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<pb facs="00057562_0001"/>
&amp;hz iEast Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.57 No.ftf A<lb/>
Wednesday June 29,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Professor Emeritus<lb/>
Henderson Receives His Due<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
By MELANIE ROGERS<lb/>
Surf Writer<lb/>
E. L. Henderson, 98, is an im-<lb/>
maculately dressed, articulate,<lb/>
educated man. These facts are not<lb/>
too surprising since he received his<lb/>
doctorate from Columbia Univer-<lb/>
sity. Wednesday, the rank of pro-<lb/>
fessor emeritus was bestowed<lb/>
upon him by university officials<lb/>
for his "significant and endur-<lb/>
ing" contributions to ECU.<lb/>
Charles Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education and neighbor<lb/>
of Henderson's, initiated the pro-<lb/>
cess to have the honor given to<lb/>
him after learning of Henderson's<lb/>
background.<lb/>
Henderson came to what was<lb/>
then the East Carolina Teacher's<lb/>
College in 1923. He retired in 1944<lb/>
after holding such positions as<lb/>
director of student teaching,<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Administration and Supervision,<lb/>
and finally in 1939, chairman of<lb/>
the graduate committee.<lb/>
With his help, the graduate pro-<lb/>
gram at ECU was one of only six<lb/>
accredited in the state.<lb/>
For all of his work at the<lb/>
university, Henderson was<lb/>
dismissed for disloyalty 13 days<lb/>
before he became eligible for<lb/>
retirement by university President<lb/>
Leon R. Meadows. Meadows was<lb/>
later convicted and imprisoned<lb/>
for three years for misuse of<lb/>
funds.<lb/>
When I talked with him Mon-<lb/>
day, Henderson described<lb/>
Meadows as a good friend.<lb/>
"When he was sick, I visited him<lb/>
up to four times a day. We went<lb/>
bird hunting together, and even<lb/>
attended a year at Columbia<lb/>
University together<lb/>
Henderson, while reminiscing<lb/>
about Meadows, recalled an inci-<lb/>
dent when he helped avert a plan-<lb/>
ned student strike. He told the<lb/>
student who came to him that in-<lb/>
stead of going on strike he should<lb/>
form a committee and talk to<lb/>
Meadows. "The students formed<lb/>
a committee Henderson quip-<lb/>
ped, "and I was fired for disloyal-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
After Meadows' conviction,<lb/>
Henderson's retirement benefits<lb/>
were restored. Although he lives<lb/>
less than a block from ECU, he<lb/>
has only been on campus twice<lb/>
since his retirement: once for a<lb/>
reunion of a class he was especial-<lb/>
ly close to, and once for a lun-<lb/>
cheon. Although he said being<lb/>
given the rank of professor<lb/>
emeritus was the "biggest surprise<lb/>
of my life he still doesn't want<lb/>
to be involved with the university.<lb/>
Henderson said he was never<lb/>
reinstated after the disloyalty inci-<lb/>
dent and only received his retire-<lb/>
ment benefits because of legisla-<lb/>
tion passed prior to the incident<lb/>
and not because of university of-<lb/>
ficials. "As far as I'm concerned,<lb/>
they wanted me out and never<lb/>
asked me back. According to<lb/>
them, I'm still out Henderson<lb/>
said, adding that he considers the<lb/>
conferral of professor emeritus a<lb/>
partial reinstatement.<lb/>
Henderson came to ECTC in<lb/>
1923, when the university was 16<lb/>
years old. Henderson's amazing<lb/>
memory for detail was evident as<lb/>
he described the campus as it was<lb/>
in 1923 � Austin was the main<lb/>
classroom building, Wright was<lb/>
under construction, and there was<lb/>
a science building across from<lb/>
Wright.<lb/>
Jarvis was the only dorm,<lb/>
Henderson remembered, although<lb/>
Cotton Hall was under construc-<lb/>
tion. There was a dining hall and a<lb/>
post office east of where the infir-<lb/>
mary is today. According to<lb/>
Henderson, it was difficult to find<lb/>
places to live in Greenville, so<lb/>
there were four houses on campus<lb/>
for the faculty. There were no<lb/>
0 �<lb/>
� �<lb/>
I � �<lb/>
� �<lb/>
� � V<lb/>
� �<lb/>
hi <lb/>
Pftoto Ceurtny ei ECU NEWS BUREAU<lb/>
Dr. E. L. Henderson received the rank of professor emeritus from Chancellor John M. Howell last<lb/>
Wednesday. Henderson, 98, is the oldest living former faculty member.<lb/>
paved roads on campus and only a<lb/>
few sidewalks.<lb/>
There was no library when<lb/>
Henderson first came to ECU, but<lb/>
later the first library opened in the<lb/>
basement of the Austin building.<lb/>
The first year he taught the cost of<lb/>
tuition, room, board, infirmary<lb/>
fee, laundary and books was only<lb/>
$60 a Quarter.<lb/>
When I met Dr. Henderson, he<lb/>
told me he was "blind, deaf and<lb/>
about half dumb He has an<lb/>
amazing memory and still keeps<lb/>
up with current events. A former<lb/>
avid reader, visual impairments<lb/>
have prevented him from reading<lb/>
for the past 15 years, so his sole<lb/>
source of information is the radio.<lb/>
He is very knowledgeable of<lb/>
government and told me that<lb/>
"there has been very few change<lb/>
in the last 30 years but he<lb/>
predicts great changes as the<lb/>
"government moves toward<lb/>
socialism He foresees the<lb/>
"government taking over<lb/>
everything His biggest concern<lb/>
is the lack of public interest and<lb/>
knowledge of government.<lb/>
Henderson lives on Fifth Street<lb/>
with his wife of 63 vears.<lb/>
Hopeful<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Assistant NWN dilr<lb/>
Recent speculation that civil<lb/>
rights leader the Rev. Jesse<lb/>
Jackson might seek the 1984<lb/>
Democratic presidential nomina-<lb/>
tion is being greeted by mixed<lb/>
reactions from black and white<lb/>
leaders at the national level. Some<lb/>
leaders suggest the time is right<lb/>
for a black candidate to break the<lb/>
color barrier, while others are re-<lb/>
maining cautious, fearing that<lb/>
Jackson or any black candidate<lb/>
might split the Democratic party<lb/>
and pave the way to victory for a<lb/>
more conservative white can-<lb/>
didate.<lb/>
For many, the 1972 candidacy<lb/>
of congresswomen Shirley<lb/>
Chisholm is still remembered.<lb/>
Chisholm split the black vote with<lb/>
Terry Sanford in the North<lb/>
Carolina Democratic primary.<lb/>
Sanford, a liberal, lost, and<lb/>
George Wallace won in the five<lb/>
candidate field.<lb/>
Among black ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff members there is similar<lb/>
mixed feeling regarding the<lb/>
possibility of a black presidential<lb/>
candidate in 1984.<lb/>
Jasper C. Register, assistant<lb/>
sociology professor, said that<lb/>
coalition building among<lb/>
minorities was an essential first<lb/>
step before the mood would be<lb/>
right for a viable black candidate.<lb/>
"It's a little too early to be en-<lb/>
dorsing a particular black to run<lb/>
for president Register said.<lb/>
"Realistically, I don't think a<lb/>
black would have a chance of get-<lb/>
ting the nomination<lb/>
"I don't think the general<lb/>
population is ready to accept a<lb/>
black candidate. I would hope<lb/>
that they would be, but being<lb/>
realistic, I don't think they are<lb/>
said accounting instructor Delano<lb/>
H. Berry.<lb/>
Berry said the emergence of a<lb/>
black presidential candidate could<lb/>
cause problems for the national<lb/>
political parties � particularly the<lb/>
Democrats. Berry hopes the<lb/>
presence of a potential candidate,<lb/>
such as Jackson, will convince the<lb/>
Democrats of the need to address<lb/>
issues of concern to black<lb/>
Americans. "They (Democrats)<lb/>
have to become more in tune to<lb/>
the concerns of the black<lb/>
populace Berry said. "If they<lb/>
don't, the emergence of a black<lb/>
candidate will take away a strong<lb/>
voting block that traditionally has<lb/>
gone Democratic<lb/>
Berry feels there is also a<lb/>
possibility of a black presidential<lb/>
candidate running on an indepen-<lb/>
dent ticket, an action he claims<lb/>
could cause the Democrats to lose<lb/>
the election in 1984. Register sees<lb/>
such a move as being dangerous<lb/>
for blacks. He said he would not<lb/>
support a black candidate running<lb/>
on a third-party platform.<lb/>
Donald E. Ensley, an associate<lb/>
professor of community health,<lb/>
said strong voter registration<lb/>
drives are necessary before a black<lb/>
candidate can be elected to office.<lb/>
"Jesse Jackson's efforts are<lb/>
good in creating motivation to get<lb/>
more blacks registered to vote<lb/>
Ensley said. "But, I think the tim-<lb/>
ing for Jesse Jackson or any other<lb/>
black isn't quite right. There's<lb/>
just too many things that aren't in<lb/>
place yet<lb/>
"There is a feeling from blacks<lb/>
that there is a need for change<lb/>
said librarian Mary P. Williams.<lb/>
"I think the timing is right not on-<lb/>
ly for a black candidate, but<lb/>
another women candidate as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Williams praised Jackson's cur-<lb/>
rent efforts to get more blacks to<lb/>
register. "I'm feeling positive<lb/>
about the effort he's making to<lb/>
get more blacks on the books<lb/>
Williams said, adding that she had<lb/>
been hearing more talk among her<lb/>
friends about the importance of<lb/>
registering and votinR.<lb/>
Williams feels the present ad-<lb/>
ministration has not been recep-<lb/>
tive to the needs of black people.<lb/>
"Whether or not Jackson runs<lb/>
isn't the issue Williams claims.<lb/>
"Whatever he chooses to do, it<lb/>
will still get the message across to<lb/>
the nation that blacks want<lb/>
representation<lb/>
Ensley sees Jackson's efforts as<lb/>
a means of creating a "positive<lb/>
consciousness" that will get black<lb/>
voters to become more aware of<lb/>
the need to support candidates<lb/>
sensitive to the needs of black<lb/>
people. "I think there are<lb/>
segments of the white population<lb/>
that are somewhat ready (to sup-<lb/>
port a black candidate), but I<lb/>
think overall white America is not<lb/>
ready Ensley said.<lb/>
Ensley pointed out that<lb/>
Jackson's effectiveness with Con-<lb/>
gress could be hurt by the poor<lb/>
representation of blacks in the<lb/>
House and Senate.<lb/>
Register sees the presence of a<lb/>
black candidate as being helpful<lb/>
in encouraging more blacks to<lb/>
register. He also feels it will in-<lb/>
crease the influence of blacks at<lb/>
national conventions.<lb/>
Berry said that depending on<lb/>
who the choices are, he would not<lb/>
rule out the possibility of voting<lb/>
Group Against Food Tax Lobbies<lb/>
General Assembly On New Tax Bill<lb/>
�AY FATTMSOM - 1CU<lb/>
Watermelon Feast<lb/>
This student enjoys a nice, cool piece of watermelon Monday at the<lb/>
Watermelon Feast sponsored by Mendeuhal! Student Center's Stu-<lb/>
dent Union.<lb/>
A student who spends $25 per<lb/>
week on food is at present paying<lb/>
an additional $48 per year in sales<lb/>
tax on these purchases. Because<lb/>
North Carolina is among the few<lb/>
states which tax food purchases,<lb/>
consumers must pay a 4 percent<lb/>
tax on food purchases. A bill now<lb/>
before the state Senate would<lb/>
raise the tax to 414 percent.<lb/>
The bill, which passed the N.C.<lb/>
House on Friday, allows counties<lb/>
to raise the local sales tax by Vi<lb/>
cent. Food is also considered a<lb/>
taxable item under the new bill.<lb/>
The measure has been met with<lb/>
strong criticism from food-tax<lb/>
abolitionists across the state.<lb/>
"The tax on food is a heavier<lb/>
burden on those of lower and<lb/>
moderate incomes said H.<lb/>
Edger Pray, a member of the<lb/>
Board of Directors of the N.C.<lb/>
Consumers Council. The council<lb/>
is an arm of the National Federa-<lb/>
tion of Consumers, a non-profit,<lb/>
consumer action group. Pray said<lb/>
the consumers council made the<lb/>
abolition of the food tax it's<lb/>
number one priority for 1983.<lb/>
Groups such as the Consumers<lb/>
Council and the North Carolina<lb/>
Council of Churches point out<lb/>
that the food tax as well as all<lb/>
sales taxes are regressive, which<lb/>
means they levy the same burden<lb/>
on all citizens regardless of their<lb/>
income.<lb/>
Pray explained that a family<lb/>
spending $75 per week on grocery<lb/>
bills will end up paying $156 per<lb/>
year in tood taxes. The new bill, if<lb/>
approved, would raise the total to<lb/>
$176 a year.<lb/>
"It penalizes people who are<lb/>
least able to pay taxes said ECU<lb/>
community health professor<lb/>
William C. Byrd III. "It's one of<lb/>
those kinds of taxes that is grossly<lb/>
unfair<lb/>
Byrd, who is also president of<lb/>
the Greenville-Pitt County<lb/>
Chapter of the North Carolina<lb/>
Civil Liberties Union, said the<lb/>
food tax is especially burdensome<lb/>
for students and people in lower-<lb/>
income brackets.<lb/>
"Many students are already<lb/>
badly strapped. It's very difficult<lb/>
for many of them to make it<lb/>
Byrd said. "Increasing numbers<lb/>
of students seem to be working in-<lb/>
creasing numbers of hours. It's as<lb/>
if they're becoming part-time<lb/>
students and full-time workers. A<lb/>
tax like the food tax is for them<lb/>
very unfortunate and unfair, like<lb/>
See, FOOD, Page 5<lb/>
for Jackson in the primary.<lb/>
Williams said that because<lb/>
Jackson is well known, he will be<lb/>
able to have alot of influence on<lb/>
blacks and the political system.<lb/>
"Whatever his intentions are, 1<lb/>
think the results will be positive<lb/>
Williams said.<lb/>
Black Leader<lb/>
Speaks About<lb/>
1984 Election<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
"I'd like to see a black person<lb/>
seeking office said D.D. Gar-<lb/>
rett, president of the Pitt County<lb/>
chapter of the NAACP, in<lb/>
reference to a question on the<lb/>
1984 presidential election. "1<lb/>
reckon (the Rev. Jesse) Jackson<lb/>
would be as good a candidate as<lb/>
we could locate<lb/>
Garrett said he has no qualms<lb/>
with a Jackson candidacy, but he<lb/>
knows the road to the presidency<lb/>
for Jackson would be an "up-hill<lb/>
battle. Not because he's not<lb/>
qualified; 1 don't think the mood<lb/>
of the country would be receptive<lb/>
to a black president<lb/>
Garrett said a black candidate<lb/>
must first be accepted by the<lb/>
whole country before he has a<lb/>
chance of winning. Two or three<lb/>
black candidates might need to<lb/>
run in upcoming elections to<lb/>
achieve acceptance, Garrett add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Garrett sees no immediate<lb/>
dangers if Jackson decides to run<lb/>
