<?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">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057628_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Vol.58 NoWU<lb/>
SOULS Moving<lb/>
In New Direction<lb/>
Becoming Active<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Newi tdliof<lb/>
The Society of United Liberal Students will be<lb/>
heading in a new direction this vear, according to<lb/>
SOULS President Jimmie Hackett.<lb/>
"In the past SOULS ha been social but not<lb/>
active Hackett said, "but now we plan to enter fur-<lb/>
ther into the scope of reality and deal with real pro-<lb/>
blems which are dealt with by minoritv students and<lb/>
by most people in today's society<lb/>
"The major problem with the organization is that<lb/>
it excluded the major political problems of the cam-<lb/>
pus said Vice President Monteith Womble, "In-<lb/>
stead of being active, they were reactive<lb/>
In order to increase involvement in the organiza-<lb/>
tion, SOULS has planned many activities for next<lb/>
year. A study habits workshop will be held Sept. 11<lb/>
and a minority banquet will be held Sept. 18. The<lb/>
group would also like to<lb/>
sponsor films on Monday<lb/>
nights. In November, they<lb/>
will sponsor the Shaw<lb/>
Players, a theatrical group.<lb/>
In February, a special ac-<lb/>
tivity is planned for every<lb/>
week.<lb/>
SOULS elections will be<lb/>
held Thursday. Jimmie<lb/>
Hackett is running again<lb/>
for president, Monteith<lb/>
Womble for vice president,<lb/>
Martha Kornegay for<lb/>
secretary and Ella<lb/>
Hedgepeth for treasurer.<lb/>
Harlot A11 are runnin8 for re-<lb/>
????-? ?? -lection unopposed.<lb/>
Membership in SOULS is open to all students. It is<lb/>
oriented toward minorities and dedicated to the im-<lb/>
provemen of race relations.<lb/>
"All these goals and ideals can't ever be reached<lb/>
without the input of the student body. Students' sup-<lb/>
port and service is very much desired and ap-<lb/>
preciated Hackett said.<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tuesday, February 28,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
?V7<lb/>
mqm.<lb/>
Minority Council,<lb/>
Reception Approved<lb/>
, 't<lb/>
Rain, Rain, Go A way<lb/>
This is a typical February day in Greenville. Only three months until June!<lb/>
MA?K lARtEft ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Pirate Walk 'Surviving'<lb/>
Despite Usage Decline<lb/>
By MOLLY BLSH<lb/>
surr w hicr<lb/>
In 1983, Pirate Walk was<lb/>
established to provide walking<lb/>
companions for the women of<lb/>
ECU. Today, with approximately<lb/>
sixty students volunteering their<lb/>
time, Pirate Walk is still surviving<lb/>
despite the decreasing number of<lb/>
callers requesting the service.<lb/>
"The reason we are falling<lb/>
behind is lack of advertisement<lb/>
Ronnie Langley, director of<lb/>
Pirate Walk said. "If girls were<lb/>
only aware of how many attacks<lb/>
there are around campus, I feel<lb/>
they would use the Pirate Walk<lb/>
There have been two reported<lb/>
rapes this semester. One occured<lb/>
last semester, but was reported<lb/>
this semester. "The other<lb/>
reported incident did not actually<lb/>
occur said Francis Eddings,<lb/>
Assistant Director of Public Safe-<lb/>
ty. "Just because things are going<lb/>
well is no reason to think these<lb/>
rapesassaults will not occur he<lb/>
said. "It is human nature to think<lb/>
'it's not going to happen to me<lb/>
Lack of fear is sometimes worse<lb/>
than too much fear<lb/>
According to Langley, the pro-<lb/>
blem areas are around campus<lb/>
and in the downtown region. Ed-<lb/>
dings agreed, saying anywhere so-<lb/>
meone can be concealed is a<lb/>
potentially hazardous area. Some<lb/>
places cited are between the main<lb/>
campus and the College Hill, the<lb/>
Joyner library and Slav Hall,<lb/>
Umstead Hall and the downtown<lb/>
area near Fletcher Hall.<lb/>
Both Langley and Eddings<lb/>
agreed safety is in groups. "It is<lb/>
always good to have someone<lb/>
with you after dark said Ed-<lb/>
dings.<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Maaaglaa. EtfHor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monday<lb/>
passed resolutions approving a<lb/>
charter for the minority Greek<lb/>
council, an endorsement for a fall<lb/>
semester graduation reception and<lb/>
a rule prohibiting campaigning by<lb/>
SGA candidates after 10 p.m. in<lb/>
residence halls.<lb/>
The charter for the minority<lb/>
Greek and social council was ap-<lb/>
proved by the legislature. The<lb/>
organization is to be a governing<lb/>
body that fills in when the<lb/>
Panhellenic Council and the Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Council cannot incor-<lb/>
porate minority organizations, ac-<lb/>
cording to Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life Elmer Meyer. The<lb/>
Panhellenic Council will accept<lb/>
any chartered sorority, but the<lb/>
IFC will admit groups only if they<lb/>
have at least 20 members. Neither<lb/>
organization has discriminatory<lb/>
bylaws,however, Meyer said.<lb/>
The Student Welfare Commit-<lb/>
tee brought forth a resolution en-<lb/>
dorsing a winter reception for<lb/>
graduating seniors and guests.<lb/>
The event would honor students<lb/>
graduating in December but<lb/>
would not be a full graduation<lb/>
ceremony, said Glenn Maughan,<lb/>
the committee member who<lb/>
presented the bill.<lb/>
Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
Chairman David Brown presided<lb/>
over the meeting, since Speaker of<lb/>
the Legislature Kirk Shelley was<lb/>
absent.<lb/>
The Student Welfare Commit-<lb/>
tee "looked at this resolution and<lb/>
we whole-heartedly endorse it<lb/>
Maughan said. He said the event<lb/>
would cost only about $1,500,<lb/>
while a full commencement<lb/>
ceremony would cost much more.<lb/>
Brown<lb/>
"Its something that's needed<lb/>
and it's something that's wanted<lb/>
among the seniors said Senior<lb/>
Class President Lisa Roberts.<lb/>
The SGA Legislature supported<lb/>
a recent Student Residence<lb/>
Association rule making it ill<lb/>
for SGA candidates to camp<lb/>
in door-to-door in residence ha<lb/>
after 10 p.m een though regular<lb/>
visitation hours extend after tha<lb/>
time.<lb/>
The legislature spent nearly 1<lb/>
its Monday meeting debating<lb/>
changes in rules for the SGA ex-<lb/>
ecutive elections next month. The<lb/>
legislators debated for more than<lb/>
half an hour before passing a rule<lb/>
limiting the use of "sound<lb/>
mechanisms" by candidates.<lb/>
Other rules included a require-<lb/>
ment that candidates report all ex-<lb/>
penses and campaign workers for<lb/>
their campaigns.<lb/>
SRA President Mark Nieu<lb/>
reported preliminary results from<lb/>
an SRA survey on the "quie<lb/>
dormitory. Niewald said more<lb/>
than 200 students of 600 who<lb/>
returned surveys were interested<lb/>
in living in a residence hall witr<lb/>
stricter noise restrictions.<lb/>
Archaeology Excavation Continues;<lb/>
N.C. Algonkian Artifacts Studied<lb/>
Langley<lb/>
"A self defense or karate<lb/>
course offered on campus through<lb/>
intramurals will help said<lb/>
Langley. "The key is to be aware<lb/>
of what is going on around you<lb/>
and to use the Pirate Walk. Its<lb/>
purpose is to provide protection<lb/>
All escorts and operators of the<lb/>
Pirate Walk are ECU students.<lb/>
Pirate Walk operates Sunday<lb/>
through Thursday nights 6 p.m.<lb/>
to midnight. The telephone<lb/>
number is 757-6616.<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
C?-N?w? fcditor<lb/>
A group of ECU archaeologists<lb/>
and students are continuing a<lb/>
four-year excavation project on<lb/>
the coastal plain of N.C. The pro-<lb/>
ject, which began last year, was<lb/>
designed to give a better<lb/>
understanding of the native<lb/>
Americans who were here before<lb/>
the English settlers and also the<lb/>
contributions they made.<lb/>
"The Carolina Algonkians Ar-<lb/>
chaeology of the Native<lb/>
American" is the title of their cur-<lb/>
rent project. "The first year of<lb/>
the project has emphasized studies<lb/>
of native American towns where<lb/>
the English Algonkians actually<lb/>
had contact said David S.<lb/>
Phelps, anthropology professor<lb/>
and project director. Phelps said<lb/>
the team's work at Roanoke, the<lb/>
capital town of the Ci! moke<lb/>
society of ths '? olina<lb/>
Algonkians, is one "f thoe loca-<lb/>
Phelps<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The Choanokes were the largest<lb/>
and most politically powerful of<lb/>
all the Carolina Algonkian socie-<lb/>
ty. In 1586 the village was believ-<lb/>
ed to have had about 2100<lb/>
residents. "It has a lot of infor-<lb/>
mation still intact Phelps said.<lb/>
"What we're looking for literally<lb/>
is the city's center The site<lb/>
Arnold To Speak At Graduation<lb/>
under study stretches tor a mile<lb/>
along the Chowan River near<lb/>
Harrelsville.<lb/>
Two aims the team has are to<lb/>
find the Roanoke village which<lb/>
was located near Fort Raleigh and<lb/>
to find evidence outside of Fort<lb/>
Raleigh on the actual English col-<lb/>
ony settlement that is yet to be<lb/>
found, Phelps said.<lb/>
The project is sponsored by tl<lb/>
-America's 400 Anniversary Con.<lb/>
mittee project under the Depart<lb/>
ment of Federal Resources Fun<lb/>
ding Agency. This vear's<lb/>
$140,000 budget is funded<lb/>
through the Z. Smith Revnolds<lb/>
Foundation. Phelps said he ex-<lb/>
pects the budget to remain the<lb/>
same for the next three years.<lb/>
The excavation team consists of<lb/>
three staff members, Paul Green,<lb/>
assistant to project director, Ken-<lb/>
neth Hansell. archaeologist.<lb/>
and Loretta Lautzenheiser,<lb/>
assistant archaeologist<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Judge Gerald Arnold of the<lb/>
N.C. Court of appeals, a<lb/>
distinguised alumnus, will be the<lb/>
speaker at the 75th commence-<lb/>
ment at ECU on May 5.<lb/>
"We are very happy that Judge<lb/>
Arnold has accepted our invita-<lb/>
tion to be the commencement<lb/>
speaker Dr. John M. Howell,<lb/>
ECU chancellor said. "He has<lb/>
been a very strong and en-<lb/>
thusiastic supporter of this univer-<lb/>
sity and is actively interested i all<lb/>
of our programs Howell said.<lb/>
Arnold, a resident of Lill-<lb/>
ington, is a i963 graduate of ECU<lb/>
and a graduate of the University<lb/>
of North Carolina school of law.<lb/>
He has practiced law in Lillington<lb/>
and Raleigh and served as county<lb/>
attorney for Harnett County. He<lb/>
was elected and served two terms<lb/>
in the N.C. House of Represen-<lb/>
tatives and in 1974 was elected to<lb/>
the N.C. Court of Appeals.<lb/>
In 1981, he was honored as a<lb/>
recipient of ECU's annual<lb/>
Outstanding Alumni award.<lb/>
The 1984 commencement<lb/>
ceremonies will be held in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Arnold<lb/>
New Phone Bills Cause Confusion<lb/>
(UPI) - The public is not mour-<lb/>
ning Ma Bell's court-ordered<lb/>
demise ? just trying to Figure out<lb/>
the new, thicker phone bill.<lb/>
Confusion over thicker<lb/>
telephone bills has been the only<lb/>
widespread complaint since the<lb/>
Jan. l divestiture of American<lb/>
Telephone &amp; Telegraph, said<lb/>
telephone company spokesmen<lb/>
for several Southern firms.<lb/>
'I suppose the most significant<lb/>
ea of interest is in the billing, of<lb/>
course said Charlotte Southern<lb/>
Bell spokesman Ladd Baucom.<lb/>
"Actually, we've been very pleas-<lb/>
ed with the response in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Fatter phone bills are<lb/>
misunderstood as higher phone<lb/>
bills, he said.<lb/>
"It's now broken down into<lb/>
various segments he said. "But<lb/>
the customer is still paying one<lb/>
bill. That's been a big help<lb/>
Nashville South Central Bell<lb/>
spokesman John Ed Miller said<lb/>
the bills have confused Tennessee<lb/>
phone users, too.<lb/>
"The thing that frightens peo-<lb/>
ple is that the bill is so thick. In<lb/>
the past it meant a lot of long<lb/>
distance calls.<lb/>
"South Central Bell no longei<lb/>
provides long distance service ex-<lb/>
cept those calls that originate and<lb/>
terminate in the same<lb/>
geographical area he said.<lb/>
Other long distance calls are<lb/>
provided and billed by AT&amp;T or<lb/>
See NEW, page 6<lb/>
Come Again Some Other Day<lb/>
Theae girls are enjoying weather atypical of Greenville In the springtime<lb/>
MA?K M?H - ecu NMi L.fc<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
(<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 28, 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Strv4n$ the campus community<lb/>
?tag MB<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian Is the of<lb/>
flclal newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University, owned, operated and<lb/>
published for and by the students<lb/>
of East Carolina University<lb/>
Unless otherwise noted, unsign<lb/>
ed editorials on the opinion page<lb/>
are the newspaper's opinion,<lb/>
generally written by the manag<lb/>
ing editor<lb/>
Subscription Rate IX yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices are<lb/>
located In the Publications<lb/>
building on the campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville. NX.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian,<lb/>
2nd Floor, Publications building,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, NC. 27834.<lb/>
Telephone: 757 6366, 6367, 6309<lb/>
SOFTBALL OFFICIALS<lb/>
Now is your chance to become an<lb/>
umpire. The Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
will hold the training clinic for in<lb/>
tramural Softball officials beginning<lb/>
Tuesday, March 13, 1984 at 600 p.m.<lb/>
in room 102 of Memorial Gymnasium.<lb/>
Rules, interpretations and mechanics<lb/>
will be discussed. Officials will be<lb/>
hired based on practical and written<lb/>
tests<lb/>
WEIGHT TRAINING<lb/>
The Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering a<lb/>
weight training class. Registration<lb/>
will be held February 27 through<lb/>
March 2 Cost for students, tour<lb/>
dollars for one class per week, eight<lb/>
dollars for two classes per week<lb/>
FacultyStaff, five dollars tor one<lb/>
class per week, ten dollars for two<lb/>
classes per week.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
All those who were Initiated in Psi<lb/>
Chi In Fall S3, Certificates &amp; initla<lb/>
tlon Cards can be picked up in the Psi<lb/>
Chi Library now! Deadline for<lb/>
membership In Psi Chi for Spring 84<lb/>
Is Mar. 211 Initiation for these new<lb/>
members will be Mar. 10 at 7:00 In<lb/>
Rm. 244 Mendenhall All members<lb/>
are urged to attend! Elections tor Psi<lb/>
Chi officers for 84-85 school year will<lb/>
be held after the initiation Ceremony<lb/>
Also, info &amp; applications for the Wray<lb/>
i. Prewett Scholarships are in Psi Chi<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
IRSAQUARBICS<lb/>
The Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreation Services is offering an<lb/>
aquaroblcs class Registration will be<lb/>
held February 27 through March 2.<lb/>
Cost for students, four dollars for one<lb/>
class per week, eight dollars for two<lb/>
classes per week FacultyStaff, five<lb/>
dollars for classes meeting once per<lb/>
week, ten dollars tor classes meeting<lb/>
twice per week<lb/>
FASHION MODELS<lb/>
The Advanced Photography class<lb/>
at the School of Art is Screening<lb/>
Models on Monday, Feb 27 and Tues<lb/>
day Feb 28 at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store from 11 00 to 7:00.<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and the<lb/>
Art Exhibition Committee would like<lb/>
to Invite everyone to visit American<lb/>
Drawings IV, showing till March 2 In<lb/>
the Student Center Don't miss this<lb/>
unique event!<lb/>
HONORS PROGRAM<lb/>
Any undergraduate with a 3.5 GPA<lb/>
is eligible to take courses in the<lb/>
Honors Program fall 1984 while space<lb/>
permits. Honors seminars In women<lb/>
writers. The Latin American connec<lb/>
tlon, the human body, psychology,<lb/>
and technology andor survival, and<lb/>
Honors sections of many introductory<lb/>
level courses are listed with asterisks<lb/>
in the preregistratlon schedule. Con<lb/>
tact Dr David Sanders, 212 Ragsdale<lb/>
(757-6373) for permission join the<lb/>
reception Mon , Feb. 27, 4-6 p.m<lb/>
Ragsdale 201 Lounge<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
Remember the meeting toc'iy, Feb.<lb/>
28 in room 212 of Mendenhall. Sister<lb/>
Happy will be speaking to us about<lb/>
the CROP walk Attendance Is man-<lb/>
datory! ! See ye' there sisters.<lb/>
NIH<lb/>
A representative from National In<lb/>
stihjte of Health, Bethesda, MD will<lb/>
be on campus March 19 and 20 to In<lb/>
terview students who would like to<lb/>
work in a clinicaf setting as Normal<lb/>
volunteers Students will be paid dal<lb/>
ly stipends All interested students<lb/>
must attend a general meeting at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. on Monday, March 19 In Raw!<lb/>
302 before having Interviews on the<lb/>
20th Students majoring In Allied<lb/>
Health. Nursing, and related fields<lb/>
are encouraged to apply Contact the<lb/>
Co op Office. 313 Rawl, for details and<lb/>
applications<lb/>
PI KAPP<lb/>
The Pi Kapps will be having a Din-<lb/>
ner Out in celebration of Brotherhood<lb/>
this Wednesday night at 6:00 p.m. at<lb/>
the Golden Coral This ceremony will<lb/>
be dedicated to David Martin and the<lb/>
Village Green incident. All brothers,<lb/>
pledges, little sisters, and friends are<lb/>
encouraged to attend this special oc<lb/>
casion<lb/>
DEFENSE CLASS<lb/>
The Department of intramural-<lb/>
Recreatloan Services is offering a<lb/>
personal defense class. Registration<lb/>
will be held February 27 through<lb/>
March 2 Cost for students; four<lb/>
dollars, cost for FacultyStaff; five<lb/>
dollars<lb/>
HONORS PHIL 1100<lb/>
The Honors section (no. 299) of<lb/>
PHIL 1100 was listed at an Incorrect<lb/>
time in the Honors correspondence. It<lb/>
is correctly listed in the newpaper<lb/>
schedule as being taught at 10:00<lb/>
MWF Students should prereglster<lb/>
tor section no 799 at 10 00 MWF<lb/>
MINGESPOOL<lb/>
Minges Pool will not be opened for<lb/>
Rec swim on Wed night Feb. 29 and<lb/>
Fri night. March 2 Minges pool will<lb/>
reopen following normal schedule<lb/>
March 12<lb/>
LIBRARY HOURS<lb/>
joyner Library hours for Spring<lb/>
Break; please note that the hours<lb/>
have been extended (beyond those<lb/>
appearing on printed schedules,<lb/>
calendars, etc.) for the following<lb/>
dates:<lb/>
Friday, March 2, 8 a.m. 9<lb/>
p.mSaturday and Sunday, March 3<lb/>
&amp;, 4 closed; Monday, March 5 ? Fri-<lb/>
day, March 9 8 a.m. 5 p.m Satur<lb/>
day, March 10, 9 a.m. - 6 p.m Sun-<lb/>
day, March 11, 1 p.m. 12 Midnight.<lb/>
AEROBIC EXERCISE<lb/>
The Department of intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering Spr-<lb/>
ing semester aerobic fitness classes.<lb/>
Registration for the second and last<lb/>
session will be held February 27<lb/>
through March 2. Cost for students:<lb/>
four dollars for one class per week,<lb/>
eight dollars for two classes per<lb/>
week. FacultyStaff, five dollars for<lb/>
classes meeting once per week, ten<lb/>
dollars tor classes twice per week.<lb/>
IRS TAX FORMS<lb/>
Joyner Library has received a ship-<lb/>
ment of tax forms from the Internal<lb/>
Revenue Service to be used In prepar<lb/>
Ing 1983 Federal tax returns.<lb/>
The forms are at the Information<lb/>
desk in the Documents Dept. and<lb/>
North Carolina Collection, In the<lb/>
basement of Joyner Library, West<lb/>
wing.<lb/>
LOGO CONTEST<lb/>
The Student Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee Is sponsoring a Logo con<lb/>
test for "Barefoot on the Mall Bring<lb/>
your entry to Mendenhall (room 234)<lb/>
by March 2. The year 1984 Is re<lb/>
quired on all entries, if you have any<lb/>
questions, call Bruce at 752 3065 or<lb/>
John at 757 6611 (ext. 213).<lb/>
WEIGHT CLUB<lb/>
Attention ECU students and faculty<lb/>
- there will be an organizational<lb/>
meetlno of the ECU Intramural<lb/>
Weight Club on Tuesday, February<lb/>
28, In Room 102 Memorial Gym. The<lb/>
faceting will last from 7 until 8 p.m.<lb/>
All Interested individuals should at-<lb/>
tend because elections will be held.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The next general meeting of Gam<lb/>
ma Beta Phi will be held on Thurs<lb/>
day, March 1 at 7:00 p.m. In the<lb/>
Jenkins Art Auditorium. All<lb/>
members and persons Interested In<lb/>
loining Gamma Beta Phi please at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
ALL SING MEETING<lb/>
Hope everyone is getting psyched<lb/>
for ALL SINGH There will be a Presl<lb/>
dent's meeting with all the sororities<lb/>
and fraternities tonight at the Alpha<lb/>
XI Delta house at 9:30 for further In<lb/>
formation.<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Brothers! Pledge meeting Wednes<lb/>
