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<pb facs="00057559_0001"/>
?to iEaBt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No, fc?<lb/>
Wednesday June 8,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,<lb/>
Drinking Age<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Vuutant Ntwi Milor<lb/>
Beginning Oct. 1, at 12:01 a.m<lb/>
a law will go into effect to raise<lb/>
North Carolina's minimum drink-<lb/>
ing age to 19. Last Thursday,<lb/>
after months of revision and com-<lb/>
promise, the General Assembly<lb/>
passed the Safe Roads Act.<lb/>
The bill, which received almost<lb/>
unanymous approval from both<lb/>
houses, has been termed "the<lb/>
toughest law in America against<lb/>
drunk driving by Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. Hunt was the chief sup-<lb/>
porter of the legislation.<lb/>
The section of the new measure<lb/>
requiring the age change is ex-<lb/>
pected to be difficult to enforce<lb/>
and has received little support<lb/>
from officials at North Carolina<lb/>
colleges and universities.<lb/>
Several ECU officials have<lb/>
spoken in the past against the age<lb/>
change claiming the law will be<lb/>
difficult to enforce and require<lb/>
university officials to segregate<lb/>
students at college functions<lb/>
where alcohol is served.<lb/>
Vice-Chancellor for Student<lb/>
Life Elmer Meyer has been in op-<lb/>
position to the proposal since it<lb/>
was initially discussed in the<lb/>
General Assembly. In an inter-<lb/>
view Tuesday, Meyer said he<lb/>
Bus. School<lb/>
Gets $20,000<lb/>
Banking Gift<lb/>
ByTINAMAROSCHAK<lb/>
StaAWtitci<lb/>
On Tuesday, May 31, the nor-<lb/>
theastern group of the North<lb/>
Carolina Bankers Association an-<lb/>
nounced a $20,000 gift to the<lb/>
banking curriculum here at ECU's<lb/>
business school.<lb/>
Dr. James H. Bearden, dean of<lb/>
the School of Business, said the<lb/>
gift i; "seed money" that will be<lb/>
used to generate more than<lb/>
$100,000 in endowment funds for<lb/>
an NCBA chair in banking.<lb/>
"This initial gift by NCBA will<lb/>
provide us with the momentum to<lb/>
build a support base for the pro-<lb/>
gram. We expect a significant<lb/>
amount of interaction with the<lb/>
banking community in North<lb/>
Carolina as we develop and<lb/>
enlarge our banking cirriculum<lb/>
Bearden said.<lb/>
The money will be used to pay<lb/>
plans to hold a meeting Friday at<lb/>
2 p.m. with all interested parties<lb/>
to discuss the numerous changes<lb/>
that will be necessary to enforce<lb/>
the new law.<lb/>
"Fait Accompli said Meyer,<lb/>
indicating that now the university<lb/>
must begin to work with, not<lb/>
against, the new law. "It's going<lb/>
to cause us some difficulty<lb/>
Meyer said. "It's going to cause<lb/>
students some difficulty<lb/>
Meyer is welcoming student<lb/>
participation Friday at the<lb/>
meeting being held in the Student<lb/>
Life Conference Room at the<lb/>
Whichard Building. "We're going<lb/>
to look at everything Meyer<lb/>
said. He added the new law would<lb/>
impact on many student functions<lb/>
such as fraternity rushes and other<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Meyer said a new type of ID<lb/>
card would probably be required<lb/>
to distinguish between 18- and<lb/>
19-year-olds. Meyer claims that<lb/>
more than 20 percent of ECU's<lb/>
students including "most<lb/>
freshman" are under the age of<lb/>
19. ECU will be admitting ap-<lb/>
proximately 2.600 new freshmen<lb/>
this fall. Many will be 17-year-<lb/>
olds, Meyer said.<lb/>
"1 felt it was something needed<lb/>
to make our roads safer for law<lb/>
abiding citizens said Sen. Ver-<lb/>
non White, D-Pitt, who sup-<lb/>
ported the Safe Roads bill. White<lb/>
said the measure was designed to<lb/>
make it more difficult for high<lb/>
school students to buy alcohol,<lb/>
and the General Assembly "did<lb/>
not have college students in<lb/>
mind" when it voted to pass the<lb/>
bill.<lb/>
White said the new age law<lb/>
would be "very hard to enforce"<lb/>
and that there were "a lot of loose<lb/>
ends" to be worked out. He add-<lb/>
ed that any retailer who sold<lb/>
alcohol to those under age would<lb/>
be in serious trouble if they were<lb/>
caught.<lb/>
During a Thursday press con-<lb/>
ference, Hunt said he was<lb/>
"shocked and appalled" by the<lb/>
flagrant disregard many retailers<lb/>
have for the law forbidding them<lb/>
to sell alcohol to minors. "We're<lb/>
going to break them. We're going<lb/>
to stop selling beer to minors<lb/>
Hunt said.<lb/>
The new law also contains sec-<lb/>
tions which would require jail<lb/>
sentences for some offenders con-<lb/>
victed of drunk driving. The new<lb/>
measure will also scrap several<lb/>
statutes that previously had allow-<lb/>
ed those convicted of drunk driv-<lb/>
ing to plea bargain. These provi-<lb/>
sions will now be replaced by a<lb/>
driving-while-impaired statute.<lb/>
LC<lb/>
i St oa?v pattsmson ecu<lb/>
After Oct. 1, ECU's 18-year-olds will no longer be seen chugging down the brews on campus. A North<lb/>
Carolina statute going into effect on that date will prohibit all people under the age of 19 from purchasing<lb/>
beer or wine in the state.<lb/>
Immigration Service Restricts Students<lb/>
Dean Bearden<lb/>
for costs associated with such<lb/>
things as faculty research, guest<lb/>
speakers, travel courses, ad-<lb/>
ministrative expenses and banking<lb/>
forum.<lb/>
David Nisbet, chair of NCBA<lb/>
Group I said, "Of course this<lb/>
.pecific effort by the eastern<lb/>
North Carolina banks is viewed as<lb/>
a continuation of our interest in<lb/>
being involved in higher educa-<lb/>
tion, especially as it impacts on<lb/>
the banking field. We are pleased<lb/>
to provide these funds with the<lb/>
hope that others will be suppor-<lb/>
tive also<lb/>
(CPS) ? Restrictions on<lb/>
foreign students attending<lb/>
American colleges are about to get<lb/>
tougher in August, and may get<lb/>
even harder if Congress passes a<lb/>
new bill.<lb/>
The Immigration and<lb/>
Naturalization Service (INS) an-<lb/>
nounced last week that, as of<lb/>
August, it will give foreign<lb/>
students four years to complete<lb/>
their coursework here.<lb/>
If they don't finish in that time<lb/>
and they want to continue going<lb/>
to school, they'll have to return to<lb/>
their home countries for two years<lb/>
before re-registrating here, ex-<lb/>
plains INS spokesman Janet<lb/>
Graham.<lb/>
At the same time, congressional<lb/>
committees approved bills that, if<lb/>
passed by the full House and<lb/>
Senate, would force foreign<lb/>
students to return home for two<lb/>
years before becoming eligible to<lb/>
apply for permanent U.S. citizen-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
Graham says the bills are<lb/>
necessary to "deter" foreign<lb/>
students whose "whole intent is<lb/>
never to go back home<lb/>
But Carole Shaffer, interna-<lb/>
tional student advisor at the<lb/>
University of San Francisco,<lb/>
believes Congress is trying to keep<lb/>
out foreign students to save jobs<lb/>
for Americans.<lb/>
"It is our feeling that this<lb/>
legislation is being proposed<lb/>
without proper justification<lb/>
adds Georgia Stewart of the Na-<lb/>
tional Association of Foreign<lb/>
Students Affairs (NAFSA)<lb/>
She insists congressional spon-<lb/>
sors of the bill are using "old and<lb/>
not very reliable" information.<lb/>
The sponsors believe 40-to-50<lb/>
percent of the 325,000 foreign<lb/>
students now here are trying to<lb/>
gain permanent resident status.<lb/>
Stewart says only about 15 per-<lb/>
cent of the 325,000 foreign<lb/>
students new here are trying to<lb/>
gain permanent resident status.<lb/>
Stewart says only about 15 per-<lb/>
cent has in fact applied for resi-<lb/>
dent status. "It's not a very<lb/>
remarkable figure she notes.<lb/>
But Hie House Subcommittee<lb/>
on Immigration did pass an<lb/>
amendment that would exempt<lb/>
about 4,500 foreigners who apply<lb/>
for certain college jobs ?<lb/>
engineering teaching positions in<lb/>
particular ? from the return-<lb/>
home requirement.<lb/>
No further congressional action<lb/>
is needed to enforce the INS' new<lb/>
rule that will put a definite limit<lb/>
on the foreigners' visas.<lb/>
Congress passed the law mak-<lb/>
ing the change possible in 1981,<lb/>
but the INS delayed putting the<lb/>
change into effect.<lb/>
Since then "a few bad people in<lb/>
the barrel have spoiled the<lb/>
batch Shaffer says. Some<lb/>
foreign students have managed to<lb/>
stay on in this country for up to<lb/>
nine years.<lb/>
Until now, foreign student visas<lb/>
were good for "duration of<lb/>
status meaning they lasted as<lb/>
long as the student remained a<lb/>
student and didn't violate an<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
As of August, however, the<lb/>
government will isssue only visa-<lb/>
that have a "date certain" expira<lb/>
tion. Freshmen entering in 198?,<lb/>
for example, will get visas that ex-<lb/>
pire in 1987.<lb/>
Under the new rules, the INS<lb/>
will also need to know the stu<lb/>
dent's major, if the student<lb/>
changes majors, and if the student<lb/>
transfers schools, adds INS ex<lb/>
aminer Joe Cuddihy.<lb/>
Stewart hopes "there will be<lb/>
some exceptions" granted.<lb/>
especially for foreign student <lb/>
afraid to return home for political<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
In any case, students will havt<lb/>
to be more vigilant in maintaining<lb/>
their statuses, Shaffer says<lb/>
They're not off to a good start<lb/>
Student Forum<lb/>
PIRG Proposal Receives Strong Support<lb/>
Women Opposed To Weapons<lb/>
Embark Oni Walk For Peace'<lb/>
JTT'<lb/>
-?-fc?-<lb/>
i<lb/>
In March Consumer Activist<lb/>
Ralph Nader visited ECU. Dur-<lb/>
ing his visit, Nader said he<lb/>
found support among both<lb/>
students and faculty to<lb/>
establish a Public Interest<lb/>
Research Group (PIRG) at<lb/>
ECU. Nader then sent a<lb/>
representative from his<lb/>
Washington, D.C office to<lb/>
help lay the ground for the<lb/>
research organization's ECU<lb/>
chapter. Students were asked if<lb/>
they would be supportive of the<lb/>
idea of a PIRG chapter at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Don Westbrook, Chemistry,<lb/>
Freshman ? "I would be in<lb/>
favor of the idea of a PIRG. I<lb/>
think it would be good to get<lb/>
students involved in research in<lb/>
their fields of interest<lb/>
Susan Thomas, General Col-<lb/>
lege, Freshman ? "I'm in<lb/>
favor of PIRG because I think<lb/>
it might help the students to in-<lb/>
crease their areas of<lb/>
knowledge<lb/>
Keith Stalltngs, English,<lb/>
Senior ? "Definitely. I would<lb/>
like to see that (PIRG) happen<lb/>
here. It would bring prestige to<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Darlene Keene, Biology,<lb/>
Senior ? "I support it. Maybe<lb/>
if we had a PIRG, the students<lb/>
would get more involved in the<lb/>
things that are going on around<lb/>
us<lb/>
Thomas<lb/>
A group of women peace ac-<lb/>
tivists were cheered on by a crowd<lb/>
of more than 50 supporters Mon-<lb/>
day as they began their First leg of<lb/>
a 600-mile, 30-day walking trip<lb/>
from Durham, N.C. to Seneca<lb/>
Army Depot in New York.<lb/>
The event, known as the<lb/>
Women's Peace Walk, began at<lb/>
noon. Ten women started the<lb/>
walk which will make several<lb/>
stops in Virginia, Maryland, Pen-<lb/>
nsylvania and finally New York.<lb/>
Five women plan to walk the en-<lb/>
tire distance while other women<lb/>
are expected to join the walkers<lb/>
for shorter intervals.<lb/>
The walk is being sponsored by<lb/>
the Durham-based War Resisters<lb/>
League. The league is holding the<lb/>
event as part of its effort to op-<lb/>
pose United State's plans to<lb/>
deploy medium-range nuclear<lb/>
missiles in Western Europe later<lb/>
this year. The Seneca Army Depot<lb/>
is used as a storage facility for the<lb/>
neutron bomb and Pershing II<lb/>
missiles. Both weapons are<lb/>
schedualed for deployment in<lb/>
Western Europe.<lb/>
WRL staffperson Mandy<lb/>
Carter will be walking the entire<lb/>
distance. Carter called the walk<lb/>
"one of the many ways to<lb/>
challenge our government on the<lb/>
deployment of the cruise and Per-<lb/>
shing II missiles<lb/>
The walkers will be joining<lb/>
dozens of other women in Seneca<lb/>
where they plan to establish a<lb/>
peace camp similar to camps<lb/>
presently set up by women living<lb/>
in Western Europe who also op-<lb/>
pose the missile deployment. The<lb/>
European women also set their<lb/>
camps up on the peripheries of<lb/>
U.S. military bases.<lb/>
Elana Freedom of Durham is<lb/>
planning to walk the entire<lb/>
distance. Freedom, 62, has been a<lb/>
pacifist for more than 40 years.<lb/>
She said she is a "firm believer in<lb/>
the power of nonviolence" as a<lb/>
way to resolve conflicts. Freedom,<lb/>
who once walked from California<lb/>
to Washington, D.C on another<lb/>
peace walk, said she sees her ef-<lb/>
fort as a way to help<lb/>
"de-escalate" the nuclear arms<lb/>
race.<lb/>
"For centuries, men have made<lb/>
the decisions about war, about<lb/>
destruction of men, women,<lb/>
children and the countryside<lb/>
Freedom said. "We feel that we<lb/>
can't leave it to the men anymore<lb/>
? we must be vocal; we must pro-<lb/>
test<lb/>
The Durham group expects to<lb/>
arrive in New York on July 4.<lb/>
Carter said the walk is a "gesture<lb/>
of support" for the women in<lb/>
Europe who are also opposing the<lb/>
deployment of the new missiles.<lb/>
In a statement released last<lb/>
week, Secretary of Defense<lb/>
Casper Weinberger announced<lb/>
that plans to deploy the new<lb/>
warheads were on schedule.<lb/>
In a related story another group<lb/>
of North Carolina peace activists,<lb/>
including a dozen student and<lb/>
faculty members from ECU, took<lb/>
part in a one-hour vigil opposing<lb/>
nuclear weapons outside the gates<lb/>
of Seymour Johnson Air Force<lb/>
Base on Saturday.<lb/>
The group stood with signs on a<lb/>
grassy median on the main road<lb/>
leading into the base. Some<lb/>
members of the group contend<lb/>
there are nuclear weapons kept at<lb/>
Seymour Johnson, but base of-<lb/>
ficials will neither confirm nor<lb/>
deny the presence of such<lb/>
weapons.<lb/>
The vigil was sponsored by the<lb/>
North Carolina Peace Network<lb/>
and was held in conjunction with<lb/>
an "open house" celebration held<lb/>