in 1984. "I don't think he'll do<lb/>
any harm Garrett said.<lb/>
Ricky Seabolt Finally Comes Home<lb/>
Ricky Seabolt was released<lb/>
from Charlotte Rehabilitation<lb/>
Hospital June 10 after spending<lb/>
more than three months in three<lb/>
different hospitals recovering<lb/>
from injuries he received in the<lb/>
March 2 Village Green apartment<lb/>
explosion.<lb/>
Seabolt was critically injured in<lb/>
the explosion that took the life of<lb/>
one ECU student and injured 12<lb/>
others. ECU student David Mar-<lb/>
tin, a friend of Seabolt's, was loll-<lb/>
ed in the explosion. Seabolt suf-<lb/>
fered severe head and liver in-<lb/>
juries.<lb/>
"I'm getting more and more en-<lb/>
durance all the time Seabolt<lb/>
said in a Tuesday interview from<lb/>
his parents home in Durham.<lb/>
Seabolt is at present participating<lb/>
in six hours a week of out-patient<lb/>
therapy at Memorial Hospital in<lb/>
Chapel Hill. His treatment in-<lb/>
cludes work with occupational,<lb/>
physical and speech therapists. He<lb/>
is also taking part in a rigorous<lb/>
daily exercise program.<lb/>
"My recovery's going too<lb/>
slow Seabolt said in a reference<lb/>
to the partial paralysis he is still<lb/>
experiencing in his left side.<lb/>
But over the long run, Seabolt<lb/>
admits that he has seen a steady<lb/>
improvement in his motor skills.<lb/>
"I can almost swing a golf dub<lb/>
now, and 1 couldn't two or three<lb/>
weeks ago when I first got out of<lb/>
the hospital Seabolt said.<lb/>
Seabolt would have graduated<lb/>
this summer. Counting the 11<lb/>
hours of incompletes he has from<lb/>
the spring, Seabolt only needs 14<lb/>
hours to earn his degree in<lb/>
marketing. "I hope to come back<lb/>
to school next spring Seabolt<lb/>
said. "I'm ready to get finished<lb/>
up<lb/>
Both Seabolt and his mother<lb/>
Doris Seabolt thanked the friends<lb/>
and family members for their love<lb/>
and support. "His friends haven't<lb/>
forgotten him Mrs. Seabolt<lb/>
said. "They have stood by him<lb/>
faithfully. A major part of his<lb/>
rehabilitation has been his friends<lb/>
treating him like they always<lb/>
have<lb/>
"All my friends are keeping up<lb/>
with me Seabolt said. "I thank<lb/>
them all for their support<lb/>
Seabolt says he is planning to<lb/>
make a trip to Greenville soon to<lb/>
visit with the many people who<lb/>
have helped him through this ex-<lb/>
� "� �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057562_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 29. ISO<lb/>
-�fc-<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
STUDENTS MAKE<lb/>
A DIFFERENCE<lb/>
if you are a motivated in<lb/>
dividual who wishes to help seek<lb/>
solutions to consumer and en-<lb/>
vironmental problem through<lb/>
research and advocacy, then<lb/>
North Caroline Public Interest<lb/>
Research Group (NC PIRG) Is<lb/>
for 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. in ltd 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, making the student<lb/>
drafted 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 ot��r students<lb/>
concerned with these issues Por<lb/>
more details call Eliia Godwin<lb/>
at 7� 174i.<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyone interested in running<lb/>
souls office next semester con<lb/>
tact Barbara at 751 9550<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
CHRISTIAN<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Monday Nights Bible Study<lb/>
I 30 pm 10i Jarvis Dorm<lb/>
Prayer Group tor spiritual sup<lb/>
port and fellowship 10:15 pm<lb/>
every night 111 Fletcher. For<lb/>
more information contact: Todd<lb/>
10S Jarvis, Shelia 157 Jarvis and<lb/>
Scott ill Fletcher<lb/>
BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
Alpha Epsilon Delta (the pre<lb/>
medical honor society) an the<lb/>
ECU Biology Club will be spon<lb/>
soring a blood drive for the<lb/>
Americasn Red cross on Tues<lb/>
day, July 5. in the AAendenhall<lb/>
Student center from 10 to 4 p. m.<lb/>
Please come and donate blood!<lb/>
BIBLE STUDY AT ECU<lb/>
Inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship sponsors a bible<lb/>
study on Monday nights Come<lb/>
to lot Jarvis Hall at �:30 p.m. for<lb/>
a time of spiritual fellowship<lb/>
and fun Prayer is also offered<lb/>
every night at 111 Fletcher Halt<lb/>
at 10:15 p.m. Take a break from<lb/>
studying.<lb/>
WZMB PRESENTS<lb/>
WZMB presents classical<lb/>
music Saturday and Sunday,<lb/>
twelve noon to six p. m. Watch in<lb/>
the upcoming East Carolinians<lb/>
for weekly programs and tune In<lb/>
this weekend for 'A Touch Of<lb/>
Class<lb/>
WATERMELON<lb/>
FEASTS<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty, and<lb/>
staff art invited to eat cool<lb/>
delicious watermelons free! Th-<lb/>
ie Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a<lb/>
Watermelon Feast on the Mall<lb/>
on Monday, June 27th at 13:30 p<lb/>
m. Enjoy the delicious melons,<lb/>
the jeautiful weather, and the<lb/>
good company of your friends.<lb/>
The dates tor the summer<lb/>
Watermelon Feasts are as<lb/>
follows: All art on Mondays<lb/>
with the following dates June<lb/>
27, July it, July 11. July 25, Also<lb/>
all feasts art at 1230 p m on<lb/>
the mall.<lb/>
GREENVILLE PEACE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
One million dollars per minute<lb/>
i 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 night at 6:30 p.m. for a<lb/>
pot-luck dinner arK 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 751 406 or 752 5714.<lb/>
Peace.<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Want a central place for three<lb/>
lettert of reference from your<lb/>
professors If you are<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 193 84. you may<lb/>
pick up a packet and prepare it<lb/>
to return in August or<lb/>
September.<lb/>
MATH FOR PEOPLE<lb/>
Professor Lokenath Debnath<lb/>
will speak on 'Mathematics for<lb/>
Human Needs' Thursday even<lb/>
ing June 30th at 7.30 p. m. in the<lb/>
Austin Auditorium which hap<lb/>
pens to be Room 132 in Austin.<lb/>
His talk will last for about forty<lb/>
five minutes, after which he will<lb/>
open for questions and discus<lb/>
sion n 3 Debnath is Professor<lb/>
of Mathematics and Physics,<lb/>
and is the Managing editor of the<lb/>
International Journal of<lb/>
Mathematics and Mathematical<lb/>
Science as well as overseas<lb/>
editor of the Bulletin of the<lb/>
Calcutta Mathematical Society<lb/>
Students, Faculty and the public<lb/>
are Invited<lb/>
CATHOLICS<lb/>
Note. Sunday Mass in the<lb/>
Biology building has been<lb/>
cancelled for the summer<lb/>
Students art welcome to attend<lb/>
Mass at St. Peters and St<lb/>
Gabriel's Catholic Churches.<lb/>
Call 7511504 for Mass schedules<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
TRAVEL<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
Scuba Diving Travel Adven<lb/>
ture's Dive Coiumel, Mexico on<lb/>
the beautiful Yucatan peninsula<lb/>
Aug. 3, 1�3 to Aug 10, 1913<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/>
PROFESSIONAL<lb/>
BROADWAY<lb/>
MUSICALS<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre opens July 4th with<lb/>
'PIPPIN' . PIPPIN runs nightly<lb/>
until the 9th.Save 10.00 on ad<lb/>
mission by signing up to usher<lb/>
and you can see the spectacular<lb/>
show for free! Simply go by the<lb/>
Drama Dept. and sing up on the<lb/>
usher sheet. No experience Is<lb/>
needed. Hurry because only<lb/>
twelve ushers art needed for<lb/>
each performance. Don't miss<lb/>
out!III<lb/>
COUNSELORS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Male counselors needed tow<lb/>
ork in the Lutheran Camp in<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 29, 1983<lb/>
The Rosenberg Case Still Far From Settled<lb/>
By PATRICK<lb/>
O'NElll<lb/>
N�wt Editor<lb/>
June 19 marked the<lb/>
30th anniversary of<lb/>
one the most well-<lb/>
known executions in<lb/>
the nation's history.<lb/>
On that day in 1953,<lb/>
Julius and Ethel<lb/>
Rosenberg were elec-<lb/>
trocuted in New<lb/>
York's Sing Sing<lb/>
Prison after the being<lb/>
convicted of selling<lb/>
secrets on the atomic<lb/>
bomb to the Soviet<lb/>
Union.<lb/>
Pegged the "atomic<lb/>
spies the couple was<lb/>
tried for heading a<lb/>
band of spies who<lb/>
stole and passed<lb/>
secrets to the Soviets.<lb/>
At the time, their case<lb/>
drew world-wide<lb/>
public attention and,<lb/>
to this day, many peo-<lb/>
ple are still debating<lb/>
whether the couple ac-<lb/>
tually committed the<lb/>
crime. Some claim<lb/>
their case was a large-<lb/>
scale conspiracy<lb/>
designed to incite<lb/>
anti-communist senti-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The couple is<lb/>
perhaps best<lb/>
remembered for their<lb/>
stead-fast refusal to<lb/>
admit any guilt in the<lb/>
case. Even when of-<lb/>
fered the chance to<lb/>
avoid death only days<lb/>
before their execu-<lb/>
tion, the Rosenbergs<lb/>
refused the govern-<lb/>
ment's request that<lb/>
they admit their guilt.<lb/>
"History will<lb/>
record that we were<lb/>
victims of the most<lb/>
monstrous frame-up<lb/>
of our country the<lb/>
Rosenberg's wrote in<lb/>
their refusal to accept<lb/>
the offer of the<lb/>
government. "We die<lb/>
with honor and digni-<lb/>
ty � knowing we<lb/>
must be vindicated by<lb/>
history<lb/>
Today, there is a<lb/>
organization called<lb/>
the National Commit-<lb/>
tee to Reopen the<lb/>
Rosenberg Case.<lb/>
There is also an effort<lb/>
being coordinated by<lb/>
the two surviving sons<lb/>
of the Rosenbergs to<lb/>
vindicate their<lb/>
parents.<lb/>
On June 17 in<lb/>
Chapel Hill, a group<lb/>
believing the<lb/>
Rosenbergs were in-<lb/>
nocent gathered for a<lb/>
noon-time vigil at the<lb/>
Franklin Street Post<lb/>
Office. In the even-<lb/>
ing, the same group<lb/>
showed a 90-minute,<lb/>
1975 documentary<lb/>
film on the case. After<lb/>
the film, co-defendant<lb/>
in the case Morton<lb/>
Sobell spoke on the<lb/>
events surrounding<lb/>
the case. Sobell serv-<lb/>
ed I8V2 years of a<lb/>
30-year sentence for<lb/>
his role in the spy<lb/>
ring.<lb/>
"Ethel, Julius and<lb/>
myself were inno-<lb/>
cent Sobell said.<lb/>
"The government<lb/>
framed us, using per-<lb/>
jured, intimidation-<lb/>
induced testimony<lb/>
Sobell said the im-<lb/>
pact of the case<lb/>
strongly contributed<lb/>
to the lack of political<lb/>
dissent that lasted<lb/>
through the 50s.<lb/>
"There is a long list<lb/>
of abuses which lead<lb/>
to the conclusion that<lb/>
the Rosenbergs didn't<lb/>
get a fair trial said<lb/>
Rob Gelblum,<lb/>
organizer of the<lb/>
Chapel Hill events.<lb/>
"There was never<lb/>
much to connect them<lb/>
to the theft of anv<lb/>
kind of atomic<lb/>
secrets, and much has<lb/>
been pried loose<lb/>
under the Freedom of<lb/>
Information Act that<lb/>
tends to throw their<lb/>
conviction into even<lb/>
greater doubt<lb/>
Despite doubts in<lb/>
the case, the final fate<lb/>
of the Rosenbergs was<lb/>
sealed when President<lb/>
Dwight D.<lb/>
Eisenhower refused to<lb/>
commute their death<lb/>
sentences. The film<lb/>
also shows that some<lb/>
of the jurors in the<lb/>
case were still con-<lb/>
vinced of the<lb/>
Rosenbergs' guilt.<lb/>
In 1979, the<lb/>
Rosenbergs' sons,<lb/>
Michael and Robert<lb/>
Meeropol (their<lb/>
adopted parents'<lb/>
names), discovered a<lb/>
memo written by<lb/>
General Leslie Groves<lb/>
to the Atomic Energy<lb/>
Commission about<lb/>
the Rosenberg data<lb/>
being "of minor<lb/>
value adding, "I<lb/>
would never say that<lb/>
publicly<lb/>
The two men found<lb/>
the memo in a file<lb/>
about their parents<lb/>
case which they re-<lb/>
quested through the<lb/>
Freedom of Informa-<lb/>
tion Act.<lb/>
Sobel, who spoke<lb/>
to more than 100 peo-<lb/>
ple in Chapel Hill's<lb/>
Community Church,<lb/>
called the case a large-<lb/>
scale conspiracy. "It<lb/>
was a political trial<lb/>
whose idea was to sti-<lb/>
fle dissent here at<lb/>
home. It was a show<lb/>
trial put on for that<lb/>
expressed purpose<lb/>
and it succeeded<lb/>
Sobel said.<lb/>
Sobel said<lb/>
Watergate was a<lb/>
heavy factor in con-<lb/>
vincing Americans to<lb/>
question more closely<lb/>
the actions of govern-<lb/>
ment officials. "No<lb/>
defense was possi-<lb/>
ble Sobel said,<lb/>
referring to his case.<lb/>
"We couldn't have<lb/>
gotten a fair trial<lb/>
Sobel also made ap-<lb/>
pearences in several<lb/>
classrooms at UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. "I think<lb/>
there is enough<lb/>
evidence that<lb/>
reasonable people will<lb/>
conclude that we've<lb/>
been framed he<lb/>
said. The effort to<lb/>
reopen the Rosenberg<lb/>
case is focused on<lb/>
Judge Irving R. Kauf-<lb/>
man, the original<lb/>
judge in the trial.<lb/>
Kaufman recently<lb/>
retired. Members of<lb/>
the committee to<lb/>
reopen the case have<lb/>
asked Kaufman to<lb/>
state that he made an<lb/>
error in the case. The<lb/>
committee is also re-<lb/>
questing that the<lb/>
President appoint a<lb/>
commission of in-<lb/>
quiry to investigate<lb/>
new evidence in the<lb/>
case.<lb/>
"Thirty years have<lb/>
passed since the case<lb/>
began, and the<lb/>
American people have<lb/>
waited long enough<lb/>
for the full truth<lb/>
claims the committee<lb/>
in one of their<lb/>
statements.<lb/>
Fletcher Gets New Roof<lb/>
ByDKNNIS<lb/>
KILCOYNE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
A roof is the least<lb/>
interesting architec-<lb/>
tural feature of a<lb/>
building. In fact, they<lb/>
are to buildings what<lb/>
toe joints are to<lb/>
bodies � items people<lb/>
usually ignore. Too<lb/>
bad the subject isn't<lb/>
basements, or a<lb/>
discussion on spooky<lb/>
places would be in<lb/>
order.<lb/>
But roofs are<lb/>
necessary, so at ECU<lb/>
the Physical Plant<lb/>
Department is com-<lb/>
pletely refurbishing<lb/>
two: Rawl building<lb/>
and Fletcher hall,<lb/>
which will be com-<lb/>
pleted this week. In<lb/>
addition, sections on<lb/>
the School of Nursing<lb/>
and home economics<lb/>
building will be partly<lb/>
redone. The six-step<lb/>
process requires<lb/>
almost four weeks of<lb/>
work if the weather is<lb/>
favorable.<lb/>
"The General<lb/>
Assembly ap-<lb/>
propriated this money<lb/>
a while ago, so it's not<lb/>
an emergency job<lb/>
said Jim Lowry,<lb/>
physical plant direc-<lb/>
tor. The $300,000<lb/>
granted to the univer-<lb/>
sity was<lb/>
"considerably less<lb/>
than what we had ask-<lb/>
ed for So, Lowry<lb/>
decided Fletcher and<lb/>
Rawl were more in<lb/>
need of repair than<lb/>
the other buildings on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
