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<pb facs="00057556_0001"/>
She lEaat (Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Uie,i?tJ<lb/>
Vol.57 Nof (p )h<lb/>
Tlumday, May 18, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Jenkins Planning To Enter Governor's Race<lb/>
L<lb/>
?<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Former ECU Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
I eo W. Jenkins has unofficially<lb/>
announced his plans to run for<lb/>
governor in 1984. "I'm very<lb/>
serious Jenkins said. "I'm go-<lb/>
ing to take a crack at it<lb/>
Jenkins, 69, served as<lb/>
chancellor at ECU for 18 years<lb/>
before retiring in 1978. Since<lb/>
then. Jenkins has remained active<lb/>
sithin the Democratic Party while<lb/>
handling special assignments for<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr.<lb/>
Jenkins said he would not of-<lb/>
ficially announce his candidacy<lb/>
until next January because doing<lb/>
so would require him to give up<lb/>
his position with "Tarheel Por-<lb/>
traits a weekly television show.<lb/>
The network would have to give<lb/>
equal air time to other announced<lb/>
candidates if he remained with the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
Consistent with his<lb/>
background, Jenkins noted<lb/>
education would be his primary<lb/>
concern if elected governor.<lb/>
Jenkins commented he was in<lb/>
favor of introducing North<lb/>
Carolina students to the computer<lb/>
age which he termed "the thing of<lb/>
vhe future<lb/>
Jenkins said he would like to<lb/>
see computers introduced at the<lb/>
high school and community col-<lb/>
lege level.<lb/>
"The second thing we've got to<lb/>
give serious thought to is day care<lb/>
centers for working mothers<lb/>
Jenkins said. "Today, people<lb/>
can't live off one salary; most of<lb/>
our young folks are two-income<lb/>
families<lb/>
Jenkins said he would like to<lb/>
see more affordable and<lb/>
reasonable daycare. "I think in-<lb/>
dustry itself has got to get into the<lb/>
act (daycare for its employees)<lb/>
more than it has in the past<lb/>
Jenkins will be joining an<lb/>
already packed field of<lb/>
Democratic hopefuls in the gover-<lb/>
nor's race. The field is expected to<lb/>
include Charlotte Mayor H. Ed-<lb/>
ward Knox, Attorney General<lb/>
Rufus L. Edminsten, Insurance<lb/>
Commissioner John R. Ingram,<lb/>
Lt. Gov. James C. Green, Com-<lb/>
merce Secretary S.M. "Lauch"<lb/>
Faircloth, former Deputy Human<lb/>
Resources Secretary Thomas O.<lb/>
Gilmore, Rep. Charles G. Rose<lb/>
111, D-N.C, and former Superior<lb/>
Court Judge L. H. Thornburg.<lb/>
Thornburg and Knox have of-<lb/>
ficially announced their can-<lb/>
didacies.<lb/>
Jenkins said he considered the<lb/>
big field an advantage to his can-<lb/>
didacy, adding his feelings that<lb/>
"the more the merrier<lb/>
A large field could force the<lb/>
race to enter a second primary<lb/>
stage which Jenkins thinks would<lb/>
help his candidacy.<lb/>
Jenkins has decided to wait<lb/>
before getting up a fund-raising<lb/>
organization to support his can-<lb/>
didacy. "I feel that there ought to<lb/>
be a place in North Carolina for a<lb/>
person to run on issues and not<lb/>
make it a contest to see who can<lb/>
raise the most money<lb/>
Another issue Jenkins said he<lb/>
would work for would permit<lb/>
dependents of military personnel<lb/>
to attend state colleges at reduced<lb/>
in-state rates. Currently, North<lb/>
Carolina is one of only seven<lb/>
states which do not allow military<lb/>
dependents to attend school at in-<lb/>
state price levels.<lb/>
"It just seems ridiculous that<lb/>
we don't let military dependents<lb/>
come to our state-supported<lb/>
schools the same way that we let<lb/>
citizens come Jenkins said.<lb/>
Jenkins said he would be op-<lb/>
posed to efforts to raise North<lb/>
Carolina's drinking age above<lb/>
current levels. He said the pro-<lb/>
blem of drunken driving was one<lb/>
of education, not age. "If a boy is<lb/>
able to go to war and defend his<lb/>
See, Dr Page 3<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins, who along with former N.C. Senator Robert Morgan<lb/>
received ECU's first honorary doctorate degrees, is planning to enter the<lb/>
'84 governor's race.<lb/>
Transit Authority Ordering New Buses<lb/>
Bv GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
News Kditor<lb/>
is<lb/>
Photo By GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
Transit Manager Bill Hilliard announced Monday that he plans to pur-<lb/>
chase three new busses this fall.<lb/>
The SGA Transit Authority<lb/>
in the process of purchasing three<lb/>
new buses that would save the<lb/>
school more than $200,000 over<lb/>
the next five years. Transit<lb/>
Manager Bill Hilliard said Mon-<lb/>
day the move would avoid a possi-<lb/>
ble student fee increase.<lb/>
Hilliard said the three buses<lb/>
would cost approxiamately<lb/>
$60,000 each. The money to pay<lb/>
for the buses will come from a<lb/>
$120,000 loan taken out by the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees and from<lb/>
a S60J000 surplus the transit<lb/>
authority currently has in its<lb/>
budget. The transit authority<lb/>
would pay back the loan over the<lb/>
next four years.<lb/>
The new buses were badly need-<lb/>
ed, Hilliard said, because the six<lb/>
buses he has are constantly<lb/>
needing to be repaired, over-<lb/>
crowded and get poor gas mileage<lb/>
(3.3 mpg). The three new buses<lb/>
would hold 95 people, almost<lb/>
twice as many people as the cur-<lb/>
rent vehicles. They would also be<lb/>
better quality buses with a life<lb/>
span of more than 12 years and<lb/>
get seven miles per gallon.<lb/>
According to Hilliard, three of<lb/>
the old buses would be sold when<lb/>
the new ones arrive. He said two<lb/>
1973 models and a 1976 model<lb/>
would go to make room for the<lb/>
1983s coming in October. The old<lb/>
The Tran-ot<lb/>
purchase the<lb/>
lowest bidder<lb/>
have 30 davs<lb/>
buses are Thomas Built buses,<lb/>
which Hilliard expects to purchase<lb/>
again. He said they are now in the<lb/>
process of receiving bids on the<lb/>
purchase.<lb/>
Authority would<lb/>
buses from the<lb/>
and would then<lb/>
to pay for them.<lb/>
Hilliard said the Trustees would<lb/>
then borrow the money needed<lb/>
from the bank that gives them the<lb/>
lowest interest rate.<lb/>
The older buses cost approx-<lb/>
imately $2.000 and ran on<lb/>
gasoline; the new buses will be<lb/>
equipped with diesel engines.<lb/>
Hilnard also said the transit<lb/>
authority had applied for a grant<lb/>
from the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Members Move In<lb/>
Transportation which would<lb/>
enable him to run buses<lb/>
downtown at night. The grants<lb/>
are being given out for new and<lb/>
innovative ideas in transporta-<lb/>
tion. Hilliard believes that with<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt's emphasis<lb/>
on drunken driving, his proposal<lb/>
has a good chance of being<lb/>
selected to recieve the funds.<lb/>
Hilliard said the plan calls for<lb/>
running buses downtown to the<lb/>
bar areas on Thursday, Friday<lb/>
and Saturday. He said there<lb/>
would be two routes, one running<lb/>
towards Riverbiuff and<lb/>
Eastbrook apartments and one<lb/>
through campus and towards<lb/>
Oakmont apartments.<lb/>
TKE Frat House Reopens<lb/>
Complete with an $1800 rewir-<lb/>
ing job and lots of smoke detec-<lb/>
tors the Tau Kappa Epsilon<lb/>
fraternity house is once again a<lb/>
home the fraternity's brothers.<lb/>
An early morning fire Jan. 8<lb/>
caused more than $15,000 in<lb/>
damages to the three-story struc-<lb/>
ture. Most of the damage was<lb/>
confined to the attic area which<lb/>
served as bedrooms for four<lb/>
students. The cause of the fire was<lb/>
never determined although some<lb/>
members have speculated faulty<lb/>
wiring or a lit cigarette might have<lb/>
ignited the blaze. There were no<lb/>
injuries.<lb/>
Assistant to the Chancellor<lb/>
Charles R. Blake, faculty advisor<lb/>
to the TKE's, praised contractors<lb/>
and TKE members for their hard<lb/>
work which resulted in the<lb/>
reopening of the house before<lb/>
summer classes. "We are very<lb/>
pleased with the progress Blake<lb/>
said. "Now we can start off as a<lb/>
cohesive group in the fall<lb/>
Blake helped orchestrate a<lb/>
$15,500 loan from a Greenville<lb/>
bank which was used to make<lb/>
repairs including a new roof, new<lb/>
shingles for the side of the house,<lb/>
new walls and ceilings.<lb/>
Because of poor financial<lb/>
management the fraternity's fire<lb/>
insurance was allowed to expire,<lb/>
leaving the group without<lb/>
coverage. Blake has worked with<lb/>
TKE members to make the frater-<lb/>
nity financially stable. The<lb/>
group's monthly mortgage pay-<lb/>
ment will be $600 for the next five<lb/>
years and be reduced to $200 after<lb/>
seven years. Blake said the rent<lb/>
from the 14 members scheduled to<lb/>
live in the house next fall would<lb/>
cover the expenses.<lb/>
TKE members and their little<lb/>
sisters took an active role in the<lb/>
renovation effort. According to<lb/>
Blake, their efforts represented<lb/>
about $7000 in work. Members<lb/>
led the clean-up effort con-<lb/>
tributing painting, carpentry and<lb/>
other interior work. They also laid<lb/>
carpet, donated by a local<lb/>
business, in several rooms.<lb/>
Blake said the house required<lb/>
less repair than initially expected.<lb/>
The saved funds were used to<lb/>
make other improvements on the<lb/>
structure. Blake credited the con-<lb/>
tractor for the1000 to $1500 sav-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Blake said the house is in the<lb/>
best shape it's been in the last<lb/>
seven years. He said TKE alumni<lb/>
would be proud of the renovated<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Blake said the new wiring in the<lb/>
house updated the electrical<lb/>
system to meet the standards used<lb/>
for today's newly-constructed<lb/>
homes. The TKE house was con-<lb/>
structed in the early 1950s.<lb/>
"We're very safe Blake add-<lb/>
ed. Blake said the group would be<lb/>
able to look back on the tragic<lb/>
event in a positive light and learn<lb/>
from the experience.<lb/>
"We're very safe Blake add-<lb/>
ed. Blake said the group would be<lb/>
able to look back on the tragic<lb/>
event in a positive light and learn<lb/>
from the experience.<lb/>
James Lanier Selected<lb/>
New Vice Chancellor;<lb/>
Assumes Post July 1<lb/>
James Lanier<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
New MMor<lb/>
Dr. James L. Lanier has been<lb/>
selected to fill the post of vice<lb/>
chancellor for institutional<lb/>
development. Lanier, whose ap-<lb/>
pointment takes place July 1, is<lb/>
currently the director of develop-<lb/>
ment and alumni affairs at<lb/>
Louisburg College in Louisburg,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Acting Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Affairs Angelo Volpe<lb/>
was also named to continue his<lb/>
current post permanently. Both<lb/>
Volpe and Lanier were recom-<lb/>
mended by search committees<lb/>
before being approved by the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors.<lb/>
Lanier attended Louisburg Col-<lb/>
lege and received his bachelor<lb/>
degree in health, physical educa-<lb/>
tion and recreation and his<lb/>
masters in education from ECU.<lb/>
The job of the vice chancellor<lb/>
for institutional advancement and<lb/>
planning includes coordinating<lb/>
fundraising and promoting good-<lb/>
will in the local community.<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell,<lb/>
speaking on the appointment, said<lb/>
Lanier "has a background that<lb/>
already prepares him to succeed in<lb/>
this university effort. He knows<lb/>
the communities outside the cam-<lb/>
pus as well as the various aspects<lb/>
of the campus<lb/>
Lanier, 36, will succeed Dr.<lb/>
Donald Lemish, who resigned in<lb/>
January 1982. Lanier planned and<lb/>
coordinated Louisburg's develop-<lb/>
ment and alumni programs since<lb/>
1976 and directed the three-year<lb/>
$4.2 million "Third Century"<lb/>
campaign, Louisburg College's<lb/>
most successfull fundraising ven-<lb/>
ture in 30 years.<lb/>
Volpe, 44, is a native of<lb/>
Brooklyn, N.Y. He succeeds Dr.<lb/>
Robert H. Maier, who resigned in<lb/>
Janurary to become profesror of<lb/>
experimental surgery in the<lb/>
School of Medicine. Before his<lb/>
present appointment, Volpe had<lb/>
been dean of the College of Arts<lb/>
and Sciences for more than two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Grads Celebrate<lb/>
POtt Bv GARY PATTERSON<lb/>
These two lucky grads hug each other in relief after commencement ceremonies May 6. More than 2600 lucky<lb/>
ECU students received degrees at the early morning excercises.<lb/>
World News At A Glance<lb/>
From Staff and Wire Reports<lb/>
While we reporters joined you, readers, in sun-<lb/>
bathing down at the beach, this paper stopped but<lb/>
the news went on. Here is the rundown of top<lb/>
stories.<lb/>
INTERNATIONAL Prosecutor-General Tabrizi<lb/>
dissolved Iran's Communist Party. U.S. Secretary<lb/>
of State Shultz is credited with the peace plan now<lb/>
approved by Israel and Lebanon but not Syria.<lb/>
PLO leader Yassir Arafat calls for war. Socialists<lb/>
won national elections in Spain by a landslide.<lb/>
England's Prime Minister Margaret Thatcher call-<lb/>
ed a general election for June 9. Iran and Iraq ex-<lb/>
changed their first POWs. Chilean soldiers sur-<lb/>
rounded Santiago shantytowns and seized 1,000<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
NATIONAL U.S. Roman Catholic bishops ap-<lb/>
proved and issued their teaching letter opposing<lb/>
current nuclear strategy; the vote was 238-9. Exit<lb/>
exams for functional literacy may be required for<lb/>
high school graduation in Florida and possibly all<lb/>
states. The stock market recorded record highs, but<lb/>
the job market for college grads got tighter than<lb/>
ever. Chicago's machine is outvoting its new mayor<lb/>
in the city council. Thirteen-month-old Brandon<lb/>
Hall, who received two liver transplants, died.<lb/>
Looks like Lakers vs. 76ers in the NBA finals.<lb/>
STATE Chlordane and other chemicals in a<lb/>
Durham well suggests widespread well contamina-<lb/>
tion in North Carolina. Nine of 11 N.C. represen-<lb/>
tatives joined in passing the nuclear freeze resolu-<lb/>
tion in the U.S. House.<lb/>
LOCAL The Greenville City Council adopted an<lb/>
anti-noise ordinance. Campus groups may apply<lb/>