day at 5:00. Business meeting at 5:30<lb/>
in Austin 132 as usual. Thanks go out<lb/>
to Jody and Beth tor the use of their<lb/>
Haunted House for the Mardl Gras<lb/>
Throwdown. Also ? Ken's on ZMB<lb/>
Tuesday night 1200 until 2:00<lb/>
MEMORIAL POOL<lb/>
Memorial Poof will be cloaed for<lb/>
noon hour Rec swim on Feb. 29 and<lb/>
March 1. Memorial Pool will close at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. on March 2 Memorial Pool<lb/>
will reopen following normal<lb/>
schedule on March 12.<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
Bill Black from William and Mary<lb/>
will speak on "God's Plan for the<lb/>
World" at tomorrow night's inter<lb/>
Varsity Christian Fellowship<lb/>
meeting. It will be held In Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium at 6:30. See ya there!<lb/>
PHI BETA LAMBDA<lb/>
The Omlcron Chapter of Phi Beta<lb/>
Lambda will hold its next meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday, February 29, at 4 p.m. In<lb/>
Rawl 341. There will be a guest<lb/>
speaker at the meeting.<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLUB<lb/>
The Sign Language Club is having a<lb/>
silent dinner on Thursday, March l.<lb/>
We'll be meeting at the Tree House<lb/>
about 6:X Come downtown and join<lb/>
us.<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
Cliffs<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Monday thru Thursda<lb/>
located I mile past<lb/>
Hastings Ford on<lb/>
10th St. Ext.<lb/>
Popcorn Shrimp<lb/>
$2.95<lb/>
Ocean Perch $1.99<lb/>
Seafood Cakes $1.99<lb/>
French Fries or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Tossed Salad may be substituted for slaw 35- extra<lb/>
MMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMMM<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
MORE ADVENTUI<lb/>
A BLIND<lb/>
THaAN<lb/>
Can you picture yourself<lb/>
swinging down a cliff? Or<lb/>
shooting the rapids? Or<lb/>
crossing a river using only<lb/>
A rope and your own two<lb/>
ihands?<lb/>
You'll have a chance<lb/>
to do all this and more in<lb/>
Army ROTC.<lb/>
Adventure training like<lb/>
this helps you develop<lb/>
many of the qualities you'll<lb/>
neea as an Army officer.<lb/>
Qualities like self-<lb/>
confidence. Stamina. And<lb/>
the ability to perform<lb/>
under pressure.<lb/>
If you'd like to find out<lb/>
more, make a date to see<lb/>
Captain Helduv Liivak at 757-<lb/>
6967 or come by Room 324<lb/>
ROTC this fall.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC<lb/>
BEALLVOUCANBE.<lb/>
lMIUlHll!llflflMllll@<lb/>
HANDBALL OFFICIALS<lb/>
Would you like to be an Intramural<lb/>
team handball official? If to, attend<lb/>
the training clinic to be held by me<lb/>
Department of intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services Monday,<lb/>
March 12,1984 at 600 pm in Room 102<lb/>
of Memorial Gymnasium. Rules,<lb/>
mechanics and interpretations will be<lb/>
discussed. Officials will be hired bas-<lb/>
ed on practical and written tests and<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
LIBERAL STUDENTS<lb/>
There will not be a meeting of the<lb/>
Society of United Liberal Students on<lb/>
Thursday, March 1, 19?4. Officer in-<lb/>
ductions will take place on Thursday,<lb/>
March is, 1984.<lb/>
SOPHOMORES<lb/>
If you plan to major in physics,<lb/>
math or computer science this could<lb/>
be your last chance for the AFROTC<lb/>
two year program. Would you like a<lb/>
guaranteed ob starting at nearly<lb/>
J18,000 per year? Take the Air Force<lb/>
Officer Qualifying Test on March 1,<lb/>
1984 at 12:30 In Wright Annex to see if<lb/>
you qualify. For further details con-<lb/>
tact Major Patton at 757-4597 or stop<lb/>
by the AFROTC office on the second<lb/>
floor of the Wright Annex<lb/>
RHOEPSILON<lb/>
Les Turnage will be the guest<lb/>
speaker. He will discuss Real Estate<lb/>
Brokerage on Tuesday, Feb. 28, at<lb/>
3:00 In Rawl 104.<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DINNER<lb/>
Come to the Delta Zeta house Wed<lb/>
Feb. 29 between 5:00 and 8:00 for an<lb/>
all you can eat Spagetti Dinner!<lb/>
Tickets can be purchased from any<lb/>
sister and they will be sold at the<lb/>
door.<lb/>
PEACE MEETING<lb/>
Going to be In Greenville over me<lb/>
break Take this chance to check out<lb/>
the Peace Committee, 6 30 Friday<lb/>
nights, 610 S. Elm St lust east of<lb/>
Austin For Information, call 758-4906.<lb/>
ETACHI CHAPTER<lb/>
The Eta CM Chapter of Kappa<lb/>
Delta PI will meat on Wednesday,<lb/>
February 29, In the Willis Building at<lb/>
7:00 P.M.<lb/>
Our speaker will be Mr. Johann<lb/>
Blelcher, Principal, Agnes Fulillove<lb/>
Community School His topic will be<lb/>
about the Quality Assurance Pro-<lb/>
gram (Q.A.P.). We encourage all<lb/>
Kadelplans and their friends to at<lb/>
tend this meeting. Refreshments will<lb/>
be served. We look forward to seeing<lb/>
you there.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
The PI Kapp Brothers will be nav<lb/>
Ing their Happy hour this Thurs. night<lb/>
at 200 West. Come out to 200 West and<lb/>
enoy your favorite beverage at<lb/>
reduced prices. Party with all your<lb/>
friends one more time before Spring<lb/>
Break.<lb/>
The Ft. Lauderdale Crew will meet<lb/>
this Thurs. night at 9:00 p.m. sharp In<lb/>
the Ghetto. Have your money on<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
SIGMA THETATAU<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau, the national<lb/>
honor society of nursing, will hold its<lb/>
annual business meeting on Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 1, 1984, at 7:30 p.m. in the<lb/>
School of Nursing, room 203. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
The Brothers of Sigma Phi Epsiion<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to the<lb/>
Elbe Room, TONIGHT, Tues Feb<lb/>
28. for DIME DRAFT NIGHT. Ex<lb/>
cuse me, I don't think you fUiy<lb/>
understand this will be a party, so,<lb/>
we're expecting to see all you party<lb/>
donkeys there tonight<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Personal Development<lb/>
ClassesMarch 13 Survival Italian,<lb/>
A New You, Money Matters, Career<lb/>
Change, Dreamt Contact Continuing<lb/>
Education, Erwin Hall.<lb/>
SOCCER COACHES<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
Youth Soccer coaches work part<lb/>
time, 10-20 hours weekly, with some<lb/>
Saturday coaching. Hours from<lb/>
3' 30-6.00 p.m. Salary rate S3.30hour<lb/>
Applicants must possess knowledge<lb/>
of soccer skills and have ability to<lb/>
coach young people ages 6 12. in soc<lb/>
cer fundamentals.<lb/>
Applications will be accepted<lb/>
through Monday, March 19, at the<lb/>
Personnel Office, City of Greenville,<lb/>
corner of West Fifth and Washington<lb/>
Streets.<lb/>
Contact Margaret McGlohon,<lb/>
752-4137, ext 259 for further Informa<lb/>
tlon.<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
The Gamma Beta Phi National<lb/>
Honor Society invites all interested<lb/>
persons with a grade point average of<lb/>
above a 3.0 to attend an orientation<lb/>
session on either Tuesday, Feb 28 or<lb/>
Wednesday, Feb 29 at 630 p.m. in<lb/>
the Mendenhall Multl Purpose<lb/>
Room.<lb/>
BIBLE DISCUSSIONS<lb/>
Co-ed Group Bible Discussions<lb/>
Tuesday 7:30 p.m. Rm. 212<lb/>
Mendenhall Everyone Welcome!<lb/>
TKE HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
The pledges of Tau Kappa Epsiion<lb/>
would like to invite everyone to Hap<lb/>
py Hour at the Treehouse Wednes<lb/>
day, Feb 29. 800 12 00 pm tl ed<lb/>
mission and 82 pitchers. 60 oz<lb/>
Everyone Invited<lb/>
Need a<lb/>
Roommate?<lb/>
Let the<lb/>
Classifieds help!<lb/>
This blank space<lb/>
could be filled with<lb/>
yourannouncemen?<lb/>
Let us help<lb/>
publicize your<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
?' v iay us the form at ripM j<lb/>
or uw a separate sheet of <lb/>
paper if you need more lines<lb/>
There are 33 units per line<lb/>
Each letter, punctuation mark<lb/>
and work space counts as one<lb/>
unit Capitalize and hyphenate <lb/>
wcas properly. Leave space i<lb/>
at end o? line if word doesn't fit. j<lb/>
No ads will be accepted over (<lb/>
the phone We raserve the right i<lb/>
to rejec any ?d. All ads mwst<lb/>
be prepaid Enclose 75 cents<lb/>
p une or fraction of a lint.<lb/>
-i,e print legibly) Use<lb/>
capital and lower case letters.<lb/>
Return<lb/>
at t?? par let I.<lb/>
to the Media Board i<lb/>
secretary by 3 p.m. the day <lb/>
before publication .<lb/>
?<lb/>
r -  it J<lb/>
Have the luck<lb/>
of the Irish.<lb/>
Introducing Cafe Irish Creme.<lb/>
Smooth and satisfying, it blends coffee<lb/>
with the rich flavor of Irish creme for a taste that<lb/>
will bring out the Irish in everyone.<lb/>
?25<lb/>
yy<lb/>
zgzmpzma<lb/>
OeneuaI Foods<lb/>
International CoffEEs<lb/>
O&amp;Wl&amp;etw<lb/>
MtZy<lb/>
n<lb/>
300<lb/>
'&amp;mj??<lb/>
MANUFACTURERS COUPON<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES S30M<lb/>
Introducing Cafe Irish Creme.<lb/>
30<lb/>
n<lb/>
L<lb/>
NB0187S4<lb/>
43000"84830<lb/>
04<lb/>
legal<lb/>
Tab<lb/>
C-1, mcorpofstsd tors by reference VaM only ,f redeemed bVr?a?5Xt2<lb/>
? "y&amp;SS 5 ??"? ?FcalKau?ier?d Dys?Ta?ft2?,?<lb/>
General Foods Corporation. WBo? tfo. Kereakes iTeOHB ? "<lb/>
e General Foods Corporation 19?4<lb/>
Student Supply Store<lb/>
<lb/>
Sexual<lb/>
B SHARON LEWIS<lb/>
Vff ?ni?r<lb/>
A semmar on sexual<lb/>
fulfillmer was g;<lb/>
ECU ilogy profe-<lb/>
David knox Tuev?<lb/>
night<lb/>
Kn began<lb/>
meeting - a defining<lb/>
of the element of human<lb/>
sexual bation<lb/>
wa sugge ted   wa<lb/>
becoming fan<lb/>
one's body (,? in-<lb/>
tercourse . j and<lb/>
touching were ali men-<lb/>
tioned as a normal part of<lb/>
sexual<lb/>
Value<lb/>
another<lb/>
"Se<lb/>
place<lb/>
a alue<lb/>
Knox si<lb/>
does or d<lb/>
on<lb/>
teac . ?<lb/>
'Humi<lb/>
high<lb/>
ible<lb/>
T<lb/>
? he<lb/>
vol.<lb/>
are oth<lb/>
Wiggins Addn<lb/>
SAM About S<lb/>
Business Strati<lb/>
B MOl I HI Ml<lb/>
Clarence <lb/>
recognized e<lb/>
growth<lb/>
busine<lb/>
ofCem Data S<lb/>
Inc - -<lb/>
the EC v<lb/>
dvai .me<lb/>
Manager- 5 '? M<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Wig<lb/>
periencc ai<lb/>
in the <lb/>
Data -<lb/>
Cent<lb/>
a<lb/>
empl ??<lb/>
working out<lb/>
es throughout N<lb/>
and South Ca<lb/>
Georgia In tl<lb/>
States<lb/>
largest independent<lb/>
tronic :asl<lb/>
disti<lb/>
" C e ? Da<lb/>
Systems com<lb/>
growth ple ?<lb/>
right p aid '?<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
With<lb/>
East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
(A .<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
k<lb/>
7<lb/>
Lounge<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
Large Screen '<lb/>
32 Washers 18<lb/>
Outside Patio<lb/>
Opel<lb/>
2510 E. 10<lb/>
"If vou have to<lb/>
'??'<lb/>
.????<lb/>
f.i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARYS. 9fU<lb/>
This blank space<lb/>
mid be filled with<lb/>
ourannouncement<lb/>
Let us help<lb/>
publicize your<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
1<lb/>
L. r<lb/>
i<lb/>
f<lb/>
U. j -  ??11 u<lb/>
sck<lb/>
Fulfillment<lb/>
By SHARON LEWIS<lb/>
Staff ?Mn<lb/>
A seminar on sexual<lb/>
fulfillment was given by<lb/>
ECU sociology professor<lb/>
David Knox Tuesdav<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Knox began the<lb/>
meeting with a defining<lb/>
of the elements of human<lb/>
sexuality. Masturbation<lb/>
was suggested as a way of<lb/>
becoming familiar with<lb/>
one's body. Oral sex, in-<lb/>
tercourse, kissing and<lb/>
touching were all men-<lb/>
tioned as a normal part of<lb/>
sexuality.<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Values were said to be<lb/>
another part of sexuality.<lb/>
"Sexual behavior takes<lb/>
place inside the context of<lb/>
a value framework<lb/>
Knox said. What one<lb/>
does or doesn't do is bas-<lb/>
ed on one's moral<lb/>
teachings, he said.<lb/>
"Human Sexuality is<lb/>
highly variable. It is also<lb/>
variable in the same per-<lb/>
son. There are times<lb/>
when you will be a very<lb/>
sexually active and in-<lb/>
volved person and there<lb/>
are other times when you<lb/>
will be sexually dead.<lb/>
There is a terrific range<lb/>
Knox said.<lb/>
The meaning of sexual<lb/>
fulfillment to different<lb/>
individuals was then<lb/>
discussed and the<lb/>
characteristics of a good<lb/>
sexual partner described.<lb/>
Primarily, being in love<lb/>
and being cared about<lb/>
were concerns of the ma-<lb/>
jority. However there are<lb/>
those who want variety,<lb/>
aggressiveness, patience<lb/>
and endurance in a sexual<lb/>
partner. Knox quoted one<lb/>
woman as saying, "If he<lb/>
can't stay erect for two<lb/>
hours, I don't want<lb/>
him<lb/>
"The couple who never<lb/>
has intercourse may be as<lb/>
sexually fulfilled as the<lb/>
couple who has inter-<lb/>
course a lot There is<lb/>
more to life than inter-<lb/>
course Knox said. The<lb/>
frequency of intercourse<lb/>
in a stable relationship<lb/>
was said to always go<lb/>
down. But that doesn't<lb/>
mean it isn't fun or en-<lb/>
joyable, according to<lb/>
Knox; just the opposite is<lb/>
true. "As the frequency<lb/>
goes down, the enjoy-<lb/>
ment goes up as the se-<lb/>
cond language of sex<lb/>
comes in. The first<lb/>
language physically in-<lb/>
volved (is when) you are<lb/>
rubbing pleasure zones.<lb/>
The second language of<lb/>
sex is one in which you<lb/>
are rubbing souls<lb/>
He then talked about<lb/>
the pre-requisites of sex-<lb/>
ual fulfillment, beginning<lb/>
with sexual knowledge of<lb/>
oneself. Knowing what<lb/>
one finds enjoyable is<lb/>
essential. A good rela-<lb/>
tionship is the second ele-<lb/>
ment. "The best sex you<lb/>
will ever have is sex with<lb/>
someone you love<lb/>
Knox said. Open sexual<lb/>
communication was said<lb/>
to be the third prere-<lb/>
quisite.<lb/>
Women don't want to<lb/>
hear about other women,<lb/>
Knox said. They also like<lb/>
men to be more responsi-<lb/>
ble concerning birth con-<lb/>
trol. More caressing,<lb/>
gentleness, kissing and<lb/>
talking before and after<lb/>
intercourse is desired by<lb/>
most women. Also, sex<lb/>
can be enjoyable to<lb/>
women without climax-<lb/>
ing. Most agree<lb/>
tenderness is important.<lb/>
Men also have their list<lb/>
of things they'd like<lb/>
women to know, Knox<lb/>
claimed. Men do not<lb/>
always want to be the<lb/>
dominant partner. Men<lb/>
want women who can kiss<lb/>
passionately and who<lb/>
aren't inhibited in bed.<lb/>
They want to enjoy sex in<lb/>
different positions and at<lb/>
different times of the<lb/>
day. Most would also like<lb/>
more oral sex, Knox add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Attitudes range from<lb/>
"sex is sinful" to "if it<lb/>
feels good, do it A man<lb/>
cannot learn to have an<lb/>
erection and a woman<lb/>
cannot learn to vaginally<lb/>
lubricate, Knox said.<lb/>
"Women are the more<lb/>
sexual animal. They've<lb/>
got the equipment that<lb/>
doesn't need a lot of<lb/>
recharge in between he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Knox also stressed<lb/>
good physical and mental<lb/>
health as primary to sex-<lb/>
ual fulfillment.<lb/>
The lecture concluded<lb/>
with a raffling off of a<lb/>
copy of the latest book by<lb/>
Knox, Human Sexuality:<lb/>
A Search for Understan-<lb/>
ding. Knox is a certified<lb/>
marriage counselor and<lb/>
the author of six books.<lb/>
Wiggins Addresses<lb/>
SAM About Small<lb/>
Business Strategy<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
B MOLLY BUSH<lb/>
Suff W rtlr<lb/>
Clarence Wiggins, a<lb/>
recognized expert in<lb/>
growth strategy for small<lb/>
businesses and president<lb/>
of Century Data Systems,<lb/>
Inc. in Raleigh addressed<lb/>
the EC ' Society for the<lb/>
Advancement of<lb/>
Management (SAM)<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
Wiggins shared his ex-<lb/>
perience and knowledge<lb/>
in the growth of Century<lb/>
Data Systems, Inc.<lb/>
Century Data Systems<lb/>
has grown in size and<lb/>
employs over 135 people<lb/>
working out of nine of-<lb/>
fices throughout North<lb/>
and South Carolina and<lb/>
Georgia. In the United<lb/>
States it is one of the<lb/>
largest independent elec-<lb/>
tronic cash register<lb/>
distributors.<lb/>
"Century Data<lb/>
Systems contributes its<lb/>
growth to people ? the<lb/>
Tight people" said Wig-<lb/>
gins. "Quality people are<lb/>
the most important<lb/>
asset<lb/>
For three consecutive<lb/>
years Century Data<lb/>
Systems has been ranked<lb/>
by Inc. Magazine as one<lb/>
of America's fastest<lb/>
growing private com-<lb/>
panies.<lb/>
We Do Chicken<lb/>
Bight<lb/>
z nicttCMekM<lb/>
Buttermilk Biscuit<lb/>
IfN<lb/>
G?t 2 pieces of the Colonel's Original Recipe or Extra<lb/>
Crispy Chicken and 1 Buttermilk Biscuit tor only $1 19<lb/>
with this coupon. Coupon good only for combination white<lb/>
dark orders and may not be used with any other special of- 0 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
fers. Limit one per coupon. Customer pays .ail applicable anH<lb/>
-ta . Offer expire. Mar. 15, MM. (Kb tJSZ 2905 F  m<lb/>
only at store locations listed In tab ad W5 East 5th Street<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
With<lb/>
x??imimmmmimti'jvMwwss<lb/>
?<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Phone 756-0625<lb/>
2Forl<lb/>
Special<lb/>
(Pizza Only)<lb/>
Offer Good Thru Nov. 8,1983<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Specials<lb/>
Buy One Pizza at Regular Price<lb/>
And Get Another of Same Value<lb/>
Or Lees FREE<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
LASAGNE<lb/>
JUST $1.99<lb/>
? TO GO $2.29 ?<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
(REG. PRICE $3.35)<lb/>
(Not good with other Lasagne Specials)<lb/>
.EXPIRES MARCH 31,1984<lb/>
SMALL SPAGHETTI PEPPI<lb/>
JUST $1.99<lb/>
? TO GO $2.29 ?<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
(REG. PRICE $3.25)<lb/>
(Not good with other Spaghetti<lb/>
Peppi specials)<lb/>
Support<lb/>
the<lb/>
PIRATE<lb/>
WALK<lb/>
757-6616<lb/>
LIFEGUARDS<lb/>
The City of Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
would like to interview qualified applicants for<lb/>
swimming instructors and lifeguards,Full-Time<lb/>
and Part-Time summer Work.Please contact<lb/>
Jim Parker at Greenville Recreation and<lb/>
Parks. 752-4137 extension 205<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
mi Tyfer<lb/>
caruhna east mall Sqreenville<lb/>
MEN'S ?reA&amp;<lb/>
SPRING SAVINGS<lb/>
Monday February 27th through Saturday, March 3rd<lb/>
"?<lb/>
, P<lb/>
Daily Drawings for Terrific Prizes:<lb/>
T-Shirts<lb/>
Suntan Lotion Sun Glasses Sun Visors Frisbees<lb/>
Beach Coolers Beach Towels Beach Balls<lb/>
(No purchase necessary Reg.sler Da.lv beg.nn.ng Hornby. Feb 27th ,n the Men s Deparlmen.<lb/>
? Do Not Have To Be Present To Win<lb/>
M ?: -V . ?<lb/>
 20 OFF Men's and Boy's<lb/>
?m nom Swimweaar and Beachwear<lb/>
?5Mp<lb/>
?HobieJantzen ?Offshore <lb/>
?Panama Jack:?Ocean Pacific ?Sundek ?P.C.A.<lb/>
LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
Lounge<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
Large Screen "Cable" TV<lb/>
32 Washers 18 Dryers<lb/>
Outside Patio<lb/>
Fluff &amp; Fold Service<lb/>
Dry Cleaning Pick-Up<lb/>
Ample Parking<lb/>
Attendant On Duty<lb/>
Cold Beverages<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight, 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Located Next To The Pizza Hut<lb/>
2510 E. 10th Street Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
752-5222<lb/>
'If you have to do your own laundry, do it in style at the Wash Pub<lb/>
MJJJJUUfJJIJUIJUIT<lb/>
'AAJW2HBWMBM<lb/>
Shop Monday Thru Saturday Warn to 9pm Phonv 756 8 ELK 7fk23SS)<lb/>
? it <lb/>
f .MqMtt ? ?'? ?W'?fei?H<lb/>
?<lb/>
P?SC<lb/>
K f It <lb/>
$ ??- .?? ?? i'i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0004"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
3Jie ffaat (Earnlfnfan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. cw???<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ?, &amp;?,?.<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mmmm j.t. pietrzak. ??? ,??,<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. cn? ??,? mike McPartland, m <lb/>
Ed Nicklas. spok Ea,or Tom Norton, o??, v??<lb/>
Gordon Ipock, ?, kathy Fuerst. oo, ???,<lb/>
Mark Barker, c?w.??. m?h Mike Mayo, r??io &amp;??.<lb/>
February 28, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Voting Rights<lb/>
Students Must Work For Rights<lb/>
While the SGA Legislature spent<lb/>
45 minutes Monday arguing over<lb/>
one, small rule for the SGA elec-<lb/>
tion next month, they could have<lb/>
been planning more substantial ac-<lb/>
tion for even more important elec-<lb/>
tions ? the state and national ones<lb/>
coming up in May and November.<lb/>
Instead of fueding over what<lb/>
kind of "sound mechanisms" a<lb/>
student candidate can use when<lb/>
running for an SGA office, the<lb/>
legislature could take the lead in<lb/>
really representing the students<lb/>