So onto the roofs<lb/>
go tons of material<lb/>
laid out by crews from<lb/>
a contracted com-<lb/>
pany.<lb/>
"When the weather<lb/>
is hot, the work goes<lb/>
more slowly Lowry<lb/>
observed. That's<lb/>
understandable. Dur-<lb/>
ing the past few days<lb/>
the temperature on<lb/>
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more than 100<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
IIHIIIIinifllllllTTT<lb/>
GET READY FOR BIG BROADWAY MUSICALS WITH SINGING. TAP DANCING. MUSiC AND MAGiC<lb/>
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The East Carolina Summer Theatre is ust about the best thing to happen to Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
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�t?e �aat (HarDlintan<lb/>
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June 29, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Dr. E. L. Henderson<lb/>
Former Professor Finally Recognized<lb/>
Sometimes, it seems, deserved<lb/>
recognition is a long time in com-<lb/>
ing. Just ask Dr. E. L. Henderson,<lb/>
a retired ECU history professor<lb/>
and administrator. His took about<lb/>
39 years.<lb/>
Last Wednesday, June 22,<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell bestowed<lb/>
upon Henderson the honorary<lb/>
rank of Professor Emeritus in<lb/>
Education. In a simple ceremony,<lb/>
Howell praised the retired pro-<lb/>
fessor for his "significant and en-<lb/>
during" contributions to ECU.<lb/>
At age 98, Henderson is ECU's<lb/>
oldest living faculty member. He<lb/>
came to ECU, then East Carolina<lb/>
Teachers College, in 1923. Three<lb/>
years later, he became director of<lb/>
student teaching, and three years<lb/>
after that, in 1929, chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Administration and<lb/>
Supervision.<lb/>
Strangely enough, especially for<lb/>
a man who was instrumental in the<lb/>
founding of the university,<lb/>
Henderson was dismissed for<lb/>
"disloyalty" in 1944, during the<lb/>
stormy reign of President Leon R.<lb/>
Meadows.<lb/>
Henderson's dismissal came 13<lb/>
days before he would be eligible<lb/>
for retirement. His benefits,<lb/>
however, were restored following<lb/>
Meadow's conviction and sentence<lb/>
to three years in prison.<lb/>
With all this in mind, it's easy to<lb/>
understand why Henderson pro-<lb/>
bably doesn't consider June 22,<lb/>
1983, the greatest day of his life.<lb/>
Sure, having the rank of professor<lb/>
emeritus conferred upon oneself is<lb/>
a tremendous honor, but consider<lb/>
a ucmciiuvua uuuui , uui wumm-  <lb/>
m!threeu?lme�fi035ssgo Governor Opposes New Cigarette Warning<lb/>
Hunt's Lethal Choice<lb/>
Henderson has a legitimate gripe<lb/>
He was never reinstated after the<lb/>
"disloyalty" incident and says<lb/>
university officials at the time<lb/>
showed little or no interest in him<lb/>
thereafter.<lb/>
And despite living just a block<lb/>
from ECU, Henderson has been<lb/>
on campus but twice since 1944.<lb/>
It's a shame that a man who<lb/>
contributed so much to East<lb/>
Carolina � Henderson's posts in<lb/>
the late 20s preceded the establish-<lb/>
ment of the present School of<lb/>
Education � would feel so<lb/>
alienated from his university and<lb/>
would have to wait 39 years for the<lb/>
recognition he deserves. But,<lb/>
logically, who's to blame? Without<lb/>
a doubt, the university officials<lb/>
from his day have long since<lb/>
retired.<lb/>
Although we do regret the delay<lb/>
in the honoring of this fine man,<lb/>
we, nonetheless, commend Dr.<lb/>
Henderson on his career, his<lb/>
dedication to and his ac-<lb/>
complishments at ECTC and wish<lb/>
him the best of fortune in the years<lb/>
to come.<lb/>
By PAT O'NEILL<lb/>
In November 1980, East Carolinian<lb/>
cartoonist John Weyler hit the nail on<lb/>
the head with his sketch of a Pitt County<lb/>
tobacco farmer poised in front of his<lb/>
lethal field, hacking and coughing on a<lb/>
lit cigarette The caption showed the<lb/>
farmer decrying the evils of liquor-by-<lb/>
the-drink.<lb/>
Once again, the inconsistency ex-<lb/>
hibited by North Carolina political<lb/>
leaders has emerged regarding these two<lb/>
issues. On Thursday, Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt � the same governor who<lb/>
authored legislation that raised the<lb/>
state's minimum drinking age to 19 �<lb/>
called the proposed new stricter warn-<lb/>
ings on cigarette packages "overly<lb/>
harsh" and "unfair to tobacco<lb/>
farmers<lb/>
The current wording on cigarette<lb/>
packages reads as follows: "Warning:<lb/>
The surgeon general has determined that<lb/>
cigarette smoking is dangerous to your<lb/>
health<lb/>
The proposed new message, selected<lb/>
by a 15-1 vote of members of the Senate<lb/>
Labor and Human Resources Commit-<lb/>
tee, states: "Warning: Cigarette smok-<lb/>
ing causes cancer, emphysema, heart<lb/>
disease; may complicate pregnancy; and<lb/>
is addictive<lb/>
To tell the truth, I'm not really con-<lb/>
vinced that warnings on cigarette<lb/>
packages make a damn bit of difference<lb/>
to the addicted millions. I know smokers<lb/>
who wouldn't give up the habit if<lb/>
cigarette packages stated: "Warning:<lb/>
Cigarettes have been shown to cause<lb/>
long, agonizing, painful suffering and<lb/>
death The problem is that once a per-<lb/>
son's addicted to them, it's often too<lb/>
late.<lb/>
My bet is that most tobacco farmers<lb/>
would prefer to see no warning at all.<lb/>
Better yet, they'd probably be in favor<lb/>
of warnings that go something like this:<lb/>
"Warning: Beware of anyone who<lb/>
'Damned If You Do &amp;<lb/>
Damned If You Don't'<lb/>
As much of a surprise as this may<lb/>
come to my noted and devoted adver-<lb/>
saries (an organization whose number<lb/>
seems to increase hourly), I have been<lb/>
doing a lot of thinking lately. Yes,<lb/>
believe it or not, girls, once a month,<lb/>
when the moon is at just the right point<lb/>
in its orbit, I am capable of semi-<lb/>
intelligent thought<lb/>
MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
-&amp; &amp;<lb/>
I was trying to decide on something to<lb/>
write about, something, preferably, that<lb/>
would appeal to everyone who reads it<lb/>
(all 14 of you), something that, perhaps,<lb/>
would evoke a grin (however small<lb/>
andor shortlived) without offending or<lb/>
enraging anyone.<lb/>
Needless to say, any two-bit writer<lb/>
(myself, of course, included) knows this<lb/>
simply can't be done.<lb/>
I mean, if I write about fat people,<lb/>
they get offended and sweat on me. If I<lb/>
criticize Reaganomics, I have a hundred<lb/>
little militant college Republicans<lb/>
breathing down my neck and screaming<lb/>
"Blasphemy If I write about illiterate<lb/>
football players, I have to carry a<lb/>
baseball bat with me for a month and<lb/>
buy new tires for my car. (I can't figure<lb/>
this one out anyway. I suppose they have<lb/>
someone else read it to them.)<lb/>
If I write about the food at<lb/>
Mendenhall (admittedly, a conflict in<lb/>
terms), my apartment is bombarded<lb/>
with fungus burgers and soybean hot-<lb/>
dogs. If I write about something with<lb/>
real societal impact, like say social in-<lb/>
justice, racial inequality and repression,<lb/>
I get obscene phone calls from angry<lb/>
Greenville legislators and bomb-threats<lb/>
from the ECU Nazi Society &amp; Chess<lb/>
Club (NSCC).<lb/>
When I write on the bathroom walls,<lb/>
they tell me to put it in my column. Put<lb/>
it in my column, and they say save it for<lb/>
the little boys' room.<lb/>
If I write about pretty girls on the<lb/>
beach, women with outie belly-buttons<lb/>
and Brillo-pad hair want coverage too.<lb/>
If I write about the morality of<lb/>
premarital sex andor cohabitation, I<lb/>
get nasty letters from some 6' 2" squad<lb/>
leader of "Dykes on Bikes" demanding<lb/>
equal time.<lb/>
But what I don't understand are those<lb/>
people who know they'll hate what I've<lb/>
got to say beforehand but read it<lb/>
anyway Naturally, then, they bitch at<lb/>
me for writing it. On the whole, I'd say<lb/>
it's a damned-if-I-do, damned-if-I-don't<lb/>
situation.<lb/>
Hell, I even wrote one column a while<lb/>
back on something as universal as nose-<lb/>
picking and got a few angry letters back.<lb/>
I guess some people thought I'd revealed<lb/>
their identities. I don't know; perhaps it<lb/>
hit just a little too close to home.<lb/>
IM (COUGH!HACK') A&amp;AINST LJQUOR-8Y- THE-PRJNK IN (CHOKE'<lb/>
GASP!) PITT COUNTS BECAUSE (COUGH!) ALCOHOL. IS<lb/>
(HACK') BAP FOR. yOU (COUGH! ChOKM!)"<lb/>
r-Campus Forum<lb/>
criticizes the tobacco industry or,<lb/>
"Attention: Smoking cigarettes is as<lb/>
wholesome as mother's milk<lb/>
The governor, who incidental<lb/>
doesn't smoke, is supposed to be con-<lb/>
cerned about the overall welfare o his<lb/>
constituents. Apparently, this is why<lb/>
Hunt and practically the entire General<lb/>
Assembly supported raising the drinking<lb/>
age in North Carolina to 19. The new<lb/>
law is supposed to keep teenagers from<lb/>
being able to buy beer and wine, thus<lb/>
keeping those who would drink and<lb/>
drive off the roads. Why, then, do Hum<lb/>
and members of the General Assembly<lb/>
feel differently about protecting their<lb/>
constituents from the often lethal effects<lb/>
of smoking?<lb/>
Cigarette smoking has been proen to<lb/>
cause more than 300,000 deaths each<lb/>
year from cancer, heart disease and<lb/>
respiratory ailments. Subsequent!<lb/>
medical care from smoking costs<lb/>
Americans in the neighborhood of $13<lb/>
billion a year.<lb/>
With these facts in mind, I would like<lb/>
to call into question the statement by<lb/>
Hunt that the new warning would be<lb/>
"unfair to tobacco farmers vvha:<lb/>
about the rest of the citizens in the stat?"<lb/>
Don't we have rights too? Does Hunt<lb/>
really want to see more North Caroli-<lb/>
nians taking up the habit?<lb/>
Hunt was elected on a platform tha:<lb/>
spoke strongly of the need to upgrade<lb/>
education in North Carolina. One aspect<lb/>
of education is informing young people<lb/>
of the importance of good health care<lb/>
This information would have to include<lb/>
the advice that one shouldn't smoke if<lb/>
one desires good health. I think it's<lb/>
about time Hunt and members of the<lb/>
General Assembly stopped complaining<lb/>
about the warnings issued by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Health and Human Services and<lb/>
other agencies regarding the dangers of<lb/>
smoking. These agencies are doing their<lb/>
jobs. It's time Hunt and the legislators<lb/>
did theirs.<lb/>
Column Stoops To 'All-Time Low9<lb/>
Editor's Note: Mike Hughes, a win-<lb/>
dow gardener from Selma, recently took<lb/>
third place in the North Carolina Mr.<lb/>
Banal Pageant.<lb/>
Dear Mr. Hughes:<lb/>
In re to your reply to Kim Albin,<lb/>
BELIEVE IT � many people do not<lb/>
share your enthusiasm for your in-<lb/>
famous column. It is beyond me how the<lb/>
managing editor of ECU's only student<lb/>
newspaper managed to slip such a banal<lb/>
article (re fixations) into the paper,<lb/>
much less on the editorial page. Humor<lb/>
is one thing, but sheer "disgusting fixa-<lb/>
tions" (as Kim so accurately described<lb/>
them) belong in a private journal or,<lb/>
perhaps, on a bathroom wall<lb/>
somewhere.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is distributed not<lb/>
only throughout the ECU campus, but<lb/>
also in the Brody Building where many<lb/>
physicians and other professionals fre-<lb/>
quently pick up their copies of the<lb/>
paper. Don't you have more pride in<lb/>
your paper (which not only represents<lb/>
you but the student body as a whole and<lb/>
the English department in particular)<lb/>
than to stoop to this apparent all-time<lb/>
low for material? If you are short of<lb/>
material or writers during the summer,<lb/>
then why don't you save yourself some<lb/>
time, and the students some money, and<lb/>
just shut down for the summer?<lb/>
Hopefully, this fall, we'll see quality<lb/>
journalism returning to The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian.<lb/>
Melanie Bentlcy-Maughan<lb/>
Alumnus, English<lb/>
Teach-In Coverage<lb/>
Many thanks for the considerable<lb/>
space given given the June 18 teach-ins.<lb/>
Your readers may be interested in a few<lb/>
more aspects of that occasion:<lb/>
For tiie first time in Greenville, a<lb/>
white "peace" and a black "survival"<lb/>
group formally collaborated on a major<lb/>
project. For the first time in Greenville,<lb/>
a multi-theme conference was attemp-<lb/>
ted. For the first time in Greenville, a<lb/>
teach-in was tried (in fact, two teach-ins<lb/>
at once).<lb/>
Attendance at the Willis Building met<lb/>
our minimal expectations for a Saturday<lb/>
in beach season. Recognition is due to<lb/>
Diane Maisel, Mary Rider, Mike Hamer<lb/>
and Patrick O'Neill for the design and<lb/>
distribution of handbills and for writing<lb/>
news stories about the Solstice events.<lb/>
Thanks to Roy Schaal and Charles Co-<lb/>
ble for moderating the two meetings.<lb/>
Also not publicly acknowledged before<lb/>
were those who advised, arranged or<lb/>
contributed to the various tables:<lb/>
Wendell Allen, Carl Adler, Philip Adler,<lb/>
Kenneth Dews, Rhea Markello, Calvin<lb/>
Kervin (of Sen. East's office), Charles<lb/>
Cain and myself. Finally, Walter Dorsey<lb/>
of the N.C. Employment Security Com-<lb/>
mission thoroughly prepared an up-to-<lb/>
date overview of job prospects in 1983,<lb/>
nationally and in Pitt County.<lb/>
The idea of a teach-in to mark the<lb/>
summer Solstice derives from the Liver-<lb/>
more Action Group of the Mobilization<lb/>
for Survival. The idea of sampling from<lb/>
every major social problem, daring us to<lb/>
embrace the tremendous challenges of<lb/>
(e.g.) nuclear blow-up and of "They<lb/>
blow me up every day" (poverty) derives<lb/>
 from a reported remark of John Howell.<lb/>
Each speaker proved excellent,<lb/>
sometimes in unexpected ways. One<lb/>
speaker, detained on returning from<lb/>
Florida, wasn't heard on the 18th and<lb/>
will speak this Thursday at 7:30 p.m. in<lb/>
132 Austin. Again, an ambitious subject<lb/>
will be sampled in a new way.<lb/>
Carroll Webber<lb/>
Assoc. Prof. Math<lb/>
Retired<lb/>
Abortion Ruling<lb/>
According to the latest Supreme<lb/>
Court ruling concerning abortion, it is<lb/>
now legal in the United States for a<lb/>
woman to have an abortion at any time<lb/>
during her pregnancy before the fetus,<lb/>
infant or child is born. In other words, a<lb/>