at the Goldsboro facility. The<lb/>
open house was designed to give<lb/>
the public and news media the op<lb/>
portunity to visit the base and<lb/>
view its equipment and facilities.<lb/>
Editorial<lb/>
Stan Landers<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Page 2<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
10<lb/>
News You Can Almost Use<lb/>
? The tornado season Is well<lb/>
under way, b?t this Is not to be<lb/>
confused with the Attack-of-<lb/>
the-KHler-Toaato season<lb/>
which begins July 20 at<lb/>
MendenhaH Student Center.<lb/>
era who hold two<lb/>
jobs nay he able to deduct<lb/>
r taxable lucoae the<lb/>
cost of getting groat one Job to<lb/>
another. College students<lb/>
i't confute this with the<lb/>
off<lb/>
to<lb/>
-A?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057559_0002"/><lb/>
THl FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8, 1983<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
STUDENTS MAKE<lb/>
A DIFFERENCE<lb/>
H yix are a motivated in<lb/>
dividual Mrtw wisnes to help seek<lb/>
solutions to consumer and en<lb/>
vtronmental problems mrough<lb/>
rr-srarch end advocacy, then<lb/>
North Carolina Public interest<lb/>
Research Group (NC PIRG) is<lb/>
tor you. It is a student group<lb/>
researching issues such as Con<lb/>
sumer Protection<lb/>
Environmental Quality<lb/>
Students' Rights Government<lb/>
Accountability Renewable<lb/>
energy Civil Rights NC PIRG<lb/>
has. m the past, fought for North<lb/>
Carolina student's rights,<lb/>
documented the danger of<lb/>
nuclear cargo transportation<lb/>
through the state, and most<lb/>
recently. m?hing the student<lb/>
trafted Generic Drug Generic<lb/>
Substitution Bill a law. An ECU<lb/>
PIRG is now being formed,<lb/>
PIRG needs your support Get<lb/>
together with other students<lb/>
concerned with these issues For<lb/>
more details call Eliza Godwin<lb/>
at s: w?<lb/>
COUNSELORS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Male counselors needed tow<lb/>
ork in the Lutheran Camp in<lb/>
V.rqinla Two resident pro<lb/>
gi ,m as well as canoeing.<lb/>
INK! par king, biking and beach<lb/>
ramp Contact Rev F. Wayne<lb/>
Williams. Ft Valley R? Box 355,<lb/>
St David's Church. VA W?57.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyone interested in running<lb/>
tMiis office next semester con<lb/>
lad Barbara at 7M 9550<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Monday Nights Bible Study<lb/>
6 '0 pm tOa Jarvis Dorm<lb/>
P ' -r Gro?ip for spiritual sup<lb/>
t irl incl fellowship 10:15 pm<lb/>
rvrv night 111 Fletcher. For<lb/>
?t  information contact Todd<lb/>
 ii vH. Stwlta 1S7 Jsrvis and<lb/>
Bit III Fletcher<lb/>
BINGO-ICECREAM<lb/>
Attention bingo lovers, the<lb/>
Department of University<lb/>
Unions will be holding its final<lb/>
summer Bingo ice cream party<lb/>
on Tuesday, June 14. I9t3 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Multi Purpose Room. All are<lb/>
welcome Admission is only 25<lb/>
cents.Eat ice cream and play<lb/>
bingo for a priie Bring a friend<lb/>
BIBLE STUDY AT ECU<lb/>
inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship sponsors a bible<lb/>
study on Monday nights. Come<lb/>
to 106 JarvisHall att 30p.m. for<lb/>
a time of spiritual fellowship<lb/>
and fun Prayer is also offered<lb/>
every night at HI Fletcher Hall<lb/>
at 10 IS p.m. Take a break from<lb/>
studying.<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
NEEDS MEMBERS<lb/>
It you like variety entertain<lb/>
ment and want a challenge,<lb/>
become a member on the stu<lb/>
dent union coffeehouse commit<lb/>
tee For more information , con<lb/>
tact the Student Union (Room<lb/>
734) at 7576611. Ext 210.<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Want a central place for three<lb/>
letters of reference from your<lb/>
professors' If you art<lb/>
graduating this summer, then<lb/>
you complete a registration<lb/>
packet available from the<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service If you will finish In the<lb/>
fall, spring, or summer of<lb/>
academic year 1983-84, you may<lb/>
pick up a packet and prepare it<lb/>
to return in Augus or<lb/>
September.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
vn mf the campus community<lb/>
unct 1925<lb/>
Puuiished every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Wedn .day during the sum<lb/>
m-r<lb/>
? East Carolinian is the<lb/>
on vial newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operator and published for<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: M yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian office<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Send ed<lb/>
dress changes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Old South<lb/>
P 'iidmg, ECU Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 7S7-4J6. 4367,<lb/>
4309<lb/>
Name<lb/>
?<lb/>
SUMMER SOLTICE<lb/>
FOR PEACE<lb/>
Greenville community leaders<lb/>
art joining together on June 20th<lb/>
to celebrate a Day of Peace dur<lb/>
mg the Summer Soltice. The<lb/>
celebration wilki be worldwide<lb/>
as people everywhere work for<lb/>
peace. 5reenville will be a<lb/>
teach in on June IS For further<lb/>
information call 758 4906.<lb/>
GREENVILLE PEACE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
One million dollars per minute<lb/>
is being spent worldwide on the<lb/>
military. The Greenville Peace<lb/>
Committee rejects the notions<lb/>
that more weapons brings us<lb/>
more security. We meet every<lb/>
Friday nig at 6:30 p.m. for a.<lb/>
pot luck d' ner and meeting.<lb/>
During the summer we have<lb/>
several activities planned and<lb/>
we need your help. Come join us<lb/>
in our plans for June 20th<lb/>
WORLD DISARMAMENT<lb/>
DAY. The meetings art held at<lb/>
610 S. Elm St. For more infor<lb/>
mation call 758 4906 or 752 5724.<lb/>
Peace.<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
Scuba Diving Travel Adven<lb/>
hire's Dive Cozumel. Mexico on<lb/>
the beautiful " ucatan peninsula<lb/>
Aug. 3. 1983 to Aug. 10, 1983<lb/>
Group trip for certified divers,<lb/>
two boat dives daily and<lb/>
unlimited shore diving, meals,<lb/>
lodging and air fare from<lb/>
Raleigh Non divers welcome<lb/>
Call Ray Scharf at 757 6441<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS ,<lb/>
Yom may mm n orm at rlfptit or j AddfOi<lb/>
w a waara sheaf of paper if r.ermt-<lb/>
you rs??tf more Itftm. That v ? ?-?7'w<lb/>
units par line. Each latter, pone j<lb/>
tuatlon mark and word space <lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalist end <lb/>
nyphenate words properly. Leave <lb/>
space et end of line it word <lb/>
doesn't tit. No eds win be ec- <lb/>
cepted over the phone. We <lb/>
reserve the right to reiect any ad. <lb/>
All ads mast be prepaid- Eodoat <lb/>
75? per line or fraction of a bat. <lb/>
Please print lcgMy! Use capital and <lb/>
lower case letter. <lb/>
atom toTNE EAST CAMMJNIAN<lb/>
?ff k? bi 3:ta Tanan bateet J<lb/>
:??<lb/>
MB" .  -<lb/>
? " JS1-<lb/>
Pizza jLqxi<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas<lb/>
Now Being Delivered<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas Sack 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/>
Are<lb/>
d<lb/>
BICYCLE<lb/>
P0S<lb/>
QUALITY BIKE<lb/>
SALES &amp; SERVICE<lb/>
"Greenville's Most<lb/>
Complete Bicycle Shop"<lb/>
?Fuji ajREK<lb/>
?Puogeot ? Raleigh<lb/>
10 speedSi 29 ? up<lb/>
CRUISERS $149.95 and up<lb/>
We have<lb/>
feuoot Ptpattne Cruisers $149.95 1<lb/>
S3t CONTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC 17134<lb/>
757-31<lb/>
<lb/>
ARMN SURPLUS<lb/>
DIPPING iu- sv,<lb/>
VUTAHV GOUOS<lb/>
.? ?"  'taafv.<lb/>
ARM NAVY STORE<lb/>
' jij ' S ? vans<lb/>
INTRODUCING . . .<lb/>
ONE DAY EYEGLASS<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Now on most slnglr vision pl.iMu Irnv <lb/>
vc i .in provide von wuh ihr finished pro-<lb/>
dun ill 24 hours Allordable lees quk k<lb/>
ai c urutc srtvirr Seeing is Believing<lb/>
I)K PfcTEK W. HOLLIS<lb/>
? CAAE 0?KT?rV<lb/>
0.0 f.A.<lb/>
asm ? :2? uRtE?<lb/>
756-9404<lb/>
O.O f.A.<lb/>
"CssMi ntGREEKvtl.ll ? -<lb/>
CoUHTRV CobKlMG<lb/>
512 E. 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
?nv Complete P'ejpion tvegusses ?<lb/>
O' Contact L?"S Filling<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
Mus: B?P'WM <lb/>
n? 0' O'Oe'<lb/>
Oin?f ?cou?is O' Gouoons Do Not Apcuv<lb/>
New Daily Special Prime Rib $3.99<lb/>
Why pay $12.00 for a delicious<lb/>
prime rib dinner.<lb/>
Get your friends<lb/>
and try this new special today!<lb/>
Our new summer hours are:<lb/>
11:00am-9:00pm Daily<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat June 11. 1983<lb/>
ADVERTISED 'EM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of th?se ade'<lb/>
tised items s 'e<lb/>
quired to b? red'iy<lb/>
available o' sate n<lb/>
each Kroger Sav o"<lb/>
except as sc? ? a ?<lb/>
noted m this ad M e<lb/>
dO run Out O' a 'I?m<lb/>
e iii o'er Ou yOuf<lb/>
choice o' a com<lb/>
parable M'eti fien<lb/>
available -eiseo"<lb/>
the same savngs or a<lb/>
ramchech " ctt <lb/>
entitle you ro pu'<lb/>
chase the advertised<lb/>
item at the ad.eseo<lb/>
price withm 3c aa.s<lb/>
Open Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 pm<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
imk <lb/>
PREMIUM<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
l$-185<lb/>
N.R ?<lb/>
BtlS. ?<lb/>
DIET PEPSI,<lb/>
PEPSI LIGHT OR<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
$119<lb/>
2-Ltr. <lb/>
2-<lb/>
N.R<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
PRINCLES<lb/>
Potato Chips<lb/>
FRESH FRIED<lb/>
Apple<lb/>
Fritters<lb/>
3.99<lb/>
E. Ge<lb/>
Dr. Helmut Domke pie<lb/>
of East Germany, a ven:<lb/>
Christian disarma- addrj<lb/>
ment leader, spoke in Di<lb/>
Durham Sundav at 30-n<lb/>
the Watts Street Bap- befo<lb/>
tist Church. Six Deo- Doi<lb/>
'Art In<lb/>
By MELA ME for<lb/>
ROGERS<lb/>
Approximate!) 20 teresl<lb/>
spaces art still open, tact<lb/>
but time is running hea<lb/>
short, to participate in cent<lb/>
this year's Art m flooi<lb/>
Europe program The Finel<lb/>
deadline to register (<lb/>
Head O<lb/>
To Add<lb/>
Dr. Kathryn<lb/>
Kolasa, chairperson<lb/>
of the Departmer !<lb/>
Food, Nutrition<lb/>
Institution Manage-<lb/>
ment in the ECl<lb/>
School of Home<lb/>
Economics, will be<lb/>
among the speakers at<lb/>
the "Mth annual<lb/>
meeting of the<lb/>
American Home<lb/>
Economics Associa-<lb/>
tion June 18.<lb/>
Kolasa, who joined<lb/>
the ECU faculty last<lb/>
December, will be<lb/>
speaking during the<lb/>
international phase of<lb/>
the Association's na-<lb/>
tional meeting. She<lb/>
will specifically ad-<lb/>
dress ways home thel<lb/>
economists and mei<lb/>
students can be in- pe<lb/>
volved in interna- ma<lb/>
tional work. Her top c<lb/>
is "Food and Nutri-<lb/>
tion in the Interna-<lb/>
tional Arena<lb/>
Kolasa has done ex-<lb/>
tensive work in<lb/>
several Central and<lb/>
South American<lb/>
countries as well a<lb/>
Europe and West<lb/>
Africa. She has co-<lb/>
authored a book and<lb/>
stuc<lb/>
thirl<lb/>
?<lb/>
typ<lb/>
grai<lb/>
ed<lb/>
(<lb/>
nl<lb/>
I<lb/>
bed<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
8 oz. Sirli<lb/>
6oz. Beef<lb/>
8 oz. Chopped<lb/>
4 oz. Sirl<lb/>
Served with<lb/>
or Frencl<lb/>
lui<lb/>
4 oz. Sirloii<lb/>
6 oz. Cubed Stt<lb/>
lb. Hambi<lb/>
?WEEK<lb/>
JunJ<lb/>
Buy one 802<lb/>
Get seconj<lb/>
Steak Dinners!<lb/>
Potato or Fn<lb/>
Now<lb/>
Also Prime Rib el<lb/>
?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057559_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8. mi<lb/>
RMN SURPLUS<lb/>
MILITARY GOODS<lb/>
G?? I90(. O.it.r.nl tec .<lb/>
Sf? nc i<lb/>
ARMY NAVY STORF<lb/>
?TlSEO TEM<lb/>
sai? i?<lb/>
j?' Sa? o"<lb/>
?  45 sp?cfcaiiv<lb/>
- " " rt? ad M ?<lb/>
j o n item<lb/>
?- "er you yoof<lb/>
? jf a com<lb/>
item when<lb/>
. ?? 'efecVtng<lb/>
am savings or a<lb/>
- ? ?"C Will<lb/>
? u to Dur<lb/>
- MtvMtiMd<lb/>
- acjveMised<lb/>
- - - 3C Oa?s<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
HUM<lb/>
Her<lb/>
er<lb/>
85<lb/>
HROOM<lb/>
irmin<lb/>
sue<lb/>
9<lb/>
IURMET<lb/>
irkey<lb/>
east<lb/>
19<lb/>
E. German Disarmament Leader Visits N.C.<lb/>
Dr. Helmut Domke<lb/>
of East Germany, a<lb/>
Christian disarma-<lb/>
ment leader, spoke in<lb/>
Durham Sunday at<lb/>
the Watts Street Bap-<lb/>
tist Church. Six peo-<lb/>
ple from Greenville<lb/>
went to hear Domke's<lb/>
address.<lb/>
During his<lb/>
30-minute lecture<lb/>
before 150 people,<lb/>
Domke addressed<lb/>
several fears he claims<lb/>
East Germans harbor<lb/>
concerning the<lb/>
nuclear arms race.<lb/>
Damke criticized<lb/>
United States plans to<lb/>
install cruise and Per-<lb/>
shing II medium-<lb/>
range nuclear missiles<lb/>
in Western Europe.<lb/>
Yet, on only one oc-<lb/>
cassion did Domke<lb/>
elude to the fact that<lb/>
he was also opposed<lb/>
to Soviet-made SS-20<lb/>
missiles in Eastern<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
Domke claimed<lb/>
that the people of<lb/>
Central Europe were<lb/>
strongly in favor of<lb/>
disarmament and<lb/>
peace. "We in Central<lb/>
Europe have no<lb/>
chance for survival<lb/>
Domke said.<lb/>
"Nuclear war at any<lb/>
scale is a total<lb/>
'Art In Europe' Trip Still Has Space<lb/>
holocaust for us, for<lb/>
my wife, for my son,<lb/>
for all Christians, for<lb/>
all people<lb/>
Domke said the<lb/>
race was becoming<lb/>
more dangerous<lb/>
because leaders of<lb/>
nuclear nations were<lb/>
technologically in-<lb/>
Domke said the<lb/>
theory of deterance<lb/>
was not viable and<lb/>
that nations would<lb/>
have to develop a new<lb/>
theory for security.<lb/>
Domke called this<lb/>
theory "common<lb/>
security He said this<lb/>
would be directed at<lb/>
By MELANIE<lb/>
ROGERS<lb/>
SuffWniet<lb/>
Approximately 20<lb/>
spaces are still open,<lb/>
biu time is running<lb/>
short, to participate in<lb/>
this year's Art in<lb/>
Europe program. The<lb/>
deadline to register<lb/>
for the two-week trip<lb/>
is June 13.<lb/>
Anyone who is in-<lb/>
terested should con-<lb/>
tact Michael Voors,<lb/>
head of the media<lb/>
center, on the third<lb/>
floor of the Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Arts.<lb/>
Costing $1,666, the group throughout the<lb/>
Art in Europe pro-<lb/>
gram includes round<lb/>
trip air fare, land<lb/>
transportation in<lb/>
Europe, accommoda-<lb/>
tions at first class<lb/>
