<lb/>
You see, what we have here ? in Bobby Short ?<lb/>
is a man who, if there were a Society for the Preser-<lb/>
vation of Class, Elegance and Nostalgic Art of Sup-<lb/>
per Club Singing, would be registered as a national<lb/>
landmark; someone to be preserved and protected<lb/>
by law for the benefit and enjoyment of future<lb/>
generations.<lb/>
A keeper of the culture, he has been called. A<lb/>
custodian of class. The premier cabaret performer in<lb/>
America. Maybe the world. No doubt about it, Bob-<lb/>
by Short belongs to that small list of people who are,<lb/>
quite simply, the best at what they do: Fred Astaire,<lb/>
Katharine Hepburn, Ella Fitzgerald, Cary Grant,<lb/>
Miles Davis. You know. The Class Acts of the<lb/>
World.<lb/>
And what Bobby Short has been doing better than<lb/>
anyone else for the last 30 years is this: He sits at a<lb/>
piano and ? in a voice both husky and clear and<lb/>
mellow ? invests old songs with new meanings,<lb/>
reunites for his audience a slower, sweeter past with<lb/>
the present.<lb/>
More than anyone else performing today, Short<lb/>
evokes a period of lost elegance and unearthly<lb/>
glamour through the incomparably witty and in-<lb/>
nocently sophisticated songs of such masters as Cole<lb/>
Porter and the Gershwin brothers, Rodgers and<lb/>
Hart, Noel Coward and the like.<lb/>
In a world hopelessly infatuated with fast food<lb/>
and built-in obsolescence, Short provides his au-<lb/>
dience with a sense of elegant continuity. When he<lb/>
steps onto the floor of the posh Cafe Carlyle ? his<lb/>
headquarters in Manhattan for the last IS years ?<lb/>
and sings his favorite Cole Porter lyric ("Why<lb/>
shouldn't ITake a chance when romance passes<lb/>
byWhy shouldn't I know of love?") he is the very<lb/>
symbol of sophistication, of penthouses and cham-<lb/>
pagne and buckets of dry wit.<lb/>
"A lot of grace has vanished from our lives, don't<lb/>
you think?" Short says. "Now everything is so<lb/>
speeded up. It gets harder and harder to hold onto<lb/>
an image<lb/>
Of course, a lot of people would say that Short<lb/>
has had trouble holding onto his image; that he's<lb/>
hardly changed at all over the years; that he's as<lb/>
timeless as the songs he sings.<lb/>
Sec SHORT, Page 11<lb/>
'Barefoot On The Mall9 Ushers In Spring Thursday<lb/>
One of last year's jugglers at Student Union Special Events Couuaittee<lb/>
on the Mall This year promises to he just as much faa ia a<lb/>
is this Thursday at 12 nooa on the University Mail; the rate site ts<lb/>
?Pring festival<lb/>
c?M weather. The<lb/>
V<lb/>
Xtra Xtra! C<lb/>
Lead ocaitt Eatk Jritre<lb/>
of "progressive" rock<lb/>
here in a performance e<lb/>
Hall in downtown dreem<lb/>
students will open for<lb/>
Floyd's<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
Obsessed with the<lb/>
death of his father.<lb/>
Eric Fletcher Waters<lb/>
(killed while fighting<lb/>
for Britian in World<lb/>
War II). Waters con-<lb/>
tinues his assaults on<lb/>
world wide<lb/>
establishments ?<lb/>
political, educatiena.<lb/>
and otherwise ? that<lb/>
he rather emphatical-<lb/>
ly states "make k'<lb/>
generation)<lb/>
mad sad laugh. c-<lb/>
ryand lav down and<lb/>
die (in war) Waters<lb/>
sings his message ?<lb/>
more conviction<lb/>
this album than eer<lb/>
before.<lb/>
A main mspira:<lb/>
for this work is ob-<lb/>
viously British Prime<lb/>
Minister Margaret<lb/>
Thatcher's sending<lb/>
British troops to win<lb/>
back the Falkland<lb/>
Islands. Rogers take<lb/>
that event, couples it<lb/>
with the plights of<lb/>
other belligerent<lb/>
countries and fighting<lb/>
soldiers such as his<lb/>
I<lb/>
art :<lb/>
verv.<lb/>
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access<lb/>
r and Bennighofen.<lb/>
i later graduates<lb/>
the "head of his<lb/>
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he can't unders-<lb/>
well wanted to go<lb/>
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s in love with the<lb/>
r Emily Webb<lb/>
I oper). Webb ex-<lb/>
be perfect but for<lb/>
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nsiders both her father<lb/>
to be perfect. Mrs.<lb/>
I hompson) longs<lb/>
She's the most ex-<lb/>
acter we meet. A<lb/>
d get a chance once<lb/>
go some place<lb/>
people don't speak<lb/>
tells her neighbor.<lb/>
nto make the trip<lb/>
ml the audience gets<lb/>
e First the stage<lb/>
- questions from<lb/>
be directed to<lb/>
(Gregory Alan<lb/>
c Grovers Corners<lb/>
5 era! actors and ac-<lb/>
s d around the<lb/>
? some inquiries. "Is<lb/>
? in culture and<lb/>
?vers Corners<lb/>
in the audience.<lb/>
that Grovers<lb/>
enjoy the sun<lb/>
their mountain and<lb/>
I by the town's<lb/>
place 1,000 days<lb/>
01 R H)WN, Page 9<lb/>
V<lb/>
Spring Thursday<lb/>
imittee spring festival "Barefoot<lb/>
konably cold weather. The festival<lb/>
r h Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 19, 1983<lb/>
'Our Town' Huge Success<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
Xtra Xtral Opening For Fabulous Knobs At Thursday Fest<lb/>
after Act 1, but not<lb/>
much has changed in<lb/>
Grovers Corners.<lb/>
Emily and George are<lb/>
a little older, they fall<lb/>
in love and George<lb/>
cans college and<lb/>
baseball to take over<lb/>
his uncle's farm. The<lb/>
marriage day scene is<lb/>
beautiful as George's<lb/>
baseball friends prac-<lb/>
tically scare him out<lb/>
of marriage with their<lb/>
outside-the-church<lb/>
ribbing and teasing.<lb/>
Mrs. Gibbs and<lb/>
Mrs. Webb (L. Thon-<lb/>
da Kirby) do not want<lb/>
to see their babies<lb/>
leave their nest. The<lb/>
fathers take it all in<lb/>
stride.<lb/>
Act HI reveals the<lb/>
true beauty of Our<lb/>
Town and Emily gets<lb/>
to steal the show. She<lb/>
dies during childbirth<lb/>
and joins the other<lb/>
"dead" residents in<lb/>
the hilltop cemetery.<lb/>
Now it's nine years<lb/>
later. The stage<lb/>
manager tells us that<lb/>
the dead people are all<lb/>
waiting, searching for<lb/>
something eternal.<lb/>
"We all hope that<lb/>
something is eternal<lb/>
he adds.<lb/>
Death is not only a<lb/>
part of Our Town, it<lb/>
even gets a few roles.<lb/>
The audience gets to<lb/>
meet the dead, some<lb/>
of them are new<lb/>
characters, others are<lb/>
left over from<lb/>
previous acts. The<lb/>
focal point of Our<lb/>
Town's message<lb/>
comes from the dead.<lb/>
"Five people don't<lb/>
understand, " they<lb/>
tell us.<lb/>
Emily immediately<lb/>
becomes aware of the<lb/>
fact that live people<lb/>
let life go by without<lb/>
really living it. Now<lb/>
that she's dead she<lb/>
realizes what she has<lb/>
left behind. She<lb/>
recognizes that life<lb/>
should be lived ?<lb/>
moment by moment<lb/>
? every moment to<lb/>
its fullest.<lb/>
Five people live in<lb/>
"a cloud of ig-<lb/>
norance" says Simon<lb/>
Stimson (Greg<lb/>
Phillips) who had<lb/>
earlier joined the<lb/>
ranks of the dead via<lb/>
suicide.<lb/>
Emily decides she<lb/>
must return to life to<lb/>
relive her early<lb/>
childhood. Her<lb/>
mother-in-law warns<lb/>
her against the plan<lb/>
telling her that she<lb/>
will not only relive<lb/>
life, but she will also<lb/>
be observing it at the<lb/>
same time. She will<lb/>
always know the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
Emily decides to see<lb/>
for herself. Take the<lb/>
least important day to<lb/>
relive, she is told, it<lb/>
will be important.<lb/>
In Our Town we<lb/>
embark on a trip<lb/>
through life, the life<lb/>
that we all live ? and<lb/>
sometimes don't lie.<lb/>
Director Cednc Win-<lb/>
chell guides us,<lb/>
through his actors, on<lb/>
this trip to Our Town<lb/>
It's a wonderful trip<lb/>
? take it.<lb/>
Lead vocalist Edie Jeffreys and bass player Jac Cain<lb/>
of "progressive" rock band Xtra Xtra! are shown<lb/>
here in a performance early last year at JJ's Music<lb/>
Hall in downtown Greenville. The local band of ECU<lb/>
students will open for Raleigh R&amp;B favorites The<lb/>
Fabulous Knobs this Thursday on the Univesity Mall<lb/>
at spring festival "Barefoot on the Mall The con-<lb/>
cert is sponsored by the Student Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Lil Sisters<lb/>
PRESENT<lb/>
'All Campus<lb/>
Chugging Contest<lb/>
Four person teams<lb/>
Wed. Apr. 20,1983<lb/>
9:00-1:00Adm $1.00<lb/>
Prizes<lb/>
s?sjsswy<lb/>
I<lb/>
1st $60.00 CASH <lb/>
2nd $30.00 CASH <lb/>
3rd $15.00 CASH I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?ntries con sign up at the club-<lb/>
Iby:<lb/>
For NmA Only<lb/>
GffOflVHM CHlfOpfOCtO<lb/>
Domino's<lb/>
Villa Roma BarroU o4 Fun<lb/>
S?? Station ? took tarn<lb/>
Plain Jane's<lb/>
Trot House<lb/>
Crow's Nest<lb/>
Mike ? Forty Center<lb/>
tfkTuCer<lb/>
caroling east mall greenvtle<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA'S MOST<lb/>
COMPLETE COSMETIC AND<lb/>
FRAGRANCE STORE. . .<lb/>
Floyd's Latest Cuts<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
Obsessed with the<lb/>
death of his father,<lb/>
Eric Fletcher Waters<lb/>
(killed while fighting<lb/>
for Britian in World<lb/>
War II), Waters con-<lb/>
tinues his assaults on<lb/>
world wide<lb/>
establishments ?<lb/>
political, educational<lb/>
and otherwise ? that<lb/>
he rather emphatical-<lb/>
ly states "make (each<lb/>
generation)<lb/>
madsadlaughc-<lb/>
ryand lay down and<lb/>
die (in war) Waters<lb/>
sings his message with<lb/>
more conviction on<lb/>
this album than ever<lb/>
before.<lb/>
A main inspiration<lb/>
for this work is ob-<lb/>
viously British Prime<lb/>
Minister Margaret<lb/>
Thatcher's sending<lb/>
British troops to win<lb/>
back the Falkland<lb/>
Islands. Rogers takes<lb/>
that event, couples it<lb/>
with the plights of<lb/>
other belligerent<lb/>
countries and fighting<lb/>
soldiers such as his<lb/>
father, and creates an<lb/>
artistic masterpiece<lb/>
with a unified and<lb/>
very convincing<lb/>
message. The album<lb/>
stands as a "Requiem<lb/>
for the post war<lb/>
dream and Waters<lb/>
final statement about<lb/>
the fate of planet<lb/>
earth (a nuclear<lb/>
holocaust) in the last<lb/>
song "Two Sons in<lb/>
the Sunset" is, one<lb/>
might say, less than<lb/>
optomistic: "the sun<lb/>
is in the easteven<lb/>
thought the day is<lb/>
donecould be the<lb/>
human race is run<lb/>
For better or worse,<lb/>
what distinguishes<lb/>
this album from all<lb/>
previous Pink Floyd<lb/>
albums is the absence<lb/>