against what amounts to<lb/>
discrimination in Pitt County. The<lb/>
group heard a report last week<lb/>
outlining how students are denied<lb/>
the right to register to vote in<lb/>
Greenville ? denied by the same<lb/>
state law that somehow permits<lb/>
students in other areas of the state<lb/>
to register in the town where they<lb/>
go to college.<lb/>
The SGA should be taking the<lb/>
lead in this fight against the disen-<lb/>
franchisement of students from<lb/>
local (and to some extent state and<lb/>
national) politics. Students live in<lb/>
Greenville at least nine months a<lb/>
year and contribute irreplaceably to<lb/>
.the economy of the town; they<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
make up almost a third of the city<lb/>
population (and more of its voting<lb/>
populace) but most can't vote in<lb/>
the city.<lb/>
Students are required to prove<lb/>
they pay taxes in the county and in-<lb/>
tend to live here perrnenantly<lb/>
before they can register in the area.<lb/>
Otherwise, they must return to<lb/>
their hometown, where they pro-<lb/>
bably spent no more than a couple<lb/>
of months each year, to register.<lb/>
And they must return because<lb/>
North Carolina does not permit, as<lb/>
many states do, citizens to register<lb/>
by mail.<lb/>
Needless to say, the inconvenience<lb/>
of the process keeps many studnts<lb/>
from voting. And students have<lb/>
virtually no voice in local housing<lb/>
laws and rent regulations, though<lb/>
without students the Greenville<lb/>
apartment business would collapse.<lb/>
The laws are interpreted and en-<lb/>
forced differently in different N.C.<lb/>
cities; there seems to be no reason<lb/>
ECU students can't register in Pitt<lb/>
County like UNC students do in<lb/>
Orange. Until students move to<lb/>
change the problem, they will re-<lb/>
main disenfranchised citizens.<lb/>
Student Grateful For<lb/>
Sports Medicine Facility<lb/>
I would like to take a moment to call<lb/>
special attention to the Department of In-<lb/>
tramural Sports Medicine. I became<lb/>
aware of the existence of this department<lb/>
several months ago, and have since receiv-<lb/>
ed a great deal of assistance from their<lb/>
staff.<lb/>
The department operates under the<lb/>
direction of Dr. Wayne Edwards, and is<lb/>
staffed by Jamie Moul and Trudy Lewis.<lb/>
Their office is located in room 111 of<lb/>
Memorial gym, and these folks are on<lb/>
hand Monday through Friday to aid<lb/>
students in the prevention or treatment of<lb/>
any sport-related injury.<lb/>
I understand that this is a one of a kind<lb/>
service that is unique to ECU. Funds for<lb/>
the department are obtained via our tui-<lb/>
tion, so there is no fee per visit. All each<lb/>
student is asked for is his or her name and<lb/>
ID number, which the department keeps<lb/>
on file so they can justify the existence of<lb/>
such a service to those who appropriate<lb/>
available funds within this university.<lb/>
To all those involve with this depart-<lb/>
ment, I congratulate you on your effort,<lb/>
and appreciate your help.<lb/>
Craig Collie<lb/>
Senior<lb/>
Physics<lb/>
Big Pat Attack<lb/>
For awhile, it seemed as if some objec-<lb/>
tivity and integrity were developing at The<lb/>
East Carolinian; this odd occurrence<lb/>
began with the dismissal of Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill. But, O'Neill's letter in last<lb/>
Thursday's edition of the paper indicates<lb/>
he still maintains some influence on The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
O'Neill ran an extremely long letter in<lb/>
the Campus Forum. In fact, it constituted<lb/>
the entire Campus Forum. More impor-<lb/>
tantly, O'Neill's letter was twice as long as<lb/>
any student letter that has recently ap-<lb/>
peared in the section. If anyone else had<lb/>
sent such a letter in, it would have been<lb/>
edited and severely reduced in length. In<lb/>
other words, O'Neill's letter grossly ex-<lb/>
ceeded the length limitations of the Cam-<lb/>
pus Forum. Apparently, O'Neill's trash<lb/>
warrants special attention at The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
According to sources at the paper,<lb/>
O'Neill intended his letter to be ran as an<lb/>
editorial. Evidently, the editors realized it<lb/>
would be improper to run a nonstudent<lb/>
editorial in a student paper.<lb/>
Instead, The East Carolinian disguised<lb/>
O'Neill's lengthy editorial by putting it in<lb/>
the Campus Forum. This blatant act is an<lb/>
abomination and disservice to the campus<lb/>
community.<lb/>
One must question the intentions of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, which allowed the<lb/>
lengthy editorial of a known left-wing<lb/>
radical to dominate the Campus Forum.<lb/>
Does O'Neill still have influence at the<lb/>
paper?<lb/>
O'Neill dominated the paper for too<lb/>
long before his dismissal, and after his<lb/>
editorial in last Thursday's Campus<lb/>
Forum, it is evident O'Neill still holds<lb/>
some influence on the paper; this must<lb/>
not continue.<lb/>
Since O'Neill is no longer a student at<lb/>
East Carolina, he should not be allowed<lb/>
to propogate his left-wing, radical beliefs<lb/>
through editorials that The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian disguises by putting in the Campus<lb/>
Forum. The Campus Forum is for com-<lb/>
ment; it should not be used as an editorial<lb/>
forum for political activist trying to<lb/>
advertise a cause.<lb/>
Joseph Olinick<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Accounting<lb/>
(Editor's note: Mr. O'Neill, like any<lb/>
other person, has a right to submit opi-<lb/>
nion to the Campus Forum. No letters to<lb/>
the Campus Forum this year have been<lb/>
edited in length. The two page limit is en-<lb/>
forced only when an overabundance of<lb/>
letters denies space to some opinions;<lb/>
many letters this year have exceeded our<lb/>
two page limit. Also, Mr. O'Neill's letter<lb/>
was the only one submitted for last Thurs-<lb/>
day's edition. No letters were denied<lb/>
print.<lb/>
Cafe' 01T<lb/>
Due to your editorial statement on Feb.<lb/>
16, "How Comea cup of coffee costs<lb/>
$.60 in the Mendenhall cafeteria and you<lb/>
can't get refills, when around the corner<lb/>
McDonald's sells the same size cup of<lb/>
$.30 and you can have all you want?" I<lb/>
felt it necessary to determine whether the<lb/>
East Carolina Dining Service facility,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Snack Bar,<lb/>
was being unfair.<lb/>
To learn exactly what was offered at<lb/>
each account, I bought a large and small<lb/>
cup of coffee from both locations and<lb/>
asked if refills were available. This is the<lb/>
information taken of Feb. 17, 1984:<lb/>
MSC Snack Bar: small cup $.358 oz.<lb/>
cup; large cup $.4512oz. cup; and refills:<lb/>
yes.<lb/>
McDonald's: small cup .308oz. cup;<lb/>
large cup .4010oz. cup; and refills yes.<lb/>
You can see that both places offer two<lb/>
sizes of coffee and refills are available at<lb/>
each location.<lb/>
Thank you for allowing me the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to clarify your statement.<lb/>
Ira L. Simon<lb/>
Director of Dining Services<lb/>
(Editor's note: I wish they'd give me a<lb/>
refill.)<lb/>
Don't Attack Sen. Jesse Helms<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
As I passed through Mendenhall the<lb/>
other day, I overheard a one-sided<lb/>
tirade. A white male ECU student was<lb/>
declaring emphaUcally, "I'm not that<lb/>
crazy about Hunt, but I'll vote for<lb/>
anybody ? anybody ? who runs<lb/>
against Helms There was an in-<lb/>
gratiating tone in his voice as he address-<lb/>
ed a black student reading the day's<lb/>
News and Observer. The reader, a male,<lb/>
listened politely.<lb/>
"The guy is a clown, an imbecile<lb/>
continued the orator. "We've got to get<lb/>
rid of him<lb/>
An ardent supporter of our senior<lb/>
senator, it hurt me to hear him so<lb/>
viciously maligned.<lb/>
"Are you referring to Senator<lb/>
Helms?" I asked my fellow student.<lb/>
"Yeah<lb/>
I assumed an exaggerated tone of in-<lb/>
credulity. "Surely you don't mean the<lb/>
things you're saying about Jesse, do<lb/>
you? Why, I can think of no greater or<lb/>
more important cause than insuring the<lb/>
re-election of Jesse Helms<lb/>
The black student folded his paper<lb/>
and calmly observed the unfolding<lb/>
tableau from his cushioned chair.<lb/>
"You've got to be kidding said the<lb/>
orator with great disgust. "Surely you're<lb/>
not for that crackpot Helms?"<lb/>
"Why, certainly I am I replied firm-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
He shook his head in utter bewilder-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"What is it about him that you so<lb/>
dislike?" I asked.<lb/>
"Everything<lb/>
"Everything?" I queried. "That's a<lb/>
pretty broad statement ? and rather<lb/>
vague. Forget about 'everything Just<lb/>
one or two specific points will do<lb/>
The orator stammered for a moment,<lb/>
confused. "Well, everything. I just<lb/>
despise everything about the guy,<lb/>
everything he stands for<lb/>
"You're perfect proof of how the<lb/>
liberal media has succeeded with its<lb/>
smear campaign against Jesse Helms I<lb/>
said. "Most of the college students I<lb/>
know strongly dislike Helms and for no<lb/>
definite reasons. It's a purely emotional<lb/>
reaction, a programed reflex, not a<lb/>
logical, thoughtful response at all I<lb/>
knew I had the guy figured right, so I set<lb/>
him up for the kill. "So come on. Don't<lb/>
give me this 'everything' routine. Give<lb/>
me one valid reason why you hate<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
"Well the man's stupid<lb/>
"Be exact. How is he stupid?"<lb/>
"Just look at the stuff he writes. The<lb/>
man doesn't make sense. And John East<lb/>
writes everything he puts out, anyway.<lb/>
Helms is so stupid, he can't even write<lb/>
"Oh. So Jesse Helms can't write?<lb/>
That's why you despise him?"<lb/>
"Yeah<lb/>
"Have you ever actually read<lb/>
anything that Jesse Helms has written?<lb/>
Have you read his book? The man writes<lb/>
beautifully lucid prose. And did you<lb/>
know at one time Jesse Helms was the ci-<lb/>
ty news editor for The Raleigh Times,<lb/>
and a reporter for the very newspaper<lb/>
your friend is holding?"<lb/>
When knowlegeable critics who know<lb/>
what Sen. Helms stands for give me their<lb/>
reasons for rejecting him, I listen to and<lb/>
accept their opinions. When someone<lb/>
says, "I prefer the social welfare state to<lb/>
the free enterprise system or, "I prefer<lb/>
to live in a society based on atheistic<lb/>
principals rather godly morals or, "I<lb/>
believe in supporting Third World<lb/>
socialism at the expense of American<lb/>
taxpayers or, "I support the spread of<lb/>
world communism by disarming<lb/>
America then I can say: "Yes, you<lb/>
have logical and reasonable grounds for<lb/>
disliking Senator Helms<lb/>
It is a pity, however, that most people<lb/>
read no deeper than the cruelly slanted<lb/>
political cartoons that litter most<lb/>
newspapers' editorial pages. They listen<lb/>
only to the local TV news, broadcasted<lb/>
by stations owned by powerful<lb/>
Democrats who allow their reporters to<lb/>
interview Hunt cronies referring to<lb/>
Senator Helms as "an embarrassment to<lb/>
A majority of the voters will agree with<lb/>
what I've already discovered: Jesse Helms<lb/>
is America's most unjustly maligned and<lb/>
castigated statesman ? and perhaps its<lb/>
greatest.<lb/>
The orator's mouth hung slightly<lb/>
agape, and he had a perplexed look<lb/>
upon his face.<lb/>
"Yes, Helms was a professional jour-<lb/>
nalist and writer for years before he<lb/>
entered politics. Writing was his career.<lb/>
Now, how did an illiterate manage to do<lb/>
that?"<lb/>
The orator had no answer.<lb/>
"What's your next point. What other<lb/>
characteristic about Helms disgusts you.<lb/>
That he's a racist? What? Toss up<lb/>
another fiction, and I'll blow it full of<lb/>
holes too<lb/>
The young orator turned on his heels<lb/>
and stormed away.<lb/>
our state cronies who won't talk about<lb/>
Helms' record and let the people decide<lb/>
if he's an embarrassment. They listen to<lb/>
the media quoting other politicians and<lb/>
statesmen who rarely challenge the<lb/>
substance of Helms' stands, but find it<lb/>
easier to attack the man personally. That<lb/>
is why many college students, who fanc<lb/>
themselves young intellectuals, despise<lb/>
Jesse Helms but can't articulate why.<lb/>
I am convinced that before Nov. 7,<lb/>
the truth about Helms will be made<lb/>
known. And a majority of the voters will<lb/>
agree with what I've already discovered:<lb/>
Jesse Helms is America's most unjustly<lb/>
maligned and castigated statesman ?<lb/>
and perhaps its greatest.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
. Until You Know A Few Things<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
It is no secret to astute American<lb/>
political observers that Soviet pro-<lb/>
poganists and KGB have infiltrated<lb/>
many Western institutions, spreading<lb/>
the filthy slime of communism in an at-<lb/>
tempt to undermine democracy.<lb/>
It is also well known that atheistic<lb/>
Communists have no less goal than to<lb/>
overthrow the Christian, Democratic<lb/>
West and rule the world with their<lb/>
godless totalitarianism. They dupe the<lb/>
Western press and innocent (or<lb/>
sometimes not so innocent) Americans<lb/>
into working for their filthy cause.<lb/>
Every kid on the street knows The<lb/>
Washington Post, The New York Times,<lb/>
Time magazine andNewsweek, to name<lb/>
but a few, are run by communist sym-<lb/>
pathizers or puppets of the Soviet<lb/>
Union. And of course the liberal think<lb/>
tanks, the Smithsonian Institution and<lb/>
the most university policical science<lb/>
departments are funded directly with<lb/>
KGB money. We don't even have to<lb/>
mention the peace movement and<lb/>
nuclear freezeniks ? Soviet puppets all.<lb/>
And every political action committee left<lb/>
of NCPAC gets hand-written checks (in<lb/>
red ink) from the Kremlin, vomiting up<lb/>
the big bucks for their filthy cause.<lb/>
The multi-billion dollar Russian pro-<lb/>
paganda blitz against the West has flown<lb/>
right in our window of vunerabili ty, and<lb/>
now has sucked in powerful members of<lb/>
the United States government no one<lb/>
would ever suspect. Worst of all, one of<lb/>
them is from North Carolina. That's<lb/>
right, I believe Jesse Helms is a puppet<lb/>
of the Soviet Union, a Russian bear with<lb/>
a Southern drawl, a communist dupe, a<lb/>
KGB sympathizer. (He even bleeds red.)<lb/>
Oh sure, he's good at hiding it. Most<lb/>
people would never suspect his filthy<lb/>
commie leanings. But they are there, and<lb/>
his is endangering the soverienty of this<lb/>
God-fearing nation.<lb/>
Just look at his record. Look at<lb/>
defense. Not only does he support<lb/>
military spending increases comparable<lb/>
to those of the Soviet Union, thus mak-<lb/>
ing us a militarized state just like the<lb/>
commies, but he does it when he knows<lb/>
it will increase the deficit to the point of<lb/>
bankrupty, crippling the last bastion of<lb/>
Christian Democracy and causing<lb/>
America to fall to its economic knees.<lb/>
And race relations. Helms has over<lb/>
and over again opposed the Voting<lb/>
knowing it is the slow death of millions<lb/>
of Americans, killing us puff by puff<lb/>
and further weakening our defenses<lb/>
against the godless commies.<lb/>
To the far ends of the Earth he<lb/>
spreads his dirty deeds. Look who sup-<lb/>
ported the military dictators of Argen-<lb/>
tina in the Falklands War ? Jesse. And<lb/>
he knew we'd waste more guns and<lb/>
equipment taking Grenada than we<lb/>
would snatch from the commies, so he<lb/>
said "yea, Reagan, give that Caribbean<lb/>
everything you got. We ought to be<lb/>
scared of that island<lb/>
A majority of citizens will agree with<lb/>
what I've already discovered: Jesse Helms<lb/>
is America's most misaligned and<lb/>
conspiring statesman ? and probably its<lb/>
gravest.<lb/>
Rights Act and the Martin Luther King<lb/>
holiday. He did this not only to chip<lb/>
away at the democratic institution of<lb/>
voting, making us more tike the com-<lb/>
mies, but he deviously heightened racial<lb/>
tension in the country with the King<lb/>
holiday move, pitting American against<lb/>
American and fermenting the social<lb/>
scene for a full-fledged people's com-<lb/>
munist revolution.<lb/>
And even more subtle is his anti-<lb/>
commie rhetoric. Oh, it's the perfect<lb/>
cover. He blasts the Soviets, worsening<lb/>
East-West relations, adding ice to the<lb/>
Cold War and readying the world for a<lb/>
commie surprise attack. Besides, all<lb/>
those commies speak in code; his blab-<lb/>
ber is probably really secret messages to<lb/>
the Kremlin that everything is going<lb/>
A-OK with the Ruskie's scheme in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Oh, oh, and tobacco. Shameless. He<lb/>
supports that crop to the- bittfr end,<lb/>
The list goes on. He used to work for<lb/>
The Raleigh Times-News and Observer<lb/>
company, which even his own political<lb/>
organization calls a biased, ultra-liberal<lb/>
(read commie) media. He was a TV news<lb/>
commentator, subtly wooing the pro-<lb/>
teanat trough the biased, poisoned<lb/>
S m!5J1c Con?r?sional Club is.<lb/>
when spelled m Russian and put in a<lb/>
mirror, The Communist Club. He acts<lb/>
to focus attention on himself personally,<lb/>
thus some don't see the deeds he's really<lb/>
working for. He poses as the last guy to<lb/>
team up with the commies, but you<lb/>
know who s going to be at Lenin's right<lb/>
hand in Kremlin heaven.<lb/>
Yes, the is almost too sad to tell, and<lb/>
too horrible to believe. But a majority of<lb/>
citizens will agree with what I've already<lb/>
discovered: Jesse Helms is America's<lb/>
most misaligned and conspring<lb/>
lUte,n?n ? ?nd perhaps its gravest.<lb/>
,rt<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
'?? ' ??? m ???<lb/>
Campu,<lb/>
B STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
Crime was up drastical-<lb/>
ly this week due to an in-<lb/>
crease in vandalism and<lb/>
larcenies. There were also<lb/>
several reports of break-<lb/>
ing and entering as well as<lb/>
alcohol related viola-<lb/>
tions. The reports for<lb/>
Feb. 20 thru Feb. 26 from<lb/>
the Department of Public<lb/>
Safety are:<lb/>
Feb. 20, 11 a.m. - a<lb/>
report of breaking and<lb/>
entering into a medical<lb/>
storeroom in the Brodv<lb/>
Buildhg and larceny of<lb/>
several housekeeping<lb/>
items; 3 p.m. - A report<lb/>
of a larceny of a licence<lb/>
plate from a car parked<lb/>
north of Scott Hall; 3:40<lb/>
p.m. - A report of break-<lb/>
ing and entering and<lb/>
iarcen :i<lb/>
14th and I<lb/>
ing lot,<lb/>
report ti<lb/>
machine!<lb/>
Building <lb/>
7:30 p. rr.<lb/>
source<lb/>
trolled s<lb/>
489 Aye<lb/>
was lat<lb/>
cupants<lb/>
Ethendj<lb/>
Erne <lb/>
room 4'<lb/>
which<lb/>
occupant<lb/>
Rar.<lb/>
J. ?<lb/>
blue lighj<lb/>
c phoi<lb/>
iseur -l<lb/>
Fer ;<lb/>
report<lb/>
center<lb/>
Jones H?<lb/>
per;<lb/>
Maritime<lb/>
By STL ART MORGAN E C I<lb/>
sufT?ni? ba<lb/>
on An e<lb/>
Students can earn five ten<lb/>
to six semester hours' shipbui<lb/>
credit through participa- and agr<lb/>
tion in a unique project Parti<lb/>
this summer. ECU and in d<lb/>
the Confederate Naval bece<lb/>
Museum of Columbus, a r.<lb/>
Ga will co-sponsor a insti<lb/>
field school in maritime tion. H<lb/>
history and underwater nun-<lb/>
research from June 4 to teres:ej<lb/>
July 13 in Columbus. history i<lb/>
Students of all majors diving at<lb/>
are encouraged to attend, ticipate<lb/>
and all participants will project<lb/>
receive a basic introduc- tion.<lb/>
tion to American "Coi<lb/>
Maritime history, under- portan:<lb/>
water archaeology and cento<lb/>
related subject material. War.<lb/>
To assist in the inter- N 1<lb/>
pretation of material ma- j<lb/>
located during the pro- "Hea<lb/>
ject, two weeks of parts.<lb/>
classroom instruction at mar. <lb/>
Use Th<lb/>
Announce<lb/>
IjllllltlllllllllllllllllfllllllllflllllllllllfllMllllliiP!<lb/>
inn<lb/>
OPTICAL i PA<lb/>
Soft Contact L<lb/>
$59 a paii<lb/>
All frames in stoc<lb/>
with this couj<lb/>
Expires Feb. 2J<lb/>
CHRISTIAN DIOR HAISTON KR. A. Al<lb/>
ARDEY GLORIA VANDERBIIT Ri I , :<lb/>
PLAVBOY and man mor1<lb/>
v Url<lb/>
t u "S im On<lb/>
The<lb/>
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S 703 Grt??rtH? Brvd (ro? From P.n P1?,<lb/>
5 CtiyM Harrta iKtnwd Opiioin Ot?- -<lb/>
lllltliillllllMflltlillllllitlllllllllllllllllllllilillllililiKIl<lb/>
rCOF<lb/>
AU<lb/>
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TO AUDI<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0005"/><lb/>
v.smm<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1984<lb/>
v x<lb/>
M<lb/>
Vims<lb/>
egeabie critics who know<lb/>
stands for give me their<lb/>
cting him. I listen to and<lb/>