hotels, two meals a<lb/>
day and a tour guide<lb/>
who accompanies the phasis is on art,<lb/>
tour is open<lb/>
anyone, student<lb/>
nonstudent<lb/>
entire two weeks.<lb/>
Leaving July 27 and<lb/>
returning August 10,<lb/>
the tour features<lb/>
Holland, Germany,<lb/>
Switzerland and Italy.<lb/>
Although the em-<lb/>
Head Of Nutrition<lb/>
To Address Meeting<lb/>
the<lb/>
to<lb/>
and<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
Students may receive<lb/>
college credit for<lb/>
?ourses offered dur-<lb/>
,ng the trip. Thirty<lb/>
people from across<lb/>
the state, including six<lb/>
from ECU have<lb/>
registered for this<lb/>
year's trie<lb/>
This year's Art in<lb/>
Europe is a continua-<lb/>
tion of the Art in<lb/>
Europe program<lb/>
started in 1980. Ac-<lb/>
cording to the spon-<lb/>
sor, Eben Tilly<lb/>
Associates, Inc "we<lb/>
started Art in Europe<lb/>
four years ago<lb/>
because we felt that<lb/>
there was a need for<lb/>
an art-oriented pro-<lb/>
gram which also in-<lb/>
cluded normal<lb/>
sightseeing<lb/>
This is the first year<lb/>
ECU has participated<lb/>
in the Art in Europe<lb/>
program. According<lb/>
to Michael Voors,<lb/>
ECU is participating<lb/>
this year because of<lb/>
student interest.<lb/>
Voors hopes that in<lb/>
the future, ECU will<lb/>
establish a more Der-<lb/>
manent program of its<lb/>
own. This year, Voors<lb/>
will be researching the<lb/>
possibility of using a<lb/>
dormitory in Europe<lb/>
as permanent housing<lb/>
for future summer<lb/>
tours. ECU chose the<lb/>
Art in Europe pro-<lb/>
gram for its low cost<lb/>
and choice of coun-<lb/>
tries to be visited.<lb/>
creasing their nuclear all nations as opposed<lb/>
arsenals and prepar- to one. "One element<lb/>
ing strategies to use<lb/>
them. "There's a<lb/>
strategic conception<lb/>
of limited nuclear war<lb/>
released by the U.S.<lb/>
government Domke<lb/>
said. "There are also<lb/>
statements of such<lb/>
kind that it might be<lb/>
necessary to make ?<lb/>
to contemplate at<lb/>
least ? a first strike<lb/>
against the Soviet<lb/>
Union<lb/>
Domke said the<lb/>
people of Central<lb/>
Europe were unable<lb/>
to understand why the<lb/>
American people were<lb/>
willing to endorse<lb/>
these positions of<lb/>
nuclear strategy.<lb/>
of common security is<lb/>
that we must<lb/>
recognize the right for<lb/>
existence of the<lb/>
political and social<lb/>
system of the other<lb/>
side he said.<lb/>
Domke, 39, is a<lb/>
physicist. He<lb/>
graduated from the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Rostock. In 1972, he<lb/>
received his doctorate<lb/>
at the University of<lb/>
Leningrad. He is at<lb/>
present working as a<lb/>
volunteer with the<lb/>
Federation of Protes-<lb/>
tant churches in the<lb/>
GDR.<lb/>
During a question<lb/>
and answer period<lb/>
Domke said the term<lb/>
"Better dead than<lb/>
red which is often<lb/>
used by Americans,<lb/>
was very dangerous<lb/>
and not conducive to<lb/>
peace-making. "I'm<lb/>
living in a country<lb/>
which is in this sense<lb/>
red and I am not<lb/>
dead Domke aid<lb/>
"I can live as a C hris-<lb/>
tian in my country ?<lb/>
indeed I have some<lb/>
problems<lb/>
Domke said he saw<lb/>
signs of hope for<lb/>
disarmament in the<lb/>
American people, but<lb/>
not from its leaders.<lb/>
Domke said Chris-<lb/>
tians represented the<lb/>
basis of his hope.<lb/>
Christianity is a diiv-<lb/>
ing force that lets us<lb/>
hope but not dispair.<lb/>
Domke said.<lb/>
During his visit to<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Domke made steps in<lb/>
several cities. He is<lb/>
one of twelve East<lb/>
Germans touring the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
Dr. Kathryn<lb/>
Kolasa, chairperson<lb/>
of the Department of<lb/>
Food, Nutrition and<lb/>
Institution Manage-<lb/>
ment in the ECU<lb/>
School of Home<lb/>
Economics, will be<lb/>
among the speakers at<lb/>
the 74th annual<lb/>
meeting of the<lb/>
American Home<lb/>
Economics Associa-<lb/>
tion June 18.<lb/>
Kolasa, who joined<lb/>
the ECU faculty last<lb/>
December, will be<lb/>
speaking during the<lb/>
international phase of<lb/>
the Association's na-<lb/>
tional meeting. She<lb/>
will specifically ad-<lb/>
dress ways home<lb/>
economists and<lb/>
students can be in-<lb/>
volved in interna-<lb/>
tional work. Her topic<lb/>
is "Food and Nutri-<lb/>
tion in the Interna-<lb/>
tional Arena<lb/>
Kolasa has done ex-<lb/>
tensive work in<lb/>
several Central and<lb/>
South American<lb/>
countries as well as<lb/>
Europe and West<lb/>
Africa. She has co-<lb/>
authored a book and<lb/>
published more than<lb/>
50 research articles<lb/>
and reports.<lb/>
Kolasa noted that<lb/>
she will primarily be<lb/>
speaking about op-<lb/>
portunities for<lb/>
students to work in<lb/>
third world develop-<lb/>
ing countries. She will<lb/>
highlight the different<lb/>
types of self-help pro-<lb/>
grams that she has us-<lb/>
ed in her work.<lb/>
One area known as<lb/>
"the barefoot doc-<lb/>
tor" program has<lb/>
been used by Kolasa<lb/>
to train village poeple<lb/>
to identify certain<lb/>
problem health areas<lb/>
and take care of<lb/>
themselves. Kolasa<lb/>
mentioned teaching<lb/>
people to recognize<lb/>
malnutrition in their<lb/>
children and better<lb/>
feeding practices as<lb/>
two of the critical<lb/>
areas recognized by<lb/>
public health<lb/>
volunteers working in<lb/>
developing countries.<lb/>
4 4 H o m e<lb/>
Economics: Momen-<lb/>
tum for Change" is<lb/>
the theme of this years<lb/>
AHEA event to be<lb/>
held at the Milwaukee<lb/>
Exposition and Con-<lb/>
vention Center and<lb/>
Arena in Milwaukee,<lb/>
Wis.<lb/>
The AHEA meeting<lb/>
will feature political<lb/>
journalist David<lb/>
Broder, professional<lb/>
trend-watcher John<lb/>
Naisbitt, economist<lb/>
Jane Bryant Quinn<lb/>
and CBS news cor-<lb/>
respondenthumorist<lb/>
Charles Osgood as<lb/>
keynote speakers.<lb/>
"I'm pleased to<lb/>
have this opportunity<lb/>
to share this informa-<lb/>
tion Kolasa said,<lb/>
"people are not<lb/>
generally very aware<lb/>
of the international<lb/>
arena of food and<lb/>
nutrition<lb/>
The AHEA, one of<lb/>
the largest profes-<lb/>
sional associations in<lb/>
the United States, has<lb/>
approximately 35,000<lb/>
members specializing<lb/>
in consumer services,<lb/>
family economics,<lb/>
resource manage-<lb/>
ment, nutrition, in-<lb/>
stitutional administra-<lb/>
tion housing and<lb/>
other fields.<lb/>
LAUTARES JEWELERS<lb/>
ESTABUSHID 1912<lb/>
GREENVILLE N C<lb/>
? 14 E.om St'Wi<lb/>
DM ft 2 jji<lb/>
?<lb/>
Remnants<lb/>
Custom Design<lb/>
Repair<lb/>
All Work Done On Premises<lb/>
EVERY WEDNESDAY<lb/>
ITALIAN BUFFET<lb/>
5P.NL-CLOSE<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
?LASAGNA<lb/>
?SPAGHETTI<lb/>
(Choice of 3 Sauces)<lb/>
with.Garlic Bread<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
i all you can tat soup and salad $4.77<lb/>
3<lb/>
4<lb/>
cvnv ntmAY<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
FLOUNDER DINNER<lb/>
also Open Fri. and Sal,<lb/>
nights midnight-3 a.m<lb/>
Breakfast Bar open 6:00am.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
203 QmmvW Ifv<lb/>
00 raDmoiAiADiK WT K ?9 <lb/>
LAMS ADWTOPD F?6 wrTH Bt?T<lb/>
? vmrrrL?re<lb/>
UuSixio SPSC1AW 4 Mi PROGS AU HKHT<lb/>
fUlTr-v uump mew 74 CAWS TO. KM<lb/>
jJqPo Jt.oo aw. wrm r??PRiz3 u 4mt<lb/>
"coUKG U'GMT " 5?i Ct TU. IUOO<lb/>
, 754 6AU5 TL :oo,ilo AN.<lb/>
WmfFUPfzE5AU.M6r.<lb/>
DOORS oreM AT :oo EACH W6WT 4 ST3IV<lb/>
OPEN TIL 2.00AM? W6 LMK ???<lb/>
ll SERVING VOU AT EAST CAROUIlA <lb/>
PMtTi CWtfK. COMR CMPCKUSOOr!<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
8 oz. Sirloin and Salad Bar $4.99<lb/>
6 oz. Beef Tips and Salad Bar $3.99<lb/>
8 oz. Chopped Sirloin and Salad Bar $3.99<lb/>
4 oz. Sirloin and Salad Bar $3.99<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Baked Potato<lb/>
or French Fries and Texas Toast<lb/>
Lunch Specials 11-2<lb/>
4 oz. Sirloin $2.19 wSalad Bar $3.19<lb/>
6 oz. Cubed Steak $2.49 wSalad Bar $3.49<lb/>
v lb. Hamburger and Salad Bar $2.79<lb/>
WEEKEND SPECIALS<lb/>
June 10th, 11th, 12th,<lb/>
Buy one 8oz. Ribeye Reg. Price $5.09<lb/>
Get second 8oz Ribeye 2 Price $2.55<lb/>
U Steak Dinners Served With King Idaho Baked<lb/>
Potato or French Fries and Texas Toast<lb/>
Now Serving Surf and Turf<lb/>
1 Also Prime Rib every Friday and Saturday Night<lb/>
2 Locations to Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057559_0004"/><lb/>
QUf ?aat (Eorolinian<lb/>
Serving the Ernst Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller.<lb/>
Mike Hughes.<lb/>
Waverly Merritt.<lb/>
Hunter Fisher.<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH, omkt<lb/>
Stephanie Groon, o?. ??<lb/>
Clay Thornton. t??k<lb/>
mem<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants. e&amp;o,<lb/>
Greg Rideout. a, &amp;???<lb/>
CARLYN EBERT, Emltrtainmtnl Editor<lb/>
Lizanne Jennings. &amp; ??<lb/>
David Gordon, w?ro?. w??<lb/>
Juik 8. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Safe Roads Act<lb/>
Legislature Takes A First Step<lb/>
On Oct. 1, 1983, the Safe Roads<lb/>
Act, a series of drunken-driving<lb/>
laws inspired by Gov. Jim Hunt,<lb/>
will go into effect. The Governor<lb/>
claims that with the adoption of<lb/>
this package, North Carolina will<lb/>
now have the 'toughest law in<lb/>
America against drunk driving<lb/>
Some of the major provisions of<lb/>
the new law include the following:<lb/>
? The abolition of the DUl<lb/>
statute and all related lesser of-<lb/>
fenses, adopting rather a driving-<lb/>
while-impaired statute for all of-<lb/>
fenses, thus eliminating plea<lb/>
bargaining.<lb/>
? An increase in the minimum<lb/>
legal age for buying and consum-<lb/>
ing beer and fortified wines from<lb/>
18 to 19.<lb/>
? The imposition of civil liability<lb/>
on establishments that sell alcohol<lb/>
to underage customers who later<lb/>
become involved in motor vehicle<lb/>
accidents.<lb/>
? The authorization for police to<lb/>
set up road blocks to screen for<lb/>
drunk drivers at their own discre-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
? Under the new law, it will now<lb/>
be a criminal offense for a driver<lb/>
to consume beer andor wine and<lb/>
possess open beer or wine con-<lb/>
tainers while in a vehicle.<lb/>
Passengers, however, are not in-<lb/>
cluded under this provision.<lb/>
? The creation of a second, or<lb/>
penalty, phase of a trial for defen-<lb/>
dants convicted of driving while<lb/>
impaired. If no "grossly ag-<lb/>
gravating factors" are found<lb/>
(additional offenses committed<lb/>
while driving impaired), the<lb/>
minimum penalty for DWI is a<lb/>
sentence of 24 hours of community<lb/>
service. However, depending on<lb/>
the weight of any and all of said<lb/>
factors, persons convicted of DWI<lb/>
will now face a maximum sentence<lb/>
of 24 months in prison.<lb/>
? Also under the new law,<lb/>
anyone refusing to take a<lb/>
Breathalyzer test or recording a<lb/>
blood alcohol level of .10 percent<lb/>
or more will be subject to an im-<lb/>
mediate 10-day license suspension.<lb/>
In addition, a $25 restoration fee<lb/>
will be invoked.<lb/>
? The law also stipulates that<lb/>
judges may confiscate and dispose<lb/>
of the motor vehicle of a driver<lb/>
convicted of DWI while driving<lb/>
under a license suspension for a<lb/>
previous drunken driving convic-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
? As of Oct. 1, any 16- or<lb/>
17-year-old driver found to have<lb/>
consumed any amount of alcohol<lb/>
will have his or her license revoked<lb/>
for 45 days or until he or she<lb/>
becomes 18, whichever is longer.<lb/>
? And finally, the new law<lb/>
makes it a criminal offense for<lb/>
anyone under 19 to use fraudulent<lb/>
identification (fake ID) to buy or<lb/>
attempt to buy beer or wine and<lb/>
for anyone under 21 to buy or at-<lb/>
tempt to buy liquor or mixed<lb/>
drinks. Persons found guilty of<lb/>
this offense will have their driver's<lb/>
license revoked for one year.<lb/>
So, after literally months of<lb/>
deliberation, haggling and rewor-<lb/>
ding, the N.C. Legislature has<lb/>
finally adopted its most, if not on-<lb/>
ly, worthwhile piece of legislation<lb/>
to date. Indeed, Gov. Hunt and<lb/>
those individual senators and con-<lb/>
gressmen who worked tooth-and-<lb/>
nail to get the new law on the<lb/>
books deserve commendation.<lb/>
Perhaps North Carolina's drunken<lb/>
driving laws are now the<lb/>
"toughest<lb/>
Unfortunately, however, in the<lb/>
past, the relative strictness or laxity<lb/>
of our state's DWI laws hasn't had<lb/>
a tremendous bearing on the actual,<lb/>
problem at hand. In fact, the<lb/>
greatest problem characteristically<lb/>
for North Carolina uasn't been the<lb/>
laws themselves but rather the en-<lb/>
forcement of those laws.<lb/>
Sure, the Safe Roads Act<lb/>
establishes the basis for outstan-<lb/>
ding improvement in one of the<lb/>
state's weakest areas. And to quote<lb/>
another safe-driving cliche, it's<lb/>
certainly a law we can live with.<lb/>
But putting it all down on paper is<lb/>
only half the job. After all, any<lb/>
law is only as good as its execution.<lb/>
?Qflpfc Believe ItcrMl<lb/>
f<lb/>
1<lb/>
0WW.EUSWH<lb/>
THERE ARE NO CIA A6ENT5!<lb/>
HERE,(!T5ALLINY0URMIKP)j<lb/>
AREPWOOP<lb/>
TREE5HAPEP<lb/>
LIKE AN OIL<lb/>
DERRICK<lb/>
WWINCAL<lb/>
MRRRFROMWSHPC<lb/>
CLAIMS-<lb/>
THISC0K1A1MS<lb/>
ALL OF THE<lb/>
NUTRITION<lb/>
ASCHOOLCHILD<lb/>
NEEDS IN A DAY<lb/>
tlWS IS A PEACEKEEPER<lb/>
THIS IS<lb/>
rrjoj<lb/>
60001&amp; WB8U6<lb/>
FOUMPBV EWIH TIMES BEACH MDj<lb/>
THISTREEQIVB OFF MORE POLLUTION<lb/>
THAN A STEEL MILL IN YOUNGSTOWN<lb/>
Capital Punishment: 'Most Racist<lb/>
Laws On The Books In The U.S<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
"Why do we kill people who kill peo-<lb/>
ple to show that killing people is<lb/>
wrong?"<lb/>
Better, perhaps, than most words, this<lb/>
famous quote illustrates the total lack of<lb/>
logic inherent in U.S. death penalty<lb/>
laws. Throughout the world, most<lb/>
civilized nations have outlawed this<lb/>
beastly business. Only in nations such as<lb/>
El Salvador and Iran, where brutal<lb/>
leaders have total control, do state-<lb/>
sanctioned killings still flourish.<lb/>
Last week, the North Carolina Senate<lb/>
passed a law that will allow future death-<lb/>
row inmates to choose their own poison.<lb/>
Now, the condemned have a choice.<lb/>
They can opt for the "inhumane" gas<lb/>