woman may have an abortion fie<lb/>
minutes before the child is born, and it's<lb/>
legal; however, if a child is born and<lb/>
strangled, it's called murder and is il-<lb/>
legal. So, now it comes down to this.<lb/>
five minutes before birth is legal; five<lb/>
minutes after birth is illegal.<lb/>
In third-trimester abortions, an inci-<lb/>
sion is made into the uterus, and the um-<lb/>
bilical cord is wrapped around the<lb/>
child"s neck and tightened until the<lb/>
fetus no longer moves. I believe this is<lb/>
also known as strangling.<lb/>
A woman should know prior to the<lb/>
fourth month if she is pregnant. She<lb/>
should also know if she wishes to keep<lb/>
the child by that time. A child is<lb/>
developed completely by the ninth<lb/>
month. If ever, the decision for an abor-<lb/>
tion should be made during the first<lb/>
three months.<lb/>
I am not anti-abortion; I am anti-<lb/>
murder. Abortion and murder may or<lb/>
may not be the same thing, but abortion<lb/>
after the seventh month is definitely kill-<lb/>
ing a fully developed individual.<lb/>
I sympathize with the victims of rape,<lb/>
incest and financial insecurity, who find<lb/>
themselves in the position of having an<lb/>
unwanted child. But I also feel that deo-<lb/>
sion can be made during the first<lb/>
trimester.<lb/>
It would be ideal for female victims of<lb/>
rape or incest to have an abortion after<lb/>
completing a police report. The finan-<lb/>
cially insecure woman should place the<lb/>
child up for adoption.<lb/>
I would like to have a petition cir-<lb/>
culated throughout the campus inform-<lb/>
ing our legislators and the Supreme<lb/>
Court that those who sign it oppose the<lb/>
recent ruling. This petition could be<lb/>
sponsored by the SGA and could be cir-<lb/>
culated this fall.<lb/>
Kimberly Cox<lb/>
Freshman, Biology<lb/>
Food<lb/>
Coat. From Page 1<lb/>
it is for other poor people "<lb/>
Both Pray and Byrd say lobbv<lb/>
ing is the critical factor in convin<lb/>
cing the General Assembly U<lb/>
abolish the tax.<lb/>
In a recent issue of Raleigl<lb/>
Report, a lobbying newsletter oj<lb/>
the N.C. Council of Churches.<lb/>
suggestion was made that citizer<lb/>
endorse and lobby for Senate Bil<lb/>
51 introduced by Sen. Kenneti<lb/>
Roy all, D-Durham, which uouk<lb/>
eventually eliminate the food<lb/>
Royall's bill would lmtiallj<lb/>
nse the overall sales tax by oi<lb/>
Taxiag Melons?<lb/>
HuntN<lb/>
New TV<lb/>
ECU Sens Bru<lb/>
In action taken last week<lb/>
Hunt Jr. named Beaufort Cou<lb/>
Singleton to the ECU Board<lb/>
also reappointed James<lb/>
Greensboro to another four-y<lb/>
Singleton is a graduate ol<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill La Schoo<lb/>
ed law in Greenville since 1<lb/>
will be the second one for Su<lb/>
first appointed to the ECU<lb/>
1977. He served until 1981.<lb/>
Dixon, who has been on<lb/>
1979, is president and own<lb/>
Inc and JMD Contractor<lb/>
development and general oof<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
Dixon has a special interest<lb/>
gram for hearing-impaired stt<lb/>
one of the best in the south. "<lb/>
man of the committee whicj<lb/>
Central Carolina School for<lb/>
been director of the N.C Sd<lb/>
14 years.<lb/>
Dixon has established<lb/>
endowed $50,000 scholarshi<lb/>
deaf students. He is a gradual<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
ECU Catholic campus<lb/>
Girard Sherba has announce<lb/>
on campus will be discontn<lb/>
mer. The Sunday service is usj<lb/>
p.m. in the first floor Biology<lb/>
ba said the cancellations werel<lb/>
of the low turnout of student<lb/>
mer months. In the meantij<lb/>
wishing to attend Catholic sej<lb/>
St. Gabriel's or St. Peters '<lb/>
St. Gabriel's, located at !<lb/>
holds services at 6 p.m Sat<lb/>
and 11 a.m. on Sunday. St<lb/>
2700 E. Fourth St holds sej<lb/>
Saturday and 8 a.m. and 10<lb/>
ECU mathematics profes<lb/>
nath will be presenting a lecrj<lb/>
30 titled "Mathematics an<lb/>
Dcbnath is the managing edj<lb/>
tional Journal of Ml<lb/>
Mathematical Science as wel<lb/>
of the Bulletin of the Calc<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
Debnath was originally s<lb/>
his lecture during the recent<lb/>
a New World Symphony"<lb/>
withdrew on account of ilh<lb/>
The lecture will be held in I<lb/>
(Room 132 Austin Building<lb/>
"Hot Fun in the Sumnu<lb/>
hibit in the East Carolina<lb/>
tion at Joyner Library, pn<lb/>
how Americans spent sumi<lb/>
the 19th century.<lb/>
The exhibit, which is<lb/>
features old letters. phot<lb/>
engraved sheet music am<lb/>
material pertaining to evr<lb/>
the waters to celebrating<lb/>
on display.<lb/>
Francis M. Eddings, chiej<lb/>
has been elected president<lb/>
of the FBI National Acac<lb/>
elite organization of law<lb/>
ment and supervisory persj<lb/>
Eddings was elected an<lb/>
annual retraining session<lb/>
June 8-10 in Charlotte. H<lb/>
Dec. 31, 1984.<lb/>
� �' wi<lb/>
(HI<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057562_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 29. 1913 5<lb/>
3S<lb/>
vVarning<lb/>
Choice?<lb/>
tcco industry or,<lb/>
 Sn king cigarettes is as<lb/>
's milk<lb/>
who incidentally<lb/>
ipposed to be con-<lb/>
: the overall welfare of his<lb/>
ueni Apparently, this is why<lb/>
 the entire General<lb/>
 � � a Mng the drinking<lb/>
N na to W. The new<lb/>
keep teenagers from<lb/>
 i a beer and wine, thus<lb/>
would drink and<lb/>
Is Why, then, do Hunt<lb/>
Genera Assembly<lb/>
tou! protecting their<lb/>
ften lethal effects<lb/>
 ng has been proven to<lb/>
JO CO deaths each<lb/>
earl disease and<lb/>
Subsequential<lb/>
smoking costs<lb/>
i ghborhood of $13<lb/>
ind, 1 would like<lb/>
n the statement by<lb/>
warning would be<lb/>
farmers What<lb/>
xns in the state?<lb/>
too7 Does Hunt<lb/>
re North Caroli-<lb/>
tkinf he habit?<lb/>
� a platform that<lb/>
the need to upgrade<lb/>
arolina. One aspect<lb/>
' timing young people<lb/>
good health care.<lb/>
vould have to include<lb/>
. shouldn't smoke if<lb/>
I d health. I think it's<lb/>
Hunt and members of the<lb/>
topped complaining<lb/>
tigs issued by the Depart-<lb/>
 and Human Services and<lb/>
ng the dangers of<lb/>
?se agencies are doing their<lb/>
time and the legislators<lb/>
.<lb/>
-Time Low9<lb/>
a<lb/>
l. In other words, a<lb/>
an abortion five<lb/>
child is born, and it's<lb/>
ie?a. hild is born and<lb/>
ran� murder and is fl-<lb/>
ies down to this:<lb/>
min birth iS legal; five<lb/>
is illegal.<lb/>
rimester abortions, an inci-<lb/>
c uterus, and the urn-<lb/>
wrapped around the<lb/>
� and tightened until the<lb/>
tus no longer moves. 1 believe this is<lb/>
known as strangling.<lb/>
 woman should know prior to the<lb/>
i month if she is pregnant. She<lb/>
auid also know if she wishes to keep<lb/>
child by that time A child is<lb/>
developed completely by the ninth<lb/>
� If ever, the decision for an abor-<lb/>
on should be made during the first<lb/>
three months.<lb/>
I am not anti-abortion; I am anti-<lb/>
Abortion and murder may or<lb/>
nay not be the same thing, but abortion<lb/>
the seventh month is definitely kill-<lb/>
ing a fully developed individual.<lb/>
I sympathize with the victims of rape,<lb/>
ncest and financial insecurity, who find<lb/>
themselves in the position of having an<lb/>
unwanted child. But I also feel that deci-<lb/>
sion can be made during the first<lb/>
trimester.<lb/>
It would be ideal for female victims of<lb/>
rape or incest to have an abortion after<lb/>
completing a police report. The finan-<lb/>
VL , msecure oman should place the<lb/>
child up for adoption.<lb/>
J would like to have a petition cir-<lb/>
culated throughout the campus inform-<lb/>
ing our legislators and the Supreme<lb/>
-ourt that those whe sign it oppose the<lb/>
recent ruling. This petition could be<lb/>
sponsored by the SGA and could be cir-<lb/>
culated this fall.<lb/>
Kimbcrly Cox<lb/>
Freshman, Biology<lb/>
i<lb/>
Food Tax Hits Poor<lb/>
Co�t. From P�Rf i<lb/>
it is for other poor people<lb/>
Both Pray and Byrd say lobby-<lb/>
ing is the critical factor in convin-<lb/>
cing the General Assembly to<lb/>
abolish the tax.<lb/>
In a recent issue of Raleigh<lb/>
Report, a lobbying newsletter of<lb/>
the N.C. Council of Churches, a<lb/>
suggestion was made that citizens<lb/>
endorse and lobby for Senate Bill<lb/>
51 introduced by Sen. Kenneth<lb/>
Royall, D-Durham, which would<lb/>
eventually eliminate the food tax.<lb/>
RoyalPs bill would initially<lb/>
rfise the overall sales tax by one<lb/>
Taxing Melons?<lb/>
percent while phasing out the tax<lb/>
on food over a three-year period.<lb/>
The bill would also raise the limit<lb/>
for sales tax on motor vehicles<lb/>
from $120 to $300 and would tax<lb/>
them at three percent instead of<lb/>
the current two percent.<lb/>
Royall claims the food tax<lb/>
could be eliminated without loss<lb/>
of revenue to the state. "The sales<lb/>
tax as a whole is regressive, but it<lb/>
is unlikely that it will not be raised<lb/>
one penny this session wrote<lb/>
Sister Evelyn Mat tern, editor of<lb/>
the Raleigh Report. "Sen.<lb/>
Royall's bill establishes the princi-<lb/>
ple that food is a necessity that<lb/>
should not be taxed and does in<lb/>
fact result in fewer taxes for<lb/>
lower-income families<lb/>
Mattern claims that Fiscal<lb/>
research on Royall's bill shows<lb/>
that families with an income of<lb/>
under $15,000 would have a<lb/>
decline of 10 to 15 percent in sales<lb/>
taxes if the tax on food were<lb/>
eliminated. Families between<lb/>
$15,000 and $25,000 would ex-<lb/>
perience no appreciable change<lb/>
and upper-income families would<lb/>
bear a 10 percent increase in the<lb/>
tax burden.<lb/>
Pray points' out that people on<lb/>
low or fixed incomes spend almost<lb/>
one-half of their income on food<lb/>
and food taxes while people in<lb/>
higher income brackets spend<lb/>
much less of their income on<lb/>
food.<lb/>
McNeil Smith .former N.C.<lb/>
state representative, said North<lb/>
Carolina is the only state to enact<lb/>
a food tax in recent years.<lb/>
"Two-thirds of the people in<lb/>
America do not pay a food tax'<lb/>
Smith said, adding that states with<lb/>
a food tax are largely concen-<lb/>
trated in the south. North<lb/>
Carolina initiated its food tax in<lb/>
1961.<lb/>
N.C. Council of Churches<lb/>
claims that because of hard<lb/>
economic times and greater<lb/>
unemployment the tax on food<lb/>
should be repealed. Their<lb/>
statistics show that a family of<lb/>
four that earns less than $8,000<lb/>
per year will spend 46.8 percent of<lb/>
their income on food, while<lb/>
another family with an income of<lb/>
$34,000 per year will only use 16.5<lb/>
percent of their funds for food<lb/>
purchases.<lb/>
The Council of Churches' Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Director S. Collins<lb/>
Kilburn called the food tax "the<lb/>
most blatent and clearly unjust<lb/>
tax" in North Carolina.<lb/>
A Black President in '84?<lb/>
The Rev. Jesse Jackson is<lb/>
considered by experts to be the<lb/>
first viable black presidential<lb/>
candidate. We asked students<lb/>
their feelings on Jackson runn-<lb/>
ing, and their thoughts on a<lb/>
potential black president.<lb/>
Teresa Moore, Junior,<lb/>
Political Science � 1 think that<lb/>
it's fine. He would be setting a<lb/>
precedent. It's a good possibili-<lb/>
ty that he could be elected. He<lb/>
would have to run in-<lb/>
dependentlv, though<lb/>
Rick Brown, Senior, History<lb/>
� "I really question Jackson's<lb/>
qualifications, He would do a<lb/>
greater service if he helped<lb/>
deliver the black vote as a solid<lb/>
block to a viable candidate<lb/>
Michael Purvis, Junior,<lb/>
Computer Science � "I don't<lb/>
think he'll have a chance of<lb/>
winning, but he'll have a big<lb/>
chance of influencing who gets<lb/>
the Democratic nomination<lb/>
Pom Washington, Junior,<lb/>
Nursing � "I would vote for<lb/>
him. I would love to see so-<lb/>
meone black be president. But,<lb/>
there are other more qualified<lb/>
candidates<lb/>
Moore<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
I Hunt Names<lb/>
I<lb/>
I New Trustee<lb/>
ARMVSUHPLU<lb/>
Vu � AH 1 .A'<lb/>
From Suff Reporu<lb/>
ECU News Briefs<lb/>
In action taken last week Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. named Beaufort County native Louis<lb/>
Singleton to the ECU Board of Trustees. Hunt<lb/>
also reappointed James M. Dixon of<lb/>
Greensboro to another four-year term.<lb/>
Singleton is a graduate of ECU and the<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill Law School. He has practic-<lb/>
ed law in Greenville since 1961. The new term<lb/>
will be the second one for Singleton who was<lb/>
first appointed to the ECU board by Hunt in<lb/>
1977. He served until 1981.<lb/>
Dixon, who has been on the board since<lb/>
1979, is president and owner of J.M. Dixon<lb/>
Inc and JMD Contractors Inc real estate<lb/>
development and general contracting firms in<lb/>
Greensboro.<lb/>
Dixon has a special interest in the ECU pro-<lb/>
gram for hearing-impaired students, considered<lb/>
one of the best in the south. He served as chair-<lb/>
man of the committee which established the<lb/>
Central Carolina School for the Deaf and has<lb/>
been director of the N.C. Schools for Deaf for<lb/>
14 years.<lb/>
Dixon has established a permanently-<lb/>
endowed $50,000 scholarship trust fund for<lb/>
deaf students. He is a graduate of UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill.<lb/>
ECU Catholic campus Chaplain Father<lb/>
Girard Sherba has announced that all masses<lb/>
on campus will be discontinued for the sum-<lb/>
mer. The Sunday service is usually held at 12:30<lb/>
p.m. in the first floor Biology lecture hall. Sher-<lb/>
ba said the cancellations were necessary because<lb/>
of the low turnout of students during the sum-<lb/>
mer months. In the meantime ECU students<lb/>
wishing to attend Catholic services may do so at<lb/>
St. Gabriel's or St. Peter's Catholic churches.<lb/>
St. Gabriel's, located at 1120 W. Fifth St<lb/>
holds services at 6 p.m. Saturday and 9 a.m.<lb/>
and 11 a.m. on Sunday. St. Peter's, located at<lb/>
2700 E. Fourth St holds services at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday and 8 a.m. and 10:30 a.m. on Sunday.<lb/>
ECU mathematics professor Lokenath Deb-<lb/>
nath will be presenting a lecture Thursday June<lb/>
30 titled "Mathematics and Human Needs<lb/>
Debnath is the managing editor of the Interna-<lb/>
tional Journal of Mathematics and<lb/>
Mathematical Science as well as overseas editor<lb/>
