<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00057623_0001"/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
She<lb/>
daroUnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Happy<lb/>
Valentine's<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Vol.58 No.r<lb/>
Tuesday, February 14, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 P<lb/>
ages<lb/>
( in ulation 10,000<lb/>
Strategy Against Defaulters Planned<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRAS1AK<lb/>
Nwi Editor<lb/>
Students receiving money from<lb/>
SGA loan funds in the future may<lb/>
want to think twice before<lb/>
defaulting if current plans for en-<lb/>
forcement of payment are passed.<lb/>
The SGA maintains two loan<lb/>
funds. One, the emergency<lb/>
medical fund, provides students<lb/>
with up to $150 and allows them<lb/>
six months to repay the loan. The<lb/>
other provides loans of $25 which<lb/>
are payable within 30 days.<lb/>
According to SGA Treasurer<lb/>
Becky Talley, $6,433.50 of<lb/>
Emergency Medical loans are cur-<lb/>
rently outstanding ? approx-<lb/>
imately 99 percent. She estimates<lb/>
approximately $3,500 to be at<lb/>
least two months overdue. Of<lb/>
loans made from the regular loan<lb/>
fund, approximately 84 percent<lb/>
are outstanding and between<lb/>
$2,000 and $3,000 is overdue.<lb/>
Under current rules, students<lb/>
delinquent in their loan payments<lb/>
are warned and then contacted by<lb/>
an attorney employed by the<lb/>
SGA. If they don't pay they face<lb/>
court action through the Small<lb/>
Claims Court and may have their<lb/>
transcripts tagged.<lb/>
Unfortunately, according to<lb/>
SGA President Paul Naso, the<lb/>
system is not working. Students<lb/>
with tagged transcripts are<lb/>
graduating without repaying<lb/>
loans. The Emergency Medical<lb/>
Loan Fund has gone from $4,000<lb/>
to almost nothing in the last four<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Because the problem of loan<lb/>
defaults is so severe, a task force<lb/>
was appointed to study the situa-<lb/>
tion and devise plans to decrease<lb/>
JIMMie MACKETT - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Democratic Presidential candidate Rev. Jesse Jackson spoke at the<lb/>
National Student Conference on Voter Registration last weekend.<lb/>
ECU Student Leaders<lb/>
Attend Conference<lb/>
Six ECU students were<lb/>
among more than 1,300 college<lb/>
student leaders from<lb/>
throughout the nation atten-<lb/>
ding National Student Con-<lb/>
ference on Voter Registration<lb/>
last weekend at Harvard<lb/>
University.<lb/>
SOULS President Jimmie<lb/>
Hackett, Assistant Student At-<lb/>
torney General Rick Brown,<lb/>
East Carolinian editors Jen-<lb/>
nifer Jendrasiak, Ed Nicklas<lb/>
and Darryl Brown, and<lb/>
political science junior Jay<lb/>
Stone attended the conference<lb/>
which featured such speakers<lb/>
as consumer advocate Ralph<lb/>
Nader and Democratic<lb/>
presidential candidate Jesse<lb/>
Jackson.<lb/>
The 3-day event featured a<lb/>
series of workshops on conduc-<lb/>
ting voter registration drives in<lb/>
communities and on college<lb/>
campuses. "I found the<lb/>
workshops extremely helpful<lb/>
Nicklas said. "I hope now we<lb/>
can get some good things going<lb/>
at ECU<lb/>
The keynote speaker for the<lb/>
event was the Rev. Jesse<lb/>
Jackson. "It should be as easy<lb/>
to register to vote as to pay<lb/>
taxes Jackson said, telling<lb/>
the student audience, "you<lb/>
must Fight for basic, uniform<lb/>
voter registration form all over<lb/>
the nation<lb/>
Jackson stressed several<lb/>
ideas for increasing voter<lb/>
registration. He said post-card<lb/>
registration and deputy<lb/>
registrars should be in every<lb/>
state to make registration<lb/>
easier. Specifically for colleges,<lb/>
Jackson said there should be a<lb/>
voter registration line beside<lb/>
every class registration line,<lb/>
and fraternities should restrict<lb/>
membership to those who are<lb/>
registered voters.<lb/>
"At high school gradua-<lb/>
tions, each high school student<lb/>
should come across that stage<lb/>
with a diploma in one hand<lb/>
symbolizing knowledge and<lb/>
wisdom, and their voter card in<lb/>
the other hand, symbolizing<lb/>
power and responsibility<lb/>
Jackson said.<lb/>
"In 1965, we found<lb/>
ourselves with the obligation to<lb/>
pay taxes, to salute the flag and<lb/>
to pledge allegiance without the<lb/>
right to vote. We found the<lb/>
hypocrisy in democracy ?<lb/>
citizens who could not vote<lb/>
Also attending the con-<lb/>
ference in Cambridge, Mass<lb/>
were representatives from<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, UNC-<lb/>
Asheville, Duke University and<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne College.<lb/>
the default rate. A plan was pro-<lb/>
posed and presented to the SGA<lb/>
Legislature at yesterday's<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Under the new plan, students<lb/>
delinquent in loan payments will<lb/>
receive a warning from Talley,<lb/>
Naso and Vice Chancellor for Stu-<lb/>
dent Life Elmer Meyer. If no ac-<lb/>
tion is taken by the student, they<lb/>
will then be summoned to appear<lb/>
before the Honor Board and<lb/>
receive a sentence varying from<lb/>
voluntary work and fines to<lb/>
possibly forced withdrawal from<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"It'll make people more aware<lb/>
that they can't abuse the system<lb/>
and if they do, the school can take<lb/>
action against them said Stu-<lb/>
dent Attorney General Harry<lb/>
Dest. Dest stressed that students<lb/>
will receive plenty of notice before<lb/>
their Honor Board appearance.<lb/>
"We're not going to get the<lb/>
money back, but it prevents more<lb/>
from going out Naso said. He<lb/>
added that the new plan will<lb/>
benefit everybody. SGA response<lb/>
was favorable, he said, and the<lb/>
proposal is currently being studied<lb/>
by a committee.<lb/>
James Mallory, associate dean<lb/>
of orientation and judiciary, said<lb/>
he feels the stricter action is<lb/>
necessary. "I think it's bad when<lb/>
students borrow money from<lb/>
other students and then keep good<lb/>
students from getting the<lb/>
money he said.<lb/>
A task force was appointed to<lb/>
survey university officials on sug-<lb/>
gestions for better control of the<lb/>
loans. Scott Epting wrote a report<lb/>
on the results.<lb/>
According to the report, ECU<lb/>
Business Manager Julian<lb/>
Vainright suggested the possibility<lb/>
of establishing an emergency<lb/>
back-up loan similar to one used<lb/>
by the Financial Aid Office. This<lb/>
money would be banked and col-<lb/>
lecting interest and only small<lb/>
withdrawals would be made.<lb/>
Vainright also releed to the<lb/>
SGA a copy of the bad check list<lb/>
compiled by the Cashier's Office<lb/>
each semester. In the future,<lb/>
students requesting loans will be<lb/>
checked against this list, a list of<lb/>
delinquent financial aid loans and<lb/>
a list of delinquent SGA loans.<lb/>
Gilbert Moore, ECU registrar,<lb/>
suggested the use of computers as<lb/>
a long-term solution. Computers<lb/>
would provide a read-out of all<lb/>
outstanding debts on an in-<lb/>
dividual's record. He also stressed<lb/>
the benefit of tagging registration<lb/>
Epting<lb/>
records ;ather than transcripts.<lb/>
This would prevent a student's ap-<lb/>
plying for a new semester if he<lb/>
had outstanding debts.<lb/>
"I think the SGA is making a<lb/>
serious effort to tighten up pro-<lb/>
cedures and we will help them in<lb/>
any way we can Mever said.<lb/>
Panhellenic Scholarship Banquet Conducted<lb/>
Sororities, Members Receive Awards<lb/>
The ECU Panhellenic Associa-<lb/>
tion held its annual Scholarship<lb/>
Banquet last Thursday night to<lb/>
honor outstanding sororities and<lb/>
individual members.<lb/>
Four sorority awards were<lb/>
presented during the evening. The<lb/>
Beta Gamma Pledge class received<lb/>
the Junior Panhellenic Outstan-<lb/>
ding Pledge Class Award. The<lb/>
Laura Sweet Award, given to the<lb/>
outstanding sorority, was<lb/>
presented to Delta Zeta. The<lb/>
Alpha Phi sorority won the Most<lb/>
Improved Intramural Award and<lb/>
the Chi Omega sorority won the<lb/>
Philanthropic Award.<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, associate<lb/>
dean and director of residence<lb/>
life, presented the Scholarship<lb/>
Award for the highest academic<lb/>
average to Alpha Delta Pi. The<lb/>
Alpha Zeta Delta sorority receiv-<lb/>
ed the award for the most improv-<lb/>
ed academic average. Laura<lb/>
Sweet, Panhellenic advisor, said<lb/>
the overall grade point average of<lb/>
all eight sororities for the fall<lb/>
semester was 2.4. She said the<lb/>
average was "quite low" and has<lb/>
gradually been dropping over the<lb/>
past five years.<lb/>
Hope Root, former Panhellenic<lb/>
president and a member of the<lb/>
Alpha Delta Zeta sorority, receiv-<lb/>
ed the scholarship award of $100<lb/>
for her 3.88 gpa. Sherri Everhart<lb/>
from Alpha Delta Pi received the<lb/>
pledge scholarship award of the<lb/>
same amount for her 3.88 gpa.<lb/>
The Lisa Turner Outstanding<lb/>
Pledge Award went to June<lb/>
Gunter, a pledge of Alpha Phi.<lb/>
Myra Pinner received the<lb/>
outstanding alumna award, the<lb/>
Hera Award. Pinner is an alumna<lb/>
of Chi Omega.<lb/>
The Artemis Awards were given<lb/>
to one outstanding sister in each<lb/>
sorority. The recipients were<lb/>
chosen by the members of each<lb/>
sorority and are as follows:<lb/>
Alpha Ptti. Amy Irnu Alpha Dalta PI. Cotaan<lb/>
Lamrtah, Alpha Omlcron Pi, Dana Schacht;<lb/>
Alpha Zata Oalta. Charyl Jonas, Chi Oma?a.<lb/>
Shallay Nawall, Dalta Zata. Halan Floyd; Kappa<lb/>
Oalta. Susan Moran, Sigma, Sigma. Sigma. Vita<lb/>
Anthony<lb/>
Tha Oraafc honorary award, tha Rho Lambda<lb/>
Award, was given to tha following paopla Mr<lb/>
Sarah Hughas, Vlcki Fraaman. Windy Skcilia<lb/>
Dana Shacht. Lisa Stinnatt, Rhonda Parry. P?m<lb/>
Maca. Shalla Roum, Jaan Campall, Tonina<lb/>
Rotooi. Ardiath Lupton. Lana Helms. Cindy<lb/>
Thompson. Kim Sandlin. Joy Ellis. Sua Morns<lb/>
Amy Breza, Mary Louisa Butt, Deiorts Wor<lb/>
thington, Robarta Watts. Gail Strom, Karen<lb/>
Koonia, Lisa Burgwin, Kim Johnson, Fran Jonas<lb/>
Sharon Mau. Mary Perry. Carolyn Hughes Susan<lb/>
ToMetsen, Wendy Taylor, Kelly Poe. Eleanor<lb/>
Sprague. Suson Freeman, Renee Riggsbee Cena<lb/>
Burrougns. Lisa Schueti. and Hancy Croft<lb/>
The Greek Hall of Fame Awards<lb/>
were presented to those who<lb/>
demonstrated outstanding service<lb/>
to their sorority, campus, and<lb/>
community. The recipients v,ere:<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi, Coleen Lemneh. Carle<lb/>
TadlacSu Alpka Omkrw PI. Lw un nmj<lb/>
Eileen Carraras. Delta Zata. Tina Peele Helen<lb/>
Floyd; Chi Omega. DebtMe Kiniaw. Kefly Foe<lb/>
Kappa Delta. Sarah Hughes. Dawn Kahlbau.<lb/>
Sigma. Sigma Sigma. (Jiom Roberts. Wanda<lb/>
Dotson<lb/>
Root and Cindy Neilson, a<lb/>
Jones Faces Political Attack<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
Congressman Walter B. Jones,<lb/>
dean of North Carolina's congres-<lb/>
sional delegation, has recently an-<lb/>
nounced that he will run for<lb/>
reelection. For seventeen years he<lb/>
has represented the first district<lb/>
and has generally been regarded<lb/>
as an effective congressman who<lb/>
responds to the bread-and-butter<lb/>
issues of his constituency.<lb/>
But Jones now appears to be<lb/>
facing a tough primary scuffle<lb/>
with Democrat John Gillam of<lb/>
Windsor, a member of the<lb/>
General Assembly. Gillam spoke<lb/>
to the Greenville Jaycees Thurs-<lb/>
day night and pointed to many<lb/>
issues which figure to be promi-<lb/>
nent in the Democratic primary.<lb/>
Gillam first mentioned the con-<lb/>
gressman's age and poor health.<lb/>
He urged voters to "think hard<lb/>
about whether Jones can provide<lb/>
the kind of leadership that eastern<lb/>
North Carolina so desperately<lb/>
needs He argued further that<lb/>
Jones cannot "feel the pulse of<lb/>
the people in this area when he is<lb/>
not physically able to campaign<lb/>
and that he has tried to "represent<lb/>
an important congressional<lb/>
district through surrogates and<lb/>
staff assistants<lb/>
Gillam vigorously attacked<lb/>
Jones' apparent inability to get<lb/>
federal assistance to stabilize the<lb/>
Oregon Inlet, which occupies the<lb/>
Outer Banks off Dare County.<lb/>
Nature has been shifting the<lb/>
inlet's sands, and fishermen intent<lb/>
on farming the waters of the<lb/>
Atlantic thread through the chan-<lb/>
nel, which is never more than<lb/>
eight feet deep.<lb/>
"The fact of the matter is<lb/>
Gillam said, "our commercial<lb/>
Fishermen are making suicide<lb/>
voyages each time they venture<lb/>
through this shifting inlet<lb/>
Gillam attacked Jones' apparent<lb/>
failure to get congressional ap-<lb/>
proval for the jetty solution,<lb/>
despite Jones' chairmanship of<lb/>
the House Merchant Marine and<lb/>
Fisheries Committee.<lb/>
The challenger also charged<lb/>
Jones with making a bad choice<lb/>
when he exchanged his seat on the<lb/>
Agriculture Committee ? where<lb/>
he was chairman of the Subcom-<lb/>
mittee on Tobacco and Peanuts ?<lb/>
for the chairmanship of the Com-<lb/>
mittee on Merchant Marine and<lb/>
Fisheries. Gillam said the latter<lb/>
post "has only marginal impact<lb/>
on the 1st District of North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
The primary voting will take<lb/>
place on May 8.<lb/>
NHL JOHNSON ? ?CU .<lb/>
Tkb female student it taking advantage of the Scott Residence Hall "tuck-in service The residents<lb/>
are offering the service Feb. 13 through Feb. 16.<lb/>
member of Alpha Delta Pi, recei -<lb/>
ed the Outstanding Greek Woman<lb/>
Award.<lb/>
Special guests for the evening<lb/>
were Chancellor John M Howell<lb/>
and his wife Gladys, Associate<lb/>
Dean of Orientation and<lb/>
Judiciary James B. Mallory and<lb/>
his wife Elizabeth, and Secretary<lb/>
of Residence Life Branch Watson.<lb/>
Dr. Edward W. Wheatley. pro-<lb/>
fessor and chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Marketing, was<lb/>
guest speaker for the program.<lb/>
Wheatley discussed the aspects<lb/>
and advantages of "Being a pro-<lb/>
fessional<lb/>
New Panhellenic officers were<lb/>
announced and are as follows:<lb/>
president. Cindy fairhanks. vice<lb/>
president. Lisa Stinnitt; recording<lb/>
secretary. Tina Pilate; correspon-<lb/>
ding secretary, Margaret Dais,<lb/>
treasurer, Robin Hess; rush chair-<lb/>
man, Lisa lager; parlimen-<lb/>
tarian. chaplain. Dawn<lb/>
Kahlbaugh; public relations. Jen-<lb/>
nifer Johnson.<lb/>
On The Inside!<lb/>
t??wwoM"a?B?awBMMaass?Ma?asa?a??eaa?s?iiii i n-<lb/>
Announcements 2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment6<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
Classifieds 10<lb/>
? Today's issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian contains special<lb/>
Valentine's Day "Love Lines<lb/>
See page 10.<lb/>
? For a review of the ECL<lb/>
drama department's "Tobacco<lb/>
Road. see Entertainment,<lb/>
page 6.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Scott Dorm<lb/>
Offers Special<lb/>
Sleeping Aid<lb/>
From Monday, Feb. 13 until<lb/>
Thursday Feb. 16, Scott<lb/>
Residence Hall will be offering a<lb/>
"tuck-in-service entitled "Bed-<lb/>
time Enterprises"to all female<lb/>
residence hails.<lb/>
The service, which costs $1. is<lb/>
being provided to raise money for<lb/>
the dorm. For the fee a girl will be<lb/>
visited by three males. The first<lb/>
male reads the recipient a bedtime<lb/>
story. The second man tucks the<lb/>
female in and gives her a teddy<lb/>
bear. Finally, the third man reads<lb/>
the female a story and kisses her<lb/>
good night.<lb/>
Scott hall will continue to take<lb/>