of the synthesizers of<lb/>
former Floyd<lb/>
keyboardist Richard<lb/>
Wright, who quit the<lb/>
band. Containing the<lb/>
ever creative guitar<lb/>
work of David<lb/>
Gilmour, the strings<lb/>
of the National<lb/>
Philharmonic Or-<lb/>
chestra, the percus-<lb/>
sion work of Nick<lb/>
Mason, and other ac-<lb/>
companiments by<lb/>
various session men,<lb/>
this album has more<lb/>
natural and realistic<lb/>
sounds than their<lb/>
previous works.<lb/>
Wright's departure<lb/>
from the band, which<lb/>
may have forced<lb/>
Waters to rely more<lb/>
on his own vocals<lb/>
than the synthesized<lb/>
sounds of Wright,<lb/>
might also have been<lb/>
the reason for<lb/>
Waters' outstanding<lb/>
dramatic singing on<lb/>
this album.<lb/>
Pink Floyd's classic<lb/>
Dark Side of the<lb/>
Moon still surpasses<lb/>
the Final Cut in<lb/>
overall musicality,<lb/>
but the latter is also<lb/>
an instant classic ?<lb/>
one that the listener<lb/>
will want to ex-<lb/>
perience all over again<lb/>
after playing it.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Mature, responsible male or female to<lb/>
share three-bedroom duplex with two<lb/>
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COSTS LESS<lb/>
 TtheTfdwl<lb/>
MULT IS<lb/>
EMPTY1<lb/>
for men<lb/>
has on opening for o port-time<lb/>
sales-person. Men's retail experience<lb/>
preferred. Must be able to work<lb/>
weekends and during the summer.<lb/>
Apply at Brady's Pitt Plata<lb/>
Monday thru Friday (2:00 until 5:00)<lb/>
HARD DAYS<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
TWIST CONTEST<lb/>
Thurs. April 21st<lb/>
at the<lb/>
CAROUNA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE <lb/>
$200.00 First Prize<lb/>
 FREE BEER<lb/>
(8:30-10:00)<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
The very best in solid gold Rock and Roll<lb/>
with WTTN's Greg Allison<lb/>
We're Taking You Back in TimeFor the Time of Your Life!<lb/>
'<lb/>
-?,?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 19. 1983<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
ATTRACTIONS<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/>
Marcella 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/>
Main Attraction "The Fabulous Knobs"<lb/>
PLUS LOTS OF GREAT FOOD<lb/>
AND<lb/>
EDMONDS AND CURLEY, EMCEES<lb/>
TShirts on Sale; Monday 18<lb/>
Student Center<lb/>
a i<lb/>
<lb/>
0ON&amp;<lb/>
hort <lb/>
Continued From Pa<lb/>
"People expect me to remain aj<lb/>
lamn hard he says. "Because.<lb/>
ly being ageless, then they're agl<lb/>
s I am young and ebullient anJ<lb/>
ludience, then it's as though th<lb/>
hat young.<lb/>
"It's very hard and as one gr<lb/>
lore and more difficult to make<lb/>
teep it up<lb/>
But aside from a few gra<lb/>
mstache and a fighting weight<lb/>
f his high school 155, Short at<lb/>
ic same as he did 20 years ago<lb/>
as performing in clubs in New<lb/>
msiastic ? but small ? group o)<lb/>
ins; his reputation was high ami<lb/>
lanhattan, but his security, bot<lb/>
id financial, was somewhat pr<lb/>
It was the early "60s and alth<lb/>
)peared on the best-dressed hi<lb/>
id Harper's Bazaar. Short soq<lb/>
imself walking around Manhati<lb/>
ime in the pocket of h immaci<lb/>
lit.<lb/>
'That was the Bad Period<lb/>
Ig to his career in 1964 and<lb/>
?med to be going nowhere. "1<lb/>
le impact that the arm a! of rocl<lb/>
le music world in the "60s it<lb/>
lat has not happened sine<lb/>
jned before ? in my on I<lb/>
id a decent job. But what was<lb/>
eing gifted people turning th<lb/>
it, trying to adjust the si<lb/>
11<lb/>
P.<lb/>
M A<lb/>
SMOKEY<lb/>
PART<lb/>
I<lb/>
r<lb/>
?<lb/>
II<lb/>
W1NN0<lb/>
C. n.<lb/>
THURSDAY, APRIL 21<lb/>
12:00 NOON-?<lb/>
Rain Site: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
<lb/>
CANNES fhM<lb/>
PLSTIWVi WINNER<lb/>
V BtST SCWENP-wA<lb/>
KiA MARK<lb/>
a MAF<lb/>
IlM v! '<lb/>
TWiW<lb/>
?<lb/>
?? - - -<lb/>
??f?M? " .<lb/>
m m i iwii"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0011"/><lb/>
IONS<lb/>
ortune<lb/>
ist<lb/>
Old Time<lb/>
ographs<lb/>
it ted-A<lb/>
ourself<lb/>
-Funky,<lb/>
Tattoo:<lb/>
vnobs"<lb/>
EES<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
"People expect me to remain ageless, and it's<lb/>
damn hard he says. "Because, you see, with<lb/>
my being ageless, then they re ageless. As long<lb/>
as 1 am young and ebullient and peppy to my<lb/>
audience, then it's as though they are at least<lb/>
that young.<lb/>
"It's very hard and as one grows older, it's<lb/>
more and more difficult to make it all work to<lb/>
keep it up<lb/>
But aside from a few gray hairs in his<lb/>
mustache and a fighting weight of 165 instead<lb/>
of his htgh school 155, Short at 58 looks much<lb/>
the same as he did 20 years ago. Back then he<lb/>
was performing in clubs in New York to an en-<lb/>
thusiastic ? but small ? group of Bobby Short<lb/>
tans; his reputation was high among the elite of<lb/>
Manhattan, but his security, both professional<lb/>
and financial, was somewhat precarious.<lb/>
It was the early '60s and although his name<lb/>
appeared on the best-dressed lists in Esquire<lb/>
and Harper's Bazaar, Short sometimes found<lb/>
himself walking around Manhattan with only a<lb/>
dime in the pocket of his immaculately-tailored<lb/>
suit.<lb/>
'That was the Bad Period he says, referr-<lb/>
ing to his career in 1964 and 1965, when he<lb/>
seemed to be going nowhere. "I cannot tell you<lb/>
the impact that the arrival of rock music had on<lb/>
the music world in the '60s. It was something<lb/>
that has not happened since and hadn't hap-<lb/>
pened before ? in my music life. 1 couldn't<lb/>
find a decent job. But what was really sad was<lb/>
seeing gifted people turning themselves inside<lb/>
out, trying to adjust their styles to rock<lb/>
Never-Ending<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 19, 1983<lb/>
11<lb/>
During that period he almost left music for<lb/>
the men's clothing business.<lb/>
"Well, 1 knew a little bit about men's<lb/>
clothing says the man who has his shirts<lb/>
made for him in London and buys his Italian-<lb/>
made shoes in France or Italy. Fortunately, for<lb/>
his fans and fans-to-be, Short stayed where he<lb/>
belonged ? perfectly tailoring his songs, not<lb/>
suits ? thanks to a contract he signed in 1968<lb/>
with the Cafe Carlyle. "It was a lifesaver for<lb/>
me he says now.<lb/>
But there's more to Bobby Short than music<lb/>
and fine clothes: dignity, sorrow, a fascination<lb/>
with African art and American abstract expres-<lb/>
sionism, a deep affection for language, an<lb/>
ability to laugh at himself, patience, and a<lb/>
clear, unflinching understanding of what his<lb/>
work is all about.<lb/>
"What I do has to be a lonely pursuit,<lb/>
although people see it as being so glamorous<lb/>
he says. "But at a certain point in your career<lb/>
you come to understand what the bottom line<lb/>
is. It's work.<lb/>
"You get into a cab and you're all dressed up<lb/>
in your black tie and the driver has had a bad<lb/>
day at work and he wants to know where<lb/>
you're going so dressed up, and most of the<lb/>
time the truth is I'm going to work where<lb/>
maybe I'll have as bad a day as the cabdriver.<lb/>
It's not all glamorous.<lb/>
"And you come to understand that after you<lb/>
perform, you leave the Carlyle ? which is<lb/>
rocking with romance and high spirits and the<lb/>
bubbling champagne ? and you mount the<lb/>
stairs and take off your wet shirt and put on<lb/>
your dry shirt, and you walk from the hotel<lb/>
down the street by yourself and you get in a cab<lb/>
and go home. Alone<lb/>
Understand, there's no self-pity in what<lb/>
Short is saying. It's just that people expect<lb/>
something from him and he gives it to them. He<lb/>
is, above all else, realistic about who he is.<lb/>
"I'm a working stiff he says, laughing.<lb/>
And just how close is the image to the man?<lb/>
How did a poor boy from Danville, 111. ? the<lb/>
ninth of 10 children ? whose father was a<lb/>
miner and mother a domestic worker, come to<lb/>
epitomize style and class and elegance and<lb/>
grace? Will the real Bobby Short please stand<lb/>
up?<lb/>
He leans forward in his chair instead: "I<lb/>
don't have two personalities. I have a profes-<lb/>
sional side, yes. But I don't change very much.<lb/>
I've tried very hard to put it all together. I thing<lb/>
playing game's is such a tedious business ? for<lb/>
the person the games are being played upon<lb/>
and the person who's playing them. It makes<lb/>
for such a splitness in your life.<lb/>
"I'm the first person to admit that I come<lb/>
from very humble beginnings and my audience<lb/>
understands that<lb/>
He sings so much these days that he has pro-<lb/>
blems with his throat, but Short still loves his<lb/>
work. "I like making people feel happy, mak-<lb/>
ing them feel good ? because that makes me<lb/>
feel good he says. "1 think with most per-<lb/>
formers, if you get right down to the roots, that<lb/>
is what pleases them.<lb/>
"And if you have it within your means to<lb/>
give somebody else that kind of a feeling of<lb/>
pleasure, it's almost a sin not to give it. You<lb/>
must. It's your obligation<lb/>
Fortune Teller Ruble Slated For Mall<lb/>
Students will be able to have their fortunes told this Thursda on<lb/>
the University Mall when fortune teller Marcella Ruble returns to<lb/>
ECU for another "Barefoot on the Mall The annual festival<lb/>
begins at 12 noon; rain site is Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
COMING SOON<lb/>
Look for<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
VI i ? I I<lb/>
jyQg in an<lb/>
vmmm upcoming<lb/>
issue<lb/>
of your<lb/>
I college<lb/>
I news-<lb/>
" paper.<lb/>
T MISS IT!<lb/>
WINNER ACADEMY AWARD<lb/>
BEST FOREIGN FILM<lb/>
l?<lb/>
.Brilliant"<lb/>
- Richard Freedman NEWHOtlSE NEWSPAPERS<lb/>
r richly deserved its Oscar<lb/>
Richard Sch.kel. TIME<lb/>
CANNES FILM<lb/>
FESTIVAL WINNER<lb/>
BEST SCREENPIAV<lb/>
"Shouldn't be missed'<lb/>
-DcMd Arisen NE.VbWEErs<lb/>
"Extraordinary<lb/>
Judrth COST SATURDAN REVIEW<lb/>
"Superb! Brilliant:<lb/>
SheiLi Bensor. LA TIMES<lb/>
7n incredibly dynamic<lb/>
performance, a<lb/>
dazzling<lb/>
tour-de-force.r<lb/>
rvithkvi. L.I ?<lb/>
NEW YORK DAIL NEWb<lb/>
 "This film is a<lb/>
work of art<lb/>
MEPHlSTO a film by ISTVAN SZABO BdSed on Waui Manns novel<lb/>