chamber or choose a more "humane"<lb/>
death, like lethal injection.<lb/>
"Why do we kill people<lb/>
who kill people to show that<lb/>
killing people is wrong?<lb/>
The senators have been walking<lb/>
around, patting themselves on the back<lb/>
for their merciful decision. "A good<lb/>
many people throughout not only North<lb/>
Carolina but the world are not satisfied<lb/>
with gassing people to death said Sen.<lb/>
Robert M. Davis, the bill's sponsor.<lb/>
Lethal injection, he added, is "the most<lb/>
humane way of execution<lb/>
Personally, I don't see much dif-<lb/>
ference between death by inhaled gas<lb/>
and death by injected poison. Dead is<lb/>
dead! And I tend to doubt that North<lb/>
Carolina's 34 death-row inmates will be<lb/>
rejoicing very much at the passage of<lb/>
this "humane" law.<lb/>
Once again, the N.C. Legislature has<lb/>
failed to deal with the realities of the<lb/>
death penalty law. It simply doesn't<lb/>
work. Study after study has proven that<lb/>
capital punishment does not effectively<lb/>
deter murderers. Its only purpose, then,<lb/>
is to satisfy society's craving for revenge<lb/>
against those who take a human life.<lb/>
But even if one argues that capital<lb/>
punishment does work as a deterrent, an<lb/>
even bigger question exists about the<lb/>
discriminatory use of the penalty.<lb/>
Throughout U.S. history, more than<lb/>
half of those sentenced to death have<lb/>
been black. An even larger percentage<lb/>
have been poor. In short, capital punish-<lb/>
ment laws are, by far, the most racist on<lb/>
the books in the United States.<lb/>
At present, there are about 1,168 peo-<lb/>
ple on death row in the U.S. Of that<lb/>
number, 42 percent are black, five per-<lb/>
cent Hispanic and one percent native<lb/>
Americans and other minorities.<lb/>
In North Carolina, where 34 inmates<lb/>
sit on death row, 15 are black, one is<lb/>
native American.<lb/>
These statistics tell the story of capital<lb/>
punishment. "Those without the capital<lb/>
get the punishment If you're poor,<lb/>
you can't afford legal assistance.<lb/>
Of course, arguing for mandatory im-<lb/>
" These statistics tell the<lb/>
story of capital punishment.<lb/>
1Those without the capital<lb/>
get the punishment. M<lb/>
position of death sentences to all killers<lb/>
would be equally wrong. First of all, it<lb/>
would never be approved. And second.<lb/>
it would be unjust to sentence Charles<lb/>
Manson types to the same fate as those<lb/>
who perpetrate less-hideous killings<lb/>
There is no way to impose capital<lb/>
punishment sentencing fairly. For this<lb/>
reason, all such laws should be stricken<lb/>
from the books.<lb/>
Americans are always looking for cut-<lb/>
and-dry solutions to their problems. It's<lb/>
simpler to kill killers than to search for<lb/>
reasons why crime is increasing. And un-<lb/>
fortunately, history has shown us that<lb/>
it's also easier to switch methods of do-<lb/>
ing dirty work than to admit that the<lb/>
system as a whole is a failure.<lb/>
The Art Of Nose-Picking<lb/>
Universal Quirks<lb/>
quirk (kwurk) n. A peculiarity of<lb/>
behavior that eludes prediction or sup-<lb/>
pression. An unpredictable or unac-<lb/>
countable act or event; vagary. An<lb/>
equivocation; quibble; subterfuge.<lb/>
Advice (For Lack Of A Better Title)<lb/>
AAIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Picking A Winner<lb/>
Dear Stan Landers: My roommate.<lb/>
Alma, and 1 were wondering something.<lb/>
Since you are a worldly traveler, we<lb/>
thought you could help us. You see,<lb/>
Alma and I are planning to go to China<lb/>
in the fall to look for work. We hear<lb/>
there's excellent opportunity there (what<lb/>
with the population on the decline), but<lb/>
we're really unfamiliar with the tcr-<lb/>
STAN LANDERS<lb/>
Straight Talk<lb/>
ritory, so we thought you could give us<lb/>
some advice; you know, like who to see<lb/>
about what. What we want are a couple<lb/>
of good-paying jobs that don't require<lb/>
much skill, because frankly, we eat a lot,<lb/>
but we're not too bright. We're not par-<lb/>
ticularly interested in rice or snake farm-<lb/>
ing, if that's any help. But we would ap-<lb/>
preciate any help you could give us.<lb/>
Gladys in Greene<lb/>
Dear Greene Gladys: Well, right now,<lb/>
as far as I know off-hand, there are only<lb/>
two real opportunities available in most<lb/>
of China. Of course, I could research it<lb/>
for you, but I haven't yet received this<lb/>
week's copy of the Peking classifieds.<lb/>
And anyway, I'm playing golf later this<lb/>
afternoon, so I really don't have time to<lb/>
look into it.<lb/>
First of all, there's a tremendous need<lb/>
for barbers in the Orient. Now, I know<lb/>
what you're already saying. You have no<lb/>
training in Oriental barbering. But don't<lb/>
fret. I mean, think about it. How tough<lb/>
can it be to put a bowl over their heads<lb/>
and shave everything that hangs out?<lb/>
The only other high-paying, low-skill<lb/>
job I can think of is in the field of police<lb/>
artistry. You know, like the guy on<lb/>
Hawaii Five-0 who draws the criminals'<lb/>
faces from witness descriptions. Here<lb/>
again, very little artistic talent or skill is<lb/>
involved. All you would need to do is get<lb/>
one fairly competent sketch of a<lb/>
Chinaman, make about a hundred<lb/>
copies and use one every time a crime is<lb/>
committed. It's a snap!<lb/>
Glad I could help. Good luck and<lb/>
good hunting.<lb/>
Dear Staa Landers: There's<lb/>
something that's been on my mind for<lb/>
months now. And normally, I wouldn't<lb/>
be so straightforward in asking, but I'm<lb/>
losing sleep and need to know. Anyway,<lb/>
here goes: What was your favorite<lb/>
episode of Gilligans Island!<lb/>
Curious in Clement<lb/>
Dear Cartons: You scum! How dare<lb/>
you assume that I've ever even seen<lb/>
Gilligans Island! It embarrasses me to<lb/>
even be associated with such a moronic,<lb/>
childish television show. Talk about<lb/>
your "lowest-common-denominator"<lb/>
theory of TV. Why, no self-respecting<lb/>
fourth-grader would ever watch, much<lb/>
less admit to watching, Gilligan's Island.<lb/>
You question my very intelligence. I am<lb/>
abhorred!<lb/>
But in answer to your question, I'd<lb/>
have to say that my favorite episode was<lb/>
when the Professor (played, of course,<lb/>
by Russell Johnson) first discovers that<lb/>
he can make batteries and a transmitter<lb/>
out of coconuts.<lb/>
Now that was fascinating!<lb/>
Editor's Note: Stan Landers, who<lb/>
claims to have been Boxcar Willie's<lb/>
brother, Sidecar, in an earlier incarna-<lb/>
tion, is glad that society in the 80s has<lb/>
replaced such asinine television shows as<lb/>
Gilligans Island with more intelligent<lb/>
programming, like The Secret Powers of<lb/>
Matthew Star and Joanie Loves Chachi.<lb/>
You know, quirks are kind of well,<lb/>
funny, I guess. They're easy as hell to<lb/>
notice in those around us, but God for-<lb/>
bid any of us should have quirks of our<lb/>
own. That's the funny thing. We all love<lb/>
to complain about Cousin Zeb's<lb/>
disgusting habit of belching in the<lb/>
shower or how Aunt Myrna scratches<lb/>
her fat rear end in public, but the fact is,<lb/>
we all do it from time to time.<lb/>
Deny it as we may, quirks are univer-<lb/>
sal. And as much as we hate to admit it,<lb/>
we're all pretty much the same when it<lb/>
comes to peculiarities.<lb/>
Take nosepicking, for example.<lb/>
Granted, there are probably 1,001 dif-<lb/>
ferent methods for extracting stubborn<lb/>
nasal blockage via fingers and tissues.<lb/>
There's the frontal attack, the plunging<lb/>
pinkie, the Kleenex cleanout, the honk-<lb/>
n-grunt, the cross-hand slide, the gold-<lb/>
digger, the drill-n-pull, the "proper<lb/>
pluck" (with pinkie extended), the<lb/>
snort-n-snack just to name a few<lb/>
But however individual we all claim to<lb/>
be, however "unique" our nosepicking<lb/>
styles, somewhere down the line, we all<lb/>
share the same disgusting quirk. We all<lb/>
open up the tissue for inspection before<lb/>
throwing it away.<lb/>
I wonder why.<lb/>
I mean, it's like we expect to find a<lb/>
pearl or a chunk of gold buried inside.<lb/>
We've all looked a million times before<lb/>
? it's always the same snotty letdown ?<lb/>
but we all still do it.<lb/>
And the same holds true for other ex-<lb/>
cavations as well. Think about it.<lb/>
Whenever you cram a Q-tip in your ear,<lb/>
don't you yank it out and analyze it? Is<lb/>
there really anything on the end of that<lb/>
swab worth looking at? Not usually,<lb/>
unless maybe if you're an organic<lb/>
chandler!<lb/>
And how about when you wake up in<lb/>
the morning and rub the sleep from your<lb/>
eyes. Don't you roll it around between<lb/>
your fingers and wipe it off on the wall?<lb/>
Of course you do. We all do.<lb/>
What I like best about quirks, though,<lb/>
is when people try to hide them. Like<lb/>
when you're sitting in class or in church,<lb/>
and you notice the guy in front of you<lb/>
fiddling with his right nostril. He thinks<lb/>
he's fooling everybody by discreetly<lb/>
picking a winner and trying to hide it<lb/>
between two fingers. Then, just when he<lb/>
thinks no one's looking, he drop his<lb/>
notebook or hymnal to the floor and<lb/>
wipes off his finger under the scat while<lb/>
he's picking up the book.<lb/>
Now that's funny!<lb/>
And how about when you're standing<lb/>
in a large crowd of people, and you<lb/>
break wind or let flee an aromatic belch.<lb/>
Don't you go along with the rest of the<lb/>
crowd and blame it on the guy standing<lb/>
next to you?<lb/>
Of course you do. Everybody does.<lb/>
That is, everybody but me, of course.<lb/>
Unlike everyone else, I don't have any<lb/>
disgusting quirks.<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, ?<lb/>
transfer student from the "Great<lb/>
Writers' School" in Topeka, Kansas,<lb/>
has only one real shortcoming and<lb/>
you just read it.<lb/>
Resister<lb/>
Draft resister<lb/>
Russell Ford will not<lb/>
have to spend time in<lb/>
prison as a result of<lb/>
his refusal to register<lb/>
for a military draft.<lb/>
During sentencing<lb/>
Monday, a Connec-<lb/>
ticutt Federal Judge<lb/>
sentenced Ford to 35<lb/>
days in prison.<lb/>
Fecause Ford had<lb/>
already served 35 days<lb/>
in federal prison<lb/>
before his trial last<lb/>
summer, ne m<lb/>
free with "nm<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Ford, 19.<lb/>
visited ECL<lb/>
February. aj<lb/>
first American<lb/>
imprisoned for<lb/>
resistance smd<lb/>
Vietnam war. Fl<lb/>
Judge M Ji<lb/>
Blumenfeld tolc<lb/>
that neither<lb/>
ment or pro!<lb/>
was hkeK to<lb/>
Writer<lb/>
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THIS IS<lb/>
t Racist<lb/>
he U.S.9<lb/>
hese statistics tell the<lb/>
capital punishment.<lb/>
without the capital<lb/>
he punishment.<lb/>
? <lb/>
ventences to ail killers<lb/>
. rong. First of all, it<lb/>
approved. And second,<lb/>
ust to sentence Charles<lb/>
the same fate as those<lb/>
es-hideous killings.<lb/>
way to impose capital<lb/>
encing fairly. For this<lb/>
aws should be stricken<lb/>
 s<lb/>
always looking for cut-<lb/>
to their problems. It's<lb/>
it ierv than to search for<lb/>
nme is increasing. And un-<lb/>
:Mor has shown us that<lb/>
to switch methods of do-<lb/>
ork than to admit that the<lb/>
a whole is a failure.<lb/>
King<lb/>
Quirks<lb/>
- ige ia fingers and tissues.<lb/>
the frontal attack, the plunging<lb/>
Kleenex cleanout, the honk-<lb/>
the cross-hand slide, the gold-<lb/>
e dnll-n-pull, the "proper<lb/>
pinkie extended), the<lb/>
i ? just to name a few<lb/>
oeer individual we all claim to<lb/>
unique" our nosepicking<lb/>
omew-here down the line, we all<lb/>
he same disgusting quirk. We all<lb/>
e tissue for inspection before<lb/>
aav.<lb/>
hy.<lb/>
it's like we expect to find a<lb/>
;hunk of gold buried inside.<lb/>
i ked a million times before<lb/>
always the same snotty letdown ?<lb/>
e all still do it.<lb/>
the same holds true for other ex-<lb/>
well. Think about it.<lb/>
Inc. er you cram a Q-tip in your ear,<lb/>
. ank it out and analyze it? Is<lb/>
really anything on the end of that<lb/>
worth looking at? Not usually,<lb/>
s maybe if you're an organic<lb/>
Idler'<lb/>
iid how about when you wake up in<lb/>
orning and rub the sleep from your<lb/>
Don't you roll it around between<lb/>
tingers and wipe it off on the wall?<lb/>
lourse ou do. We all do.<lb/>
hat 1 like best about quirks, though,<lb/>
hen people try to hide them. Like<lb/>
you're sitting in class or in church,<lb/>
you notice the guy in front of you<lb/>
ling with his right nostril. He thinks<lb/>
tooling everybody by discreetly<lb/>
ing a winner and trying to hide it<lb/>
een two fingers. Then, just when he<lb/>
is no one's looking, he drops his<lb/>
fbook or hymnal to the floor and<lb/>
rs off his finger under the seat while<lb/>
picking up the book.<lb/>
)w that's funny!<lb/>
nd how about when you're standing<lb/>
large crowd of people, and you<lb/>
tk wind or let flee an aromatic belch.<lb/>
t you go along with the rest of the<lb/>
-d and blame it on the guy standing<lb/>
to you?<lb/>
If course you do. Everybody does.<lb/>
hat is, everybody but me, of course.<lb/>
like everyone else, I don't have any<lb/>
justing quirks.<lb/>
ditor's Note: Mike Hughes, a<lb/>
sfer student from the "Great<lb/>
ters' School" in Topeka, Kansas,<lb/>
only one real shortcoming and<lb/>
just read it.<lb/>
Resister Ford Set Free<lb/>
Draft resister<lb/>
Russell Ford will not<lb/>
have to spend time in<lb/>
prison as a result of<lb/>
his refusal to register<lb/>
for a military draft.<lb/>
During sentencing<lb/>
Monday, a Connec-<lb/>
ticut! Federal Judge<lb/>
sentenced Ford to 35<lb/>
days in prison.<lb/>
Because Ford had<lb/>
already served 35 days<lb/>
in federal prison<lb/>
before his trial last<lb/>
summer, he was let<lb/>
free with "time serv-<lb/>
ed. "<lb/>
Ford, 19, who<lb/>
visited ECU last<lb/>
February, was the<lb/>
first American to be<lb/>
imprisoned for draft<lb/>
resistance since the<lb/>
Vietnam war. Federal<lb/>
Judge M. Joseph<lb/>
Blumenfeld told Ford<lb/>
that neither punish-<lb/>
ment or probation<lb/>
was likely to change<lb/>
Ford's attitudes. A<lb/>
jury took 10 minutes<lb/>
to convict Ford of<lb/>
registration refusal<lb/>
last April 14.<lb/>
"We made it said<lb/>
a jubilant Ford after<lb/>
Blumenfeld announc-<lb/>