for one exception per semester. ECU commence-<lb/>
ment in Ficklen featured 2650 graduates, ECU's<lb/>
first doctorate of philosophy, and ECU's first<lb/>
honorary degrees to Leo Jenkins and Robert<lb/>
Morgan. Three ECU hazing cases were dismissed.<lb/>
Professor Stan Riggs won an O. Max Gardner<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
OFF THE WALL Mikhail Tsypkin, graduate of<lb/>
Moscow State and formerly a Soviet army reserve,<lb/>
reports on Soviet conscripts, their training and<lb/>
morale. Airport noise is linked with heart disease.<lb/>
T<lb/>
?? wapm fun<lb/>
&amp; r ? ???<lb/>
??- .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0002"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 18, 1983<lb/>
IHEJLASTCAROLINIAS<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may um ttio form at right or<lb/>
woo o separate shoaf of paper If<lb/>
yow nood moro Unas. Thoro aro 33<lb/>
units par lino. Each lottor, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word spaco<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitaiixo and<lb/>
ftyphonate words properly. Loava<lb/>
spaco at end of line if word<lb/>
doesn't tit. No ads wilt bo ac-<lb/>
cepted over tho phono. Wo<lb/>
reserve tno right to rolect ony ad.<lb/>
Alt ads must be propaM. Enclose<lb/>
73 per line or fraction of a Km.<lb/>
Please print icjiM! Use capital and<lb/>
lower case biters.<lb/>
?Here w THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
office by 3:Pf Tuesday before<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No tines.<lb/>
,?P.<lb/>
at Tsa pst asst S.<lb/>
it"<lb/>
Mfelcome<lb/>
Students<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyooe interested in running<lb/>
souls office next semester con<lb/>
tact Barbara at 75a 9550<lb/>
BINGO?ICECREAM<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a<lb/>
BingoIce Cream Party this<lb/>
Tuesday, May 24. 193 at 700<lb/>
pm in the MendenhaM Student<lb/>
Center Multi Purpose Room All<lb/>
ECU students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
their dependents and guests are<lb/>
welcome Admission is still only<lb/>
15 cents. Eight types of Bmgo<lb/>
games will be played Try your<lb/>
luck at Bingo, eat delicious ice<lb/>
cream, and have some fun!<lb/>
Following is a schedule for the<lb/>
summer Bingoice Cream Par<lb/>
ties. AH parties are held at 7 00<lb/>
pm In the Multipurpose Room<lb/>
Tuesday, May 24, 19?3, Tues<lb/>
day. May 30, l?s3 Tuesday,<lb/>
June 7, 1983 Tueday. June 14,<lb/>
1983<lb/>
COUNSELORS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Male counselors needed tow<lb/>
ortt In the Lutheran Camp in<lb/>
Virginia. Two resident pro-<lb/>
grams as well as canoeing,<lb/>
backpacking, biking and beach<lb/>
camp. Contact Rev. F Wayne<lb/>
Williams, Ft Valley Rt Box 355,<lb/>
St. David's Church, VA 22652.<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
PEACE COMMITTEE<lb/>
Love-brutally humiliated and<lb/>
destroyed a world of stagnant<lb/>
possibilities created by the false<lb/>
fathers who built and tolerated<lb/>
the Auschweitz s and Viefnams<lb/>
of history, those who have par<lb/>
ticipated in the torture<lb/>
chambers of the ecclesiastical<lb/>
inquisitions and then forgotten<lb/>
without remorse. This is the<lb/>
state of affairs that cries out to<lb/>
us, that plagues our consciences<lb/>
and demands to be challenged<lb/>
if you mr ready to make a com<lb/>
mitment to justice if you are<lb/>
ready to begin building a new<lb/>
kind of society tree of violence.<lb/>
poverty, and alienation we need<lb/>
you. Come to the meeting of the<lb/>
Greenville Peace Committee at<lb/>
M S Elm St. at 7 00 Friday<lb/>
night, or phone 748 490 for more<lb/>
information<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
Scuba Diving Travel Adven-<lb/>
ture's Dive Cozumel, Mexico on<lb/>
the beautiful Yucatan peninsula.<lb/>
Aug. 3. 1903 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 fare from<lb/>
Raleigh Non-dive" welcome.<lb/>
Call Ray Scharf at 757 6441.<lb/>
INTER VAeWlTY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Monday Nights Bible Study<lb/>
8:30 pm 108 Jarvis Dorm.<lb/>
Prayer Group for spiritual sup-<lb/>
port and fellowship 10 15 pm<lb/>
every night 111 Fletcher. For<lb/>
more information contact: Todd<lb/>
108 Jarvis, Shelia 157 Jarvis and<lb/>
Scott ill Fletcher.<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 m 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 tor 8 weeks Anyone in<lb/>
terested must sign up 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 m 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 mam<lb/>
Biology office<lb/>
TEMPORARY<lb/>
The staff of the East Caroh<lb/>
nian would like to welcome those<lb/>
summer students who will "se in<lb/>
Greenville temporarily Please<lb/>
try to maintain that certain<lb/>
equilibrium between study<lb/>
? ngdying out in the sun with a<lb/>
six pack of Michelob with your<lb/>
textbook closed) and party<lb/>
mgisuckmg down long island ice<lb/>
teas at Darryls waiting to go<lb/>
downtown! Please drive<lb/>
carefully after you have had a<lb/>
few drinks, because they give<lb/>
out DUIs down here like the<lb/>
ELBO gives out draft on ladies<lb/>
night Have a good one<lb/>
u<lb/>
Pitta 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/>
?-aYA Mn ?.<lb/>
A HARD DAY<lb/>
LIKE OUR<lb/>
HARD DAYS NIGHT<lb/>
Every<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
at the<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE:<lb/>
FREE BEER<lb/>
(8:30-10:00)<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION ALL NIGHT<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
4i<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
Tue. Draft Night 1.50 adm. -<lb/>
-10t Draft all Night<lb/>
Wed. Hump Nite 50t cans?free adm.<lb/>
with ECU ID all night<lb/>
Thur College Nite 50cans til 11:00pm<lb/>
?754 cans til 2:00am<lb/>
Fri. End of the Week Party<lb/>
704 cans til 11:00pm<lb/>
Sat. Best in Dance Music<lb/>
Sun. Ladies Nite-5f Draft while it lasts<lb/>
?Free adm. for all ladies<lb/>
Mon. Orientation Party<lb/>
Check for specials during orientation<lb/>
The very best in solid gold Rock and Roll<lb/>
with WITN's Greg Allison<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
M fie LifyiJ l!?4 N Mrnrl IW<lb/>
Restaurant &amp; Nightclub<lb/>
taas fr? .rvr.?rH, V.rp?r, "? T57.aeaS for .ddtlM-al M.OII lH-<lb/>
Greenville's newest nightspot &amp; eatery.<lb/>
Weds. Fat Ammos 9:00-1OCmm<lb/>
AU Lady Members Free AU Night<lb/>
Happy Hour 7:00-10:00pm Heavy, hot hors'duerves<lb/>
1<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
We're taking you Back in Time<lb/>
For the Time of Your Life!<lb/>
Thlirs. Ladies Lockout-Ladies Free AU Night.<lb/>
Free draft A Wine from 8:30- 10:00pm.<lb/>
Music by Don Vickers.<lb/>
Super Summertime happy hour specials.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Music by WRQR s Kirk Williams<lb/>
504 admission for all greek members.<lb/>
Late Night Happy Hour 10:00-1:00<lb/>
25j draft all night. Doors open at 8:00pm.<lb/>
Central Park 9:00-1:00pm.<lb/>
Happy Hour 8:00-10:00pm.<lb/>
Doors open at 800,<lb/>
We have an all new men featuring<lb/>
steaks, sandwiches, staffed potatoes and much more.<lb/>
TMI <lb/>
Cfi<lb/>
:i<lb/>
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WORKSHOP<lb/>
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TO FITNESS"<lb/>
Classes are; Mon-Thur: Fri:<lb/>
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 2704 E. 10th St. 752-3228 l<lb/>
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Greenville<lb/>
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12:00-1:00<lb/>
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Sat:<lb/>
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Across from ViHo Roma,<lb/>
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Como by teay far your eoniplato ca<lb/>
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We pull for ECU not from"<lb/>
<lb/>
Seab<lb/>
Bv PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
Ricky Seabolt, the<lb/>
ECU student from<lb/>
Durham who was<lb/>
critically injured<lb/>
March 2 in the Village<lb/>
Green apartment ex<lb/>
plosion, is making<lb/>
cellent progress<lb/>
toward a full recovers<lb/>
and hopes to be t<lb/>
at ECU to finish up<lb/>
requirements for a<lb/>
marketing degree<lb/>
"I'm ready to get<lb/>
out of here and go<lb/>
home Seabolt said<lb/>
Monday m an inter-<lb/>
view from his room in<lb/>
the Charlotte<lb/>
Rehabilitation<lb/>
Hospital where he has<lb/>
been since last month<lb/>
"I could come back<lb/>
(to school) in the fall.<lb/>
ut it's doubt:<lb/>
Seabolt -<lb/>
right now lm loot<lb/>
to come back spring<lb/>
session<lb/>
Both Seabolt<lb/>
his mother. D<lb/>
Seabolt. than-<lb/>
members of the Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi fraternity<lb/>
for the continuous<lb/>
support they have<lb/>
given to the family<lb/>
during their 10-week<lb/>
ordeal since the ev<lb/>
sion. "I can't tell you<lb/>
how great they've<lb/>
been Seabolt'<lb/>
mother said, adding<lb/>
that fraternity<lb/>
members have<lb/>
regularly visited,<lb/>
telephoned and writ-<lb/>
ten to check on their<lb/>
brothers recovery.<lb/>
Seabolt is president of<lb/>
J<lb/>
?<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 18, 1983<lb/>
j<lb/>
AMO<lb/>
&amp; Mghtclub<lb/>
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1:30- 10:90pm.<lb/>
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.mntiunii"<lb/>
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St. 752-3228<lb/>
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looking good<lb/>
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tg needs.<lb/>
Kir complete car needs.<lb/>
ECU not from"<lb/>
<lb/>
iiiUHuiiitiimmiimiNiiimimuuiHiiHiiuiHuii<lb/>
Seabolt Improving Fast<lb/>
Bv PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
vwM.ni Ne. Kdilof<lb/>
Ricky Seabolt, the<lb/>
ECU student from<lb/>
Durham who was<lb/>
critically injured<lb/>
March 2 in the Village<lb/>
Green apartment ex-<lb/>
plosion, is making ex-<lb/>
cellent progress<lb/>
toward a full recovery<lb/>
and hopes to be back<lb/>
at ECU to finish up<lb/>
requirements for a<lb/>
marketing degree.<lb/>
"I'm ready to get<lb/>
out of here and go<lb/>
home Seabolt said<lb/>
Monday in an inter-<lb/>
view from his room in<lb/>
the Charlotte<lb/>
Rehabilitation<lb/>
Hospital where he has<lb/>
been since last month.<lb/>
"1 could come back<lb/>
(to school) in the fall,<lb/>
but it's doubtful<lb/>
Seabolt said. "So<lb/>
right now I'm looking<lb/>
to come back spring<lb/>
session<lb/>
Both Seabolt and<lb/>
his mother, Doris<lb/>
Seabolt, thanked<lb/>
members of the Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi fraternity<lb/>
for the continuous<lb/>
support they have<lb/>
given to the family<lb/>
during their 10-week<lb/>
ordeal since the explo-<lb/>
sion. "I can't tell you<lb/>
how great they've<lb/>
been Seabolt's<lb/>
mother said, adding<lb/>
that fraternity<lb/>
members have<lb/>
regularly visited,<lb/>
telephoned and writ-<lb/>
ten to check on their<lb/>
brothers recovery.<lb/>
Seabolt is president of<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi. Seabolt was side throughout the<lb/>
Seabolt is the only transfered to N.C. ordeal. She won t<lb/>
person still hospitaliz- Memorial Hospital in leave, said Seabolt,<lb/>
ed as a result of the Chapel Hill. A short who has been trying<lb/>
time later he was ad-<lb/>
pre-dawn explosion<lb/>
that took the life of<lb/>
ECU student David<lb/>
Martin and injured 12<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Seabolt was sleep-<lb/>
ing on the couch in<lb/>
Martin's third-floor<lb/>
apartment when li-<lb/>
quid propane gas<lb/>
tanks ignited in a<lb/>
laundry room below<lb/>
Martin's apartment.<lb/>
The force of the ex-<lb/>
plosion blew Martin<lb/>
and Seabolt into a<lb/>
backyard swimming<lb/>
pool. Martin was kill-<lb/>
ed instantly. Seabolt<lb/>
was admitted to Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in critical<lb/>
condition suffering<lb/>
from severe head and<lb/>
liver injuries.<lb/>
Seabolt did not<lb/>
learn of Martin's<lb/>
death until two weeks<lb/>
ago when doctors and<lb/>
his parents decided he<lb/>
was ready to be filled<lb/>
in on the details of the<lb/>
explosion. "It just<lb/>
tore him up terribly<lb/>
Mrs. Seabolt said.<lb/>
Seabolt's mother<lb/>
also showed her son<lb/>
newspaper accounts<lb/>
of the explosion. "He<lb/>
didn't realize the<lb/>
severity of the explo-<lb/>
sion Martin's father<lb/>
has also been in touch<lb/>
with Seabolt by<lb/>
telephone several<lb/>
times since Seabolt<lb/>
was told of his<lb/>
friend's death.<lb/>
On March 17,<lb/>
mitted to the<lb/>
Charlotte facility so<lb/>
he could begin the<lb/>
long rehabilitation<lb/>
process.<lb/>
"We're real happy<lb/>
with his progress<lb/>
said Seabolt's mother.<lb/>
"But he's got a ways<lb/>
to go yet<lb/>
"I can walk, but it<lb/>
tires me out Seabolt<lb/>
said. "I'm still in the<lb/>
beginning stages of<lb/>
walking<lb/>
Seabolt uses a cane<lb/>
to help him keep his<lb/>
balance. He is still<lb/>
suffering from some<lb/>
to encourage his<lb/>
mother to take some<lb/>
time for herself.<lb/>
Doctors have set<lb/>
June 10 as Seabolt's<lb/>
prospective release<lb/>
date. ECU has<lb/>
granted Seabolt as<lb/>
much time as he needs<lb/>
to make up his course<lb/>
work from last<lb/>
semester. Seabolt was<lb/>
slated to graduate this,<lb/>
summer. Seabolt's<lb/>
mother said she plans<lb/>
to bring her son back<lb/>
to Greenville to meet<lb/>
the doctors, nurses<lb/>
and other people who<lb/>
have helped the<lb/>
Seabolts' throughout<lb/>
their son's recovery.<lb/>
 NOBS<lb/>
I Jewlery Repair<lb/>
 custom crafting<lb/>
? fair prices<lb/>
: guarantied work<lb/>
 Bring This Ad for<lb/>
I 20OFF<lb/>
j 14K Chain Repairs<lb/>
I by Les Jewlery<lb/>
I 120E SlM Street 7SS227<lb/>
, 10-5 TuesSal.<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
In Gov. Race<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
from Page 1<lb/>
country at 18,<lb/>
he<lb/>
paralysis on his right ought to be able to<lb/>
side. Doctors allow know how to drink m-<lb/>
Seabolt to leave the<lb/>
hospital one night a<lb/>
month. Last month he<lb/>
went to visit his<lb/>
brother in Georgia.<lb/>
This month he went<lb/>
home for the first<lb/>
time.<lb/>
While at home,<lb/>
Seabolt saw many<lb/>
friends including<lb/>
fraternity brothers<lb/>
and relatives. "We're<lb/>
just thankful now that<lb/>
Ricky's going to be<lb/>
alright said Pi Kap-<lb/>
pa Phi member Scott<lb/>