reservations through Thursday.<lb/>
According to Jay Johnson, pro-<lb/>
gramming assistant for Scott hail,<lb/>
"We have been taking reserva-<lb/>
tions already and we expect a<lb/>
good turnout. "I feel like 'Bed-<lb/>
time Enterprises' is a unique<lb/>
idea Johnson added.<lb/>
Bob Smith, a house council<lb/>
member, initiated the idea. Smith<lb/>
said he got the idea when he was<lb/>
involved with a group at the<lb/>
University of Maryland. The idea<lb/>
was so popular, he said, that the<lb/>
television show "Real People"<lb/>
came out and filmed an actual<lb/>
"tuck-in<lb/>
"mmmmm<lb/>
?-i?<lb/>
a<lb/>
H<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0002"/><lb/>
THB EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 14. 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Reid<lb/>
B THERESA Dl I M<lb/>
M?ff Mnm<lb/>
The East Carol lnimn<lb/>
SarvfMit<lb/>
commvxirv<lb/>
1923.<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
log the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is me of<lb/>
tidai newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by me students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
tehecrtpHwi Kate: ?? yearly<lb/>
The East Careflaiaa offices<lb/>
ere tecated la the Old tewfh<lb/>
1?1 e? the campus ef ECU.<lb/>
?reawvlUe, N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian,<lb/>
Old South Building, ECU Green<lb/>
vine. NC 3734<lb/>
TlloahSWS: 7J7-4J44, 4M7, uat<lb/>
SWIMMERS NEEDED<lb/>
Volunteer swimmers are needed to<lb/>
help with mentally and physically<lb/>
abused children at Memorial swlmm<lb/>
ing pool on Fridays at 1:30 p.m. Ex-<lb/>
perienced swimmers are not re-<lb/>
quired, lust someone to give a helping<lb/>
hand Ask for Toney Banks when<lb/>
helping with "Ms worthy cause.<lb/>
ECUHILLEL<lb/>
The ECU Hliiel Councilorshlp will<lb/>
be having a meeting on Sunday, Feb<lb/>
if at MendenhaM Student Center in<lb/>
room ZM at ? p.m join us and let us<lb/>
know what's on your mind or lust sit<lb/>
back and listen<lb/>
SOCCER TOURNAMENT<lb/>
ZBT and Budweiser ara sponsoring<lb/>
a soccer tournament March 24 1 25.<lb/>
information is available at the cen<lb/>
tral desk In Mendenhali student<lb/>
Center Only the first 16 teams will be<lb/>
accepted so turn your roster In early I<lb/>
COLLEGE SENIORS OR<lb/>
GRADUATE STUDENTS<lb/>
College Seniors or Graduate<lb/>
Students who have not previously<lb/>
taken the MAT. One hundred (100)<lb/>
students are needed.<lb/>
Testing will require approximately<lb/>
2 hours, 15 minutes. Subject will get<lb/>
their Form M scores free (WO sav<lb/>
ings), and these scores wli; be lm<lb/>
mediately available to be Bent I red up<lb/>
to 3 schools for a period of one year<lb/>
The score from the second furm will<lb/>
also be sent free at a leter date if the<lb/>
equating proves satisfactory Scores<lb/>
ere retained for S years<lb/>
ECSCOTA<lb/>
The East Carolina Student Commit<lb/>
tee Occupational Therapy Associa<lb/>
tlon (ECSCOTA) would like to en<lb/>
courage all members and Interesied<lb/>
students to attend their Feb 14<lb/>
meeting at 5 30 p.m in room XO at<lb/>
the Allied Health Building. Pictures<lb/>
of the Club will be taken for the year<lb/>
book and ? meeting will follow<lb/>
NATIONAL INSTITUTE<lb/>
OF HEALTH<lb/>
A representative from NIH.<lb/>
Bemesda. MD will be on campus<lb/>
March 19 and 20 to interview students<lb/>
who would like to work in a clinical<lb/>
setting es Normal volunteers<lb/>
Students will be paid dally stipends.<lb/>
All interested students must attend a<lb/>
general meeting at 7 p.m. on Monday,<lb/>
March It In Rawt 302 before having<lb/>
interviews on me 20th. Students mi<lb/>
loring in Allied Health, Nursing, and<lb/>
related fields are encouraged to app-<lb/>
ly Contact the Co op office. 313 Rawl,<lb/>
for details and applications.<lb/>
INTENDED SLAP<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
All General College students Inten<lb/>
ding to maor In Speech-Language<lb/>
and Auditory Pathology will pre<lb/>
register for Fall and Summer Terms<lb/>
on Tuesday, Feb 21 at 7 p.m. In<lb/>
Brewster, D 103<lb/>
CAR WASH<lb/>
The PI Kapps will be having a Car<lb/>
Wash this Saturday at the Plaza Shell<lb/>
on Greenville Blvd. It will start<lb/>
around 10:00 a.m. and last thru out<lb/>
the day. So bring that nasty car by<lb/>
and get It to look new.<lb/>
There will be a PI Kaps "A" basket<lb/>
ball game tonight at 6 p.m.at<lb/>
Memorial and Thursday night at ?: 15<lb/>
p.m. at Minges. Come out and sop<lb/>
port the PI Kapps. Help us retire me<lb/>
Chancellors Cup. Just a reminder<lb/>
"Parents Day" Is March 17.<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
Circle K: ECU'S coed service<lb/>
organlzetlonl The Circle K Club In<lb/>
vltes you to come out and oln us<lb/>
every Tuesday this semester at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhali, Room 221. Bring<lb/>
your Ideas for protects. Hope to se<lb/>
you mere I<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omlcron Chapter of Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda will hold Its next meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb. 15 at 4 p.m. in Rawl<lb/>
341. There will be a reception after<lb/>
the meeting.<lb/>
THE PARTY<lb/>
Rumor has It that there is going to<lb/>
be a Hell of a Party Feb 25 at the<lb/>
Moose Lodge. Drive or ride the free<lb/>
bus.<lb/>
PARTY 50 KEGS<lb/>
The East Carolina Rugbv Team<lb/>
will have a pre-spring break party<lb/>
Saturday Feb 25 from 7 12 pm at the<lb/>
Greenville Moose Lodge Buses will<lb/>
run to and from the party at no<lb/>
charge. Pick ups will be made at apt.<lb/>
complexes or on campus. Call<lb/>
752-0041 if you have groups of 10 or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
BINGO ICE CREAM<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
The Department of university<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a Valentine's<lb/>
Day Bingo Ice Cream Party on Tues<lb/>
day, Feb. 14 at 7 p.m In the<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center Multi<lb/>
Purpose room All ECU students,<lb/>
faculty, staff and their loved ones are<lb/>
invited Admission Is 50 cents. Eight<lb/>
heart warming bingo games will be<lb/>
played and of course, all me delicious<lb/>
flavors of Ice cream will be available.<lb/>
BANKING<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha, Banking and<lb/>
Finance Fraternity will have a<lb/>
meeting on Thursday, Feb. le. at 5:30<lb/>
P.m. in Rawl 103. tto. Benlamm<lb/>
womack of Planters National Bank<lb/>
will speak on banking. We will also<lb/>
have a picture made for the yearbook<lb/>
during the meeting. Dress according<lb/>
ly. New memberships and dues ara<lb/>
still being taken.<lb/>
BEDROOM<lb/>
ENTERPRISES<lb/>
Let us tuck you or your frland in<lb/>
with the reading of a bedtime story by<lb/>
one of our world renowned Scott Hall<lb/>
Storytellers. For Si oo this service Is<lb/>
yours. For more information and to<lb/>
reserve en appointment, call 752 9330<lb/>
9 p.m. 12 p.m. MonFrl.<lb/>
ULTIMATE FEVER<lb/>
The warm weather Is comlngl The<lb/>
ultimate fever is rising, so get on<lb/>
down to the field at the bottom of the<lb/>
Hill on Tues Thurs and Sunday at<lb/>
3:15 p.m for a real high. All interested<lb/>
persons are cordially Invited to play<lb/>
Ultimate today and enjoy the sport<lb/>
that some say is better than sex. Im-<lb/>
portant! Wed 2 15 from 7 9 p.m the<lb/>
irates play ultimate under the lights<lb/>
on Soccer fields behind Flcklen<lb/>
Stadium. Be under the Neons tomor<lb/>
row nlghtl<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House Is<lb/>
offering one hour sessions to help you<lb/>
prepare your own resume. Few<lb/>
graduates get obs without some<lb/>
preparation. Many employers re-<lb/>
quest a resume showing your educa-<lb/>
tion and experience. Sessions to help<lb/>
will be held in the Career Planning<lb/>
Room at 3 p.m. Come on any of the<lb/>
following dates: Feb 1,9,14. 20<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
Spring Break Scuba Dive in the<lb/>
Bahamas Seven days on the 45' dive<lb/>
boet "Bottom Time Includes 3<lb/>
meals, lodging and diving. Fly from<lb/>
Ft. Lauderdale to Nassau. For<lb/>
registration and Information call Ray<lb/>
Scharf, Director of Aquatics at<lb/>
757 6441 Or 756 9339 Total COSt SA60 00<lb/>
includes a $100.00 non-refundable<lb/>
deposit.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be a meeting on Thurs,<lb/>
Feb. 16 at 5:30 p.m. in room 212<lb/>
Mendenhali All members should at<lb/>
tend this meeting! We will be discuss<lb/>
ing protects for this semester and in-<lb/>
duction of new members. Please<lb/>
mark your calendar, and don't miss<lb/>
this meeting I<lb/>
YEARBOOK PORTRAITS<lb/>
Yearbook portraits ere now being<lb/>
taken in the Buccaneer Office until<lb/>
Feb. 17. Portraits are for seniors,<lb/>
underclassmen and grad students<lb/>
Sign up for your appointment Now! 11<lb/>
this Is the last opportunity to have<lb/>
your picture appear In the 1904 Buc<lb/>
caneer. Sittings ara conducted from<lb/>
9-12 a.m. and 15 p.m. No charge or<lb/>
obligation to purchase pictures. Your<lb/>
portrait automatically appears in the<lb/>
Buccaneer.<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Service in the Bloxton House is<lb/>
offering these one hour sessions to aid<lb/>
you in developing better interviewing<lb/>
skills for use In your job search. A<lb/>
film and discussion of how to Inter<lb/>
view through this service will be<lb/>
shared. Each session will be held in<lb/>
the Career Planning Room at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Come on any of the following dates:<lb/>
Feb 2, ?. 13. 21.<lb/>
SEXUAL FULFILLMENT<lb/>
Making It good for you and your part<lb/>
nar ? when? Feb. 21 at 7:30 p.m in<lb/>
Speight 129, Psl Chi presents Or<lb/>
Knox from the Sociology Dept He<lb/>
will be our guest speaker Come and<lb/>
learn It all!<lb/>
Remember ? Psl Chi application<lb/>
deadline is March 2 so get your ap<lb/>
plications in today. You can pick<lb/>
them up in Speight 202 during hours<lb/>
ECU POETRY FORUM<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum will meet on<lb/>
Thursday (Feb. 16) in Mendenhali 248<lb/>
at 8 00 p.m. Those planning to par<lb/>
tlcipate should bring 6 8 copies of<lb/>
each poem they want to discuss<lb/>
Meeting open to all.<lb/>
REAL ESTATE<lb/>
Rho Epsllon, Real Estate Fraferni<lb/>
fy, will have an organizational<lb/>
meeting on Tuesday, Feb 14, at 3<lb/>
p.m. in Rawl 104.<lb/>
MAT ADMINISTRATION<lb/>
There will be a special evening ad<lb/>
ministration of the Miller Analogies<lb/>
Test (MAT) held on Wednesday,<lb/>
March 7 at 7 p.m In the Testing<lb/>
Center, Speight Building, Room 105,<lb/>
at East Carolina University. The fee<lb/>
for the test Is S30, and candidates may<lb/>
pay and register in the classroom at 7<lb/>
p.m. Candidates will need some type<lb/>
of picture ID (i.e Driver's License)<lb/>
and two number 2 pencils. Since<lb/>
school will not be in session on this<lb/>
date, the regularly scheduled<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon (230 p.mtest<lb/>
will not be given.<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE NTTE<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
a<lb/>
Including Skates<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
MUSIC TELEVISION<lb/>
with MTV<lb/>
16ft SCREEN<lb/>
? STUDENT OPPORTUNITIES<lb/>
We are looking for girls interested in being<lb/>
counselors - activity instructors in a private girls<lb/>
camp located in Hendersonville, NC. Instruc-<lb/>
tors needed especially in Swimming (WSI),<lb/>
Horseback riding, Archery, Canoeing, Gym-<lb/>
nastics, Crafts, Also Basketball, Computers,<lb/>
Soccer, Checrleading, Drama, Art, Office<lb/>
work, Dancing, Nature study. If your school<lb/>
offers a Summer Interchip program we will be<lb/>
glad to help. Inquires - Morgan Haynes P.O.<lb/>
Box 400C, Tryon, NC, 2T782.<lb/>
DAIL<lb/>
McLA fVHORN. D VM<lb/>
announces the opening of<lb/>
McLAWHORN ANIMAL<lb/>
CUNIC<lb/>
Corner of Evans St. 6 264 By-pass<lb/>
355-6167 emergency 756-0972<lb/>
Mon Tues Thur Fit, 8-1 and 3-6<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Sat. gi<lb/>
BudweiserZBT<lb/>
Soccer Tournament<lb/>
March 24 &amp; 25<lb/>
Rosters and tournament information<lb/>
available at Mendenhali Information<lb/>
desk.<lb/>
Only the first 16 teams will be accepted.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
? u ay use the form at right<lb/>
Of use a separate sheet of<lb/>
paper if you need more lines<lb/>
There are 31 units per lin?<lb/>
Each tetter, punctuation mark<lb/>
and work space counts as one<lb/>
unit Capitalize and hyphenate<lb/>
words properly Leave space<lb/>
af eno of line if word doesn't fit<lb/>
o ads w;ii be accepted over<lb/>
the phone We reserve the right<lb/>
to rejec an. ad. All ads most<lb/>
be prepaid Enclose 75 cents<lb/>
0 me or fraction of a line.<lb/>
 ???se print legibly! Use<lb/>
capai and lower case letters.<lb/>
Return to the Media Board<lb/>
secretary Dy 3 p m the day<lb/>
before put cation<lb/>
N<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No. Lines.<lb/>
.??.<lb/>
,m a a aw a.<lb/>
<lb/>
I T ' ' " r '  u ? t<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
SCIENCE MAJORS<lb/>
A.C.S.S.A. is selling CRC Hand<lb/>
books for $24 and Organic Handbooks<lb/>
for 120 A reference mutt for any<lb/>
science major at a discount price.<lb/>
Place order in the Chemistry Office,<lb/>
Flanagan 207 between 11 13 and 12<lb/>
thru Feb. 20 Payment due upon<lb/>
ordering Checks will be accepted<lb/>
MEDTINTENDED<lb/>
MAJORS<lb/>
Pre registration for Fall Semester<lb/>
will be held as shown below The<lb/>
faculty would appreciate It If students<lb/>
would arrive on time so that everyone<lb/>
can hear the general announcements.<lb/>
Monday Feb. 27 7 Brewster O101<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Tuesday Feb 2i 7 Brewster D102<lb/>
Sopnomore<lb/>
Students who cannot attend either<lb/>
one of these sessions should call Doris<lb/>
Johnson at 757 6941 to schedule an ap-<lb/>
pointment students who have been<lb/>
admitted to the Department for Fall<lb/>
will be notified by letter the week of<lb/>
Feb 20 and may complete change of<lb/>
maior forms at the same time that<lb/>
they pre register<lb/>
SUMMER WORK<lb/>
IN FRANCE<lb/>
Girls interested In summer work<lb/>
(or longer) with a French family<lb/>
please meet Wed. Feb 15 in BA 437 at<lb/>
2 p.m. for further information.<lb/>
MALE STRIP OFf-<lb/>
The Sigma Phi Epsilon Little<lb/>
Sisters ere sponsoring the First An<lb/>
nual Male StrlpOff. Tuesday Feb 21<lb/>
at the Elbo Room loo for the table<lb/>
in front of the Student store tor sign<lb/>
ups and more information<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The next general meeting of Gam<lb/>
mj Beta Phi will be hed on Thurs<lb/>
day. Fee U in the Jenkins Ar-<lb/>
Auditorium Please attend' This s<lb/>
the deadline tor semester dues Aisc<lb/>
officer elections will be held<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
your<lb/>
typing skills<lb/>
in the<lb/>
classifieds<lb/>
Dr Dennis Reid,<lb/>
tor of Intensive Training<lb/>
and Specialized Ser<lb/>
at Western Carol im<lb/>
Center in Niorganton<lb/>
N C, spoke Frida<lb/>
Speight Buildini<lb/>
large group of. i<lb/>
f and studer<lb/>
New Pi<lb/>
B RISn WOOl AR!<lb/>
vuf I V. rHrf<lb/>
row<lb/>
have beer, iiui<lb/>
Pitt Coun-<lb/>
Heai-r.? .<lb/>
to Lillian H<lb/>
mation as i<lb/>
tior<lb/>
Den<lb/>
" -<lb/>
trol, tra<lb/>
me-<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
School ol<lb/>
' . i<lb/>
nolog<lb/>
Ed the S<lb/>
rcchi<lb/>
a robo:<lb/>
Coffee Breaks<lb/>
east Carolina dining services<lb/>
2S2-?2S2<lb/>
WK<lb/>
K<lb/>
Gold a i)<lb/>
Silver<lb/>