ed his decision.<lb/>
"You'd be a nuisance<lb/>
to have on probation<lb/>
and you wouldn't<lb/>
change if we put you<lb/>
in jail Blumenfek<lb/>
allegedly told Ford.<lb/>
More than 50 sup-<lb/>
porters and friends of<lb/>
Ford were in the cour-<lb/>
troom during the<lb/>
sentencing. Ford<lb/>
?could have received a<lb/>
maximum sentence of<lb/>
five years in federal<lb/>
prison and a $10,000<lb/>
fine. Ford was not<lb/>
assessed a fine.<lb/>
"This reluctance to<lb/>
put us (draft resisters)<lb/>
in jail is a step<lb/>
towards a reluctance<lb/>
Writers Needed<lb/>
Apply in person<lb/>
at East Carolinian<lb/>
for all sections<lb/>
Located Old South Building<lb/>
across from Joyner Library<lb/>
to prosecute us<lb/>
Ford said.<lb/>
He is one of 13<lb/>
Americans to be in-<lb/>
dicted for registration<lb/>
refusal since the<lb/>
federal law was<lb/>
enacted in 1980. The<lb/>
government has<lb/>
chosen only to indict<lb/>
men who have<lb/>
publically or through<lb/>
affadavits called at-<lb/>
tention to their<lb/>
refusals. Justice<lb/>
Department estimates<lb/>
claim that close to<lb/>
one-million men have<lb/>
not registered.<lb/>
"I will continue<lb/>
resisting said Ford<lb/>
who has been arrested<lb/>
on at least four other<lb/>
occassions for non-<lb/>
violent civil disobe-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
During his Green-<lb/>
ville visit, Ford spoke<lb/>
to several hundred<lb/>
ECU students. He<lb/>
visited ECU<lb/>
classrooms and<lb/>
several local schools.<lb/>
Ford told ECU<lb/>
students that he<lb/>
believed registration<lb/>
for the draft was only<lb/>
the first step in the<lb/>
government's plan to<lb/>
impose full scale con-<lb/>
scription .<lb/>
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BUCK'S GULF 1<lb/>
2704 E. 10th St. 752-3228<lb/>
1<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
758-0327 4<lb/>
I Across from Villa Roma,<lb/>
 We do minor repairs, tune ups, broke<lb/>
1 alignments, and air conditioner maintainance.<lb/>
We have a rood wrecker service and do<lb/>
service calls. 24 hr. number is 758-1033.<lb/>
Keep your car looking good<lb/>
Free cor wash with each fill up!<lb/>
We rent Jortran trucks and trailers for your<lb/>
moving needs.<lb/>
j Come by today for your complete car needs.<lb/>
<lb/>
We pull for ECU not from<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057559_0006"/><lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNES. 1983<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Whiz Kid Plays 'War Games'<lb/>
By STEVE BACHNER<lb/>
Matthew Brodtrick. Ally Sheedy in John Btdhim's<lb/>
Quite a few "major motion pic-<lb/>
tures" opened around the country<lb/>
last Friday, and I managed to<lb/>
satisfy my curiosity about a few of<lb/>
them right away. I was probably<lb/>
most curious about James<lb/>
Toback's romantic thriller Expos-<lb/>
ed, starring Nastassia Kinski,<lb/>
because I had heard so many con-<lb/>
flicting views on the film. But<lb/>
before I discuss Kinski's latest, let<lb/>
me recommend director John<lb/>
Bad ham's latest, War Games, for<lb/>
it is the summer's best film so far.<lb/>
(The film is now playing at Green-<lb/>
ville's Buccaneer Theatre.)<lb/>
A month or so ago, War Games<lb/>
had one of the most successful na-<lb/>
tional sneak previews in years.<lb/>
Afterwards, the execs at<lb/>
MGMUA kept advertising costs<lb/>
low in hopes that the most power-<lb/>
ful selling point in the business,<lb/>
word-of-mouth, might snowball<lb/>
with only marginal help from pro-<lb/>
motional spots. If Greenville can<lb/>
be looked upon as any kind of in-<lb/>
dicator, then the brisk business<lb/>
that the Buc is doing in only its<lb/>
first week with the film is a sign<lb/>
that, indeed, favorable word-of-<lb/>
mouth is at play here.<lb/>
I'm still not convinced that<lb/>
whiz-kid Badham is a great direc-<lb/>
tor, as some are calling him,<lb/>
though he is on an unmitigated<lb/>
tear right now. His treatment of<lb/>
Saturday Night Fever, one of the<lb/>
most successful films of all time,<lb/>
was awkward and droopy. His<lb/>
last three films as a director,<lb/>
Whose Life is It Anyway, Blue<lb/>
Thunder and War Games, show<lb/>
no special flair with material of<lb/>
this nature. But his penchant for<lb/>
stories about the effects of<lb/>
technology gone berserk has net-<lb/>
ted him the most original<lb/>
screenplay of the year.<lb/>
War Games is the story of two<lb/>
high schoolers ? played with<lb/>
verve by relative unknowns Mat-<lb/>
thew Broderick, as a computer<lb/>
whiz, and his unbelievably cute<lb/>
partner, Ally Sheedy (Bad Boys)<lb/>
? who inadvertently plug a home<lb/>
computer into the North<lb/>
American Defense Command's<lb/>
system. The two challenge their<lb/>
new electronic friend to an inno-<lb/>
cent game of Global Ther-<lb/>
monuclear War with unexpectedly<lb/>
serious results; of course, WWIII<lb/>
is just around the corner.<lb/>
War Games is only a little<lb/>
pretentious in making its big<lb/>
moral statement at the end and<lb/>
has a bit of a split personality: the<lb/>
first half has romance, suspense,<lb/>
action; the second half is all<lb/>
cloak-and-dagger stuff with a<lb/>
MacGuffin and a double chase to<lb/>
boot. But the movie is so original,<lb/>
so good-natured, so frantically<lb/>
well-played, that it wills you to<lb/>
like it ? I wouldn't want to know<lb/>
anyone who didn't.<lb/>
Moving from one kind of split<lb/>
personality to another, Norman<lb/>
Bates returned to screens last<lb/>
week after 22 years of<lb/>
psychotherapy. Universal's<lb/>
Psycho II (now playing at Green-<lb/>
ville's Plaza Cinema) takes a<lb/>
Saturday Night Live approach to<lb/>
the business of remaking Hit-<lb/>
chcock and winds up with a<lb/>
hilarious satire of the original.<lb/>
The laughs, methinks, are all in-<lb/>
tentional.<lb/>
Anthony Perkins has the pro-<lb/>
verbial field day recreating his<lb/>
original role as the put-upon<lb/>
Bates, returning to his motel for<lb/>
peace and quiet only to find that it<lb/>
is now an adult facility. Perkins<lb/>
takes none of this seriously and<lb/>
gives an inspired comic perfor-<lb/>
mance that affords Norman, a<lb/>
folk hero that should be treated<lb/>
with respect, the luxury of martyr-<lb/>
dom.<lb/>
Hitchcock's favorite actress.<lb/>
Vera Miles, also recreates her role<lb/>
as Marion Crane's (Janet Leigh)<lb/>
sister Lila. She is the subject of a<lb/>
terrific black sight gag when, dur-<lb/>
ing an authentic identical close up<lb/>
of that famous scream that<lb/>
followed the discovery of Nor-<lb/>
man's mother's corpse, a butcher<lb/>
knife is shoved through her<lb/>
mouth.<lb/>
James Toback's Exposed (now<lb/>
playing at the Buccaneer Theatre)<lb/>
is partly the director's horny, self-<lb/>
indulgent fantasy about German<lb/>
actressmodel Nastassia Kinski,<lb/>
partly a thriller about a terrorist<lb/>
group in Paris, and partly a love<lb/>
story about the affair between<lb/>
Kinski and ballet legend"actor"<lb/>
Rudolf Nureyev, who stinks up a<lb/>
good portion of the film with his<lb/>
lisping and wooden brand of ac-<lb/>
ting. The rest is not bad. Harvey<lb/>
Keitel plays a terrorist to make<lb/>
your skin really crawl and Kinski<lb/>
is, as ever, lovely and very, very<lb/>
good ? Exposed is worth seeing<lb/>
for her frenetic, overtly sexual<lb/>
dance scene alone.<lb/>
The best thing about Alone in<lb/>
the Dark (now playing at Green-<lb/>
ville's Plitt Entertainment<lb/>
Center), a horror-movie spoof<lb/>
that is sometimes droll, sometimes<lb/>
See SUMMER, Page 7<lb/>
Hot Wheels For Big Kids: Beach Cruisers Tear Into Town<lb/>
By ELIZABETH JENNINGS<lb/>
Style MUor<lb/>
What are those things with the<lb/>
big tires and huge handlebars tear-<lb/>
ing through Greenville? They're<lb/>
beach cruisers, and they're a<lb/>
popular means of transportation<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Beach cruisers are bicycles with<lb/>
oversized tires, seats and<lb/>
handlebars on the traditional<lb/>
frame structure. Foam grips on<lb/>
the handlebars prevent the hands<lb/>
from slipping while barreling<lb/>
through that rough terrain. These<lb/>
cruisers can be equipped with or<lb/>
without hand brakes and speed<lb/>
selection. Wheels are made extra-<lb/>
wide to avoid sinking into sandy<lb/>
beaches.<lb/>
Cruisers are meant to be ridden<lb/>
on the beach, but ECU students<lb/>
find them perfect for downtown,<lb/>
across campus and dirt riding.<lb/>
Surfers and beach bums in Florida<lb/>
and Baha, Calif, were the mentors<lb/>
for this popular craze. Now the<lb/>
fad has progressed all across the<lb/>
United States, including Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The Bicycle Post, 530 Cotanche<lb/>
St stocks all types of cruisers in a<lb/>
variety of styles and colors. Such<lb/>
models as the Earth Cruiser, Pipe<lb/>
Line Cruiser, Typhoon and Boss<lb/>
Cruiser are available. Eye-<lb/>
catching red, blue, black and<lb/>
green are among the many colors<lb/>
these cruisers show off.<lb/>
Beach cruiser enthusiast John<lb/>
Nix explained cruisers have less<lb/>
chance of repair than your or-<lb/>
dinary 10-speed. The durable<lb/>
cruiser is dependable to last for<lb/>
many years. "It's your simple,<lb/>
basic bike said Nix. "There's<lb/>
not as many parts as in a<lb/>
10-speed, so less chance of<lb/>
rusting<lb/>
Girls, don't think that guys are<lb/>
the only people able to enjoy this<lb/>
free-wheeling experience. Accor-<lb/>
ding to the Bicycle Post, the<lb/>
number of guy,s who are buying<lb/>
the cruisers is equal to the number<lb/>
of girls.<lb/>
These cruisers range from<lb/>
$100-5200, but to keep in style<lb/>
and enjoy rambling through<lb/>
Greenville, it's worth it. ?<lb/>
Nostalgia Reigns<lb/>
Antique Show A Success<lb/>
By ROBIN AYERS<lb/>
surr wriur<lb/>
Old collectibles and afternoons<lb/>
in the country: Last Sunday was a<lb/>
perfect day for both.<lb/>
Woodside Antiques' 18th An-<lb/>
nual Lawn Show and Sale took<lb/>
place beneath clouds that<lb/>
threatened rain but didn't spoil<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
At a house about a quarter mile<lb/>
out on 264-Bypass, past the in-<lb/>
tersection with Dickinson Ave<lb/>
dealers set up shop for the day on<lb/>
Mrs. Leota Jenkins Tyson's lawn.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyson is the owner of Wood-<lb/>
side Antiques, which she started<lb/>
28 years ago with her sister, the<lb/>
late Lucy Jenkins Allen.<lb/>
Dealers displayed objects of<lb/>
beauty and nostalgia under tall<lb/>
and aged trees. An antique sleigh<lb/>
and a hand-cranked phonograph<lb/>
recalled sounds of another era.<lb/>
Lithographs, photograhs and<lb/>
lace tempted browsers. Furniture,<lb/>
ornately carved, stood out ma-<lb/>
jestically. Rarely can the younger<lb/>
generation find such quality and<lb/>
workmanship in something new.<lb/>
Silver, china and crystal sparkl-<lb/>
ed and shone beneath the after-<lb/>
noon sun. Boxes ? cloth, wood,<lb/>
tin ? once held jewelery, momen-<lb/>
tos, tobacco. They now hold<lb/>
memories and a collector's<lb/>
fascination.<lb/>
As many beautiful things as<lb/>
there are from any age, so there<lb/>
must be ugliness. Swords stretch-<lb/>
ed out in a neat row, still gleam-<lb/>
ing. A WWI rifle rested across a<lb/>
baby's cradle. On this peaceful<lb/>
day, the firearm was years and<lb/>
worlds away from the battles for<lb/>
which it was made.<lb/>
A set of dinnerware in the<lb/>
Depression glass pattern<lb/>
"Sharon" glistened in the sun like<lb/>
translucent pools of pink. A<lb/>
breeze ruffled the folds of in-<lb/>
tricately embroidered Chinese<lb/>
robes.<lb/>
Part of the fun of an antique<lb/>
show is talking with the dealers<lb/>
about their treasures and<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Doloris Chandler of<lb/>
Vanceboro.N.C. began collecting<lb/>
when her son Kenny, then nine<lb/>
years old, developed an interest in<lb/>
antiques and started hoarding<lb/>
anything old. After a few visits to<lb/>
flea markets, Doloris bought a<lb/>
couple of unmarked boxes of<lb/>
odds and ends at an estate sale for<lb/>
Kenny to sell at a flea market. The<lb/>
Chandlers now have their own<lb/>
shop south of Chocowinity.<lb/>
Among the items on the<lb/>
Chandlers' table was a mandolin<lb/>
guitar harp, or autoharp. A book<lb/>
? the Constitution of the<lb/>
Presbyterian Church in the United<lb/>
States ? has an interesting story<lb/>
behind it, which Mrs. Chandler is<lb/>
happy to tell. This copy of a 19th<lb/>
century edition, she says, was<lb/>
given by a slave to his master. It's<lb/>
worth $250.<lb/>
A lot of dealers do not have a<lb/>
shop in their hometown. Instead,<lb/>
they do business solely through<lb/>
travelling.<lb/>
Depresaoa glass draws the eye at WoostaMe AatJaaea.<lb/>
fey aO?IM ATMS<lb/>
George Cullon of Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids, Va. retired after working<lb/>
for a supermarket chain for 36<lb/>
years. Now he travels to shows to<lb/>
display and sell his goods. This is<lb/>
George's fourth year as a dealer; a<lb/>
more enjoyable hving, he will tell<lb/>
you. Items featured by George<lb/>
were old kitchen utensils and a<lb/>
variety of tobacco tins.<lb/>
The Coburns of Portsmouth,<lb/>
Va. are also gypsy dealers. This<lb/>
year was their second visit to<lb/>
Woodside. A wicker baby scale<lb/>
was prominent among the goods<lb/>
they had for sale.<lb/>
Craftspeople were alongside the<lb/>
antique dealers, displaying their<lb/>
wares. Jane Harris of Grifton has<lb/>
been making dolls for three years.<lb/>
Sunday, Jane and her friends set<lb/>
up house in a gazebo in the<lb/>
backyard. The dolls smiled in<lb/>
their calico print dresses, beckon-<lb/>
ing to girls of all ages to take them<lb/>
home.<lb/>
When they started Woodside<lb/>
Antiques, the Jenkins sisters<lb/>
began with $350 worth of stock in<lb/>
a one-room barn originally used<lb/>
for grading tobacco. Woodside<lb/>
Antiques expanded into the<lb/>
stable, garage and a tenant house.<lb/>
The sisters later added more one-<lb/>
room shops as they were needed.<lb/>
For their first show, Mrs.<lb/>
Tyson said she and her sister "just<lb/>
decided to do it and spread the<lb/>
word. Thirty-five dealers got the<lb/>
tradition rolling.<lb/>
Since the beginning in 1965,<lb/>
dealers from four states have<lb/>
come to Red Oak, as many as 82<lb/>
in attendance.<lb/>
Sunday was also the celebration<lb/>