Smith. "It's fantastic,<lb/>
we thank God every-<lb/>
day that he is on his<lb/>
way to a full<lb/>
recovery Smith was<lb/>
among those who<lb/>
visited Seabolt in<lb/>
Durham.<lb/>
Seabolt's mother<lb/>
has been at her son's<lb/>
telligently at 18<lb/>
Jenkins said. "I don't<lb/>
think wisdom's going<lb/>
to come because you<lb/>
add a year on. More<lb/>
and more people have<lb/>
to be taught that<lb/>
drinking and driving<lb/>
is something we can-<lb/>
not tolerate in this<lb/>
society. It's just too<lb/>
dangerous<lb/>
Jenkins stressed<lb/>
that the United States<lb/>
should "remain<lb/>
tough" on national<lb/>
defense matters.<lb/>
"We've got to be<lb/>
competitive with the<lb/>
Russians; there's no<lb/>
use kidding ourselves<lb/>
on that Jenkins<lb/>
said. "They're (the<lb/>
Russians) not letting<lb/>
us alone because they<lb/>
love us. They're let-<lb/>
ting us alone because<lb/>
they're afraid of at-<lb/>
tacking us<lb/>
Jenkins did not say<lb/>
specifically whether<lb/>
he would support a<lb/>
nuclear freeze resolu-<lb/>
tion, but he did say he<lb/>
would support bi-<lb/>
lateral reductions in<lb/>
nuclear arms if the<lb/>
Russians also took<lb/>
part in such efforts.<lb/>
Jenkins said he<lb/>
could not predict a<lb/>
sure victory in his race<lb/>
for governor. "No<lb/>
one knows what a<lb/>
man or a women will<lb/>
do when they get<lb/>
behind the closed cur-<lb/>
tain<lb/>
Jenkins plans to<lb/>
travel around the state<lb/>
during the coming<lb/>
months on speaking<lb/>
engagements before<lb/>
he officially an-<lb/>
nounces his can-<lb/>
didacy.<lb/>
N.C. State NCAA<lb/>
Championship Baseball Caps<lb/>
Extra Nice only $5.00<lb/>
Regularly $8.00 4for $20<lb/>
Call 756-8977 to place order<lb/>
4<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 8:30-10:00<lb/>
FREE DRAFT<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB-MEMBERS &amp; GUEST<lb/>
AT BARRE,ltd<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Wed May 18<lb/>
thru Sat May 21, 1983.<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
422 ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
GREENVILLE,N.C.<lb/>
(919) 756-6670<lb/>
ADVERTISED !TE<lb/>
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Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight ? Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
(D United Figure Salon's<lb/>
Summer Special<lb/>
$15.00 for 5 weeks<lb/>
Please call for Registration<lb/>
Salon Hours<lb/>
10:00-8:00 M-Th<lb/>
10:00-6:00 Friday<lb/>
10:00-12:00 Saturday<lb/>
756-2820<lb/>
Group exercise<lb/>
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10:15 M-Sat<lb/>
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Breyer's Ice Cream<lb/>
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SLICED<lb/>
Luncheon Meat<lb/>
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4b. 4- 40<lb/>
  "fc??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0004"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
2Ufe lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, a<lb/>
Mike Hughes. ?? t?,or<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. Orector of Athmtam,<lb/>
Scott Lindley. ?,<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH. Crtdu Mmnmter<lb/>
Stephanie Groon. cv?rm? M???r<lb/>
Clay Thornton. ,???, s?-<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants, s? eouot<lb/>
Greg Rideout. nm &amp;w<lb/>
CARLYN EBERT, Entertainment Editor<lb/>
Lizanne Jennings, tmoam<lb/>
David Gordon. Produce Manner<lb/>
May 18. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins<lb/>
Joining The Race In '84<lb/>
Although it's not official yet,<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Emeritus Dr. Leo<lb/>
Jenkins has announced his plans to<lb/>
seek the North Carolina gover-<lb/>
nor's seat in 1984.<lb/>
Granted, that race won't even<lb/>
fully commence for another year.<lb/>
Nevertheless, we would like to take<lb/>
this opportunity to lend our sup-<lb/>
port to this renowned state patriot<lb/>
and pioneer.<lb/>
For most of us, the name Leo<lb/>
Jenkins is synonymous with<lb/>
change. As well it should be. While<lb/>
serving as chancellor for 18 years,<lb/>
Jenkins transformed the then East<lb/>
Carolina College into what's now a<lb/>
major Southern university, work-<lb/>
ing tirelessly with diverse<lb/>
legislative bodies toward such ad-<lb/>
ditions as the ECU School of Art<lb/>
and, most notably, the School of<lb/>
Medicine.<lb/>
Again and again, before, during<lb/>
and since his days at ECU, he has<lb/>
proven himself a capable leader, a<lb/>
man unafraid of initiating wor-<lb/>
thwhile change, a man dedicated to<lb/>
the social, economic and political<lb/>
well-being of his fellow North<lb/>
Carolinians.<lb/>
Naturally, at this point in time,<lb/>
speculation on any one part of<lb/>
Jenkins' gubernatorial<lb/>
"platform" would be impossible,<lb/>
since no such formal outline has<lb/>
yet been put together. Never-<lb/>
theless, since Dr. Jenkins'<lb/>
theoretical "stands" are no secret<lb/>
to anyone familiar with the man,<lb/>
some comment is necessary.<lb/>
It seems only natural that im-<lb/>
provement in education would be<lb/>
high atop the list of Jenkins'<lb/>
priorities in a gubernatorial capaci-<lb/>
ty. Understanding "where the<lb/>
world is going he is an advocate<lb/>
of introducing the state's schools<lb/>
to the computer age. Although<lb/>
many of North Carolina's institu-<lb/>
tions of higher learning boast ex-<lb/>
cellent computer schools, Jenkins<lb/>
would like to see access to com-<lb/>
puters and computer education<lb/>
broadened, and not only on the<lb/>
college level but in high schools<lb/>
and junior colleges as well.<lb/>
Jenkins is also very conscious of<lb/>
the economic tensions facing most<lb/>
North Carolinians today and in<lb/>
recognizing such, would be in<lb/>
favor of seeking new, less expen-<lb/>
sive modes of daycare.<lb/>
Furthermore, one issue of keen<lb/>
interest to many college students in<lb/>
the state, Jenkins has said he<lb/>
would work with those means at<lb/>
his disposal toward passing legisla-<lb/>
tion enabling military dependents<lb/>
to attend North Carolina's public<lb/>
colleges and universities without<lb/>
paying out-of-state tuition. Cur-<lb/>
rently, North Carolina, which has<lb/>
one of the highest military popula-<lb/>
tions in the country, is one of seven<lb/>
states lacking such a law.<lb/>
But despite all this talk on<lb/>
"issues Dr. Jenkins fortunately<lb/>
doesn't fit the bill as a typical<lb/>
aspiring politician. Unlike those<lb/>
who would seek the office for per-<lb/>
sonal glory ? not necessarily that<lb/>
we're pointing any accusing<lb/>
fingers yet ? Jenkins is sincerely<lb/>
dedicated to the people of North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
At 69, most men and women<lb/>
would be content to retire from the<lb/>
trials and tribulations of public<lb/>
life. But not Jenkins. In fact, at<lb/>
age 69, Jenkins now seems more fit<lb/>
than ever.<lb/>
As always, our hats are off to<lb/>
Dr. Jenkins. And we wish him the<lb/>
best of fortune and offer him our<lb/>
continued support in the months to<lb/>
come.<lb/>
Working Actively Through Passive Ideals:<lb/>
A 'Timeless' Idea Whose Time Has Come<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
"An eye for an eye only ends up mak-<lb/>
ing the whole world blind. "<lb/>
? Mohandas Gandhi<lb/>
Although the film about this great<lb/>
pacifist leader took home the Academy<lb/>
Award earlier this year, until recently, I<lb/>
couldn't understand all the excitement<lb/>
Gandhi seemed to be causing.<lb/>
A short time ago, 1 read somewhere<lb/>
that people are fearing the film will "set<lb/>
off a stampede to pacifism" and that<lb/>
people will begin to catch "Gandhi<lb/>
Virus I'm tickled at the thought of it!<lb/>
But today's leaders have reason to be<lb/>
worried. Men like Gandhi and Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr. were able to exemplify<lb/>
the power of non-violent resistance in<lb/>
their efforts to put an end to injustice.<lb/>
However, the principles of non-violence<lb/>
are not deemed viable by today's<lb/>
leaders, who tout the "peace by nuclear<lb/>
strength" message. The Gandhi film has<lb/>
re-awakened the sleeping spirit of<lb/>
pacifism ? and yes, it's also beginning<lb/>
to make sense to a lot of people.<lb/>
Just as Gandhi pointed out the folly in<lb/>
"eye-for-eye" reasoning, millions of<lb/>
people throughout the world are also<lb/>
beginning to see through the<lb/>
"nuke-for-a-nuke" mentality of their<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
Instead, people are beginning to see<lb/>
deterrence and other nuclear strategies<lb/>
for what they really are: suicide.<lb/>
The world is faced with several<lb/>
choices. At this point, none of these can<lb/>
guarantee us a peaceful existence. I see<lb/>
our basic choice as being one of risk v.<lb/>
certainty. Any unilateral disarmament<lb/>
effort undertaken by the U.S. or<lb/>
U.S.S.R. will be "risky" for either side.<lb/>
On the other hand, a continuance of<lb/>
the arms race at the current levels will in-<lb/>
sure us "certainty" of nuclear death.<lb/>
The reason I speak in terms of<lb/>
unilateral efforts is because time is too<lb/>
limited for long, drawn-out talks, talks<lb/>
which have been basically fruitless for<lb/>
more than two decades. Building trust<lb/>
and reducing tension are additional ad-<lb/>
vantages of unilateral initiatives.<lb/>
Gandhi and King were both aware of<lb/>
the risks that result from being non-<lb/>
violent. "They may torture my body<lb/>
Gandhi said, "break my bones, even kill<lb/>
me; then they will have my dead body<lb/>
not my obedience Ironically, both<lb/>
Gandhi and King met death by way of<lb/>
an assassin's bullet.<lb/>
Neither King nor Gandhi would have<lb/>
killed to save his own life. "There is no<lb/>
cause Gandhi said, "for which I am<lb/>
prepared to kill.<lb/>
Both men are also recognized for their<lb/>
brilliant insight on numerous issues.<lb/>
Gandhi lived and identified with the<lb/>
poor; when he traveled, he went third-<lb/>
class. King represented the black<lb/>
American, who was once enslaved by<lb/>
plantation owners and who is now<lb/>
enslaved most often by poverty or<lb/>
racism. "Poverty Gandhi said, "is the<lb/>
worst form of violence<lb/>
"Injustice anywhere is a threat to<lb/>
justice everywhere King wrote in his<lb/>
famous 1963 "Letter from a Birm-<lb/>
ingham County Jail Both he and Gan-<lb/>
dhi spent a good deal of time behind<lb/>
bars.<lb/>
Both were pacifists, but neither v.<lb/>
passive. "I have never advocated passive<lb/>
anything Gandhi said. "Our<lb/>
resistance must be active and pro-<lb/>
vocative King was always at the front<lb/>
of the march, "actively" working to end<lb/>
injustice.<lb/>
Gandhi and King both possessed in-<lb/>
credible faith, faith unlike that of most<lb/>
mortals. King dreamed for a day when<lb/>
"all God's children, black men and<lb/>
white men. Jews and gentiles. Pro-<lb/>
testants and Catholics" would be able to<lb/>
live harmoniously. Gandhi felt the onlv<lb/>
devils in the world were those in our<lb/>
hearts. "And that's where the battle-<lb/>
should be fought he said.<lb/>
Today, in the age of nuclear weapon<lb/>
we are the devils to the Russians and<lb/>
they to us. My hope is that the world will<lb/>
quickly embrace the spirit of hope seen<lb/>
in great persons like Gandhi and King.<lb/>
Perhaps when we Ttd the-wortd of<lb/>
nuclear weapons and begin to feed the<lb/>
millions dying from hunger, we will tru-<lb/>
ly be "free at last<lb/>
Intelligence Links U.S.<lb/>
Deaths To Moslem Sect<lb/>
By JACK ANDERSON<lb/>
and JOE SPEAR<lb/>
SHIITE TERRORISTS: The Central<lb/>
Intelligence Agency is convinced that<lb/>
murder and possession of weapons.<lb/>
Meanwhile, U.S. intelligence expert-<lb/>
believe that the Syrian intelligence ser-<lb/>
vices, headed by the brother of Syrian<lb/>
President Hafez Assad, provided secret<lb/>
Shiite Moslems are responsible for the aid to the Shiite Moslems who reported-<lb/>
Don't Cry Guys; It Was Just A Game<lb/>
On Winners &amp; Losers<lb/>
recent bombing of the U.S. Embassy in<lb/>
Beirut, which killed 17 Americans. The<lb/>
incident was just one in a string of<lb/>
similar attacks perpetrated by radical<lb/>
Shiites.<lb/>
U.S. intelligence sources believe the<lb/>
terrorists have connections with Iran's<lb/>
ly carried out the Beirut attack.<lb/>
Syrian leaders want the United States<lb/>
out of Lebanon and apparently believe<lb/>
that the best way to achieve this goal is<lb/>
to kill the Americans who are stationed<lb/>
there.<lb/>
THE PRESSER FILE: Colorful<lb/>
The editorial page is probably the last<lb/>
place you expect, or for that matter<lb/>
want, to read about sports. After all,<lb/>
editorial pages are for disseminating opi-<lb/>
nions, right? Right. Well, that's why I'm<lb/>
going to write about a sports story about<lb/>
which I have very strong feelings.<lb/>
About three weeks or so ago, the<lb/>
staffs of The East Carolinian and<lb/>
WZMB squared off in our second an-<lb/>
nual inter-media softball championship<lb/>
held at the illustrious Allied Health Field<lb/>
No. 7.<lb/>
MIKE<lb/>
HUGHES<lb/>
Sportsbeat<lb/>
Pre-game festivities, which, ironical-<lb/>
ly, came before the game, included a<lb/>
comedy show by several members of the<lb/>
WZMB staff (a routine they called<lb/>
"infield practice"), much beer drinking<lb/>
and scouting out good places in the<lb/>
woods to relieve oneself.<lb/>
The radio team arrived on the field<lb/>
early, under the humorous assumption<lb/>
that practice would help them avenge<lb/>
their 28-3 loss in 1982. And in the<lb/>
background, the air waves on 91.3 FM<lb/>
rang out with taunts, jeers and predic-<lb/>
tions of an easy WZMB rout. It had all<lb/>
the makings of an upset. The air was<lb/>
thick with anticipation.<lb/>
With the score tied at 0-0 in the top of<lb/>
the first inning, the WZMB team (which<lb/>
appeared exhausted from all their<lb/>
"practice") failed to put anyone on<lb/>
bate. However, they did manage one<lb/>
almost-close call at first base when their<lb/>
third batter (I can't remember his name)<lb/>
took a home-run swing and grounded<lb/>
out to our catcher.<lb/>
In the bottom of the first, ZMB's<lb/>
tough pitching staff kept the game close,<lb/>
yielding only seven runs on nine hits.<lb/>
However, to the credit of the tight<lb/>
WZMB defense, one East Carolinian<lb/>
base runner was almost thrown out at<lb/>
first base.<lb/>
He was severely reprimanded.<lb/>
East Carolinian star pitcher Gary Pat-<lb/>