Unions When someone<lb/>
tr the social welfare state to<lb/>
sc sstem or, "I prefer<lb/>
y based on atheistic<lb/>
morals or, "I<lb/>
g Third World<lb/>
e expense of American<lb/>
"1 support the spread of<lb/>
sm by disarming<lb/>
i 1 can say. "Yes, you<lb/>
nd reasonable grounds for<lb/>
iior Helms<lb/>
eer. that most people<lb/>
kr than the cruelly slanted<lb/>
toons that litter most<lb/>
iitorial pages. They listen<lb/>
cal TV news, broadcasted<lb/>
owned by powerful<lb/>
pio allow their reporters to<lb/>
in! cronies referring to<lb/>
I an embarrassment to<lb/>
gree with<lb/>
Jesse Helms<lb/>
iligned and<lb/>
erhaps its<lb/>
I who won't talk about<lb/>
and let the people decide<lb/>
tssment. They listen to<lb/>
V - er politicians and<lb/>
I bo rareh challenge the<lb/>
Helms' stands, but find it<lb/>
k the man personally. That -<lb/>
ollege students, who fancy<lb/>
 intellectuals, despise<lb/>
  articulate why.<lb/>
Kneed that before Nov. 7,<lb/>
cut Helms will be made<lb/>
majority of the voters will<lb/>
lat Pvt already discovered:<lb/>
 America's most unjustly<lb/>
castigated statesman ?<lb/>
- greatest.<lb/>
Things<lb/>
the slow death of millions<lb/>
i, killing us puff by puff<lb/>
wakening our defenses<lb/>
kodless commies.<lb/>
ar ends of the Earth he<lb/>
liny deeds. Look who sup-<lb/>
lilitary dictators of Argen-<lb/>
talklands War ? Jesse. And<lb/>
led waste more guns and<lb/>
I taking Grenada than we<lb/>
In fro the commies, so he<lb/>
Tleagan, give that Caribbean<lb/>
Vou got. We ought to be<lb/>
at island<lb/>
"ee with<lb/>
Jesse Helms<lb/>
and<lb/>
Probably its<lb/>
oes on. He used to work for<lb/>
Times-News and Observer<lb/>
hich even his own political<lb/>
i calls a biased, ultra-liberal<lb/>
re) media. He was a TV news<lb/>
r, subtly wooing the pro-<lb/>
rough the biased, poisoned<lb/>
V The Congressional Club is,<lb/>
pd in Russian and put in a<lb/>
e Communist Club. He acts<lb/>
jention on himself personally,<lb/>
lon't see the deeds he's really<lb/>
r. He poses as the last guy to<lb/>
kith the commies, but you<lb/>
sjoing to be at Lenin's right<lb/>
lin heaven.<lb/>
is almost too sad to tell, and<lb/>
i to believe. But a majority of<lb/>
agree with what I've already<lb/>
Jesse Helms is America's<lb/>
aligned and conspring<lb/>
and perhaps its gravest.<lb/>
<lb/>
Campus Crime Takes Dramatic<lb/>
By STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
Crime was up drastical-<lb/>
ly this week due to an in-<lb/>
crease in vandalism and<lb/>
larcenies. There were also<lb/>
several reports of break-<lb/>
ing and entering as well as<lb/>
alcohol related viola-<lb/>
tions. The reports for<lb/>
Feb. 20 thru Feb. 26 from<lb/>
the Department of Public<lb/>
Safety are:<lb/>
Feb. 20, 11 a.m. - A<lb/>
report of breaking and<lb/>
entering into a medical<lb/>
storeroom in the Brody<lb/>
Building and larceny of<lb/>
several housekeeping<lb/>
items; 3 p.m. - A report<lb/>
of a larceny of a licence<lb/>
plate from a car parked<lb/>
north of Scott Hall; 3:40<lb/>
p.m. - A report of break-<lb/>
ing and entering and<lb/>
larceny to a vehicle in the<lb/>
14th and Elm Street park-<lb/>
ing lot; 6:10 p.m. - A<lb/>
report that the cigarette<lb/>
machine in the Belk<lb/>
Building was vandalized;<lb/>
7:30 p.m. - A confidential<lb/>
source reported a con-<lb/>
trolled substance in room<lb/>
489 Aycock Hall which<lb/>
was later raided. Oc-<lb/>
cupants were Brian Lee<lb/>
Etheridge and Gilbert<lb/>
Emerson McMillan; In<lb/>
room 453 Aycock Hall<lb/>
which was also raided,<lb/>
occupants were William<lb/>
Randal Sugg and Lloyd<lb/>
J. Hepler; 9 p.m The<lb/>
blue light of the emergen-<lb/>
cy phone at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum needed repair.<lb/>
Feb. 21, 1:20 a.m. - A<lb/>
report the first floor<lb/>
center stairwell door of<lb/>
Jones Hall was broken by<lb/>
person(s) unknown; 5:11<lb/>
p.m. - Kim F. Griffith, a<lb/>
non-student, was<lb/>
transported from the<lb/>
athletic field south of the<lb/>
Irons Building to Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital; 10:50 p.m. - A<lb/>
report of an attempted<lb/>
breaking and entering of<lb/>
a clinical storeroom at the<lb/>
Brody Building.<lb/>
Feb. 22, 1:30 a.m. -<lb/>
Tonia E. Thomas of 312<lb/>
Clement Hall and<lb/>
Stephen Reid of Farm-<lb/>
ville, N.C. were found in<lb/>
violation of visitation<lb/>
policy and campus<lb/>
curfew; 2:30 a.m. - Dris-<lb/>
tian B. Tyson of Winter-<lb/>
ville, N.C. was arrested<lb/>
for DW1; 3:20 a.m. -<lb/>
Cary Burton Shaw of 18C<lb/>
Aycock Hall activated the<lb/>
fire alarm on fourth flooi<lb/>
east Aycock Hall; 10:4C<lb/>
a.m. - A report of the<lb/>
larceny of four rolls of<lb/>
tape and one bucket from<lb/>
rooms SE-83 and SN-67<lb/>
of the Brody Building;<lb/>
2:15 p.m. - A report that<lb/>
money was stolen from a<lb/>
file cabinet of room SE-<lb/>
106A in the Brody<lb/>
Building; 5:00 p.m. - Ed-<lb/>
ward Earl Alphin of<lb/>
Kinston, N.C. was placed<lb/>
in protective custody for<lb/>
being publicly drunk;<lb/>
Feb. 23, 12:13 a.m. - A<lb/>
female student was stuck<lb/>
in the elevator between<lb/>
third and fourth floors of<lb/>
Tyler Hall; 12:15 a.mA<lb/>
burning electric cord was<lb/>
found in the gameroom<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center by housekeeping<lb/>
personnel; 12:20 a.m. -<lb/>
The alarm for the univer-<lb/>
sity telephone system was<lb/>
activated at the police<lb/>
department; 12:50 a.m. -<lb/>
The Greenville Police<lb/>
Department advised cam-<lb/>
pus police that the<lb/>
burglar alarm systems in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and the Student<lb/>
Supply Store were ac-<lb/>
tivated; 1:21 a.m. - A<lb/>
report of a gasoline odor<lb/>
on sixth and seventh<lb/>
floors in White Hall; 2:45<lb/>
a.m. - A report of van-<lb/>
dalism to the northeast<lb/>
curfew door of Garrett<lb/>
Hall; 12:35 p.m. - A<lb/>
report of the larceny of<lb/>
clothes and a piece of lug-<lb/>
gage from Clement Hall;<lb/>
2 p.m. - Lt. Barnes<lb/>
reported he lost a key ring<lb/>
with 14 keys somewhere<lb/>
on campus; 2:15 p.m. - A<lb/>
female student in Cotten<lb/>
Hall reported receiving<lb/>
an obscene telephone<lb/>
call; 6 p.m. - A report of<lb/>
the larceny of a bank card<lb/>
from Fleming Hall; 10:30<lb/>
p.m. - A female student<lb/>
in White Hall reported<lb/>
receiving obscene<lb/>
telephone calls; 10:40<lb/>
p.m. - A report of van-<lb/>
dalism to the southwest<lb/>
curfew door in Jones<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Feb. 24, 1.15 a.m. - A<lb/>
report the east door in<lb/>
Jones Hall was malfunc-<lb/>
tioning; 1:25 a.m. - The<lb/>
vending machine in<lb/>
Aycock Hall's lobby was<lb/>
vandalized; 1:40 a.n. -<lb/>
Wanda Sue Flanagan of<lb/>
Rt. 13, Greenville was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI; 3:30<lb/>
a.m. - The mechanical<lb/>
room door in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum was reported<lb/>
unsecured; 9 a.m A<lb/>
report by two female<lb/>
students of an<lb/>
unauthorized moving of<lb/>
their bicycles; 11:10 a.m.<lb/>
- A report of the larceny<lb/>
of a certificate from the<lb/>
lobby of Green Hall; 6:53<lb/>
p.m. - A report of a<lb/>
suspicious white male in<lb/>
the canteen of Belk Hall;<lb/>
7:20 p.m. - William E.<lb/>
Hopkins of 208-B Belk<lb/>
Hall was written up for<lb/>
creating a fire hazard;<lb/>
10:55 p.m. - A report of<lb/>
the receiver, cord, and<lb/>
face plate of the Belk<lb/>
Hall house phone stolen.<lb/>
Feb. 25, 12:01 a.m. - A<lb/>
report that a vehicle was<lb/>
vandalized west of Belk<lb/>
Hall; 1:30 a.m. - A win-<lb/>
dow of 210-A Belk Hall<lb/>
was broken out; 8:48<lb/>
a.m. - A window by the<lb/>
southwest curfew door of<lb/>
Jarvis Hall was found<lb/>
broken; 8:50 a.m. - A<lb/>
report of a broken win-<lb/>
dow on the Jarvis Hall; 4<lb/>
p.m. - A report of the<lb/>
larceny of a bicycle east<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center; 4:50 p.m. - A<lb/>
report of a breaking and<lb/>
entering of a locker and<lb/>
larceny of art supplies in<lb/>
Jenkins Fine Arts Center.<lb/>
Feb. 26, 1:20 a.m. - A<lb/>
room in Scott Hall was<lb/>
broken into and contents<lb/>
vandalized; 1:44 a.m. -<lb/>
Ronal Leigh Lindquist<lb/>
and Benjamin Eugene<lb/>
Buie of 338 Slay Hall<lb/>
were found in possession<lb/>
of drug paraphenalia;<lb/>
1:50 a.m. - Gregg Alan<lb/>
Gainer of Camp Lejeune,<lb/>
N.C. was arrested for<lb/>
DWI; 3 p.m. - A report<lb/>
of the larceny of a stereo<lb/>
from the basement of<lb/>
Jones Hall; A report of<lb/>
vandalism to the lobby<lb/>
phone of Scott Hall.<lb/>
Maritime History Project To Be Offered<lb/>
By STUART MORGAN<lb/>
Staff Wittar<lb/>
Students can earn five<lb/>
to six semester hours'<lb/>
credit through participa-<lb/>
tion in a unique project<lb/>
this summer. ECU and<lb/>
the Confederate Naval<lb/>
Museum of Columbus,<lb/>
Ga will co-sponsor a<lb/>
field school in maritime<lb/>
history and underwater<lb/>
research from June 4 to<lb/>
July 13 in Columbus.<lb/>
Students of all majors<lb/>
are encouraged to attend,<lb/>
and all participants will<lb/>
receive a basic introduc-<lb/>
tion to American<lb/>
Maritime history, under-<lb/>
water archaeology and<lb/>
related subject material.<lb/>
To assist in the inter-<lb/>
pretation of material<lb/>
located during the pro-<lb/>
ject, two weeks of<lb/>
classroom instruction at<lb/>
ECU will provide<lb/>
background information<lb/>
on America's trade pat-<lb/>
terns, transportation,<lb/>
shipbuilding, industry<lb/>
and agriculture.<lb/>
Participants interested<lb/>
in diving activities must<lb/>
be certified in SCUBA by<lb/>
a nationally recognized<lb/>
instructional organiza-<lb/>
tion. However, a limited<lb/>
number of students in-<lb/>
terested only in maritime<lb/>
history research and non-<lb/>
diving activities can par-<lb/>
ticipate by supporting the<lb/>
project at the site's loca-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"Columbus was an im-<lb/>
portant manufacturing<lb/>
center during the Civil<lb/>
War said Dr. William<lb/>
N. Still, professor in<lb/>
maritime history at ECU.<lb/>
"Heavy guns, machinery<lb/>
parts, boilers, etc were<lb/>
manufactured there ft. r<lb/>
Confederate warships<lb/>
Columbus, as the site<lb/>
of a Confederate<lb/>
shipyard, was also an im-<lb/>
portant center for<lb/>
railroad and water<lb/>
transportation<lb/>
throughout the ninteenth<lb/>
and early twentieth cen-<lb/>
turies. In fact, as Dr. Still<lb/>
further explained, Col-<lb/>
umbus was the head of<lb/>
navigation for the<lb/>
Chatahoochee River;<lb/>
Because vessels could not<lb/>
travel any further<lb/>
upriver, many docked at<lb/>
Columbus to load and<lb/>
unload passengers and<lb/>
cargoes.<lb/>
After two weeks of<lb/>
classroom instruction at<lb/>
ECU, participants will<lb/>
move to the project site in<lb/>
Columbus. For the next<lb/>
four weeks, they will<lb/>
survey and investigate<lb/>
cultural resource material<lb/>
preserved beneath the<lb/>
Chattahoochee River, in-<lb/>
cluding the remains of the<lb/>
Civil War vessel Chat-<lb/>
tahoochee and a Con-<lb/>
federate navy yard.<lb/>
Survey activities will<lb/>
utilize state-of-the-art<lb/>
remote sensing electronic<lb/>
equipment to locate<lb/>
historical structures,<lb/>
features and vessel re-<lb/>
mains submerged and<lb/>
buried beneath the Chat-<lb/>
tahoochee River.<lb/>
Material identified during<lb/>
the survey will be in-<lb/>
vestigated to provide data<lb/>
relating to age, origin and<lb/>
cultural significance.<lb/>
For North Carolina<lb/>
residents, cost of the six-<lb/>
week course will be about<lb/>
$250 for five hours' credit<lb/>
and at least $296 for six<lb/>
hours' credit. For non-<lb/>
residents, cost will be<lb/>
about $540 for five<lb/>
hours' credit and at least<lb/>
$610 for six hours'<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
Costs will include tui-<lb/>
tion, laboratory fee, and<lb/>
room and board at the<lb/>
project site and room for<lb/>
two weeks, without<lb/>
board, on the main cam-<lb/>
pus of ECU. Total cost<lb/>
will be $45 less for<lb/>
students not wanting<lb/>
university housing during<lb/>
the first two weeks at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
For more information,<lb/>
contact the offices of the<lb/>
Program in Maritime<lb/>
History and Underwater<lb/>
Research.<lb/>
Buy, Sell<lb/>
Ana Trade<lb/>
With The<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Use The<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
llllllllllllllllllllll!llllllllll,?illlllltlllflllllllHIIiiii<lb/>
OPTICAL<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
Soft Contact Lenses<lb/>
$59 a pair<lb/>
All frames in stock 30?off<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Expires Feb. 29th<lb/>
18321-51 S&amp;fflASrSii I<lb/>
Wan Vtirtft-<lb/>
I or imi On<lb/>
 OPTICAL<lb/>
PALACE A, <lb/>
 703 Gr??vil!? Btvd (Acre From Plo PU? N?t To ERA R?y <lb/>
 GiiyM Hurit Ucm?t Optician Op?n 9 30 ? m io 6 p m Mon F ?<lb/>
iiiiiiMiiiiiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiniiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiF<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
WZMB Ladies<lb/>
Light Night<lb/>
65CHappy Hour<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
Adm. with<lb/>
PKM or Attic<lb/>
T-shirt.<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
MARCH 1<lb/>
FRI.<lb/>
MARCH 2<lb/>
I<lb/>
OFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
AUDITIONS<lb/>
MARCH 1<lb/>
HENDRIX THEATRE<lb/>
ALL ACTS<lb/>
INVITED<lb/>
TO AUDITION CALL 757-6611<lb/>
selected acts will be<lb/>
paid to perform<lb/>
public welcome<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
for iust M.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
$2.25 for a Pitcher of Beer<lb/>
fACO<lb/>
CfQ<lb/>
Feista Time<lb/>
Everydav<lb/>
5:00 until<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT AT<lb/>
THE KING AND QUEEN NORTH f<lb/>
WED. Feb. 29<lb/>
Poor Souls<lb/>
Harden<lb/>
All College Students 12 Price before 7:30<lb/>
All Dining costumer admitted free.<lb/>
Coming Mar. 7 North Tower<lb/>
Happy Hour f-8<lb/>
W.lc For Special Saturday Night<lb/>
TOP THIS!<lb/>
Then top it again!<lb/>
Introducing Hardee's New Baked Potato Bar<lb/>
Hardee's baked potatoes are sauce . Sour Cream ? Cheese<lb/>
better two ways: They're bigger And if you finish the toppings<lb/>
than most fast-food potatoes, and before you finish your potato.<lb/>
you can stuff em yourself, any<lb/>
way you want, with all the top-<lb/>
pings vou want. Figure out your<lb/>
favorite combination from such<lb/>
Potato Bar items as.<lb/>
Bacon bits ? Broccoli cuts ? Cheese<lb/>
bring it back and top it again at<lb/>
no extra charge.<lb/>
Also available at drive-thru<lb/>
with Broccoli &amp; Cheese Sauce or<lb/>
Bacon Bits &amp; Cheese Sauce onlv.<lb/>
v?<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
?iiwii? " i? mm-f'tmitHm1! ? ?'? ??i?rtn mi m m ? ?-?? .m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0006"/><lb/>
6<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
Campuses Succumb To Major Flu Epidemic<lb/>
(CPS) ? Lookinng<lb/>
over her list of students<lb/>
waiting for care at Emory<lb/>
University's Student<lb/>
Health Service on Valen-<lb/>
tine's Day, Nurse Joyce<lb/>
Carlone noted that, for<lb/>
the umpteenth day in a<lb/>
row, seven of the 10<lb/>
students were complain-<lb/>
ing of flu symptons.<lb/>
"One week after winter<lb/>
break, the students were<lb/>
breaking down our<lb/>
doors Carlone<lb/>
remembers.<lb/>
They've been besieging<lb/>
campus healtii centers<lb/>
over most of the country,<lb/>
too, especially in the<lb/>
South and Southeast, as a<lb/>
flu epidemic spreads<lb/>
without much control.<lb/>
Administrators are jug-<lb/>
gling appointment books<lb/>
and infirmary beds to ac-<lb/>
commodate the rush of<lb/>
flu victims. At the<lb/>
University of Vermont,<lb/>
for example, appoint-<lb/>
ments are not to be had.<lb/>
At Southwest Missouri,<lb/>
at least one junior gave<lb/>
up on the health center<lb/>
and went home to suffer.<lb/>
At other campuses,<lb/>
teacher illnesses have<lb/>
threatened to force<lb/>
cancellation of some<lb/>
classes.<lb/>
Most of the suffering<lb/>
results from Russian<lb/>
Type A influenza,<lb/>
although there is also<lb/>
Type B circulating<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Both accompany high<lb/>
fevers, body aches,<lb/>
coughs and sometime<lb/>
sneezing and sore throats,<lb/>
says Jeff Taylor of Texas'<lb/>
State Health Department.<lb/>
About 175 students ?<lb/>
twice the normal number<lb/>
? have been visiting the<lb/>
University of Texas-<lb/>
Austin's health center,<lb/>
forcing doctors to treat<lb/>
students in triage screen-<lb/>
plane to California and<lb/>
suddenly it was spreading<lb/>
nationwide<lb/>
At Southwest<lb/>
Missouri, however,<lb/>
physicians blame Texans<lb/>
for the 200 flu cases they<lb/>
New Phone Bills Cause Confusion<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
anuiner vendor, such as MCI or<lb/>
Sprint, he said.<lb/>
"With two companies pro-<lb/>
viding the services, you have to<lb/>
have two long distance sheets and<lb/>
two portions of the bill he said,<lb/>
explaining the thicker bill.<lb/>
Another sheet takes care of the<lb/>
equipment costs. Miller said the<lb/>
customers<lb/>
All of those separate sheets are<lb/>
confusing, he said.<lb/>
"Other than that, we haven't<lb/>
had people calling to say it's any<lb/>
better or worse since the change<lb/>
Miller said, "by and large, most<lb/>
people haven't had a problem. We<lb/>
don't see any evidence of it<lb/>
The president of a small in-<lb/>
telephone sets transferred at mid- dependent telephone company in<lb/>
night on New Year's Eve to Nashville said he believes the<lb/>
AT&amp;T, so "now customers are<lb/>
leasing them from AT&amp;T which<lb/>
contracted with South Central<lb/>
Bell to continue to bill<lb/>
public will react.<lb/>
"We're waiting until those<lb/>
customers get the second phone<lb/>
bill of the year said James Ber-<lb/>
Reproductive Health Care<lb/>
TrlEfUfniNCj<lb/>
CCvtERs,<lb/>
L<lb/>
Understa :  . ? ? ? . ??<lb/>
I? abort loc ? ? I , .<lb/>
?we bothpartm ? .? ,<lb/>
Special Services and rates lor students<lb/>
Call 781 5550 days, evenings, and weekends<lb/>
ryman, Southern Communica<lb/>
tions president.<lb/>
His telephone equipment com-<lb/>
pany started in 1978 to sell and<lb/>
service small business telephone<lb/>
systems.<lb/>
"The whole market is up in the<lb/>
air and people are going into a<lb/>
panic said John Perdue, Jr<lb/>
management consultant for a<lb/>
small company.<lb/>
Berryman said phone calls to<lb/>
inquire about his telephone equip-<lb/>
ment have more than doubled<lb/>
since Jan. 1 and he expects the<lb/>
trend to continue.<lb/>
2 Pleas CMckin<lb/>
ing rooms, reports Dr.<lb/>
Jack Crosby.<lb/>
"There was some talk<lb/>
of altering class<lb/>
schedules" because so<lb/>
many students were sick,<lb/>
he adds, but absentee<lb/>
levels are decreasing now treated during the first<lb/>
"after four pretty severe weeks of the semester,<lb/>
weeks "Young people are<lb/>
Texas A'M, Baylor, harder hit because most<lb/>
Southern Methodist and of them were not exposed<lb/>
Southwest Texas State to it when they were<lb/>
students are equally hard growing up, so they're<lb/>
hit, Taylor says. more vulnerable. People<lb/>
But closing schools, he over 30 were more likely<lb/>
says, "isn't an effective to be exposed to it in their<lb/>
control of an epidemic. It youth, so they're less<lb/>
doesn't stop the spread of vulnerable now<lb/>
the virus. But it is Kappus says this par-<lb/>
necessary when there is ticular form of Type A<lb/>
no one left to teach the first hit the United States<lb/>
class<lb/>
"There's not a heck of<lb/>
a lot anybody can do to<lb/>
prevent it counsels Karl<lb/>
Kappus of the Center for<lb/>
Disease Control in Atlan-<lb/>
ta.<lb/>
"It spreads too quickly<lb/>
? within 24 hours ? to<lb/>
know where it starts<lb/>
Taylor says. "It could<lb/>
have been introduced on<lb/>
the East Coast, then so-<lb/>
meone there got on a<lb/>
in 1977. It hadn't been<lb/>
detected in America since<lb/>
1920.<lb/>
"We don't know where<lb/>
it's hung out since then<lb/>
he adds.<lb/>
Not in Ohio, according<lb/>
to Dr. Robin Cottle of<lb/>
the University of Miami<lb/>
in Oxford. The Ohio<lb/>
Public Health Depart-<lb/>
ment told him the flu<lb/>
epidemic wouldn't be hit-<lb/>
ting Ohio too hard this<lb/>
year, "i agree, but I may<lb/>
eat my words in a few<lb/>
weeks<lb/>
"There've been so<lb/>
many cases in the last two<lb/>
weeks says Ruth Set-<lb/>
terlund of the Student<lb/>
Health Service at the<lb/>
University of Minnesota<lb/>
in Duluth. "We don't ex-<lb/>
pect it to level off this<lb/>
week, either, because it's<lb/>
the week before finals,<lb/>
and people are always<lb/>
more susceptible to illness<lb/>
then<lb/>
At Pepperdine Univer-<lb/>
sity in California, Jane<lb/>
Hirt says "it's been hit-<lb/>
ting us for two weeks and<lb/>