of Mrs. Tyson's 86th birthday.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyson's hair is silver but her<lb/>
eyes are bright when she talks<lb/>
about the antique business. "The<lb/>
most rewarding experience has<lb/>
been the friends I have made<lb/>
she says. She has led a full and in-<lb/>
teresting life, from playing piano<lb/>
in a silent movie house to making<lb/>
three European trips. On a trip to<lb/>
Mexico, Mrs. Tyson found herself<lb/>
in an impromptu jam session in a<lb/>
local cantina.<lb/>
Mrs. Tyson is pianist at Red<lb/>
Oak Christian Church, where she<lb/>
has played since she was a<lb/>
See ANTIQUE, Page 7<lb/>
?ABV FATTHSOM - SOU PtMM La<lb/>
Urban beachboy John Nix craises to happy hoar.<lb/>
Women Peace Marchers<lb/>
En Route To New York<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
On Monday morning a group<lb/>
of women left Durham, N.C,<lb/>
beginning the first leg of a<lb/>
600-mile walk to Seneca, New<lb/>
York. The women's destination is<lb/>
the Seneca Army Depot, which<lb/>
houses both the neutron bomb<lb/>
and Pershing II nuclear weapons.<lb/>
The women hope to arrive by July<lb/>
4 to join other women who will be<lb/>
establishing a Peace Camp at the<lb/>
Depot in opposition to the<lb/>
scheduled deployment of the Per-<lb/>
shing in Western Europe later this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Walk For Peace, as it is<lb/>
known, is sponsored by the<lb/>
Southeast regional office of the<lb/>
War Resisters League. Mandy<lb/>
Carter, one of two women staff<lb/>
members of the WRL's Durham<lb/>
office, is participating in the walk.<lb/>
Events such as the Walk For<lb/>
Peace have been sponsored by the<lb/>
League for more than 60 years.<lb/>
Nationwide there are more than<lb/>
10,000 members of WRL, which<lb/>
has its national headquarters in<lb/>
the Bowery section of New York<lb/>
City. Membership requires no an-<lb/>
nual dues and asks only that<lb/>
members agree with the organiza-<lb/>
tion's statement of purpose: "The<lb/>
War Resisters League affirms that<lb/>
war is a crime again humanity.<lb/>
We therefore are determined not<lb/>
to support any kind of war, inter-<lb/>
national or civil, and to strive<lb/>
non-violently for the removal of<lb/>
all the causes of war<lb/>
Dannia Souther land, another<lb/>
WRL-SE staffer, will be supervis-<lb/>
ing the Durham office while<lb/>
Carter is walking. Southerland<lb/>
told The East Carolinian that<lb/>
WRL is a "real diversified<lb/>
organization" working for<lb/>
"social change through non-<lb/>
violent action<lb/>
Since its establishment by a<lb/>
group of conscientious objectors<lb/>
after WWI, WRL has expanded<lb/>
its range of concerns and has suc-<lb/>
cessfully attempted to keep in step<lb/>
with the numerous peace and<lb/>
justice issues that have surfaced.<lb/>
During the civil rights move-<lb/>
ment of the late '50s and '60s,<lb/>
WRL was among the leaders of<lb/>
groups organizing for an end to<lb/>
discrimination against blacks. In<lb/>
1959, Martin Luther King Jr. ad-<lb/>
dressed WRL's Annual Dinner.<lb/>
WRL staff members often recall<lb/>
times they were victims of<lb/>
violence while joining the famous<lb/>
"freedom rides" in the South.<lb/>
During the Vietnam War, WRL<lb/>
initiated dozens of anti-war ac-<lb/>
tions. League staffers have all<lb/>
spent time in prison for their non-<lb/>
violent resistance. The New York<lb/>
office even held a party to<lb/>
celebrate the fiftieth arrest of one<lb/>
staff member.<lb/>
Su<lb/>
Cob tint<lb/>
silly, is thatl<lb/>
Dr Dan Pol<lb/>
This afford)<lb/>
directed the<lb/>
Robert Shaj<lb/>
ster. plenty<lb/>
make fun o<lb/>
Dr Pott<lb/>
Dr Leo Bal<lb/>
a peace pip<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
He<lb/>
Coniini<lb/>
WRI ha,<lb/>
to stop the<lb/>
as a solution<lb/>
claims that<lb/>
the cause<lb/>
of crime<lb/>
worked for<lb/>
people and<lb/>
interventio<lb/>
has opr <lb/>
has been i<lb/>
moen<lb/>
Both C<lb/>
focus a lot<lb/>
fermn:<lb/>
build a ;<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Southe<lb/>
feminist th<lb/>
to its right<lb/>
movement<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
i<lb/>
Souther<lb/>
direct cor<lb/>
violence<lb/>
pohc an<lb/>
women an<lb/>
WRL-SI<lb/>
education <lb/>
messages t<lb/>
is one exs<lb/>
action beii<lb/>
change<lb/>
In W<lb/>
another wl<lb/>
as the Coj<lb/>
ed froml<lb/>
Washmgt<lb/>
ed<lb/>
to<lb/>
t<lb/>
A . -<lb/>
 :f ' -?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057559_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Page f<lb/>
ames'<lb/>
era Miles, also recreates her role<lb/>
a- Marion crane's (Janet I eigh)<lb/>
Mster I lla she is the subject of a<lb/>
' c b!av k sight gag when, dur-<lb/>
g an authentic identical close up<lb/>
?: that famous scream that<lb/>
lowed the discover) o Nor-<lb/>
m's mother's corpse, a butcher<lb/>
fe is shoved through her<lb/>
mouth<lb/>
James Foback's Exposed (now<lb/>
aying al the Buccaneer Theatre)<lb/>
artl) the director's horny, self-<lb/>
ulgent fantas) about German<lb/>
5 model Nastassia Kinski,<lb/>
a thriller about a terrorist<lb/>
up in Pans, and parti) a love<lb/>
about the affair between<lb/>
i and ballet legend "actor"<lb/>
doll Nureyev, who stinks up a<lb/>
ortion of the film with his<lb/>
and wooden brand of ac-<lb/>
- The rcsl is not bad. Hare<lb/>
xeitel plas a terrorist to make<lb/>
ou ill reall) crawl and kinski<lb/>
as ever. loel and very, er<lb/>
d ? Exposed is worth seeing<lb/>
her frenetic, overtly sexual<lb/>
r scene alone.<lb/>
The best thing about Alone in<lb/>
t Dark (now playing at Green-<lb/>
ill e' Pint Entenainmen'<lb/>
enter), a horror-movie spoof<lb/>
a is sometimes droll, sometimes<lb/>
See SUMMER, Page 7<lb/>
o Town<lb/>
9A?Y PATTf RSON - ECU PHo lab<lb/>
uses to happy hour.<lb/>
e Marchers<lb/>
New York<lb/>
lational or civil, and to strive<lb/>
pn-violently for the removal of<lb/>
11 the causes of war<lb/>
Dannia Southerland, another<lb/>
RL-Sfc staffer, will be supervis-<lb/>
ig the Durham office while<lb/>
:arter is walking. Southerland<lb/>
Id The East Carolinian that<lb/>
RL is a "real diversified<lb/>
? rganization" working for<lb/>
social change through non-<lb/>
iolen' action<lb/>
Since its establishment by a<lb/>
Iroup of conscientious objectors<lb/>
Ifter WWI, WRL has expanded<lb/>
p range of concerns and has suc-<lb/>
ssfully attempted to keep in step<lb/>
nth the numerous peace and<lb/>
istice issues that have surfaced.<lb/>
During the civil rights move-<lb/>
lent of the late '50s and '60s,<lb/>
RL was among the leaders of<lb/>
roups organizing for an end to<lb/>
jiscnmination against blacks. In<lb/>
'59. Martin Luther King Jr. ad-<lb/>
ressed WRL's Annual Dinner.<lb/>
RL staff members often recall<lb/>
imes they were victims of<lb/>
lolence while joining the famous<lb/>
freedom rides" in the South.<lb/>
During the Vietnam War, WRL<lb/>
itiated dozens of anti-war ac-<lb/>
ns. League staffers have all<lb/>
snt time in prison for their non-<lb/>
lolent resistance. The New York<lb/>
Tfice even held a party to<lb/>
elebrate the fiftieth arrest of one<lb/>
iff member.<lb/>
See MARCHERS, Page 7<lb/>
Summer Sizzlers, Bombs Share Marquees<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 8, MM<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
silly, is that its central character<lb/>
Dr. Dan Potter, is a psychiatrist!<lb/>
This affords Jack Sholder, who<lb/>
directed the film and wrote it with<lb/>
Robert Shaye and Michael Harp-<lb/>
ster, plenty of opportunity to<lb/>
make fun of the profession.<lb/>
Dr. Potter has gone to work for<lb/>
Dr. Leo Bain, who smokes pot in<lb/>
a peace pipe with a feather on the<lb/>
end and insists on referring to his<lb/>
patients as "voyagers even<lb/>
though they're known as maniacs<lb/>
elsewhere. When the maniacs<lb/>
escape, surround Dr. Potter's<lb/>
home and terrorize his family, Dr.<lb/>
Potter tells his wife and daughter:<lb/>
played by Jack Palance, Martin<lb/>
Landau, the enormous Erland<lb/>
Van Lidth and a fourth actor<lb/>
whose identity is supposed to be a<lb/>
mystery (all we know about him is<lb/>
that he has frequent nosebleeds).<lb/>
As villains, these actors have a<lb/>
Breathe deeply! Hopefully, we'll good chance to ham it up royally,<lb/>
never have to go through this kind and they take good advantage of<lb/>
of stress again<lb/>
Stress it is, as the family is<lb/>
menaced by four lively thugs<lb/>
Marchers For Peace<lb/>
Head For New York<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
WRL has also actively worked<lb/>
to stop the use of prisons and jails<lb/>
as a solution to crime. The League<lb/>
claims that incarceration is one of<lb/>
the causes rather than preventers<lb/>
of crime. The League has also<lb/>
worked for the civil . i -his of gay<lb/>
people and for a cessation of U.S.<lb/>
intervention in Latin America,<lb/>
has opposed draft registration and<lb/>
has been active in the women's<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
Both Carter and Southerland<lb/>
focus a lot of their work on the<lb/>
feminist issue. "We're trying to<lb/>
build a bridge between feminists<lb/>
and the peace movement<lb/>
Southerland said, adding that<lb/>
feminist theory must be brought<lb/>
to its rightful place in the peace<lb/>
movement.<lb/>
esi's<lb/>
i<lb/>
Leagu<lb/>
Southerland believes there is a<lb/>
direct connection between the<lb/>
violence inherent in U.S. foreign<lb/>
policy and the violence against<lb/>
women and children in the home.<lb/>
WRL-SE Ujses a combination of<lb/>
education and action to convey its<lb/>
messages to the public. The walk<lb/>
is one example of education and<lb/>
action being utilized together for<lb/>
change.<lb/>
In 1975 the League initiated<lb/>
another walk. This walk, known<lb/>
as the Continental Walk, stretch-<lb/>
ed from San Francisco to<lb/>
Washington, D.C and WRL us-<lb/>
ed it to call attention to the<lb/>
dangers of the nuclear arms race.<lb/>
In both 1978 and 1982 the<lb/>
League has been one of the key<lb/>
organizers of huge rallies held in<lb/>
conjunction with United Nations<lb/>
Conferences on Disarmament.<lb/>
Perhaps WRL's most well-<lb/>
known event was 1978's<lb/>
simultaneous Moscow-<lb/>
Washington anti-nuclear<lb/>
demonstration.<lb/>
While 11 WRL members un-<lb/>
furled a banner on the White<lb/>
House lawn, seven other members<lb/>
did the same in Moscow's Red<lb/>
Square.<lb/>
The banners, written in native<lb/>
languages of both countries,<lb/>
stated "No Nuclear Weapons! No,<lb/>
Nuclear Power U.S.A. or<lb/>
U.S.S.R Leaflets in both<lb/>
languages were also distributed<lb/>
for a few seconds before both<lb/>
groups were arrested.<lb/>
Ironically, the Moscow group<lb/>
was let free after only a few hours<lb/>
of questioning, but the 11 in<lb/>
Washington were detained in jail<lb/>
overnight and later tried, found<lb/>
guilty and fined.<lb/>
Besides working to increase in-<lb/>
volvement of women in the peace<lb/>
movement, Southerland also<lb/>
wants to see greater participation<lb/>
among non-whites. "We need to<lb/>
debunk the idea of the white peace<lb/>
movement she said.<lb/>
Southerland said she hopes the<lb/>
1980s will be a time when the<lb/>
movement toward peace becomes<lb/>
"multi-cultural" as well as<lb/>
"multi-racial She also claims<lb/>
that WRL attempts to integrate an<lb/>
"anti-racist" analysis and action<lb/>
in all its projects.<lb/>
The League has an interna-<lb/>
tional affiliate known as War<lb/>
Resisters International which is<lb/>
active in several countries<lb/>
throughout the world.<lb/>
WRL plans to hold its 60th An-<lb/>
niversary National Conference<lb/>
from July 14-17 at Lafayette Col-<lb/>
lege in Easton, Pa.<lb/>
the opportunity. The story's<lb/>
straight-arrow characters are also<lb/>
a lot better than a movie like this<lb/>
might warrant, and most of them<lb/>
are relatively new. They include<lb/>
Dwight Schultz, Lee Taylor-<lb/>
Allan, Deborah Hedwall,<lb/>
Elizabeth Ward as an unusually<lb/>
brazen child and Carol Levy as<lb/>
the obligatory sexy, frightened<lb/>
baby-sitter.<lb/>
Two films playing in Greenville<lb/>
that you want to avoid are science<lb/>
fiction "epic" Spacehunter:<lb/>
Adventures in the Forbidden<lb/>
Zone, starring Peter Strauss and<lb/>
Molly Ringwald, and Doctor<lb/>
Detroit, starring Dan Aykroyd,<lb/>
Howard Hessman and Donna<lb/>
Dixon.<lb/>
Spacehunter (now at the Plitt) is<lb/>
a 3-D feature that, even with those<lb/>
damn glasses on, is flat. The story<lb/>
concerns a galactic mercenary<lb/>
who journeys to a plague-ravaged<lb/>
planet to rescue three female<lb/>
space voyagers in a bad "road"<lb/>
movie type of way. The film is one<lb/>
of those Canadian tax shelter<lb/>
packages that is distinguished<lb/>
from other quickies like it only by<lb/>
the fact that it got a major<lb/>
distribution deal with Columbia<lb/>
Pictures. The location work was<lb/>
done on one of Utah's many salt<lb/>
flats. Seriously.<lb/>
Doctor Detroit (in its last week<lb/>
at the Buccaneer) is an embarrass-<lb/>
ingly unfunny vehicle for old SNL<lb/>
regular Dan Aykroyd. It comes<lb/>
off worse than most television sit-<lb/>
coms. Everything is so<lb/>
outrageously overdone that a new<lb/>
definition for the word<lb/>
"excessive" comes to mind. The<lb/>
soundtrack is great though, main-<lb/>
ly soul and funk, and James<lb/>
Brown does a cameo; but the few<lb/>
laughs that the movie happens<lb/>
upon are, like pain, quickly<lb/>
forgotten.<lb/>
jB<lb/>
THIS MOVIE<lb/>
IS TOTALLY<lb/>
OUT OF<lb/>
CONTROL<lb/>
This week at Hendrix Theatre: Tonight at 8, the zany<lb/>
'Kentucky Fried Movie Monday at 9, it's 'Alien<lb/>
NED TOPHAM PR! SI rs A KENTUCKY HBED rHtATTU PKKTI M<lb/>
"THf KENTUCKYFMEDNOME-<lb/>
?V ftmAi tLAW ROFF? 1 ? pv ? - ?? i ,i  <lb/>
Stiver-by JEfVtYZUCKER AMESABRAHAMS HA MR<lb/>
Produced h R BERT - MA !ss . ntvcted K k i LAN) s<lb/>
Rt i ! As ; ? iv? UNITED FB M ! H- fRJBl FTION I MP V- 11<lb/>
f vi F8 Ms W "?<lb/>
Films Incorporated<lb/>
-?f?-<lb/>
Antiques Draw<lb/>
Nostalgia Buffs<lb/>
Continued From p.6<lb/>
teenager. She gets re-<lb/>
quests to entertain at<lb/>
community functions<lb/>
to share her music and<lb/>
her joy of living.<lb/>
Retired from the<lb/>
antique business as of<lb/>
Jan. 1, Mrs. Tyson is<lb/>
looking forward to a<lb/>
cruise to Alaska in<lb/>
August, a visit to one<lb/>
of three states she<lb/>