terson, in his first appearance on the<lb/>
mound this season, hurled four more in-<lb/>
nings of no-hit ball before staggering out<lb/>
to the mound in the top of the sixth inn-<lb/>
ing and giving up ? of all things ? a<lb/>
double. But despite the embarrassment,<lb/>
Patterson pulled his faculties (or what<lb/>
was left of his faculties) together and<lb/>
struck out the side.<lb/>
Not much worth writing about hap-<lb/>
pened in the next few innings, except<lb/>
when a WZMB baserunner tripped over<lb/>
a discarded beer bottle on his way to<lb/>
first base, skidded along the dirt for a<lb/>
while and yelled out a burrage of dirty<lb/>
words.<lb/>
He was immediately made WZMB's<lb/>
team captain.<lb/>
But then, WZMB staged one of the<lb/>
great comebacks of all time. In the top<lb/>
of the 13th inning (we agreed to keep on<lb/>
playing until either WZMB scored or we<lb/>
all passed out), The East Carolinian was<lb/>
shelled for two hits. Our hopes for a<lb/>
shutout were shattered. And when the<lb/>
dust cleared (a car went by on the dirt<lb/>
road alongside the field), the score was<lb/>
38-1.<lb/>
This proved the decisive factor in the<lb/>
game, as The East Carolinian team<lb/>
started to fall apart. It wasn't so much<lb/>
that we started playing any worse as it<lb/>
was everyone had to leave. Pat O'Neill,<lb/>
an all-star from the League of Women<lb/>
Voters who, of course, played "left"<lb/>
field, was already late for a rally. And<lb/>
yours truly had to get home in time for<lb/>
Leave It To Beaver. Nevertheless, with a<lb/>
skeleton team of about five, the domi-<lb/>
nant newspaper squad managed six<lb/>
more runs while yielding three in the<lb/>
14th inning-<lb/>
After the game, the modest victors<lb/>
(us) congratulated our opponents (them)<lb/>
on their fine performance. We, like all<lb/>
modest athletes, knew there was a time<lb/>
and place for good sportsmanship.<lb/>
But that was then, and this is now.<lb/>
Thus, 1 close with a note to all those DJs<lb/>
who were so full of taunts before the<lb/>
game:<lb/>
You know, you guys really sucked.<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini, who is believed to Cleveland strongman Jackie Presser has<lb/>
be using them to foment worldwide been elected president of the powerful<lb/>
revolution. A few examples: Teamsters union, but his rise to power is<lb/>
? The CIA has learned that Khomeini no surprise to the Justice Department,<lb/>
planned to use the Shiites to stir up riots Officials there have been keeping a close<lb/>
last summer throughout Saudi Arabia, eye on him for years.<lb/>
which is controlled by rival Sunni Douglas Roller, the U.S. attorney<lb/>
Moslems. who prosecuted Presser's predecessor.<lb/>
? Some of the same dissident students Roy Williams, co-authored a report on<lb/>
who took over the American Embassy in organized crime and labor unions in<lb/>
Tehran in 1979 were later dispatched to 1977. The report stated that Presser's<lb/>
Egypt shortly before President Anwar "goal is reportedly the presidency of the<lb/>
Sadat was killed. Intelligence analysts international Teamsters union Added<lb/>
suspect they may have played a role in the report: "The organized crime affiha-<lb/>
plotting Sadat's assassination. tion and involvement of Presser<lb/>
? The government of Turkey recently through, and independent of, the<lb/>
uncovered an attempt by 33 Shiites to Teamsters Union are well documented<lb/>
create an Islamic state within that coun- mj<lb/>
try. They were charged with attempted iMMNMfcMB.kc<lb/>
EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
ah f a M<lb/>
26 8 19 5<lb/>
Rideoui, 3b<lb/>
Hughes, lb<lb/>
O'Neill. If<lb/>
Sacco,f<lb/>
Williams, u<lb/>
Patterson, p<lb/>
Thornton. 2b<lb/>
Pleasants, cf<lb/>
24 S 16 3<lb/>
26 6 20 6<lb/>
25 6 20 6<lb/>
24 6 21 7<lb/>
23 3 10 4<lb/>
24 5 16 6<lb/>
23 3 10 3<lb/>
Tatato<lb/>
Twtstt<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
OB 44 132 42<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Player No. I, p<lb/>
Player No. 2. c<lb/>
Player No. 3. lb<lb/>
Player No. 4. 2b<lb/>
Player No. 5. 3b<lb/>
Player No. 6. ss<lb/>
Player No. 7. If<lb/>
Player No. t, cf<lb/>
Player No. 9. rf<lb/>
Player No. 10. dog<lb/>
Player No. 11, doo<lb/>
Player No. 12, dip<lb/>
Player No. 13, fds<lb/>
Tolas.<lb/>
SIM<lb/>
5 0 0 0<lb/>
5 111<lb/>
4 110<lb/>
5 111<lb/>
3 0 I 0<lb/>
4 0 0 0<lb/>
4 0 10<lb/>
4 0 0 0<lb/>
3 0 0 0<lb/>
2 0 00<lb/>
2 0 00<lb/>
0 0 0 0<lb/>
41 4 6 3<lb/>
aaa asa asa saa u-4<lb/>
732 323 233 332 6a - 42<lb/>
Game W.nning RBI - O'Neill (2)<lb/>
E ? Player Not. 1.2,3.4,3.7,9.11,12.13 (four each). DP - East<lb/>
Carolinian 3. LOB ? EC 90. WZMB 2. 2B ? Entire East Caroli-<lb/>
nian learn (4 each). Player No. 4. 3B ? Entire East Carolinian team<lb/>
(3 each). HR ? Entire East Carolinian team (2 tack) except Dave<lb/>
Williams, who got 6.<lb/>
IP H B Ot BB SO<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
PtayerNo. I(LO-I) 13 132 42 42 0 0<lb/>
lfWl-0) 14 5 4 406<lb/>
T ?4:31. A ?tor 9.<lb/>
DEAR DIARY ?.<lb/>
Job Out I oo<lb/>
(CPS) ? The job<lb/>
outlook for college<lb/>
grads appears bleak<lb/>
for the rest of this<lb/>
decade, according to a<lb/>
new Stanford Univer-<lb/>
sity study of the long-<lb/>
range college job<lb/>
market.<lb/>
Moreover, "an in-<lb/>
creasing number (of<lb/>
college grads) will be<lb/>
forced to accept jobs<lb/>
incommensurate with<lb/>
their level of train-<lb/>
ing says Russell<lb/>
Rumberger, author of<lb/>
the report.<lb/>
"Based on projec-<lb/>
tions of low employ-<lb/>
ment growth for the<lb/>
'80s he explains,<lb/>
"and the increasing<lb/>
number of people<lb/>
who will hold college<lb/>
degrees, 1 see a large<lb/>
number of college<lb/>
graduates who will be<lb/>
over-trained and not<lb/>
able to get upper-level<lb/>
jobs<lb/>
Already,<lb/>
Rumberger says, one<lb/>
out of every four<lb/>
young workers in the<lb/>
labor force has a col-<lb/>
lege degree. And by<lb/>
1990, he estimates,<lb/>
one out of three will<lb/>
be college grads.<lb/>
At the same time,<lb/>
the number of jobs<lb/>
which require a col-<lb/>
lege education is<lb/>
holding steady, while<lb/>
the number of service<lb/>
and clerical jobs<lb/>
panding.<lb/>
There's alreal<lb/>
glut of college<lb/>
in many fij<lb/>
Rumberger p<lb/>
out, and soon<lb/>
high-demand<lb/>
like engineers<lb/>
computer sci<lb/>
grads will be<lb/>
peting for few<lb/>
fewer job openu<lb/>
"We're simplj<lb/>
ducmg more<lb/>
grads than the<lb/>
market can at<lb/>
and it's going<lb/>
worse<lb/>
Many grads<lb/>
ticularly those<lb/>
aren't choosey<lb/>
their majors ?<lb/>
pushed into<lb/>
and clerical joi<lb/>
which they arei<lb/>
qualified, he prj<lb/>
"It isn't nec<lb/>
true that those<lb/>
will earn less<lb/>
but they win<lb/>
lower-level jobsl<lb/>
College grac<lb/>
rently earn an<lb/>
of 65 percent<lb/>
than high<lb/>
graduates, Rui<lb/>
says, and for<lb/>
lucky enough<lb/>
jobs in their 11<lb/>
college degree<lb/>
be worth more.<lb/>
"I'm<lb/>
discouraging<lb/>
from getting a<lb/>
degree he<lb/>
Comol<lb/>
GLAS!<lb/>
PLAS1<lb/>
LENSI<lb/>
ANY USj<lb/>
PRESCRI<lb/>
(Tints Eitra) (No Other Coupons Appt<lb/>
THIS AD MUST ACCOMPANY 01<lb/>
(OFFER GOODTHRU Jwat 30 1983<lb/>
GREENVILLE STOI<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
W PBjBBBBl Commons<lb/>
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Banquet Facilities Availa<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
-4-<lb/>
I<lb/>
 IT<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 18, 1983<lb/>
SSfT<lb/>
pi<lb/>
fek.<lb/>
54<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
?P<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ive Ideals:<lb/>
Has Come<lb/>
- rote in his<lb/>
Mil a Birm-<lb/>
e vtnd Gan-<lb/>
time behind<lb/>
but neither was<lb/>
ated passive<lb/>
??Our<lb/>
t and pre-<lb/>
pays al the tront<lb/>
working to end<lb/>
sed in-<lb/>
a1 of most<lb/>
a da when<lb/>
- men and<lb/>
Pro-<lb/>
ild be able to<lb/>
fell the only<lb/>
se in our<lb/>
the battles<lb/>
capons,<lb/>
P ussians and<lb/>
? rld will<lb/>
? oi hope seen<lb/>
idhi and King.<lb/>
world ot<lb/>
feed the<lb/>
we will tru-<lb/>
nks U.S.<lb/>
)slem Sect<lb/>
IP Mis.<lb/>
i genet experts<lb/>
gence scr-<lb/>
? Nnan<lb/>
 secret<lb/>
reported-<lb/>
u k<lb/>
cd States<lb/>
ntl) believe<lb/>
this goal is<lb/>
art stationed<lb/>
ill! Colorful<lb/>
? ie Presser has<lb/>
the powerful<lb/>
to power is<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
. Keeping a close<lb/>
I S attorney<lb/>
's predecessor,<lb/>
I report on<lb/>
labor unions in<lb/>
hat Presser's<lb/>
'he presidency of the<lb/>
- union Added<lb/>
zed crime affilia-<lb/>
lvemeni of Presser<lb/>
endent of, the<lb/>
? ell documented<lb/>
XXEl<lb/>
<lb/>
N?,<lb/>
Job Outlook Bleak<lb/>
(CPS) ? The job and clerical jobs is ex-<lb/>
outlook for college panding.<lb/>
grads appears bleak<lb/>
for the rest of this<lb/>
decade, according to a<lb/>
new Stanford Univer-<lb/>
sity study of the long-<lb/>
range college job<lb/>
market.<lb/>
Moreover, ,4an in-<lb/>
creasing number (of<lb/>
college grads) will be<lb/>
There's already a<lb/>
glut of college grads<lb/>
in many fields,<lb/>
Rumberger points<lb/>
out, and soon even<lb/>
high-demand majors<lb/>
like engineers and<lb/>
computer science<lb/>
grads will be com-<lb/>
peting for fewer and<lb/>
forced to accept jobs fewer job openings.<lb/>
incommensurate with<lb/>
their level of train-<lb/>
ing says Russell<lb/>
Rumberger, author of<lb/>
the report.<lb/>
"Based on projec-<lb/>
tions of low employ-<lb/>
ment growth for the<lb/>
'80s he explains,<lb/>
"and the increasing<lb/>
number of people<lb/>
who will hold college<lb/>
degrees, 1 see a large<lb/>
number of college<lb/>
graduates who will be<lb/>
over-trained and not<lb/>
able to get upper-level<lb/>
jobs<lb/>
Already,<lb/>
Rumberger says, one<lb/>
out of every four<lb/>
young workers in the<lb/>
labor force has a col-<lb/>
lege degree. And by<lb/>
1990, he estimates,<lb/>
one out of three will<lb/>
be college grads.<lb/>
At the same time,<lb/>
the number of jobs<lb/>
which require a col-<lb/>
lege education is<lb/>
"We're simply pro-<lb/>
ducing more college<lb/>
grads than the labor<lb/>
market can absorb,<lb/>
and it's going to get<lb/>
worse<lb/>
Many grads ? par-<lb/>
ticularly those who<lb/>
aren't choosey about<lb/>
their majors ? will be<lb/>
pushed into service<lb/>
and clerical jobs for<lb/>
which they are over-<lb/>
qualified, he predicts.<lb/>
"It isn't necessarily<lb/>
true that those people<lb/>
will earn less money,<lb/>
but they will have<lb/>
lower-level jobs<lb/>
College grads cur-<lb/>
rently earn an average<lb/>
of 65 percent more<lb/>
than high school<lb/>
graduates, Rumberger<lb/>
says, and for those<lb/>
lucky enough to find<lb/>
jobs in their fields a<lb/>
college degree will still<lb/>
be worth more.<lb/>
I'm not<lb/>
discouraging people<lb/>
"For students who do<lb/>
go on to college, they<lb/>
still have a better<lb/>
chance of getting a<lb/>
better, higher-level<lb/>
job. It's just that<lb/>
there's also a good<lb/>
chance they won't<lb/>
Consequently,<lb/>
"it'll be more impor-<lb/>
tant than ever to pick<lb/>
a major which is in<lb/>
high demand. A col-<lb/>
lege degree by itself<lb/>
just won't mean<lb/>
much<lb/>
Still, predicting the<lb/>
job market years in<lb/>
advance is a risky<lb/>
business, warns Linda<lb/>
Pengilly, with the<lb/>
College Placement<lb/>
Council.<lb/>
"I haven't seen the<lb/>
study, but we don't<lb/>
do any long-range<lb/>
forecasts because<lb/>
we've seen how many<lb/>
variables there can be<lb/>
in the market<lb/>
The number of peo-<lb/>
ple with degrees may<lb/>
well create a glut of<lb/>
college grads, she<lb/>
says, but unpredic-<lb/>
table turns in the<lb/>
economy could also<lb/>
create very strong<lb/>
demands for certain<lb/>
majors.<lb/>
9:00 til 200<lb/>
All Summer<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057556_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST C AK ? ?<lb/>
1 HI I AS1 ?. AROI INIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Allen Film Kicks Off<lb/>
Summer Movie Lii<lb/>
 ood Mien and Richard Harris in a scene from tonight's MSC film.<lb/>
By CARLYN EBERT<lb/>
trslurn tdilor<lb/>
Woody Allen's 1972 film Everything You Always<lb/>
Wanted To Know About Sex But Were Afraid To<lb/>
Ask, which followed on the heels of the best-selling<lb/>
self-help sex book of the same title, plays at Hendnx<lb/>
Theater tonight at 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. David Reuben, question-and-answer sex guru<lb/>
and the book's author, glad handed talk show hosts<lb/>
and hustled his book to a nationwide television au-<lb/>
dience. Allen's response? A neurotic comedy lifting<lb/>
the title and format of the bestseller, but posing such<lb/>
absurd questions as "Why do women have only two<lb/>
breasts?"<lb/>
Audiences are also treated to Allen's answers to<lb/>
"What is sodomy?" and "Are transvestites<lb/>
homosexual?" An excellent supporting cast includes<lb/>
Gene Wilder as a shrink in love with an Armenian<lb/>
sheep named Daisy and Lou Jacobi as a nice Jewish<lb/>
transvestite who makes the mistake of getting caught<lb/>
wearing his prettiest lace underthings at a dinner<lb/>
with future in-laws.<lb/>
The final and most successful segment, "What<lb/>
Happens During Ejaculation?" satirizes Dr.<lb/>
Reuben's overused missile-launching metaphor with<lb/>
a "2001" stvied inside view of the big act, complete<lb/>
with an omnipotent computer launching Allen<lb/>
jessed as a reluctant sperm) and W???<lb/>
Reynolds out of the mother ship with missile preci<lb/>
as an Italian housewife with a problem, a telev s on<lb/>
game show on which panelists try to guess guests<lb/>
feTual perversions, and a single mammoth femak<lb/>
breast terrorizing a suburban countryside Allen ap-<lb/>
pears in another segment as a frustrated medieval<lb/>
jester lusting after his queen (Lynn Redgrave) ?th<lb/>
disastrous results.<lb/>
Greeted with mixed reviews, this giddy film often<lb/>
substitutes sheer silliness for good taste. John Simon<lb/>
of the ew York Times objected to its lack of sexual<lb/>
subtlety, but Allen fans ignored Simon and made<lb/>
Everything You Always Wanted To Know About<lb/>
Sex But Were Afraid To Ask a moderate summer of<lb/>
'72 box office success and "What's My Perver-<lb/>
sion?" a popular party game in at least one<lb/>
Marvland suburb. .<lb/>
Allen directed the film as well as writing the<lb/>
screenplav and starring in four of the seven<lb/>
segments Filmgoers put off by uncharacteristic<lb/>