Starring KLAUS MARIA BRANDAUER. KRYSTYNA JANDA ILDIKQ BANSAOi HUlF HlH'Pr<lb/>
Screenplay by PETER DOBAI and ISTVAN SZABO Cmematoyr aphv by LAjOS KOUAi<lb/>
A MAFILM OBJECTIV STUDIO Production In cooperatfon with MANFRED DURNIOK PHO'DiX r'M'<lb/>
 tr ARALraS FBJ RELEASING CORPORATKtfl<lb/>
This Wednesday Night - 8 PM - Hendrix Theatre, MSC<lb/>
LOST<lb/>
Black Art Portfolio<lb/>
Between Friday and Monday<lb/>
Very important it is returned.<lb/>
Is of no value to anyone else.<lb/>
Reward being offered.<lb/>
Coll Danny Gairher at 752-0168<lb/>
COM?ONOUT<lb/>
THE PUTTINGS FINE!<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
758-1820 ALL YOU CAN l-LAY<lb/>
TOSPMOMLYSMt<lb/>
12<lb/>
P.O.<lb/>
27SJ4<lb/>
The ALAMO<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Weds.<lb/>
Ladies Night with Fat Ammons Band 8:30-2:30<lb/>
A11 Ladies Free tilt 9:00<lb/>
Happy Hour 5:30-9:00<lb/>
Thurs.<lb/>
The Alamo's 1st Ladies Lockout<lb/>
with DJ Don Vickers<lb/>
A11 Ladies Free all night<lb/>
WRQR will be 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 Admission till 8:00-A11 Greek Members 501<lb/>
25draft All Sight.<lb/>
Late Sight Happy Hour 11:00pm-1:00am<lb/>
Music by request with WRQRs Kirk Williams<lb/>
3t? The Main Attraction<lb/>
Doors open at 7:00 Happy Hour 7-9:00pm.<lb/>
C loved Sundaw rxcrpl for special events<lb/>
IIA4 S Mrmonal l?r<lb/>
crtKs from (.rrrnvillr irp?rt<lb/>
Pfco- 757-O0O5 f,H addmoajl .nrrm<lb/>
j BREAKFAST SPECIAL<lb/>
7521411<lb/>
 ATTENTION<lb/>
E.C.U. STUDENTS &amp; FACULTY<lb/>
Ope?<lb/>
ANNOUNCING<lb/>
HUCKELBERRY'S<lb/>
"GET AQU AINTED"<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
(Formally Biscuit Town-Across from Crows Nest)<lb/>
tn<lb/>
ve<lb/>
?&amp;?<lb/>
? ??????<lb/>
? ?????????????-?<lb/>
(6am till 11am Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
Any of the combinations below for only 79C<lb/>
Ham &amp; Cheese-Sausage &amp; Cheese<lb/>
Ham &amp; Egg-Sausage &amp; Egg<lb/>
Egg &amp; Cheese<lb/>
(with purchase of any Beverage per order)<lb/>
CHICKEN SPECIAL<lb/>
?<lb/>
(llam-9pm Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
Two piece chicken dinner our choice. Fries &amp;<lb/>
Biscuit included!<lb/>
(with purchase of any Med. or Lg. Beverage per order)<lb/>
ONLY 99<lb/>
??<lb/>
tttim mm 1111<lb/>
RIB SPECIAL<lb/>
(11am till 9pm Mon. thru Sat.)<lb/>
Two Jumbo Beef Ribs. Fries. Biscuit<lb/>
(with purchase of any Med. orLg. Beverage per order)<lb/>
ONLY $1.99<lb/>
if TDaystWtek if<lb/>
123<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0012"/><lb/>
-???<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
April 19. 1983 . Page 12<lb/>
Four-Day Stretch Keeps Bucs Busy<lb/>
' -7" V'?<lb/>
V?v?r<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
ECU senior John Hallow was the Pirates' main force on offense<lb/>
during this weekend's busy slate. The defending ECAC-South<lb/>
champs still have a chance of making this year's tournament.<lb/>
Denkler Receives $2,000<lb/>
Student-Athlete Scholarship<lb/>
ECU basketball All-American<lb/>
Mary Denkler has been selected as<lb/>
one of ten student-athletes<lb/>
throughout the nation to receive<lb/>
an NCAA post-graduate scholar-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
The award is for $2000 and is<lb/>
for post-graduate studies at the<lb/>
school of her choice. "I can't<lb/>
believe I got it said Denkler.<lb/>
"I'm really happy and pleased<lb/>
and honored<lb/>
A senior majoring in Urban<lb/>
planning, Denkler carried a 3.2<lb/>
average into the current semester<lb/>
and will graduate at the end of<lb/>
summer school.<lb/>
"I wasn't really expecting to get<lb/>
the award, so I haven't thought<lb/>
about which schools I'm going to<lb/>
apply to Denkler said. "I've<lb/>
been thinking about getting into a<lb/>
business program, but I'm still<lb/>
undecided at this point.<lb/>
Denkler, from Alexandria, Va<lb/>
is the first East Carolina athlete to<lb/>
ever be selected for this<lb/>
prestigious award and was one of<lb/>
only four choosen from the Divi-<lb/>
sion I level.<lb/>
Denkler capped off her il-<lb/>
lustrious four-year career averag-<lb/>
ing 22.5 points and 7.8 rebounds<lb/>
per game, and finished as the<lb/>
number two all-time Lady Pirate<lb/>
scorer.<lb/>
Denkler says she owes a lot of<lb/>
thanks to Ernie Schwarz (ECU<lb/>
faculty representative to NCAA)<lb/>
for getting her the application,<lb/>
and to her coach, Cathy Andruz-<lb/>
zi.<lb/>
"I feel so proud for Mary and<lb/>
happy for East Carolina An-<lb/>
druzzi said. "I know how hard<lb/>
Mary's worked from being with<lb/>
Mary Denkler<lb/>
her for four years. She's not only<lb/>
worked hard on the court, but off<lb/>
the court too. This is a reward for<lb/>
an individual who has never given<lb/>
up and has worked hard to repre-<lb/>
sent her team and University to<lb/>
the highest limits. This is what<lb/>
athletics is all about<lb/>
'Near Perfect Ball Player<lb/>
Committed Only Two Errors<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Described by Head Baseball<lb/>
coach Hal Baird as one of the best<lb/>
defensive players in North<lb/>
Carolina, Senior Centerfielder<lb/>
Robert Wells has made only two<lb/>
errors so far in his career as a<lb/>
Pirate.<lb/>
Wells leads the Pirates with a<lb/>
.308 batting average and has ac-<lb/>
cumulated 29 total bases in just 26<lb/>
games. He also has 18 runs and<lb/>
nine sacrifices.<lb/>
Besides great plays in the field,<lb/>
Wells knows how to manipulate<lb/>
opposing pitchers. He has 16<lb/>
walks this season and needs only<lb/>
five more to become ECU's all-<lb/>
time career leader.<lb/>
Wells hails from Wilson and<lb/>
became interested in baseball at a<lb/>
very early age. "Our home is right<lb/>
in front of a minor league<lb/>
stadium, and my dad used to be a<lb/>
batboy for them he said.<lb/>
"When I became five, I started<lb/>
being their batboy, and I've been<lb/>
interested in baseball ever since<lb/>
Wells started playing organized<lb/>
baseball when he was seven and in<lb/>
later years, he was honored with<lb/>
the Clint Farris Award, signifying<lb/>
him as the most outstanding<lb/>
baseball player in the Wilson<lb/>
County area.<lb/>
"That award had special mean-<lb/>
ing to me Wells explained,<lb/>
"because it was the last year it was<lb/>
presented. Mr. Farris passed away<lb/>
three months after I was<lb/>
honored<lb/>
At James Hunt High School,<lb/>
Wells was named an all-area per-<lb/>
former for three consecutive<lb/>
years. During his senior year, he<lb/>
was recipient of the Golden Glove<lb/>
award as the best outfielder on his<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Upon graduating, Wells turned<lb/>
down a full scholarship from a<lb/>
community college to attend<lb/>
ECU. He saw limited playing time<lb/>
as a freshman, but moved into a<lb/>
starting position as a centerfielder<lb/>
when he was a sophomore. Along<lb/>
with his starting role, Wells was<lb/>
also awarded a scholarship.<lb/>
Wells, along with the rest of the<lb/>
team, is hoping to gain yet<lb/>
another conference title cham-<lb/>
pionship this year. And according<lb/>
to Baird, if the other players can<lb/>
perform like Wells, the Pirates<lb/>
certainly have a great chance.<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Aatotaal Sports Editor<lb/>
Two conference losses, one<lb/>
win, one tie and a loss to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
completed a busy four-day stretch<lb/>
for ECU as the Pirates record<lb/>
dropped to 16-14-1.<lb/>
But even with their 2-3-1 mark<lb/>
in the ECAC-South conference,<lb/>
the defending champion Pirates<lb/>
still have a chance of making this<lb/>
year's four-team tourney.<lb/>
ECU is one of only four teams<lb/>
in the running that has an overall<lb/>
winning record. At the end of the<lb/>
regular season, a selection com-<lb/>
mittee composed of conference<lb/>
athletic directors will choose the<lb/>
four teams.<lb/>
Sunday's 6-3 loss to Richmond<lb/>
was the last conference game of<lb/>
the year for the Pirates. ECU had<lb/>
four ECAC-South games rained<lb/>
out this year.<lb/>
The lengthy stretch started on<lb/>
Thursday night with a 9-1 loss to<lb/>
the Tar Heels and former Rose<lb/>
High pitcher Roger Williams.<lb/>
Williams returned to Greenville<lb/>
to limit the Pirates to only two<lb/>
hits in seven and one-third inn-<lb/>
ings, raising his record to 6-2.<lb/>
While the Pirates were unable<lb/>
to do any damage against<lb/>
Williams, the Tar Heels had little<lb/>
trouble with five different ECU<lb/>
pitchers ? including regular right<lb/>
Fielder John Hallow.<lb/>
UNC opened the scoring in the<lb/>
first inning when Drex Roberts led<lb/>
off with a single. Jeff Hubbard<lb/>
followed with another single and<lb/>
Roberts scored when center<lb/>
fielder Robert Wells mishandled<lb/>
the ball.<lb/>
B.J. Surhoff singled aiid a<lb/>
groundout by Mike Jedziniak<lb/>
drove in Hubbard to make the<lb/>
score 2-0.<lb/>
The Tar Heels added two more<lb/>
runs in the third on a two-run<lb/>
homer by Pete Kumeiga following<lb/>
a walk to Hubbard.<lb/>
A home run by Roberts in the<lb/>
fifth and a double steal in the<lb/>
eighth made it 6-0 with one frame<lb/>
left.<lb/>
But the Tar Heels weren't<lb/>
finished. Walt Weiss opened the<lb/>
top of the ninth with a single, and<lb/>
after Roberts reached on an error,<lb/>
Hubbard delivered an RBI single.<lb/>
Surhoff then grounded out to<lb/>
score Roberts, and a wild pitch<lb/>
brought home Hubbard.<lb/>
The Pirates added their lone<lb/>
run in the bottom of the ninth<lb/>
with two consecutive singles by<lb/>
Hallow and Todd Evans and a<lb/>
pair of walks to Daniel Boone and<lb/>
David Home.<lb/>
The victory raised UNC's<lb/>
record to 33-7 and marked the se-<lb/>
cond time this year that the<lb/>
Pirates had lost to the Tar Heels<lb/>
by a 9-1 score.<lb/>
ECU bounced back on Friday<lb/>
to defeat American University in<lb/>
the first game of a scheduled<lb/>
doubleheader. The second game<lb/>
was called after seven innings<lb/>
because of darkness with the score<lb/>
tied 1-1.<lb/>
In the first game, Hallow was<lb/>
again the main force for the<lb/>
Pirates, as he went two-for-four<lb/>
with an RBI and a run scored.<lb/>
Bob Davidson gave up only<lb/>
four htis and struck out five in<lb/>
raising his record to 2-4.<lb/>