hasn't yet seen.<lb/>
Antiques are her<lb/>
life, she says. They<lb/>
have taken her about<lb/>
the world and into the<lb/>
hearts of many peo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
Antique treasures<lb/>
are often faded or<lb/>
discolored. The<lb/>
materials are fragile<lb/>
from age, but they are<lb/>
no less beautiful.<lb/>
They invite us to visit<lb/>
places and times of no<lb/>
return.<lb/>
?<lb/>
HARD DAYS NIGHT<lb/>
(NO OhlE UNDERSTANDS My<lb/>
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The very best in solid gold Rock and Roll<lb/>
with WITN's Greg Allison<lb/>
We're taking you Back in Time For the Time of Your Life'<lb/>
TIME IS RUNNING OUT<lb/>
The Opry House is going private soon!<lb/>
Special 12 price membership! $5.00<lb/>
Mail for applications: COH<lb/>
P.O. Box 3016<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
AT BARRE,ltd<lb/>
Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057559_0008"/><lb/>
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1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 8, 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirate Freshman Ready For Festival<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports ??ior<lb/>
When fc?U sophomore Sylvia<lb/>
Bragg participates in the National<lb/>
Sports Festival later this month,<lb/>
she will become the second lady<lb/>
Pirate coached by Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
to attend the games.<lb/>
Former basketball center<lb/>
Darlene Chaney played on the<lb/>
southeast squad last year.<lb/>
According to Andruzzi, the<lb/>
festival gives athletes a chance to<lb/>
see how high the caliber of com-<lb/>
petition is across the country. "I<lb/>
think that any time an athlete gets<lb/>
an opportunity to go up against<lb/>
the finest ball players in the na-<lb/>
tion, they're very lucky An-<lb/>
druzzi said. "They can see how<lb/>
far they can go<lb/>
After competing against 200<lb/>
girls for a position on the<lb/>
southeast team, Bragg has already<lb/>
seen a portion of what she can do.<lb/>
But that's not quite enough. "I've<lb/>
become more confident jn myself<lb/>
and what I'm capable of doing<lb/>
Bragg said. "It's just a matter of<lb/>
going out and doing it<lb/>
Andruzzi will be practicing with<lb/>
Bragg until she leaves for Col-<lb/>
orado Springs in hopes of prepar-<lb/>
ing her for what lies ahead. "The<lb/>
festival is a great, prestigious<lb/>
event Andruzzi said. "It gives<lb/>
you goosebumps because that's<lb/>
what athletics is all about. Sylvia<lb/>
didn't make it last year, but now<lb/>
it's time for her to go out there<lb/>
and do her thing<lb/>
Andruzzi is mostly drilling<lb/>
Bragg on individual offensive<lb/>
moves, basic man-to-man defen-<lb/>
se and outside shooting.<lb/>
"There's such a high altitude<lb/>
there, and that may have an effect<lb/>
on Syl Andruzzi said, "but I've<lb/>
been real pleased with her perfor-<lb/>
mance and her personal growth<lb/>
This past season, the freshman<lb/>
earned a starting position on an<lb/>
injury-riddled team. By the year's<lb/>
end, Bragg was averaging 9.8<lb/>
points per game and 3.8 rebounds<lb/>
per contest. Against Boston Col-<lb/>
lege, the former Converse ail-<lb/>
American popped in a career-high<lb/>
23 points.<lb/>
During her high school days in<lb/>
Richmond, Va Bragg led her<lb/>
team to a 54-4 record in three var-<lb/>
sity seasons, including a 21-1<lb/>
finish and regional and district<lb/>
titles her senior year.<lb/>
But a great deal has changed<lb/>
since Bragg first arrived at ECU.<lb/>
She got a quick lesson in the fund-<lb/>
mentals of college basketball.<lb/>
"It's (college basketball) a lot dif-<lb/>
ferent from high school Bragg<lb/>
said. "There's a lot of hustle. You<lb/>
always have to be aware on the<lb/>
court. You cant let up at all.<lb/>
Coach helped me a lot. She told<lb/>
me you can't act as a freshman.<lb/>
This past year taught me so<lb/>
much<lb/>
Andruzzi describes Bragg as a<lb/>
hard worker and a player whose<lb/>
main goal is to keep improving.<lb/>
"I hope Sylvia enjoys the ex-<lb/>
perience and appreciates the op-<lb/>
portunity, Andruzzi said. "We<lb/>
just want her to do the best job<lb/>
she can.<lb/>
"We'd like all our girls to be<lb/>
the best they can be ? not<lb/>
mediocre<lb/>
Noah Captures French Title<lb/>
TENNIS: Yannick Noah<lb/>
became the first Frenchman in<lb/>
37 years to win the French Open<lb/>
tennis championship Sunday<lb/>
with a 6-2, 7-5, 7 6 victory over<lb/>
defending champion Mats<lb/>
Wilander.<lb/>
Noah, displaying a serve-and-<lb/>
volley attack, collected $90,000<lb/>
in the world's premier clay court<lb/>
championship.<lb/>
The title match was played in<lb/>
front of 16,000 partisan fans at<lb/>
Paris' Roland Garros Stadium<lb/>
and marked the first time in five<lb/>
years that the men's title went to<lb/>
someone other than a Swede.<lb/>
In the women's final, Chris<lb/>
Evert Lloyd needed only 66<lb/>
minutes to defeat Mima<lb/>
Jausovec of Yugoslavia 6-1, 6-2<lb/>
?a capture her record-tying fifth<lb/>
French Open crown.<lb/>
Evert shares the mark with<lb/>
Australian Margaret Court, who<lb/>
last won in Paris in 1973. The<lb/>
victory earned Evert $70,000 and<lb/>
added to her previous titles in<lb/>
1974, 1975, 1979 and 1980.<lb/>
BASEBALL: Rod Carew of<lb/>
the California Angels was nam-<lb/>
ed American League Player of<lb/>
the Month for May, and the San<lb/>
Fransisco Giants' Darrell Evans<lb/>
was given the award in the Na-<lb/>
tional League.<lb/>
Sports Update<lb/>
Carew batted .438 during<lb/>
May, including six doubles, one<lb/>
triple and nine RBI. Evans hit<lb/>
.423 with 41 hits, nine home runs<lb/>
and 23 RBI.<lb/>
Dave Stieb of the Toronto<lb/>
Blue Jays and Bill i as key of the<lb/>
San Fransisco Giants were nam-<lb/>
ed Pitchers of the Month in the<lb/>
American and National League,<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Stieb won five games in May,<lb/>
making him the majors' winn-<lb/>
ingest pitcher with eight vic-<lb/>
tories. Laskey won six games<lb/>
while allowing only 13 earned<lb/>
runs and 32 hits in 41 innings.<lb/>
BOXING: Marvis Frazier,<lb/>
22-year old son of former<lb/>
heavyweight boxing champ Joe<lb/>
Frazier, followed in his father's<lb/>
footsteps Saturday by scoring a<lb/>
unanimous decision over Joe<lb/>
Bugner in a 10-round<lb/>
heavyweight bout.<lb/>
Bugner, a 33-year old<lb/>
Englishman, lost a 12-round<lb/>
non-title fight to the elder<lb/>
Frazier in London in 1973.<lb/>
GOLF: Fred Couples won his<lb/>
first PGA Tour event Sunday as<lb/>
he defeated four other golfers in<lb/>
a five-way playoff in the<lb/>
$400,000 Kemper Open in<lb/>
Bethesda, Md.<lb/>
Couples, Scott Simpson, Gil<lb/>
Morgan, Barry Jaeckel and T.C.<lb/>
Chen of Taiwan all finished tied<lb/>
at one-under-par 287 after 72<lb/>
holes of regulation.<lb/>
On the second playoff hole,<lb/>
Couples fired a five-iron to<lb/>
within two feet of the cup and<lb/>
tapped-in for the decisive birdie.<lb/>
For the victory, Couple took<lb/>
home $72,000.<lb/>
BASKETBALL: Each<lb/>
member of the Philadelphia<lb/>
76crs will receive at least $26,000<lb/>
from a record $422,500 pot for<lb/>
winning the NBA championship<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
The pot includes $100,000 for<lb/>
the best regular-season record,<lb/>
$42,500 for beating the New<lb/>
York Knicks, $50,000. for<lb/>
beating the Milwaukee Bucks,<lb/>
and $230,000 for defeating the<lb/>
Los Angeles Lakers in the cham-<lb/>
pionship series.<lb/>
Sophomore Sylvia Bragg will take her first-year college experience to<lb/>
Colorado Springs this month to compete in the National Sports<lb/>
Festival.<lb/>
Bishops Eliminated<lb/>
eruvian Olympic Performer Heads<lb/>
List Of Finest Incoming Swimmers Ever<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU head swim coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe closed out his recruiting ef-<lb/>
forts this week, and called his in-<lb/>
coming class, "the finest crop of<lb/>
swimmers to ever come to ECU<lb/>
"We're very, very pleased with<lb/>
our recruiting he said, "and we<lb/>
filled all the spots where we had<lb/>
some problems last year. I don't<lb/>
see any weaknesses on the men's<lb/>
or women's team for the upcom-<lb/>
ing season<lb/>
Foremost among the recruits is<lb/>
Chema Larranaga from Lima,<lb/>
Peru. Larranaga holds two Peru-<lb/>
vian national records and was a<lb/>
participant in the 1980 Olympics at<lb/>
Moscow.<lb/>
In 1982, he was junior college<lb/>
champion in the 500 and 1650<lb/>
freestyles, and was runner-up for<lb/>
swimmer of the year.<lb/>
Also joining the Pirates will be<lb/>
backstrokers Kevin Hidalgo from<lb/>
Chester, Va and Caycee Paust<lb/>
from Richmond. Both hold times<lb/>
in their events that are better than<lb/>
the current ECU varsity records.<lb/>
Diver Lori Miller of Columbus,<lb/>
Pa will be a fine addition com-<lb/>
plimenting current men's diver<lb/>
Scott Eagle. Kobe describes each<lb/>
as having national potential.<lb/>
Among the 26 new recruits, 16<lb/>
men and 10 women, Kobe also<lb/>
managed to sign two YMCA Na-<lb/>
tional champions and a junior col-<lb/>
lege all-America.<lb/>
"I expect everybody to con-<lb/>
tribute immediately Kobe said.<lb/>
"Swimming is the type of sport<lb/>
where freshmen can step right in,<lb/>
and I feel about 75 percent of our<lb/>
new kids will score points for us in<lb/>
their first season<lb/>
Although the Pirates are going<lb/>
to be strong in every event, Kobe<lb/>
will look for the most out of his<lb/>
freestylers. "We're solid all the<lb/>
way from the 50 to the 1650 meter<lb/>
events he said.<lb/>
Stan Williams, who returns<lb/>
from a year's stay in Texas, and<lb/>
Steve Hallet, a transfer student<lb/>
from Tennessee that becomes<lb/>
eligible in December are two addi-<lb/>
tional swimmers that will join the<lb/>
freestyle corps in the fall.<lb/>
Kobe has high expectations for<lb/>
the 1983-84 season and has<lb/>
scheduled the toughest teams in<lb/>
the country to face his Pirates.<lb/>
The men will compete in 12 dual<lb/>
meets, and the women in 13. ECU<lb/>
will confront the likes of North<lb/>
Carolina, South Florida, John<lb/>
Hopkins and South Carolina.<lb/>
The Pirates begin practice 10<lb/>
days aftef class begins this fall in<lb/>
preparation for their November<lb/>
18 meeting with N.C. State.<lb/>
MARIETTA, Ohio (AP) ?<lb/>
North Carolina Wesleyan, top-<lb/>
ranked in NCAA Division III<lb/>
baseball going into the World<lb/>
Series, lost two games Monday<lb/>
and was eliminated from the tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
The Bishops fell to Otterbein<lb/>
10-9 in the first game, then lost<lb/>
6-4 to host Marietta in the doubie-<lb/>
elimination tournament.<lb/>
Wesleyan finishes the season with<lb/>
a 38-7 record.<lb/>
John Mastel, hitless in four<lb/>
previous trips to the plate, won<lb/>
the opening game for Otterbein<lb/>
with a two-out two-run single<lb/>
through the middle in the bottom<lb/>
of the ninth.<lb/>
Wesleyan had taken a 7-2 lead,<lb/>
scoring five runs in the fourth on<lb/>
four hits, including doubles by<lb/>
Ronnie Shorter, Willie Arrington<lb/>
and Mike DeLeone, and an error.<lb/>
Otterbein pulled to within one<lb/>
in the fifth when Mike Blythe and<lb/>
Dave Whitehead hit back-to-back<lb/>
homers, and tied the score at 7-7<lb/>
in the seventh when Blythe doubl-<lb/>
ed off the wall and came home on<lb/>
Whitehead's single.<lb/>
Wesleyan went ahead 9-7 in the<lb/>
eighth when Charlie Simpson hit<lb/>
an 0-2 pitch from Kirk McDonald<lb/>
for a two-run homer.<lb/>
In the bottom of the ninth,<lb/>
Brett Brownfield blooped a single<lb/>
off Mike Siciliano and Blythe<lb/>
chased Siciliano with another<lb/>
single. Whitehead's fifth hit of the<lb/>
game, a grounder between the legs<lb/>
of pitcher Carl Payne, brought<lb/>
Brownfield home.<lb/>
Jim Hoyle reached first on a<lb/>
NL West Heats Up<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI) ? You'd<lb/>
think it was playoff time the way<lb/>
folks are carrying on about this<lb/>
week's three-game series between<lb/>
the Atlanta Braves and the Los<lb/>
Angeles Dodgers.<lb/>
The series began Tuesday and is<lb/>
the first of the year between the<lb/>
two clubs. The reason for all the<lb/>
excitement is that one-third<lb/>
through the season, the first-place<lb/>
Dodgers led the second-place<lb/>
Braves by only one and a half<lb/>
games with the rest of tne Na-<lb/>
tional League West far behind.<lb/>
The pressure for this one is on<lb/>
the Braves since they have to<lb/>
sweep the series to grab the lead.<lb/>
Two ouf of three would still leave<lb/>
them a half-game back. Lose all<lb/>
three and they would be hard<lb/>
pressed to get this close again<lb/>
before the All-Star break.<lb/>
The Braves are off to their best<lb/>
start in their 18 seasons in Atlanta<lb/>
? 34-18. That's three more vic-<lb/>
tories than they had through their<lb/>
first 52 games last year and at that<lb/>
time they were one and a half<lb/>
games ahead instead of one and a<lb/>
haii" behind.<lb/>
"We feel like we've been on a<lb/>
treadmill, said Braves manager<lb/>
Joe Torre. "Everytime we win,<lb/>
the Dodgers win. When they final-<lb/>
ly lose one every now and then, we<lb/>
fail to take advantage of it.<lb/>
"But now that we're finally go-<lb/>
ing head-to-head for the first time<lb/>
this season; maybe we can do<lb/>
something about it ourselves. We<lb/>
know the Dodgers are the team we<lb/>
have to beat to repeat as division<lb/>
champions. We've known that<lb/>
since before the season even<lb/>
began<lb/>
The Dodgers got off to a slow<lb/>
start last season but, at 35-16, are<lb/>
the hottest team in the major<lb/>
leagues this year. In addition to<lb/>
their usual fine pitching and ex-<lb/>
ceptional speed, they also have<lb/>
been getting the long ball from<lb/>
rookie Greg Brock and Pedro<lb/>
Guerrero, who have 11 home runs<lb/>
each. Although the Braves finish-<lb/>
ed a game ahead of the Dodgers in<lb/>
the National League West last<lb/>
year, the Dodgers, who trailed by<lb/>
10 in last July, won 11 of 18<lb/>
meetings with Atlanta.<lb/>
See DODGERS, Page 9<lb/>
TbJs Pirate swtaner Is only<lb/>
Kobe. Kobe described this year's recruiting<lb/>
Altogether, Kobe brought in 2<lb/>
1<lb/>
"the finest<lb/>
10 w<lb/>
of<lb/>
to Head coach Rick<lb/>
to ever cone to ECU<lb/>