WLBl AH<lb/>
1 - , eftaaweVsv, c?<lb/>
oens. bicyclesaufi<lb/>
portable 4f.ff. caJ<lb/>
good furniture, ihind A i<lb/>
c0H &amp; HI<lb/>
Vw OF MET S?"<lb/>
400 EVANS,<lb/>
Downtow<lb/>
752<lb/>
DATE: ?'&amp;?, TIME:M<lb/>
PLACE" Student Supply Store<lb/>
Saving Include All Quality Rings<lb/>
9<lb/>
HERFF JONES<lb/>
Dnrition of CarnaUon Company<lb/>
AN<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
FREE AD Ml<lb/>
. ?-<lb/>
4???M i '??? 'H "<lb/>
?? m ???  ??????' i<lb/>
ai f pmnmn'inaM <lb/>
-f?.<lb/>
iri<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 14, 1984<lb/>
1 1 1<lb/>
III<lb/>
<lb/>
- ?-4-H<lb/>
 T 1<lb/>
-? ? ?- -i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
"<lb/>
iL -<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
? e exi g,nerai meeting of Gam<lb/>
s Be?a Ph ? Be rteld on Thors<lb/>
' In f?e Jenkins Art<lb/>
ciease attend! This is<lb/>
Md I 'or semester aues Also,<lb/>
leer eietons wit! be neia<lb/>
KT V1CCS<lb/>
Ff JONES<lb/>
r Carnation Company<lb/>
Reid Speaks On Technology During Lecture<lb/>
By THERESA DULSKI<lb/>
Staff Wilier<lb/>
Dr. Dennis Reid, direc-<lb/>
tor of Intensive Training<lb/>
and Specialized Services<lb/>
at Western Carolina<lb/>
Center in Morganton,<lb/>
N.C spoke Friday in the<lb/>
Speight Building to a<lb/>
large group of. faculty,<lb/>
staff and students who<lb/>
are currently working<lb/>
with or who have an in-<lb/>
terest in mentally retard-<lb/>
ed individuals.<lb/>
The topic of Reid's<lb/>
presentation was "The<lb/>
Non-existence of a<lb/>
Technology for Manag-<lb/>
ing Staff Performance<lb/>
Reid, co-author of a<lb/>
recently published book<lb/>
entitled Behavior<lb/>
Modification with the<lb/>
Severely and Profoundly<lb/>
Retarded: Research and<lb/>
Application, has also<lb/>
published several articles<lb/>
in professional journals<lb/>
dealing with staff training<lb/>
and leisure and social<lb/>
skills development for in-<lb/>
stitutionalized retarded<lb/>
individuals.<lb/>
"These built-in pro-<lb/>
cedures can help train<lb/>
staff and other in-<lb/>
dividuals who work in the<lb/>
human resource service<lb/>
fields Reid said.<lb/>
Reid focused his<lb/>
presentation on three ma-<lb/>
jor aspects and one com-<lb/>
bined procedure for ef-<lb/>
fectively training staff<lb/>
personnel who work with<lb/>
the mentally retarded<lb/>
population.<lb/>
Reid said the first<lb/>
aspect focused on the<lb/>
antecedent intervention<lb/>
which uses written and<lb/>
oral modeling and<lb/>
manual sign language<lb/>
that aids in com-<lb/>
municating with mentally<lb/>
handicapped individuals.<lb/>
Reid also stressed the<lb/>
importance of contingen-<lb/>
New Programs Initiated At PCMHC<lb/>
cy management or the<lb/>
feedback approach to<lb/>
staff training. "Con-<lb/>
tingency management<lb/>
focuses on feedback,<lb/>
group contingencies,<lb/>
punishment strategies<lb/>
and performance lot-<lb/>
teries he said.<lb/>
Reid said the third<lb/>
aspect of staff training is<lb/>
self-controlled programs<lb/>
in which the staff<lb/>
monitors performance<lb/>
through self-recording,<lb/>
goal setting and rein-<lb/>
forcement.<lb/>
The final combined<lb/>
procedure Reid called the<lb/>
multifaceted approach to<lb/>
behavior oriented staff<lb/>
training.<lb/>
The importance of<lb/>
good staff training is<lb/>
"critical to the welfare of<lb/>
the client he said.<lb/>
Anyone interested in<lb/>
knowing more about<lb/>
behavior modification<lb/>
techniques with the men-<lb/>
tally retarded is en-<lb/>
couraged to read Dr.<lb/>
Reid's book or to contact<lb/>
Dr. Jeannie Golden in the<lb/>
Psychology Department.<lb/>
By RUSTY WOOLAJtD<lb/>
Starf riter<lb/>
Four new programs<lb/>
have been initiated at the<lb/>
Pitt County Mental<lb/>
Health Center, according<lb/>
to Lillian Huffy, infor-<lb/>
mation and communica-<lb/>
tions specialist.<lb/>
The new programs con-<lb/>
cern methods of depres-<lb/>
sion control, weight con-<lb/>
trol, transition manage-<lb/>
ment and elimination of<lb/>
self-defeating behaviors.<lb/>
Archer Heinzen, a<lb/>
psychologist, will coor-<lb/>
dinate the programs,<lb/>
which will begin in<lb/>
February and March.<lb/>
Groups will meet once<lb/>
a week, and each session<lb/>
will last approximately<lb/>
two hours. The programs<lb/>
will last six weeks, and<lb/>
there is a $25 fee which<lb/>
covers all six sessions.<lb/>
In these structured<lb/>
group programs, formal<lb/>
teaching methods are<lb/>
combined with ex-<lb/>
perimental learning. Par-<lb/>
ticipants relay their suc-<lb/>
cesses and failures in ap-<lb/>
plying the techniques<lb/>
taught at the meetings.<lb/>
On "homework<lb/>
assignments group<lb/>
members carry out simple<lb/>
exercises in their spare<lb/>
time based on what is<lb/>
taught at the sessions.<lb/>
However, interpersonal<lb/>
confrontation is avoided,<lb/>
and most interaction oc-<lb/>
curs with the "group<lb/>
facilitator or leader,<lb/>
rather than with the other<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
Huffy pointed out that<lb/>
these programs are<lb/>
beneficial only for people<lb/>
who are experiencing<lb/>
mild distress, not for<lb/>
those suffering major<lb/>
personal crises. A brief<lb/>
interview is conducted<lb/>
with each prospective<lb/>
participant to determine<lb/>
whether or not the pro-<lb/>
gram will be helpful.<lb/>
Huffy said many peo-<lb/>
ple are unfamiliar with<lb/>
the variety of services<lb/>
provided by the Pitt<lb/>
County Mental Health<lb/>
Center. "We help people<lb/>
cope with everyday life<lb/>
situations, not just people<lb/>
who are chronically ill<lb/>
she said. "These pro-<lb/>
grams teach people how<lb/>
to cope with everyday<lb/>
problems. They make<lb/>
people more aware of<lb/>
themselves, and they<lb/>
teach strategies for deal-<lb/>
ing successfully with their<lb/>
difficulties<lb/>
School of Technology Receives New Robot<lb/>
The world of high<lb/>
technology has reached<lb/>
ECU. The School of<lb/>
Technology is purchasing<lb/>
a robot that will cost an<lb/>
estimated S3,000 and is to<lb/>
be used as an "educational<lb/>
tool by the Center for<lb/>
Applied Technology.<lb/>
Funding will come from a<lb/>
$5,000 gift from Sperry<lb/>
Univac to the School of<lb/>
lecnnoiogy.<lb/>
Robots are becoming<lb/>
more popular in industry<lb/>
as a way of freeing<lb/>
workers from tedious or<lb/>
dangerous tasks on pro-<lb/>
duction lines, ine rooot<lb/>
to be used by the center<lb/>
will be of industry type,<lb/>
with an arm and base<lb/>
controlled by a<lb/>
microcomputer said Jerry<lb/>
Tester, director for the<lb/>
Center of Applied<lb/>
Technology.<lb/>
The robot is designed<lb/>
to teach students how<lb/>
robots work,<lb/>
N<lb/>
S4<lb/>
??<lb/>
s&amp; v<lb/>
<lb/>
0 ? ,G<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
CAR<lb/>
PARTS INC.<lb/>
"<lb/>
,<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
J<lb/>
<lb/>
f' 105 Greenville Blvd. GREENVILLE. N.C. h<lb/>
JQ<lb/>
y<lb/>
j<lb/>
jt<lb/>
W<lb/>
. <lb/>
w<lb/>
? Tft<lb/>
???It<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
We carry a complete line of parts &amp; accessories.<lb/>
NEW LOCATION<lb/>
756-7114<lb/>
UNIVERSAL KOKO MATS<lb/>
KONrS BMW 2002 SHOCKS<lb/>
AUDI 5000 &amp; 4000 WIND DEFLECTORS<lb/>
Quality Parts at a Reasonable Price<lb/>
WE<lb/>
PAY<lb/>
?????????'??:??i??;?;??:?:?i??i??:??i??i'?i??:?'i??-??:??:??-?-??i?-?i?i??i???i??T?:?? ?<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Class Rings Diamond Rings<lb/>
Gold &amp; Silver Jewerly<lb/>
Silver Coins<lb/>
Pi Kappa Ph<lb/>
i<lb/>
WE BLV&amp; PAYCASH FOR<lb/>
T Vs. rrro emmerms, video, mlcrowmve<lb/>
ovens, bicycles, watche<lb/>
portable AM-FM, cassette, walkmans, heaters,<lb/>
good furniture, china &amp; crystal, typewriters, etc.<lb/>
VW of KtY SALES CO ,? ty<lb/>
400 EVANS, "on the corner"<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Coffeehouse<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
is auditioning acts to appear in its up<lb/>
coming weekly programs. Auditions<lb/>
will be held Wednesday, February 15,<lb/>
1984, at 7:00 P.M. in the Coffeehouse<lb/>
located in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
AH interested parties should call<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 210 to sign up.<lb/>
o<lb/>
mappy<lb/>
Valentines<lb/>
Day<lb/>
Pi Kapps<lb/>
little Sisters<lb/>
M<lb/>
? <lb/>
p<lb/>
? <lb/>
? <lb/>
?<lb/>
?Mr<lb/>
:<lb/>
Buy, Sell &amp; Trade<lb/>
through the<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
How to have class between classes.<lb/>
NEW DELI<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
A<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
For Women Only<lb/>
Featuring Music By<lb/>
LAHN &amp; LOFTIN<lb/>
AND THE NEW DELI WAITERS<lb/>
PREAAIERING THURSDAY<lb/>
FEBRUARY 16th<lb/>
LOCK-OUT FROM 7:30p.m9:30p.m.<lb/>
WITH A<lb/>
FREE FOUNTAIN OF CHAMPAGNE THE 1st HOUR<lb/>
ONLY 25tPER GLASS THE 2nd HOUR<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION FOR WOMEN<lb/>
513 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
MENS7.00<lb/>
(After 9:30p.m.)<lb/>
Indulge yourself in a warm cup of Cafe Vienna. It's a light and cin-<lb/>
namony touch of class. And just one of six deliriously different flavors<lb/>
from General Foods J" 3 3<lb/>
International Coffees.<lb/>
Cjkhmmjm<lb/>
rf53aii3CT3ieTF-a<lb/>
GENERAL FOODS INTERNATIONAL COFFEES<lb/>
AS MUCH A FEELING AS A FLAVOR<lb/>
Genera Foods Corporator 193<lb/>
ft<lb/>
 11" toamtyfmjamlatK "ifliip'  ' " "  u v <lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0004"/><lb/>
SUl iEaat (Earnlintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, cw????<lb/>
Darryl Brown, m?,?,<lb/>
Jl-NNIFER JENDRASIAK, ItaM. J.T. PIETRZAK. Mmtm,<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. o m. mm Mike McPartland. ?u?, ???,<lb/>
Ed Nicklas. ,? gdtar Tom Norton, cr, v??,r<lb/>
Gordon Ipock. m. ?? Kathy Fuerst. ??? w<lb/>
Mark Barker, oommmm Mike Mayo, ???????<lb/>
rebruarv 14, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Loan Defaults<lb/>
ECU Student Record Shameful<lb/>
The low deliquency rates reflect<lb/>
the quality of East Carolina's<lb/>
students. Most of our borrowers are<lb/>
willing to repax their loans because<lb/>
without them many could not have<lb/>
made it financially. '?ECU loan office<lb/>
Such was a quote from last Oc-<lb/>
tober about ECU students repaying<lb/>
student loans. But one isn't likely to<lb/>
hear that from anyone in the SGA.<lb/>
The student government's loan<lb/>
funds are almost depleted, thanks to<lb/>
an unbelievably high rate of student<lb/>
defaults. About 99 percent of<lb/>
emergency medical loans are over-<lb/>
due, as are about 84 percent of<lb/>
general, $25 loans.<lb/>
Little blame rests on the SGA and<lb/>
administration. They can tag stu-<lb/>
dent transcripts to prevent gradua-<lb/>
tion until outstannding debts are<lb/>
paid, but students have been allow-<lb/>
ed to graduate anyway, and then<lb/>
have no reason to repay the money<lb/>
save a sense of integrity, which most<lb/>
defaulters seem to lack. Stricter en-<lb/>
forcement of rules could be used,<lb/>
but cases are difficult to get to Small<lb/>
Claims Court. Besides, the SGA<lb/>
and university shouldn't have to<lb/>
take such action; it only further<lb/>
wastes ECU's financial resources.<lb/>
The SGA's decision to take the mat-<lb/>
ter to the Honor Board, for suspen-<lb/>
sion, fines andor voluntary work,<lb/>
is a harsh but not undue one.<lb/>
ECU Students defaulted on less<lb/>
than 6 percent of state or federal<lb/>
loans, yet defaulted on virtually all<lb/>
loans obtained through the SGA,<lb/>
money from fees paid by students.<lb/>
Perhaps the federal government<lb/>
seems more ominous, and the Set-<lb/>
Off Debt Collection Act more<lb/>
threatening. (It allows the govern-<lb/>
ment to keep tax refunds for over-<lb/>
due loans.) If that is the case,<lb/>
perhaps suspension from school and<lb/>
an enforced graduation prevention<lb/>
procedure will be enough. The loans<lb/>
are small and most should be able to<lb/>
pay them back more easily than<lb/>
larger loans. Too many loans are<lb/>
for medical emergencies; students<lb/>
borrowing from this fund should<lb/>
remember their own need and repay<lb/>
the fund a quickly as possible so<lb/>
other student needs can be met.<lb/>
Most borrowers would do well to<lb/>
remember the importance loan<lb/>
funds can have to many people, and<lb/>
without them many could not make<lb/>
it financially.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Dorm President Opposes<lb/>
Jarvis As Quiet Residence<lb/>
Last Wednesday a proposal to establish<lb/>
a quiet dorm on campus by the fall of 1985<lb/>
was passed by SRA. Yet one question re-<lb/>
mains to be decided ? precisely which<lb/>
dorm will go quiet?<lb/>
SRA President Mark Niewald proposed<lb/>
that it atfect either Fleming or Jarvis halls.<lb/>
For many students an article which ap-<lb/>
peared in Thursday's East Carolinian was<lb/>
the first such exposure to the news. Since<lb/>
the appearance of that article a number of<lb/>
residents from both dorms have expressed<lb/>
their disapproval to any such proposal.<lb/>
Several Jarvis residents have questioned<lb/>
the sudden, secretive manipulation of Mr.<lb/>
Niewald to push the bill without adequate<lb/>
student knowledge.<lb/>
Mr. Niewald bases his proposal for<lb/>
establishment ot a quiet dorm on a survey<lb/>
taken well over a year ago. The survey ap-<lb/>
parently questioned students as to whether<lb/>
or not they felt there was a genuine need<lb/>
for a quiet dorm on ECU's campus.<lb/>
Howler, those surveyed were not asked<lb/>
whether they would actually consent to<lb/>
live in such a place. So whether or not<lb/>
there is a significant number of students<lb/>
willing to reside in a quiet dorm is not ac-<lb/>
tually known, only that there may be a<lb/>
need.<lb/>
As to Mr. Niewald's choice of Jarvis to<lb/>
become a quiet dorm, I feel it necessary to<lb/>
point out that many interested students<lb/>
may be discriminated against due to the<lb/>
fact that Jarvis has no handicapped<lb/>
facilities and also because of the extra<lb/>
costs due to air conditioning. The fact that<lb/>
Jarvis does have air conditioning may also<lb/>
attract those students whose intentions are<lb/>
less than sincere. It would seem that there<lb/>
must be a location better suited to the<lb/>
needs and demands of all students con-<lb/>
cerned.<lb/>
While I hope that those students with<lb/>
sincere and honest desires to live in a<lb/>
residence such as the one proposed will<lb/>
make themselves known, it would seem a<lb/>
terrible hame to see what Mr. Niewald<lb/>
refers to as "only the displacement of 166<lb/>
students" go to benefit another 166<lb/>
students for the wrong reasons. Perhaps if<lb/>
the residents of both Jarvis and Fleming<lb/>
felt that the university's best interests were<lb/>
being pursued then the proposal would not<lb/>
be so upsetting.<lb/>
Wendy Caibe<lb/>
President of Jarvis hall<lb/>
Abortion Acceptable<lb/>
I am always disturbed when I read<lb/>
something ignorant, and when Nan<lb/>
George claimed that abortion is a one sid-<lb/>
3d, no-exceptions issue, I was angry. She<lb/>
says that rape almost never results in<lb/>
pregnancy and that medical technology<lb/>
can detect early pregnancy problems.<lb/>
Therefore, abortion is wrong, no ques-<lb/>
tions asked I don't like abortion as a<lb/>
means of birth control more than anyone,<lb/>
but there are times when abortion is<lb/>
understandable Rape can result in a<lb/>
pregnancy, and it has. Should the victim,<lb/>
who has already gone through enough<lb/>
trauma, be expected to go through the ad-<lb/>
ditional trauma of carrying and delivering<lb/>
a child? Of course not! There is also the<lb/>