The game was delayed for 25<lb/>
minutes as American was late in<lb/>
arriving. It didn't take ECU long<lb/>
to warm up, however, as the<lb/>
Pirates scored in the first inning.<lb/>
With one out, Hallow singled<lb/>
and moved to third on a walk to<lb/>
Todd Evans. After a fielders-<lb/>
choice grounder by David Wells,<lb/>
Hallow scored as he and Wells ex-<lb/>
ecuted a double steal.<lb/>
The Pirates added two more<lb/>
runs in the third on a triple by<lb/>
Tony Salmond and RBI singles by<lb/>
Hallow and Wells.<lb/>
American rallied to tie the score<lb/>
with three runs in their half of the<lb/>
third inning. A single by Steve<lb/>
Salem, a double by Greg Wells<lb/>
and a triple by Mike Spring scored<lb/>
the first two runs, and a groun-<lb/>
dout tied the score at 3-3.<lb/>
ECU added three more runs in<lb/>
the fifth to put the game away. A<lb/>
hit batsman, a wild pitch and a<lb/>
passed ball allowed Evans, who<lb/>
had singled, to score.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson and Mark<lb/>
Shank proceeded to walk, loading<lb/>
the bases. Jack Curlings was hit<lb/>
by a pitch and Salmond hit a<lb/>
sacrifice fly to score two more<lb/>
runs.<lb/>
On Saturday, ECU lost to the<lb/>
William and Mary Indians by a<lb/>
5-4 score in ten innings. The In-<lb/>
dians had rallied to tie the score in<lb/>
the bottom of the seventh on two<lb/>
unearned runs.<lb/>
Although they only lost on the<lb/>
scoreboard by one run, the Pirates<lb/>
were outhit by the Indians, 11-2.<lb/>
William and Mary starter Alan<lb/>
Zoldark held the Pirates to only<lb/>
See INDIANS, Page 14<lb/>
Pirates Ready For Purple-Gold<lb/>
After several weeks of learning<lb/>
new drills, techniques and fun-<lb/>
damentals, the ECU football team<lb/>
will cap off spring practice Satur-<lb/>
day when they suit up for the an-<lb/>
nual Purple-Gold game.<lb/>
"I feel that overall we have had<lb/>
good work this spring and shown<lb/>
signs of improvement in some<lb/>
areas said Head Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory. "We are throwing the ball<lb/>
better, our quarterbacks have im-<lb/>
proved, and our line has made<lb/>
great strides<lb/>
Offensively, Emory has been<lb/>
especially pleased with the team's<lb/>
overall performance. "Our<lb/>
receiver situation looks real good,<lb/>
and that's an area entering the<lb/>
drills we had some real reserva-<lb/>
tions about, but we appear now to<lb/>
have quality and depth<lb/>
Three players are fighting for<lb/>
the starting wide receiver position:<lb/>
returning junior starter Ricky<lb/>
Nichols, junior college transfer<lb/>
Henry Williams and red shirt<lb/>
Chris McLawhorn.<lb/>
"All three of these young men<lb/>
have outstanding speed, spring<lb/>
speed, and provide us with quality<lb/>
and depth Emory said.<lb/>
"Competition is keen right now<lb/>
and that's what we want<lb/>
In addition to receivers, the<lb/>
other major question mark on of-<lb/>
fense for the spring was the<lb/>
development of Kevin Ingram at<lb/>
quarterback and finding a good<lb/>
backup quarterback.<lb/>
"Kevin has really come on this<lb/>
spring Emory noted. "He's out<lb/>
front, but John Williams has real-<lb/>
ly closed the gap. If John can<lb/>
come as far in the next eight days<lb/>
as he has in the last eight days, it<lb/>
will be a real competition for star-<lb/>
ting quarterback duties.<lb/>
"And Brian Herndon, red-<lb/>
shirted last season, has shown<lb/>
some outstanding qualities to be a<lb/>
contended in the future.<lb/>
In the back field, tailback Tony<lb/>
Baker and fullback Earnest Byner<lb/>
are leading the way, but quality<lb/>
depth is lacking. Pat Bowens has<lb/>
shown major improvement over<lb/>
the last week at fullback, while<lb/>
Bubba Bunn is back in competi-<lb/>
tion at tailback. Jimmy Walden<lb/>
has been lost for the spring at<lb/>
tailback with a groin pull.<lb/>
"Our offensive linemen have<lb/>
made great strides Emory said,<lb/>
"but injuries have become a real<lb/>
problem. Six players are out of<lb/>
practice, but this has opened the<lb/>
door for others to get a better<lb/>
chance to play. My concern is<lb/>
developing some depth and you<lb/>
can't do that with injured<lb/>
players<lb/>
Those out with injuries include.<lb/>
Jeff Autry, arm surgery; Mac<lb/>
Powers, a crushed ankle; Robert<lb/>
Alexander, kneecap surgery;<lb/>
Shawn Brady, an ankle injury;<lb/>
Scott Totten, ankle injury; and<lb/>
Tim Mitchell, a knee injury.<lb/>
All of the players were expected<lb/>
to make major contributions, but<lb/>
Emory is still keeping a positive<lb/>
attitude. "A red shirt and two<lb/>
transfers have developed and are<lb/>
going to be fine ones for us on the<lb/>
line Emory said. "Ricky<lb/>
Hilburn and Greg Sokolohorsky<lb/>
have transferred in and done a<lb/>
fine job. Freshman Tim Dumas is<lb/>
running first team left tackle right<lb/>
now<lb/>
Improvement on defense has<lb/>
been much slower, but Emory ex-<lb/>
plained that the loss of several<lb/>
players has meant a great deal of<lb/>
rebuilding for the four new defen-<lb/>
sive coaches. "We went back to<lb/>
square one he said, "started ail<lb/>
over and have been working on<lb/>
technique and fundamentals.<lb/>
"The first defensive group ap-<lb/>
pears sound, with our secondary<lb/>
in the best shape ever, but depth<lb/>
continues to be our defensive pro-<lb/>
blem<lb/>
Presently, the strongest area on<lb/>
the team is the linebacker posi-<lb/>
tion. Last season, the Pirates had<lb/>
as many as 11 linebackers out at<lb/>
one time with injuries and had vir-<lb/>
tually no depth in the secondary.<lb/>
Five players are now fighting for<lb/>
the two starting linebacker spots.<lb/>
Mike Grant, who was out last year<lb/>
with knee surgery, is competing<lb/>
with last year starter P.J. Jordan.<lb/>
Grant was the team's leading<lb/>
tackier two years ago.<lb/>
Two other linebackers. Lam<lb/>
Berry and Ron Reid, were both<lb/>
out with injuries last fall and are<lb/>
back. "I'm real pleased to see that<lb/>
our secondary may be the<lb/>
strongest we've had since I've<lb/>
been here Emory said.<lb/>
See LINEBACKERS, Page 14<lb/>
Wins<lb/>
En Route to UNC-C Championship Title<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
After winning seven of the last<lb/>
eight games within two days, the<lb/>
Lady Pirate softball team whip-<lb/>
ped Western Carolina, 10-2, for<lb/>
the UNC-Charlotte tournament<lb/>
title this weekend.<lb/>
Before reaching the champion-<lb/>
ship game, the Pira'es shut out<lb/>
Appalachian State, 4-0, eased past<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, 9-3, and left<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth behind,<lb/>
10-3.<lb/>
On Saturday, the Lady Bucs<lb/>
squeezed by hosting UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte, 4-3, to end round-<lb/>
robin play. Now in double<lb/>
elimination, the Pirates again beat<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth, 7-3, and<lb/>
went on to defeat UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill, 7-1, marking the sixth vic-<lb/>
tory this season the Bucs have had<lb/>
over the Tarheels.<lb/>
With a 7-0 win over Western<lb/>
Carolina, the Lady Pirates ad-<lb/>
vanced to the finals. But WCU<lb/>
was seeking revenge and nailed<lb/>
the Bucs, 4-2, in the first of two<lb/>
championship games.<lb/>
But when the title was on the<lb/>
line, the Lady Bucs pulled<lb/>
through. After scoring one run<lb/>
each in the first, second and<lb/>
fourth innings, the powerhitting<lb/>
squad knocked seven runs in the<lb/>
fifth inning to seal the lid on the<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
In the first inning, Cynthia<lb/>
Shepard hit a triple and came<lb/>
home after a throwing error wa.?<lb/>
made by WCU.<lb/>
Fran Hooks then hit a single ii<lb/>
the second inning, and Gingei<lb/>
Rothermei reached on a throwing<lb/>
error to move Hooks to third<lb/>
base. Melody Ham came in and<lb/>
hit a sacrifice fly to right center-<lb/>
field to bring Hooks in.<lb/>
In the fourth inning, Sandy Key<lb/>
got on base when WCU's third<lb/>
baseman made an error. Melody<lb/>
Ham then got a single. Key ad-<lb/>
vanced on another error, and pit-<lb/>
cher Jeanette Roth brought Ham<lb/>
in with a base hit.<lb/>
WCU scored one run each in<lb/>
the first and fourth innings, giving<lb/>
the Bucs a 3-2 lead at the top of<lb/>
the fifth.<lb/>
But the narrow margin<lb/>
wouldn't prove to last very long.<lb/>
this weekend's UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
? ?? "trim,<lb/>
vahuMe player in<lb/>
The Lady Pirates exploded for<lb/>
seven runs in the fifth inning, with<lb/>
senior Yvonne Williams starting<lb/>
the hitting streak off.<lb/>
Williams and Shepard both had<lb/>
singles to land on base, and team-<lb/>
mate Mitzi Davis then knocked a<lb/>
double to score both runners<lb/>
Junior Jo Landa Next, Clavton<lb/>
hit a single and Hooks connected<lb/>
for one to score both Clavton and<lb/>
Davis. Ham's following single<lb/>
then scored Hooks.<lb/>
With Ham on base, Key singled<lb/>
to bring her in. The last run of the<lb/>
inning came when pitcher Jeanette<lb/>
Roth reached on an error and<lb/>
Yvonne Williams hit a single to<lb/>
score Key.<lb/>
The championship contest was<lb/>
the ninth game in two days, and<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Sue Manahan<lb/>
telt the Pirates definitely got<lb/>
enough playing in. "It was a lot of<lb/>
softball Manahan said, referr-<lb/>
ing to the two-day tourney. "I'm<lb/>
very pleased with the way we<lb/>
Pyed, especially since we plaved<lb/>
so much. The team reallv pulled<lb/>
together<lb/>
Both Shepard and Williams<lb/>
were named as the tournment's<lb/>
co-most valuable players, and Jo<lb/>
ckSSl ?,ayton rcccivcd lhe<lb/>
V01 Glove award for best<lb/>
fielder.<lb/>
.Jn hitters in the cham-<lb/>
wonship game were Ham, who<lb/>
went three-for-four and Hooks,<lb/>
k? 'wo-for-four. Ham also<lb/>
ee runs batted in.<lb/>
IT Lady Pirates, now 25-8,<lb/>
?p??y their last regular season<lb/>
jame today against Campbell at 3<lb/>
P.m. The Bucs will then go to the<lb/>
?te playoffs.<lb/>
(E<lb/>
Man<lb/>
:<lb/>
- :<lb/>
-<lb/>
M.<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
The Lady Pirate<lb/>
tennis team came<lb/>
back to win two out<lb/>
of three doubles mat<lb/>
ches to edge out<lb/>