of the Bulletin of the Calcutta Mathematical<lb/>
Society.<lb/>
Debnath was originally scheduled to deliver<lb/>
his lecture during the recent "Can we Compose<lb/>
a New World Symphony" symposium. He<lb/>
withdrew on account of illness.<lb/>
The lecture will be held in Austin Auditorium<lb/>
(Room 132 Austin Building) at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
"Hot Fun in the Summertime a new ex-<lb/>
hibit in the East Carolina Manuscript Collec-<lb/>
tion at Joyner Library, provides a glimpse of<lb/>
how Americans spent summer holidays during<lb/>
the 19th century.<lb/>
The exhibit, which is open to the public,<lb/>
features old letters, photographs, post cards,<lb/>
engraved sheet music and other manuscript<lb/>
material pertaining to everything from taking<lb/>
the waters to celebrating the Fourth of July is<lb/>
on display.<lb/>
Francis M. Eddings, chief of police for ECU,<lb/>
has been elected president of the N.C. chapter<lb/>
of the FBI National Academy Associates, an<lb/>
elite organization of law enforcement manage-<lb/>
ment and supervisory personel.<lb/>
Eddings was elected and took office at the<lb/>
annual retraining session of the state chapter<lb/>
June 8-10 in Charlotte. He will serve through<lb/>
Dec. 31, 1984.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057562_0006"/><lb/>
L<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 29. 19S3<lb/>
Pat 6<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
w�� H<lb/>
Sending Your Message With A Flair:<lb/>
Stall Scribblers Revive Art Of Graffiti<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
GARY FATTIRtON - ICU<lb/>
A would-be graffiti artist turns to other literary pursuits for lack of<lb/>
wall space.<lb/>
From racism to sexual solicita-<lb/>
tion and political rhetoric to<lb/>
nonsense. That's the story of the<lb/>
writings on the walls of the<lb/>
restrooms at ECU. Unless you<lb/>
manage to avoid using public<lb/>
restrooms altogether, you're<lb/>
already familiar with the various<lb/>
tidbits of information filling the<lb/>
walls of toilet stalls on campus.<lb/>
During my early morning trek<lb/>
from stall to stall, I discovered<lb/>
that some ECU majors produce<lb/>
more graffiti than others; that<lb/>
women's restroom writings are<lb/>
far less interesting than men's;<lb/>
and for the best in wall writing,<lb/>
you should try Joyner Library's<lb/>
main floor West wing men's<lb/>
room.<lb/>
Trying to look discreet while<lb/>
walking in or out of a women's<lb/>
restroom was a major problem I<lb/>
encountered on this adventure. I<lb/>
only entered the most isolated<lb/>
ones during the usual class hours.<lb/>
My safety valve was a roll of toilet<lb/>
paper which I carried while<lb/>
visiting the women's rooms. I was<lb/>
prepared for any encounter I<lb/>
might have had with a confused<lb/>
woman. "Oh, the men's room is<lb/>
out of toilet paper so I came here<lb/>
to borrow some was my<lb/>
rehearsed response to a woman<lb/>
ready to yell "pervert as loud as<lb/>
she could.<lb/>
My first stop was the Jenkins<lb/>
Fine Art Center. I expected this<lb/>
place to be a gold mine of creativi-<lb/>
ty, but 1 was quite wrong. "I'm<lb/>
not an art major, I just like to shit<lb/>
in your yard instead of mine.<lb/>
Thanks alot was the first thing I<lb/>
read in the first floor men's room.<lb/>
"I'm a drama major on a brief<lb/>
emergency stop said another<lb/>
visitor. And "After seeing these<lb/>
walls' graffiti 1 have come to the<lb/>
conclusion that art majors may be<lb/>
able to draw and paint, but their<lb/>
penmanship stinks<lb/>
Another writer said, "If you<lb/>
enjoy hard work, spending money<lb/>
that you don't have (and) all<lb/>
nighters get into C.A it's<lb/>
great C.A I discovered, stands<lb/>
for Commercial Art.<lb/>
Mendenhall's men's room walls<lb/>
sported "1 oe is indispensible for<lb/>
heterosexuals" and "God is all<lb/>
All over campus 1 kept seeing<lb/>
references to the tcond floor<lb/>
men's room in Austin Building.<lb/>
"Big hole in wall was the<lb/>
message. Sure enough, there is a<lb/>
hole in the ail between two<lb/>
stalls. The walk were full of times<lb/>
and dates when interested parties<lb/>
cold meet in the future. Up on the<lb/>
third floor, the men's room stalls<lb/>
sported no holes and "Reality is a<lb/>
figment of your imagination<lb/>
UNCChapcI Hill received<lb/>
much criticism on ECU's toilet<lb/>
walls. "UNC, where men are<lb/>
men, women are scarce, and sheep<lb/>
are nervous" wrote one wit on<lb/>
Austin's third floor. And scrawl-<lb/>
ed on the door: "The Greenville<lb/>
Peace Committee is a Communist<lb/>
front<lb/>
Knowing that English majors<lb/>
frequent Austin, my hopes were<lb/>
high that I would find top-grade<lb/>
graffiti � possibly, even, a little<lb/>
poetry. But my hopes were soon<lb/>
dimmed when I came across lcss-<lb/>
than-interesting, rather drab<lb/>
chicken scratch. "Why are these<lb/>
walls so clean?" wondered so-<lb/>
meone in the ladies' room. <lb/>
don't know, let's do something<lb/>
about it was the response.<lb/>
When I visited faculty<lb/>
restrooms, I was amazed � not<lb/>
one mark on their walls. I can on-<lb/>
ly wonder if they just don't have<lb/>
anything interesting to say or if<lb/>
the janitors are advised to<lb/>
See GRAFFITI.<lb/>
Jazzy Guitar Licks From<lb/>
Larry Carlton Lend Sass<lb/>
Soa? Fans Tune In For Sexy Thrills<lb/>
By ROBIN AYERS<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
Last week, Whit McCall found<lb/>
out he is married to a former Las<lb/>
Vegas showgirl � in addition to<lb/>
his wife, Lisa. The wedding took<lb/>
place when he was drunk five<lb/>
years ago. Lisa is not going to like<lb/>
this.<lb/>
Wally McCandless needs a<lb/>
kidney transplant because<lb/>
gangster Danny DeNato had him<lb/>
run off the road. Danny doesn't<lb/>
want his daughter Veronica dating<lb/>
Wally because Wally isn't good<lb/>
enough for her.<lb/>
Patti Abbot wants a baby. Her<lb/>
husband Jack wants a vasectomy.<lb/>
He married her only because he<lb/>
wanted the presidency of his<lb/>
father's cosmetics firm. When<lb/>
Patti found this out, she shot him.<lb/>
No, this isn't local gossip.<lb/>
These incidents of life can be seen<lb/>
every weekday on television soap<lb/>
operas.<lb/>
The term "soap opera" was<lb/>
derived from the products adver-<lb/>
tised by sponsors during the show<lb/>
and from the melodramatic plots.<lb/>
A popular soap, now in its 46th<lb/>
year, is The Guiding Light. In<lb/>
1982, The Guiding Light won an<lb/>
Emmy as best daytime series.<lb/>
The Guiding Light was first<lb/>
heard on WGN radio in Chicago<lb/>
in 1937. Created by Irna Phillips,<lb/>
The Guiding Light ran for 12<lb/>
minutes with the sponsors getting<lb/>
two minutes to advertise their<lb/>
soapy products.<lb/>
The Guiding Light centered<lb/>
around a Reverend Rutledge and<lb/>
the make-believe town of Five<lb/>
Points. GL now airs an hour from<lb/>
the town of Springfield,<lb/>
somewhere in the Midwest.<lb/>
Several other soap operas are set<lb/>
in the Midwest as well, and the<lb/>
East Coast has its share of soap<lb/>
settings.<lb/>
Miss Phillips initiated the use of<lb/>
organ bridges for transition and<lb/>
suspense-oriented plots to grab<lb/>
listener attention.<lb/>
On June 30, 1952, The Guiding<lb/>
Light debuted on CBS, where it<lb/>
has resided ever since. GL was<lb/>
CBS's third soap on the air. Its<lb/>
first, Search For Tomorrow,<lb/>
began Sept. 3, 1951 and is still<lb/>
running on NBC.<lb/>
Miss Phillips was the first writer<lb/>
to" stir up fans' fascination with<lb/>
professional people as characters.<lb/>
Doctors, lawyers and ministers<lb/>
were and are the heroes and<lb/>
heroines of the soap opera. More<lb/>
now than in the past, members of<lb/>
the middle class are also getting<lb/>
into the act.<lb/>
Daytime serials are a mixture of<lb/>
fun, fantasy and mystery. Love is<lb/>
a major theme.<lb/>
All the action and excitement<lb/>
takes place in fictional tov ns with<lb/>
names like Oakdak Port Charles<lb/>
and Llanview. No matter the<lb/>
show or the network, all soap<lb/>
towns have a feu things in com-<lb/>
mon. All seem to have a small<lb/>
town atmosphere uith all the con-<lb/>
veniences of a metropolis. A body<lb/>
of water, usually a lake, is not far<lb/>
away. Blizzards are a ea:ly oc-<lb/>
curence to add danger and<lb/>
See SOAPS, page 7<lb/>
By JAN E. BLOUNT<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
More often than not, when so-<lb/>
meone is good at something, he<lb/>
usually makes it appear easy.<lb/>
Larry Carlton's Sleepwalk LP is a<lb/>
pretty fair illustration of someone<lb/>
taking a difficult task (holding a<lb/>
listener's interest for the duration<lb/>
of an instrumental album) and<lb/>
making it look as easy as convers-<lb/>
ing with friends.<lb/>
While listening to this album, I<lb/>
was reminded of an old saying<lb/>
from the world of fashion: "Less<lb/>
is more Carlton's lead guitar<lb/>
succeeds in dominating the music<lb/>
without overwhelming it. Nuances<lb/>
of mood are created which are<lb/>
vivid without being harsh the<lb/>
moods are suggested, but not in-<lb/>
sisted upon (as in the title cut,<lb/>
which is rife with classy nightclub-<lb/>
like atmosphere).<lb/>
rwwwvywwwwwwww<lb/>
REVIEW<lb/>
WWWWWWWWWWWWWVW<lb/>
Most of the eight compositions<lb/>
on Sleepwalk are mellow and easy<lb/>
to listen to. This is not to say that<lb/>
there is no diversity on the album.<lb/>
A variety of fast and slow settings<lb/>
is represented, from the hypnotic,<lb/>
almost bluegrass of "Senator<lb/>
Katie" to the funky, motivating<lb/>
drive of "You Gotta Get It While<lb/>
You Can<lb/>
It is along these lines that I have<lb/>
my only real complaint with<lb/>
Sleepwalk. At times, there is a lit-<lb/>
tle too much mixing of theme.<lb/>
"Upper Kern" and "Last httte"<lb/>
try to do too much � as if<lb/>
Carlton had mor to say than he<lb/>
found he had lime for. The pace<lb/>
changes erratically from a<lb/>
breakneck dancing rhythm to a<lb/>
romantic, thoughtful melody, and<lb/>
instead of conveying the feeling of<lb/>
covering a lot of area quickly, the<lb/>
effect is a monotonous spinning<lb/>
of wheels.<lb/>
In the overview, though,<lb/>
Carlton and his supporting<lb/>
players (Terry Trotter, keyboards;<lb/>
Pops Popwell, bass; Steve Gadd.<lb/>
drums; and Paul hi no Da Costa,<lb/>
percussion) have put together a<lb/>
very good jazz album. They enjoy<lb/>
what they do, and it shows.<lb/>
Carlton manhandles the electric<lb/>
guitar like a child at play. 1<lb/>
recommend Sleepwalk.<lb/>
Those Dancin' Romans<lb/>
'Pippin' Opens Monday<lb/>
Pippin, the musical extravagan-<lb/>
za that ran for four and a half<lb/>
years on Broadway and garnered<lb/>
four Tony Awards, is the first<lb/>
musical comedy production of the<lb/>
East Carolina Summer Theatre<lb/>
season. It will be presented this<lb/>
Monday through Saturday at 8:15<lb/>
p.m. on the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
No American musical ever had<lb/>
so immediate and extensive an in-<lb/>
ternational success as Pippin.<lb/>
Called "the show that runs like a<lb/>
racehorse" by The New York<lb/>
Times, Pippin is a story based<lb/>
loosely on the life of<lb/>
Charlemagne's eldest son who is<lb/>
an idealist searching for himself<lb/>
and the pleasures of court, the<lb/>
pandemonium of battle and the<lb/>
aggravation of being Holy Roman<lb/>
Emperor.<lb/>
Scott Evans will play the title<lb/>
role of Pippin, whose story is con-<lb/>
jured up by a colorful troupe of<lb/>
traveling actors led by John Duhn<lb/>
in the role of a fast-talking, high-<lb/>
stepping master of ceremonies,<lb/>
who promises "a stunning exam-<lb/>
ple of magic and merriment<lb/>
Joey Pollock will be seen as the<lb/>
hard-living, hard-praying<lb/>
Charlemagne, whose council of<lb/>
war is done as a lively minstrel<lb/>
shr His wife Frastrada (Babs<lb/>
Scott Evaas leads the cast as Pippin, Charlemagne's<lb/>
ofasoa.<lb/>
Winn) sings and dances "Spread<lb/>
A Little Sunshine another of<lb/>
the musical's showpieces compos-<lb/>
ed by Stephen Schwartz, whose<lb/>
credits include the score for<lb/>
Godspell.<lb/>
Director Jay Fox will guide the<lb/>
company through the cheerful<lb/>
anachronisms of a plot derived<lb/>
from history, but the show dances<lb/>
and sings in a modern mode. The<lb/>
choreographer will be Broadway<lb/>
veteran Mavis Ray, creating<lb/>
dances that range from soft shoe<lb/>
to sultry acrobatics. The profes-<lb/>
sional cast of 25 singers and<lb/>
dancers have been in rehearsal for<lb/>
several weeks on the ECU cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
Summer Theatre Technical<lb/>
Director Leonard Darby has<lb/>
assembled and installed a com-<lb/>
pletely new and enlarged stage<lb/>
floor for McGinnis Theatre that<lb/>
has motorized wagon units for<lb/>
scenery which run in special tracks<lb/>
recessed in the surface. Also hid-<lb/>
den within the new stage floor are<lb/>
unique lighting, mirror and smoke<lb/>
effects which all promise not to<lb/>
disappoint Summer Theatre au-<lb/>
diences who have come to expect<lb/>
lavish productions numbers from<lb/>
the popular musical theatre,<lb/>
which this year celebrates its 16th<lb/>
year in operation.<lb/>
Tickets are still available for<lb/>
Pippin and may be purchased at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre, corner of Fifth<lb/>
and Eastern Streets, Monday<lb/>
through Friday from 10 a.m. until<lb/>
4 p.m and on Saturdays from 10<lb/>
a.m. until 1 p.m.<lb/>
Also available are season tickets<lb/>
to all four musical productions:<lb/>
Pippin (July 4-9), A Little Night<lb/>
Musk (July 11-16), No, No,<lb/>
Nanette (July 18-23) and They're<lb/>
Playing Our Song (July 25-30).<lb/>
For further information and<lb/>
ticket reservations call 757-6390.<lb/>
 The Jury9<lb/>
Arm and Assante stars in 'I, The Jury tonight's<lb/>
Twentieth Century-Fox release also features<lb/>
Alan King, and airs at 8 p.m. Admission b by<lb/>
Hendrix will be dark next Monday to<lb/>
Fie of<lb/>
band -i<lb/>
Jul 2. at<lb/>
benefit n<lb/>
Musk fi<lb/>
Lemon<lb/>
Sting Raj<lb/>
Proteus<lb/>
cast. Ab<lb/>
jjnnv IBM<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
Cootinui<lb/>
often.<lb/>
A fir-<lb/>
room m<lb/>
Bui<lb/>
serin<lb/>
about<lb/>
Yankeesl<lb/>
about I<lb/>
life in t<lb/>
sus the<lb/>
Norther!<lb/>
final<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
North0<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
replied<lb/>
Dunn<lb/>
MendJ<lb/>
It<lb/>
P<lb/>
amity<lb/>
Wt<lb/>
 <lb/>