it's not leveling off she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
But one shouldn't be<lb/>
quick to term the out-<lb/>
break "an epidemic<lb/>
warns Dr. Robert Murras<lb/>
of the California Public<lb/>
Health Department.<lb/>
"Type A has hit man.<lb/>
college-aged and younger<lb/>
adults he says. "But in<lb/>
many places that's nor-<lb/>
mal for the season. Flu<lb/>
breaks out every year<lb/>
At Boise State, in an.<lb/>
case, "We've been ter-<lb/>
ribly busy for the past<lb/>
week and a half one<lb/>
nurse says, "which is wh<lb/>
the doctor can't talk to<lb/>
you<lb/>
Z2S<lb/>
M???1?M??,?,1W .???,?<lb/>
Buttermilk Biscuit<lb/>
We Do Chicken<lb/>
Bight.<lb/>
Cm CMdw Md i Buttermilk Biscuit for only $l 19<lb/>
with thi. coupon. Coupon good only for combination white<lb/>
dart order, and m.y not be used with .ay other special of-<lb/>
?1? .TnrT Pr1COUP?n Cb9,?? WU ?PPllcble<lb/>
only at store locations listed in tab ad.)<lb/>
Kentucky Fried Chicken<lb/>
600 W. Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
and<lb/>
2905 East 5th Street<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS<lb/>
Start Your Summer Right<lb/>
Take a BA HAMARAMA CRUISE on<lb/>
the Sunward II.<lb/>
Leaves on May 7, 1 984<lb/>
Relax on this 4 night cruise visiting<lb/>
Nassau and Freeport.<lb/>
Just $403 per person, not in-<lb/>
cluding air travel Accomodations for<lb/>
3 people per room<lb/>
Call Quixote Travel before Springbreal<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.<lb/>
319 Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 2aJ4<lb/>
yQ Phone 757-0234.<lb/>
T<lb/>
Student Organizations Receive<lb/>
A 50 Percent Discount<lb/>
When They Advertise With<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
?Js ?? ??.?? ?M<lb/>
IMPORTED  ;<lb/>
?cP<lb/>
s<lb/>
V<lb/>
OF<lb/>
CAR V x<lb/>
PARTS INC.<lb/>
XN cO 05 Greenville Blvd. GREENVILLE, N.C. u<lb/>
r&amp;<lb/>
y<lb/>
mw<lb/>
J<lb/>
7<lb/>
V<lb/>
'<lb/>
We carry a complete Ine of parts &amp; accessories.<lb/>
NEW LOCATION<lb/>
SIXTH<lb/>
ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
30 to 60 OFF ALL<lb/>
Eyeglass Frames<lb/>
WITH PURCHASE Of UNSE5 (EXCLUDING LOGO METAl FRAMES<lb/>
REC SPEC 3995<lb/>
ATHLETIC GOGGLES With MOST S  ?<lb/>
OU O off BAUSCH &amp; LOMB<lb/>
RAY-BAN SUNGLASSES<lb/>
LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN<lb/>
?5<lb/>
'ciEm<lb/>
-rv, !  XTf<lb/>
Shop w.tn you? Ey. Glass Pi?Ciunion Arvj $?<lb/>
? h Far Am l? Immmammm ?Uh 0? Oacta<lb/>
V<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
756-7114 S<lb/>
UNIVERSAL KOKO MATS 8<lb/>
S KONrS BMW 2002 SHOCKS X<lb/>
jj AUDI 5000 &amp; 4000 WIND DEFLECTORS 8<lb/>
8 Quality Parts at a Reasonable Price <lb/>
ECU MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
We Are Now Accepting Applications<lb/>
For Media Heads (East Carolinian,<lb/>
Photo Lab, Rebel, Buccaneer, Ebony<lb/>
Herald, and WZMB Radio Station)<lb/>
Apply AAon Feb. 27-Thurs Mar.<lb/>
15,1984 At The Media Board<lb/>
Office In The Publications Building.<lb/>
GET INVOLVED<lb/>
For Further Information Call 757-6009 or Come<lb/>
By The Media Board Office In The Publications<lb/>
Building Behind Joyner Library.<lb/>
Is Your Car Ready For That Trip To<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED The Beach?<lb/>
Retread Tires<lb/>
17.00 It Up<lb/>
ERVlCjf<lb/>
Complete 5 Point<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
. Check<lb/>
Ccou0<lb/>
CUR SHAKES?<lb/>
"$14.88<lb/>
For<lb/>
Alignment.<lb/>
C ?? ?? 5<lb/>
COOOH?<lb/>
4.Cyltnder<lb/>
V?9 95 I AU -size<lb/>
6and?cylindeT tires<lb/>
aighily higher j available.<lb/>
OFFICIAL NCRIH CAROLINA S1AIIINSPICIIQN STAKN<lb/>
Wf SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
BFGoodrich<lb/>
&amp;TIRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
? :00 A.M. 1:00 P.M.<lb/>
OPENMON. FRI<lb/>
(:00A.MS: 10 P.M.<lb/>
' 'Consider us your cars'<lb/>
? Home Away From Home'?'<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville Blvd<lb/>
25?40 J REDUCTIONS<lb/>
Wednesday, February 29th thru<lb/>
Friday, March 2nd<lb/>
Fling<lb/>
Selected group of:<lb/>
Jerseys<lb/>
T-shirts<lb/>
Jackets<lb/>
Sweaters<lb/>
Children's Outfits<lb/>
and more!<lb/>
Before<lb/>
Spring<lb/>
Break<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
We accept<lb/>
mastercard &amp;<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
Owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
THFEASTt AEOI NJ<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
BestF<lb/>
In To<lb/>
I A-ish I had a dime for even<lb/>
up to me and sajd. <lb/>
and distinction I g<lb/>
contact with bea <lb/>
some mug tppreciate :he<lb/>
literature good mi,<lb/>
I'm sick of hearing i<lb/>
about the restaurant:<lb/>
whiners think they're<lb/>
think they're .<lb/>
this town<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
LoSalU<lb/>
Face it: Nobod) is ft<lb/>
LaSaile. And I car. tdl<lb/>
Greenville has a I<lb/>
because 1 eat dinner out c<lb/>
kind of guy I am.<lb/>
 If there are two things 1 ki<lb/>
find something good to e<lb/>
let the cat out of the bag<lb/>
LaSalle's Best lr.<lb/>
The Best Deal In Town<lb/>
Restaurani, you .<lb/>
For S3.85 youg<lb/>
a hockey puck, a I<lb/>
refills on soda and tea.<lb/>
salad bar as j<lb/>
The salad bar has the<lb/>
these little biscuits. I<lb/>
dozen of them and<lb/>
clip. Included in<lb/>
dessert bar which ha<lb/>
different pudd<lb/>
Western Che c<lb/>
Boulevard in the b<lb/>
Bonanza. If you <lb/>
your place.<lb/>
Best Breakfast Deal in 1 - <lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
and sausage fc s W<lb/>
in town. The price<lb/>
Mendenhall's, but here<lb/>
If you're low or. Xmkk.<lb/>
this for dinner<lb/>
24 hours and runs<lb/>
Best Steak House i <lb/>
throw a rock, vou<lb/>
E.C.<lb/>
By DARim BROUN<lb/>
Muafutf V4ltor<lb/>
The East Carolina Dan<lb/>
Theatre literally put its b<lb/>
forward last weekend in its<lb/>
I<lb/>
:<lb/>
The RakigB-based roci<lb/>
evening at Greenville's Al<lb/>
record the event.<lb/>
According to Steve Boy<lb/>
he marketed with an uf<lb/>
wH consist of the live perf j<lb/>
video will be submitted<lb/>
mmemi will he used in ti<lb/>
Boyle has a hacfcgroui<lb/>
-<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0007"/><lb/>
emic<lb/>
l says.<lb/>
But one shouldn't be<lb/>
quick to term the out-<lb/>
lo break "an epidemic<lb/>
Id warns Dr. Robert Murray<lb/>
of the California Public<lb/>
Health Department.<lb/>
"Type A has hit many-<lb/>
la college-aged and younger<lb/>
adults he says. "But in<lb/>
many places that's nor-<lb/>
mal for the season. Flu<lb/>
breaks out every year<lb/>
At Boise State, in any<lb/>
case, "We've been ter-<lb/>
ribly busy for the past<lb/>
week and a half one<lb/>
nurse says, "which is whv<lb/>
c the doctor can't talk to<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28.14<lb/>
Pate<lb/>
<lb/>
TRAVELS<lb/>
bt on<lb/>
se v siting<lb/>
jbreak.<lb/>
INC.<lb/>
2 :J4<lb/>
7-0234<lb/>
Mick Rates<lb/>
Best Food<lb/>
In Town<lb/>
I wish I had a dime for every time someone came<lb/>
up to me and said, "Mick, you're a man of taste<lb/>
and distinction I guess it's obvious. Constant<lb/>
contact with beautiful women would make even<lb/>
some mug appreciate the finer things in life:<lb/>
literature good music food.<lb/>
I'm sick of hearing numbskulls piss and moan<lb/>
about the restaurants in Greenville. Maybe these<lb/>
whiners think they're impressing me. Maybe they<lb/>
think they're city slickers who can look down on<lb/>
this town.<lb/>
<lb/>
?&amp;<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
? -hP-<lb/>
?  ?. '????.<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
Carolinian,<lb/>
aneer, Ebony<lb/>
io Station;<lb/>
ThursMar.<lb/>
Board<lb/>
3ns Building.<lb/>
Dff?<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
757 6009 or Come<lb/>
The Publications<lb/>
ry.<lb/>
Face it: Nobody is from a bigger city than Mick<lb/>
LaSalle. And I can tell you for a town this size,<lb/>
Greenville has a lot of nice places to eat at. I know<lb/>
because I eat dinner out every night. That's just the<lb/>
kind of guy I am.<lb/>
If there are two things I know, one is where to<lb/>
find something good to eat. That's why it's time I<lb/>
let the cat out of the bag and released Mick<lb/>
LaSalle's Best In Food in Greenville.<lb/>
The Best Deal In Town. At Western Choice Family<lb/>
Restaurant, you can stuff yourself into a coma.<lb/>
For $3.85 you get a flame-broiled burger the size of<lb/>
a hockey puck, a full-plate of fries, unlimited<lb/>
refills on soda and tea, and as many trips to the<lb/>
salad bar as you can stand.<lb/>
The salad bar has the usual items. But it also has<lb/>
these little biscuits. I usually smear butter over a<lb/>
dozen of them and pop them in my mouth two at a<lb/>
clip. Included in the price of the salad bar is the<lb/>
dessert bar which has jellos, chocolate mousse and<lb/>
different puddings.<lb/>
Western Choice is located on Greenville<lb/>
Boulevard in the building that used to house<lb/>
Bonanza. If you want to eat yourself sick, this is<lb/>
your place.<lb/>
Best Breakfast Deal in Town. The Crow's Nest's<lb/>
Student Special breakfast - 3 pancakes, 2 eggs,<lb/>
and sausage for $1.89 ? is the best breakfast deal<lb/>
in town. The price is about the same as<lb/>
Mendenhall's, but here's food you can swallow.<lb/>
If you're low on fundsryou might want to have<lb/>
this for dinner one night. The Crow's Nest is open<lb/>
24 hours and runs the SDecial around the clock.<lb/>
Best Steak House. If you go anywhere in town and<lb/>
throw a rock, you'll probably hit a steak house.<lb/>
. dprA<lb/>
But Western Sizzlin' Steak House on 10th Street is<lb/>
the best restaurant of its kind in Greenville. The at-<lb/>
mosphere is cozy, and the service is excellent. But<lb/>
most importantly, everything just seems to taste<lb/>
better there.<lb/>
Pitchers of tea are let on each table, so you<lb/>
don't have to treat your glass like it's a canteen.<lb/>
Barbara, who waited on me last time I was there, is<lb/>
the perfect waitress ? friendly, but not all over<lb/>
me, and fast.<lb/>
Depending on what you order, the Sizz will cost<lb/>
you about five skins.<lb/>
Best Date (Under $25.00). If Villa Roma were more<lb/>
expensive, it would still be a good restaurant. It has<lb/>
the best Italian food in town. Not only that, it has<lb/>
good Italian food ? and that means something.<lb/>
I sometimes eat at Villa Roma with friends. If<lb/>
you order a drink and dinner, you can walk out<lb/>
spending about five clams. (With the tip, Figure<lb/>
six.) All the drinks come with unlimited refills, and<lb/>
the waitresses keep bringing baskets of garlic<lb/>
bread until you stagger out of the place.<lb/>
ptioto by GORDON I POCK<lb/>
Considering the quality of Villa Roma as a place<lb/>
to bring a date, it's amazing it's so cheap. If you<lb/>
both get dinner and a carafe of the house wine, you<lb/>
can walk out drunk and stuffed for under 15<lb/>
smackers. If you go the distance and order ap-<lb/>
petizers and salad, you'll still escape for less than<lb/>
25. And that's not bad.<lb/>
I take a girl to Villa Roma when I'm not sure<lb/>
how I feel about her, or on a week-night, or when<lb/>
I'm broke. But face it: Most of you guys are broke<lb/>
all the time.<lb/>
If you're not rolling in dough, yet you want to<lb/>
show a girl that you've got more class than these<lb/>
other slobs around here, take her to Villa Roma.<lb/>
The atmosphere is romantic, and Italian food is the<lb/>
best kind of food there is.<lb/>
The Best Restaurant in Greenville. If the best is as<lb/>
important to you as it is to me, you should check<lb/>
out Sweet Caroline's. Don't take a stupid girl here.<lb/>
Take a woman who is intelligent enough to ap-<lb/>
preciate a compliment without you having to spell<lb/>
it out for her.<lb/>
Sw CMnmmt'u<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's serves a variety of seafood,<lb/>
beef and poultry dishes. If you like seafood (which<lb/>
I don't), try the Trout a la Brettonne. Everybody<lb/>
seems to love it, and they give you enough fish<lb/>
there to choke a horse.<lb/>
As for myself, I usually order Beef Bordelaise,<lb/>
or, my favorite, Tenderloin a la Beef Marengo<lb/>
(which sounds like the title of an old Bogart pic-<lb/>
ture). They're both delicious.<lb/>
My favorite appetizer of all time is at Sweet<lb/>
Caroline's. Mushrooms are cooked in some kind of<lb/>
batter and are served in a cheese sauce. Sometimes<lb/>
I go back there just for that.<lb/>
Sweet Caroline's is not the most expensive<lb/>
restaurant in town. It's just the best. The wait-<lb/>
tresses aren't a bunch of kids; you get treated with<lb/>
respect, and the tables are far enough apart to<lb/>
allow for private conversation.<lb/>
In a big city, a place like Sweet Caroline's would<lb/>
cost twice what it does here. At least once while<lb/>
you're in Greenville, put on some clothes and go<lb/>
somewhere you'll be treated right.<lb/>
E. C. Dance Theatre Puts Best Feet Forward<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Maaagiat Editor<lb/>
The East Carolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre literally put its best feet<lb/>
forward last weekend in its annual<lb/>
"Evening of Dance The ECU<lb/>
dance program's annual event was<lb/>
conspicuously without any<lb/>
classical ballet, an ommission pro-<lb/>
bably better for the department<lb/>
and the performance.<lb/>
The ECU dance program, like<lb/>
most college campuses, is usually<lb/>
more effective when training<lb/>
modern and jazz dancers than<lb/>
those in ballet. Occasional profi-<lb/>
cient classical dancers are produc-<lb/>
ed at the university level, but they<lb/>
are, for the most part, few and far<lb/>
between. And with the departure<lb/>
thru<lb/>
e accept<lb/>
stercard &amp;<lb/>
VISA<lb/>
RE<lb/>
a University<lb/>
:<lb/>
It's Video Time<lb/>
 DAVB SCIAMftASI<lb/>
I<lb/>
The Raleigh-based rock band PKM will perform this Friday<lb/>
evening at Greenville's Attic Nightclub, and Videocraft, Inc. will<lb/>
record the event.<lb/>
According to Steve Boyle of Videocraft, the finished video will<lb/>
be marketed with an upcoming PKM album, about half of which<lb/>
will consist of the live performance at the Attic. Boyle also says the<lb/>
video will be submitted to MTV and Nightflight. Five separate<lb/>
cameras will be used in the production.<lb/>
Boyle has a background in rock musk and TV production. He<lb/>
majored in television in college and also played In a rock band In<lb/>
New York. He left rock to work for WRAL in Raleigh before con-<lb/>
necttng with Videocraft. Besides working within the growing<lb/>
business of musical video production, Videocraft also produces TV<lb/>
commercials and other commercial video productions.<lb/>
In the above photograph (left to right) are Kenny Soule and<lb/>
Wee Watson of PKM, Pat Regan and Steve Boyle of Videocraft,<lb/>
and Mike Gardner of PKM. Photo by Dave Sdabarasi.<lb/>
of dance faculty member Petrus<lb/>
van Muyden, the department<lb/>
would probably do just as well to<lb/>
concentrate on modern and jazz.<lb/>
That, anyway, is how the an-<lb/>
nual showcase turned out. Not a<lb/>
toe shoe or tutu all evening.<lb/>
"Evening of Dance" worked best<lb/>
when worked with its best ?<lb/>
modern and contemporary<lb/>
dancers and the excellent staging<lb/>
facilities of McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Art addresses life most effec-<lb/>
tively when it does so on its own<lb/>
terms. Those who think aloud in<lb/>
print know all too well the short-<lb/>
comings of the written word, and<lb/>
how something expressed inade-<lb/>
quately in five pages can be clear<lb/>
in two minutes of music or in a<lb/>
small drawing. That art works<lb/>
best which knows its form of ex-<lb/>
pression most thoroughly, and<lb/>
uses it most effectively.<lb/>
East Carolina Dance Theatre's<lb/>
program followed that theory<lb/>
much of the time, but when it<lb/>
broke with it at times, it showed.<lb/>
Portions of Jerome Jenkin's<lb/>
Why is case-in-point. It fell<lb/>
through the cracks at times,<lb/>
weakest when it was too literal,<lb/>
strongest when most kinetic. The<lb/>
piece was an admirable attempt to<lb/>
address the grief of families of the<lb/>
Marines killed in Lebanon and<lb/>
was effective when it offered im-<lb/>
ages reflecting emotional anguish,<lb/>
but it faltered when it became<lb/>
pantomime. A clinched fist or<lb/>
clutched heart are too obvious ex-<lb/>
pressions of grief, hollow in com-<lb/>
parison to a dancer's full-body ex-<lb/>
pression of emotion.<lb/>
Choreographer Patricia Weeks,<lb/>
however, worked in pure dance<lb/>
and stage craft, and it worked<lb/>
well. She proved again this year<lb/>
she's as avante garde as anybody<lb/>
on the Down East dance scene,<lb/>
creating the interesting multi-<lb/>
media work Knots, reminiscent of<lb/>
progressive choreographer Senta<lb/>
Driver, and a Pilobolus-<lb/>
influenced piece, Crooked Sky.<lb/>
Both works were excellent and ef-<lb/>
fective, Knots using lighting ef-<lb/>
fects as well as any stage produc-<lb/>
tion can, and Crooked Sky show-<lb/>
ing a knowledge and respect for<lb/>
living shapes and silouettes that<lb/>
the troupe Pilobolus has brought<lb/>
to the American dance scene in<lb/>
the last dozen years. Her duet for<lb/>
two women was less effective, but<lb/>
stilled retained a certain pleasing<lb/>
lyricism.<lb/>
Other faculty-produced pieces<lb/>
also made good use of McGinnis'<lb/>
excellent technical facilities, pro-<lb/>
ducing special effects that<lb/>
heightened the evening. Pat<lb/>
Downey-Kuhn's Et Lux Perpetua<lb/>
Luceat Eis used large projections<lb/>
of stained glass and medieval<lb/>
paintings to create a mystic tone<lb/>
buried deep in the Middle Ages,<lb/>
matching the religious choral<lb/>
music.<lb/>
The first act closed with a routy<lb/>
barnyard square dance Down the<lb/>
River and Up the Creek, replete<lb/>
with bluejean overalls and calico<lb/>
bloomers. The dancers generally<lb/>
showed little more technique<lb/>
than, say, the Carteret County<lb/>
Cogging Club, but little more was<lb/>
called for. At times they seemed<lb/>
less than convinced of their own<lb/>
yeeee-haaaawws, and a little un-<lb/>
sure on their feet. Throughout the<lb/>
ramble-rouser I had a resistabie<lb/>
urge to yell OOOooooklahoma<lb/>
and all through intermission I<lb/>
couldn't help humming when<lb/>
the waving wheat sure smells<lb/>
sweet<lb/>
The Moods of Jami was pro-<lb/>
bably the audience favorite, and<lb/>
deservedly so. Dancer Jami<lb/>
Wilkerson was delightful as a fan-<lb/>
ciful girl Living out a series of hap-<lb/>
py imaginings choreographed by<lb/>
Mavis Ray to the Americana<lb/>
music of Scott Joplin. Her<lb/>
sometime partner Aubrey Barnes<lb/>
was perfect in his role, but<lb/>
followers of ECU drama for the<lb/>
Last year or two know Barnes can<lb/>
hardly go wrong when he's on<lb/>
stage.<lb/>
Moods of Jami should have<lb/>
traded places with Olavi to finish<lb/>
the evening, for the dosing<lb/>
number was almost a '60s genera-<lb/>
tion jazz number with musk that<lb/>
sounded Like the score to Em-<lb/>
mamteOe. The dancing was at<lb/>
times interesting but only a little<lb/>
outshined its musk. Olavi left one<lb/>
feeling Like he should return to the<lb/>
age of the flower child, endorse<lb/>
free love and Listen to Moody<lb/>
Blues albums. And so it goes.<lb/>
inhaMMA " ' ???? ? ?? aflMfW4?Wa9atiMMaJ<lb/>
ii ? ?? ? iifi m ,a,? ,? i ?, m<lb/>
???-? ?-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1984<lb/>
r<lb/>
A<lb/>
Real Life's 'Heartland' Hypnotic<lb/>
ByPATFELTON<lb/>
M ?rtu?<lb/>
Real 1 itc <lb/>
is basically an optim<lb/>
album. Although n<lb/>
of the songs initially<lb/>
sound less than : ?<lb/>
colored, a thoughtful<lb/>
listening suggests :hat<lb/>
despite present<lb/>
ficulties. there is alv<lb/>
tomorrow to nspire<lb/>
hope. This hope centers<lb/>
around lyrics of love,<lb/>
e and happiness.<lb/>
Send Me an Angel" is<lb/>
the mosl familiar song on<lb/>
this album Full of hope<lb/>
foi Hue loe, the song is<lb/>
enhanced by its accompa-<lb/>
nying video. The smokey<lb/>
setting, in what seems<lb/>
medieval times, is an ef-<lb/>
ba. kground for<lb/>
the white stallion, fair<lb/>
maiden and local beast.<lb/>
This romantic vision<lb/>
typifies the tone of the<lb/>
album.<lb/>
On Heartland, some<lb/>
underlying war themes<lb/>
and strife for peace are<lb/>
noticeable in the title cut<lb/>
and in "Exploding<lb/>
Bullets In "Bullets"<lb/>
the protagonist is in-<lb/>
nocently waiting for his<lb/>
First taste of war. In the<lb/>
slow-tempo title cut<lb/>
"Heartland an allusion<lb/>
is made by the artist to his<lb/>
longing to be back in his<lb/>
home land, but not being<lb/>
able to return because of<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Even more, evident<lb/>
than the peace plea on<lb/>
Heartland is the recurring<lb/>
theme of love; from lost<lb/>
love, to new love, to<lb/>
everlasting love, Real<lb/>