yjslC-Charlotte. 5-1<lb/>
Sunday<lb/>
Recording to Head<lb/>
Coach Patricia Sher<lb/>
man, the match ma?<lb/>
ed the team's bes' pe-<lb/>
formance all season<lb/>
"Everyone plaec<lb/>
their best tennis of the<lb/>
entire year to defea:<lb/>
an excellent Charlotte<lb/>
team ? a team :r.<lb/>
nas beaten man<lb/>
teams that have<lb/>
heaten us she said<lb/>
??Janet Rus<lb/>
played exceptional<lb/>
well in a three n<lb/>
plus match and<lb/>
doubles team ol<lb/>
Tolson and Christine<lb/>
have played excellent- C<lb/>
lv of late<lb/>
The Lady Pirate-<lb/>
are now 8-9.<lb/>
In singles. Su<lb/>
Romeo (C) def Der<lb/>
bie Christine. 6-4,6-3<lb/>
Katherine T<lb/>
EC AC<lb/>
The EC Ac -<lb/>
conference boa<lb/>
last week and<lb/>
nounced firm p <lb/>
several area, m<lb/>
near future<lb/>
James Mad<lb/>
University P-<lb/>
Dr. Ronald B<lb/>
ner, chairman<lb/>
ECAC-South basl<lb/>
ball group, MM<lb/>
ed that the<lb/>
basketball toi<lb/>
ment will be he d<lb/>
IliU in H<lb/>
burg. Va Ma<lb/>
8-10.<lb/>
The 1985 u<lb/>
ment will be hek<lb/>
William &amp; Mar; -<lb/>
TheCatal<lb/>
Billv S<lb/>
&amp; The Georgi.<lb/>
New<lb/>
Ga<lb/>
BYOB.Bnn?oofO.<lb/>
C.O. Tankard Di!<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0013"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
J9 1913 Page i;<lb/>
Fridaj<lb/>
lii in<lb/>
la u led<lb/>
(game<lb/>
tilings<lb/>
score<lb/>
a as<lb/>
the<lb/>
Oil!<lb/>
nl<lb/>
: m<lb/>
? in<lb/>
i the<lb/>
I<lb/>
li<lb/>
?ders-<lb/>
e b<lb/>
Busy<lb/>
Hallow and Wells.<lb/>
American rallied to tie the score<lb/>
with three runs in their half of the<lb/>
third inning A single by Steve<lb/>
Salem, a double bv Greg Wells<lb/>
and a triple bv Mike Spring scored<lb/>
the first two runs, and a groun-<lb/>
dout tied the score at 3-3.<lb/>
 CD added three more runs in<lb/>
the fifth to put the game away. A<lb/>
hit batsman, a wild pitch and a<lb/>
passed ball allowed Evans, who<lb/>
had singled, to score.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson and Mark<lb/>
shank proceeded to walk, loading<lb/>
the bases, lack Curlings was hit<lb/>
b a pitch and Salmond hit a<lb/>
sacrifice fly to score two more<lb/>
run<lb/>
On Saturday, ECU lost to the<lb/>
William and Mary Indians by a<lb/>
5 4 score in ten innings. The In-<lb/>
dians had rallied to tie the score in<lb/>
the bottom of the seventh on two<lb/>
unearned runv<lb/>
Although they only lost on the<lb/>
scoreboard by one run. the Pirates<lb/>
vere outhit by the Indians, 11-2.<lb/>
William and Mary starter Alan<lb/>
Zoldark held the Pirates to only-<lb/>
See INDIANS, Page 14<lb/>
rple-Gold<lb/>
?<lb/>
to the<lb/>
tier<lb/>
trn is<lb/>
piude:<lb/>
Mac<lb/>
M -<lb/>
uury;<lb/>
and<lb/>
ported<lb/>
but<lb/>
itive<lb/>
two<lb/>
iq are<lb/>
n the<lb/>
ck<lb/>
I<lb/>
te a<lb/>
right<lb/>
has<lb/>
y ex-<lb/>
eral<lb/>
;al of<lb/>
lefen-<lb/>
c coaches. "We went back to<lb/>
square one he said, "started all<lb/>
over and have been working on<lb/>
technique and fundamentals.<lb/>
'The first defensive group ap-<lb/>
pears sound, with our secondary<lb/>
in the best shape ever, but depth<lb/>
continues to be our defensive pro-<lb/>
blem<lb/>
Presently, the strongest area on<lb/>
the team is the linebacker posi-<lb/>
tion. Last season, the Pirates had<lb/>
as many as 11 linebackers out at<lb/>
one time with injuries and had vir-<lb/>
tually no depth in the secondary.<lb/>
Five players are now fighting for<lb/>
the two starting linebacker spots.<lb/>
Mike Grant, who was out last year<lb/>
with knee surgery, is competing<lb/>
with last year starter P.J. Jordan.<lb/>
Grant was the team's leading<lb/>
tackier two years ago.<lb/>
Two other linebackers. Larry<lb/>
Berry and Ron Reid, were both<lb/>
out with injuries last fall and are<lb/>
back. "I'm real pleased to see that<lb/>
our secondary may be the<lb/>
strongest we've had since I've<lb/>
been here Emory said.<lb/>
See LINEBACKERS, Page 14<lb/>
Eight Wins<lb/>
onship Title<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
ich in<lb/>
Jiving<lb/>
op of<lb/>
irgin<lb/>
long.<lb/>
T?SO?<lb/>
in<lb/>
The Lady Pirates exploded for<lb/>
seven runs in the fifth inning, with<lb/>
senior Yvonne Williams starting<lb/>
the hitting streak off.<lb/>
Williams and Shepard both had<lb/>
singles to land on base, and team-<lb/>
mate Mitzi Davis then knocked a<lb/>
double to score both runners.<lb/>
Junior Jo Landa Next, Clayton<lb/>
hit a single and Hooks connected<lb/>
for one to score both Clayton and<lb/>
Davis. Ham's following single<lb/>
then scored Hooks.<lb/>
With Ham on base, Key singled<lb/>
to bring her in. The last run of the<lb/>
inning came when pitcher Jeanette<lb/>
Roth reached on an error and<lb/>
Yvonne Williams hit a single to<lb/>
score Key.<lb/>
The championship contest was<lb/>
the ninth game in two days, and<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Sue Manahan<lb/>
felt the Pirates definitely got<lb/>
enough playing in. "It was a lot of<lb/>
softball Manahan said, referr-<lb/>
ing to the two-day tourney. "I'm<lb/>
very pleased with the way we<lb/>
played, especially since we played<lb/>
so much. The team really pulled<lb/>
together<lb/>
Both Shepard and Williams<lb/>
were named as the tournment's<lb/>
co-most valuable players, and Jo<lb/>
Landa Clayton received the<lb/>
Golden Glove award for best<lb/>
fielder.<lb/>
Leading hitters in the cham-<lb/>
pionship game were Ham, who<lb/>
went threc-for-four and Hooks,<lb/>
who was two-for-four. Ham also<lb/>
had three runs batted in.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates, now 25-8,<lb/>
will play their last regular season<lb/>
game today against Campbell at 3<lb/>
p.m. The Bucs will then go to the<lb/>
state playoffs.<lb/>
ECU Netters Defeat 49ers<lb/>
The Lady Pirate<lb/>
tennis team came<lb/>
back to win two out<lb/>
of three doubles mat-<lb/>
ches to edge out<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte, 5-4,<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
According to Head<lb/>
Coach Patricia Sher-<lb/>
man, the match mark-<lb/>
ed the team's best per-<lb/>
formance all season.<lb/>
"Everyone played<lb/>
their best tennis of the<lb/>
entire year to defeat<lb/>
an excellent Charlotte<lb/>
team ? a team that<lb/>
has beaten many<lb/>
teams that have<lb/>
beaten us she said.<lb/>
"Janet Russell<lb/>
played exceptionally<lb/>
well in a three-hour<lb/>
plus match and the<lb/>
doubles team of<lb/>
Tolson and Christine<lb/>
have played excellent-<lb/>
ly of late<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
are now 8-9.<lb/>
In singles, Susan<lb/>
Romeo (C) def. Deb-<lb/>
bie Christine, 6-4, 6-3;<lb/>
Katherine Tolson<lb/>
(ECU) def. Kellie<lb/>
Kayton, 6-2, 6-2;<lb/>
Janet Russell (ECU)<lb/>
def. Dorothy Brown,<lb/>
6-0, 5-7, 7-6; Janet<lb/>
Redford (ECU) def.<lb/>
Mary Anne McKen-<lb/>
na, 6-1, 5-7, 6-3; Ann<lb/>
Mendel (C) def. Kim<lb/>
Harrison, 6-1, 6-1;<lb/>
and Mary Taylor (C)<lb/>
def. Lori Reep, 6-1,<lb/>
6-2.<lb/>
In doubles, Tolson-<lb/>
Christine (ECU) def.<lb/>
Romeo-Kayton, 7-6,<lb/>
6-3; Russell-Redford<lb/>
(ECU) def. Brown-<lb/>
Susan Marston, 6-2,<lb/>
7-5; and Taylor-<lb/>
McKenna (C) def.<lb/>
Harrison-Reep, 6-4,<lb/>
6-0.<lb/>
On Thursday, the<lb/>
Pirates suffered a 7-2<lb/>
loss against Peace<lb/>
College. Second-<lb/>
seeded Katherine<lb/>
Tolson was the only<lb/>
ECU player to win her<lb/>
singles match. Tolson<lb/>
then teammed with<lb/>
Debbie Christine and<lb/>
added another victory<lb/>
with a three-set win in<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
In singles, Traci<lb/>
Shelton (P) def.<lb/>
Christine, 7-5, 6-4;<lb/>
Tolson (ECU) def.<lb/>
Amy Maddox, 6-1,<lb/>
6-2; Whitney Bales<lb/>
(P) def. Russell, 6-4,<lb/>
6-2; Leanna Lewis (P)<lb/>
def. Redford, 3-6,<lb/>
7-5,6-1; Lori Past (P)<lb/>
def. Harrison, 7-5,<lb/>
2-6, 6-3; and<lb/>
Llewellyn Powell (P)<lb/>
def. Reep, 6-1, 6-2.<lb/>
In doubles, Tolson-<lb/>
Christine (ECU) def.<lb/>
Bales-Maddox, 1-6,<lb/>
6-1, 6-3; Shelton-<lb/>
Lairs (P) def. Russell-<lb/>
Redford, 2-6, 6-1,<lb/>
6-1; and Taft Powell<lb/>
(P) def. Harrison-<lb/>
Reep, 6-1. 6-3.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates'<lb/>
last match will be<lb/>
Tuesday when they<lb/>
take on William &amp;<lb/>
Mary. Matchtime is<lb/>
3:30 p.m.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 19, 19t3<lb/>
13<lb/>
m<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be reedtfy sverieWe for sole et<lb/>
i below the advertised price in each AAf Store, eicept as spectftcelry noted<lb/>
in this sd<lb/>
etor<lb/>
u<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED Set. April 23 A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
It) Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N. C.<lb/>
YOUE l&amp;P G0U1ITB7 STORE<lb/>
ECU tennis player Debbie Christine, the team's number-one seeded<lb/>
player, belts out a serve during a recent Pirate match.<lb/>
EC A C Makes Plans<lb/>
The ECAC-South<lb/>
conference board met<lb/>
last week and an-<lb/>
nounced firm plans to<lb/>
several areas in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
University President<lb/>
Dr. Ronald B. Car-<lb/>
rier, chairman of the<lb/>
ECAC-South basket-<lb/>
ball group, announc-<lb/>
ed that the 1984<lb/>
basketball tourna-<lb/>
ment will be held at<lb/>
JMU in Harrison-<lb/>
burg, Va March<lb/>
8-10.<lb/>
The 1985 tourna-<lb/>
ment will be held at<lb/>
William &amp; Mary in<lb/>
Williamsburg, Va<lb/>
while the 1986 tourna-<lb/>
ment is scheduled for<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
University in Fairfax,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Ben Carnevale,<lb/>
who has headed the<lb/>
ECAC-South for two<lb/>
years, has been retain-<lb/>
ed as the executive<lb/>
director of the league.<lb/>
A league office is<lb/>
scheduled to be open-<lb/>
ed in Richmond, Va<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
W&amp;M Athletic<lb/>
Director Jim<lb/>
Copeland has been<lb/>
named to head a com-<lb/>
mittee to look into<lb/>
possible expansion for<lb/>
the league. Presently,<lb/>
six schools compete in<lb/>
the ECAC-South:<lb/>
ECU, JMU, George<lb/>
Mason, the Naval<lb/>
Academy, the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Richmond and<lb/>
W&amp;M.<lb/>
Other areas of im-<lb/>
mediate attention will<lb/>
include negotiation of<lb/>