<pb facs="00057562_0007"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
Page t<lb/>
Flair:<lb/>
f Graffiti<lb/>
poetr) But mv hopes were toon<lb/>
dimmed when i came across less-<lb/>
than interesting, rather drab<lb/>
chicken scratch "Why are these<lb/>
alU so clean wondered so-<lb/>
meone in the ladies' room. 'l<lb/>
don't know, let's do something<lb/>
about it was the response.<lb/>
When 1 mted faculty<lb/>
ooms, I was amazed � not<lb/>
one mark on their walls. I can on-<lb/>
 wonder if they just don't have<lb/>
am thing interesting to say or if<lb/>
the janitors are advised to clean<lb/>
See GRAFFITI, page 7<lb/>
icks From<lb/>
Lend Sass<lb/>
there is no diersity on the album.<lb/>
 variet) of fast and slow settings<lb/>
- represented, from the hypnotic.<lb/>
almost bluegrass of "Senator<lb/>
Katie" to the funky, motivating<lb/>
wme of "You Gotta Get It While<lb/>
 ou Can<lb/>
It is along these lines that 1 have<lb/>
rm onl real complaint with<lb/>
Sleepnalk At times, there is a lit-<lb/>
tle too much mixing of theme.<lb/>
"Upper Kern" and "Last Nile"<lb/>
tr to do too much � as if<lb/>
Carlton had more to say than h<lb/>
found he had time for The pace<lb/>
changes erratically from a<lb/>
breakneck dancing rhythm to a<lb/>
romantic, thoughtful melody, and<lb/>
:ead of conveying the feeling of<lb/>
enng a lot of area quickly, the<lb/>
effect is a monotonous spinning<lb/>
of wheels.<lb/>
In the overview, though,<lb/>
Carlton and his supporting<lb/>
plaers (Terry Trotter, keyboards;<lb/>
Pops Popweil, bass; Steve Gadd,<lb/>
urns; and Paulhino Da Costa,<lb/>
percussion) have put together a<lb/>
ver good jazz album. They enjoy<lb/>
what they do, and it shows.<lb/>
Carlton manhandles the electric<lb/>
guitar like a child at play. 1<lb/>
recommend Sleepwalk.<lb/>
Bfc<lb/>
leadeaaal! s HearirU<lb/>
Laadoa, Paul<lb/>
ictirity card or MSC<lb/>
Tacatre. Tfct<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 29. 1983<lb/>
Soaps Bring Fans9 Seamier Fantasies To Life<lb/>
Five of Greenville's hottest jazz and blues<lb/>
bands will be featured this Saturday night,<lb/>
July 2, at 6:00 when WVSP (90.9 FM) airs a<lb/>
benefit concert played recently at The Attic.<lb/>
Music from the Rutabaga Brothers and<lb/>
lemon Sisters, Lightning Wells with the<lb/>
Sting Rays, Big Boy Henry, Jazz Plus and<lb/>
Proteus will highlight the three-hour broad-<lb/>
cast. Above, Bob Tunnell of the Sting Rays<lb/>
grins through his band's set.<lb/>
Continued from P.6<lb/>
photographic excite-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
These shared<lb/>
devices are used to<lb/>
lend not only excite-<lb/>
ment but familiarity<lb/>
and hooks to hang<lb/>
storylines on. The<lb/>
physical<lb/>
characteristics of a<lb/>
soap opera city also<lb/>
provide vicarious<lb/>
thrills for viewers who<lb/>
don't live in a city or<lb/>
near a lake or where<lb/>
snow is an every-<lb/>
winter occurence.<lb/>
What makes The<lb/>
Guiding Light so<lb/>
popular with soap<lb/>
opera audiences and<lb/>
especially the campus<lb/>
soap fanatic crowd?<lb/>
One fan says it's the<lb/>
diverse lifestyles of<lb/>
the characters.<lb/>
Viewers can sample<lb/>
the life of the filthy<lb/>
rich or the deceitfully<lb/>
criminal. The sets,<lb/>
once rather plain, are<lb/>
highly realistic � fan-<lb/>
tastic, some might<lb/>
argue. For with soap<lb/>
opera's rising<lb/>
popularity has come<lb/>
bigger budgets; pro-<lb/>
ducers are spending<lb/>
the extra revenue on<lb/>
location for greater<lb/>
authenticity.<lb/>
But it's people and<lb/>
relationships that<lb/>
ultimately draw<lb/>
viewers to their sets<lb/>
every day. Fans tune<lb/>
in to see who's doing<lb/>
what to, for, and with<lb/>
whom. Soap operas<lb/>
provide temporary<lb/>
escape from real life.<lb/>
Action is an in-<lb/>
tegral part of a soap<lb/>
opera. Every week it<lb/>
seems someone falls<lb/>
into or out of peril.<lb/>
One ardent viewer of<lb/>
four and a half years<lb/>
recommends Friday<lb/>
as the best day to<lb/>
watch for plot-turning<lb/>
and hair-raising ac-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Social issues are<lb/>
realistically written in-<lb/>
to soap opera scripts<lb/>
with a certain amount<lb/>
of frequency. Abor-<lb/>
tion, unwed<lb/>
motherhood and<lb/>
alcoholism � and<lb/>
other formerly taboo<lb/>
subjects � are sen-<lb/>
sitively portrayed.<lb/>
'Fans tune in to<lb/>
see who's doing<lb/>
what to, for, and<lb/>
with whom, �<lb/>
Devoted viewers<lb/>
laugh and cry with<lb/>
their favorite<lb/>
characters. Fans can<lb/>
suffer along with a<lb/>
character who has a<lb/>
mysterious disease,<lb/>
often witnessing<lb/>
amazingly swift<lb/>
recoveries � depen-<lb/>
ding on whether or<lb/>
not the actor's con-<lb/>
tract was successfully<lb/>
re-negotiated.<lb/>
Absurdity, in fact,<lb/>
is prevalent in the<lb/>
world of soap opera.<lb/>
Villainous schemes<lb/>
and evil mind games<lb/>
are played out to the<lb/>
hilt. Everything's<lb/>
done bigger than life,<lb/>
even though soaps are<lb/>
supposed to be life.<lb/>
Weddings, for ex-<lb/>
ample. No simple<lb/>
horse-drawn carriage<lb/>
(like Nina's on All My<lb/>
Children) for GL's<lb/>
Quint and Nola. They<lb/>
arrived at their wed-<lb/>
ding reception in a hot<lb/>
air balloon.<lb/>
And viewers, of<lb/>
course, have their<lb/>
favorite heroes,<lb/>
heroines and especial-<lb/>
ly villains. Favored<lb/>
"bad guys" in a re-<lb/>
cent informal poll<lb/>
ranged from The<lb/>
Guiding Light's<lb/>
millionairess socialite<lb/>
Vanessa Chamberlain<lb/>
to the vicious Arid<lb/>
Aldren and Karen<lb/>
Stenbeck of As The<lb/>
World Turns. Soap<lb/>
opera villains are<lb/>
usually rich, powerful<lb/>
schemers who think<lb/>
money is the answer<lb/>
to everything, and<lb/>
they appeal to fans'<lb/>
seamier sides fans<lb/>
who might fantasize<lb/>
about being rich,<lb/>
powerful, or even a<lb/>
little manipulative.<lb/>
Certain soap opera<lb/>
storylines seem to<lb/>
recur frequently as<lb/>
one flips the dial.<lb/>
Murders are always<lb/>
popular, as are<lb/>
characters who have<lb/>
accidents and leave<lb/>
the world to assume<lb/>
that their character<lb/>
has died. Later, when<lb/>
the time is right, the<lb/>
character returns<lb/>
from the dead after<lb/>
fooling his enemies<lb/>
and finding out who,<lb/>
if anyone, mourned<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Lately, a popular<lb/>
storyline involves a<lb/>
young politician's<lb/>
career being threaten-<lb/>
ed because the woman<lb/>
he loves has a tainted<lb/>
past. This plot has oc-<lb/>
curred recently on As<lb/>
The World Turns as<lb/>
well as on The<lb/>
Guiding Light.<lb/>
Characters and<lb/>
storylines are so<lb/>
realistically and con-<lb/>
vincingly presented<lb/>
that soap opera actors<lb/>
report being hit and<lb/>
cursed at by people on<lb/>
the the street who<lb/>
forget that what they<lb/>
see on television is on-<lb/>
ly fiction or fan-<lb/>
tasy. Fans rate The<lb/>
Guiding Light high on<lb/>
the believability scale.<lb/>
But soap opera is<lb/>
entertainment, pure<lb/>
and simple. Escapism,<lb/>
humor, sex, suspense<lb/>
� tune in tomorrow!<lb/>
Millions do; The<lb/>
Guiding Light and<lb/>
company are where<lb/>
it's at this summer.<lb/>
Graffiti Art Surfaces In ECU's Finest Stalls<lb/>
AT BARRE,ltd<lb/>
Continued from P.6<lb/>
their restrooms more<lb/>
often.<lb/>
A first floor men's<lb/>
room in the Brewster<lb/>
Building boasted a<lb/>
series of comments<lb/>
about Rebels and<lb/>
Yankees, and several<lb/>
about the quality of<lb/>
life in the North ver-<lb/>
sus the South. But a<lb/>
Northerner got in the<lb/>
final word: "Has<lb/>
anyone ever retired up<lb/>
North?" wrote one<lb/>
Rebel. "Nixon<lb/>
replied a Yankee.<lb/>
During my visit to<lb/>
Fletcher, I hoped to<lb/>
find some good lyrics,<lb/>
but the stall walls<lb/>
were short on musical<lb/>
arrangements. Just<lb/>
more of the same old<lb/>
sour notes. In one<lb/>
women's room I<lb/>
found that<lb/>
"Musicians make bet-<lb/>
ter lovers "They<lb/>
know how to play<lb/>
shot back another<lb/>
music student.<lb/>
In some restrooms,<lb/>
marble stall dividers<lb/>
and darkly painted<lb/>
doors didn't foil hid-<lb/>
den scrawlers.<lb/>
Creative and deter-<lb/>
mined graffiti-ists<lb/>
then turned to the til-<lb/>
ed walls as their<lb/>
tablets.<lb/>
"I have herpes<lb/>
lamented one scribe<lb/>
on the biology side of<lb/>
the Science Complex<lb/>
Building. "Me too<lb/>
claimed another.<lb/>
But nowhere on<lb/>
campus was the<lb/>
restroom writing<lb/>
more interesting than<lb/>
in Joyner Library.<lb/>
Joyner's first floor<lb/>
men's room walls<lb/>
must be filled with the<lb/>
oldest graffiti on cam-<lb/>
pus. There's a long<lb/>
discussion of the 1980<lb/>
presidential race, with<lb/>
former president<lb/>
Carter taking the<lb/>
brunt of the com-<lb/>
ments, numerous<lb/>
criticisms of Iran, and<lb/>
wisdoms ranging<lb/>
from "Flush twice,<lb/>
it's a long way to<lb/>
racist writers;<lb/>
negative comments<lb/>
about most minorities<lb/>
filled the walls.<lb/>
Finally, I came<lb/>
across a jolting<lb/>
reference to yours tru-<lb/>
ly: "Pat O'Neill is a<lb/>
commie fag wrote<lb/>
not, that ye may not<lb/>
be judged respond<lb/>
ed another.<lb/>
And above it all, in<lb/>
big block letters:<lb/>
,4Our Brains At<lb/>
Work<lb/>
r Dancewear Specialty Shop<lb/>
For all your dancing needs.<lb/>
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the Jewish<lb/>
to<lb/>
anonymous<lb/>
When one person<lb/>
wrote "Communisum<lb/>
for America a critic<lb/>
responded "Commies<lb/>
can't spell<lb/>
Joyner seemed to<lb/>
attract the majority of<lb/>
lltlllll<lb/>
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SS S! �<lb/>
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Mendenhall's film tonight is 'I, The Jury<lb/>
It airs at 8:00 in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Across from Villa Roma,<lb/>
We do minor repairs, tune ups, brake<lb/>
alignments, and air conditioner maintainance.<lb/>
We have a road wrecker service and do<lb/>
service calls. 24 hr. number is 758-1033.<lb/>
Keep your car looking good<lb/>
Free car wash with each fill up!<lb/>
We rent Jartran trucks and trailers for your<lb/>
moving needs.<lb/>
i Come by today for your complete car needs.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057562_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 29, 1983<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Connors Ousted By Curren's Aces<lb/>
W 1MBLEDON, England (UPI)<lb/>
South African Kevin Curren<lb/>
�lasted No. 1 seed Jimmy Con-<lb/>
5, the defending champion,<lb/>
of the Wimbleuon Tennis<lb/>
ion ships Monday,<lb/>
ileashing an incredible 33 aces,<lb/>
ording a 6-3, 6-7, 6-3, 7-6<lb/>
th round upset victory.<lb/>
Connors, uith reputedly the<lb/>
return of service in tennis,<lb/>
5 overwhelmed by Curren's<lb/>
kel serve. The 25-year-old<lb/>
University of Texas star,<lb/>
 is seeded 12th at Wimbledon,<lb/>
more than 70 service winners<lb/>
: the two-hour, 55-minute duel<lb/>
the No. 2 court, a traditional<lb/>
graveyard for so many tourna-<lb/>
ment favorites in the past.<lb/>
lthough Curren defeated Con-<lb/>
- when thev last met in<lb/>
Brussels, he had never beaten<lb/>
Connors on grass.<lb/>
"I knew if I served well, I was<lb/>
in there Curren said. To beat<lb/>
Connors at Wimbledon must be<lb/>
the finest win of my career. Jim-<lb/>
my Connors had probably the<lb/>
best return of serve in the game.<lb/>
Wimbledon<lb/>
'83<lb/>
but he was having a lot of trouble<lb/>
today.<lb/>
'T wasn't really under much<lb/>
pressure in the first two sets.<lb/>
Through the first set, I knew right<lb/>
then that if 1 kept up that serving,<lb/>
I had him under a lot of pressure.<lb/>
He didn't know where the serve<lb/>
was going. At one point, I heard<lb/>
him say that even I didn't know<lb/>
where the serve was going<lb/>
Curren's explosive serve was<lb/>
the key to his success against Con-<lb/>
nors, who never got into his<lb/>
rhythm and uncharacteristically<lb/>
stayed back on his own service for<lb/>
most of the time.<lb/>
Connors, who won the title here<lb/>
for the first time in 1974 and<lb/>
regained his world No. 1 status<lb/>
last year with triumphs at the U.S.<lb/>
Open and Wimbledon, was so<lb/>
disappointed after the defeat that<lb/>
he left without making any com-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Curren, the 1979 NCAA singles<lb/>
champion, kept the pressure on<lb/>
Connors throughout. "He had a<lb/>
lot of trouble anticipating my ser-<lb/>
vice, which I control with my<lb/>
wrist to keep my opponent guess-<lb/>
ing up until the last moment<lb/>
Curren said.<lb/>
He refused to be psyched out by<lb/>
Connors, who was warned for an<lb/>
audible obscenity after Curren<lb/>
blistered an ace past him.<lb/>
"It's no good putting these<lb/>
guys on a pedestal he said.<lb/>
"You have got to have a positive<lb/>
attitude<lb/>
Curren's unexpected victory<lb/>
earned him a quarterfinal berth<lb/>
against 16th-seeded Tim Mayotte<lb/>
of the U.S who outplayed<lb/>
Australian John McCurdy, 6-0,<lb/>
6-2, 6-4.<lb/>
Second-seeded John McEnroe,<lb/>
unaware of the drama involving<lb/>
his major rival, also had a testing<lb/>
workout, needing 3 hours and 15<lb/>
minutes to eliminate 14th seed Bill<lb/>
Scanlon of the U.S 7-5, 7-6, 7-6<lb/>
on center court.<lb/>
McEnroe, the 1981 champion who<lb/>
has reached the last four finals<lb/>
here, was told the news of Con-<lb/>
nors' defeat as soon as he clinched<lb/>
his second tiebreaking game. He<lb/>
and Connors had been huge<lb/>
favorites to meet in the finals.<lb/>
McEnroe was worried about<lb/>
certain aspects of his player after<lb/>
beating Scanlon. "It was a tight<lb/>
match he said. "I'm just glad I<lb/>
got through it. I can't worry<lb/>
about Connors. I'm just worried<lb/>
about myself<lb/>
McEnroe's service lacked its<lb/>
usual penetration and he double-<lb/>
faulted twice in the third-set tie-<lb/>
breaking game.<lb/>
"I was surprised, but Curren is<lb/>
a dangerous grasscourt player;<lb/>
there's no doubt about that. It<lb/>
doesn't affect my game what-<lb/>
soever, however. I've got a tough<lb/>
road ahead anyway said<lb/>
McEnroe, who next meets Sandy<lb/>
Mayer, a 6-1, 7-6, 6-1 winner<lb/>
against fellow American Mike<lb/>
Leach.<lb/>
The women's competition also<lb/>
produced its share of surprises,<lb/>
but Navratilova and Jaeger both<lb/>
won in convincing fashion. Na-<lb/>
vratilova, chasing her third<lb/>
Wimbledon crowd, reached the<lb/>
peak of her power in destroying<lb/>
West Germany's Claudia Kohde in<lb/>