Life's wailing words are<lb/>
Filled with emotion and<lb/>
backed by soothing, en-<lb/>
chanting music.<lb/>
The two songs on the<lb/>
Author Harold Robbins Says,<lb/>
Except For Money, The Rich<lb/>
Are No Different Than You<lb/>
album that probably have<lb/>
the most potential for the<lb/>
Top 40 are "Always"<lb/>
and "Catch Me, I'm Fall-<lb/>
ing "Always" is one of<lb/>
my favorites. Although<lb/>
the tune reminds me<lb/>
somewhat of Bowie's<lb/>
"Modern Love it<lb/>
definitely earns its own<lb/>
merit, and its lyrics are<lb/>
catchy:<lb/>
We keep it to ourselves<lb/>
about our love affair.<lb/>
If no one ever knows<lb/>
about it, we don't care.<lb/>
We know our love is<lb/>
forever,<lb/>
Always never ending,<lb/>
always never pretending.<lb/>
"Catch Me I'm Fall-<lb/>
ing" comes across as a lit-<lb/>
tle giddy, but it is melodic<lb/>
and dreamy and may<lb/>
become popular. The ma-<lb/>
jority of the songs on the<lb/>
album are better for<lb/>
listening to than dancing<lb/>
to; however, some songs,<lb/>
such as "Always are<lb/>
danceable and could be<lb/>
made more danceable<lb/>
with a remix.<lb/>
A couple of other good<lb/>
cuts on Heartland are<lb/>
"Openhearted" and<lb/>
"Burning Blue The<lb/>
former is infectious,<lb/>
mysterious and has plenty<lb/>
of rhythm. The latter,<lb/>
which deals with undying<lb/>
love, has a rich, deep<lb/>
sound and heavy bass<lb/>
throughout.<lb/>
If it seems I don't have<lb/>
many bad things to say<lb/>
about Heartland, it's<lb/>
because I just can't Find<lb/>
any. Overall, this is a<lb/>
hypnotic, percolating<lb/>
album.<lb/>
Heartland<lb/>
?ss,SsSssSSSSSSSSff.<lb/>
By VFJR iO<lb/>
l PI Hxlri ?, ir,<lb/>
HOI LYWOOD (I n<lb/>
? Authoi Harold B<lb/>
bins' 18 noelb ha sold<lb/>
300 million co ies on the<lb/>
premise that e sells<lb/>
books and sex plus w ealth<lb/>
sells more books.<lb/>
Ergo, Robins els<lb/>
are peopled h<lb/>
and oversexed.<lb/>
His best kn<lb/>
are The C at<lb/>
The Betsy, The L a<lb/>
lad and Wi<lb/>
Another (<lb/>
The formula<lb/>
him one ol histoiv? I<lb/>
selling a  I<lb/>
almost dN Filthy is hi;<lb/>
protagonists, fi<lb/>
owns opnii.<lb/>
Beverly Hills. Acapulco<lb/>
and the south of Frai<lb/>
The latter<lb/>
establishments I<lb/>
urious yachts<lb/>
k I f R o b b i ?.<lb/>
about movie moguls like<lb/>
Howard Hughes<lb/>
Middle East oil t <lb/>
like Adnan K, hoj .<lb/>
with more creduiri<lb/>
other authors, it<lb/>
because he can afford to<lb/>
rub elbows with them in<lb/>
real life.<lb/>
Lnlike tl<lb/>
downtrodden h imai<lb/>
Robbins doe n<lb/>
the rich in av. e<lb/>
"The rich are<lb/>
essentially different i.<lb/>
other people K, I<lb/>
observed the other dd<lb/>
"They have theii in-<lb/>
securities, but then <lb/>
blems are different, that's<lb/>
all. They are ina<lb/>
about their manhood,<lb/>
growing old and<lb/>
families. The oni pro-<lb/>
blem the big rich don't<lb/>
have is monetir. Money<lb/>
clones itself once you get<lb/>
enough. It multiplies in<lb/>
its own right.<lb/>
"The extrav-rdi.io<lb/>
rich have one great fear,<lb/>
changes in government,<lb/>
whether revolutionary or<lb/>
peaceful, like the recent<lb/>
socialist government in<lb/>
France. Their fortunes<lb/>
can be wiped out. That's<lb/>
why so many flee to the<lb/>
United States to invest in<lb/>
the only safe bastion of<lb/>
capitalism.<lb/>
"The best thing about<lb/>
very great wealth is not<lb/>
having to answer to<lb/>
anyone<lb/>
Robbins acknowledges<lb/>
that becoming a<lb/>
multimillionaire jet settei<lb/>
himself makes it easier to<lb/>
write on the scale that he<lb/>
does. He laughs at the no-<lb/>
tion that he approximates<lb/>
the fortunes of his friends<lb/>
on the Riviera and the<lb/>
Mexican gold coast.<lb/>
"My yacht is only<lb/>
90-feet long with a year-<lb/>
round crew of four he<lb/>
said. "Koshoggi's yacht<lb/>
is 400 feet with a crew of<lb/>
60. I live in their world,<lb/>
but I don't compete.<lb/>
They accept me because 1<lb/>
don't want anything from<lb/>
them. I've never been in-<lb/>
volved in any of their<lb/>
business deals<lb/>
Twelve of Robbbins'<lb/>
novels have been sold for<lb/>
theatrical films, TV<lb/>
movies or miniseries. He<lb/>
expects his new book,<lb/>
Descent From Xanadu,<lb/>
already a literary guild<lb/>
selection, to Find its way<lb/>
to the screen.<lb/>
This time around Rob-<lb/>
bins has zeroed in on high<lb/>
drugs. His hero<lb/>
multi-billionaire who<lb/>
all<lb/>
tovs<lb/>
a jaded<lb/>
mail could desire ?<lb/>
homes, yachts, planes,<lb/>
women What he wants is<lb/>
immortality.<lb/>
"There's a lot of ex-<lb/>
perimental work being<lb/>
done in this field behind<lb/>
(i Curtain and in<lb/>
the tinted States,<lb/>
? ? among politi-<lb/>
cian-<lb/>
"He represents a cer-<lb/>
ed of<lb/>
icated, cynical<lb/>
men who a e not into<lb/>
id who keep<lb/>
? profiles i ee them<lb/>
time in the south<lb/>
?<lb/>
"hoi a time, during the<lb/>
international oil crisis,<lb/>
Middle Easterners<lb/>
dominated the scene.<lb/>
Now that the crisis is over<lb/>
they aren't as evident.<lb/>
But, hell, they're still so<lb/>
rich they don't bother to<lb/>
count their money.<lb/>
Descent From<lb/>
Xanadu is set in Calilfor-<lb/>
nia, Florida, South<lb/>
America, Europe, Cuba<lb/>
and China and involves<lb/>
amazing insights into<lb/>
drug trade.<lb/>
"One of the things that<lb/>
urprised me most is that<lb/>
the banking center of the<lb/>
United States today is in<lb/>
Miami. Florida banks<lb/>
clear billions of dollars of<lb/>
drug money every week,<lb/>
but nobody does<lb/>
anything about it. If they<lb/>
busted the cocaine trafFic<lb/>
in Florida, it would<lb/>
seriously affect the entire<lb/>
economy<lb/>
Robbins' own<lb/>
economy is flourishing.<lb/>
Simon and Schuster, his<lb/>
publisher, is printing a<lb/>
First order of 200,000<lb/>
copies of Descent From<lb/>
Xanadu, a fact that br-<lb/>
ings a wry grin to the<lb/>
author.<lb/>
"I've never writte.<lb/>
anything less than a best<lb/>
seller he said. "I don't<lb/>
know how. But my<lb/>
publishers worried about<lb/>
the last four books, say-<lb/>
ing 'they won't sell<lb/>
anymore But they did,<lb/>
and I'm confident<lb/>
Xanadu will be a best<lb/>
seller too<lb/>
990<lb/>
Subs 99C<lb/>
14 lb. Hamburger 99C<lb/>
French Fries 650<lb/>
Onion Rings 650<lb/>
Only At The Blue Moon!<lb/>
205 E. 5th St.<lb/>
(Acrosj from Apple Records)<lb/>
HiWffTOtWiWiW<lb/>
STEAIf HOUSE<lb/>
2 Locations<lb/>
2903 E 10th St.<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Alon &amp; Tues<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
12 chopped<lb/>
sirloin &amp;<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Wod &amp; Thurs<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
3 Beef Tips<lb/>
&amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
cr?fi c 8oz sirloin<lb/>
FrLSat &amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
$4.69<lb/>
The GAMMA BETA PHI HONOR SOCIETY<lb/>
INVITES<lb/>
Ail Students With A Grade Point<lb/>
rage of Above 3.0 To Attend An<lb/>
Orientation Session on Tuesday,<lb/>
February 2 8 or Wednesday,<lb/>
February 29 at 6:30pm in<lb/>
The Mendenhall Multi-purpose Room.<lb/>
Now Featuring Fix it<lb/>
yourself potato bar<lb/>
Free with meal. I<lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
WWALJ<lb/>
105 Airport Rd<lb/>
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?4 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-Haul Renta.s<lb/>
Available<lb/>
ii?nimiiiirffinfiuiiimiiiniiniiimiiiiiin?<lb/>
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Arm Wrestling Chamnmni<lb/>
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SPRING BREAK '&amp;4<lb/>
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FT. LAUDERDALES PREMIERE<lb/>
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LIVE DJ. EMCEEING POOLSIDE CONTESTS ? FREE BEER CHOO RELAYS<lb/>
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LIMBO CONTEST AND CLIMAX THE DAY WITH  THE WETTEST<lb/>
WET T-SHIRT CONTEST FEATURED IN PLAYBOY MAGAZINE<lb/>
CASH PRIZES ? FREE T SHIRTS ? AND OTHER GIVEAWAYS<lb/>
7 pm to 8 pm COLLEGE HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
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BETWEEN 7 O CLOCK AMD ? O'CLOCK WTTN PMW COtXSM LB.<lb/>
ALL BAR DRINKS AND DRAFT BEER - S0?<lb/>
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INTERNATIONALLY ACCLAIMED DJ. SPINNING THE BEST DANCE<lb/>
MUSIC AND ALL DAY, ALL NIGHT MUSIC VIDEO.<lb/>
? f ?NO SAlF "<lb/>
MONDAY:<lb/>
Dance Contest<lb/>
Prizes and giveaways<lb/>
TUESDAY and FRIDAY<lb/>
Best Buns on the Beach" Contest<lb/>
HaraUad by Playboy Mapartna<lb/>
$175 00 Cash Prizes<lb/>
" CLm ANO SAVE "<lb/>
East Carolina University Wed Mar 7<lb/>
NIGHTLY EVENTS<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
Com and Party tW 3 AM!<lb/>
THURSDAY:<lb/>
Look tor National Concert Acts<lb/>
WEDNESDAY:<lb/>
Special Events Night<lb/>
("hack ??!? Calandar<lb/>
ONE FREE BAR DRINK OR DRAFT<lb/>
GOOD FROM 7-8 PM NIGHTLY<lb/>
SUNDAY:<lb/>
Video Music Night<lb/>
Oa?iea to ew eMl ww<lb/>
??si iNjNt mow an?i<lb/>
i ken MM.<lb/>
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SPRING BREAK 'WiJ<lb/>
The Department of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Service and Jeffrey's Beer<lb/>
and Wine Co. (Budweiser) would like to<lb/>
congratulate these strong arm winners:<lb/>
From L to R Laura Quisenberry<lb/>
135-under, Lori Greene 136-over; Carl<lb/>
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176-199, Kelly Smiley. Budweiser Col-<lb/>
lege Rep Chris Kelly 200-over, and Reg-<lb/>
gie McDonald 151-175. Jeffrey's<lb/>
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Eventually, nature gangs<lb/>
with ugly women.<lb/>
Nature forces us to sleej<lb/>
Like the kind you find<lb/>
This is tbe hell that lest<lb/>
He's lost his looks, his<lb/>
Bat if be takes this barn<lb/>
Nature forces us to sleej<lb/>
She's fat, unwashed, aci<lb/>
He's drunk and, seeing<lb/>
This is the hell that iem<lb/>
He makes his move. an<lb/>
"Yes she says, in brei<lb/>
Nature forces us to sleei<lb/>
In bed, he chances upo<lb/>
"Do you have you ki<lb/>
This is the hell that leai<lb/>
He wakes to sermonett <lb/>
And a face that's uglier<lb/>
Nature forces us to sle<lb/>
This is the hell that lea<lb/>
Auditions Set<lb/>
For 'A<lb/>
Auditions will be held for hirr<lb/>
Wednesday and Thurs- parti d<lb/>
day, Feb. 29 and March ancr<lb/>
1, from 7:30 p.m. until 10 quires<lb/>
p.m. in room 206 of the mania.<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts lone ac<lb/>
Center for Angel City, posses<lb/>
the fifth and final major and wi<lb/>
production for the 1984 dance<lb/>
season of the East Ange.<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse. cor<lb/>
Under the direction of wh?<lb/>
Cedric Winchell, the play the act<lb/>
offers roles for five men role ;<lb/>
and one woman, all who veteran<lb/>
must have some specific Yeager<lb/>
performance skills. One ture Th<lb/>
of the men in the play ac- additi<lb/>
tually has no Lines, but he tion he<lb/>
must be an accomplished the m.<lb/>
saxophone player. a.so b<lb/>
Another man is needed in "the<lb/>
a speaking role that calls young<lb/>
iaritiaJ eye examn<lb/>
aad foUow-Lu<lb/>
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?K<lb/>
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$1.<lb/>
Any foo<lb/>
with Dtfrchof <lb/>
Expires<lb/>
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IF TOO MANY PEOl<lb/>
WE'LL LOSE MO!<lb/>
IFYOI<lb/>
rf m r , ?  ?l.<lb/>
f ? -<lb/>
-? auMkaaN<lb/>
I "? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0009"/><lb/>
? I BRL ABV 2?, 1984<lb/>
8<lb/>
yartland<lb/>
t<lb/>
JSE<lb/>
2 Locations<lb/>
2903 E 10th St<lb/>
A Greenville Blvd<lb/>
?d<lb/>
Wod &amp; Thur;<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
3 Beef Tips<lb/>
&amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
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Kith meal.<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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tkuglZZ.g0n8S UP ?n andf?rCeS m f? Slee<lb/>
This Is the hell that leads men Into heaven.<lb/>
But If he takes this hand, he thinks hell win.<lb/>
Nature forces us to sleep with ugly women.<lb/>
H?lSd?nWShed; 'Cned yet "ty-aeven.<lb/>
?. i  J?.d' Seeing youtn' "ys. "I want In<lb/>
This is the hell that leads men into heaven.<lb/>
"VSL m?re'?nd this ?? hh head's swimmin<lb/>
?, she says, in breath that ages skin.<lb/>
Nature forces us to sleep with ugly women.<lb/>
In bed, he chances upon the crucial question,<lb/>
Do you have you know?" he asks with a win<lb/>
This is the beU that leads men into heaven<lb/>
He wakes to sermonette that's just beginning,<lb/>
And a face that's uglier than sin. <lb/>
Nature forces us to sleep with ugly women.<lb/>
This is the hell that leads men into heaven.<lb/>
Scott Franklin<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 2?. 1984<lb/>
N.Y. Timesman<lb/>
Reveals Life<lb/>
Inside Vatican<lb/>
Auditions Set<lb/>
For 'A ngel City <lb/>
Audition will Km 1-h.i-i r t: ? .?<lb/>
Auditions will be held<lb/>
Wednesday and Thurs-<lb/>
day, Feb. 29 and March<lb/>
1, from 7:30 p.m. until 10<lb/>
p.m. in room 206 of the<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts<lb/>
Center for Angel City,<lb/>
the fifth and final major<lb/>
production for the 1984<lb/>
season of the East<lb/>
Carolina Playhouse.<lb/>
Under the direction of<lb/>
Cedric Winchell, the play<lb/>
offers roles for five men<lb/>
and one woman, all who<lb/>
must have some specific<lb/>
performance skills. One<lb/>
of the men in the play ac-<lb/>
tually has no lines, but he<lb/>
must be an accomplished<lb/>
saxophone player.<lb/>
Another man is needed in<lb/>
a speaking role that calls<lb/>
for him to play the tim-<lb/>
pani drums, and still<lb/>
another male role re-<lb/>
quires expertise in the<lb/>
martial arts. The play's<lb/>
lone actress must also<lb/>
possess martial-arts skills<lb/>
and will be expected to<lb/>
dance in the production.<lb/>
Angel City is a satirical<lb/>
comedy by Sam Shepard,<lb/>
who is better known as<lb/>
the actor who portrays a<lb/>
role patterned after<lb/>
veteran test pilot Chuck<lb/>
Yeager in the motion pic-<lb/>
ture The Right Stuff. In<lb/>
addition to the recogni-<lb/>
tion he has recieved from<lb/>
the movie, Shepard has<lb/>
also been heralded as<lb/>
"the most influential<lb/>
young playwright in<lb/>
America by the New<lb/>
York Post.<lb/>
In Angel City,<lb/>
Shepard deals with the<lb/>
landscape of American<lb/>
mythology, the greatest<lb/>
American myth of all:<lb/>
Hollywood. A young<lb/>
stuntman is hired by a<lb/>
movie producer to save<lb/>
his $8 million picture<lb/>
from disaster.<lb/>
By STANLEY DARDEN<lb/>
O, Vatican! by Paul<lb/>
Hoffman (Congdon and<lb/>
Weed, 306 pp $18.95)<lb/>
(UPI) The Vatican: the<lb/>
very name conjures up<lb/>
diverse images in the<lb/>
minds of those who hear<lb/>
it, ranging from pious to<lb/>
malign.<lb/>
Yet, what is the<lb/>
Vatican? Paul Hoffman<lb/>
sets out to answer this<lb/>
question based on his<lb/>
wide experience gained<lb/>
through covering the<lb/>
Vatican from the Rome<lb/>
bureau of the New York<lb/>
Times.<lb/>
Hoffman is at his most<lb/>
effective when he writes<lb/>
about the labyrinthine<lb/>
ways of Vatican finances<lb/>
and the difficulties a<lb/>
journalist encounters in<lb/>
covering the Holy See,<lb/>
the oldest and, some<lb/>
would say, the most<lb/>
cumbersome of all<lb/>
bureaucracies.<lb/>
He also gets high<lb/>
marks for his analysis of<lb/>
the shadowy society of<lb/>
the ultra-conservative<lb/>
Catholics known as Opus<lb/>
Dei (Works of God). The<lb/>
Work, as it is known<lb/>
among its devotees,<lb/>
recently achieved a<lb/>
diplomatic coup when<lb/>
Pope John Paul II gave<lb/>
the society its own ar-<lb/>
chbishop.<lb/>
The book is full of<lb/>
anecdotes about the<lb/>
popes and the power<lb/>
structure of the Vatican.<lb/>
The current pope, John<lb/>
Paul II, emerges as a<lb/>
strong-willed man who<lb/>
installed his own Polish<lb/>
presence in the Vatican,<lb/>
sometimes to the dismay<lb/>
of the Roman Curia,<lb/>
which is dominated by<lb/>
Italians.<lb/>
Hoffman characterizes<lb/>
himself in the introduc-<lb/>
tion as a former altar boy<lb/>
who became an agnostic.<lb/>
His writing betrays no<lb/>
trace of an anti-Catholic<lb/>
stance, however. He is, in<lb/>
fact, very unbiased in his<lb/>
treatment of all things<lb/>
related to the church.<lb/>
The publishers Con-<lb/>
gdon &amp; Weed get low<lb/>
marks, however, for their<lb/>
choice of a subtitle for<lb/>
this book: A Slightly<lb/>
Wicked View of the Holy<lb/>
See. It promises a<lb/>
prurience that it simply<lb/>
cannot deliver. Another<lb/>
lack is the absence of any<lb/>
black and white or color<lb/>
plates that might have<lb/>
helped the reader unders-<lb/>
tand more about the<lb/>
Vatican.<lb/>
????O??OMOQQ?on<lb/>
TAmvn<lb/>
OOOOOOOOOOQ<lb/>
The performance<lb/>
dates of the production<lb/>
are April 18-21 in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre on the<lb/>
ECU campus. ECU<lb/>
students, faculty, staff<lb/>
and local residents are all<lb/>
invited to audition. For<lb/>
further information call<lb/>
757-6390 in Greenville<lb/>
Bovsch&amp;Lomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
nrv ii inJUUU.<lb/>
UXiJiLXijJLb ??<lb/>
items ana Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru sat<lb/>
March 5 1984<lb/>
ADVEmSEO ITEM POUCY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is re-<lb/>
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luciMU. imitl . yA&amp;RnXm I Vi<lb/>
??? Initial eye examination, lenses, care Idt,<lb/>
SSr "1 toUoP v?u for the mo.th<lb/>
ECUtt?k.t.I.D.required. QQ<lb/>
OPEN 24 Hrs. Everyday<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0010"/><lb/>
I HE FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 1984 Page 10<lb/>
&amp;v<lb/>
Pirate Grit Falls Short<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Assistant Sports Editor<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team played their final game of<lb/>
the regular-season Saturday night,<lb/>
losing 64-55 to the University of<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
"We did a pretty good job con-<lb/>
sidering who we were up against<lb/>
Pirate head coach Cathy Andruzzi<lb/>
said. "South Carolina is a fine<lb/>
team and has a very solid lineup<lb/>
Andruzzi said her team played<lb/>
with a lot of heart, and never gave<lb/>
up. "We were down by 23 points<lb/>
with seven minutes left, but were<lb/>
able to outscore them 20-7 down<lb/>
the strech<lb/>
After Renee Najarian drove the<lb/>
length of the court for an easy<lb/>
layup giving the Lady Gamecocks<lb/>
a 57-34 lead with 6:54 remaining,<lb/>
the Pirates called timeout and<lb/>
then went to full court pressure.<lb/>
The strategy was successful as<lb/>
ECU caused three consecutive tur-<lb/>
novers, converting all into layups<lb/>
to make it 57-40 with 4:31 left.<lb/>
After an exhange of baskets,<lb/>
the Pirates were able to trim the<lb/>
score to 63-50 when Anita Ander-<lb/>
son sunk a turn-around-jumpcr in<lb/>
the lane with 1:24 left in the game.<lb/>
After another Pirate basket and<lb/>
a free throw by Najarian,<lb/>
Delphine Mabry ended the game<lb/>
by successfully completing a three<lb/>
point-play on a drive to the<lb/>
basket.<lb/>
"Defensively we played a great<lb/>
game Andruzzi said, "but our<lb/>
weakness on offense showed<lb/>
The Pirates shot a miserable 32<lb/>
percent from the field, while not<lb/>
doing much better from the free<lb/>
throw line, connecting on only 44<lb/>
percent of their attempts.<lb/>
Starting guards Sylvia Bragg<lb/>
and Jody Rodriguez had perhaps<lb/>
their worst shooting performances<lb/>
of the year, as the two combined<lb/>
for 9 of 36 shots from the floor.<lb/>
ECU played on even terms with<lb/>
the Gamecocks for most of the<lb/>
first half, as Bragg poured in 10 of<lb/>
the Pirates' first 14 points.<lb/>
But with the score 15-14 with<lb/>
6:06 left in the first half, USC<lb/>
went on a scoring binge in which<lb/>
they knocked in 10 unanswered<lb/>
points. Amy McAlister and Na-<lb/>
jarian combined for eight of the<lb/>
Gamecocks ten points during the<lb/>
rally.<lb/>
The two teams traded baskets<lb/>
for the remainder of the half, as<lb/>
USC went into the lockerroom<lb/>
with a commanding 29-18<lb/>
halftime lead.<lb/>
The opening minutes of the se-<lb/>
cond half were a repeat of the<lb/>
opening period of play, as the<lb/>
Gamecocks quickly ballooned<lb/>
their lead to 47-24.<lb/>
USC maintained their advan-<lb/>
tage for most of the second half,<lb/>
until the Pirates staged their late-<lb/>
game rally.<lb/>
Andruzzi commended her en-<lb/>
tire team for their defensive effort<lb/>
after the game, noting that they<lb/>
held USC's leading scorer, Sharon<lb/>
Gilmore, to a 2 of 14 shooting<lb/>
performance.<lb/>
ECU was also impressive on the<lb/>
boards, outrebounding th<lb/>
Gamecocks 60-46, and caused 20<lb/>
turnovers, most of which came<lb/>