a television package<lb/>
and exploring the<lb/>
possibility of non-<lb/>
revenue sports com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?1C Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
754-3023 ?24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHE<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
LI-Haul Rentals<lb/>
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Service<lb/>
24 hr. Towing Service<lb/>
Jarlran Rentals Available<lb/>
Buck's<lb/>
270? E. 10th Si VjllllI<lb/>
58 10JJ<lb/>
"???<lb/>
 Sunday, April 24th, 1983 W<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
f I I I<lb/>
The Catalinas<lb/>
t<lb/>
The Showmen<lb/>
Billy Scott<lb/>
&amp; The Georgia Prophets<lb/>
The Castaways<lb/>
New Pitt County Fairgrounds, Greenville<lb/>
Gate Opens at 11:00 - Bands Start at 12:00<lb/>
BYOB (Bring Your Own Beer) No C laSS Or Bottles<lb/>
Tickets. Advance - $5.00 ? At Gate - $7.00<lb/>
TICKET LOCATION <lb/>
IDs Checked at Gate<lb/>
GREENVILLE - Record Bar, Pitt Plaza<lb/>
Sponsored By<lb/>
CO. Tankard Distributing Co.<lb/>
Bsn<lb/>
PI Kappa Phi<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLON1AN<lb/>
APRll 19, 1983<lb/>
Linebackers Strong<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 12<lb/>
'Competition is good<lb/>
and some depth is<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
Honorable mention<lb/>
all-America Clint<lb/>
Harris will be at free<lb/>
safety with strong<lb/>
support from<lb/>
sophomore Vernard<lb/>
Wynn and freshman<lb/>
Marcus Somervillc.<lb/>
Right cornerback<lb/>
starter Chuck Bishop<lb/>
returns this year, and<lb/>
the left cornerback<lb/>
spot ma be filled by<lb/>
Junior Kola n d 0<lb/>
Caparas, a transfer<lb/>
from Furman last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
At tackles. Seniors<lb/>
Steve Hamilton and<lb/>
Hal Stephens have<lb/>
secured their veteran<lb/>
positions. At defen-<lb/>
sive end, two other<lb/>
seniors, Curtis Wyatt<lb/>
and Jeff Pegues will<lb/>
bring their experience<lb/>
to try and make up<lb/>
for the loss of all-<lb/>
America Jody Schulz.<lb/>
Although Emory<lb/>
has quite a few con-<lb/>
cerns about the team's<lb/>
defense, his main<lb/>
priority is to build<lb/>
depth. "To play the<lb/>
schdule we have, we<lb/>
must find depth on<lb/>
the defensive line he<lb/>
said. "Our starters<lb/>
are good ones, but we<lb/>
just don't have what<lb/>
we need behind them.<lb/>
With eight new<lb/>
coaches, Emory said<lb/>
the team overall has<lb/>
adjusted well to new<lb/>
ideas and has improv-<lb/>
ed. "As for the<lb/>
meshing of our<lb/>
players with the new<lb/>
coaches, I don't think<lb/>
anything more<lb/>
positive could have<lb/>
happened he said.<lb/>
"The kids have amaz-<lb/>
ed me with their abili-<lb/>
ty to be flexible and<lb/>
work with other<lb/>
changes. This area is<lb/>
no problem<lb/>
The Purple-Gold<lb/>
game will get under-<lb/>
way Saturday at 7:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Game Rescheduled<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
University football<lb/>
game with the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Miami has<lb/>
been rescheduled for<lb/>
Nov. 5 at the Orange<lb/>
Bowl in Miami, Fla<lb/>
at 2 p.m.<lb/>
The game was<lb/>
originally scheduled Miami-Notre Dame<lb/>
to be played Sept. 24 on Sept. 24.<lb/>
in Miami at 4 p.m. East Carolina and<lb/>
The change was Miami both had open<lb/>
mutually agreed upon dates on Nov. 5. The<lb/>
between the two Pirates will open the<lb/>
schools, following 1983 season on Sept. 3<lb/>
CBS television's deci- against FSU in<lb/>
sion to televise Tallahassee.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Roll<lb/>
Tug For A Cause<lb/>
Sixty-four ai ea<lb/>
teams are needed to<lb/>
compete in the 1 ite<lb/>
Beet rug-of-War tor<lb/>
I aster Seals to be held<lb/>
April 30th at the<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
Fairgrounds. Groups<lb/>
of 8-10 individuals<lb/>
will join I ite Celebri-<lb/>
 Boog Powell in this<lb/>
single elimination<lb/>
i o u r n a m e n t ex-<lb/>
travaganza to benefit<lb/>
the handicapped<lb/>
The purpose or the<lb/>
eveni is to raise funds<lb/>
? oi Easter Sea! service<lb/>
programs for han-<lb/>
apped children and<lb/>
a d u 11 s in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The event is spon-<lb/>
 I ite Beer and<lb/>
i-sponsord b y<lb/>
WRAI 101-FM. All<lb/>
participants will<lb/>
c e i v e specially<lb/>
designed t-shirts, a<lb/>
certificate for a free<lb/>
taco from Taco Bell,<lb/>
and refreshments<lb/>
throughout the day.<lb/>
Teams are formed<lb/>
bv groups of friends<lb/>
or business associates.<lb/>
Participants must be<lb/>
at least 18 years of<lb/>
age. Teams will raise<lb/>
the $100 entry fee by<lb/>
obtaining a business<lb/>
sponsor or by having<lb/>
individual team<lb/>
membes secure dona-<lb/>
tions tow are the entry<lb/>
fee. With or without a<lb/>
business sponsor,<lb/>
each team member is<lb/>
encouraged to obtain<lb/>
at least S10 in dona-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
P r i e s will be<lb/>
awarded in catagories<lb/>
of both top fundrais-<lb/>
ing and tug-of-war<lb/>
competition. WRAI<lb/>
Gi Ccmou'iaged Fangues andj<lb/>
? , ? , s ?- ? P " 9 Bags<lb/>
Backpack, Campmq Equ.o<lb/>
men' S'eii Toed Shoes D'ShesI<lb/>
and Out '00 Diitff"1 Ne and<lb/>
Used Hems Cowbo B<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY<lb/>
SOl i Evans<lb/>
S'ree'<lb/>
STORE<lb/>
ABORTIONS<lb/>
1 7i wee terminations<lb/>
App ts. Made 7 Days<lb/>
CALL TOLL FREE<lb/>
800 3210575<lb/>
l ! A<lb/>
101-FM will award<lb/>
Panasonic AMFM<lb/>
radios to each<lb/>
member of the top<lb/>
fund-raising team and<lb/>
tote bags to the first<lb/>
place team in the tug<lb/>
competition. Trophies<lb/>
will be awarded to<lb/>
first, second, and<lb/>
third place teams in<lb/>
the tug competition.<lb/>
The first round of<lb/>
competition begins at<lb/>
10:00 a.m Saturday,<lb/>
April 30th. Teams are<lb/>
encouraged to pre-<lb/>
register by April 20th.<lb/>
Entry forms are<lb/>
available at the Easter<lb/>
Seals Office at 3825<lb/>
Barrett Drive,<lb/>
Raleigh. To ensure a<lb/>
spot for your team or<lb/>
to obtain more infor-<lb/>
mation, call Diana<lb/>
Domby at 782-6376.<lb/>
? ???????-????'???<lb/>
IEWE! r Pf<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
rolled to an 8-1 vic-<lb/>
tory over the Blue<lb/>
Devils Saturday after-<lb/>
noon, losing their on-<lb/>
ly match in the<lb/>
number one singles.<lb/>
Duke's June<lb/>
Alvendt downed Deb-<lb/>
bie Christine in split<lb/>
sets, preventing her<lb/>
team from being shut<lb/>
out.<lb/>
In the number four<lb/>
singles, Kim Harrison<lb/>
was forced to split<lb/>
sets. Besides Harrison<lb/>
and Christine, the<lb/>
Pirates lost only eight<lb/>
other games the rese<lb/>
of the day. ECU was<lb/>
also awarded two<lb/>
matches by default.<lb/>
Saturday's Results:<lb/>
June Alvendt (D)<lb/>
defeated Debbie<lb/>
Christine, 7-6, 1-6,<lb/>
6-3; Kathenne Tolson<lb/>
(ECU) defeated Lisa<lb/>
Hench, 6-0, 6-0; Janet<lb/>
Russell (ECU)<lb/>
defeated Sue Jackson,<lb/>
6-1, 6-1; Laura Red-<lb/>
ford (ECU) defeated<lb/>
Cynthia Pecena, 6-0.<lb/>
6-0; Kim Harrison<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Jenifer Packer, 6-7,<lb/>
6 2, 6-1; Lon Reep<lb/>
(ECU)<lb/>
default.<lb/>
w on<lb/>
by<lb/>
In doubles:<lb/>
Christine-Tolson<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Abrendt-Hench, 6-0,<lb/>
7-5; Russell-Redford<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Pecena-Packer, 6-0,<lb/>
6-1 and Harnson-<lb/>
Reep (ECU) won by<lb/>
default.<lb/>
Indians Stop Bucs<lb/>
j.jfc.tt fifutttiJ A-wua- ft?<lb/>
GREENV UE ?? ?<lb/>
'cteif<lb/>
Do K 2 ?J<lb/>
Remounts<lb/>
Custom Design<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
AII ork Done On Premises<lb/>
p<lb/>
Pizza inn<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
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/>
h<lb/>
K<lb/>
)<lb/>
MS. 4PKIL 19, 00-1 00<lb/>
25<lb/>
All mMi fccovt i vws f?e M88 to el&amp;o<lb/>
ComeZafify.<lb/>
<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Pirate Head Softball Coach Sue Manahan and Assistant Coach<lb/>
Lynn Davidson discuss the progress of the 1 ad Pirates, who are<lb/>
now 25-8. <lb/>
Cont'd From Page 12<lb/>
one hit in five innings,<lb/>
as did reliever Buddy<lb/>
Key.<lb/>
Neither team scored<lb/>
until the fourth inning<lb/>
when the Indians<lb/>
tallied on a single by<lb/>
John O'Keefe and a<lb/>
double by D.C.<lb/>
Aiken.<lb/>
ECU scored two<lb/>
runs in the fifth to<lb/>
take the lead but the<lb/>
Indians scored a run<lb/>
in their half of the in-<lb/>
ning to tie the score at<lb/>
2-2.<lb/>
In the seventh, the<lb/>
Pirates took a 4-2 lead<lb/>
into the inning but<lb/>
gave up a pair of<lb/>
unearned runs to end<lb/>
the game into extra in-<lb/>
nings.<lb/>
ECU wasted a<lb/>
golden opportunity to<lb/>
take the lead in the<lb/>
tenth inning uhen<lb/>
Hallow opened the in-<lb/>
ning with a single and<lb/>
took second on a wild<lb/>
pitch.<lb/>
But Hallow could<lb/>
not advance any fur-<lb/>
ther as the next three<lb/>
Pirate batters struck<lb/>
out.<lb/>
The Indians scored<lb/>
the winning run in the<lb/>
bottom of the tenth<lb/>
on Yolpfs two-out<lb/>
sinele.<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Sunday's con-<lb/>
ference finale with<lb/>
Richmond was once<lb/>
again a case of the<lb/>
Pirates jumping out<lb/>
to a lead but not being<lb/>
able to sustain it.<lb/>
In the first inning.<lb/>
KelK Robmette walk-<lb/>
ed and scored on<lb/>
Hallow's home run.<lb/>
The Spiders put the<lb/>
game away with two<lb/>
runs in the seventh in-<lb/>
ning with a single, a<lb/>
walk and a two-run<lb/>
double by Tubb<lb/>
Pace.<lb/>
The next couple of<lb/>
weeks will be crucial<lb/>
for the Pirates as the<lb/>
seek to gain one of the<lb/>
four conference<lb/>
tournev berths.<lb/>
On Tuesday night<lb/>
at 7:30, the Pirates<lb/>
will travel to Wilm-<lb/>
ington to take on the<lb/>
rival LNC-YA<lb/>
Seahawks The<lb/>
Seahawks will be ir.<lb/>
Greenville for a return<lb/>
matchup on Wednes-<lb/>
day night. Gametime<lb/>
is 00 p.m.<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed. April 20 thru<lb/>
Sat April 23 1983.<lb/>
ADVERTSE0 ;TEM POLiC<lb/>
cjore3 to t? 'eaOi'y aaaDie o'<lb/>
ue n e?c "s-Dge' Sa on aiceo'<lb/>