Allen efforts like Stardust Memories or Interiors will<lb/>
enjoy this piece of vintage Allen neurotica.<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
HvMlM BAt MM l<lb/>
?o-<lb/>
vi( - um-<lb/>
t v o the antics<lb/>
i e even<lb/>
n be<lb/>
xhaps a<lb/>
less entertaining than is expected<lb/>
during the summer. But just<lb/>
about everybody, especially the<lb/>
?industry" folk, agree that the<lb/>
box office potential of this-<lb/>
summer-in-movies is unlimited.<lb/>
I his conclusion is based on the<lb/>
same avarice that has major<lb/>
studios investing in 40 major mo-<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Two of the biggies that opened<lb/>
last week in theatres across the<lb/>
country are Blue Thunder, starr-<lb/>
ing Rov Scheider (now playing at<lb/>
Greenville's Pl;tt Entertainment<lb/>
Center), and Breathless, with hot<lb/>
box office attraction Richard<lb/>
Gere and beautiful newcomer<lb/>
weaponry (like a tank that Hies) is mere excuse to introduce the<lb/>
equipped, we are told at the begin- kooks and misfits of the original<lb/>
nine of the film, with state-of-the- film in a far less original way<lb/>
art surveillance appliances that Before even discussing and<lb/>
are "presently being used by the dismissing the updated Breathless,<lb/>
U S Government This infor- it is important to recall Jean-Luc<lb/>
mation is supposed to lend some Godard's 1961 classic of the same<lb/>
kind of warped validity to a film title that has been remade so poor-<lb/>
that winds up being a noisy, silly, ly in this country<lb/>
:  PISSr-a ESS! Va,ene Kasky (now p.ay.ne a,<lb/>
the Plaza Cinema). the only<lb/>
Protesters Prepare<lb/>
To 'Fast For Life'<lb/>
Kv V mil K O'NEIl I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
it ?? ei s ot<lb/>
d inning<lb/>
? sts is<lb/>
I ama that<lb/>
re attention<lb/>
?<lb/>
film the In-<lb/>
mbarks on<lb/>
 iel1 violence<lb/>
: Both times Gan-<lb/>
Ben Kingslev sUc-<lb/>
( arolinian in a Tuesday telephone<lb/>
interview.<lb/>
Blockev-O'Brien admits that<lb/>
full support tor the tasters may<lb/>
falter if they near death. "I've<lb/>
had difficulties with this from the<lb/>
beginning she said, referring to<lb/>
the ethical question of this life and<lb/>
death situation. "In other words<lb/>
there is the possibility of<lb/>
similarity between the two films is<lb/>
that they both use Los Angeles as<lb/>
their location.<lb/>
In actioner Blue Thunder,<lb/>
Scheider plays a tough LAPD cop<lb/>
who works nights with a partner<lb/>
Hying a helicopter and doing air<lb/>
surveillance of the city; he spots<lb/>
holdups, drug deals and the like,<lb/>
assists in apprehension of the bad<lb/>
guys, does some occasional peep-<lb/>
ing tomfoolery and then gets<lb/>
chewed out by his boss, the chief<lb/>
of police, played by the late War-<lb/>
ren Oates (to whom this picture is<lb/>
dedicated). These opening scenes<lb/>
are terrific, giving us the best of<lb/>
both an objective and a subjective<lb/>
viewpoint while taking us along<lb/>
totally implausible romp that tries<lb/>
to comment on everything from<lb/>
the Vietnam War to the dangerous<lb/>
somebody not being able to last as for a joyride similar to the first<lb/>
 u nt T t it i ?o mroo.mnntaop in the<lb/>
I<lb/>
e ('Bi ic<lb/>
01 ?? I I i 1 d<lb/>
fei ation,<lb/>
?Aili par-<lb/>
ganizer Pamela<lb/>
termed "an<lb/>
in the Ghandian<lb/>
long as they would like. To put it<lb/>
bluntly, there's a possibility that<lb/>
somebody may die<lb/>
"1 think they have a good<lb/>
chance of success said ECU<lb/>
graduate Andy Rector, who is<lb/>
publicizing the fast in Mobile,<lb/>
Alabama. "They're going to do it<lb/>
big crime-spree-montage in the<lb/>
original Superman movie when<lb/>
Chris Reeve goes on a tear and<lb/>
saves everybody in sight, in-<lb/>
cluding Lois from a nasty fall of<lb/>
some 30 or 40 stories.<lb/>
The real "fun" begins when<lb/>
Blue Thunder, the helicopter of<lb/>
whether we support them or not the title, is introduced as a possi<lb/>
.<lb/>
event ' <lb/>
jo Americans.<lb/>
inese Bud-<lb/>
eople from<lb/>
the fast August<lb/>
fi ma ?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ids<lb/>
w e<lb/>
38th anniversary, of<lb/>
ie first atomic<lb/>
: uj against great<lb/>
te three of the tasters<lb/>
position letter. "To<lb/>
must use the most<lb/>
nonviolent methods<lb/>
lvaj i: Gandhi is cor-<lb/>
the most powerful such<lb/>
method is tasting<lb/>
"Fasting foi religious people is<lb/>
i path to God; tor those guided by<lb/>
ral and ethical principles,<lb/>
fasting is a profound way to ex-<lb/>
press their beliefs they wrote.<lb/>
Gandhi and many others<lb/>
throughout history have con-<lb/>
tronted evil institutions by offer-<lb/>
ing their lives through fasting. We<lb/>
mtend to do the same<lb/>
The position letter, written<lb/>
eleven months ago, was<lb/>
distributed a week after a massive<lb/>
June 12 disarmament rally held at<lb/>
the United Nations in New York<lb/>
Citv. As a result of the letter and<lb/>
and this (publicizing the fast) is<lb/>
the best way to keep them alive<lb/>
"Open-ended fasts, because<lb/>
o the life risks involved, have a<lb/>
wav of speeding up decision-<lb/>
making, breaking stalemates and<lb/>
producing change the original<lb/>
three wrote in their position letter.<lb/>
"If we ever needed such speed, it<lb/>
is certainly now. The children are<lb/>
dving and the thread that holds<lb/>
the bomb is fraying<lb/>
The eight met late last month in<lb/>
I ranee to discuss their planned ac-<lb/>
tion and to decide under what<lb/>
conditions they would agree to<lb/>
call the fast off.<lb/>
Charles Gray has been planning<lb/>
the fast for three and one half<lb/>
years. Gray said his American<lb/>
citizenship played a strong role in<lb/>
his decision because he believes<lb/>
the United States is attempting to<lb/>
achieve a "first strike capability<lb/>
"This absolutely should not be<lb/>
allowed to happen Gray said.<lb/>
The four French participants<lb/>
will fast in Paris while the others<lb/>
will fast in the San Francisco Bay<lb/>
area. Both groups will remain in<lb/>
contact in case te need to<lb/>
negotiate the end of the fast<lb/>
arises.<lb/>
Gray mentioned several<lb/>
"goals" the fasters had for the ac-<lb/>
tion, including passage of U.S.<lb/>
ble crowd control device to be us-<lb/>
ed at the summer Olympics in Los<lb/>
possibility that our government<lb/>
might someday try to keep us in<lb/>
line with something like Blue<lb/>
Thunder<lb/>
Good peformances by Scheider,<lb/>
Malcolm McDowell as an<lb/>
unscrupulous pilot and nemesis of<lb/>
Scheider, and Warren Oates, who<lb/>
died only months after making<lb/>
this film, lend credibility to an<lb/>
otherwise incredible story. Also,<lb/>
the action sequences and special<lb/>
effects are, save for only a couple,<lb/>
some of the best around.<lb/>
All of this brings us to<lb/>
Breathless, which uses its Los<lb/>
ed at tne summer uiymivo ? .? -?<lb/>
Angeles. This futuristic piece of Angeles location less well, as a<lb/>
Godard's film was an amazing<lb/>
bit of improvision that should<lb/>
never have been remade in the<lb/>
first place, a cubistic thriller that<lb/>
had and audience because half a<lb/>
century of modern art and movies<lb/>
had rigorously educated the<lb/>
public eye. The film had no plot<lb/>
in the usual sense of the word.<lb/>
The script of the picture was a<lb/>
three-page memo. Situation,<lb/>
dialogue, locations were improvis-<lb/>
ed every morning and shot off the<lb/>
cuff. By these casual means<lb/>
Godard achieved a sort of ad-lib<lb/>
epic, a Joycean harangue of im-<lb/>
ages in which the only real con-<lb/>
tinuity was the irrational<lb/>
coherence of nightmare. Yet, like<lb/>
many nightmares, Breathless had<lb/>
its crazy humor,its anarchic beau-<lb/>
ty, its night-mind meaning.<lb/>
The adventurous, almost in-<lb/>
consequential story of Breathless<lb/>
dealt with a Parisian cool cat,<lb/>
played in the original by Jean-<lb/>
Paul Belmondo, who steals cars<lb/>
for a living. In the short time span<lb/>
of the movie, he murders a<lb/>
policeman and begins a casual,<lb/>
painfully erratic night from the<lb/>
authorities, in the course of which<lb/>
he attempts to collect a shady<lb/>
debt, singlehandedly commits a<lb/>
mugging and two or three car<lb/>
thefts, and recommences a love<lb/>
affair with a pretty but equally<lb/>
unadmirable American girl, who<lb/>
betrays him to the police. Lacking<lb/>
even the tiny moral energy to<lb/>
escape, he is shot down, and the<lb/>
film ends.<lb/>
The story of Breathless in its<lb/>
updated form, even the sequence<lb/>
of events, has changed very little<lb/>
from the film of 1961 In this one.<lb/>
Richard Gere plays the anti-hero<lb/>
as an American who travels from<lb/>
Vegas to L.A. in a stolen car. is<lb/>
chased by a policeman who he ac-<lb/>
cidentally (we are led to believe)<lb/>
shoots and kills. Of course, in this<lb/>
one, the girlfriend is French. She<lb/>
quotes Faulkner instead of Dylan<lb/>
Thomas and bares her breasts<lb/>
faster than you can reach for pop-<lb/>
corn.<lb/>
The much-touted sex scenes<lb/>
are, at best, tepid. The use of back<lb/>
projection and tinting doesn't jibe<lb/>
with the otherwise slick approach<lb/>
taken to the project. Sexy<lb/>
newcomer Valerie Kapnsky is<lb/>
fine, and Gere gives one of his<lb/>
best : rformances as a hero who<lb/>
winds up funnier than he does<lb/>
tragic. (The new script has him<lb/>
singing and dressing like Jerry<lb/>
Lewis and reading Silver Surfer<lb/>
comic books.)<lb/>
In short, director Jim McBnde<lb/>
has taken on the impossible task<lb/>
of turning one of the most in-<lb/>
spired films of the French New<lb/>
Wave into a hip parable for to-<lb/>
day. Unfortunately, he has, in-<lb/>
deed, found the task impossible.<lb/>
5K?S; "pSSto? r- r SfSr ??<lb/>
I<lb/>
attracted five more participants,<lb/>
olange Fernex, president of<lb/>
France's Green Party,and<lb/>
Dorothv Granada and Charles<lb/>
Gray, both ol Eugene, Oregon,<lb/>
initiated the fast. Also fasting are<lb/>
French participants Didier Ma-<lb/>
inguv. Michael Nodet and Jacky<lb/>
Guy on, Andre Lariviere of<lb/>
Canada and Kojima, a Japanese<lb/>
Buddhist monk.<lb/>
"The main point of the fast is<lb/>
to show that a million dollars a<lb/>
minute is being spent globally on<lb/>
the arms racemeanwhile enor-<lb/>
mous amounts of suffering is hap-<lb/>
pening around the world,<lb/>
especially from hunger,<lb/>
Blockev-O'Brien told The East<lb/>
dismantling of their SS-20<lb/>
missiles, a nuclear moratorium<lb/>
among the five nuclear powers<lb/>
and adoption of a Comprenhen-<lb/>
sive Test Ban Treaty by all nuclear<lb/>
nations.<lb/>
According to Gray, the condi-<lb/>
tions under which the fast would<lb/>
be called off have not been finaliz-<lb/>
ed and are subject to negotiation.<lb/>
He said the fast has already had<lb/>
"a remarkable effect" on many<lb/>
people. He is uncertain, however,<lb/>
whether he will survive to see his<lb/>
goals achieved. "If we can stop<lb/>
the arms race it would be<lb/>
something of a miracle Gray<lb/>
said. "I guess that makes me<lb/>
somewhat of a pessimist<lb/>
.007 Strikes Again<lb/>
Sean Conner, - I weapoo .t ? JJ-J ?? SKX KTKl 2S? cA'y<lb/>
R.E.M<lb/>
By PAKKh<lb/>
pl'TKRBAl GH<lb/>
NEW YORK<lb/>
?We wanted to make<lb/>
fa noncool, nontrend<lb/>
record, and we par<lb/>
ticularly didn't ?<lb/>
to go to Los Ang-<lb/>
)r New York or L on-<lb/>
ion says Pete-<lb/>
luck, the iankv.<lb/>
utspoken guitarist<lb/>
for RE M "We real<lb/>
v wanted to do it in<lb/>
the South with pe<lb/>
,ho were<lb/>
making rocl<lb/>
records<lb/>
So Mw"<lb/>
v M<lb/>
length alb <lb/>
recorded in Chai<lb/>
,orth Car.<lb/>
jmall stu<lb/>
:hief cus<lb/>
raise the 1<lb/>
The I P i- j-<lb/>
r ecc of m<lb/>
been heard ir<lb/>
t ?elve tunes<lb/>
B'i the bes-<lb/>
classic p<lb/>
artful ar-<lb/>
iubtle hook<lb/>
perfec'iv<lb/>
small .<lb/>
w hile<lb/>
p o r a t i n g<lb/>
measure o!<lb/>
the-hnes ,<lb/>
harticulai<lb/>
M ic h<lb/>
?ords and<lb/>
R. F. M<lb/>
taken from<lb/>
of deep<lb/>
known a<lb/>
moveme<lb/>
s t a n 11 v<lb/>
favored ?.<lb/>
critics with the<lb/>
debut - "Rad<lb/>
Free Europe<lb/>
last v ear's Chronic<lb/>
Town EP -<lb/>
banj is a<lb/>
grow ngleg<lb/>
? bui<lb/>
terms, since the-<lb/>
ject mam oi the<lb/>
?<lb/>
Su<lb/>
Fried Shrimp<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Clam Strips<lb/>
<lb/>
S?WOv<lb/>
11<lb/>
Frtdavll<lb/>
r-<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
10<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 18. 1983<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
sOff<lb/>
Lineup<lb/>
Lent computer launching Allen<lb/>
kanl sperm) and fellow sperm Bun<lb/>
he mother ship with missile preci-<lb/>
objections.<lb/>
k sketches feature Louise Lasser<lb/>
ieuife with a problem, a television<lb/>
Ihich panelists trv to guess guests'<lb/>
Is, and a single mammoth female<lb/>
1, suburban countryside. Allen ap-<lb/>
I s .gment a a frustrated medieval<lb/>
r his queen (Lynn Redgrave) with<lb/>
lived reviews, this giddy film often<lb/>
I .ess for good taste. John Simon<lb/>
l imes objected to its lack of sexual<lb/>
ans ignored Simon and made<lb/>
Iways Hunted To Know About<lb/>
rud To Ask a moderate summer of<lb/>
It .cess and "What's My Perver-<lb/>
irt) came in at least one<lb/>
?he film s well as writing the<lb/>
tarring in four of the seven<lb/>
s put off b uncharacteristic<lb/>
Stardust Memories or Interiors will<lb/>
vintage Allen neurotica.<lb/>
Fun?<lb/>
mugging and two or three car<lb/>
thefts, and recommences a love<lb/>
affair with a pretty but equally<lb/>
madmirable American girl, who<lb/>
betrays him to the police. Lacking<lb/>
even the tiny moral energy to<lb/>
.scape, he is shot down, and the<lb/>
film ends<lb/>
The story of Breathless in its<lb/>
updated form, even the sequence<lb/>
of events, has changed very little<lb/>
m the film of 1961. In this one,<lb/>
Richard Gere plays the anti-hero<lb/>
as an American who travels from<lb/>
Vegas to L.A. in a stolen car, is<lb/>
chased bv a policeman who he ac-<lb/>
cidentally (we are led to believe)<lb/>
shoots and kills. Of course, in this<lb/>
one, the girlfriend is French. She<lb/>
quotes Faulkner instead of Dylan<lb/>
Thomas and bares her breasts<lb/>
raster than you can reach for pop-<lb/>
The much-touted sex scenes<lb/>
are, at best, tepid. The use of back<lb/>
projection and tinting doesn't jibe<lb/>
with the otherwise slick approach<lb/>
taken to the project. Sexy<lb/>
newcomer Valerie Kaprisky is<lb/>
fine, and Gere gives one of his<lb/>
best performances as a hero who<lb/>