from their last-minute full-court<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
Delphine Mabry scored a game-<lb/>
high 15 points for the Pirates,<lb/>
while also contributing a team-<lb/>
high nine rebounds and four<lb/>
steals.<lb/>
The Pirates will be in action<lb/>
again this Saturday at 1:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum for the first<lb/>
round of the ECAC-South Tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
East Carolina (55)<lb/>
Bragg 6-18 0-2 12, Phillips 4-9<lb/>
0-4 8, Hedges 2-4 0-0 4. Mabry<lb/>
5-13 5-7 15, Grier 0-4 0-0 0,<lb/>
Rodriguez 3-18 2-3 8, Bethea<lb/>
0-10-0 0. Anderson 4-9 0-0 8.<lb/>
South Carolina (64)<lb/>
Southers 6-12 0-1 12,<lb/>
McAlister 5-10 0-0 10, Gilmore<lb/>
2-14 6-8 10, Lynch 2-6 0-0 4.<lb/>
Ballon 3-7 4-5 10, Williams 2-4<lb/>
1-6 5, Frost 0-2 0-1 0, Najarian<lb/>
5-6 3-6 13.<lb/>
NEIL JOHNSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Mabry A voids The Charge<lb/>
Lady Pirates in scoring Saturday night with 15 points<lb/>
Emory's H.S J.C. Recruits<lb/>
Quarterbacks<lb/>
Robbie Bartlett, 5-10 185,<lb/>
Citrus JC, Azusa, Calif.<lb/>
Lewis Wilson, 5-10 180, Foley,<lb/>
Ala.<lb/>
Todd Abrams, 6-0 185, Mobile,<lb/>
Ala.<lb/>
Dean Bumbaco, 6-2 190,<lb/>
Bergenfield, N.J.<lb/>
Running Backs<lb/>
Bobby Clair, 6-0 200, Miami,<lb/>
Okla.<lb/>
Terry Williams, 6-0 190, Kan-<lb/>
napolis, N.C.<lb/>
Gary Richardson, 6-2 190,<lb/>
Fredericksburg, Va.<lb/>
Jarrod Moody, 6-1 200,<lb/>
Nashville, N.C.<lb/>
Tim James, 6-0 220, Hartsville,<lb/>
S.C.<lb/>
Receivers<lb/>
Andre Fields, 6-0 175, Norfolk,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
William Carver, 6-2 195, Fayet-<lb/>
teville, N.C.<lb/>
Melvin Ford, 6-5 250, Wallace,<lb/>
N.C.<lb/>
Offensive Lineman<lb/>
Ken Bourgeous, 6-0 240 Gulf<lb/>
Coast, Miss.<lb/>
Tim Orr, 6-4 240, Hampton,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Mark Minshew, 6-5 250<lb/>
Wallace, N.C.<lb/>
Defensive Tackles<lb/>
David Kramer, 6-3<lb/>
Chowan JC<lb/>
Walter Brvant, 6-3 235.<lb/>
folk, Va.<lb/>
Joseph Molineaux, 6-3<lb/>
Tabb, Va.<lb/>
Defensive Ends<lb/>
Robert Washington, 5-11<lb/>
Troy, N.Y.<lb/>
Rodney Glover, 6-6<lb/>
Jacksonville, Fla.<lb/>
Willie Powell, 6-5 215.<lb/>
boro, N.C.<lb/>
Shannon Boling, 6-4<lb/>
Asheville, N.C.<lb/>
Linebackers<lb/>
260. Ojah Vasser, 6-3 225,<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Nor- Ken Taylor, 6-1 210, Hampton,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
220, John Britt, 6-1 225. Hampton,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Defensive Backs<lb/>
Keith Ford, 6-0 185, Sacramen-<lb/>
to, Calif.<lb/>
205, Barriet Easteriing, 6-3 190<lb/>
Raeford. N.C.<lb/>
215, Robert Majette. 6-3 185, Nor-<lb/>
folk, Va.<lb/>
Tar- Roswell Streeter, 6-0 175,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
210, Winston Guy, 6-1 180, Hamp-<lb/>
ton, Va.<lb/>
Everyone Supporting Purple Pirate Progress<lb/>
Pirates mil A ttempt to 'Capitalize' On Last Season's Exposure<lb/>
B ED NICKLAS<lb/>
Nporti Kdllnr<lb/>
spacious office on the second floor of<lb/>
 large couch, desk and long con-<lb/>
take up little room. Purple and gold<lb/>
ihe design. In place of a wall is a large win-<lb/>
hat looks out onto Ficklen Stadium ? a win-<lb/>
hich one can gaze and dream of a na-<lb/>
hampionship.<lb/>
mlight through the looking glass illuminates<lb/>
;ar-to-ear smile and causes his eves to<lb/>
Hands folded across his stomach, he smiles<lb/>
when he pauses between expressed thoughts;<lb/>
words carefully.<lb/>
ere we have to go, we have to sell the<lb/>
of the future says Karr, who has been<lb/>
Jirecte: of athletics at ECU since his arrival from San<lb/>
Die. e in July 1980.<lb/>
the "promise of the future" is invariably<lb/>
ed w.th the football program. Presently. 75 per-<lb/>
f the athletic budget goes to the major sport's<lb/>
ograms. And after last season's successful football<lb/>
more and more money should flow into<lb/>
:he program via ticket sales, Pirate Club or private<lb/>
lonations and student activity fees<lb/>
trink we gained tremendously with last season's<lb/>
ace says Karr. "I think the media gave us<lb/>
posure, especially with the Cinderalla image.<lb/>
We should try to capitalize on it<lb/>
To capitalize, ECU will have to incrementally<lb/>
develop a change in image, says Karr. Quality teams<lb/>
will have to come to Ficklen, fan support will have to<lb/>
increase even more so than last year, and the coaches<lb/>
and players will have to try to equal last season's<lb/>
record, despite losing several important seniors to<lb/>
graduation.<lb/>
"Bowl bids are based more on ticket-selling<lb/>
capability than necessarily what their record is says<lb/>
Karr, mentioning Notre Dame as an example. "The<lb/>
bowls are prone to go with established names. Notre<lb/>
Dame has a quality association<lb/>
Karr has been instrumental in the attempt to bring<lb/>
high quality teams to Ficklen. The 1985 home foot-<lb/>
ball schedule will be the toughest since ECU became<lb/>
an independent in 1977. Through "a lot of<lb/>
contacts he was able to lure Miami and Temple to<lb/>
Ficklen. However, says Karr, the 1986 schedule has<lb/>
"holes" that need to be filled.<lb/>
"I think we have shown some improvement, im-<lb/>
provement in the quality of opponents, especially in<lb/>
football, and improvement in the quality of our<lb/>
team's performance to be considered at the top of the<lb/>
NCAA football teams says Karr.<lb/>
"He's well known around the country says<lb/>
Assistant to the Chancellor Charles Blake of Karr.<lb/>
"He's always looking at schools with average at-<lb/>
He gets favorable<lb/>
1<lb/>
Returning starter P.J. Jordan (63) will be a force to be reckoned with. " AT?io" meu<lb/>
w<lb/>
tendence of 50,000 or more<lb/>
guarantees<lb/>
According to Blake, the ECU athletic budget is<lb/>
now totaled at $3.4 to $3.5 million. The sources of in-<lb/>
come are broken down as such: $900,000 guaranteed<lb/>
revenue from away games; a $234,000 bonus for ap-<lb/>
pearing on television against N.C. State; $300,000 to<lb/>
$400,000 from season ticket and concession sales-<lb/>
$450,000 to $550,000 from the Pirate Club; and $1<lb/>
million from student tuition fees. Blake says each<lb/>
student will be paying $85 next year in activity ex-<lb/>
penses.<lb/>
The present budget will certainly grow, but it has a<lb/>
great deal of ground to cover in order to reach, what<lb/>
Blake estimates, a budget of $8 to $10 million that<lb/>
other established universities acquire.<lb/>
"We have limited budgets compared to other<lb/>
schools says Karr. "I think we are always in a<lb/>
catch-up role being in the bottom 15 to 25 percent of<lb/>
the selected group of institutions (in terms of<lb/>
revenue). If you consider the goals set by our consti-<lb/>
tuency, we are not spending too much<lb/>
The Pirate Club, which expends most of its<lb/>
revenue for football scholarships, continues to play<lb/>
an important role in the upgrading of the football<lb/>
program, as it nearly doubled its membership in<lb/>
1983. The club now consists of 3,000 members, but<lb/>
Blake says its goal is to reach 10,000 in the near<lb/>
future. This is quite a feat, he says, when one keeps<lb/>
in mind that UNC-Chapel Hill's Ram Club member-<lb/>
ship is 5,500.<lb/>
Furthermore, the Pirate Club intends to reach the<lb/>
$1 million mark, and Blake thinks it should occur in<lb/>
the "not too distant future<lb/>
In addition to the Pirate Club and the athletic<lb/>
department's attempt to bring in more revenue, the<lb/>
school's administration has also put in its two-cents<lb/>
worth. The most obvious example occurred in<lb/>
January 1982. "The first order of business was to ex-<lb/>
amine the athletic program and see what had to be<lb/>
done to compete with the top teams in the nation<lb/>
says Blake. The result was the launching of a<lb/>
"million dollar fund drive instrumented by then<lb/>
Interim Chancellor John Howell.<lb/>
A committee was formed and chaired by Dr. Ray<lb/>
Minges, a local retired surgeon, and co-chaired by<lb/>
Bill Clark, an ECU alumnus who heads a construc-<lb/>
tion firm in Greenville. The goal of the committee is<lb/>
to raise the money in five years, then become self-<lb/>
supporting.<lb/>
"The committee has assured us success says<lb/>
Blake. "He (Howell) has spent a lot of time on it<lb/>
"Howell has been very supportive of athletics<lb/>
says Karr. "His first goal was to get a million dollar<lb/>
fund drive for the football team. To me that shows<lb/>
tremendous administrative support<lb/>
ECU is moving in the right direction, monetary<lb/>
?trategies developed and the like. But the bulk of the<lb/>
responsibility remains tied to the football program,<lb/>
the bread and butter of college revenue sports.<lb/>
Because success brings national exposure, and na-<lb/>
tional exposure results in increased ticket sales,<lb/>
private sector and television dollars, the team must<lb/>
continue to improve under head coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
"If we wish to spend more, we have to show the<lb/>
?ARV PATTERSON - ECU<lb/>
'We Have To Sell The Pro-<lb/>
mise Of. The Future'<lb/>
? Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
ability to bring in more admits Karr. "We have t?<lb/>
be the strongest independent in football that we can<lb/>
and we have to turn to the ECAC for the ?ro<lb/>
balance of competition for our future " 8<lb/>
ECU has come a long way since its Southern Con<lb/>
ference days, rep acing Furmans mJiA-S. .on'<lb/>
States with Miarnis andI PhSErS? hTttS<lb/>
don't even need the North Carolina Ta?Hu"<lb/>
their schedule to bring fan attention "Aen" we cS<lb/>
mg well without them says Karr.<lb/>
l<lb/>
Mabry has been named<lb/>
against Richmond and S<lb/>
points for both games.<lb/>
Classifie<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
??P Ml TtoreehOta; 40? -A Amp P<lb/>
'?" Preoma rm M or bet' Mm<lb/>
over. Flrstreto 7t-rat<lb/>
ROOM for BSMT. Mm ? Mada<lb/>
'resn campus UN me ptvs i uhi<lb/>
WM. ?v?n now iwiin ?mT<lb/>
RENT A FULLY FURNISHEC<lb/>
??dream apt for me Summer King,<lb/>
Row AM a: Air Com O i ??<lb/>
MAV moT)tt c?U T?-s?a? or 752 15 ?<lb/>
MUST SELL SCO Good cond.fxv<lb/>
u Cam 7si mo<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
??<lb/>
P?EI<lb/>
WHEN A FRIEND hot Stereo system<lb/>
problems NXl mem mat ?? avdc<lb/>
technicians at me TECH shop aor ?<lb/>
cNorpe for repair estimates Can m<lb/>
At 7S7-1?1 THe TECH SHOP<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYFINO SER<lb/>
VICE: All typing needi<lb/>
7SA-S4AA7SA-A34I<lb/>
AUTO ACCIDENTS Spec : <lb/>
personal iniury Httejatton j Zt-<lb/>
Dwffwt Jr Attorney NCMB<lb/>
RufMiflf. Greenville Norm c? o -1<lb/>
?JeVMK,<lb/>
?t<lb/>
PH<lb/>
IF ANYONE SAW a red Honda ?? I<lb/>
 o parking tot between Garret one<lb/>
me Art BviMMiMj on ix please cei<lb/>
iss-stu or rsrssss<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service<lb/>
experience qvaHty work. iam Setec<lb/>
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Pre<lb/>
Speciall<lb/>
SaturdJ<lb/>
John .Moor'<lb/>
Lady Member<lb/>
Doors'<lb/>
Happy H<lb/>
F<lb/>
4<lb/>
U<lb/>
'<lb/>
?R?o ipw.i?<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
"i " ? w ?' -??.il ?0 iQfcifopnii QeayOai I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
K<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0011"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 28, 194<lb/>
11<lb/>
rt<lb/>
h came<lb/>
ourt<lb/>
game-<lb/>
ates,<lb/>
v<lb/>
-<lb/>
ns 2-4<lb/>
ruits<lb/>
2 li<lb/>
Hamo-<lb/>
gress<lb/>
Harrison Embarrassed<lb/>
With UNC-W Loss<lb/>
ByEDNICKLAS<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
avenged a 44-43 loss to<lb/>
ECU earlier this season,<lb/>
defeating the Pirates<lb/>
7047 Saturday night at<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
The Pirates did not<lb/>
score a point in the first<lb/>
five minutes of the game,<lb/>
and shot only 31.2 per-<lb/>
cent for the contest to<lb/>
lower their record to<lb/>
4-21. The loss was ECU's<lb/>
seventh straight.<lb/>
UNC-W, however,<lb/>
shot SO percent to raise its<lb/>
record to 10-15.<lb/>
In addition to poor<lb/>
shooting, turnovers also<lb/>
plagued the Pirates. ECU<lb/>
coughed the ball up 17<lb/>
times while the Seahawks<lb/>
committed only eight<lb/>
mishaps.<lb/>
"I was completely em-<lb/>
barrassed ECU coach<lb/>
Charlie Harrison said.<lb/>
"My sincere apologies to<lb/>
my coaches and my fans<lb/>
as I've got to shoulder<lb/>
something like this.<lb/>
"We had the oppor-<lb/>
tunities early, but never<lb/>
took advantage of them.<lb/>
We got nothing inside<lb/>
when we put the ball in<lb/>
there.<lb/>
We played like we<lb/>
practiced and acted over<lb/>
the last three days. I<lb/>
threw them out of prac-<lb/>
tice yesterday for the<lb/>
same thing<lb/>
Brian Rowsom led the<lb/>
Seahawks with 13 points<lb/>
while Tony Anderson and<lb/>
George Durham each had<lb/>
10.<lb/>
Jack Turnbill played<lb/>
his second straight strong<lb/>
game, leading the Pirates<lb/>
with eight rebounds and<lb/>
coming in second to<lb/>
William Grady's 15<lb/>
points, scoring 12.<lb/>
UNC-W jumped out to<lb/>
a quick 20-11 lead after<lb/>
outscoring ECU 11-2<lb/>
over a six minute stretch.<lb/>
ECU cut the lead to<lb/>
20-19, but the Seahawks<lb/>
ran off eight straight<lb/>
points in route to a 28-21<lb/>
halftime lead.<lb/>
In the second half, the<lb/>
Pirates shot no better,<lb/>
and fell to a 16 point<lb/>
deficit, 55-39, on a basket<lb/>
by UNC-W's Hank Har-<lb/>
ris.<lb/>
The Seahawks then<lb/>
raced to a 25 point lead,<lb/>
68-43, with 1:55 left in<lb/>
the game, to further em-<lb/>
barrass the Pirates.<lb/>
 ?A?r pattmson - ecu mh l?<lb/>
Coach Charlie Harrison looked on as his team was<lb/>
crushed Saturday night by UNC-W<lb/>
NCIL JOHNSON ? 1CU PlMN) La<lb/>
Mabry has been named to the ECAC-South honor roll for her performances<lb/>
against Richmond and South Carolina in last week's play. She averaged 15.5<lb/>
points for both games.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
KIP l?St TkrMhoM 400 Amp. PS<lb/>
A?li? rVeemp SttOO.M or best offer<lb/>
ever. Flnrrete TSe-JMe.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT. Houie 4 blocks<lb/>
from campus, hoc mo. plus It util.<lb/>
7SS-HM, awtl. now, fomala only.<lb/>
RENT A FULLY FURNISHED 1<lb/>
bedroom apt. for ftie Summer. Kings<lb/>
Row too A-i Air cond Dish washer.<lb/>
mvmonttl. Call 7M-S5? or 752-351.<lb/>
MUST SELL BED. Good condlfton.<lb/>
iso call 7st-mo.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WHENAFRIEND has stereo systtm<lb/>
problems, tell them that the audio<lb/>
technicians at the TECH SHOP don't<lb/>
charge for repair estimates. Call us<lb/>
at 757 )W0 The TECH SHOP.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER-<lb/>
VICE: All typing needs;<lb/>
7So-S4?t7So-??l.<lb/>
AUTO ACCIDENTS Speclaliilng In<lb/>
personal lnury litigation. J. David<lb/>
Dutfus, Jr Attorney, NCNB<lb/>
Building, Greenville, North Carolina,<lb/>
7SO-4M0<lb/>
IF ANYONE SAW a red Honda get hit<lb/>
in the parking lot between Qarrtf and<lb/>
the Art Building on 210 please call<lb/>
iS5-714 or 733 5353<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service-<lb/>
experience, quality work, IBM Selec-<lb/>
fric. Typewriter. Call Lanie SMve<lb/>
7U-5M1<lb/>
QUALITY TYPING. IBM typewriter,<lb/>
IS years experience. Full time typing<lb/>
for faculty and students. Se-Soec.<lb/>
LOCAL CHURCH would like parson<lb/>
to keep church nursery 10:45-12 noon<lb/>
each Sunday. Could possibly be divid-<lb/>
ed with another person, u each Sun-<lb/>
day. Send resume to: Nursery<lb/>
Helper; JO Prince Rd Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27H4.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE Neat, Fast,<lb/>
Reasonable. Call 155-2042.<lb/>
FREE PUPPY to a good home. Call<lb/>
Ellen at 751-IUl Wed. or Thurs. after<lb/>
five.<lb/>
BAGEL BRUNCH, Mendenhall at<lb/>
t 30 on Sunday, February it. BE<lb/>
THERE!<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
REWARDl Lost rust colored velcre<lb/>
wallet. Thought to be lost on the Hill<lb/>
by basketball courts between J:M<lb/>
and 5:00 Sat Fab. Islti. Call 7SM110<lb/>
or 757-eUe ask for Jim.<lb/>
ECU vs. James Madison University<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
THE SISTERS of Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma Sorority would like to welcome<lb/>
their new sisters. We Love You l<lb/>
PHI TAU LIL SISTERS: Thursday<lb/>
night was quite nice, as we sipped our<lb/>
liquor and ice. Their could not have<lb/>
been a better crowd, as Dewson knew<lb/>
we got real loud. Once again we prov<lb/>
ed we are best, so we deserve ? week<lb/>
of rest Let Spring break do you well,<lb/>
when we get back we'll have show<lb/>
and tell. Have a great break.<lb/>
I WANT TO BE RICH. Will<lb/>
everybody who reads this ad please<lb/>
and me a dollar. Thank you. Mail to:<lb/>
Rich, 145 Slay Hall.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Private<lb/>
Room fully furnished ? House<lb/>
Privileges clean, neat, responsible<lb/>
only behind Belk Dorm tlK 750-7470<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: 752-SW4.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible female<lb/>
roommate as soon as possible V<lb/>
rent-utlllties-Wllson Acres. Evenings<lb/>
call 752-0515.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted:<lb/>
5117 30mthf tm.SO dap. Bryfon<lb/>
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only call 751 151. Ask for Tori.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE Needed for<lb/>
summer school andor fall semester<lb/>
Call Karen at Stratferd Arms,<lb/>
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RIDES<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: to and from<lb/>
BeaufortHilton Head area, S C over<lb/>
spring creak. Will pay half of gas.<lb/>
Contact joe at i?o Slay, rstVAeaS.<lb/>
Minges Coliseum, Saturday, March 3rd at 7:30 P.M<lb/>
qwi<lb/>
Come and cheer on the Pirates as they play their last home game of the 1984<lb/>
I??k- th? actJ,?.u ls,It"s Saturday night when ECU takes on James Madison<lb/>
Also this week-end the Women s ECAC Tournament-all atthe Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Plus you can win T-shirts, a trip for 4 to Disney World (sponsored by PTA) or<lb/>
Pony athletic shoes. y ,u<lb/>
So, be a part of the action at Minges! Be there.<lb/>
-?Si"?r?'77 ?vwyK'vsr?<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Including Skates<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
MUSIC TELEVISION<lb/>
with MTV<lb/>
16ft SCREEN<lb/>
Custom crofting<lb/>
4<lb/>
Jowlory Repair<lb/>
fair prices<lb/>
guaranteed work<lb/>
Bring This Ad for<lb/>
25OFF<lb/>
14X Chain Rfjpoin<lb/>
by Us lewlery<lb/>
120 E. 5th Street<lb/>
758-2127 10-5 TuesSat.<lb/>
MM<lb/>
k?r ?TTC?MN eCU LMt<lb/>
Sell The Pro-<lb/>
future'<lb/>
Or. Ken Karr<lb/>
j admits Karr. "We have to<lb/>
it in football that we can<lb/>
It ic ECAC for the strong<lb/>
lr our future<lb/>
 ;ge, second floor Minges<lb/>
w mr ability to fill theex-<lb/>
185-86 seasons, we might<lb/>
f savs.<lb/>
av since its Southern Con-<lb/>
Purmans and Appalachian<lb/>
J Pittsburghs. The Pirates<lb/>
fh Carolina Tar Heels on<lb/>
attention. "Aren't we do-<lb/>
lays Karr.<lb/>
PAPA<lb/>
KATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
9th Annual<lb/>
TKE Boxing<lb/>
Tournament<lb/>
RING GIRL<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
Tues. Feb 28th<lb/>
at PAPA KATZ<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
10th Street Ext.<lb/>
at River Bluff Road<lb/>
Ticket on Sa Now!<lb/>
S4.00 in Advance<lb/>
M.00DayofShow<lb/>
?pring Break T-SkirPs!<lb/>
various printed designs on long sleeve &amp;shirmtelshtPs<lb/>
perfect? for'sprintfweather, etonedftre iprleave<lb/>
so evenpne will' know ifou're fromEastCarolina!<lb/>
ML HOMES OCX<lb/>
mmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmmm i<lb/>
Weight Training<lb/>
Equipment<lb/>
BARS (All Types)<lb/>
"Featuring"<lb/>
-Olympic Curl Bars $79.95<lb/>
-Standard Curl Bars - 29.95<lb/>
SETS (Includes Bar)<lb/>
-110 lb. (Standard) $79.95<lb/>
-310 lb. (Olympic) $399.95<lb/>
ALSO - Health Shoes (For men &amp; women), Collars, Dumbell Sets,<lb/>
&amp; Misc. Equipment.<lb/>
Students (ECU &amp; Pin Community) Receive a 1 Discount As<lb/>
Always wValid I.D.<lb/>
PLATES<lb/>
-Olympic - $.80lb.<lb/>
-Standard - .75lb.<lb/>
-CAST IRON<lb/>
DUMBELLS - $.80lb.<lb/>
CAST IRON IHOOIbs)<lb/>
I .<lb/>
'<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0012"/><lb/>
'<lb/>
A i<lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 28. 1984<lb/>
EC Trivia: Knowledge Test<lb/>
Bring your answers to the<lb/>
East Carottnain, Publica-<lb/>
tions Building (across<lb/>
from Joyner Library).<lb/>
Winner's names will be<lb/>
published in Tuesday's<lb/>
sports section.<lb/>
1. Who is the present<lb/>
ECU head coach for the<lb/>