as jp?c ca'?y "Otod m th.aad II e<lb/>
do fun oui of an .tern e ii om?t<lb/>
you you' coce of a compaac e<lb/>
?er" ?h?n aa 'able 'enacting h?<lb/>
sae sa fls cm a 'acec K :<lb/>
m ent it ?oo io purchase !??<lb/>
acer' sec item at the adve't sec<lb/>
prce li n 3C 3as<lb/>
i.<lb/>
Open Mon thru Sat 8am to Midnight<lb/>
Sun 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
70 LEAN<lb/>
SOLD<lb/>
IN A<lb/>
Chub Lb<lb/>
PAK<lb/>
Total Price $4.90.<lb/>
Coca-Cola<lb/>
LUNCHEON MEAT<lb/>
Armour Treet<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Can<lb/>
FRESH CHEESE OR<lb/>
 Pepperoni<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
2SCSO<lb/>
For J SAVE<lb/>
 FRESH CRUSTY<lb/>
f Hani Rolls<lb/>
89<lb/>
AEROSOL<lb/>
HAIRSPRAY<lb/>
Vuwitat Mrtk<lb/>
$-149<lb/>
3 a! ? ?<lb/>
?imtt<lb/>
cTFHo?SON<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
M38<lb/>
fnl Miss Breck<lb/>
? $413<lb/>
m 9<lb/>
Can<lb/>
COST CUTTER IWS<lb/>
IMITATION<lb/>
12-Oz-<lb/>
PKQ<lb/>
12-Oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
? - -j?<lb/>
jp <lb/>
f<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
6CU STUDENTS UCult ?tM<lb/>
MtKOfflt tc at?r '?? markei at<lb/>
me Pitt Co?fir? f'trovna<lb/>
Blvtf Op" ???') S'v'a. nc<lb/>
iunOav ? til 1 Cra?H ?oou tm<lb/>
n.tur booi H Dne.i o?<lb/>
old pos?c?r?s Dm"o?i '?u?<lb/>
K 7SC KAMASAK ?? i ??(<lb/>
PncK 'o MM &amp; o<lb/>
QOOC CO??Ji'iW T" s s '<lb/>
mo?orc?cl? M?? M ;??' C<lb/>
? X SPECIAL II rtrrt" ? :X<lb/>
Good COrtO 'iO" A1"<lb/>
B,HC NH 'C i W??? r o'<lb/>
?r Call ?S2 4?3i<lb/>
l?tJ CME?CwS,Crr?.tt<lb/>
4.4 ? ?P?C S 2 -? rf ? '<lb/>
OOWS AM fv ??????? ? S<lb/>
p B LOC? r "ulll f? -<lb/>
pnerd ?e it i ?<lb/>
-S2 4?15<lb/>
:a albums of<lb/>
CHOICE M oid ?'a . x-<lb/>
roc? cov  ?- "<lb/>
T?fc? J ??'? c p. - s.<lb/>
plylDKI! NC ati<lb/>
CAB STEBEO CCVfE<lb/>
and sp?fi<lb/>
-tm C SE .E f :?<lb/>
(OR SAlE f SHE!<lb/>
SPEAKERS <lb/>
IM Cai '?? ?<lb/>
FOB SAlE I<lb/>
I SP?d Sr0? I ? ?<lb/>
goufAi in Fall  si E?<lb/>
cef P"? HIS m best<lb/>
C?H'5Jnc ??? 'v?9<lb/>
I SPEED BiCTCwE M<lb/>
internaoo :s ;? ;?<lb/>
Eue'iK" iMt? a.fi?<lb/>
ed M Car ' ??: - -<lb/>
' C?" TS? JS -it'<lb/>
?77 MGB ??? " <lb/>
-SI Ui<lb/>
: PANASCN ; TMKU1<lb/>
jdw?t i?? p? '??"<lb/>
? ? ; "?: ??"<lb/>
9 c? ?"? jjs?<lb/>
?ESVO?EBE? i? -<lb/>
Mrqaif t  ?'??<lb/>
i SALE i. I ??<lb/>
S?l?5<lb/>
FOB Si.E<lb/>
9i-e?n S'M-<lb/>
-S? "M3<lb/>
EPR!GEB-CS ' -<lb/>
3 CuoC hMH "<lb/>
?S? M3<lb/>
compac :e:<lb/>
-si s?:<lb/>
8EFmGEei?<lb/>
i S cubic lad B? cand<lb/>
?or S'SC C<lb/>
?1 mONDA KL2SS ? "? ?<lb/>
Ec cor? MM<lb/>
?, ?- S-iZ i<lb/>
FOR SAE I<lb/>
Grea' ?or c:? 1<lb/>
"SI ?37J a?te' i z ?<lb/>
??EPRIGERA-CS f -<lb/>
On? ei<lb/>
?fi- 5?'j ?-? E?; I<lb/>
S'SC C?" 'S? ;<lb/>
DRESSER<lb/>
STEREO a?C Sf<lb/>
t?! Ipr vat G?ee<lb/>
Can ?? a ?:<lb/>
NEMOv'EEN S IE -<lb/>
ED S20 As? "? s" -<lb/>
: so s:x ca i $ea? 'Si-1<lb/>
V A T E NJ i 11<lb/>
" i t' S'f ? I<lb/>
pus F o? mor?<lb/>
Men a' ?SI m<lb/>
AtKEO<lb/>
 &amp;K-ac- out<lb/>
t . - ; - f ;<lb/>
Synoect r?S<lb/>
campus :<lb/>
FEMitE<lb/>
? ?N'EOICI<lb/>
R' o h aj<lb/>
ip?s? N<lb/>
Por IJI WMJ<lb/>
stta<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
 ? ?: ' s<lb/>
?OOvm? E<lb/>
Utf E I I<lb/>
-<lb/>
G . ?<lb/>
?-? V i<lb/>
KR<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
- - i<lb/>
-<lb/>
PERSONAl<lb/>
ADRs &amp;-s ????<lb/>
ail parties TV &amp;e" :?<lb/>
II 9?t us "ive'e  I<lb/>
shorts too?eo ?ooc i- ?? ?<lb/>
me ?oud Nc ? bm ??<lb/>
semester Ou ? r :?<lb/>
ward to f Ni9Kt ? ?<lb/>
another one N<lb/>
PKTs<lb/>
MDL ? You re a 9<lb/>
ma'e and end The<lb/>
? ears have bee?- <lb/>
sure ?i't m.ss ? ??? ?? <lb/>
Better .s ? ?? I ??' ??"? -<lb/>
f?er?th,n9, .? ? dO<lb/>
ROOMMAlr<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE BOOM?<lb/>
WANTED N s-J f <lb/>
house Ne? home tm ?<lb/>
n StoAes rtt : sha'? - ?<lb/>
emaie roomma -<lb/>
'eassmao-e -e- ;<lb/>
pm Mon' a<lb/>
weekends at  :<lb/>
PEMAlE rocmma-e ????<lb/>
'c share nee en- -c oec ?<lb/>
townhouse ? MaltjaMl -<lb/>
?or me Sum me- ca rj-l<lb/>
FEMALE - vv i'E<lb/>
iaanted Ca r? :?:<lb/>
: F E M A u E BOO??1<lb/>
wanted lai a<lb/>
Geor qeI I '<lb/>
?"3 'S mo"h ACTSS " ??'<lb/>
tram campus C "M?<lb/>
ROOMVA-E VEECET<lb/>
summe' BM o "<lb/>
utiht.es Fa ?  " <lb/>
a??.Ub4e Ca v<lb/>
murmatior.<lb/>
FEMALE -r.v ?<lb/>
ANTEC tr -i I <lb/>
apt Ca ?'? - x  ??"?<lb/>
ROOMMATE i"?- E D<lb/>
sublease fil? <lb/>
tna aHMm  HJ-5HI<lb/>
SEEDED FEMALE<lb/>
-<lb/>
?<lb/>
- I<lb/>
N<lb/>
-<lb/>
WOMEN S MEALW<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN ajos"<lb/>
DEPEND ON<lb/>
<lb/>
 - ?-<lb/>
SflTVTCES ?<lb/>
MOOha ? ' -<lb/>
Ph?- ? ' ? <lb/>
rVX)t?Md ? C?Vu m MM<lb/>
Mec- core co  - ' I<lb/>
 M<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
m w -f M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0015"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 19. 1983<lb/>
rates Roll<lb/>
cs lost only eight<lb/>
games the rese<lb/>
da ECU was<lb/>
awarded two<lb/>
les b default.<lb/>
day's Results:<lb/>
c -Uendt (D)<lb/>
iicd Debbie<lb/>
line. 7-6. 1-6,<lb/>
.athenne Tolson<lb/>
I defeated Lisa<lb/>
6-0, 6-0; Janet<lb/>
(ECU)<lb/>
ed Sue Jackson,<lb/>
-l; 1 aura Red<lb/>
ECU) defeated<lb/>
iia Pecena, 6-0.<lb/>
6-0; Kim Harrison<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Jenifer Packer, 6-7,<lb/>
6-2, 6-1; Lori Reep<lb/>
(ECU) won by<lb/>
default.<lb/>
In doubles:<lb/>
Christine-Tolson<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Abrendt-Hench, 6-0,<lb/>
7-5; Russell-Redford<lb/>
(ECU) defeated<lb/>
Pecena-Packer, 6-0,<lb/>
6 1 and Harrison-<lb/>
Reep (ECU) won by<lb/>
default.<lb/>
Stop Bucs<lb/>
he lead in the<lb/>
inning when<lb/>
 opened the in-<lb/>
s ngle and<lb/>
d on a wild<lb/>
i could<lb/>
Ivance an fur-<lb/>
- the next three<lb/>
- struck<lb/>
- scored<lb/>
in in the<lb/>
the tenth<lb/>
olpi's two-oul<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
c o n -<lb/>
finale with<lb/>
a.s once<lb/>
tse of the<lb/>
nping out<lb/>
noi being<lb/>
'am it.<lb/>
' si inning.<lb/>
nette walk-<lb/>
scored on<lb/>
Hallow's home run.<lb/>
The Spiders put the<lb/>
game away with two<lb/>
runs in the seventh in-<lb/>
ning with a single, a<lb/>
walk and a two-run<lb/>
double by Tubby<lb/>
Pace.<lb/>
The next couple of<lb/>
weeks will be crucial<lb/>
tor the Pirates as they<lb/>
seek to gain one of the<lb/>
four conference<lb/>
tourne berths.<lb/>
On Tuesday night<lb/>
at 7:30, the Pirates<lb/>
will travel to Wilm-<lb/>
ington to take on the<lb/>
nul UNC-W<lb/>
Seahawks. The<lb/>
Seahawks will be in<lb/>
Greenville for a return<lb/>
matchup on Wednes-<lb/>
dav night. Gametime<lb/>
is :00 p.m.<lb/>
ADVERTISEO ITEM POLICY<lb/>
( 'ese adveMsed items is re<lb/>
ec to te reacj'iy available tor<lb/>
sa-e n sac Kroger Sav on except<lb/>
as spec 'icaiiy noted m this ad it we<lb/>
do run out o' an item we will otter<lb/>
you your choice of a comparable<lb/>
tem hen a?aiabie reflecting the<lb/>
sae 9airgs o a ranchec which<lb/>
 e?t tie yOo to purchase the<lb/>
idveM'sed ite at the advertised<lb/>
e within 30 days<lb/>
V<lb/>
P"ESH CHEESE OR<lb/>
PePperon<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
2 s 15 so<lb/>
ijT save<lb/>
?"J08<lb/>
 FRSH CflUSTY<lb/>
) Kaiser<lb/>
p Hard r0hs<lb/>
6<lb/>
For<lb/>
89<lb/>
rw<lb/>
?<lb/>
U<lb/>
??.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS, faculty, stall:<lb/>
Welcome to our flea market at<lb/>
the Pitt County Fairgrounds<lb/>
located on North Greenville<lb/>
Blvd Open every Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday I til 5 CralH. tools, lur-<lb/>
mture, books, etc. Displays ol<lb/>
old postcards, buttons, antique<lb/>
pistols and collectors' items.<lb/>
Real bargainsII<lb/>
K: 7S0 KAWASAKI. IfSI. SI.400<lb/>
Priced to sell. Great bargain.<lb/>
Good condition. This is a real<lb/>
motorcycle Make an oiler. Call<lb/>
75244JS.<lb/>
tso SPECIAL II Yamaha Si.200<lb/>
Good condition An excellent<lb/>
Bike Need to sell. Make an of<lb/>
?er Call 7S2 443J.<lb/>
l?8I CHEVY Custom Deluxe 10,<lb/>
tx4 speed, sliding rear win-<lb/>
dows AMFM, cassette. PS<lb/>
PB Lock in hubs. Rally wheels.<lb/>
Priced to sell. S10.SO0. Call<lb/>
?5: 4935. <lb/>
. ALBUMS OF YOUR<lb/>
CHOICE, newold hard to por,<lb/>
rock coun. iaii, clas. only S70.00<lb/>
Tike 1 years to pay in ? easy<lb/>
payments No dealers please.<lb/>
Call today 7S8 0207 ask for JAY.<lb/>
CAR STEREO COMPLETE<lb/>
with am fm receiver, equalizer<lb/>
and speakers. 30 watts and like<lb/>
new Call STEVE at 7S4-4045.<lb/>
FOR SALE: FISHER S30<lb/>
SPEAKERS Will sell cheap.<lb/>
$;? Call 7S-t?77.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Burgundy 77-inch<lb/>
10 speed Shogun bike. Just<lb/>
pougnt in Feb Toe clips. Ex-<lb/>
cellent price $125 or best offer.<lb/>
Call 752-049 and leave message.<lb/>
10 SPEED BICYCLE: Windsor<lb/>
international S12S or best offer.<lb/>
Enceiient shape, have barely us-<lb/>
ed it Can't afford to move with<lb/>
it Call '52 0854 Jennifer.<lb/>
177 MGB Asking tlOOO Call<lb/>
'52 ms <lb/>
; PANASONIC THRUSTERS. 2<lb/>
advents. 2 Sony speakers, new,<lb/>
must sell Call 7S2 2340. ask for<lb/>
 ? and Judy<lb/>
KENMORE REFRIGERATOR:<lb/>
' 2 years old 2 5 cubic feet.<lb/>
Available May 1. 5125 Great<lb/>
Bargain, call 7 5? 8005<lb/>
4 SALE 12 Blazer cheap<lb/>
'58 885<lb/>
FOR SALE 13 cubic foot<lb/>
whirlpool refrigerator Avacado<lb/>
green. 5 feet tall Best offer. Call<lb/>
'58 1303 <lb/>
REFRIGE?ATOR FOR SALE:<lb/>
I cubic toot Whirlpool Avacado<lb/>
9reen. 5 ft tall Best offer Call<lb/>
758 1303. <lb/>
COMPACT OED, best Offer,<lb/>
'58 5202. <lb/>
REFRIGERATOR 1 year old,<lb/>
5 5 cubic feet Beautiful condi<lb/>
tion $150 Call 752 9449<lb/>
'8 HONDA XL2S0 ?? helmet<lb/>
Exc cond 500 3 cycle trailer<lb/>
with straps 512$. 757 1233.<lb/>
FOR SALE 5 cubic ft refng<lb/>
Great for dorm, $125 Call<lb/>
'58 9372 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE<lb/>
One year olds 5 cubic toot<lb/>
relrigeratorfreeier. Exc cond<lb/>
5'SO call 7S4-9279.<lb/>
ORESSER. COMPACT<lb/>
STEREO, and queen sue sofa<lb/>
bed for sale Good condition<lb/>
Call Kirk at 7S?-70f.<lb/>
SEW QUEEN SIZE WATERB<lb/>
ED $700 Also new Shogun 25 in<lb/>
12 sp. $700. Call Scott, 7SB 7119.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
ADP's: Girls, it was the party of<lb/>