problem of a person accidentally getting<lb/>
pregnant at such a bad time that trying to<lb/>
deal with a baby could literally destroy-<lb/>
that person. It is not right to bring a child<lb/>
into this world if you are not capable of<lb/>
caring for it. Adoption is a good alter-<lb/>
native, but many people cannot stand the<lb/>
idea of knowing that they have a child out<lb/>
in the world. The Supreme Court decision<lb/>
to legalize abortion was a good one, and to<lb/>
reverse this decision could be a disaster. I<lb/>
don't like it when people have abortions<lb/>
when they don't really need to, but abor-<lb/>
tion must be left to the individual and the<lb/>
medical profession, not Ronald Reagan,<lb/>
Jesse Helms, Jim Bakker, Billy Graham,<lb/>
Campus Crusade and friends.<lb/>
Bern McCrady<lb/>
Freshman, General College<lb/>
Editorial Vunerable<lb/>
Last Tuesday's editorial entitled "Fund<lb/>
Raising: Hunt Record Outshines Helms"<lb/>
included some interesting points, but ex-<lb/>
cluded some even more interesting ones.<lb/>
The editorial is vulnerable, so I'll take<lb/>
some shots.<lb/>
The column gleefully pointed out that<lb/>
Helms has raised more money from out of<lb/>
state than Hunt. So what? Helms has no<lb/>
choice but to build a broader fund-raising<lb/>
base because the media, from The<lb/>
(Raleigh) News and Observer to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, is working against him.<lb/>
Now I have some points. The average<lb/>
contribution to the Hunt campaign has<lb/>
been $69 compared to $29 for Helms. The<lb/>
figures are more glaring at the national<lb/>
level, where the average contribution to<lb/>
the Democratic National Committee is<lb/>
$300. The average contribution to the<lb/>
Republican National Committee ? $28.<lb/>
Why do Helms and the Republican Par-<lb/>
ty raise so much more money and in such<lb/>
smaller contributions? Because both repre-<lb/>
sent the middle class, which is much larger<lb/>
and, as a whole, wealthier than the upper<lb/>
class. Jesse Helms represents the common<lb/>
man, the one who supports him with those<lb/>
tiny contributions, not the fat cats who<lb/>
vomit the big bucks for Jim Hunt and his<lb/>
parij of the rich.<lb/>
?&amp;?<lb/>
?.A5K NOTFOR WHOM M BEll TOLLS IT<lb/>
TousroRTHee<lb/>
Police Crime<lb/>
Tobacco Road Economics Falter<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
The audience's response was under-<lb/>
whelming to the opening night per-<lb/>
fomance of Tobacco Road by the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse. With a life-size<lb/>
cabin, a Chinbaberry tree and a few<lb/>
tons of dirt on stage, the settings were<lb/>
extraordinary. And the acting was good<lb/>
as well, highlighted by a solid profes-<lb/>
sional performance by Tom Hull, and a<lb/>
superb piee of character acting by<lb/>
Crisa Warren in a supporting role. It<lb/>
was a production worthy of a standing<lb/>
ovation. The response, however, was<lb/>
languid; I sensed ambivalent feelings<lb/>
around me.<lb/>
The play Tobacco Road by Jack<lb/>
Kirkland was adopted from Erskine<lb/>
Caldwell's novel by the same name. As<lb/>
the local press release on the play ex-<lb/>
plains, the novel was written as a "com-<lb/>
passionate social document" about<lb/>
poor white share croppers living in a<lb/>
rural pocket of poverty in Georgia in<lb/>
about 1930. But the play has developed<lb/>
into a comedy over the years with au-<lb/>
diences finding it easier to laugh at the<lb/>
miserable poverty and ignorance of the<lb/>
Lesters rather than be moved to pity. I<lb/>
have not made a comparative study bet-<lb/>
ween Kirkland's play and Caldwell's<lb/>
novel; thus, I'm not sure where the<lb/>
heavy accent on comedy came in. But, I<lb/>
am certain that between the snickers<lb/>
and guffaws, the audience still picked<lb/>
up on Caldwell's original message, and<lb/>
no matter how superb the production, it<lb/>
was difficult to shower enthusiastic ap-<lb/>
plause on such a spectacle of human<lb/>
degradation and suffering. Thus the<lb/>
ambivalence: how does one react to an<lb/>
excellent performance of something<lb/>
that is both a farce and a realistic<lb/>
tragedy.<lb/>
Despite the contradictions, I enjoyed<lb/>
the play ? immensely ? because it<lb/>
made me think. That, I'm certain, was<lb/>
exactly Caldwell's purpose. But what<lb/>
was Caldwell's message; what was he<lb/>
saying to the readers of his time? Let's<lb/>
return to the 1930s.<lb/>
The nation and the world was mired<lb/>
in an economic depression of staggering<lb/>
proportions. Many intellectuals of the<lb/>
time saw it as indisputable proof of the<lb/>
inherent flaws within capitalism. This<lb/>
was the end, they said, of the Western<lb/>
economic and social order as Marx had<lb/>
predicted. Talk of revolution was<lb/>
everywhere. Already Czarist Russia had<lb/>
overthrown the old order. Socialist and<lb/>
Communist intellectuals in the U.S.<lb/>
watched the Soviet Union with a sense<lb/>
of rapture looking for the worker's<lb/>
Utopia to unfold and ignoring the<lb/>
millions slaughtered in Stalin's purges.<lb/>
Many intellectuals felt that socialism,<lb/>
or communism, was the only real solu-<lb/>
tion to the economic crisis and human<lb/>
suffering in the U.S. The nation faced a<lb/>
severe test. Something had to be done.<lb/>
This was the scenario that Caldwell<lb/>
wrote within and about.<lb/>
Caldwell took the raw material of<lb/>
what he saw and viewed it first as a<lb/>
sociologist might, and then he<lb/>
transformed it into art. He wrote of<lb/>
economic degradation and racial and<lb/>
class conflicts. No doubt, he hoped his<lb/>
works would catalyze social and<lb/>
economic change. But in what direc-<lb/>
tion?<lb/>
Many of his sharpest critics accused<lb/>
Caldwell of being a Communist, a false<lb/>
charge that had some credibility<lb/>
because of his travels to the Soviet<lb/>
Union and because his work was and<lb/>
still is popular there, as is all American<lb/>
literature that shows our society at its<lb/>
worst. Whether he supported socialism<lb/>
at the time is difficult to say, but<lb/>
Caldwell did have strong liberal sen-<lb/>
timents, and his graphic accounts of<lb/>
hypocracy and injustice provided<lb/>
strong fodder for the promoters of<lb/>
Roosevelt's New Deal. The Lesters of<lb/>
Tobacco Road and the Waldens of<lb/>
God's Little Acre were composites of<lb/>
an entire class of people. Caldwell gave<lb/>
them names and faces and brought their<lb/>
suffering into focus. There was purpose<lb/>
and meaning in these works. Certainly<lb/>
Caldwell advocated change.<lb/>
After poverty, the second most noted<lb/>
theme in Tobacco Road (it figures pro-<lb/>
minently in God's Little Acre as wet!) is<lb/>
the Christian religion. Caldwell's works<lb/>
are a commentary on the gap between<lb/>
its theory and its practice. His<lb/>
characters use Christianity as a twisted<lb/>
and warped crutch to prop up their<lb/>
pitiful existences. It is an excuse and<lb/>
justification for their ignorance,<lb/>
laziness and immorality. Karl Marx<lb/>
could not have written a sterner indict-<lb/>
ment against Christian belief. Any<lb/>
believer who sat through the play on<lb/>
campus had to feel at least mild<lb/>
chagrin, but a sophomore told me that<lb/>
she became so livid she felt like walking<lb/>
out of the theater.<lb/>
Caldwell grew up the son of a<lb/>
Presbyterian minister, a man con-<lb/>
sidered to be something of a social<lb/>
radical by his church's hierarchy in the<lb/>
South. I know nothing of Caldwell's<lb/>
personal religious beliefs, but in his<lb/>
novel Tobacco Road he was careful to<lb/>
point out that his characters' warped<lb/>
brand of Christianity was an aberation,<lb/>
an atypical extreme. Unfortunately, the<lb/>
play's comedic twist turns it into a<lb/>
mean non-stop joke that many people<lb/>
will probably take as the gospel truth<lb/>
about Christianity in general. The pro-<lb/>
fanity in the play is easily recognized<lb/>
and therefore not offensive. However,<lb/>
the cruel treatment of Christianity in<lb/>
the play is insiduous, a profanity not<lb/>
readily recogonized as such, and<lb/>
therefore it is offensive.<lb/>
The overall message one gets from<lb/>
the play is that of failure, the miserable<lb/>
failure of the then-existing social,<lb/>
economic and religious systems, ie<lb/>
capitalism and Christianity. Even when<lb/>
it's well done, an audience in conser-<lb/>
vative Eastern North Carolina will like-<lb/>
ly have difficulty applauding such a<lb/>
condemnation of traditional American<lb/>
values.<lb/>
Though Tobacco Road's message<lb/>
was intended for America in the '30s,<lb/>
like all classics of literature, it has a<lb/>
timeless message. Besides commenting<lb/>
on the flaws of a contemporary societv<lb/>
it also showcases the eternal elements of<lb/>
human nature and thus gives reason for<lb/>
even more thought: perhaps it is the<lb/>
flaws inherent within some men that<lb/>
causes their suffering rather than the<lb/>
flaws within their society. Through<lb/>
Caldwell's realism we can see the :ruth<lb/>
about Jeeter Lester. He is what he is by<lb/>
choice.The source of his poverty is his<lb/>
own laziness, and he is immoral in spite<lb/>
of Christianity, not because of it.<lb/>
In reaction to liberals and Socialists<lb/>
from the '30s, in reaction to men such<lb/>
as Caidwell, government has given us<lb/>
50 years of social programs, billions of<lb/>
dollars worth of New Deals. New Fron-<lb/>
tiers, Great Societies and Wars on<lb/>
Poverty in an effort to change human<lb/>
nature and achieve a greater degree of<lb/>
economic and class equality. But todav<lb/>
after SO yrmrs of back-door socialism a<lb/>
present federal budget of $850 billion of<lb/>
which about 50 percent is devoted to<lb/>
social-welfare and entitlement pro-<lb/>
grams, and a national debt of over $1<lb/>
trillion, we still have not erased pover-<lb/>
ty. We still have not achieved economic<lb/>
and class equality. The Jeeter Lesters<lb/>
are still with us. They live just down the<lb/>
road in a trailer park.<lb/>
Since the publication of Tobacco<lb/>
Road, liberal politicians have mortgag-<lb/>
ed this generation's economic future in<lb/>
a blind attempt to change human<lb/>
nature. They have not learned that<lb/>
economic equality for everyone is not<lb/>
only unatainable, but undesirable.<lb/>
Their folly threatens to bring on an<lb/>
economic crisis in the near future, a<lb/>
total collapse of the U.S. monetary<lb/>
system, a catastrophe that will make the<lb/>
Great Depression seem insignificant.<lb/>
Instead of trying to pave Tobacco<lb/>
Road and replace its shacks with<lb/>
government housing projects, instead<lb/>
of trying to make sure that everyone<lb/>
who lives in Tobacco road is well fed<lb/>
and has health insurance, the govern-<lb/>
ment should offer every young person<lb/>
there and across the land a college or<lb/>
technical education ? free. With this<lb/>
promise of equal opportunity ? not<lb/>
economic equality ? those remaining<lb/>
on Tobacco Road, like Jeeter Lester,<lb/>
will do so by choice. All others will be<lb/>
free to leave Tobacco Road and ad-<lb/>
vance as far as their abilities and ambi-<lb/>
tions will allow them. They will be free<lb/>
to fulfill the American dream. And that<lb/>
is something we can all applaud.<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne<lb/>
Junior, Political Science<lb/>
Columnist Countered<lb/>
Perhaps someone should set Gordon<lb/>
Ipcock straight on a few facts. It's ob-<lb/>
vious from his recent Life in<lb/>
N.C.Klan Incident editorial that his<lb/>
(I'm sure) good journalistic intentions<lb/>
are being smothered by the same kind<lb/>
of ultra-conservative, right-wing<lb/>
philosophies that I'm afraid are<lb/>
characteristic of the region.<lb/>
First I'd like to congratulate Mr.<lb/>
Ipock for opening his extremely<lb/>
narrow-minded editorial with a conver-<lb/>
sation sure to elicit a favorable<lb/>
response from the majority of his<lb/>
readers; that of our football team's<lb/>
success and subsequent post-season<lb/>
bowl bid rejection. After all, and I'm<lb/>
sure Ipock realized this when he wrote<lb/>
it, who could argue with someone who<lb/>
realizes that the ECU Pirates should've<lb/>
been in a bowl game? Not any true<lb/>
North Carolinian; not any real, good,<lb/>
old-fashioned American.<lb/>
I find it interesting that (Ipock) pull-<lb/>
ed out all stops to portray the CWP<lb/>
party as something that is so repulsive<lb/>
and undesirable that swift extermina-<lb/>
tion is the only way to deal with them.<lb/>
Really now, "responsible for the whole<lb/>
tragedy "callous indifference to the<lb/>
safety of women and children if I<lb/>
may borrow a few of (his) more un-<lb/>
biased observations, would you have<lb/>
us believe that when the Klan and<lb/>
Nazis opened fire they were concerned<lb/>
with women and children? I think not.<lb/>
I think that the only thing they cared<lb/>
about was killing a few "commies" (a<lb/>
term you seem to be fond of).<lb/>
You state that the Klan places Com-<lb/>
munists far above blacks on its enemies<lb/>
list. (I suppose to reassure us that the<lb/>
Klan is just looking out to protect the<lb/>
"good ole American" way.) Yet I<lb/>
don't think that your average<lb/>
Klansman could even tell you what a<lb/>
Communist is. Point of fact: you, a<lb/>
supposedly educated college student,<lb/>
can't even (Judging by your editorial<lb/>
content) decide if the CWP is com-<lb/>
munist or socialist. Also, if the Klan is<lb/>
supposedly less rascist than you are,<lb/>
why do they still spout such witty (and<lb/>
manly) slogans as "Show us a nigger<lb/>
with courage and we'll show you a<lb/>
Klansman with a gun If the Klan is<lb/>
so all-American (it's okay to hate<lb/>
blacks as long as you also hate Com-<lb/>
munists) why do they hang around<lb/>
with the Nazi (Fascist) Party. Probably<lb/>
because the Nazis and Klansman are<lb/>
such good buddies from their days in<lb/>
legislature.<lb/>
Finally, I think it a sad state of af-<lb/>
fairs when an open minded, educated<lb/>
newspaper propagates the kind of<lb/>
narrow-minded, Sen. Helmsian<lb/>
philosophy that puts all evil under one<lb/>
label. Perhaps we should realize that<lb/>
when people are acquitted for murder-<lb/>
ing five people solely because the had<lb/>
differing economic beliefs, then the<lb/>
greatest threat to a truly free people is<lb/>
not the "Communists but a system<lb/>
that condones their murders.<lb/>
JefferyJ.Larrimore<lb/>
Junior, Sociology<lb/>
Mr. Ipock based the information in his<lb/>
editorial on "The Communists and the<lb/>
Klan " by Terry East land, an article that<lb/>
appeared in the May '80 issue of Com-<lb/>
mentary magazine. Mr. Ipock asks that<lb/>
before anyone else accuses him of being<lb/>
a racist they read this definitive article<lb/>
Va<lb/>
BvsTLPHAN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
SWt ?-<lb/>
Reports from the EC I<lb/>
Department of Public<lb/>
Safet were more than<lb/>
double over last week. In-<lb/>
cluded were seven reports<lb/>
of vandalism, four of<lb/>
theft and nine alcohol<lb/>
related incidents. The<lb/>
reports from Feb " thru<lb/>
Feb 1? are<lb/>
Feb 7, 11 25 a m -<lb/>
vandalism of two win-<lb/>
dows on third and fa<lb/>
floors of Aycock dorm.<lb/>
8:15 p.m. ? Timoth. Lee<lb/>
Kellv of 104-C Scot:<lb/>
dorm was served a sum-<lb/>
mons for a u-<lb/>
check. 10 30 r<lb/>
Carol Ann Hargrove was<lb/>
served a criminal sum-<lb/>
mons for a worthless<lb/>
check. 1 1:0 n.?<lb/>
report that R<lb/>
of 202 C Scott d<lb/>
thrown a burning -<lb/>
paper into a trashcai<lb/>
room 210- A of<lb/>
dorm, cau as -<lb/>
ft<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
B MOl I Bl H<lb/>
5 ? "<lb/>
Next fall the SRA <lb/>