winds up funnier than he does<lb/>
tragic. (The new script has him<lb/>
singing and dressing like Jerry<lb/>
Lewis and reading Silver Surfer<lb/>
comic books.)<lb/>
In short, director Jim McBride<lb/>
has taken on the impossible task<lb/>
of turning one of the most in-<lb/>
spired films of the French New<lb/>
Wave into a hip parable for to-<lb/>
day. Unfortunately, he has, in-<lb/>
deed, found the task impossible.<lb/>
fawv. x<lb/>
mution at Hendrix Theatre. Ad-<lb/>
ID and activity card and by<lb/>
ibers.<lb/>
R.E.M. Is Wide Awake<lb/>
By PARKE<lb/>
PUTERBAUGH<lb/>
NEW YORK ?<lb/>
?We wanted to make<lb/>
a noncool, nontrendy<lb/>
record, and we par-<lb/>
ticularly didn't want<lb/>
to go to Los Angeles<lb/>
or New York or Lon-<lb/>
don says Peter<lb/>
Buck, the lanky,<lb/>
outspoken guitarist<lb/>
for R.E.M. "We real-<lb/>
ly wanted to do it in<lb/>
the South with people<lb/>
who were fresh at<lb/>
making rock and roll<lb/>
records<lb/>
So Murmur,<lb/>
R.E.Ms first full-<lb/>
length album, was<lb/>
recorded in Charlotte,<lb/>
North Carolina, at a<lb/>
small studio whose<lb/>
chief customer is the<lb/>
Praise the Lord Club.<lb/>
The LP is as original a<lb/>
piece of music as has<lb/>
been heard in 1983: its<lb/>
twelve tunes embody<lb/>
all the best virtues of<lb/>
classic pop ? concise,<lb/>
artful arrangements,<lb/>
subtle hooks and a<lb/>
perfectly modulated<lb/>
small-combo sound<lb/>
? while incor-<lb/>
porating a good<lb/>
measure of between-<lb/>
the-lines eccentricity,<lb/>
particularly in<lb/>
Michael Stripe's<lb/>
words and singing.<lb/>
R.E.M. ? a name<lb/>
taken from the state<lb/>
jof deep dreaming<lb/>
known as "rapid eye<lb/>
movement" ? in-<lb/>
stantly achieved<lb/>
favored status among<lb/>
critics with their 1981<lb/>
 debut single "Radio<lb/>
Free Europe and<lb/>
llast year's Chronic<lb/>
Town EP. And the<lb/>
I band is attracting a<lb/>
growing legion of fans<lb/>
j? but on their own<lb/>
(terms, since they re-<lb/>
Iject many of the stan-<lb/>
dard pathways to pop<lb/>
success. They've<lb/>
declined offers to tour<lb/>
with such big-time<lb/>
acts as the Clash, the<lb/>
Go-Go's, U2 and the<lb/>
B-52's, for example.<lb/>
"Opening for other<lb/>
bands is just the<lb/>
rankest sort of<lb/>
masochism Buck<lb/>
says, scowling. And<lb/>
they passed over name<lb/>
producers to work<lb/>
with a relatively<lb/>
unknown North<lb/>
Carolinian named<lb/>
Mitch Easter,<lb/>
Easter, who runs a<lb/>
recording studio out<lb/>
of his home in<lb/>
Winston-Salem,<lb/>
North Carolina, came<lb/>
to the attention of<lb/>
R.E.M. through a<lb/>
mutual friend, Peter<lb/>
Holsapple of the<lb/>
dB's. "There was<lb/>
something about them<lb/>
that I immediately lik-<lb/>
ed says Easter.<lb/>
"They have this kind<lb/>
of old-fashioned thing<lb/>
about them that made<lb/>
me feel real good ?<lb/>
like the way four guys<lb/>
get together and<lb/>
decide to form a<lb/>
group<lb/>
At the heart of the<lb/>
R.E.M. aesthetic is<lb/>
that rapport. Though<lb/>
Buck stands out as the<lb/>
most garrulous of the<lb/>
bunch and Stipe is the<lb/>
most introverted, they<lb/>
share a kind of<lb/>
bemused casualness<lb/>
about the world that<lb/>
reflects their upbring-<lb/>
ing in the Deep South<lb/>
and their coming of<lb/>
age in Athens,<lb/>
Georgia, where they<lb/>
were students at the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Georgia, a party<lb/>
school of great<lb/>
renown. "At Georgia,<lb/>
all you wanna do is<lb/>
avoid having a job for<lb/>
four years, so you<lb/>
drink and raise hell<lb/>
Buck explains. "I<lb/>
didn't study, I didn't<lb/>
even go to classes. I<lb/>
waslazy<lb/>
Nongraduates all,<lb/>
the four members of<lb/>
R.E.M. ? Buck,<lb/>
Stipe, bassist Mike<lb/>
Mills and drummer<lb/>
Bill Berry ? met one<lb/>
another in the ex-<lb/>
tracurricular melting<lb/>
pot of Athens night<lb/>
life. Berry and Mills,<lb/>
both twenty-three (as<lb/>
is Stipe), were<lb/>
childhood friends<lb/>
who'd come to<lb/>
Athens from their<lb/>
hometown of Macon.<lb/>
Buck ? at twenty-six,<lb/>
the eldest band<lb/>
member ? hailed<lb/>
from Atlanta, and<lb/>
Stipe was an army<lb/>
brat who'd grown up<lb/>
in Texas and Georgia.<lb/>
The latter two were<lb/>
living in an abandon-<lb/>
ed church outside of<lb/>
Athens, and Berry<lb/>
moved in after getting<lb/>
thrown out of school.<lb/>
"It was a real zoo<lb/>
Buck remembers.<lb/>
"We lived with some<lb/>
girl who dealt drugs<lb/>
? all of these sickos<lb/>
coming over at four in<lb/>
the morning with the<lb/>
urge.<lb/>
"One of the guys<lb/>
who lived there before<lb/>
us was named Purple<lb/>
Hayes says Stipe,<lb/>
chuckling. "That<lb/>
church has been<lb/>
through generations<lb/>
of real bad hippies<lb/>
The main part of<lb/>
the church made a<lb/>
good rehearsal hall<lb/>
for a rock band,<lb/>
though, and R.E.M.<lb/>
could stay up all night<lb/>
cutting their craft on<lb/>
such venerable stan-<lb/>
dards as "Gloria"<lb/>
without having to<lb/>
worry about the<lb/>
neighbors. "We<lb/>
played on the altar<lb/>
says bassist Mills,<lb/>
"since it made a kind<lb/>
of natural stage<lb/>
Summer Films at Mendenhall<lb/>
Everything You've Always<lb/>
Wanted To Know About Sex<lb/>
From Russia With Love<lb/>
Pink Floyd, The Wall<lb/>
The Godfather<lb/>
Dressed To Kill<lb/>
Blow Out<lb/>
Motel Hell<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Movie<lb/>
Alien<lb/>
Blues Brothers<lb/>
Blues Brothers<lb/>
Body Heat<lb/>
Cannery Row<lb/>
The Long Riders<lb/>
I, The Jury<lb/>
The Eyes of Laura Mars<lb/>
Fort Apache, The Bronx<lb/>
National Lampoon's Class Reunion<lb/>
A Clockwork Orange<lb/>
Attack of the Killer Tomatoes<lb/>
Invasion of the Body Snatchers<lb/>
The Stunt Man<lb/>
Wed May 18<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Thu<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
Mon<lb/>
Wed<lb/>
May 23<lb/>
May 25<lb/>
May 30<lb/>
June 1<lb/>
June 1<lb/>
June 6<lb/>
June 8<lb/>
June 13<lb/>
June 15<lb/>
June 16<lb/>
June 20<lb/>
June 22<lb/>
June 27<lb/>
June 29<lb/>
July 6<lb/>
July 11<lb/>
July 13<lb/>
July 18<lb/>
July 20<lb/>
July 25<lb/>
July 27<lb/>
? Mondays (and one Thursday) at 9:00 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
? Wednesdays at 8:00 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Super Lunch and Supper<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Monday-Tuesday-Wednesday<lb/>
.11:00 A.M9:00 P.M<lb/>
Fried Shrimp<lb/>
Trout<lb/>
Flounder<lb/>
Clam Strips<lb/>
Crab Cakes<lb/>
Deviled Crabs<lb/>
Oysters<lb/>
and<lb/>
Choice<lb/>
of<lb/>
2<lb/>
Vegetabl<lb/>
Includes Beverage and Tax<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Seafood Bonanza<lb/>
Every Doy<lb/>
Yo?r Choice Of Amr Or All<lb/>
Additional Speciols Thurs-Sundoy<lb/>
Abram-s t$ftfai<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
11A.M. 9PM<lb/>
Friday 11 A.M10 P.M. tun.Gw.iSi.<lb/>
4PM 10 PM (kmmnmm.MCT7tU<lb/>
Barbecue<lb/>
Oyster Sap<lb/>
752-0090<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
COUPON I<lb/>
10 OFF ANY REGULAR PRICED MEAL l<lb/>
<lb/>
'I M PCK 'C ?<lb/>
Each of that advartisad rtams is raquwad lo ba raadily avaaabta lor sata<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057556_0008"/><lb/>
,4-<lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 18. 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Manahan Looks Ahead<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
SparttMMar<lb/>
After a fourth-place finish in<lb/>
last year's AIAW National Cham-<lb/>
pionship, the Lady Pirates had<lb/>
high hopes of improving their<lb/>
overall ranking in this season's<lb/>
National Invitational Softball<lb/>
Tournament.<lb/>
The third-seeded Bucs,<lb/>
however, were eliminated in the<lb/>
losers' bracket by fourth-seeded<lb/>
South Florida, but Head Coach<lb/>
Sue Manahan was quick to point<lb/>
out that the Lady Pirates have<lb/>
nothing to be ashamed of. " You<lb/>
always want to be number one, '<lb/>
she said, " but how many people<lb/>
have gotten to be number four?"<lb/>
Manahan, who has just com-<lb/>
pleted her second year at ECU,<lb/>
k has already compiled an im-<lb/>
pressive 74-25 record. Why has<lb/>
she been so successful? Manahan<lb/>
has always stressed the impor-<lb/>
tance of being an unselfish ball<lb/>
player. She wants all her players<lb/>
to be team-oriented, making<lb/>
sacrifices for their team rather<lb/>
than seeking personal gain.<lb/>
Manahan can also identify with<lb/>
with her players because she is a<lb/>
player herself. Last year, she was<lb/>
named to the women's American<lb/>
Softball Association all-America<lb/>
team. Manahan's team, the<lb/>
Virginia Stompers, captured the<lb/>
ASA National title in 1982, and<lb/>
this summer Manahan will once<lb/>
again join the Virginia squad in<lb/>
hopes of capturing yet another na-<lb/>
tional title.<lb/>
Overall, Manahan, who led the<lb/>
Pirates to a 32-12 record this<lb/>
season, was not disappointed by<lb/>
the Lady Pirates' play in Graham.<lb/>
"I think we played very well she<lb/>
said. "I think we should have<lb/>
been able to win the FSU game<lb/>
(3-2), but they have a definite ad-<lb/>
vantage over us.<lb/>
"They played so many more<lb/>
games and have so much more<lb/>
money that they can travel with.<lb/>
Besides that, the weather is always<lb/>
nice down there (Florida). They<lb/>
played than 40 games this<lb/>
season<lb/>
The lack of monetary funds is a<lb/>
constant battle ("It's much more<lb/>
difficult to get what you would<lb/>
call blue chip prospects here<lb/>
because we can't offer scholar-<lb/>
ships"), but Manahan said ECU<lb/>
has managed to land several ex-<lb/>
tremely talented players, in-<lb/>
cluding two all-America players,<lb/>
Mitzi Davis and Cynthia Shepard,<lb/>
who just finished their final year.<lb/>
Pitcher Fran Hooks, second<lb/>
baseman Ginger Rothermel and<lb/>
outfielder Yvonne Williams, who<lb/>
according to Manahan, "have<lb/>
been ail-every thing" have exited<lb/>
due to graduation.<lb/>
The loss of five valuable<lb/>
starters will take a toll on the Bucs<lb/>
lineup next year, but the transi-<lb/>
tion from slow pitch to fast pitch<lb/>
will be what Manahan is mostly<lb/>
concerned with. "I like the game<lb/>
(fast pitch) Manahan said, "but<lb/>
it will be harder to recruit,<lb/>
especially pitchers and catchers.<lb/>
Because the game is not played in<lb/>
North Carolina, we'll have to<lb/>
travel more too<lb/>
Although there seems to be<lb/>
more disadvantages than advan-<lb/>
tages to the transition, Manahan<lb/>
is looking forward to the<lb/>
challenge. "The NCAA sanctions<lb/>
championships, and we're trying<lb/>
to go along with that.<lb/>
"It'll be nice to have a goal that<lb/>
goes beyond the state, especially<lb/>
since only two states ? North<lb/>
Carolina and Florida ? are the<lb/>
two most competitive. There were<lb/>
teams in other states, but these<lb/>
two are basically the slow-pitch<lb/>
states<lb/>
Because fast-pitch softball is<lb/>
played in the northern states,<lb/>
Manahan has been recruiting out<lb/>
of Virginia, Maryland and other<lb/>
surrounding areas. Last year, she<lb/>
brought in five players with fast-<lb/>
pitch experience: pitchers Stacy<lb/>
Boyette and Robin Graves, cat-<lb/>
cher Suzanne Tater, second<lb/>
baseman Carla Alphin and short-<lb/>
stop Sandy Kee. All five players<lb/>
are from Virginia.<lb/>
"1 think next year will be a<lb/>
rebuilding year for us Manahan<lb/>
said. "Some of the players we<lb/>
brought in have fast-pitch ex-<lb/>
perience but not at a college level.<lb/>
That's what we need ? ex-<lb/>
perience<lb/>
Kobe Announces New Recruits<lb/>
Lady Pirate Softball Coach Sue Manahan has racked up a 74-25 record<lb/>
in just two years at ECU.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Finish<lb/>
Fourth In Tourney<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff Wrilf<lb/>
The ECU Women's softball<lb/>
team finished fourth in the Na-<lb/>
tional Invitational Softball Tour-<lb/>
nament, held May 6-8, in<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
The Lady Bucs were seeded<lb/>
third going into the three-day<lb/>
event which was sponsored by the<lb/>
American Softball Association.<lb/>
The University of Florida was<lb/>
top-seeded in the event, followed<lb/>
by defending national champion<lb/>
Florida State. ECU, who won the<lb/>
state title the week before, was<lb/>
trailed bv number four South<lb/>
Florida UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
Cleveland State, Northern Ken-<lb/>
tucky and Western Carolina.<lb/>
Going into the final day of<lb/>
play, only four teams were left in<lb/>
action: ECU and South Florida in<lb/>
the lower's bracket and top-<lb/>
seeded Florida in the winner's<lb/>
bracket.<lb/>
South Florida thrashed the<lb/>
Lady Pirates, 8-1, giving the Bucs<lb/>
a fourth-place finish in their final<lb/>
appearance in slow pitch softball.<lb/>
ECU will switch to fast pitch soft-<lb/>
ball next spring, the only version<lb/>
of the sport in which the NCAA<lb/>
offers championship competition.<lb/>
In the first day of action, senior<lb/>
outfielders Yvonne Williams and<lb/>
Cynthia Shepard each slapped<lb/>
three hits to lead the Pirates to a<lb/>
6-5 victory over unseeded West<lb/>
Florida. "Everyone hit the ball<lb/>
well said Head Coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan following the game. "It<lb/>
was a very difficult game for us,<lb/>
as will everyone we play. No one<lb/>
is to be taken lightly<lb/>
On the second day, ECU split a<lb/>
pair of games to drop into the<lb/>
loser's bracket of the double<lb/>
elimination tournament.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates bowed to<lb/>
Florida State, 3-2, but downed<lb/>
Western Carolina in the night<lb/>
game, 4-3, to remain alive.<lb/>
ECU jumped out to a 1-0 lead<lb/>
in the first inning of their opening<lb/>
game Friday, but FSU tied it up<lb/>
with one out in the fourth. ECU<lb/>
scored again in the sixth, but the<lb/>
Lady Noles took the lead for good<lb/>
with two runs in the bottom of the<lb/>
same inning to complete the scor-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
In the second game, the Pirates<lb/>
put it away with three runs in the<lb/>
third. Jeanette Roth singled to<lb/>
open up the inning, and then<lb/>
yvonne Williams reached on an<lb/>
error. Cynthia Shepard singled in<lb/>
Roth, and Williams scored on a<lb/>
sacrifice fly by Mitzi Davis. Jo<lb/>
Landa Clayton then reached on<lb/>
an error, scoring Shepard.<lb/>
Western Carolina rallied for<lb/>
two in the bottom of the frame to<lb/>
close within one, but neither team<lb/>
scored again.<lb/>