all parties The beer and liquor,<lb/>
' got us there quicker Your<lb/>
shorts looked good as we knew<lb/>
they would. No time left this<lb/>
semester, but we're looking for<lb/>
ward to P Night It will be<lb/>
another one to remember.<lb/>
PKTs. <lb/>
MDL ? You re a great room<lb/>
mate and friend The past 7<lb/>
? ears have been a lot of fun. I<lb/>
sure will miss ya next year. You<lb/>
better visit me a lot. Thanx 4<lb/>
everything Luv ya! GG.<lb/>
ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MATE to share 2 bedroom<lb/>
trailer one mile from ECU cam-<lb/>
pus. For more in forma tin, call<lb/>
Helen at 7SMII1 after 4:34.<lb/>
WANTED: WOMAN to star<lb/>
2 bedroom duplex May July 31.<lb/>
Furnished, grand piano,<lb/>
sundeck Less than 1 mile from<lb/>
campsis. SUsmonth. m-1077.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to share two bedroom<lb/>
townhouse at Tar River Estate.<lb/>
Rent plus deposit $iso and hall<lb/>
expenses Nonsmoker, please.<lb/>
Rhone 7SWW.<lb/>
WANTED? WE NEED ONE<lb/>
female to share our townhouse<lb/>
one block from campus. $90 per<lb/>
month plus one-third utilities.<lb/>
Available May-summer or fall if<lb/>
"?oded. Please call 7S?-Se?7.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED FOR<lb/>
SUMMER : 3BDR Apartment in<lb/>
Wilson Acres. lJ rent and<lb/>
utilties. Call 752 3201<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
RIVERBLUFF Apartments.<lb/>
Total, rent and utilities.<lb/>
$130 person Call Jeff Mitchell<lb/>
at 757-0443. Call in mornings or<lb/>
4-7. <lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED TO<lb/>
SHARE turn 7BRD. townhouse<lb/>
May Aug. V4 month plus 13<lb/>
utilities. Call 758 7138<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE, experience, quality<lb/>
work, IBM Selectric typewriter.<lb/>
Call Lanie Shive 7 58 530i or<lb/>
GAIL JOYNER 7S4 1042<lb/>
TYPING: Term papers, thesis,<lb/>
etc Call Kempie Dunn. 752-4733.<lb/>
AUDIO ELECTRONICS SER-<lb/>
VICE: Complete audio repair<lb/>
call after t p.m. Mark 752 1294.<lb/>
MOVING? No job too large or<lb/>
small! Reasonable rates, call<lb/>
7519533. <lb/>
TYPING? U years experience I<lb/>
Call 355 4974 after 5:30 p.m. <lb/>
NEED TYPING? Call Cindy<lb/>
355 4748 after 5:00. 10 years ex<lb/>
penence IBM type. Spelling,<lb/>
grammar errors checked.<lb/>
10 YEARS TYPING:<lb/>
Reasonable rates, spelling,<lb/>
punctuation and grammar cor-<lb/>
rections, proofreading. Call<lb/>
CINDY 4 a.m. p.m at 355 2444<lb/>
TYPING AND GRAPHICS-<lb/>
RUSH JOBS Portfolio and<lb/>
references. Call S. Hamilton<lb/>
7516917 or L. Piantadosia,<lb/>
754-041<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTING TO BUY: DOUBLE<lb/>
BED Call 754 S444<lb/>
MARRIED COUPLE NEEDS 1<lb/>
or 2 bedroom apartment from<lb/>
May 20 to Aug. 20. Have own fur<lb/>
niture Desire apartment with<lb/>
pool privileges. Ask for Dalton<lb/>
from 5 8 p.m. at 757-1944.<lb/>
WANTED MUSICIAN tor Bap<lb/>
tist Church. Call 522 3078 after<lb/>
4 00.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED to share 3 bedroom<lb/>
house New home fully furnished<lb/>
m Stokes area. To share with<lb/>
female roommate and owner ?<lb/>
reasonable rent Call after 5:30<lb/>
o m Mon-Fri. anytime<lb/>
weekends ph. 7S2-124.<lb/>
PEMALE ROOMMATE needed<lb/>
 share excellent two bedroom<lb/>
townhouse at Wedgewood Arms<lb/>
tor the Summer. Call 754-4707<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE<lb/>
WANTED Call 757 7347.<lb/>
2 FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
wanted for summer, for fall.<lb/>
Georgetown Apts<lb/>
S73 75month. Across street<lb/>
trom campus. Call 7S4-4?:<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED for<lb/>
summer: $90 per month plus 13<lb/>
utities Fully furnished. Pool<lb/>
available Call 754-3711 for more<lb/>
information. <lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
WANTED to share two-bedroom<lb/>
apt Call after 5:00 7;30-<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED TO<lb/>
sublease Eastorook apt. 13 rent<lb/>
and utilities. Call 7S2-H40.<lb/>
NEEDED: FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MOVING? NO JOB TOO<lb/>
LARGE OR SMALLII<lb/>
Reasonable rates Call 754 9533.<lb/>
RESPONSIBLE PERSON(S)<lb/>
WANTED to sublease one<lb/>
bedroom apartment at Tar<lb/>
River Estates this summer. Apt.<lb/>
is beside large swimming pool,<lb/>
has patio and is located 5<lb/>
minutes from campus. Call<lb/>
754-4474 tor more information<lb/>
LOOKING FOR AN APART-<lb/>
MENT?? We're graduating this<lb/>
semester and need someone to<lb/>
take our lease in May.<lb/>
2 bedroom townhouse with new<lb/>
carpet, located at River Bluff<lb/>
behind Papa Katz For more in<lb/>
formation, call 754 3444 and ask<lb/>
for Steele or Kevin.<lb/>
APARTMENT to sublease for<lb/>
summer at Cannon Court. Bus<lb/>
route to ECU. If interested, call<lb/>
7S7-14I<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR<lb/>
SUBLEASE: 1 BDRM. APT. ful-<lb/>
ly furnished and equipped. Air<lb/>
cond. paid for with rent.<lb/>
7S2<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT:<lb/>
2 bedroom River Bluff Poolside j<lb/>
5245 month 7 58 4842<lb/>
TAKE OVER LEASE BEGINN-<lb/>
ING MAY. 1 bedroom. 1 131<lb/>
blocks from campus. Energy ef-<lb/>
ficient. Handicapped features.<lb/>
For more into, call 754-9353.<lb/>
APT FOR RENT both summer I<lb/>
sessions. lOe-B Eastbrook<lb/>
1125 month Fully furnished.<lb/>
MALE 754-5144.<lb/>
FURNISHED 3-BEDROOM<lb/>
APT. TO SUBLET: May<lb/>
August. For more info, call <lb/>
3SS-67t3.<lb/>
FOR RENT: EFFICIENCY<lb/>
garage Apt. 3 blocks from ECU.<lb/>
Occupancy Aug. 1. Deposit and I<lb/>
lease. $135 plus utilities. Call <lb/>
7$2J2M.<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
NATIONAL FIRM interviews I<lb/>
for summer jobs. S310 wkly. <lb/>
Hard workers only Tue, Wed,<lb/>
Thurs, Apr. 19-31, 4-7 Brewster <lb/>
D-30S. <lb/>
GEMINI SHIRTS. INC. Rocky I<lb/>
Mount, N.C has summer jobs<lb/>
available for interested<lb/>
students. Jobs consist of travel-<lb/>
ing to national motorcycle races <lb/>
and working in souvenier con-<lb/>
cession stand. Good pay. Con-<lb/>
tact Eric Kavit at 1-444-4947.<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN tmemottadmexfioeef<lb/>
DEPEND ON. sion that's made e'isier by<lb/>
? e wor" er o the Meming Center Counselors are<lb/>
jvaiiaoie day and night to support and under<lb/>
stana you Your sateh. comfort and privacy are<lb/>
assured by the caring staff of the Fleming Center<lb/>
SERVICES: ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments ? 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
i B Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Earry<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? AH incisive Fees ? insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CALL 781-5550 DAY OR NIGHT ?<lb/>
Health care counseling jg FLEMING<lb/>
and education for wo<lb/>
menof<lb/>
$145 00 Pregjnancy Test, Birth<lb/>
Control, and Problem<lb/>
Pregnancy Counsehng. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
432-0535 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
40-321 7$44) between A.M<lb/>
and S P.M. Weekdays.<lb/>
R ALEIGHS WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
f 1? Wost M?rtn ft.<lb/>
RaleU<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, April 23,1983<lb/>
USB C.OieO B?f R4444<lb/>
??!? (SlUoe FREE) 10 M Lb. A?. .<lb/>
Bottom Rounds u, M58<lb/>
$toVft<lb/>
8r f7j8T)<lb/>
 (CiHWCtJ<lb/>
USDA Cboiea Btaf Round - Whole<lb/>
10-12 Lb. Average<lb/>
(Sliced FREE)<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Holly Farm - Grade A Chicken<lb/>
Drumsticks<lb/>
Or Thighs<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Clioiet - Boot Roatd BoHom<lb/>
Round<lb/>
Ql Bi I s<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Holly Firms - Ortae A<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
Breasts<lb/>
2 Liter<lb/>
I.S Liter - Hty. B4r?.?.y Baraiaay Rbie<lb/>
Ckiklli BUat, Flak Chiklii, Rii R?t?<lb/>
Gallo<lb/>
Wine<lb/>
fk?. oft -11 Ox. etat<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
1.S Litar - Raa. Piak. Gala1. Wkitt Ckibiii<lb/>
Taylor Lake<lb/>
Country<lb/>
6.5 0zLt.ekaakTaaa.leOil<lb/>
22 Ounce<lb/>
YJfJtK'<lb/>
Quart<lb/>
?ky Fay '1.09<lb/>
Duke's<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
F<lb/>
Wky Fay M.3S<lb/>
Wm?jv<lb/>
99 59<lb/>
4 Faek -1 Fly<lb/>
Del Monte Catsup Page Toilet Tissue<lb/>
489<lb/>
4.5 Oz. - Liver Kioto Natrtf $??? - Cat F??<lb/>
S Lk. - Criakit Cat<lb/>
Purina 100 Cga Interstate Potatoes<lb/>
14 0i. Caa ? Aitorteej<lb/>
1 Lk. - Feee Te?e<lb/>
10 Oaaaa<lb/>
AlpO Dog Food ip Margarine Quarters I Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
13 Oz. Ba- ? Flan.<lb/>
Folger's Coffee<lb/>
<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
IWHrTEHouff<lb/>
APPtE<lb/>
JUKE<lb/>
Why Pay '1 69<lb/>
119 Sb??fs 2 Piy<lb/>
So-Dri<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
WKyPa, 59<lb/>
SODRI<lb/>
SO-DRI<lb/>
0DR!<lb/>
ffwry<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0016"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
16 THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRIL 19, 1983<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
DINING<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
WANTS YOU<lb/>
to attend the intra Squad<lb/>
PURPLE AND GOLD<lb/>
FOOTBALL GAME<lb/>
on<lb/>
- Saturday?April 23rd<lb/>
BUTFIRST:<lb/>
Have your pregame meal<lb/>
on Purple and Gold Night<lb/>
in College Hill Dining Hall<lb/>
 Ribeye Steak<lb/>
Baked Potato and Sour Cream<lb/>
Broccoli Spears with<lb/>
Cheese Sauce<lb/>
Dinner: 4:30 -6:30pm<lb/>
Whole Baby Carrots<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
Desserts<lb/>
Beverages<lb/>
Game Time: 7:00pm<lb/>
We are within walking distance ofFicklin Stadium<lb/>
price only $3,75 person<lb/>
(lower with discount coupon)<lb/>
Save 75' College Hill Dining Hall valid 4-225-4<lb/>
Discount Coupon<lb/>
off any Meal ?<lb/>
I Good 4-225-4 Save 75'<lb/>
Ribeye Steak 18oz. Serving per person "All you can<lb/>
eat" available on second entree plus vegetables,<lb/>
salad bar, beverages and deserts.<lb/>
Meal Plans Welcomed<lb/>
ES<lb/>
BBS<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057552_0017"/>
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