only 39 minutes for a quarterfinal<lb/>
berth against Jenny Mundell of<lb/>
South Africa.<lb/>
Bragg Shows Off Pirate Stuff M<lb/>
A t National Sports Festival<lb/>
i l basketball forward Sylvia<lb/>
; ored 12 points and grabb-<lb/>
rebounds Sunday night<lb/>
ing the East squad's opening<lb/>
nd in the National Sports<lb/>
tival.<lb/>
g, who is co-captain of the<lb/>
-quad along with Virginia's<lb/>
v Mayer, was limited to just<lb/>
minutes of playing time<lb/>
al rule). However, she still<lb/>
ed to make two out of three<lb/>
oals and sink eight of 10<lb/>
'WS.<lb/>
East squad lost to the<lb/>
rth team, 91�90. Bragg's team<lb/>
iv again tonight in the four-<lb/>
Neries.<lb/>
Bragg, a native of Richmond,<lb/>
is the only player from a<lb/>
rth Carolina school to make<lb/>
festival squad.<lb/>
It took the Houston Rockets<lb/>
seconds to open Tuesday's<lb/>
N'BA's draft with the selection of<lb/>
nia's all-America center<lb/>
Sampson. The 7-4 athlete<lb/>
been college player of the year<lb/>
e last three seasons.<lb/>
Sampson said, "I'm not just<lb/>
down to play basketball,<lb/>
ts can give me all the com-<lb/>
;nts in the world, but they<lb/>
nothing to me if I don't play<lb/>
my capabilities<lb/>
pson ended his career<lb/>
mg 17 points and nearly 12<lb/>
mds to lead the Cavaliers to<lb/>
v ictories.<lb/>
Along with Sampson, Houston<lb/>
picked up Louisville's Rod<lb/>
jv , a third-selection first-<lb/>
round draft choice. The second<lb/>
selection in round one draft<lb/>
choice was Missouri forward<lb/>
Steve Stipanovich, who will be<lb/>
playing for the Indiana Pacers.<lb/>
The fourth pick in the first<lb/>
round was Arizona State guard<lb/>
Byron Scott, who was selected by<lb/>
the San Diego Clippers.<lb/>
N.C. State forward Thurl<lb/>
Bailey was a seventh pick in the<lb/>
first round by Utah, while his<lb/>
teammates Dereck Whittenburg<lb/>
(third round, 4th) will head to<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Phoenix, and Sidney Lowe<lb/>
(second round, 1st) will make his<lb/>
new home in Chicago.<lb/>
Defending Champion Martina<lb/>
Navratilova and veteran Billie<lb/>
Jean King both advanced to the<lb/>
women's semifinals of the<lb/>
Wimbledon tennis champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Navratilova used her awesome<lb/>
power to overwhelm unseeded<lb/>
South African Jennifer Mundel,<lb/>
6-3, 6-1. Navratilova needed just<lb/>
47 minutes to win the match.<lb/>
King, once again making a big<lb/>
showing at Wimbledon, reached<lb/>
the semi-finals for the 11th time<lb/>
with a 7-6, 6-4 victory over fellow<lb/>
American Kathy Jordan.<lb/>
Yvonne Vermaak, another<lb/>
unseeded South African, earned<lb/>
the unenviable task of facing<lb/>
Navratilova with a 6-3, 2-6, 6-2<lb/>
triumph over Britain's Virginia<lb/>
Wade. King will face third-seed<lb/>
Andrea Jaeger, who advanced<lb/>
with a 6-4, 6-1 triumph overllth-<lb/>
seed Barbara Potter.<lb/>
Third-seed Ivan Lendl of<lb/>
Czechoslovakia, seeking his first<lb/>
major tennis title, became the first<lb/>
player to reach the men's semi-<lb/>
finals with a 7-5, 7-6, 6-3 victory<lb/>
over American Roscoe Tanner.<lb/>
New Zealand's Chris Lewis,<lb/>
ranked only 91st in the world, also<lb/>
advanced by outlasting American<lb/>
Mel Purcell, 6-7, 6-0, 6-4, 7-6.<lb/>
The NBC network will provide<lb/>
live coverage of the Wimbledon<lb/>
women's singles final Saturday at<lb/>
9 a.m. and of the men's singles<lb/>
final Sunday at 9 a.m. Highlights<lb/>
of the matches will air tonight<lb/>
through Friday at 11:30 p.m.<lb/>
Former N.C. State basketball<lb/>
star Ronnie Shavlik died Monday<lb/>
of cancer. He was 49 years old.<lb/>
Shavlik, who was an all-<lb/>
America while playing for the<lb/>
Wolfpack in the mid-1950's,<lb/>
played professional basketball for<lb/>
a couple of seasons with the New-<lb/>
York Knicks before returning to<lb/>
Raleigh in 1956. In the next few<lb/>
years, Shavlik started a janitorial<lb/>
service, and in 1957, Carolina<lb/>
Maintenance Co. was incor-<lb/>
porated.<lb/>
Among many of the honors he<lb/>
received, Shavlik was said to have<lb/>
been most proud of the NCAA's<lb/>
1980 Silver Anniversary Award,<lb/>
which is given annually to five<lb/>
fowmer athletes who have<lb/>
distinguished themselves in<lb/>
business careers and community<lb/>
service.<lb/>
Shavlik was also inducted into<lb/>
the North Carolina Sports Hall of<lb/>
Fame in 1979.<lb/>
Tom Kite and John Cook have<lb/>
withdrawn from this weekend's<lb/>
Western Golf Championships<lb/>
outside Chicago. Top money win-<lb/>
ner Kite withdrew for personal<lb/>
reasons, and Cook has an injured<lb/>
wrist.<lb/>
In the USFL Monday night, the<lb/>
Tampa Bay Bandits played by the<lb/>
motto of the U.S. Post Office.<lb/>
Neither hail nor rain nor lightn-<lb/>
ingin this casecould keep<lb/>
them from their appointed round.<lb/>
The Bandits kept their playoff<lb/>
hopes alive with a 26�23 win over<lb/>
the Denver Gold in a game<lb/>
suspended 50 minutes in the<lb/>
fourth quarter because of lightn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
But just two plays later, after<lb/>
nature took a rest, Bandit quarter-<lb/>
back Jimmy Jordan zipped a<lb/>
44-yard touchdown pass to wide<lb/>
receiver Eric Truvillion. The<lb/>
touchdown capped the comeback<lb/>
victory for the home team and im-<lb/>
proved its record to 11 �6 for the<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Tampa is now tied with<lb/>
Chicago and Michigan in the<lb/>
league's central division. Denver's<lb/>
mark fell to 7-10.<lb/>
ECU's Sylvia Bragg (center) looks on as former teammate Dariene<lb/>
Chaney grabs a rebound. Bragg is serving as co-captain on the Na-<lb/>
tional Sports Festival's East squad.<lb/>
After 21 Years On Mound, Gay lord<lb/>
Perry May Have Thrown His Last Ball<lb/>
N C. Stale's Thurl Bailey goes up against former Pirate Johnny Ed-<lb/>
wards. Bailey was a first-round draft pick in the NBA Draft Tuesday.<lb/>
After pitching for 21 years in<lb/>
the major leagues, Gay lord Perry<lb/>
may have taken the mound for the<lb/>
last time. The Williamston native,<lb/>
who is 10th on the all-time list<lb/>
with 310 victories, was put up for<lb/>
assignment by the Seattle<lb/>
Mariners on Saturday.<lb/>
This marks the fourth time in<lb/>
the last four seasons that Perry<lb/>
has been released by a major<lb/>
league team. In 1980, the San<lb/>
Diego Padres released him and he<lb/>
was picked up by the New York<lb/>
Yankees. After the Yankees<lb/>
released him in 1981, Perry was<lb/>
picked up by the Atlanta Braves.<lb/>
Then, in 1982 the Yankees releas-<lb/>
ed him and he was picked up by<lb/>
the Mariners, where he pitched<lb/>
career victory No. 300 on May 6th<lb/>
of last year.<lb/>
It is possible that Perry will be<lb/>
picked up by another club, but it<lb/>
is unlikely since the Mariners had<lb/>
the worst record in baseball and<lb/>
still didn't have room for him on<lb/>
their squad. So, it's possible that<lb/>
the man famous for his alleged<lb/>
"spitter" has thrown his last<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Next Wednesday, July 6th, the<lb/>
54th All-Star game will be played<lb/>
at the same park as the first All-<lb/>
Star game back in 1933 �<lb/>
Chicago's Comiskey Park. When<lb/>
the top vote-getters clash next<lb/>
week, it will be exactly 50 years<lb/>
since Babe Ruth hit a two-run<lb/>
homer to give the American<lb/>
League a 4-2 victory in the in-<lb/>
augural contest.<lb/>
The National League will try to<lb/>
continue one of the most amazing<lb/>
records in sports. They will be<lb/>
shooting for their 12 consecutive<lb/>
win and 19 of their last 20. In last<lb/>
year's contest, Cincinnati short-<lb/>
stop Dave Concepcion was voted<lb/>
the MVP after his second-inning<lb/>
two-run homer boosted the Na-<lb/>
tional League to a 4-1 victory.<lb/>
As the All-Star break nears,<lb/>
two unfamiliar names sit atop the<lb/>
American League's two divisions.<lb/>
The Toronto Blue Jays, who<lb/>
finished in the Eastern division<lb/>
cellar last year, are leading the<lb/>
Baltimore Orioles by one-half<lb/>
game, as of Tuesday morning.<lb/>
with his eighth consecutive pinch<lb/>
hit. Staub holds the record along<lb/>
with Dave Philley, who set the<lb/>
mark in 1958.<lb/>
This week's trivia question:<lb/>
Who has the highest winning<lb/>
percentage among active major<lb/>
league managers'<lb/>
Answer to last week's question:<lb/>
Hank Aaron is the Atlanta<lb/>
Braves' all-time leader in stolen<lb/>
bases with 240. Aaron also leads<lb/>
the Braves in nine other offensive<lb/>
categories.<lb/>
Cards Trying Hard<lb/>
KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Baseball Today<lb/>
The Texas Rangers, who won only<lb/>
64 games last year, are tied with<lb/>
the California Angels for first<lb/>
place in the West.<lb/>
The major leagues' hottest<lb/>
club, the Pittsburgh Pirates,<lb/>
defeated the St. Louis Cardinals<lb/>
6-1 Monday night for the Pirates'<lb/>
ninth consecutive victory � the<lb/>
longest winning streak in baseball<lb/>
this season. The surge has pulled<lb/>
the Pirates to within five and one-<lb/>
half games of the Montreal Expos<lb/>
in the National League East.<lb/>
Rusty Staub, a 39-year old utili-<lb/>
ty player for the New York Mets,<lb/>
tied a major league record Sunday<lb/>
ST. LOUIS (AP) - The St.<lb/>
Louis Cardinals are trying, says<lb/>
Manager Whitey Herzog. Very<lb/>
trying.<lb/>
Last year they were baseball's<lb/>
champions. This year they have<lb/>
suddenly fallen on hard times.<lb/>
They took a six-game losing<lb/>
streak into Monday night's game<lb/>
against the resurgent Pittsburgh<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
"You don't get mad, because<lb/>
they're trying said Herzog.<lb/>
"You get awful disgusted wat-<lb/>
ching it. If you don't get pit-<lb/>
ching well, I don't know. What<lb/>
can you do?"<lb/>
They can try and stay within<lb/>
grasp of the lead in the National<lb/>
League East. "If we can just stay<lb/>
close until the All-Star break, we<lb/>
should be all right Herzog said<lb/>
after watching St. Louis drop<lb/>
three and one-half games behind<lb/>
the first-place Montreal Expos.<lb/>
The All-Star break comes a week<lb/>
from now.<lb/>
Pitching � or, more precisely,<lb/>
the lack of it � has been the Car-<lb/>
dinals' primary problem. The St.<lb/>
Louis staffs collective earned-run<lb/>
average is 3.88, ninth in the<lb/>
league. Cardinals pitchers have<lb/>
given up 53 home runs in 69<lb/>
games compared to the 94 they<lb/>
allowed in all of 1982.<lb/>
"I can't believe some of the<lb/>
balls flying out of here Herzog<lb/>
said after the Pirates belted six<lb/>
home runs out of spacious Busch<lb/>
Stadium in a 24-hour span.<lb/>
There are bright spots in the<lb/>
Cardinals' lineup � George Hen-<lb/>
drick, now at first base, is batting<lb/>
a league-high .342, and Willie<lb/>
McGee is at .318 � but the best<lb/>
pitching record is 7-4 by John<lb/>
Stupcr, recently relegated to the<lb/>
bullpen. Because the Cards rarely<lb/>
have held a late inning lead in<lb/>
their swoon, their ace reliever,<lb/>
Bruce Sutter, has sat idle.<lb/>
"I'm going to have to start<lb/>
mm, said Herzog only half jok-<lb/>
ingly. "Hopefully we'll be in a<lb/>
game for six or seven innings that<lb/>
way <lb/>
Festival<lb/>
Of Track<lb/>
COLORADO SPR-<lb/>
INGS, Colo. (UPI) -<lb/>
Rain and<lb/>
unseasonably chilly<lb/>
temperatures plagued<lb/>
the National Sports<lb/>
Festival once agajn<lb/>
Monday, but<lb/>
organizers of the<lb/>
massive event were<lb/>
saddled with a pro-<lb/>
blem potentially<lb/>
larger than the<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
Thousands of<lb/>
tickets have been sold<lb/>
for the weekend's<lb/>
track and field com-<lb/>
petition � as alwa<lb/>
the top attraction at<lb/>
the Festival � and as<lb/>
of Monday afternoon<lb/>
there were nowhere<lb/>
near enough seats for<lb/>
those ticket hold?<lb/>
sit in.<lb/>
The track and field<lb/>
events will take place<lb/>
al the Air Forl<lb/>
Academy and th(<lb/>
are no-<lb/>
bleachers at tin j<lb/>
accomodate on<lb/>
about 3,000 peoj<lb/>
So the Spor I e<lb/>
officials arrang<lb/>
with a Denver c<lb/>
pany to<lb/>
bleachers for 7<lb/>
additionaJ spe.<lb/>
But the<lb/>
operation<lb/>
' tival, J<lb/>
It<lb/>
received a<lb/>
stall at ion la<lb/>
the compa-<lb/>
"We �n<lb/>
sea: here<lb/>
V. .<lb/>
N<lb/>
He .<lb/>
m:<lb/>
KM<lb/>
Celtics<lb/>
Suns' D<lb/>
BOSTON (UPI) -<lb/>
The Boston Ce<lb/>
announced Mondaj<lb/>
they had traded<lb/>
backup center Rick<lb/>
Robey to the Phoenix<lb/>
Suns for veteran<lb/>
guard Denn. -<lb/>
Johnson, a former all-<lb/>
star, in a deal that<lb/>
also involved a wap<lb/>
of draft choice<lb/>
The deal give<lb/>
Boston the 198? first-<lb/>
round pick<lb/>
Phoenix � No 21<lb/>
overall � as well a<lb/>
the Suns' second pick<lb/>
The t .<lb/>
S u r. �<lb/>
28 as<lb/>
Rob<lb/>
well<lb/>
backup �<lb/>
- fc<lb/>
but sa r<lb/>
p<lb/>
time<lb/>
because<lb/>
center-1<lb/>
Mc Ha<lb/>
average -<lb/>
points a<lb/>
'Jik<lb/>
JLi<lb/>
5I2E !4thS<lb/>
Greenville. North<lb/>
$1,99 Daily S(<lb/>
1 Meat<lb/>
2 Vegetabl<lb/>
1 Bread<lb/>
Our new summer hours are:<lb/>
,E PAY IMMEDIATE<lb/>
CLASSRINGS WEDD!<lb/>
DIAMONDT<lb/>
ALLGOLD&amp; SI<lb/>
SILVER COI<lb/>
CH'NA&amp;CRYSI<lb/>
FINE WATCH<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
Of �tt 5��S CO<lb/>
OPEN:<lb/>
PHOI<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH)<lb/>
"YOUR PROFESSIONAL! <lb/>
Greenville's Besfl<lb/>
Now Being De<lb/>
Most delivery pizias lack n<lb/>
true quality and have h.ddj<lb/>
delivery costs in the price<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our deliver<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Pri<lb/>
No Surcharge. We<lb/>
giVe FREE Drinks<lb/>
our large and giantl<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TO<lb/>
1 �4i GreenvHje<lb/>
 JtI <lb/>
� '� &amp; �<lb/>
<pb facs="00057562_0009"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 29, I9t3 9<lb/>
ces<lb/>
Mpned. but Curren is<lb/>
angerous grasscourt player;<lb/>
doubt about that. It<lb/>
ccl m game what-<lb/>
m evci I've got a tough<lb/>
cad anyway said<lb/>
who next meets Sandy<lb/>
6 1 7-6, 6-1 winner<lb/>
v mencan Mike<lb/>
- competition also<lb/>
share o surprises,<lb/>
Sa ova and Jaeger both<lb/>
i 'ashion. Na-<lb/>
ng her third<lb/>
wd, reached the<lb/>
K)wer in destroung<lb/>
� sClaudia Kohde in<lb/>
a quarterfinal<lb/>
- Jenm Mundell of<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
P<lb/>
�P<lb/>
<lb/>
� V<lb/>
OLlt<lb/>
<lb/>