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Residence Watch p<lb/>
gram. Last Od -<lb/>
SRA approved the p<lb/>
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pus area Because il<lb/>
such a huge s<lb/>
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The WASH PUB . l,rtn<lb/>
CAROLINA STUDEN'<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AlTOMOT! r<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
? '?Greenville Buo<lb/>
7i4 3023 ?24 MRS<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
24 hour Towing Sci i <lb/>
I Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
The<lb/>
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Expires Eel<lb/>
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their days in<lb/>
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fimtive article.<lb/>
Police Crime Blotter<lb/>
Vandalism, Arson Reports High<lb/>
By STEPHAN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
Malt Mki<lb/>
Reports from the ECU<lb/>
Department ot Public<lb/>
Safety were more than<lb/>
double over last week. In-<lb/>
cluded were seven reports<lb/>
of vandalism, four of<lb/>
theft and nine alcohol<lb/>
related incidents. The<lb/>
reports from Feb. 7 thru<lb/>
Feb. 13 are:<lb/>
Feb. 7, 11:25 a.m. ?<lb/>
vandalism of two win-<lb/>
dows on third and fourth<lb/>
floors, of Aycock dorm;<lb/>
8:15 p.m. ? Timothv Lee<lb/>
Kelly of 104-C Scott<lb/>
dorm was served a sum-<lb/>
mons for a worthless<lb/>
check; 10:30 p.m<lb/>
Carol Ann Hargrove was<lb/>
served a criminal sum-<lb/>
mons for a worthless<lb/>
check; 11:03 p.m.?<lb/>
report that Rich Forero<lb/>
of 202-C Scott dorm had<lb/>
thrown a burning piece of<lb/>
paper into a trashcan in<lb/>
room 210-A of Scott<lb/>
dorm, causing fire alarm<lb/>
to activate.<lb/>
Feb. 8, 9.55 a.m. ?<lb/>
Donna Deluise, resident<lb/>
director of Umstead<lb/>
Residence Hall, reported<lb/>
the larceny of furniture<lb/>
from the lobby of the<lb/>
hall; 3:50 p.m. ? report<lb/>
of damage to truck<lb/>
camper shell during snow<lb/>
while being driven on<lb/>
College Hill Drive; 8:23<lb/>
p.m. ? Kimberly Jo<lb/>
Mercer of 617 Clement<lb/>
dorm was transported to<lb/>
Pitt Memorial due to in-<lb/>
jury to her head; 10:30<lb/>
p.m. ? report of window<lb/>
of the door to the<lb/>
mechanical room in Scott<lb/>
dorm broken.<lb/>
Feb. 9, 2:05 p.m.<lb/>
Kenneth J. Del Cogliano<lb/>
of 408 Jones and Patrick<lb/>
D. Lorimer III of 482<lb/>
Jones were determined to<lb/>
have pushed over the<lb/>
Cushman vehicle at<lb/>
Joyner Library, causing<lb/>
approximately $50<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
Feb. 11, 12:25 a.m. ?<lb/>
Denise Muriel Miller of<lb/>
214 Fleming was issued a<lb/>
campus citation for<lb/>
transporting an alcoholic<lb/>
beverage with the seal<lb/>
broken; 1:01 a.m. ?<lb/>
Larry Darnell White,<lb/>
Michael Keith Coward<lb/>
and Anthony Alexander<lb/>
Carman, all of Winter-<lb/>
ville, N.C were banned<lb/>
from the campus for<lb/>
icated; 1:25 a.m. ?<lb/>
James Marion Pearce of<lb/>
309-B Scott was arrested<lb/>
for DWI; 2:03 a.m. ?<lb/>
Charles William Huff-<lb/>
man of 50H Sandy Knoll<lb/>
Trailer Court was issued<lb/>
a campus citation for<lb/>
DWI; 3:20 a.m. ? Tony<lb/>
Ray Harris of 502 West<lb/>
4th Street was banned<lb/>
from campus for being<lb/>
intoxicated and disrup-<lb/>
tive.<lb/>
Feb. 12, 1:10 a.m. ?<lb/>
Charles Szucham of 43 E.<lb/>
Honor Board Action<lb/>
Defendant Charge<lb/>
PlM<lb/>
Decision<lb/>
Jones dorm; 12:15 p.m.<lb/>
? report of larceny of a<lb/>
shoulder bag from room<lb/>
in Clement dorm; 5:45<lb/>
p.m. ? Sgt. Lawler<lb/>
reported snack machine<lb/>
in canteen of Tyler dorm<lb/>
appeared to have been <lb/>
vandalized; 6:10 p.m. ?<lb/>
report of vehicle van-<lb/>
dalized while parked ad-<lb/>
jacent to the band prac-<lb/>
tice field on College Hill<lb/>
Drive.<lb/>
Feb. 13, 12:35 a.m. ?<lb/>
Report of protective glass<lb/>
Freshman Stealing Guilty<lb/>
Freshman Forging checks Guilty<lb/>
Complete restitution<lb/>
Suspension from the<lb/>
university for one<lb/>
year; must petition<lb/>
the Honor Board for<lb/>
lission<lb/>
5th Street was obstructing from Fire alarm pull box<lb/>
and delaying Cpl. Wat- on 4th floor of Aycock<lb/>
son in carrying out his dorm broken; 1:15 a.m.<lb/>
duties as an officer; 2:50 ? Greenville Police<lb/>
a.m. ? Tammy McRae Department requested<lb/>
of 277 Jones dorm and assistance in apprehen-<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
? report of larceny of bicy- posession of a controlled Carl W. Bailey Jr. of 235 yding Kevin Ralph Smith<lb/>
cle from northwest corner<lb/>
of Aycock dorm; 6:38<lb/>
p.m. ? Todd Hess of 172<lb/>
Jones dorm was<lb/>
transported to Student<lb/>
Health Center by Green<lb/>
ville Rescue Squad due to<lb/>
injury while at Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria.<lb/>
Feb. 10, 1:15 a.m. ?<lb/>
substance and urinating<lb/>
in public; 1:15 a.m. Ann<lb/>
Michele Pridgcn was<lb/>
found to be driving after<lb/>
drinking; 1:15 a.m. ?<lb/>
Britt Douglas Campbell<lb/>
of Elizabeth City, N.C<lb/>
was banned from the<lb/>
campus for suspicious ac-<lb/>
tivity and being intox-<lb/>
Garrett were<lb/>
violation of<lb/>
policy in 277 Jones; 3:45<lb/>
a.m. ? James Archibald<lb/>
Campbell III of 435<lb/>
Aycock dorm was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI; 2:07<lb/>
a.m. ? anonymous caller<lb/>
reported a disturbance on<lb/>
4th floor west wing of<lb/>
found in f Aycock dorm who had<lb/>
visitation taken a SGA bus from<lb/>
Papa Katz nightclub<lb/>
without permission; 1:35<lb/>
a.m. ? Milton Norman<lb/>
White of 137 Aycock<lb/>
dorm was arrested for<lb/>
DWI; 210 a.m. ? report<lb/>
of glass broken out of<lb/>
southwest curfew door.<lb/>
Crime Watch Program Implemented<lb/>
B MOLLY BUSH<lb/>
Staff ? rim<lb/>
Next fall the SRA will<lb/>
begin a campus-wide<lb/>
Residence Watch pro-<lb/>
gram last October the<lb/>
SRA approved the pro-<lb/>
gram for the central cam-<lb/>
pus area. Because it was<lb/>
huge success,<lb/>
Wk<lb/>
Mark Niewald, SRA<lb/>
president, asked that the<lb/>
program be implemented<lb/>
campus-wide. "The<lb/>
Residence Watch has<lb/>
been a great success<lb/>
Niewald said.<lb/>
James B. Mallory,<lb/>
associate dean of orienta-<lb/>
program using Fines col-<lb/>
lected from those who<lb/>
committed crimes. "The<lb/>
costs that run over that<lb/>
amount will be absorbed<lb/>
by the SRA Niewald<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The program is similar<lb/>
out for each other.<lb/>
Residents are taught to<lb/>
watch for suspicious<lb/>
behavior and how to<lb/>
report it.<lb/>
Pamphlets, which will<lb/>
be distributed to the<lb/>
residence halls, contain<lb/>
information on the pro-<lb/>
how to protect property<lb/>
from vandalism.<lb/>
Watch signs have been<lb/>
posted on the entrances<lb/>
and doors of residence<lb/>
halls on central campus.<lb/>
Attention:<lb/>
All student organizations re-<lb/>
questing student funds must<lb/>
submit budgets beginning<lb/>
Feb. 13 thru Feb. 29, 1984.<lb/>
Please turn in requests to the<lb/>
SGA office in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Any ques-<lb/>
tions, please contact either<lb/>
Becky Talley or John Rainey<lb/>
at 757-6611.<lb/>
such<lb/>
to the Neighborhood<lb/>
tion and judiciary, is pro- Watch program whereby cedures used in reporting<lb/>
viding funding for the residents know and look crimes and give tips on<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
4 <lb/>
until ??ui.<lb/>
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A M?M<lb/>
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For a heart ruggng<lb/>
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Wright Building<lb/>
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Greenville's newest laundry facility, still under construction, forces local<lb/>
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Understanding, non judgmental care thai<lb/>
includes abortion (or women o all ages<lb/>
Counseling for both partners is available<lb/>
Special Services and rates for students.<lb/>
Call 781 5550 days, evenings, and weekends.<lb/>
OPTICAL<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
HALF PRICE SALE<lb/>
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Baked potato or french fries<lb/>
and<lb/>
trip to our salad bar or a cup of clam chowder<lb/>
Come by and register for a free<lb/>
Cabbage Patch Doll to be given<lb/>
away on February 14th.<lb/>
2311S. Evans St.<lb/>
756-2011<lb/>
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fciii?ys??Pii??ii??i<lb/>
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? i <lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0006"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FEBRUARY 14, 19M Page 6<lb/>
Robert Cox as Jupiter appeals to hurvdlce In the guise of a fly. The easily tempted Eurydice b Denise Miller.<lb/>
Orpheus<lb/>
Descends<lb/>
On ECU<lb/>
Singers, musicians and dancers from East Carolina<lb/>
University's campus and local communities will be<lb/>
featured in the Offenbach operetta, Orpheus in<lb/>
Hades Feb. 16-18.<lb/>
The production, directed by Dr. Clyde Hiss, is the<lb/>
major ECU Opera Theater presentation for the<lb/>
academic year. All performances are scheduled for 8<lb/>
p.m. in the Fletcher Recital Hall on campus.<lb/>
Orpheus, considered the first modern operetta, in-<lb/>
cludes numerous musical parodies and presents a<lb/>
comic retelling of a classic Greek myth. Its hero is a<lb/>
musician whose playing ot the lyTe is so beautiful that<lb/>
it casts spells even on wild armmais.<lb/>
Deeply in love with his wife Eurydice, he deter-<lb/>
mines to recover her from the underworld where she<lb/>
has gone after dying of a serpent sting. Orpheus<lb/>
charms Pluto, the god of Hades, with his music and<lb/>
is allowed to lead Eurydice out of Hades provided he<lb/>
docs not look back at her until he comes up from the<lb/>
underworld. The loving husband forgets, turns<lb/>
around, and Eurydice "dies" a second time.<lb/>
The cast of characters includes the chief god and<lb/>
goddess, Jupiter and Juno, and more than a dozen<lb/>
other gods and mythical characters, along with<lb/>
choruses and an ensemble of dancers.<lb/>
The ECU production will be sung in English.<lb/>
Tickets for Orpheus are on sale at ECL's Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in Mendenhail Student Center,<lb/>
telephone 757-6611.<lb/>
'Tobacco Road'Provokes Laughter, Thought<lb/>
B NDY ROBB1NS<lb/>
S?tf Writer<lb/>
Last Thursday evening Tobacco<lb/>
Road opened to a receptive au-<lb/>
dience. I was there, notebook in<lb/>
hand. I shouldn't have brought it,<lb/>
though, because I was too caught<lb/>
up n the pa to take many notes.<lb/>
Tobacco Road is a play set in<lb/>
the deepest pains of the Depres-<lb/>
sion. The one unchanging stage<lb/>
set is a perfect representation of a<lb/>
shack on a backwoods Georgia<lb/>
road. The minute the curtain<lb/>
open you get a definte idea of<lb/>
where you are and what it's like to<lb/>
be there. The lighting is harsh and<lb/>
bright, but you get the impression<lb/>
that the sun neer shines on these<lb/>
poor farmers.<lb/>
The show is divided into three<lb/>
acts that show the passage of time<lb/>
from late afternoon to the next<lb/>
corning, and finally, dawn of the<lb/>
next day. Two of the main<lb/>
characters are Ada and Jeeter<lb/>
Lester. They play "Ma and Pa<lb/>
farmer Most of their childien<lb/>
have moved away to the city to<lb/>
work in the mills. The only<lb/>
children left at home are Dude<lb/>
and Ellie May. Jeeter's mother is<lb/>
?.till around, but she doesn't speak<lb/>
and is terribly neglected. If the<lb/>
Depression was really like this,<lb/>
I'm glad I was born in the '60s.<lb/>
The play was written by Jack<lb/>
Kirkland and was based on a<lb/>
novel by Erskine Caldwell. Both<lb/>
obviously realized that if they por-<lb/>
trayed all the action as it might<lb/>
have been, few audiences would<lb/>
have enjoyed it. So there was a<lb/>
comic touch all through it. Most<lb/>
Theater<lb/>
Review<lb/>
of the comedy is centered around<lb/>
Jeeter Lester. The one liners really<lb/>
make the show. For example, in<lb/>
one scene Lov Bensey, who is<lb/>
married to one of Jeeter's<lb/>
daughters, is complaining that she<lb/>
never speaks to him and won't<lb/>
sleep with him. Jeeter suggests<lb/>
that maybe he hasn't done the<lb/>
right things to make her talk.<lb/>
"Tried kickin' her, throwin' rocks<lb/>
and sticks at her replies Lov.<lb/>
This is funny when you first hear<lb/>
it, but if you think about it, it tells<lb/>
you a lot about these people's at-<lb/>
titudes.<lb/>
There is a lot of cruelty in the<lb/>
play, but the characters don't<lb/>
seem to notice. The only one who<lb/>
does is Ellie May Lester. She has a<lb/>
hair lip and is constantly being<lb/>
ridiculed for it. Jeeter is the usual<lb/>
source of her torment, but Ellie<lb/>
May gets it from everyone.<lb/>
This brings out something that<lb/>
should be recognized. It's difficult<lb/>
to be a good actor when you have<lb/>
a major role. But it's even more<lb/>
difficult to turn a small part into<lb/>
one that demands attention. Sure<lb/>
Ellie May's part is a small one; in<lb/>
fact, she has very few lines. She<lb/>
spends most of her time off to the<lb/>
side. Only a few times does she<lb/>
enter the main focus of action.<lb/>
That's why at first I didn't notice<lb/>
her, but my editor did. When we<lb/>
were discussing the show, he got<lb/>
me thinking about her perfor-<lb/>
mance. And the more I thought<lb/>
about it, the more I realized Crisa<lb/>
Warren had turned a small role in-<lb/>
to something memorable. She<lb/>
seemed so natural, and you could<lb/>
tell everything she was thinking<lb/>
just from her body language or<lb/>
the way her expressions mirrored<lb/>
the main action.<lb/>
Tom Hull was superb as Jeeter<lb/>
Lester. After seeing him, it was<lb/>
tough for me to imagine anyone<lb/>
else doing the part.<lb/>
The play was filled with fine ac-<lb/>
ting all around. Mike Pitts supris-<lb/>
ed me in his role as Captain Tim. I<lb/>
know him from his job as Pirate<lb/>
Walk director last semester. He<lb/>
too seemed a natural on stage.<lb/>
Much of the credit for the suc-<lb/>
cess of Tobacco Road goes to the<lb/>
production staff and the technical<lb/>
crews. Director Edgar Loessin did<lb/>
a great job of making the entire<lb/>
show look natural and unrehears-<lb/>
ed. All of the set designers and<lb/>
construction teams are to be con-<lb/>
gratulated on a striking set.<lb/>
This play was well done to sav<lb/>
the least. But I don't think<lb/>
everyone will enjoy it as much as I<lb/>
did. If you go to see it strictly for<lb/>
comedy, you'll enjoy it. But those<lb/>
who look for meaning and drama<lb/>
will enjoy it even more.<lb/>
 Risky Business9<lb/>
Tom Cruise Debuts<lb/>
By ANDY ROBBINS<lb/>
Staff Wrtaar<lb/>
GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
FMrtar<lb/>
This Thursday Risky Business<lb/>
comes to Hendrix Theatre. Not<lb/>
the usual horror flick that the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union Films Comittee seems<lb/>
so fond of in recent weeks, Risky<lb/>
Business boasts a top-notch acting<lb/>
debut by Tom Cruise and rates<lb/>
high marks in production and<lb/>
cinamatography as well.<lb/>
This high-budget film mixes<lb/>
comedy with serious drama and<lb/>
throws in a healthy dose of good<lb/>
clean sex in a way that keeps you<lb/>
guessing what will happen next ?<lb/>
and sitting on the edge of your<lb/>
seat waiting for it. Written and<lb/>
directed by Tom Brickman,<lb/>
Business is well worth seeing. One<lb/>
critic even suggested we see it<lb/>
6,000 times.<lb/>
It's the story of Joel Goodson<lb/>
(Cruise) whose upper-middle<lb/>