Pirate head coach Rick Kobe<lb/>
has announced the signing of 17<lb/>
recruits for the 1983-84 season.<lb/>
"We're very, very pleased with<lb/>
recruiting this year he said.<lb/>
"We filled a lot of spots where we<lb/>
had some problems last year<lb/>
Stratton Smith from Charlotte<lb/>
and Mike Lotz from Sarasota,<lb/>
Fla will add strength in the<lb/>
distance freestyle events. Kobe<lb/>
described Smith as the "most ver-<lb/>
satile swimmer of all those com-<lb/>
ing while Lotz "should break<lb/>
most of our distance records<lb/>
before he leaves ECU<lb/>
Backstroker Kevin Hidalgo<lb/>
from Chester, Va has a 200-yard<lb/>
time better than the current ECU<lb/>
varsity record.<lb/>
Freestyle sprint recruits include<lb/>
David Breece of Greensboro and<lb/>
Tim Baker of Tarboro, both of<lb/>
whom were finalists in the North<lb/>
Carolina high school champion-<lb/>
ship. Ray Fredler of Glenolden,<lb/>
Pa and Jeff Brown from Ft.<lb/>
Bragg will also swim freestyle<lb/>
sprints.<lb/>
Backstroker Scott Robinson of<lb/>
Falls Church, Va and freestylers<lb/>
John Torrence of Davidsonville,<lb/>
Md and Richard Wells of<lb/>
Greensboro have also signed.<lb/>
Leading the list of female<lb/>
recruits is Caycee Paust from<lb/>
Richmond, Va a backstroker<lb/>
who had times under the current<lb/>
ECU varsity marks. Cindy<lb/>
Newman, who is the sister of<lb/>
former swimmer Perry Newman,<lb/>
will be attending ECU. Kobe has<lb/>
also added Beth Stackhouse from<lb/>
High Point and Jean Keating<lb/>
from Huntington, N.Y in the<lb/>
freestyle events, and Scotia Miler<lb/>
from Silver Springs, Md in the<lb/>
backstroke.<lb/>
The swim coach also landed<lb/>
Diver Lori Miller of Columbus,<lb/>
Pa who Kobe describes as<lb/>
"having national potential<lb/>
Kobe is extremely pleased about<lb/>
the incoming recruits and is hop-<lb/>
ing to sign even a few more.<lb/>
"We're still working on some<lb/>
quality swimmers, but were very<lb/>
satisfied with those who have<lb/>
committed he said. "Anyone<lb/>
else we get is gravy<lb/>
Bucs Split In Season Finale<lb/>
Eagles Draft Schulz<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Aafetaal Sports E?or<lb/>
A split of a doubleheadcr with<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College over<lb/>
the spring ? summer school<lb/>
break ended the 1983 season for<lb/>
the ECU baseball team and left<lb/>
them with a 21-17-1 mark.<lb/>
The Pirates, who are the defen-<lb/>
ding ECAC-South conference<lb/>
champs, were not invited to par-<lb/>
ticipate in this year's four-team<lb/>
tourney.<lb/>
James Madison, Richmond,<lb/>
Georgetown and William and<lb/>
Mary were the four teams invited<lb/>
on the basis of their record. The<lb/>
Pirates finished with a 2-3-1 con-<lb/>
ference mark.<lb/>
Junior pitcher Robbie Mc-<lb/>
Clanahan topped off the season in<lb/>
impressive fashion as he tossed a<lb/>
two-hitter in the second game of<lb/>
the season-ending doubleheader<lb/>
with ACC.<lb/>
The Pirates scored two runs in<lb/>
the third inning to pull out the 3-1<lb/>
victory. A single by Kelly<lb/>
Robinette, a double by John<lb/>
Hallow, and a two-run single by<lb/>
Robert Wells provided all the runs<lb/>
that the Pirates needed.<lb/>
In the first game, Atlantic<lb/>
Christian scored a run in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the seventh inning to break<lb/>
a 2-2 tie.<lb/>
David Lawhon opened the inn-<lb/>
ing with a single and was sacrific-<lb/>
ed to second. Since third base was<lb/>
left uncovered on the play,<lb/>
Lawhon advanced all the way to<lb/>
third.<lb/>
After intentional walks to Jeff<lb/>
Pierce and Mack Smith loadedt<lb/>
the bases, Greg Baker delivered a<lb/>
game-winning hit to right field.<lb/>
The doubleheader marked the<lb/>
end of the careers of seven ECU<lb/>
seniors: John Hallow, Kelly<lb/>
Robinette, Kirk Parsons, Charlie<lb/>
Smith, Jack Curlings, Robert<lb/>
Wells and Mike Williams.<lb/>
Hallow was a four-year starter<lb/>
for the Pirates, switching between<lb/>
third base and right field. In his<lb/>
four years, Hallow piled up some<lb/>
impressive statistics.<lb/>
He is the career ECU leader in<lb/>
RBI (104), hits (181), total bases<lb/>
(268), and doubles (34). Hallow is<lb/>
also third in runs scored and<lb/>
fourth in number of at-bats.<lb/>
Another four-year starter for<lb/>
the Pirates has been shortstop<lb/>
Kelly Robinette. The Prince<lb/>
George, Va. native is fourth on<lb/>
the all-time list with 151 hits and is<lb/>
third with 587 at-bats.<lb/>
The loss of center fielder<lb/>
Robert Wells will leave a big hole<lb/>
in the Pirate outfield. Wells made<lb/>
only three errors in his four years<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
Wells is also the all-time ECU<lb/>
leader in walks with 82.<lb/>
Other crucial losses for the<lb/>
Pirates will be catcher Jack Curl-<lb/>
ings and outfielder Mike<lb/>
Williams, along with two pitchers.<lb/>
Starter Charlie Smith and<lb/>
reliever Kirk Parsons will leave<lb/>
the ECU coaching staff with a<lb/>
vacancy to fill.<lb/>
With the abolishment of the<lb/>
summer league, head coach Hal<lb/>
Baird and assistant coach Gary<lb/>
Overton will be able to concen-<lb/>
trate this summer on filling the<lb/>
spots left by the departing seniors.<lb/>
The Pirates hope to be able to<lb/>
get the talent they will need to<lb/>
return to the championship-<lb/>
winning form of 1982.<lb/>
ECU Ail-American defensive<lb/>
end Jody Schulz was picked by the<lb/>
Philadelphia Eagles in the recent<lb/>
NFL draft. Schulz was taken by<lb/>
the Eagles in the second round,<lb/>
making him the highest draft pick<lb/>
in ECU history.<lb/>
Schulz, who was the 18th player<lb/>
chosen in the second round, will<lb/>
most likely play linebacker for the<lb/>
Eagles.<lb/>
Schulz played at ECU for two<lb/>
years after playing for Chowan<lb/>
Junior College, where he was an<lb/>
All-American.<lb/>
After his senior year at ECU,<lb/>
Schulz received many individual<lb/>
honors, including Associated<lb/>
Press third-team All-American<lb/>
and first-team All-Southern In-<lb/>
dependent.<lb/>
Baird Announces Pirates<lb/>
First Signee Of The Year<lb/>
Denkler A warded<lb/>
The Christenbury Award, given<lb/>
annually to an outstanding senior<lb/>
as a member of a varsity squad<lb/>
who had excelled in scholarship,<lb/>
character and service to ECU, has<lb/>
been awarded to basketball star<lb/>
Mary Denkler.<lb/>
The most decorated Lady<lb/>
Pirate in ECU history, Denkler's<lb/>
latest award was preceded by an<lb/>
NCAA post-graduate scholarship.<lb/>
The Christenbury Award is<lb/>
voted upon by members of the<lb/>
Dept. of Health, Physical Educa-<lb/>
tion, Recreation and Safety and<lb/>
the Dept. of Athletics. The award<lb/>
is in memory of the late John<lb/>
Christenbury, who was killed in<lb/>
World War II after coaching foot-<lb/>
oall at ECU in 1940 and 1941. His<lb/>
1941 team is the only unbeaten<lb/>
and untied team in the school's<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Buc Chosen<lb/>
ECU freshman basketball<lb/>
player Sylvia Bragg has been<lb/>
selected to compete on the Nor-<lb/>
theast Region team at the Na-<lb/>
tional Sports Festival at Colorado<lb/>
Springs in June.<lb/>
The tryouts were held May 1 at<lb/>
Rutgers University.<lb/>
Head Baseball Coach Hal Baird<lb/>
has announced the Pirates' first<lb/>
recruit to sign with ECU this year.<lb/>
Steve Sides, a 5-9, 160-pound<lb/>
second baseman from Eastern<lb/>
Wayne High School, will be atten-<lb/>
ding ECU, according to Baird.<lb/>
"Steve was a very highly<lb/>
recruited player by all of the area<lb/>
major college teams Baird said.<lb/>
"We're delighted that he signed<lb/>
with ECU<lb/>
Sides won the Golden Glove<lb/>
Award at Eastern Wayne for<lb/>
defensive excellence all three years<lb/>
with the Warriors. He had a<lb/>
cumulative .378 fielding percen-<lb/>
tage while earning all-conference<lb/>
honors for three consecutive<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The 1982 Eastern Wayne squad<lb/>
placed second in the state with a<lb/>
24-4 recrod, and the 1983 unit<lb/>
leads the Mideastern Conference<lb/>
going into the final week.<lb/>
"He's (Steve) the type of player<lb/>
that can provide help right<lb/>
away Baird said. "I fully expect<lb/>
Steve to contend for starting posi-<lb/>
tion next year. He runs and hits<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"Steve is not only an outstan-<lb/>
ding baseball player, but an<lb/>
outstanding student. He's a solid<lb/>
'A' student and scored 1,100 on<lb/>
the college boards<lb/>
Sides is a member of the Beta<lb/>
Club and the National Honor<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
ECU Baseball Coach Hal Baird will spead the mi<lb/>
key positions because of so many departing seniors<lb/>
trying to fill<lb/>
Summer Recreation<lb/>
1st Summer Session<lb/>
(MayrUaae21)<lb/>
Activity<lb/>
Video Games Rec Nite<lb/>
Racquetball Tourn.<lb/>
Co-Rec Softball<lb/>
Tennis (S) Tourn.<lb/>
Co-Rec Volleyball<lb/>
Putt-Putt Tourney<lb/>
3-on-3 Basketball<lb/>
Canoe Race<lb/>
Golf Classic<lb/>
Prediction Run<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling<lb/>
Entry Dates<lb/>
516-519<lb/>
516-519<lb/>
516-519<lb/>
516-519<lb/>
523-526<lb/>
523-526<lb/>
523-61<lb/>
530-67<lb/>
66-69<lb/>
66-614<lb/>
Begins<lb/>
518<lb/>
523<lb/>
523<lb/>
523<lb/>
524<lb/>
526<lb/>
531<lb/>
62<lb/>
67<lb/>
69<lb/>
615<lb/>
Days Tin location<lb/>
W 7-9 p.m. Mem. GymPool<lb/>
MR TBA Minges Cts.<lb/>
M&amp;W 5:30-7:30 p.m. IM Fids.<lb/>
M-R TBA Coll. Hill Cts.<lb/>
TAR 5:30-7:30 p.m. Mail<lb/>
RNoon-11 p.m. Hwy 33<lb/>
TAR 6:30-8:30 p.m. Mem. Gym<lb/>
R 4 p.m. Tar River<lb/>
T 9 a.m4 p.m. Ayden CC<lb/>
R 6 p.m. Bunting Track<lb/>
W 7-9 p.m. MSC Alley<lb/>
Camps<lb/>
During<lb/>
Several ECU head fa<lb/>
coaches have <lb/>
nounced when !he<lb/>
vmII hold their 1983 Jul<lb/>
summer<lb/>
:ssion<lb/>
camps.<lb/>
Head Coath i<lb/>
Emory's Pira<lb/>
ball camp wili he<lb/>
on campu.<lb/>
17-20. lor you <lb/>
of various age<lb/>
First-e<lb/>
Basketball C<lb/>
Charlie Har:<lb/>
announced tv<lb/>
mer camp sess<lb/>
youngsters : . .<lb/>
A<lb/>
1<lb/>
4<lb/>
;AGi  ' - ;<lb/>
WZMB pitcher Jim Fnsor<lb/>
during the annual clash<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
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4K Gre?"viUe Blvd<lb/>
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taoac ilCNLNU I<lb/>
Introductory W.<lb/>
Our ne w"i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0009"/><lb/>
I ?<lb/>
ll' -<lb/>
ead<lb/>
king forward to the<lb/>
?nee "The NCAA sanctions<lb/>
Jmpionships, and we're trying<lb/>
along with that<lb/>
f It'l bt - e to ha e a goal that<lb/>
b beyond the state, especially<lb/>
wo Ntatos North<lb/>
t lorida ? are the<lb/>
co npetitive. There were<lb/>
other states, but these<lb/>
basically the slow-pitch<lb/>
as! pitch sottball is<lb/>
in the northern states.<lb/>
as been recruiting out<lb/>
a Maryland and other<lb/>
ai eas I asl ear, she<lb/>
 e plaers with tast-<lb/>
ence: pitchers Stac<lb/>
? Robin Graes, cat-<lb/>
ne Tater. second<lb/>
lphin and short-<lb/>
Kee All five players<lb/>
s .ma.<lb/>
k next year will be a<lb/>
for us Manahan<lb/>
e of the players we<lb/>
c fast-pitch ex-<lb/>
al a college level.<lb/>
ac need ? ex-<lb/>
ecruits<lb/>
Beth v.uk house from<lb/>
Point and Jean Keating<lb/>
Huntington, N.Y in the<lb/>
and Scotia Miler<lb/>
S ,er Springs. Md in the<lb/>
swim<lb/>
oach also landed<lb/>
 ei I on Miller of Columbus.<lb/>
 o Kobe describes as<lb/>
ving national potential<lb/>
? be is extremely pleased about<lb/>
:oming recruits and is hop-<lb/>
gn even a few more.<lb/>
11 working on some<lb/>
Aimmers, but were very<lb/>
rj with those who have<lb/>
;nmed he said. "Anyone<lb/>
Ae get is gravy<lb/>
inale<lb/>
walks with 82.<lb/>
ucial losses for the<lb/>
will be catcher Jack Curl-<lb/>
and outfielder Mike<lb/>
. long with two pitchers.<lb/>
starter Charlie Smith and<lb/>
K ' I Parsons will leave<lb/>
.caching staff with a<lb/>
to fill<lb/>
With the abolishment of the<lb/>
summer league, head coach Hal<lb/>
Bail I and assistant coach Gary<lb/>
Overtoil will be able to concen-<lb/>
trate this summer on filling the<lb/>
the departing seniors.<lb/>
The Pirates hope to be able to<lb/>
get the talent they will need to<lb/>
irn to the championship-<lb/>
winntng form of 1982.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 18. 1983<lb/>
will spend the summer trying to fill<lb/>
my departing seniors.<lb/>
Days TimeLocation<lb/>
W 7-9 p.m. Mem. GymPool<lb/>
MR TBA Minges Cts.<lb/>
M&amp;W 5:30-7:30 p.m. 1M Fids.<lb/>
MR TBA Coll. Hill Cts.<lb/>
T&amp;R 5:30-7:30 p.m. Mall<lb/>
R Noon-11 p.m. Hwy 33<lb/>
T&amp;R 6:30-8:30 p.m. Mem. Gym<lb/>
R 4 p.m. Tar River<lb/>
T 9 a.m4 p.m. Ayden CC<lb/>
R 6 p.m. Bunting Track<lb/>
W 7-9 p.m. MSC Aaiey<lb/>
Camps To Be Held<lb/>
During June and July<lb/>
Several ECU head<lb/>
poaches have an-<lb/>
nounced when they<lb/>
?,U hold their 1983<lb/>
summer session<lb/>
camps.<lb/>
Head Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory's Pirate foot-<lb/>
ball camp will be held<lb/>
on campus, July<lb/>
17-20, for youngsters<lb/>
of arious ages.<lb/>
First-year Head<lb/>
Basketball Coach<lb/>
Charlie Harrison has<lb/>
announced two sum-<lb/>
ma camp sessions for<lb/>
soungsters ranging<lb/>
from ages 8-18. The<lb/>
first session will be<lb/>
held June 26 through<lb/>
July 1 and will be for<lb/>
overnight campers.<lb/>
The second camp, Ju-<lb/>
ly 25 through July 29,<lb/>
will be held for day<lb/>
campers.<lb/>
Head Baseball<lb/>
Coach Hal Baird has<lb/>
also announced two<lb/>
camp sessions. The<lb/>
first session will begin<lb/>
on June 12 and will<lb/>
continue through<lb/>
June 17. This camp<lb/>
will be specifically for<lb/>
pitchers and catchers.<lb/>
The second session,<lb/>
which will be held Ju-<lb/>
ly 17-22, will deal with<lb/>
all aspects of baseball.<lb/>
Special instructors<lb/>
attending the camp<lb/>
will be Ray Pennes,<lb/>
an assistant at N.C.<lb/>
State; Tony Guzzo, a<lb/>
former ECU player<lb/>
and coach who is now<lb/>
head coach at Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth; and<lb/>
Chip Baker, the assis-<lb/>
tant coach at Va.<lb/>
Tech.<lb/>
Evans Places<lb/>
High Twice<lb/>
In Va. Meet<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU Trackster Er-<lb/>
skine Evans placed se-<lb/>
cond in the 100 meter<lb/>
and third in the 200<lb/>
meter events to lead<lb/>
ECU in the Virginia<lb/>
Invitational Track<lb/>
Meet Sunday.<lb/>
Evans finished the<lb/>
100-meter race in 10.3<lb/>
seconds, while his<lb/>