t<lb/>
� �<lb/>
as former teammate Dariene<lb/>
Imnu as co-captain on the Na-<lb/>
ylord<lb/>
ast Ball<lb/>
manager.<lb/>
week's question:<lb/>
the Atlanta<lb/>
time leader in stolen<lb/>
with 740. Aaron also leads<lb/>
in nine other offensive<lb/>
fng Hard<lb/>
rimary problem. The St.<lb/>
- staff's collective earned-run<lb/>
I erage is 3.88, ninth in the<lb/>
Wue. Cardinals pitchers have<lb/>
�en up 53 home runs in 69<lb/>
unes compared to the 94 they<lb/>
ed in all of 1982.<lb/>
an't believe some of the<lb/>
lying out of here Herzog<lb/>
id after the Pirates belted six<lb/>
me runs out of spacious Busch<lb/>
tadium in a 24-hour span.<lb/>
There are bright spots in the<lb/>
ardinals' lineup � George Hen-<lb/>
frick, now at first base, is batting<lb/>
league-high .342, and Willie<lb/>
FlcGee is at .318 - but the best<lb/>
bitching record is 7-4 by John<lb/>
btuper, recently relegated to the<lb/>
ullpen. Because the Cards rarely<lb/>
lave held a late inning lead in<lb/>
ieir swoon, their ace reliever,<lb/>
Jruce Sutler, has sat idle.<lb/>
"I'm going to have to start<lb/>
Hm, said Herzog only half jok-<lb/>
iglv 'Hopefully we'll be in a<lb/>
ame tor six or seven innings that<lb/>
Festival Plagued By Lack<lb/>
Of Track &amp; Field Seats<lb/>
COLORADO SPR-<lb/>
INGS, Colo. (UP1) �<lb/>
Rain and<lb/>
unseasonably chilly<lb/>
temperatures plagued<lb/>
the National Sports<lb/>
Festival once again<lb/>
Monday, but<lb/>
organizers of the<lb/>
massive event were<lb/>
saddled with a pro-<lb/>
blem potentially<lb/>
larger than the<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
Thousands of<lb/>
tickets have been sold<lb/>
for the weekend's<lb/>
track and field com-<lb/>
petition � as always<lb/>
the top attraction at<lb/>
the Festival � and as<lb/>
of Monday afternoon<lb/>
there were nowhere<lb/>
near enough seats for<lb/>
those ticket holders to<lb/>
sit in.<lb/>
The track and Field<lb/>
events will take place<lb/>
at the Air Force<lb/>
Academy and there<lb/>
ar� normally<lb/>
bleachers at the site to<lb/>
accomodate only<lb/>
about 3,000 people.<lb/>
So the Sports Festival<lb/>
officials arranged<lb/>
with a Denver com-<lb/>
pany to supply<lb/>
bleachers for 7,400<lb/>
additional spectators.<lb/>
But the director of<lb/>
operations for the<lb/>
Festival, Jim Warsin-<lb/>
ske, said he had not<lb/>
received a Firm in-<lb/>
stallation date from<lb/>
the company.<lb/>
"We wanted the<lb/>
seats here last week<lb/>
said Warsinske.<lb/>
"Now we're in lim-<lb/>
bo<lb/>
He said if the pro-<lb/>
mised bleachers were<lb/>
not delivered, tem-<lb/>
porary seating being<lb/>
used at other venues<lb/>
around the academy<lb/>
would be brought into<lb/>
play.<lb/>
For the second<lb/>
straight day, occa-<lb/>
sional rains peppered<lb/>
down on Colorado<lb/>
Springs, hampering<lb/>
outdoor activities.<lb/>
A thick fog settled<lb/>
in over the rowing<lb/>
course at the Cherry<lb/>
Creek Reservoir early<lb/>
Monday, but the<lb/>
North eight-oared<lb/>
crew � containing<lb/>
three members of<lb/>
Brown University's<lb/>
national champion-<lb/>
ship squad � won the<lb/>
gold medal by a nar-<lb/>
row margin in its<lb/>
event.<lb/>
The North crew,<lb/>
stroked by Brown<lb/>
senior Nick Justicz of<lb/>
Atlanta led from start<lb/>
to finish, but never by<lb/>
more than a few feet.<lb/>
About three-quarters<lb/>
of a boat length<lb/>
seperated the four<lb/>
boats at the finish.<lb/>
Monday's highlight<lb/>
was expected to come<lb/>
during the third and<lb/>
last evening of swim-<lb/>
ming competition,<lb/>
where SMU's Steve<lb/>
Lundquist had<lb/>
already won three<lb/>
gold medals.<lb/>
It was also the final<lb/>
day of practice for the<lb/>
24 boxers left in the<lb/>
Festival, all of whom<lb/>
will be in action<lb/>
tonight in the cham-<lb/>
pionship round. The<lb/>
Festival boxing com-<lb/>
petition is being used<lb/>
as trials tor the Pan<lb/>
American Games.<lb/>
Among Tuesday<lb/>
night's top bouts<lb/>
should be the ban-<lb/>
tamweight confronta-<lb/>
tion between defen-<lb/>
ding world champion<lb/>
Floyd Favors of<lb/>
Capital Heights, Md.<lb/>
and national Gold<lb/>
Gloves champ Jesse<lb/>
Benavides of Corpus<lb/>
Christi, Texas.<lb/>
The super-<lb/>
heavyweight division<lb/>
will bring together<lb/>
two sluggers who<lb/>
disposed of their op-<lb/>
ponents in convincing<lb/>
fashion during the<lb/>
semifinals. Al Evans<lb/>
of Chicago stopped<lb/>
Craig Payne in 44<lb/>
seconds of the first<lb/>
round in their fight<lb/>
and Tyrell Biggs of<lb/>
Philadelphia put Kim-<lb/>
muel Odum away 58<lb/>
seconds into the se-<lb/>
cond round.<lb/>
Celtics Deal Robey For<lb/>
Suns' Dennis Johnson<lb/>
BOSTON (UPI) �<lb/>
The Boston Celtics<lb/>
announced Monday<lb/>
they had traded<lb/>
backup center Rick<lb/>
Robey to the Phoenix<lb/>
Suns for veteran<lb/>
guard Dennis<lb/>
Johnson, a former all-<lb/>
star, in a deal that<lb/>
also involved a swap<lb/>
of draft choices.<lb/>
The deal gives<lb/>
Boston the 1983 first-<lb/>
round pick of<lb/>
Phoenix � No. 21<lb/>
overall � as well as<lb/>
the Suns' second pick<lb/>
in the third round in<lb/>
the college draft.<lb/>
The Celtics gave the<lb/>
Suns their two picks<lb/>
in the second round,<lb/>
Nos 28 and 54 overall.<lb/>
Robey, 6-10, was<lb/>
well regarded as a<lb/>
backup to All-Star<lb/>
center Robert Parish,<lb/>
but saw increasingly-<lb/>
diminished playing<lb/>
time last season<lb/>
because of the play of<lb/>
center-forward Kevin<lb/>
McHale. Robey<lb/>
averaged only 4.2<lb/>
points a game last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
McHale was<lb/>
rumored to be on the<lb/>
verge of accepting a<lb/>
multi-million dollar<lb/>
offer sheet from the<lb/>
New York Knicks<lb/>
which the Celtics had<lb/>
promised to match.<lb/>
Johnson, 6-4<lb/>
guard, averaged 14.2<lb/>
points per game and<lb/>
shot 46 percent from<lb/>
the floor for Phoenix<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
The former Pepper-<lb/>
dine College star, a<lb/>
veteran of seven years<lb/>
in the NBA, played<lb/>
four years with the<lb/>
Seattle Supersonics.<lb/>
He was named to the<lb/>
All-Star team and was<lb/>
the most valuable<lb/>
player in 1978-79<lb/>
NBA championship<lb/>
series when Seattle<lb/>
won the title.<lb/>
Aerobic exercising has quickly become one of the most exciting ways to get in shape around the<lb/>
ECU campus. Aerobic classes began Monday and will end July 28.<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat July 2 1983<lb/>
vVui.V<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM<lb/>
POLICY<lb/>
Each of the.se aciver<lb/>
tiseci items is re<lb/>
quired to oe readiiv<lb/>
available for sale in<lb/>
each Kroger sav-on<lb/>
except as specificai<lb/>
iv noted in this ad if<lb/>
we do run out of an<lb/>
item we win offer<lb/>
von your choice of a<lb/>
comparable item<lb/>
when avanacie<lb/>
reflecting the same<lb/>
savings or a ram<lb/>
check which will en<lb/>
title vou to purchase<lb/>
the advertised item<lb/>
at the advertised<lb/>
price within 3C days<lb/>
Limit one manufac<lb/>
turers coupon pe�<lb/>
item<lb/>
�� -<lb/>
�AYMMMEDIATE cash for<lb/>
LCLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALL GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
SILVER COINS<lb/>
CHNA&amp; CRYSTAL<lb/>
FINE WATCHES<lb/>
&amp; RING<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. openon sat<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHONE 752-3866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER.<lb/>
Pizza irun<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden' <lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL ggg Greenville Blv<lb/>
PREMUIM<lb/>
coors<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
12-02.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
SPRITE, TAB, OR<lb/>
PLUS DEPOSIT<lb/>
Ret.<lb/>
Btls.<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Natural Flavor<lb/>
ice Cream<lb/>
a<lb/>
12-Cal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
VLB POTATO SAIAD<lb/>
OR C0U SlAW WITH<lb/>
PURCHASE OF<lb/>
12-Pc. Wishbone<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
BUY 2<lb/>
Bags Dell<lb/>
Nacho<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
Get 1 Bag<lb/>
14-OZ<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
12 PC<lb/>
Bucket<lb/>
includes<lb/>
rohs<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057562_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 29, 1983,<lb/>
Ayako Beats<lb/>
Whitworth<lb/>
At Rochester<lb/>
PITTSFORD, N.Y.<lb/>
(AP) � For Kathy<lb/>
Whitworth, one more<lb/>
golf tournament title<lb/>
will end her quest, but<lb/>
for Ayako Okamoto,<lb/>
who is bidding to<lb/>
become the Japanese<lb/>
version of Whitworth,<lb/>
the pressure never<lb/>
stops.<lb/>
Okamoto recovered<lb/>
from a 4-over-par 76<lb/>
to win the $200,000<lb/>
Rochester Interna-<lb/>
tional in a playoff<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
After pocketing the<lb/>
$30,000 first prize,<lb/>
she said she enjoyed<lb/>
the fact that she is not<lb/>
well-known in the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
"In Japan, a<lb/>
celebrity's private life<lb/>
can get disturbed<lb/>
she said through an<lb/>
interpreter.<lb/>
Okamoto, Whit-<lb/>
worth and Donna<lb/>
White tied for first at<lb/>
6-under-par 282 after<lb/>
72 holes.<lb/>
All three made par<lb/>
on Nos 1 and 2, but<lb/>
Okamoto cut short<lb/>
the tournament on No<lb/>
18, the third playoff<lb/>
hole, with a 10-foot<lb/>
birdie putt.<lb/>
Whitworth, 43, was<lb/>
shooting for her 85th<lb/>
Ladies Professional<lb/>
Golf Association title,<lb/>
which would put her<lb/>
one ahead of Sam<lb/>
Snead as the winn-<lb/>
ingcst American<lb/>
golfer of all time. She<lb/>
is tied with the Profes-<lb/>
sional Golfers'<lb/>
Association veteran<lb/>
with 84 champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
White, whose<lb/>
8-under 208 after Fri-<lb/>
day trailed Okamoto<lb/>
by two shots, also<lb/>
staggered home with<lb/>
an over-par finishing<lb/>
round of 74. The day<lb/>
before, she tied a<lb/>
course and tourna-<lb/>
ment record with a<lb/>
6-under 66.<lb/>
Okamoto generated<lb/>
steady rounds of 68,<lb/>
71 and 67 before her<lb/>
controlled collapse,<lb/>
which included three<lb/>
bogeys on the front<lb/>
nine, a birdie just<lb/>
before a double<lb/>
bogey-6 on No 13 and<lb/>
another bogey on 15<lb/>
before a saving birdie<lb/>
on 17. Vicki Fergon<lb/>
shot a 69 to claim<lb/>
fourth place at 283 on<lb/>
the par-72, 6,162-yard<lb/>
Locust Hill Country<lb/>
Club layout. Jo Anne<lb/>
Carner and Jane<lb/>
Blalock were two<lb/>
shots out of the<lb/>
playoffs at 284.<lb/>
Betsy King fashion-<lb/>
ed a 285 with another<lb/>
finishing round of 69,<lb/>
one shot ahead of a<lb/>
six-player cluster at<lb/>
286.<lb/>
Okamoto, who at<lb/>
32 has been playing<lb/>
golf for only 10 years,<lb/>
is a major celebrity in<lb/>
Japan, said free-lance<lb/>
journalist Duke<lb/>
Ishikawa.<lb/>
Overton Breaks<lb/>
Slalom Record<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, July 2, 1983<lb/>
Lb,<lb/>
USDA Chalet Beef Rib<lb/>
Rib-Eye<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
Tib.<lb/>
SaithfitM - U-20 Ut. A��.SIieH FREE<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
4 Lbs.<lb/>
Slie.d FREE<lb/>
Etch<lb/>
Jmfc<lb/>
9 Size<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
1 Liter<lb/>
1.S Liter � LiMbmtee, Biaoeo Rosito<lb/>
Riunite<lb/>
Wine<lb/>
Pkf. of 12 � 12 Ox. Cats<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Ph. of 11 � 12 Ox. Coot<lb/>
Old Milwaukee<lb/>
Pb. of 11 -12 Oz. Cats<lb/>
Stroh's<lb/>
L<lb/>
?<lb/>
TAMPA, FLA �<lb/>
Kristi Overton broke<lb/>
her own junior girls<lb/>
national slalom<lb/>
record with a score of<lb/>
57 and one-half buoys<lb/>
this weekend.<lb/>
She was one of nine<lb/>
female and eight male<lb/>
skiers from across the<lb/>
country who qualified<lb/>
to compete for a<lb/>
coveted position on<lb/>
the six-member team<lb/>
to represent the<lb/>
United States in<lb/>
Sweden in late August<lb/>
at the semi-annual<lb/>
World Champion-<lb/>
ships.<lb/>
Overton, 13, was<lb/>
the youngest of the<lb/>
qualifiers and had the<lb/>
highest score of the<lb/>
females in three<lb/>
rounds of the trick<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Those chosen for<lb/>
the team were: Cindy<lb/>
Todd, Deena Burch,<lb/>
Carl Roberge, Sammy<lb/>
Duvall, Camille<lb/>
Duvall and Cory<lb/>
Pickos, all of Florida.<lb/>
Yugoslavia Wins<lb/>
KANSAS CITY,<lb/>
Mo (UPI) � Center<lb/>
Ratko Radovanovic<lb/>
and guard Petar<lb/>
Vilfan combined for<lb/>
47 points to carry<lb/>
Yugoslavia to a 93-82<lb/>
victory over Cuba in<lb/>
the International<lb/>
Basketball Tourna-<lb/>
ment Monday.<lb/>
In games on the<lb/>
night card, the United<lb/>
States Pan American<lb/>
team met the U.S.<lb/>
University Games en-<lb/>
try in the women's<lb/>
competition and the<lb/>
U.S. men took on<lb/>
Mexico.<lb/>
Radovanovic, the<lb/>
only holdover from<lb/>
Yugoslavia's 1980<lb/>
gold medal-winning<lb/>
team, scored 28 points<lb/>
and had 10 rebounds.<lb/>
Vilfan finished with<lb/>
19 points and three<lb/>
assists as the Yugosla-<lb/>
vians completed the<lb/>
tournament with a 2-1<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Vilfan scored eight<lb/>
of his points in the<lb/>
final five and one-half<lb/>
minutes of the first<lb/>
half to help<lb/>
Yugoslavia rally from<lb/>
deficits of as many as<lb/>
10 points and claim a<lb/>
37-35 lead at intermis-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
TYPINO: TIIM PAPONS.<lb/>
� MAYS ONtf IISUMIS. IOM<lb/>
SILICTIIC TYPBWNITKN<lb/>
a�� CAMfKA HKADY<lb/>
riiumi Slavics, cam<lb/>
MOM at gwgpj:<lb/>
ACAOIMIC AMD PAOPIS-<lb/>
StONAL TYNINO. IOM Mk-<lb/>
trie tH- �"� aiaaAwartfc.<lb/>
tu-m.<lb/>
KIIP YOU� TAN THIS IUM-<lb/>
Mll AMO M A VACATION<lb/>
COUNSELOR AT MAUTINUL<lb/>
� MSAALO ISLII UNO<lb/>
IIIUMI TO: VACATION<lb/>
CCUO Of AMINICA 141<lb/>
�OOUI INLBT ON. 107<lb/>
IS4.I, NC:<lb/>
YOU'NI NOT RIALLY<lb/>
STUPIDI YWr HMt MvMtfl a<lb/>
llfftt tfMawM iMrWI ��1111<lb/>
Can nm; I cm kata. Tatartaa<lb/>
�vailaW tar All<lb/>
Nam.ta<lb/>
PITT -NULL. PUPPIIS FOR<lb/>
SALI, 1 OrMMHA Paw. CAN<lb/>
7S7-00U aak tar Jawataaw �r<lb/>
I HMO A<lb/>
TUTOR tar aav<lb/>
CaN<lb/>
STINCO NOR SAL NtaAOT<lb/>
ISO racatoar, JVC tanrtaali, I<lb/>
rianaar laialiin Can STU,<lb/>
TSS-SSSS.<lb/>
ROOMMATI WANTIO:<lb/>
Naiata ta tkara s-aaraa��<lb/>
11 vHHMaa � SMS par<lb/>
. 9 tttocttt It�mi CSMV<lb/>
apaat IS. Oa 1S1<lb/>
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