class, restrictive parents go on a<lb/>
vacation and leave him alone with<lb/>
the house ? and the Porsche. Joel<lb/>
is a hard-working high school<lb/>
senior trying to get into<lb/>
Princeton. A friend offers him<lb/>
some advice for handling life's<lb/>
pressures, advice that leads Joel to<lb/>
a call girl played by Rebecca<lb/>
DeMornay. She and her friends<lb/>
use him and his folks' house to<lb/>
elude their pimp. What happens<lb/>
next is a no-return situation for<lb/>
Joel, and he has to try and refur-<lb/>
nish the house before his parents<lb/>
return.<lb/>
Watch for the large crystal egg.<lb/>
It's Joel's mother's prize posses-<lb/>
sion. It also represents the change<lb/>
in Joel's character. In the beginn-<lb/>
ing the egg is flawless, but by the<lb/>
movie's end there is a small crack<lb/>
inside it. Joel observes that this<lb/>
makes the egg unique. If this is<lb/>
true, then Joel is different also.<lb/>
I first paid $4 to see Risky<lb/>
Business. It was worth it. But you<lb/>
can see it for free this weekend at<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Admission is by<lb/>
student ID and activity card.<lb/>
?<lb/>
'Harlem Nocturne<lb/>
Showcases Black<lb/>
Musical Talent<lb/>
Scott Joplin, Bert Williams, Bessie Smith, Duke<lb/>
Ellington, Ella Fitzgerald, Lionel Hampton, Nat<lb/>
King Cole and Cab Calloway are only a few of the<lb/>
black composers and performers whose music will be<lb/>
celerbrated in Atlantis Productions Harlem Noc-<lb/>
turne: A Salute to Black Performers from the Cotten<lb/>
Club to Broadway. The program will take place on<lb/>
Monday, Feburay 20 at 8 p.m. in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center on the campus of East<lb/>
Carolina University. It is sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Minority Arts Committee, and there is no ad-<lb/>
mission charge.<lb/>
Featuring a cast of six highly talented young<lb/>
singersactorsdancers, Harlem Nocturne will bring<lb/>
you such songs as "Maple Leaf Rag "Sweet<lb/>
Georgia Brown "Stc.my Weather" and "St. Louis<lb/>
Blues" among others. Fully staged and costumed,<lb/>
the production is an evening of music that will make<lb/>
you proud of the contributions made by those who<lb/>
first called Harlem their cultural home. It was in<lb/>
places like the Cotten Club, the Savoy and Apollo<lb/>
Theatre that many of the stars began their climb to<lb/>
musical fame and fortune.<lb/>
Harlem Nocturne is based on a concept by pro-<lb/>
ducer Tad Currie whose previous work includes<lb/>
From Harlem to Broadway and The Best of<lb/>
Hollywood: Music from the Movies. Robert<lb/>
Cleveland is associate producer and writer.<lb/>
Harlem Nocturne is an evening of musical theater<lb/>
you won't want to miss. For additional information<lb/>
contact the Central Ticket Office. Call 757-6611, ext.<lb/>
266 between 10 a.m. and 4 p.m. Monday through<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Dear<lb/>
Dear Mr. LaSaile,<lb/>
I am a senior political<lb/>
sience major. I am 5'8<lb/>
125 pounds, and I hae<lb/>
long brown hair and blue<lb/>
eyes. Wherever I go, out-<lb/>
side of Greenville, I am<lb/>
considered extremely at-<lb/>
tractive and popular f.<lb/>
problem is that here at<lb/>
school I can't seem to<lb/>
find the right man for<lb/>
me. You see. Mr<lb/>
LaSaile, there is only one<lb/>
type of man on Ed's<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Yes, he's the type of<lb/>
guy who asks a girl out<lb/>
about once a month He<lb/>
blows big bucks getting<lb/>
her drunk to enjoy the oc-<lb/>
casion and he's, in-<lb/>
variably, walking her<lb/>
back to her dorm at<lb/>
about 7:30 the next morn-<lb/>
ing. This campus felloe is<lb/>
described by friends as<lb/>
seldom going out or - <lb/>
ing girlfriends but ever)<lb/>
morning on the way<lb/>
my 8:00 class 1 see a dif-<lb/>
ferent female up-toeing<lb/>
OUt Of his ro 1<lb/>
You see, Mr L iSaUe, I<lb/>
enjoy having sex Just -<lb/>
much as the next fir<lb/>
feel it is a beautiful way<lb/>
to express one's passion<lb/>
for another. Ho?e.er I<lb/>
like to wait until afic '<lb/>
know the gu is a true<lb/>
friend<lb/>
some :if<lb/>
enjoy edi<lb/>
companX<lb/>
what tf<lb/>
"Good<lb/>
those w;<lb/>
a g.rl d<lb/>
sack <lb/>
on the<lb/>
seldom<lb/>
him aga<lb/>
into hn<lb/>
casuc<lb/>
ackr <lb/>
he doesl<lb/>
I<lb/>
stdt i<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
see h-<lb/>
 m<lb/>
M -<lb/>
'?<lb/>
<lb/>
exc<lb/>
r<lb/>
FAM<lb/>
uui ?<lb/>
I OS A K - ' -<lb/>
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3 3 75B -<lb/>
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Class gel<lb/>
PIZ<lb/>
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U th pin<lb/>
spaghetti and aiad<lb/>
toucan eat<lb/>
Dinner fij<lb/>
l the pt<lb/>
vpagbetu at<lb/>
??? .? - I<lb/>
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D?tl: Uimio 2pa<lb/>
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v I<lb/>
Corner of Catanche &amp; 10th(<lb/>
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Now B<lb/>
Most delivery pi;<lb/>
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PIZZA INN has d<lb/>
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Daily Bu<lb/>
and Won.<lb/>
CALL 754244<lb/>
1<lb/>
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I<lb/>
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Giant<lb/>
 -v<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 14. IV84<lb/>
4 NH4<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
heus<lb/>
cends<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
mcers from East Carolina<lb/>
d local communities will be<lb/>
h operetta. Orpheus in<lb/>
t) Dr Clyde Hiss, is the<lb/>
eater presentation for the<lb/>
 ormances are scheduled for 8<lb/>
Hall on campus.<lb/>
modern operetta, in-<lb/>
il parodies and presents a<lb/>
reek myth. Its hero is a<lb/>
c lyre is so beautiful that<lb/>
d amimals.<lb/>
(e Eurydice, he deter-<lb/>
 the underworld where she<lb/>
a serpent sting. Orpheus<lb/>
Hades, with his music and<lb/>
e out o! Hades provided he<lb/>
It until he comes up from the<lb/>
i g husband forgets, turns<lb/>
"a second time,<lb/>
includes the chief god and<lb/>
and more than a dozen<lb/>
characters, along with<lb/>
dancers<lb/>
 sung in English.<lb/>
sale at ECU's Central<lb/>
denhall Student Center,<lb/>
ought<lb/>
?us play was well done to sav<lb/>
But 1 don't think<lb/>
ne will enjoy it as much as 1<lb/>
If you go to see it strictly for<lb/>
you'll enjoy it. But those<lb/>
? for meaning and drama<lb/>
enjoy u even more.<lb/>
ebuts<lb/>
tide their pimp. What happens<lb/>
1 t is a no-return situation for<lb/>
and he has to try and refur-<lb/>
sh the house before his parents<lb/>
turn.<lb/>
Watch for the large crystal egg.<lb/>
Joel's mother's prize posses-<lb/>
n It also represents the change<lb/>
Joel's character. In the beginn-<lb/>
the egg is flawless, but by the<lb/>
vie's end there is a small crack<lb/>
side it Joel observes that this<lb/>
ikes the egg unique. If this is<lb/>
le, then Joel is different also.<lb/>
first paid S4 to see Risky<lb/>
isiness It was worth it. But you<lb/>
see it for free th;s weekend at<lb/>
rndri.x Theatre. Admission is by<lb/>
ident ID and activity card.<lb/>
? f1.<lb/>
Dear Mr. LaSalle,<lb/>
Dear Mr. LaSalle,<lb/>
I am a senior political<lb/>
sience major. I am 5'8<lb/>
125 pounds, and I have<lb/>
long brown hair and blue<lb/>
eyes. Wherever I go, out-<lb/>
side of Greenville, I am<lb/>
considered extremely at-<lb/>
tractive and popular. My<lb/>
problem is that here at<lb/>
school I can't seem to<lb/>
find the right man for<lb/>
me. You see, Mr.<lb/>
LaSalle, there is only one<lb/>
tvpe of man or. ECU's<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Yes, he's the type of<lb/>
guv who asks a girl out<lb/>
about once a month. He<lb/>
blows big bucks getting<lb/>
her drunk to enjoy the oc-<lb/>
casion and he's, in-<lb/>
variably, walking her<lb/>
back to her dorm at<lb/>
about 7:30 the next morn-<lb/>
ing. This campus fellow is<lb/>
described by friends as<lb/>
seldom going out or hav-<lb/>
ing girlfriends, but every<lb/>
morning on the way to<lb/>
my 8:00 class I see a dif-<lb/>
ferent female tip-toeing<lb/>
out of his room.<lb/>
You see. Mr. LaSalle. I<lb/>
enjoy having sex just as<lb/>
much as the next girl. I<lb/>
feel it is a beautiful way<lb/>
to express one's passion<lb/>
for another. However, I<lb/>
like to wait until after I<lb/>
know the guy is a true<lb/>
friend. After we 've spent<lb/>
some time together and<lb/>
enjoyed each other's<lb/>
company. You know<lb/>
what they say, Mick,<lb/>
"Good things come to<lb/>
those who wait Well, if<lb/>
a girl doesn't hop in the<lb/>
sack with a guy at ECU<lb/>
on the first date, she<lb/>
seldom ever hears from<lb/>
him again. If she does run<lb/>
into him downtown, he<lb/>
casually brushes past her<lb/>
and may even mumble an<lb/>
acknowledging hello, but<lb/>
he doesn't associate with<lb/>
her and he no longer con-<lb/>
siders her a friend.<lb/>
Mr. LaSalle, I don't<lb/>
see how I can win. The<lb/>
guys at ECU call the<lb/>
women who do,<lb/>
"tramps, " but they<lb/>
won't even take the time<lb/>
to get to know the women<lb/>
who "don't I don't<lb/>
know what to do, because<lb/>
these college boys don't<lb/>
know what they're miss-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Signed: A lone, and better<lb/>
off that wav, in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Dear Alone,<lb/>
I wouldn't advise any<lb/>
woman to get laid on the<lb/>
first date. Sure, there are<lb/>
exceptions and things<lb/>
happen. But if you find<lb/>
yourself with a guy who<lb/>
expects it the first time<lb/>
out, forget him,<lb/>
sweetheart. The mug<lb/>
ain't worth it.<lb/>
Most men would rather<lb/>
go to bed with a friend<lb/>
than a stranger. But on a<lb/>
first date, sometimes a<lb/>
guy'll get anxious ? or<lb/>
nervous ? or misread<lb/>
signals.<lb/>
Next time this happens,<lb/>
tell him what you told<lb/>
me. Then watch his reac-<lb/>
tion. Most guys will say<lb/>
the same thing in this<lb/>
situation. But you're not<lb/>
a kid anymore: You'll<lb/>
know who's sincere.<lb/>
Men train themselves<lb/>
to seem in control even<lb/>
when they're on the edge<lb/>
of falling apart. Chances<lb/>
are, half the guys who<lb/>
brush past you mumbling<lb/>
hello are just embarrass-<lb/>
ed. They're remembering<lb/>
the time they came on too<lb/>
strong and blew it with<lb/>
you. Be sensitive to that<lb/>
facade, because the pret-<lb/>
tier you are the more<lb/>
you're gonna run into it.<lb/>
And vou sound like a real<lb/>
doll.<lb/>
ECU isn't the best<lb/>
place to find a boyfriend.<lb/>
But right now there are a<lb/>
few thousand guys who<lb/>
just read your letter, and<lb/>
each is convinced he<lb/>
could solve your pro-<lb/>
blem. All but a handful<lb/>
are wrong. But if you<lb/>
want to find one of that<lb/>
handful, do a couple of<lb/>
things. Don't be cynical:<lb/>
When a guy meets you,<lb/>
give him a chance. And<lb/>
use your head: Don't<lb/>
look for him downtown.<lb/>
Mick will answer only letters<lb/>
containing at least a semblance<lb/>
of sincerity. Garbage letters,<lb/>
sicko letters and set-up mail will<lb/>
be trashed.<lb/>
The following article ap-<lb/>
peared in last Thursday's Style<lb/>
section. An error in layout made<lb/>
for difficult reading. Features<lb/>
has decided to run the piece<lb/>
again, in smaller type, for<lb/>
Mick's many devoted fans and<lb/>
ardent critics.<lb/>
I'm sitting at somebody's<lb/>
desk at The East Carolinian<lb/>
looking at two piles of letters.<lb/>
One pile is from the critics. The<lb/>
other pile is from the sickoes.<lb/>
Most of the letters could really<lb/>
fit in either pile.<lb/>
Ipock, my editor, busts in. So<lb/>
I tell him what I'm thinking. "If<lb/>
I answer the critics, it's like I'm<lb/>
running my own Bum of the<lb/>
Week club with me getting the<lb/>
last word every time. And no<lb/>
good's served by running letters<lb/>
from sickoes, while I wind up<lb/>
becoming some kind of P.T.<lb/>
Barnum for ECU's geeks and<lb/>
freaks<lb/>
Ipock nods, walks over to the<lb/>
desk and surprises me. He takes<lb/>
the two piles and plops them in-<lb/>
to the trash. "How's that?" he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
I smile. Sometimes a column<lb/>
doesn't turn out the way you ex-<lb/>
pect<lb/>
But there's still one letter on<lb/>
the desk. I had set it aside earlier<lb/>
because I wanted to think about<lb/>
it before I gave my answer. Now<lb/>
I look at it again:<lb/>
Eh, Mick!<lb/>
I'm a 19-year-old, male, col-<lb/>
lege sophomore, and I get my<lb/>
share of co-ed ass on campus<lb/>
I'm wondering, though,<lb/>
whatever happened to the<lb/>
morals of society? It seems the<lb/>
ECU student body is mainly<lb/>
concerned with when and where<lb/>
they're going to get laid next.<lb/>
Sure, 1 like some hooter-hole<lb/>
too, but I'm getting tired of all<lb/>
the one-night stands. Sex just<lb/>
seems to be so casual that it<lb/>
hardly takes any work or time to<lb/>
get laid. I thought it was sup-<lb/>
posed to be something special<lb/>
between two people who are<lb/>
very close. This isn 't to say that<lb/>
I don't believe m premarital sex,<lb/>
I do, and it's great to have varie-<lb/>
ty too, but it seems that sex has<lb/>
no importance when you don't<lb/>
really know your partner and<lb/>
share a common feeling of<lb/>
togetherness. I just don't think<lb/>
casual sex is all it's cracked up<lb/>
to be. It seems that the morals<lb/>
and values of today's youth are<lb/>
changing very rapidly,<lb/>
downhill What do you think,<lb/>
Mick?<lb/>
Signed: "Morally Confused<lb/>
I shake my head. "Hooter-<lb/>
hole That's one on me. Thei<lb/>
guy is trying to impress me byf<lb/>
being vulgar. Car salesman do<lb/>
that too. But I'll let that slide.<lb/>
The problem with "Morallyl<lb/>
Confused" is he's kidding!<lb/>
himself. Blaming the "morals!<lb/>
of society" for one's sexual con-<lb/>
duct is only a notch above roll-<lb/>
ing off your woman and blam-<lb/>
ing her So the letter annoys me<lb/>
But not enough to dump it. I<lb/>
stuff "Morally Confused" in<lb/>
my pants pocket and forget him<lb/>
and his problems for the next 24<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
A day later, a couple of girls<lb/>
are in my room. I'm flat on my<lb/>
back, in bed, and the room is<lb/>
rocking. The girls, sophomores<lb/>
they say. are here to take care of<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"It's just something goin'<lb/>
'round, Mick one of them<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Whatever it is, I got it.<lb/>
"Can we try on yer hat?"<lb/>
It takes just one day with this<lb/>
Greenville flu to completely<lb/>
forget what it was ever like to<lb/>
feel well. 1 keep dozing off for<lb/>
half hours at a clip, but wake up<lb/>
coughing like a jerk. And I keep<lb/>
having the same nightmare<lb/>
where I'm a door-to-door pencil<lb/>
salesman trying to escape these<lb/>
insane Miss America con-<lb/>
testants who keep pelting me<lb/>
with donuis<lb/>
I wake up in a cold sweat<lb/>
One of my nurses is patting me<lb/>
on the head, asking if I'm "all<lb/>
right yet " The other is on the<lb/>
floor going through my pants<lb/>
"You need this piece of<lb/>
paper, Mick?" she asks, and<lb/>
hands me the letter from<lb/>
"Morally Confused "<lb/>
Maybe when you get sick you<lb/>
get nice ? operating off the<lb/>
outside chance you might croak<lb/>
This time I look at the letter,<lb/>
and all I say is. "Ladies, the on-<lb/>
ly problem this guy has is he<lb/>
doesn't know The LaSalle<lb/>
Philosophy<lb/>
"The LaSalle. what<lb/>
And that's all I need. I start<lb/>
mouthing off. saying things off<lb/>
the top of my head I begin with<lb/>