200-meter time was<lb/>
20.8.<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle.<lb/>
placed fifth in the<lb/>
100-meter race with a<lb/>
time of 10.4. The<lb/>
400-relay team placed<lb/>
second at 39.9.<lb/>
The Pirates will run<lb/>
in the 1C4A outdoor<lb/>
championships at<lb/>
Villanova, May 21-22<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN BUFFET<lb/>
5 P.MCLOSE<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
?LASAGNA<lb/>
 ?SPAGHETTI<lb/>
ia<lb/>
(Choice of 3 Sauces)<lb/>
with Garlic Bread<lb/>
A <lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
" W ith all you can eat soup and salad<lb/>
it? .v-ar<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
Clay 'The Beav' Thornton<lb/>
The East Carolinian's Clay Thornton takes his stance in a vain attempt to copy the style of that<lb/>
famous afternoon personality, Beaver Cleaver.<lb/>
EVEKY HUDAY<lb/>
ALL-VOl CAN-EAT<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
Breakfast Bar open 6:00am<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
205 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
 I' V :<lb/>
W7MB pitcher Jim Ensor serves up one of the many "gopherballs<lb/>
during the annual clash between the student radio station and The<lb/>
Fast Carolinian.<lb/>
ARM SURPLUS<lb/>
CAMPING SPOUTING<lb/>
MILITARY GOODS<lb/>
C?ei '000 DiHeieni Hems<lb/>
Nh and os??o<lb/>
ARMV-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S Evans<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
4K Greenville Blvd<lb/>
7Se-3023 ? 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
I -Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELFRS<lb/>
tSTASLIHfO 1912<lb/>
GrFFKVILLE N r<lb/>
i<lb/>
. 4 (<lb/>
ft i )bl<lb/>
Remnants<lb/>
Custom Design<lb/>
Repair - t<lb/>
All Work Dor On Premises <lb/>
t<lb/>
T<lb/>
ABORT IONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
iUS.OO Pregn??KV ? B,r1<lb/>
Control. and Problem<lb/>
Pregnantv Counseling For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
113 OS35 (Toll Free Number<lb/>
(00 721 2S? between ? AM<lb/>
?nd S P M Weekday<lb/>
HALEIGMS WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
?17 West M r,?n 51<lb/>
Sjieig<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN abo?tion od" ?<lb/>
DEPEND ON. ' rnc' "aat  '<lb/>
 o??r ?n?ng Cen'ef Counse ors are<lb/>
'  e jcy onarvgM ?o support ana una"<lb/>
? .  -our safe-v comfort ard pr,vac, are<lb/>
assured cv me car-ng staff of the Rem.ng Center<lb/>
SERVICES ? 'uesaav ?- Saturacrv Aoortion <lb/>
a ? rmertfsa 1st &amp; 2ndT?me??er Aoorttons up to<lb/>
' - Meetcs ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? very Earty<lb/>
Pre nncv T-ts . A? .nc s M m insure<lb/>
Acceptea ? CALL 781-5S5C DAY OB NIOMT ?<lb/>
Health care, counseling A FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
NNOUNCING . . .<lb/>
SATURDAY OFFICE<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
For your convenience we will be oprn<lb/>
for examination and optical services<lb/>
every Saturday from 9:00 a.m. to 1 00<lb/>
p.m Affordable fees, quick, accurate<lb/>
service. Convenient Hours. Seeing is<lb/>
Believing PETER W HOLLtS<lb/>
OnOMEINC<lb/>
?t? CAME OEHICa<lb/>
O.D ?.A.<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
$<lb/>
and eOucation fo? wo-<lb/>
-er of gjj<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Any Complete Prescription<lb/>
Eyeglasses Or Contact Lens<lb/>
Fitting.<lb/>
Must Be Presented At<lb/>
Time Of Order<lb/>
Other Discounts Or Coupons<lb/>
Do Not Apply<lb/>
Coupon Enpires May 15. 1983<lb/>
QUALITY BIKE<lb/>
SALES &amp; SERVICE<lb/>
"Greenville's Most<lb/>
Complete Bicycle Shop"<lb/>
?TREK<lb/>
? Puegeot ? Raleigh<lb/>
Country Cookin6<lb/>
51 2 E 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
Why pay $12.00 for a delicious<lb/>
prime rib dinner.<lb/>
Get your friends<lb/>
and try this new special tonight!<lb/>
Back to School<lb/>
TIRE SPECIAL<lb/>
27 X 1 Va 95 psi Gumwall Tire<lb/>
Reg. $7.95 Now $4.95<lb/>
Limited Time Only<lb/>
530 CONTANCHC STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 27834<lb/>
757-3696<lb/>
Our ne? summer hours are:<lb/>
ll:00am-9:00pm Daily<lb/>
3tlt I<lb/>
??fc <lb/>
t<lb/>
MMJ1JI<lb/>
-s??, ?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0010"/><lb/>
i<lb/>
l?KP9<lb/>
W<lb/>
i<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 18, 1983<lb/>
CFA Leader<lb/>
Sees Battle<lb/>
KANSAS CITY<lb/>
(AP) ? The U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court pro-<lb/>
bably will have the<lb/>
final word in the bat-<lb/>
tle over football<lb/>
television controls,<lb/>
the president of the<lb/>
College Football<lb/>
Association predicted<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Dr. Joab Thomas,<lb/>
president of the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Alabama and a<lb/>
former chancellor at<lb/>
N.C. State, also said<lb/>
that college presidents<lb/>
were going to become<lb/>
more active as<lb/>
athletics struggles<lb/>
through a decade of<lb/>
upheavel and change.<lb/>
"I think there will<lb/>
be more meaningful<lb/>
presidential involve-<lb/>
ment in the next three<lb/>
or four years than at<lb/>
any other time in the<lb/>
history of inter-<lb/>
collegiat athletics<lb/>
Thomas said in a<lb/>
telephone inteiview<lb/>
from his office in<lb/>
Tuscaloosa,<lb/>
Alabama. "For one<lb/>
thing, we've allowed<lb/>
the academic pro-<lb/>
grams to deteriorate<lb/>
and create embarrass-<lb/>
ing situations across<lb/>
the country<lb/>
The most pressing<lb/>
order of business for<lb/>
college athletics is the<lb/>
resolution of battle<lb/>
over football televison<lb/>
rights. An appeal to<lb/>
the Supreme Court is<lb/>
one of several options<lb/>
the NCAA is con-<lb/>
sidering in the wake<lb/>
of a ruling last week<lb/>
by the 10th U.S. Cir-<lb/>
cuit Court of Ap-<lb/>
peals.<lb/>
By a 2-1 vote, the<lb/>
appelate court upheld<lb/>
a lower court ruling<lb/>
that declared the<lb/>
NCAA in violation of<lb/>
antitrust laws in forc-<lb/>
ing member schools to<lb/>
participate in the<lb/>
NCAA TV football<lb/>
plan. The lower<lb/>
court's order had<lb/>
voided the NCAA's<lb/>
current network net-<lb/>
work contracts for<lb/>
football television and<lb/>
enjoined it from mak-<lb/>
ing future contracts.<lb/>
However, the ap-<lb/>
pelate court asked the<lb/>
lower court to recon-<lb/>
sider those parts of its<lb/>
order, and the picture<lb/>
remains muddled.<lb/>
The 60-member<lb/>
CFA includes the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference and other ma-<lb/>
jor football con-<lb/>
ferences and in-<lb/>
dependents except the<lb/>
Pac-10 and Big Ten.<lb/>
The CFA is expected<lb/>
to offer a TV plan to<lb/>
its members at its con-<lb/>
vention next month in<lb/>
Dallas.<lb/>
NCAA spokesmen<lb/>
said Monday they still<lb/>
were undecided on<lb/>
their next legal move.<lb/>
But one possibility is<lb/>
to attempt to get a<lb/>
stay of the ruling pen-<lb/>
ding an appeal to the<lb/>
Supreme Court.<lb/>
Eventually, Thomas<lb/>
believes, the high<lb/>
court will agree to<lb/>
hear the case.<lb/>
A CC gains<lb/>
GREENSBORO<lb/>
(AP) ? The eight<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference schools gross-<lb/>
ed more than $13<lb/>
million from football<lb/>
and basketball in<lb/>
1982-83, not counting<lb/>
money from ticket<lb/>
sales, league figures<lb/>
indicate.<lb/>
The money came<lb/>
from televison fees,<lb/>
bowl appearances and<lb/>
post season basketball<lb/>
tournament participa-<lb/>
tion. The money from<lb/>
basketball exceeded<lb/>
$8.5 million, com-<lb/>
pared to about $5.3<lb/>
million from football.<lb/>
Among the ACC<lb/>
members, North<lb/>
Carolina got the most<lb/>
money ? about<lb/>
$2,216,500. Virginia<lb/>
was next at<lb/>
$2,126,200, followed<lb/>
by Maryland with<lb/>
$1,851,250, Clemson<lb/>
$1,691,850, North<lb/>
Carolina State<lb/>
$1,635,850, Georgia<lb/>
Tech $1,507,900,<lb/>
Duke $1,453,350 and<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
$1,421,550.<lb/>
booster organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The ACC and its<lb/>
members realized the<lb/>
largest single chunk of<lb/>
revenue from their<lb/>
regional basketball<lb/>
televison network.<lb/>
According to the<lb/>
terms of a three-year<lb/>
contract signed last<lb/>
year with Raycom-<lb/>
Jefferson Production-<lb/>
sa, the ACC members<lb/>
divided $5 million in-<lb/>
to shares of $625,000<lb/>
each. The contract<lb/>
will be $6 million next<lb/>
year and $7 million in<lb/>
1984-85.<lb/>
The ACC earned<lb/>
more than $1.5<lb/>
million for the par-<lb/>
ticipation of four of<lb/>
its teams in the<lb/>
NCAA basketball<lb/>
tournament. NCAA<lb/>
champion N.C. StaU<lb/>
received $550,000 for<lb/>
reaching the Final<lb/>
Four, Carolina and<lb/>
Virginia $412,500<lb/>
each for reaching the<lb/>
regional level<lb/>
Maryland $137,500<lb/>
for its first- and<lb/>
second-round ap-<lb/>
pearances.<lb/>
Those figures equal<lb/>
20 percent of 40 per-<lb/>
cent of the ACC<lb/>
members' annual<lb/>
athletic budgets, each<lb/>
of which falls into the<lb/>
$5 million to $10<lb/>
million range.<lb/>
Televison revenue is<lb/>
added to gate receipts<lb/>
and student fees to<lb/>
meet the budgetary re-<lb/>
quirements of up to<lb/>
26 varsity sports pro-<lb/>
grams. Athletic<lb/>
scholarships generally<lb/>
are financed with<lb/>
funds raised through<lb/>
ACC bylaws allow<lb/>
each of its NCAA<lb/>
participants $50,00<lb/>
off the top of its earn-<lb/>
ings plus 50 percent of<lb/>
the remaining figure.<lb/>
The other 50 percent<lb/>
is divided among the<lb/>
rest of the ACC I<lb/>
members.<lb/>
That means State<lb/>
received $300,000 of<lb/>
its own earnings plus<lb/>
portions of the other<lb/>
teams' earnings for a<lb/>
total of $358,030.<lb/>
Burns Resign:<lb/>
ECU Assistant<lb/>
Basketball Coach<lb/>
Beth Burns announc-<lb/>
ed her resignation in<lb/>
order to accept the<lb/>
assistant coaching<lb/>
position at the<lb/>
University of Col-<lb/>
orado in Boulder.<lb/>
The 26-year-old<lb/>
native of Chantham,<lb/>
N.J joined the Lady<lb/>
Pirate staff two years<lb/>
ago. Prior to coming<lb/>
to ECU, Burns coach-<lb/>
ed at her alma mater,<lb/>
Ohio Wesley an.<lb/>
Burns' resignation<lb/>
is effective im-<lb/>
mediately.<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These trices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, May 21,1983<lb/>
V fuSDA?<lb/>
 (choice)<lb/>
USDA Choice - Bttf Rtit4 Whtlt<lb/>
10-12 Lbt. Atftrtft<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Sliced FREE<lb/>
USDA Cbaiet Bom-I<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Roast<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
4-S Ibt. Atftrtgt<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Picnics<lb/>
Rtt<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
3 Liter - Baruady Rbiae. Rose. Cbablis,<lb/>
Freeeb Colowbara Ziafanael Cbaaia Bleat<lb/>
Ruby Ceberaet<lb/>
Inolenook<lb/>
Pk?. of 12 ? 12 0z. Caai<lb/>
Navalle I Milwaukee<lb/>
2 Littr<lb/>
 V<lb/>
22 Ounce<lb/>
Qtarl<lb/>
I<lb/>
Why Pay M.39<lb/>
6.S0zIt. CkatkTtM.lt OH<lb/>
Way Pay M.29<lb/>
Wky Pay M.09<lb/>
Alpo Dog Food 13 Page Toilet Tissue<lb/>
7.2S 0z. ? Fad Taw<lb/>
Macaroni &amp; Cheese<lb/>
14 0z. ? AtserUa<lb/>
Pet Rite Cream Pies<lb/>
489<lb/>
4.10s. - U??fJCMatffttrtv Ste? Cat Feee<lb/>
Purina 100<lb/>
32 Otaaa<lb/>
1 Lb. ? Qttrttra<lb/>
Pel Monte CatsupIBflParkay Margarine<lb/>
2 Caa ? Tbtak Vtt<lb/>
Cherry Pie Filling<lb/>
COtoLD<lb/>
DUCK<lb/>
Half G?l<lb/>
?I5JC<lb/>
Half Gallon 50f Off<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
fth F v 3 H<lb/>
Qti")( ju,(t<lb/>
Donald Duck<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
fJTVy<lb/>
t?<lb/>
49 0: ft S<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
, f13 2<lb/>
?<lb/>
wm0mt0m&amp;<lb/>
????"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0011"/><lb/>
CRAB A BIGGER SLICE OF SUMMER<lb/>
r<lb/>
w<lb/>
Stop cooking your dinner up or chasing your dinner down.<lb/>
Crab an extra hour of summer timejll<lb/>
and have your dinner delivered. <lb/>
S<lb/>
Menu<lb/>
PTA pizzas (Small 12 . Large 16Our zesty sauce is made<lb/>
with romano cheese and topped with 100 mozzareila<lb/>
Double sauce is free<lb/>
Toppings<lb/>
Pepperoni Green Pepper Rings Green Olives<lb/>
Ground Beef Fresh Mushrooms Onion Circles<lb/>
Sausage Black Olives Double Cheese<lb/>
Canadian Bacon<lb/>
Double Crust<lb/>
Italian sauce<lb/>
Jatepeno Peppers<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
757-1955<lb/>
JACKSONVILLE<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
anywhere in our<lb/>
service zone!<lb/>
Deluxe<lb/>
pepperoni sausage green peppers onions<lb/>
and mushrooms (5 items for the price of 4)<lb/>
Pizza Lite ? mushrooms, onions ground beef green<lb/>
peppers ripe olives<lb/>
353-4700<lb/>
Look for Other Stores Opening in Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
buy one get one free<lb/>
Oi der any large two or more item<lb/>
and get a small two or more free.<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25, 1983<lb/>
One discount per pizza<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
Qi<lb/>
grab a dollar or two<lb/>
special coupon<lb/>
Save on any 2-topping pizza<lb/>
S1.00 off small $2.00 off Large<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25, 1983<lb/>
Cl<lb/>
<lb/>
One discount per pizza<lb/>
8<lb/>
buy one get one free<lb/>
Order any large two or more item<lb/>
and get a small two or more free.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
? Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25, 1983 oS<lb/>
One discount per pizza 8 $<lb/>
buy two and try two<lb/>
Order any 4 or more toppings and<lb/>
get 2 toppings free.<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25,1983<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
One discount per pizza<lb/>
ID<lb/>
 buy one get one free Cl<lb/>
Order any large two or more item m<lb/>
and get a small two or more free.<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25, 1983<lb/>
3P<lb/>
One discount per pizza<lb/>
?<lb/>
i?t wildeard-pick-a-coupon f<lb/>
 ? Order 2 or more toppings, doubte one of mem ???. ?<lb/>
1 a n Order 4 toppings, get 2 of mem torn. 3P<lb/>
 $1.00 off small or 9 00 off large 2-topptng pttza<lb/>
D Order 2 or more toppings and add one more topping<lb/>
D Double cneese please on any pizza.<lb/>
<lb/>
Offer good<lb/>
thru August 25,1983 a<lb/>
One discount per pizza<lb/>
ID<lb/>
 k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057556_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>