fielder's choice and then a walk<lb/>
loaded the bases. After a fly to<lb/>
short left field for the second out.<lb/>
Mastel rapped his game-winrung<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
It was the seventh one-run game<lb/>
of the series, and the fifth decided<lb/>
in the ninth inning.<lb/>
Payne, losing pitcher in relief of<lb/>
tiie fusi game, started the second<lb/>
and again was tagged with the<lb/>
loss, only his third in 14 decisions<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
Marietta capitalized on a pair<lb/>
of errors and a passed ball to<lb/>
eliminate the Bishops.<lb/>
Wesleyan took a 1-0 lead in the<lb/>
first on Richard Mattocks' double<lb/>
and a single by .Arrington. But<lb/>
Marietta tied the score in the se-<lb/>
cond when Arrington dropped a<lb/>
fly ball with the bases loaded.<lb/>
The Pioneers never trailed after<lb/>
taking a 3-1 lead in the third on<lb/>
Mark Talarico's RBI double and a<lb/>
passed ball by DeLeone.<lb/>
Wesleyan threatened in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the ninth, scoring once on<lb/>
back-to-back doubles by Moochie<lb/>
Medley and Jim Provenzano. A<lb/>
single by Mattocks, who had<lb/>
homered earlier, left runners at<lb/>
first and third, but then Jim Ken-<lb/>
nedy got Arrington to pop a bunt<lb/>
to third, ending the game.<lb/>
Kennedy went the distance for<lb/>
Marietta, scattering eight hits and<lb/>
striking out nine.<lb/>
Wesleyan lost its second catcher<lb/>
of the series of the series in the<lb/>
first game when Toby Holliday<lb/>
suffered a fractured ankle while<lb/>
sliding into second base in the se-<lb/>
cond inning.<lb/>
Baird Names<lb/>
Third Signee<lb/>
Jimmy Riley of Chesapeake.<lb/>
Va. signed a basketball grant-in-<lb/>
aid to attend ECU, Pirate head<lb/>
coach Hal Baird announced last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Riley is the third player to sign<lb/>
with ECU this year. The Pirates<lb/>
have already signed pitcher Mike<lb/>
Christopher of Dinwiddie, Va.<lb/>
High School and second baseman<lb/>
Steve Sides of Goldsboro High.<lb/>
Recruit Update<lb/>
Three high school players who<lb/>
have committed to ECU will be in<lb/>
the lineup July 26 when the an-<lb/>
nual East-West North Carolina<lb/>
all-star game is played in the<lb/>
Greensboro Coliseum.<lb/>
6-5 Derrick Battle of Northern<lb/>
Nash and 6-9 Jack Turnbill of<lb/>
Wilmington New Hanover will be<lb/>
members of the East squad.<lb/>
6-7 Roy Smith of Gastonia<lb/>
Huss will be playing on the West<lb/>
team.<lb/>
These three players mark the<lb/>
largest contingent of future ECU<lb/>
players ever to play in the East-<lb/>
West contest.<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
MIL<lb/>
(UPI)<lb/>
Milwauk(<lb/>
exchangii<lb/>
ball for d<lb/>
day trad<lb/>
home rut<lb/>
man The<lb/>
Cleveland I<lb/>
center fil<lb/>
Manning<lb/>
hander<lb/>
The<lb/>
America)<lb/>
champior<lb/>
up rehei<lb/>
Easterly<lb/>
league pil<lb/>
Camachof<lb/>
Thomaj<lb/>
center<lb/>
D<lb/>
Coat'd<lb/>
Both<lb/>
Monday<lb/>
Torre feei<lb/>
the Bra'<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
"We<lb/>
rest, esj<lb/>
pitchers.<lb/>
"This w<lb/>
able tc<lb/>
hander-<lb/>
nights,<lb/>
game<lb/>
would<lb/>
our rotaul<lb/>
and we<lb/>
had to<lb/>
hander.<lb/>
prefer<lb/>
a g i a i n s<lb/>
Angeles<lb/>
Tone<lb/>
rest will<lb/>
his relief<lb/>
has won<lb/>
of late<lb/>
Braves<lb/>
oniy one I<lb/>
perform;<lb/>
starter i<lb/>
games<lb/>
"Th<lb/>
75,<lb/>
CO!<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? 24<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
COi<lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
24<lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
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?<lb/>
? 24<lb/>
? ?'<lb/>
 1 m<lb/>
- ? - ? ,j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057559_0009"/><lb/>
estival<lb/>
<lb/>
it<lb/>
ill take her first-year college experience to<lb/>
mpete in the National Sports<lb/>
Eliminated<lb/>
Jer - choice and then a walk<lb/>
ided the bases. After a fly to<lb/>
hort left field for the second out.<lb/>
M istel rapped his game-winning<lb/>
hit.<lb/>
It was the seventh one-run game<lb/>
' the Nenes. and the fifth decided<lb/>
in the ninth inning.<lb/>
Payne, losing pitcher in relief of<lb/>
the tirsi game. .lated the second<lb/>
tgain was tagged with the<lb/>
5S, onl) his third in 14 decisions<lb/>
Marietta capitalized on a pair<lb/>
? errors and a passed ball to<lb/>
eliminate the Bishops.<lb/>
esleyan took a 1-0 lead in the<lb/>
? on Richard Mattocks' double<lb/>
: a single b Arnngton. But<lb/>
Marietta tied the score in the se-<lb/>
J when Arnngton dropped a<lb/>
fly ball with the bases loaded.<lb/>
The Pioneers never trailed after<lb/>
taking a 3-1 lead in the third on<lb/>
Mark Talarico's RBI double and a<lb/>
parsed ball by DeLeone.<lb/>
 esleyan threatened in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the ninth, scoring once on<lb/>
k-to-back doubles by Moochie<lb/>
Medley and Mm Provenzano. A<lb/>
gle by Mattocks, who had<lb/>
mered earlier, left runners at<lb/>
first and third, but then Jim Ken-<lb/>
ned got Arrington to pop a bunt<lb/>
to third, ending the game.<lb/>
Kennedy went the distance for<lb/>
Marietta, scattering eight hits and<lb/>
striking out nine.<lb/>
V esleyan lost its second catcher<lb/>
of the series of the series in the<lb/>
game when Toby Holliday<lb/>
red a fractured ankle while<lb/>
ding into second base in the se-<lb/>
'd inning.<lb/>
ingle<lb/>
f the<lb/>
? Baird Names<lb/>
Third Signee<lb/>
Jimmy Riley of Chesapeake,<lb/>
Va. signed a basketball grant-in-<lb/>
aid to attend ECU, Pirate head<lb/>
coach Hal Baird announced last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Riley is the third player to sign<lb/>
with ECU this year. The Pirates<lb/>
have already signed pitcher Mike<lb/>
Christopher of Dinwiddie, Va.<lb/>
High School and second baseman<lb/>
0 Steve Sides of Goldsboro High.<lb/>
Recruit Update<lb/>
Three high school players who<lb/>
have committed to ECU will be in<lb/>
the lineup July 26 when the an-<lb/>
nual East-West North Carolina<lb/>
all-star game is played in the<lb/>
Greensboro Coliseum.<lb/>
6-5 Derrick Battle of Northern<lb/>
Nash and 6-9 Jack Turnbill of<lb/>
Wilmington New Hanover will be<lb/>
members of the East squad.<lb/>
6-7 Roy Smith of Gastonia<lb/>
Huss will be playing on the West<lb/>
team.<lb/>
These three players mark the<lb/>
largest contingent of future ECU<lb/>
players ever to play in the East-<lb/>
West contest.<lb/>
rh Rick<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
I<lb/>
Brewers Trade Thomas<lb/>
MILWAUKEE<lb/>
(UP1) ? The<lb/>
Milwaukee Brewers,<lb/>
exchanging the long<lb/>
ball for defense, Mon-<lb/>
day traded slumping<lb/>
home run king Gor-<lb/>
man Thomas to the<lb/>
Cleveland Indians for<lb/>
center fielder Rick<lb/>
Manning and left-<lb/>
hander Rick Waits.<lb/>
The defending<lb/>
American League<lb/>
champions also gave<lb/>
up reliever Jamie<lb/>
Easterly and minor<lb/>
league pitcher Ernie<lb/>
Camacho.<lb/>
Thomas, a 32-year<lb/>
center fielder<lb/>
hampered by injuries,<lb/>
has averaged 35 home<lb/>
runs and 98 RBI the<lb/>
past five seasons and<lb/>
Played a key role in<lb/>
the Brewers' pennant<lb/>
drive last year.<lb/>
"We're delighted to<lb/>
have Gorman<lb/>
Thomas said In-<lb/>
dians president Gabe<lb/>
Paul. "We hate to<lb/>
lose Rick Manning<lb/>
but our need for home<lb/>
run power dictated<lb/>
the move.<lb/>
"We've been sear-<lb/>
ching far and long for<lb/>
a power hitter and we<lb/>
think Gorman<lb/>
Thomas is one of the<lb/>
better ones in baseball<lb/>
today said Phil<lb/>
Seghi, Indians' vice<lb/>
president-general<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
The Brewers<lb/>
regular center fielder<lb/>
since 1978, Thomas<lb/>
has 202 career<lb/>
homers. He led the<lb/>
American League in<lb/>
homers in 1979 and<lb/>
shared the crown with<lb/>
Reggie Jackson last<lb/>
year with 39.<lb/>
The departure of<lb/>
Thomas may set off<lb/>
protest from<lb/>
Milwaukee fans, who<lb/>
have made the out-<lb/>
fielder a great favorite<lb/>
in recent years.<lb/>
But the injury-<lb/>
plagued Thomas is<lb/>
hitting .183 this<lb/>
season with only five<lb/>
home runs in 26<lb/>
games. He was tied<lb/>
for fourth place on<lb/>
the club in home runs<lb/>
and sixth in RBI with<lb/>
18.<lb/>
The Brewers an-<lb/>
nounced Sunday the<lb/>
recall of outfielder<lb/>
Mark Brouhard from<lb/>
Vancouver of the<lb/>
Pacific Coast League.<lb/>
Outfielder Bob Skube<lb/>
was sent down.<lb/>
Easterly, 30, is 0-1<lb/>
with one save and had<lb/>
a 3.86 ERA in 12<lb/>
games this year. He<lb/>
has a lifetime record<lb/>
of 11-26.<lb/>
Camacho, 27, was<lb/>
with the Brewers Tri-<lb/>
ple A team at Van-<lb/>
couver this year.<lb/>
The Brewers have<lb/>
been interested in<lb/>
Manning for some<lb/>
time. The fine-<lb/>
fielding 28-year old<lb/>
joined the Indians in<lb/>
1975 and has a major<lb/>
league average of<lb/>
.263, with 35 career<lb/>
home runs, 142 stolen<lb/>
bases and 326 RBI.<lb/>
Dodgers, Braves To Square Off<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 8<lb/>
Both teams had<lb/>
Monday off and<lb/>
Torre feels that was to<lb/>
the Braves' advan-<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
"We needed the<lb/>
rest, especially for our<lb/>
pitchers said Torre.<lb/>
"This way, we'll be<lb/>
able to start right<lb/>
handers all three<lb/>
nights. If we had a<lb/>
game Monday, it<lb/>
would have moved<lb/>
our rotation up a day,<lb/>
and we might have<lb/>
had to use a left-<lb/>
hander, which I'd<lb/>
prefer not to do<lb/>
agiainst Los<lb/>
Angeles<lb/>
Torre also feels the<lb/>
rest will be good for<lb/>
his relief staff, which<lb/>
has worked overtime<lb/>
of late since the<lb/>
Braves have gotten<lb/>
only one route-going<lb/>
performance from a<lb/>
starter in their last 34<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"That doesn't<lb/>
bother me as much as<lb/>
it seems to bother<lb/>
some people said<lb/>
Toire. "I'm a lot<lb/>
more concerned about<lb/>
how a game ends than<lb/>
how it starts. If our<lb/>
short relievers (who<lb/>
have a 6-2 won-lost<lb/>
record and 19 of<lb/>
Atlanta's 20 saves)<lb/>
keep getting the job<lb/>
done, that's all that<lb/>
counts<lb/>
Torre plans to start<lb/>
Rick Camp (5-4)<lb/>
against Fernando<lb/>
Venezuela (6-2)<lb/>
tonight and his rookie<lb/>
Craig McMurtry (7-2)<lb/>
against Burt Hooton<lb/>
(4-2) Thursday.<lb/>
Torre feels Atlan-<lb/>
ta's bats are ready to<lb/>
test that Dodger pit-<lb/>
ching. With four<lb/>
regulars at .300 or<lb/>
better, the Braves<lb/>
have a team batting<lb/>
average of .278, with<lb/>
Dale Murphy leading<lb/>
the league in home<lb/>
runs (13), runs baited<lb/>
in (43) and runs<lb/>
scored (50).<lb/>
"This is a series<lb/>
that everybody has<lb/>
been waiting for<lb/>
players and fans<lb/>
alike said Torre. "I<lb/>
don't know how the<lb/>
Dodgers feel about it,<lb/>
but we're really look-<lb/>
ing forward to it.<lb/>
"They tell us we're<lb/>
going to have more<lb/>
than 40,000 on hand<lb/>
each the three nights<lb/>
and that's great by<lb/>
us Torre said. "Our<lb/>
players play with a lot<lb/>
of animation. They<lb/>
like to play in front of<lb/>
big crowds<lb/>
Some would have<lb/>
you think there was<lb/>
bad blood between<lb/>
the Braves and<lb/>
Dodgers because of<lb/>
some of the comments<lb/>
that have been made<lb/>
in the past, especially<lb/>
by Dodger manager<lb/>
Tom Lasorda.<lb/>
"I don't think that<lb/>
is true at all said<lb/>
Murphy, who is runn-<lb/>
ing slightly behind last<lb/>
year's pace when he<lb/>
was named Most<lb/>
Valuable Player in the<lb/>
National League.<lb/>
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JUNE 8. 1983<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
Sneaker<lb/>
Sam Sez<lb/>
Doublcheader Action<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
Co-Rec softball<lb/>
winds up Wednesday<lb/>
with a doubleheader.<lb/>
Nancy's Favorites<lb/>
have been a strong<lb/>
contender thus far,<lb/>
beating their op-<lb/>
ponents by an average<lb/>
of 10 points per game.<lb/>
The second game<lb/>
Wednesday will be for<lb/>
the championship.<lb/>
Action begins at 5:00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Tennis Tourney<lb/>
Tennis singles tour-<lb/>
nament is underway<lb/>
as five participants<lb/>
are vying for the title.<lb/>
Mike Wynn and<lb/>
William Shipley are<lb/>
favored in this single<lb/>
elimination action as<lb/>
both sport undefeated<lb/>
records.<lb/>
Seeing Red<lb/>
Red Pin Bowling<lb/>
registration is now<lb/>
through June 14. This<lb/>
is an individual event<lb/>
scheduled to take<lb/>
place at MSC Bowling<lb/>
Alley Wednesday,<lb/>
June 15 from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
stop by Memorial<lb/>
Gym Room 204.<lb/>
Athletes Join<lb/>
Conference<lb/>
Two members of<lb/>
the ECU football<lb/>
team will work as<lb/>
huddle leaders during<lb/>
next week's national<lb/>
Fellowship of Chris-<lb/>
tian Athletes Con-<lb/>
ference in Black<lb/>
Mountain.<lb/>
Kevin Samuel, a<lb/>
snapper from Fayet-<lb/>
teville, and Jeff Pat-<lb/>
ton, a defensive end<lb/>
from Selma, will each<lb/>
head up a group of<lb/>
approximately 14 high<lb/>
school boys for a<lb/>
week-long con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
"Kevin and Jeff<lb/>
have been very active<lb/>
in our local FCA<lb/>
chapter explained<lb/>
assistant coach Bob<lb/>
Sanders, local advisor<lb/>
for the FCA "And<lb/>
this is a fine honor to<lb/>
be selected to be a<lb/>
huddle leader.<lb/>
"The conference is<lb/>
to work with the high<lb/>
school boys in a<lb/>
recreational setting,<lb/>
but with spiritual em-<lb/>
phasis being placed on<lb/>
the week's activities<lb/>
Sanders, and<lb/>
associate head coach<lb/>
Art Baker, are both<lb/>
expected to attend<lb/>
some sessions of next<lb/>
week's conference, as<lb/>
well as a conference<lb/>
the following week.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
BEACH COTTAGE FOR RENT<lb/>
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MATURE GAY WHITE MAN.<lb/>
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Chat, P.O. Box 4273 Greenville,<lb/>
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Trend<lb/>
Detergent <lb/>
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