the obvious, like, "Necr hit an<lb/>
elderly person with a baseball<lb/>
bat " But the letter is in the<lb/>
back of my mind So 1 come up<lb/>
with a few things I wouldn't<lb/>
mind telling "Morally Confus-<lb/>
ed "<lb/>
"Never kid vourself. Even<lb/>
when you're doing wrong, ad<lb/>
nut it to yourself ? otherwise<lb/>
you may forget what right and<lb/>
wrong are<lb/>
"Never use sex to hurt<lb/>
anybody Don't tell some<lb/>
young, vulnerable girl vou love<lb/>
her, get in her pants and then<lb/>
turn around and dump her. So-<lb/>
meone's feelings are more lm<lb/>
portant than you gettir.g iaid.<lb/>
"If you keep on doing<lb/>
something for pleasure, but<lb/>
you're not enjoying it, use your<lb/>
head and stop doing it "<lb/>
That was three days ago To-<lb/>
day I fed pretty good I reach<lb/>
for the phone, and this Woody<lb/>
Allen line comes xo me 'Sex<lb/>
with someone you don't love is<lb/>
an empty experience But as far<lb/>
as empty experiences go, it's one<lb/>
of the best "<lb/>
1 laugh for the same reason 1<lb/>
laugh at anything because it's<lb/>
true Once you know wha:<lb/>
you're passing up, it's reall<lb/>
much easier to become "moral<lb/>
ly confused "<lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057623_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROl INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 14, 1984<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Bio w<lb/>
Half time Lead<lb/>
Record Falls to 4-17<lb/>
By SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
 ?.t. ?? i - .<lb/>
apwv wrfWT<lb/>
After an impressive first half<lb/>
against William and Mary Satur-<lb/>
day night, coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison's ECU Pirates fell apart in<lb/>
the second half, allowing the In-<lb/>
dians to win going away, 67-52.<lb/>
The win was the sixth in a row<lb/>
for the Indians, now 11-10 overall<lb/>
and 4-2 in the East Coast Athletic<lb/>
Conference. It was also their sixth<lb/>
in a row over the Pirates, who fell<lb/>
to 4-17 overall and 1-6 in the con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to an<lb/>
early 4-2 lead on a follow shot by<lb/>
guard Keith Sledge and a fast<lb/>
break layup by guard Curt<lb/>
Vanderhorst, who had a career-<lb/>
high 29 points to lead all scorers.<lb/>
After that, the teams traded<lb/>
baskets for most of the first half.<lb/>
The Indians did manage to pull<lb/>
out to a 28-23 lead with two<lb/>
minutes left in the half. The<lb/>
Pirates took the halftime lead,<lb/>
however, on a layup and two free<lb/>
throws by Vanderhorst and a last<lb/>
second jumpshot from the corner<lb/>
by guard William Grady.<lb/>
In the second half, the Pirates<lb/>
fell apart, however. "It was caus-<lb/>
ed by a total breakdown in our<lb/>
guard plav Harrison said.<lb/>
EC A C-South Standings<lb/>
I eague Overall<lb/>
Richmond 5-1 14-7<lb/>
William and Mary 4-2 11-10<lb/>
George Mason 43 16-4<lb/>
Navy 3-3 17-6<lb/>
James Madison 2-4 10-10<lb/>
East Carolina 1-6 4-17<lb/>
Saturday's EC A C results<lb/>
George Mason 77, Richmond 74<lb/>
William and Mary 67, ECU 52<lb/>
Navy 79, James Madison 73<lb/>
Vanderhorst had five turnovers<lb/>
for the game, while his teammate<lb/>
in the backcourt, Tony Robinson,<lb/>
had seven turnovers and suffered<lb/>
a dismal one of 11 shooting per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
Early in the second half, the<lb/>
Pirates were ice cold. After a<lb/>
20-footer by Vanderhorst at the<lb/>
19.00 mark, the Pirates failed to<lb/>
score until another long jumper<lb/>
by Vanderhorst, nearly eight<lb/>
minutes later.<lb/>
During the ECU drought, the<lb/>
Indians stretched their lead to<lb/>
41-31. The Pirates cut that lead to<lb/>
43-37 with 9:45 left on two more<lb/>
Vanderhorst baskets, but that was<lb/>
as close as the Pirates would get.<lb/>
The Pirates managed to pull<lb/>
back to within seven at 53-46 on a<lb/>
follow shot by forward Roy Smith<lb/>
with four minutes left, but the In-<lb/>
dians scored 10 unanswered<lb/>
points to put the game out of<lb/>
reach, and never looked back, as<lb/>
the Pirates hurt themselves with<lb/>
poor shot selection.<lb/>
"We can't afford to get impa-<lb/>
tient against a smart team like<lb/>
William and Mary Harrison<lb/>
said. "We'll run when we get the<lb/>
chance, but you can't take quick<lb/>
shots or bad shots.<lb/>
"It's tough to get the ball inside<lb/>
on a team like the Indians. You<lb/>
have to put it in from the outside<lb/>
and hope to draw them out. We<lb/>
did that for a while but then our<lb/>
guards got soft with the ball<lb/>
The Indians were led by Keith<lb/>
Cieplicki with 22 points, many of<lb/>
which came in clutch situations.<lb/>
Other Indians in double figures<lb/>
were Tony Traver with 17, and<lb/>
Herb Harris with 10 second half<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Vanderhorst was the only<lb/>
Pirate in double figures, while<lb/>
Grady added 8 points.<lb/>
The Pirates will attempt to<lb/>
break their three-game losing<lb/>
streak when they host Howard<lb/>
University 7:30 Tuesday night at<lb/>
Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Women Defeat AU;<lb/>
Lose To ODU, GM<lb/>
? ICU PlWt La<lb/>
Forward William Grady Drives<lb/>
East Carolina (52)<lb/>
Sledge 1 0-0 2, Battle 0 0-0 0,<lb/>
Bass 0 0-0 0, Vanderhorst 13 3-4<lb/>
29, Robinson 1 4-6 6, Turnbill 1<lb/>
O-O 2, Grady 4 0-0 8, Smith 2 12<lb/>
5.<lb/>
William and Mary (67)<lb/>
Richardson 3 2-5 8, Bland 2 1-2<lb/>
5, Harris 4 2-2 10, Cieplicki 10 2-3<lb/>
22, Traver 6 5-8 17. Mc Far lane O<lb/>
0-0 0, Coval 0 3-43, Boddy O 2-4<lb/>
2, Brooks 0 0-0 0.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Aallllil Sport J-dJiof<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team took to the road last week,<lb/>
losing to nationally ranked Old<lb/>
Dominion on Thursday and split-<lb/>
ting a pair of games over the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Top ten ODU-had little trouble<lb/>
with the Lady Pirates, as they<lb/>
wrapped up a 7247 victory.<lb/>
The Monarchs scored the first<lb/>
nine points of the game and never<lb/>
looked back as they rolled to leads<lb/>
as big as 20 points in the first half.<lb/>
ECU was able to slim the lead<lb/>
to 33-17 by halftime, while play-<lb/>
ing against the ODU substitutes,<lb/>
but the second half was just as<lb/>
disasterous as the Monarchs mov-<lb/>
ed out to a 26 point bulge on<lb/>
several occasions.<lb/>
"I think they're awesome in<lb/>
terms of what they're capable of<lb/>
doing ECU head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "We weren't going<lb/>
to run with them, we weren't go-<lb/>
ing to press them and we didn't<lb/>
want to let the crowd get into the<lb/>
game<lb/>
Tracy Claxton led ODU with a<lb/>
game-high 19 points and 10 re-<lb/>
bounds, while ECU was led by-<lb/>
Lisa Squirewell and Delphine<lb/>
Mabry with 14 points each.<lb/>
Saturday night the Pirates "did<lb/>
real well under a tough<lb/>
situation as they earned a hard-<lb/>
fought 59-49 victory over<lb/>
American University.<lb/>
Andruzzi was pleased with her<lb/>
team's win, but was upset with<lb/>
conditions under which her team<lb/>
was forced to play.<lb/>
The Pirates first arrived at the<lb/>
game five hours early when they<lb/>
were uninformed of a time<lb/>
change, and then discovered the<lb/>
gym floor had a number of "dead<lb/>
spots According to Andruzzi,<lb/>
"Their place was worse then<lb/>
Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Squirewell paced the Pirates<lb/>
with 20 points, but Andruzzi said<lb/>
ECU won the game on defense.<lb/>
"Offensively we didn't get our<lb/>
game going, but we played as a<lb/>
team on defense she said.<lb/>
The Pirates' aggressive defense<lb/>
was most evident inside, as they<lb/>
held a 36-23 rebounding advan-<lb/>
tage, with Squirewell pulling<lb/>
down a game-high 13.<lb/>
George Mason held off an ECU<lb/>
rally in fhe final minutes of play<lb/>
to take a 58-54 ECAC-South vic-<lb/>
tory in the Pirates' final road<lb/>
gJme of the season.<lb/>
Trailing 53-41 with 5:34 left in<lb/>
the game, the Lady Pirates reeled<lb/>
off ten unanswered points to nar-<lb/>
row the margin to 53-51 with 1:22<lb/>
remaining, but the Patriots were<lb/>
successful from the line in the<lb/>
final minute to escape with a four-<lb/>
point victory.<lb/>
Mabry scored eight of the<lb/>
Pirates' 10 points during the rally<lb/>
and finished the game leading<lb/>
ECU with 15.<lb/>
"The girls played real hard and<lb/>
real intense Andruzzi said.<lb/>
"Everybody played, and<lb/>
everybody did well<lb/>
Although she was plaesed with<lb/>
her team's play, Andruzzi said<lb/>
turnovers were the Pirates'<lb/>
downfall. ECU committed 30 for<lb/>
the game, while George Mason<lb/>
had only 16.<lb/>
The Pirates now stand at 2-2 in<lb/>
league play and 10-13 overall and<lb/>
geared up for the Converse Lady<lb/>
Pirate Classic to be held this<lb/>
weekend in Greenville.<lb/>
The tournament is only one of<lb/>
four throughout the country<lb/>
sponsored by Converse. Other<lb/>
teams participating will include<lb/>
Marshall, Fan field and Cheynev<lb/>
State.<lb/>
r-A Look At Karate From The Inside<lb/>
East Carolina (54)<lb/>
Squirewell 2 2 6, Phillips 2 3-4<lb/>
7, Hedges 13-4 5, Rodriguez 2 0-0<lb/>
4, Bragg 4 5-6 13, Mabry "1-215.<lb/>
Bethea 0 0-0 0, Grier 1 0-0 2,<lb/>
Anderson 1 0-0.<lb/>
George Mason (58)<lb/>
Daunoras 7 6-10 20, Douglas 0<lb/>
O-O O, Aunidon 3 O-O 6. Pugh 5 3-3<lb/>
13, Jones 1 7-8 9, Ragiand 1 0-0 2,<lb/>
McCoy 0-0 1-3 1, Braxton 3 1-47.<lb/>
Karate<lb/>
Wants<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
aMwl Spona Mttor<lb/>
He lifts weights, jogs, takes<lb/>
aerobics and works out every day<lb/>
helps beginning students on the<lb/>
weekends and coordinated all the<lb/>
tournaments in which he and club<lb/>
members attend.<lb/>
What does someone get out of<lb/>
Club<lb/>
spiration for me<lb/>
Johnson hasn't done so bad for<lb/>
himself in tournaments either, as<lb/>
he recently came in second in the<lb/>
kumite (fighting) division at the<lb/>
the playoffs Johnson said.<lb/>
"There will be over 10,000 par-<lb/>
ticipants, and people like Chuck<lb/>
Norris, Bill "Supcrfoot" Wallace<lb/>
and many of the PKA World<lb/>
? ii-ii j- ,?? ,u , ii u i j- ? ? ivumiiv i"gB uiviaiuii ai mc iuiu many oi me rr<lb/>
deJelon mHM " P dedlcalin? a lar8e P1 of his life North Carolina State Champion- Champions will be there<lb/>
develop my skills<lb/>
ECU Karate Club president<lb/>
Chuck Johnson is more devoted<lb/>
to the art of karate then one could<lb/>
ever imagine.<lb/>
As club president, the black belt<lb/>
conducts three classes a week,<lb/>
to a sport that is barely recognized<lb/>
or understood in American<lb/>
athletics? "I know I want to teach<lb/>
karate one day Johnson ex-<lb/>
plained, "and when I see one of<lb/>
the club members do well in a<lb/>
tournament, it serves as an in-<lb/>
ships in Jacksonville. According to Johnson, the club<lb/>
This spring Johnson and several is going through a transition<lb/>
club members will be headed for period because many of the<lb/>
the "Battle of Atlanta one of veterans recently graduated, but<lb/>
the largest karate tournaments in said he has a goal to make the club<lb/>
the United States. as strong as it was in the past.<lb/>
'This is Karate's equivalent to "We have a really good beginner<lb/>
class, and a lot of them could be<lb/>
on their way ud<lb/>
The club operates under the<lb/>
direction of sixth-degree black<lb/>
belt Bill McDonald, who is head<lb/>
sensei (creator) of the Goju-<lb/>
Shorin style of karate.<lb/>
Johnson recieved his black belt<lb/>
in another style, but says he en-<lb/>
joys teaching under McDonald's<lb/>
system. "Goju-Shorin offers a<lb/>
well rounded variety of techni-<lb/>
ques. It blends traditional karate,<lb/>
self defense and sport (fighting)<lb/>
all in one<lb/>
<lb/>
All the different styles is one of<lb/>
the things that makes Karate so<lb/>
interesting to Johnson. "I've<lb/>
IcaAied a lot of katas (a series of<lb/>
kicks, blocks and punches per-<lb/>
formed in rapid succession) in dif-<lb/>
ferent systems, but there's always<lb/>
more you can learn. I want to<lb/>
branch out and grow as much as I<lb/>
can.<lb/>
See KARATE, Page 9<lb/>
Baird Shuffles Outfield For Stability<lb/>
Plans To Move Slugger Evans To Left<lb/>
PATTMtON - SCU MWte to<lb/>
"They're going to be good, there is no<lb/>
doubt in my mind. But whether it is<lb/>
going to be this year or not remains to<lb/>
be seen HjU Baird<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
Last in a series<lb/>
While the rest of the starting<lb/>
positions on the ECU baseball<lb/>
ttj-m appear fairly certain, the<lb/>
spots in coach Hal Baird's out-<lb/>
field, at 'his point in pre-season<lb/>
training, stii! remain vague.<lb/>
"The outfield situation, in a<lb/>
general sense, is maybe the most<lb/>
unsettled that we have says<lb/>
Baird, who plans to move last<lb/>
year's leading hitter, Todd Evans,<lb/>
from first to left field to provide<lb/>
leadership in that area.<lb/>
With freshman Jeff Ginn show-<lb/>
ing the potential to take over the<lb/>
first base position, Baird has no<lb/>
qualms with placing Evans in left.<lb/>
"Right now, he's our leftfielder<lb/>
he says. "I think that is where he<lb/>
will end up<lb/>
Baird commented on the pro-<lb/>
bable starting outfielders:<lb/>
Todd Evans (Senior, left field.<lb/>
Last year: .310 batting average, 25<lb/>
runs, 20 RBI's, 7 doubles, 2<lb/>
triples, 3 HR's) "Todd was a star-<lb/>
ting first baseman for a couple of<lb/>
years and will probably be one of<lb/>
the all-time record holders in hit-<lb/>
ting before he leaves. He's our co-<lb/>
captain.<lb/>
"Since he has played first base,<lb/>
there may be times we will slide<lb/>
him in to play first against certain<lb/>
pitchers<lb/>
Mike Williams (Senior,<lb/>
rightfielder. Last year: .195 bat-<lb/>
ting average, 6 runs, 5 RBI's, 1<lb/>
triple): "It looks like he will be the<lb/>
starter in right field. Mike pro-<lb/>
bably had a better fall than he has<lb/>
had since he's been at East<lb/>
Carolina, but last year he hit only<lb/>
.195 in the spring.<lb/>
"That job is his right now, but<lb/>
we are going to have to have more<lb/>
out of him than that (last year) to<lb/>
Baseball Preview<lb/>
be able to hold it this year. Based<lb/>
on what he did in the fall, we<lb/>
think he will do that<lb/>
Football star Ricky Nichols and<lb/>
returner Mark Shank will battle<lb/>
for the center field position:<lb/>
Ricky Nichols (Junior): "He is<lb/>
one of the finest athletes at East<lb/>
Carolina right now, without ques-<lb/>
tion. He can fly and has just<lb/>
outstanding ahtletic ability.<lb/>
"He needs to polish has<lb/>
baseball game a little bit as far as<lb/>
technique, but the sky's the limit<lb/>
as far as potential with him<lb/>
Mark Shank (Junior. Last year:<lb/>
.237, 9 runs, 8 RBI's, 5 stolen<lb/>
bases): "He also runs very well.<lb/>
His bat needs to be more consis-<lb/>
tent, but he may be a shade ahead<lb/>
defensively right now<lb/>
Overall, the potential of this<lb/>
year's baseball team is perhaps in<lb/>
the same category as past ECU<lb/>
clubs that have produced profes-<lb/>
sional baseball material. The skill<lb/>
is there, says Baird; the question<lb/>
involves when that skill will<lb/>
develop to the caliber of Baird's<lb/>
expectations. "We think we had a<lb/>
really good recruiting year he<lb/>
says. "We are going to be an<lb/>
awfully young team, but I believe<lb/>
it is a talented group.<lb/>
"I think really it is just going to<lb/>
depend upon how quickly these<lb/>
kids are going to adjust. They're<lb/>
going to be good, there is no<lb/>
doubt in my mind. But whether it<lb/>
is going to be this year or not re-<lb/>
mains to be seen<lb/>
Although the team is inex-<lb/>
perienced, it does not lack the all-<lb/>
important leadership aspect. "We<lb/>
are going to be starting three<lb/>
freshman or probably even<lb/>
more But, Baird says, "We've<lb/>
got good leadership in Todd<lb/>
Evans and David Wells. They've<lb/>
been through it long enough to<lb/>
help these kids along, so I think<lb/>
we have a good matrix.<lb/>
"We have a couple of heads<lb/>
that have been through it a few<lb/>
times<lb/>
Todd Evans hit .318 hist year<lb/>
<lb/>
ECU Karate Club President I<lb/>
into eye a<lb/>
and folk<lb/>
ECLstsdratsI.D. rrq<lb/>
Mard<lb/>
FeJ<lb/>
HOLIDOi<lb/>
Drinks a-id He<lb/>
Tickets v<lb/>
Must Presei <lb/>
ckets X<lb/>
r<lb/>
Ck i settle hr pre-<lb/>
evoked ucrmedrtuti<lb/>
?"HocM burnen<lb/>
)xi hutt a fresh aiiervtwt<lb/>
alSutXifr Garten fresh lettuce.<lb/>
tomatoes, onwns and d the'r.<lb/>
Chace iked meats and cheeses. x" .<lb/>
balls ana moot? aniresnh baHeiHooH<lb/>
roUs And am un&amp;utf) m saiac : . J<lb/>
madekjiurJer notmoder. xnoiy-<lb/>
E.St?St.<lb/>
7?-77t<lb/>
JWIWWtoi<lb/>
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mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 14, 1984<lb/>
at AU;<lb/>
J, GM<lb/>
 tssive defense<lb/>
it inside, as they<lb/>
bounding adan-<lb/>
urewell pulling<lb/>
ne-high 13.<lb/>
n held off an ECU<lb/>
minutes of play<lb/>
V South vic-<lb/>
rs' final road<lb/>
N 34 left in<lb/>
ates reeled<lb/>
vwi ints to nar-<lb/>
51 with 1:22<lb/>
PaL.<lb/>
m the line<lb/>
. with a four<lb/>
riots vsere<lb/>
in the<lb/>
1 the<lb/>
ts during the rally<lb/>
. i eading<lb/>
and<lb/>
v said.<lb/>
and<lb/>
?J with<lb/>
-aid<lb/>
ites"<lb/>
- 30 for<lb/>
eorge Mason<lb/>
 ? in<lb/>
5 overall and<lb/>
e Lady<lb/>
Other<lb/>
i .<lb/>
heynev<lb/>
: ! 4<lb/>
. .? 2 0-0<lb/>
V .2 15.<lb/>
8<lb/>
" 6-10 20, Douglas 0<lb/>
iion O-O f, PurY 5 3<lb/>
R  3 T 2 .<lb/>
; I 4 <lb/>
ib<lb/>
fighting)<lb/>
es is one of<lb/>
Karate so<lb/>
Johnson. "I've<lb/>
 aas (a series of<lb/>
and punches per-<lb/>
successi in dif-<lb/>
but there's always<lb/>
:an learn. I want to<lb/>
a as much as I<lb/>
IkXRATt Page 9<lb/>
m<lb/>
f<lb/>
40<lb/>
pattmson - icu<lb/>
fans hit .310 last year<lb/>
Karate Club<lb/>
Continued From Page 8 turning professional, but Johnson got his start in<lb/>
for now I only want to Newport News, Va<lb/>
Another aspect of the keep on teaching where he received his<lb/>
sport Johnson has ex- Many people associate black belt at the age of<lb/>
perimented with is full- karate with mind control, IS. In that year his family<lb/>
contact competition but Johnson says there's<lb/>
karate. He has a profes- nothing magical about his<lb/>
sional record of 2-1, with sport. "In any kind of<lb/>
one victory coming by athletics you build con-<lb/>
knockout. All three fights fidcnce over time. After<lb/>
have been local bouts several years you begin to<lb/>
sponsored by McDonald, know yourself and realize<lb/>
with another planned for your capabilities are<lb/>
iMiaiiMiiuu<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
Flying High<lb/>
ECU Karate Club President Chuck Johnson demonstrates a flying side kick<lb/>
Bdusch&amp;Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
COMPI?T?<lb/>
indndes initial eye examination, lenses, care ldt,<lb/>
instmctfons and follow-np visits for the moath<lb/>
ECU stndmts I.D. required.<lb/>
anoMenuc<lb/>
?YCCARC06N1CK<lb/>
0 GrwMviMt 9 A<lb/>
7MGWEKMVILLI IIVO<lb/>
TirrOMAMMBX<lb/>
much more then what<lb/>
you originally thought<lb/>
Johnson added that if<lb/>
you start with your body<lb/>
and let the mind follow<lb/>
it's much easier to direct<lb/>
your will at any task that<lb/>
confronts you.<lb/>
E<lb/>
moved to Manteo, and<lb/>
Johnson had to begin<lb/>
working out on his own.<lb/>
"I had a punching bag<lb/>
and weights in my garage,<lb/>
but for the first six mon-<lb/>
ths we were down there it<lb/>
was hard to get any work<lb/>
done Johnson said he<lb/>
worked out with a kung<lb/>
fu stylist several times,<lb/>
and gradulally got back<lb/>
into the swing of things.<lb/>
"It became an addiction<lb/>
after a while, and now I<lb/>
can't stop<lb/>
mmn<lb/>
M<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
l<lb/>
a<lb/>
w<lb/>
m<lb/>
i<lb/>
m<lb/>
LADES NIGHT AT<lb/>
YC f0 THE KING AND QUEEN NORTH<lb/>
Tae a BIG BITE ot -tie BIG APPLE'<lb/>
SPRING BREAK IN NEW YORK<lb/>
March 2 - March 9. 1984<lb/>
-<lb/>
3  - j?rv ,<lb/>
I -<lb/>
S ?<lb/>
?-? ? ?<lb/>
?r<lb/>
SKiH UP "? ? FtB&amp;UAftT l? t ' THf<lb/>
CtHTHAL TtCRf I OFFiCf<lb/>
HIIllllliiuiniiniM?t??iM?tTrrr<lb/>
Valentines Special<lb/>
 For 2 v<lb/>
2 Ribeyes, 2 Salads<lb/>
tea or coffee and 2<lb/>
glasses of Wine<lb/>
$16.95 plus tax<lb/>
315 Stsntonsburg Rd.<lb/>
Across From Docters Park<lb/>
758-4600<lb/>
Not valid with other coupons<lb/>
Void 2-17-34<lb/>
Present Ad When Ordering<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
MMMMMMMMMM<lb/>
TIE<lb/>
CD and<lb/>
Wed. Fab. 15<lb/>
The Fantastic<lb/>
Shakers<lb/>
8-12<lb/>
All Dining cosrumers admitted free.<lb/>
Coming Feb. 22-Choirmon of the Board<lb/>
Oueen<lb/>
 NORTH<lb/>
College l.D. - FREE Admission<lb/>
TU 7:30<lb/>
Happy Hour 6-8<lb/>
Watcfc For Spedal Satarday Night Bas4s'<lb/>
SRA<lb/>
presents a<lb/>
Mardi Gras Party<lb/>
February 25, 1984<lb/>
7:00-12:00<lb/>
HOLIDOME, HOLIDAY INN<lb/>
Drinks and Hors d'oeuvres Will Be Served<lb/>
Tickets Must Be Purchased In Advance<lb/>
Through Your Residence Hall<lb/>
Must Present Valid ECU ID and SRA Card<lb/>
Tickets Will Not Be Sold At The Door<lb/>
SINGLE $3.00<lb/>
DOUBLE $5 00<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
&amp;u<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
"THE ULTIMATE FANTASY"<lb/>
HAS ARRIVED<lb/>
To give you the Best<lb/>
"LADIES NIGHT OUT'<lb/>
you have ever experienced<lb/>
The Ultimate Fantasy show presents:<lb/>
6 of the Top Male Exotic Dancers<lb/>
from across the U.S.A.<lb/>
in a High Powered Show<lb/>
that's guaranteed to please!<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
THE HOLLYWOOD SWINGER<lb/>
T.N.T. e ACE<lb/>
GQ e ITALIAN STALLION<lb/>
AND Special Guest From the<lb/>
Peter Adonis Show<lb/>
"LORD JIM"<lb/>
SO LADIES LET YOUR<lb/>
"ULTIMATE FANTASY"<lb/>
COME TRUE!<lb/>
Ladies The Ultimate Fantasy<lb/>
will be coming to the<lb/>
Tuesday, February 14,1984 Ladies Lockout til 10:00 p.m<lb/>
Admission $3.00 Doors Open at 7:00<lb/>
Show Starts at 7:30<lb/>
Don't Miss Our Valentine's Day Special<lb/>
JUST FOR YOU!<lb/>
, y ?-?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057623_0010"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
HS<lb/>
Valentine<lb/>
Love Lines<lb/>
ALECIA: PImm share your body<lb/>
with me on Valentino' Oeyi All<lb/>
my iov? and body C HP<lb/>
FREODCTTI, lfs maka up for<lb/>
o?t tlmt and lot! enf ay tx mm<lb/>
on Valeriuses Night HHBl<lb/>
TO ALL MY FRIENDS and ac<lb/>
quatntancat whom hopefully<lb/>
knew who you art. Thanks for all<lb/>
your unseltish lovt, laughtar.<lb/>
tears, and support ? hava<lb/>
shared together Happy Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day l lova you. Rachal<lb/>
Pope<lb/>
HAPPY VALENTINE S DAY to<lb/>
all m? iistars of Chi Omega! Wi<lb/>
Lova Yowl<lb/>
TO ALL MEDIA Employees:<lb/>
Have a Happy Valentine's Dayi<lb/>
From: Mark Niewald, Chairper-<lb/>
on, Media Board. <lb/>
BEHJIE A iGGY Happy Valen<lb/>
tine's Day to one in the seme-you<lb/>
trt the king of weirdness but I<lb/>
love you anyway ? Karen.<lb/>
PAUL Ma Ball is starting to<lb/>
worry about your telephone<lb/>
abuse ? relax! Have a wonderful<lb/>
valentine's Dayi Jennifer.<lb/>
JEN JEN - It was a great<lb/>
weekend, except you v got to<lb/>
break that habit of always steal<lb/>
mg the blanket I'll come up<lb/>
from Yale to see you a' Harvard<lb/>
Business School. fOA gerz. ma tad<lb/>
da s gonna kill me , Mario<lb/>
?<lb/>
WENCHES ? V D Is a lot more<lb/>
fun than you think, just check<lb/>
your desks tomorrow.<lb/>
TO DEMISE M Hope your Valen<lb/>
tin Day is a great on lovc B<lb/>
H <lb/>
TO CAPERS We're always in<lb/>
??? e no matter how close or how<lb/>
far so take this valentine, don't<lb/>
worry my darling my love is trut<lb/>
Charlotte's PK <lb/>
HAPPY VALENTINE S Day<lb/>
Gail! I love yal S more months!<lb/>
Your fiance. Rusty (alias YT<lb/>
SUB)<lb/>
DEAR HOBBYHORSE. Just a<lb/>
valentine to remind you that<lb/>
you're the best thing that ever<lb/>
happened to this cowgirl)<lb/>
Remember the State Fair, tickl-<lb/>
ing matches, snowball fights, los-<lb/>
ing things in the ocean, and<lb/>
sk mny-dipping in the<lb/>
moonlight?? And especially Sir<lb/>
watlsi All this and much more is<lb/>
why there's "No one like you<lb/>
Baby, I lova you with all my<lb/>
heart, more and more each day.<lb/>
Happy valentine s1 Lova, Nita<lb/>
Bug. <lb/>
HEY O tip Happy v Day love<lb/>
V?J<lb/>
TOMMY E. How about some<lb/>
serious sea.<lb/>
WILL, Do you need a showery<lb/>
WE love you ROBERT! DingBat<lb/>
Twin.<lb/>
BRIAN, Wanna go to my room?<lb/>
Darling.<lb/>
BILLY, I Love You. Sandra.<lb/>
ROB, These past two years have<lb/>
been the best out of my 21. Look-<lb/>
ing forward to spending all the<lb/>
rest with you 1 Forever Plus,<lb/>
Lela.<lb/>
angel Happy Vals. Oay.<lb/>
Ready for another romp through<lb/>
the shaboo trees in Valerina? I<lb/>
luv ya. Mike.<lb/>
SEXY M Claire, Happy V Day<lb/>
to I of the prettiest D.Js I know<lb/>
I do believe its still my turn. Your<lb/>
number 1 fan.<lb/>
AE. Thanks for all the very<lb/>
special times over the years<lb/>
Happy valentines Oay. Love.<lb/>
CW<lb/>
karen ? Valentine's Day Is<lb/>
made for sweethearts Prom one<lb/>
sweetheart to another have a<lb/>
happy Valentine's Day. Love<lb/>
ROXANNE,<lb/>
ny Kleenex.<lb/>
I bum for you. Ken-<lb/>
TO MY CANDY GIRL. Happy<lb/>
valentines Pay, Mr. Bill<lb/>
Dmc After 10 months, your still<lb/>
the sunshmt of my life I love you<lb/>
a lot Ginger<lb/>
TULIP. Happy 2nd valentine's<lb/>
Day with m That is enough to<lb/>
make mm the greatest Your<lb/>
love is th? most special thing in<lb/>
my life You're all I want!<lb/>
Foreveri Damn jti<lb/>
TO MARY O on th.rd floor<lb/>
Jones Wc really do lov you!<lb/>
Why don't you ever wave to us?<lb/>
Love, second floor front Aycock.<lb/>
WENDY, Soon it will be II mon<lb/>
ths for you and m and you know<lb/>
what. I lov you even more Hap-<lb/>
py Valentine's Day Robbie.<lb/>
PAUL. Happy Valentine s Day!<lb/>
I'll always love you Pals<lb/>
Foreveri <lb/>
BOBBY RAINES. Bobby Raines,<lb/>
your so fine ? 1 sur will be<lb/>
happy if you'll be mineni<lb/>
DONNA K, Be mine today What<lb/>
else can 1 say, who loves you?<lb/>
The Hay.<lb/>
RTK. I'm glad you're mine.<lb/>
Always and forever, my Valen<lb/>
fine I love you all the way from<lb/>
MO. ALB<lb/>
THE SUN SHINES, the moon<lb/>
beams. You're the rose who<lb/>
makes my dreams. The sun<lb/>
beams, the moon shines. Will you<lb/>
forever and always be miner I<lb/>
love you. Honey HUNS<lb/>
BOB ? You're my favorite red-<lb/>
hot, red-eyed ad salesman. Hap-<lb/>
py Valentine's Day. Shorty.<lb/>
RANDY Happy Valentine's Dayi<lb/>
The past ? months have been<lb/>
great. I Love Youl You're my E.<lb/>
T. Love Hiboy.<lb/>
DARRYL, will you come play in<lb/>
the dark with me. Kathy.<lb/>
MARIO ANDRETTI ? Yes you,<lb/>
DKB The tour of Cambridge was<lb/>
great, its wonderful to have a<lb/>
level-headed, "Big Brother<lb/>
Happy Valentine's Oay anyway.<lb/>
Cows DON'T snore 1 J.<lb/>
TEN Happy 1st Valentine's Day.<lb/>
How I love these days, you're my<lb/>
Home 1 lov you forever and<lb/>
always. Brick.<lb/>
PAIGIE Happy valentine's Day)<lb/>
What ar you doing tomorrow<lb/>
night? You ntvr know, it could<lb/>
be fun, Like they say. What<lb/>
the in Love. Pepper. Casey<lb/>
and HAM.<lb/>
FELIZ DIA De San Valetin Lycia<lb/>
Monett Ross, con todo mi<lb/>
carlnoi XOXOXOXOX JCV.<lb/>
MARIE: I only wish l could have<lb/>
loved you my first 21 years but<lb/>
I'll settle for the rest of my life<lb/>
To the prettiest lady there ever<lb/>
was or will be. I Love You. Mark.<lb/>
CRAIO, To our first and definite-<lb/>
ly not our last. 1 love you, Lynn.<lb/>
HAPPY VALENTINE'S Oay to<lb/>
Ginny w. and all her friends on<lb/>
the fourth floor. May your day be<lb/>
full of red tin and okeedok With<lb/>
Love. Bill.<lb/>
I LOVE<lb/>
T.K<lb/>
YOU Chris D tor?vr<lb/>
CAPPSAROONO - Have a hap<lb/>
py Valentine's Oay. and maybe<lb/>
I'll see you sometime DO.<lb/>
GUMBY if you're lucky you can<lb/>
be mine. I promise pleasure for<lb/>
my sweet valentine.<lb/>
RF, I love you and will as long as<lb/>
you want.<lb/>
OLIVE EYES men cower eat tou<lb/>
lours avec roi Happy Valentine's<lb/>
Day. I lov you more than ever.<lb/>
Gumby. <lb/>
LISA Happy Valentine's Day<lb/>
Baby 1 Love Jim ?<lb/>
TO MY TOOTIE, Roses are Red,<lb/>
Violets are Blwo, The Bony<lb/>
Chicken will always love yowl<lb/>
Happy Valentine's Oay II<lb/>
KATHOI May this Happy Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day message be as special<lb/>
as U R 2 me. Love yow, Mary.<lb/>
2 MY CRAZY Scrambled g<lb/>
gbrain roommates. You're<lb/>
nothing but the best. Happy V.D.<lb/>
Oay. Love Ya's. Mary.<lb/>
TO CELESTE. Beth, Chris,<lb/>
Sigma Al sisters and Phi Mu<lb/>
Alpha brothers, the cast and crew<lb/>
of Orpheus and Buc staff Happy<lb/>
Valentine's Day ? Bryan H<lb/>
MR. c . You've got the "ticket" i<lb/>
go "f.OOO miles" more with my<lb/>
heart and that's a "grade A"<lb/>
"standing invitation" l-Arrow<lb/>
Cub Scouts Honor now who's the 1<lb/>
who's "delirious"?? Happy<lb/>
Valentine's Oay Love Mary.<lb/>
EIOOOB, H.F. Lova, Liiard<lb/>
NAN Happy Valentine's Dayi<lb/>
Life is filled with seasons full<lb/>
ofmemories of the past, hopes<lb/>
of the present, dreams of the<lb/>
futureLet my love be the spice<lb/>
to help guide you through yowr<lb/>
liteI love yowl ML. E. S.<lb/>
FROM CUPID to Chief and<lb/>
Diane Go for it before it's too<lb/>
late 11<lb/>
HAPPY VALENTINE'S Day to<lb/>
the best bunch of sweethearts on<lb/>
campus ? our Alpha Sigsii Lots<lb/>
of Love from ail your little<lb/>
sisters 11<lb/>
TO A CHAMELEON from a cab-<lb/>
begem<lb/>
TO PAM B A DALE S: I sent<lb/>
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them on Feb. Mthii Even though<lb/>
I never say it enough, you both<lb/>
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Valentin s Day ? Tory R ?<lb/>
L E S The sun shines, the moon<lb/>
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RUTH Happy Valentine's Day<lb/>
Your the best big sis anyone<lb/>
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SUZY Happy Valentine's Day<lb/>
Honey. To the girl I lev with ell<lb/>
my heart Today A everyday yds?<lb/>
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Love Russ.<lb/>
L.O. Had a fantastic time Jatvr-<lb/>
day night Hope to see you toon.<lb/>
Happy Valentine's Oay. Lov<lb/>
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Love Tommy O.<lb/>
WENDY, I lave yow. Bug.<lb/>
ANDY. You r my Valentin! i<lb/>
Love, Lisa. j<lb/>
MY HALL FRIENDS, Thanks tor<lb/>
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Mellon head.j<lb/>
TO THE OUYS in the lounge,<lb/>
Happy Valentines Oay. ToM ya<lb/>
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KERMIE: One year since yow<lb/>
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love yow always - Happy valen<lb/>
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LUANNE. This Valentine's<lb/>
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Lisa W Oina, Amy, Oenise.<lb/>
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JOHN The best Big brother Hap-<lb/>
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Q<lb/>
AOVf HTiSEO<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
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If you're a musician who's serious<lb/>
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