men's and women's ten-<lb/>
nis team?<lb/>
2. Who is the former<lb/>
Lady Pirate Basketball<lb/>
standout that will most<lb/>
likely be selected for the<lb/>
1984 U.S. Olympic<lb/>
Handball team?<lb/>
3. Which former Olym-<lb/>
pic gold medal winner<lb/>
holds a record at Minges<lb/>
Pool?<lb/>
4. A freshman on the<lb/>
1983 soccer team was<lb/>
featured in Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated "Faces in the<lb/>
Crowd" section, who is<lb/>
this athlete?<lb/>
5. Which sport has had<lb/>
the most winning seasons<lb/>
at ECU?<lb/>
6. The ECU Educational<lb/>
Foundation is the formal<lb/>
All-Americas?<lb/>
8. What new sport was<lb/>
initiated this fall at ECU?<lb/>
9. Who is the former<lb/>
ECU women's golfer now<lb/>
active on the pro tour?<lb/>
10. Which sport is<lb/>
recognized as NCAA<lb/>
Division II at ECU?<lb/>
11. Who is the former<lb/>
ECU men's basketball<lb/>
player that played in the<lb/>
NBA in the late 1970's?<lb/>
12. Which ECU team<lb/>
sport finished the 1981<lb/>
regular season ranked<lb/>
number one in the coun-<lb/>
try and went on to finish<lb/>
third in the national tour-<lb/>
nament?<lb/>
13. Who was the first<lb/>
ECU all-state volleyball<lb/>
player?<lb/>
14. Who was ECU's 1st<lb/>
Team All-America in<lb/>
football?<lb/>
15. Who is a current<lb/>
member of the Physical<lb/>
Education faculty that<lb/>
served as a former ECU<lb/>
head coach in women's<lb/>
1959?<lb/>
17. Who was the former<lb/>
ECU athlete that received<lb/>
the 1981 Brodrick Award<lb/>
for being the most<lb/>
outstanding softball<lb/>
player in the country?<lb/>
18. Who was ECU'S first<lb/>
recipient of an NCAA<lb/>
post graduate scholar-<lb/>
ship?<lb/>
19. Which former ECU<lb/>
football great wears a<lb/>
Super Bowl ring?<lb/>
Answers to last week's<lb/>
questions:<lb/>
1. The ECU Sports Hall<lb/>
of Fame was initiated in<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
2. DEAN JIM<lb/>
MALLORY, former<lb/>
Pirate Head Baseball<lb/>
Coach, is presently an<lb/>
Associate Dean of<lb/>
Students at ECU.<lb/>
3. DANNY KEPLEY is<lb/>
the former ECU football<lb/>
player recognized by the<lb/>
nickname of Captain<lb/>
Crunch now playing in<lb/>
the Canadian Profes-<lb/>
sional Football League.<lb/>
4. SHEILAH COTTON<lb/>
was the first female<lb/>
athlete inducted into the<lb/>
ECU Sports Hall of<lb/>
Fame.<lb/>
5. COACH JOHN<lb/>
WELBORN, Assistant<lb/>
Athletic Director, was the<lb/>
former Head Wrestling<lb/>
Coach at ECU.<lb/>
6. The East Carolina<lb/>
athletic program was a<lb/>
member of the<lb/>
SOUTHERN CON-<lb/>
FERENCE until 1976.<lb/>
7. ROSIE THOMPSON<lb/>
is the ECU basketball all-<lb/>
time leading scorer and<lb/>
rebounder.<lb/>
8. DR. KEN KARR is<lb/>
the present Director of<lb/>
Athletics.<lb/>
9. The current Pirate<lb/>
head coaches who<lb/>
graduated from ECU are:<lb/>
Imogene Turner ?<lb/>
Volleyball; Jerry Lee ?<lb/>
Golf; Ed Emory ? Foot-<lb/>
ball; Hal Baird ?<lb/>
Baseball.<lb/>
9<lb/>
name for the organiza-<lb/>
tion that raises athletic<lb/>
scholarship money. What<lb/>
is the more common<lb/>
name for this organiza-<lb/>
tion?<lb/>
7. Which ECU NCAA<lb/>
sport has had the most<lb/>
basketball, volleylball,<lb/>
field hockey, gymnastics,<lb/>
tennis and golf?<lb/>
16. Who was the former<lb/>
ECU swimming coach<lb/>
who lead his teams to win<lb/>
the NAIA national cham-<lb/>
pionships in 1957 and<lb/>
 s,<lb/>
gma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NIGHT<lb/>
Wed. Feb. 28,1984 8:30-l:00am<lb/>
Adm $1.50 18yr. $1.00<lb/>
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Come Early<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
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8.98 List on Sale 5 99<lb/>
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J Newest releases by:<lb/>
Re-flex<lb/>
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Pretenders<lb/>
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Culture Club<lb/>
Judas Pnest<lb/>
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Van Halen<lb/>
Michael Schenker Group<lb/>
Luther Vandross<lb/>
TDK SAW SALE<lb/>
3.99?och;2for<lb/>
6.99; 10 for 29.99<lb/>
?L<lb/>
Reproductive Health Care<lb/>
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gPgPPEPgpB!<lb/>
Understanding, non judgmental can? thai<lb/>
includes abortion for women of all ages<lb/>
Counseling for both partners is available<lb/>
Special Sendees and rates for students.<lb/>
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JUNIOR EXECS<lb/>
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Starts $17,200 - $24,100 increasing annually<lb/>
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Worldwide locations - we pay relocation expenses<lb/>
If you're interested in finding out more, see the Navy<lb/>
Officer Programs Team, they'll be on campus 13-14<lb/>
March at the Placement Office If you can't make it,<lb/>
send your resume or transcripts to<lb/>
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THRU ?AT, MARCH i AT AAP<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0013"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0014"/><lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0015"/><lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
M A (. A Z 1 N E<lb/>
I<lb/>
H<lb/>
EEfflBJES<lb/>
n<lb/>
THE LAST<lb/>
STARFIGHTER<lb/>
.4w Earthlmg kid Uikl s<lb/>
wmi outer-spaci denizens<lb/>
FIRESTARTER<lb/>
Stiphi i King's tn<lb/>
 I)r  lin t mort<lb/>
STREETS OF FIRE<lb/>
 i :i tai Michael Pan q<lb/>
m Wallet Hilfs latest epu O<lb/>
TANK<lb/>
il'rit ? (niriiit liit tin road<lb/>
ni I'll, h In; 11 mat hirn<lb/>
SIXTEEN<lb/>
CANDLES<lb/>
Molly Ringuald ?<lb/>
in ti i nagi dili<lb/>
12<lb/>
COMING SOON <lb/>
Film in thi u mgs A i<lb/>
OUR COVER<lb/>
Michael Pan vtan in Streets oJ<lb/>
hire, photographed In Stephi t,<lb/>
Vaughan Sifm Prt w.<lb/>
Moth k ? p. ikl k-ti<lb/>
stars ? Sixteen (in-<lb/>
dies. I ?? I <lb/>
k wrrtci ' "<lb/>
 - . ; . ?? '<lb/>
Tank right<lb/>
man .n ih his<lb/>
li lllltagt ? I<lb/>
tt.i: II Sin<lb/>
I 1.iint - t ? tg .<lb/>
houses, and I ?<lb/>
in Firestarter<lb/>
trom Stephei K n<lb/>
bestst n : I hrew H.i!<lb/>
inlit s (hi<lb/>
' ' ? - : I<lb/>
10 2<lb/>
? ' ? .t  '? .? Hill<lb/>
-<lb/>
 I R I<lb/>
The Ijm<lb/>
Starhghtrr<lb/>
V1<lb/>
ihrei VVa<lb/>
- Street- of Fire.<lb/>
1 he Lonelv Guv Contest Winner!<lb/>
w<lb/>
I . Kj<lb/>
Ktv 1jv<lb/>
?j i<lb/>
1 t.l I ??  ?:?<lb/>
LYNN I BARSTOW<lb/>
? 1983 l.m WfHi.in Publishing, .t ditisi<lb/>
??mi Hollvwood 90O2M K ?in! <lb/>
ihrii copvrighi owner.nitersal t its Si<lb/>
assumes no resporisitnlili tur unsolicited<lb/>
to ordei subscriptions oi I<lb/>
IHRB st HMITT M ss. SKBR1D1<lb/>
v.1! N'Y HHiII . ? ?<lb/>
 - ? . ? .<lb/>
I ARRS. SMI IMIR<lb/>
? i.in Weston t on n ? - r. Sum<lb/>
Krt President- All rights rest 5 ? : - v<lb/>
tifiiiN Ent Letters hi ?<lb/>
shed ?- - . <lb/>
I address, write fv M U . ? - ? line. Suite H  <lb/>
1 IX RAND W. ACHEEJ1H I)l( kfSJ t MSN M Pr rt HINik<lb/>
t  ? ? ? ?? J( DITH SIMS   i : : ? BYRON LAI BENHIS N(.H fs ? - inc. S ? ? ? ? .  162 . sR H (. 1 IS Puttmil MXRI1N I rOOHEI<lb/>
IrtOrn CHIP JONES DAN EICHOl.T ' ii  n 1. ndgi ? ROXANNE PADILLA '?? W.?? BARBARA HARRISJENNULRoVsJNs NORMA KRIls - . 1 glol - hi. ie'  -BR1 N IMM1KMW '12 M-l)VOl) llanu<lb/>
I<lb/>
ir Wintei -<lb/>
rig<lb/>
gt<lb/>
(?lt struck mt - : ? ? ? ?<lb/>
???<lb/>
- i rti . t ? ritei ?. Sit " -<lb/>
?<lb/>
??. -<lb/>
S??k. I wJmit thai 2 '?<lb/>
S; mus bet<lb/>
? ii .<lb/>
toes Mi Stej?<lb/>
iboul It exj<lb/>
? ? ? .<lb/>
Perl <lb/>
? : ' t<lb/>
I might ? esi<lb/>
2 A Spe I it<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
Vrthur t irkt - ?<lb/>
? '? I ? - ' -  : J<lb/>
Iked bs it ? mt t I. ai I<lb/>
Drag irl S g<lb/>
I<lb/>
i irli lHiii<lb/>
I'm glad S M<lb/>
i m is si i -<lb/>
him ??<lb/>
DINE<lb/>
A fan club for the movie<lb/>
Dune b currently being<lb/>
formed somewhere in<lb/>
the arid sands of Hollywood.<lb/>
Those readers interested in join-<lb/>
ing, or receiving more informa-<lb/>
tion, should send name and ad-<lb/>
dress to:<lb/>
DUNE FAN CLUB<lb/>
Box 699<lb/>
Hollywood, C A 90078<lb/>
Details will be mailed as soon as<lb/>
thev are available.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0016"/><lb/>
Ml '<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0017"/><lb/>
F1RESTARTER<lb/>
B ANTHONY I) E (I K I IS<lb/>
 f mes it takes Ik i half .m hum to<lb/>
 irv. Mimriimt's Directoi l.uk<lb/>
kJ 1 t -it i - voice trails off fi. i jut u IK<lb/>
Lestei si iddled with producei Frank<lb/>
1 apra i in the forty-degree cold on the<lb/>
sei of  ?? tartei in Wilmington, mth<lb/>
( arohna I he subject ol this nnit.il i- the<lb/>
rable the word comes instmctivelv .u<lb/>
tin- point. ,i- it ii were hei title-) Drew Bai<lb/>
more, who i harmed the world in hei<lb/>
stat i mg ii tie in hi I xti . ? ? ?? n<lb/>
I j  ; has had nothing but good things in<lb/>
a about Drew, but tonight, .i- the produe<lb/>
tii m comes within .i week oi so of wrap<lb/>
ping well, iin imr wants am iitfi ulties<lb/>
ii arise now<lb/>
Vei Drew - initial problem drawing tears<lb/>
whal Lestei describes a- .i "ver emo-<lb/>
tional scene puts hei in verv good com-<lb/>
pany nil tin- -ti S'obodv's doing much<lb/>
weeping oei tin- SI ' million production.<lb/>
uhiih aftei more than tun months of<lb/>
shooting m ,i location virtualh virgin in<lb/>
filmmaking, i- both within budget and<lb/>
within foui davs ol the original schedule<lb/>
In fact, spirits around here couldn't !??<lb/>
highei<lb/>
Based on tin- best-selling novel l<lb/>
Stephen King lauthoi of Came, Tht Shin<lb/>
? c and Tht Dead m Firestartn boasts<lb/>
Imth an all-stai cast and fire effects ol ,i<lb/>
scope .iin) dimension thai haven't been en-<lb/>
countered Mine General Sherman used the<lb/>
South ,i- ,i -He tni some epie mi fiiih.it <lb/>
scenes during theivil Wai Ilu- m i ipt In<lb/>
Stanley Mann i Collector, Omen II -titk-<lb/>
iliisch to King's riveting storv of two tol-<lb/>
lege students who, in earn some extra<lb/>
buck participate m .i drug-related expei<lb/>
imeni secretly funded b the sinistei De<lb/>
partment of Scientific Intelligence, .1<lb/>
 I A -like governmeni agencv referred to<lb/>
,i- I he sinii In addition in the cash, the<lb/>
students, plaved In David Keith ' Offuei<lb/>
. '  I .? ? .till! ? ? ? 1 It .11 llt'l<lb/>
I i ii k It .ti. u k up extra-sensory powers<lb/>
.nitl some hot t m - ih.ii enableli.nlu<lb/>
Drew Barrvmorel. the daughtei thev<lb/>
eventually produce, in inn h .ii will anvone<lb/>
oi auvthmg thai m.ikt - hei angry I he<lb/>
Shopkeepers sec veilingb.u In as a prune<lb/>
i .inilitl.iit foi some tuiilui experiments,<lb/>
and then efforts te e aptuie and eventualh<lb/>
eliminate hei and la i lathei provtdi the<lb/>
Milt I it ??? -II- It II M t 111 .11 III III<lb/>
In addition to Bai I v more. Ktiih and<lb/>
1 .e ic k I ea i, ? ? ? 11 .111111 - 11111 t<lb/>
i .aIt iiis. Vward-winners foi Besl Vim<lb/>
i !I t? .t i .1 g Seeitl i I al lit and<lb/>
lnui- Flete hei Scotl plavs ohn Rainhud.<lb/>
a deranged hit-man foi the Shop who<lb/>
vearns to at hit t a kiiul of spiritual union<lb/>
withharlie b bashing hei brains in ai<lb/>
ne and Kletc hei peirtrav a trusting farm<lb/>
? nililt who shekel hal lit ami lit i father,<lb/>
mh. a- they flee ilu simp- murderous<lb/>
pursuit Martin Sheen, who reienth iioi<lb/>
travel! ohn I Kennedy in the B(<lb/>
mmiseries Kennedy appears a- the Shop's<lb/>
genial ai Inunist i an .i<lb/>
Directoi Mark l.estei is delighted with<lb/>
these tasting eciups t have people that<lb/>
we nevei imagined won lei evei be in the<lb/>
meivie. people hkt (leorge Scott. Martin<lb/>
Sheen and itarnev he points out en<lb/>
ilm-ia-iit alh 1 hi- tni .tine a iinii h . lassiel<lb/>
project because we had this greal talent in<lb/>
it 1 In last i- hevond what I had extx'cted<lb/>
when I started the liltn Because it was so<lb/>
expensive in tin the effects. we thought<lb/>
that we wouldn't be able in afford a large<lb/>
ia-t Hut everyone was so confideni in ihc<lb/>
script that the raised tin- budget ami put<lb/>
more stai - in<lb/>
Ihi- film's effects, however, will defin<lb/>
iteh give the stars a run foi theii monev<lb/>
SpeciaJ effects fen Firestartei were handled<lb/>
In efl arvis ami Mikt Wood, win, have<lb/>
collaborated mi such eve-stunners a- Pol<lb/>
f?iMf ant) tnit. ill, l Firetarter's dc<lb/>
mands presented tin two with a real dial<lb/>
lenge Mikt- ami mvseli have tried to tit<lb/>
velop some new. interesting, ami different<lb/>
ways nt burning people ami burning<lb/>
houses down arvis reports with imdei<lb/>
-Iatt-tI i mil 1 It- i- a large, hinat man ulmv<lb/>
silvery grav hail ami beard make him seem<lb/>
Dreu Harrymore itop right has the gift and<lb/>
tht curst of fire one look from her. and<lb/>
flames envelop her unlucky victim Itop left).<lb/>
Her parents I Da: id Keith and Heather<lb/>
I ticklear. above), uerc themselves victims of<lb/>
secret goitrnment experiments, and nou re-<lb/>
negade agents are after their "talented"<lb/>
daughter.<lb/>
a i Miiilnii.il mil glllll ami glamoill bov<lb/>
wif-tlti inl we've tome up with some<lb/>
things that've nevei been done before<lb/>
I ikt the -mi thai the -nun people gel into<lb/>
ten then lull bodv bums We've actually<lb/>
i in tlu -uit down i" almiii one quartet the<lb/>
sie thai it not inalK i- hen vou see a lull<lb/>
liodv hum in the movies, tin suits are al-<lb/>
ways -ii big ami hulkv ii looks hkf ilu guv<lb/>
i- twelve times hi- normal sie! Foi this<lb/>
film, we Mnt ii down so that ilu suits are<lb/>
approximated an eighth in a uuartei ol an<lb/>
null ihhk We've been able in achieve as<lb/>
much a- a minute ami lonv seconds nt<lb/>
burn turn before hi have in gel the man<lb/>
i nit<lb/>
We've also developed lace masks from<lb/>
molds nt the actors thai we put ovei the<lb/>
suil, so Mm tan look through the hit- ami<lb/>
actualh -ft- some lacial characteristics<lb/>
ii'l there are a nuinhei nt gels that have<lb/>
been invented n. help pn itee t the -unit<lb/>
I It I- Vt () V I I M A (; A I N r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0018"/><lb/>
An All-Star Cast Brings<lb/>
Stephen Kings Firestarter to Blazing Life<lb/>
I"?l . sii we . .in tini ii ? iiplf with .1<lb/>
minimum .iiiimini ol lire retardam i kit lies<lb/>
ii I hev i .in tin n with then open ??km<lb/>
(.linn k.mil.ill. whose credits in hide<lb/>
Stiu H ti ? ? ??, I ?  1 ,?<lb/>
.hi intensely soft spoken man whose mil.l<lb/>
manni i .imi I.I. iid mi i he wIwoi k<lb/>
looks In Ik .i familiantv with dangei that<lb/>
would make Mi I shuddei lit is the man<lb/>
who li.i.l to devise tin movie's pvrotei hiui<lb/>
slums .is well as ass, mill,  , te , apahle ot<lb/>
passing these trials ol lm Normally set<lb/>
'HI- Hlt (.11 lite Is .1 slltlll III lls,t.<lb/>
K.m.I.ill explains Hut we've heeti intot<lb/>
loiating othet stunts tli.it invoke not onl<lb/>
ih.  in.il sunn. I.in iIk hie .is w, , ii<lb/>
ished Rtudn I! when thev contacted me<lb/>
t.u the projei t 1 i ead the s. i ipi and<lb/>
realized ili.it we .lul have some huge prob-<lb/>
lems ii.1 it was ,i . hallenge lve been in<lb/>
tin business twenty-three vears and haw-<lb/>
sen almost everything and done almost<lb/>
everything I'm always looking tot some-<lb/>
thing new .imi different llu t reaiive .in-<lb/>
;? . ,t the tiiismcss is h.it appeals to ? .<lb/>
.ii tins si o rnv tareet got some<lb/>
vet v imiisii.il shis tot this mo ? , <lb/>
In en ,il.l iiik up with s. ,n it things that<lb/>
have not Urn pin n tiln el ? I'm well<lb/>
pic.is. <lb/>
 ?'?? opening Mas II. u.(s hinted<lb/>
enttrelv in ttliaroltna. with the bulk (<lb/>
diawing people u tables, staging high<lb/>
I.ills. it.ipuli slits. ,i lot ( various gags<lb/>
ih.ii are usually trickv enough without the<lb/>
additional problems 1 putting people in<lb/>
limn suns' 1 his degree ol artistii chal-<lb/>
lenge is .i gI part , t what drew Randall<lb/>
to Firetartei in the In si plate "I'd insi tm-<lb/>
George. Scott tabort left). Art Carney and<lb/>
Louise Fletcher lahoie. uith Dreu Barr-<lb/>
mari i. all Academy Award winners, ??tar in<lb/>
Firestarter. Director Mark Lester ifar lef'ti<lb/>
and producer Frank Capra.Jr. i near lefti<lb/>
confer on location in North Carolina<lb/>
the shooting taking place on the 258-<lb/>
v? .ii old, I'i.lMM-ai i t rton Plantation<lb/>
Producei I-rankapra. t. an unpretenti-<lb/>
ous li.id ol tlu- manot who wanders the set<lb/>
with .i glad hand and easy smile ? and a<lb/>
watchful eve itimis the spectaculai<lb/>
Orton site, which lies on an intercoasial<lb/>
waterway and formerly ias a rice planta-<lb/>
tion, as a real hnd tot looked a long time<lb/>
before u tound this place he recalls<lb/>
. l.x.kcd m Mexico, we It Hiked in Rome.<lb/>
we looked m ItA.is and m and around<lb/>
Louisiana When we tinallv tound this<lb/>
plan whit h was a combination of seeing a<lb/>
puture ol ii ii the covet ol a magazine<lb/>
and Ha. knit; u down through the Film<lb/>
( ommission t North l arohna, we came<lb/>
here and said, 1 his is jki feet lot us<lb/>
 full-sie replica "1 tlu- enormous plan-<lb/>
tation lu,use ami stables was erected foi<lb/>
the production, and a pond uas dug into<lb/>
tin- grounds On this night I shooting, the<lb/>
gloomy, heavily lorested plantation bore<lb/>
brooding witness as tin- stables lit the night<lb/>
IMI- M i I t M A ( A I I<lb/>
sk with ti.ttt-nts ot flam - u d I r ba -<lb/>
hurtled hundreds ol feel across ih s<lb/>
. tash m thunderous i  ? igainst<lb/>
mansn n house<lb/>
No strangei to su h violent<lb/>
atmospheres, tatk Lestei exudes an<lb/>
pressive .aim amid the firestorm Lestei<lb/>
an intense, distracted man with a -<lb/>
hlai k hail swept bat k ft n his fact<lb/>
perpetually darting ev? s i :?<lb/>
tion with such action-packed extra igai is<lb/>
? s A'  p, s ?  ; , ,<lb/>
hut it was the multidimensional ?.<lb/>
Stephen km; s novel thai ? U<lb/>
i nit- that I ?? ?.???? whu h t- ? g ?<lb/>
? "ii, eived as a vehicle for John <lb/>
was the t ltfht projt I was givei<lb/>
???.???? ? i ie mve produiei<lb/>
I aurentns t it  ??  ? ? ?rst<lb/>
Stephen King Uk 1 : ?. :?: 1 . -?. ? ?  .<lb/>
nd I !i ived it It works oi -<lb/>
flit levels I- : ?  .  :s .<lb/>
as si.sp, ? as a supernatura ? .  N ii -<lb/>
what attracted me. tlu- book list I<lb/>
I i st, , s ??? : ? the essentia .??. ?<lb/>
Kings storv is v sti that he is not<lb/>
 .in ei tied that ?.?.???? eve-boggling el<lb/>
leits will overwfu n<lb/>
aspei ts "It di ,t s s,  <lb/>
t-lfrt ts port<lb/>
math portion ol th. I lirectoi<lb/>
admits But v it the huma<lb/>
ships ami , : trailers i ? 11 is nevei<lb/>
Uulk U, . sir- s . .??.<lb/>
niov ies. and Itei thi imai storv s<lb/>
Si in tins I want) I I make sure that th<lb/>
human stt is th n md thai :? ?<lb/>
the iharaiters and art involved esp<lb/>
with tin leads Vndv andharlie 1 wai<lb/>
ti ? make sure thai ie storv hetweei<lb/>
the lathei and daughtei was th<lb/>
:? ? is. s v, hen ti.r effeu - t thev wi ild<lb/>
I ?. ,i plus I wh i ? <lb/>
1 t siei ;sonvmt ed th it the toi<lb/>
it  ?? ?? is also om ' ? - great<lb/>
strengths lni a vei v politically<lb/>
(isn rnvselt. so that aspect - : th? -<lb/>
really interested me he comn i ts<lb/>
VI hile the movie works on th? entertan<lb/>
? in level. 1 also kept in thai s, ? . .<lb/>
thai was m the lok. which invi Ives<lb/>
i iv il liberties ol people, and gtivernmeni<lb/>
ag? in ies .t) theit use ol . ? I ?? -(<lb/>
search in wavs those people don't know<lb/>
about All th,s, .ssts thai are in the book<lb/>
and that made it sm h a populat if si s , -<lb/>
we kepi those in the movie, though thev :t<lb/>
very subtly done I think people whi art<lb/>
lHkmg lm that will hnd it m thr movie<lb/>
Asked what he'd like his audiences to<lb/>
feel as thev leave tlu- theatei aftei sni;<lb/>
' ?????. Lestei replies, I hope they'll<lb/>
leave on an uphfat note because w ti i I<lb/>
t keep it .iiui from in-mi; ,i realh gi a<lb/>
some him 1 think they'll be very excited<lb/>
lu begins to laugh and anxiously aw ail<lb/>
the sequel. ???-?? . oi mavbe ??-??<lb/>
per, uh. directed bv Richard FU s, ? c ?<lb/>
Vftei more than two months on kxai<lb/>
and with a hnal week ol heavy shooting<lb/>
left, Mai k Lestei is cracking jokes It <lb/>
must Ih- going well.<lb/>
V. -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0019"/><lb/>
STEVEN VAL'GHAN MPA PRESS<lb/>
Michael Pare Stars in<lb/>
Walter Hill's Streets of Fire<lb/>
B Y<lb/>
D A V I N<lb/>
S E A Y<lb/>
An elevated tram roars through the<lb/>
squalid cit in the dead of night.<lb/>
From somewhere a woman's voice,<lb/>
hoarse and world weary, talks on. as it only<lb/>
to herself. "M brother's name is lorn she<lb/>
sas. "Iom Cody Whiskey and coffee<lb/>
blunt the edge m her voice. "He was com-<lb/>
plicated. A lot more complicated than<lb/>
people thought. He had a lot ot backlxne<lb/>
at a time when it was kind of scarce . .  As<lb/>
she speaks a lone figure hangs on the<lb/>
overhead straps of the subway car. He<lb/>
wears a long coal and a c hambrav shin<lb/>
and at his side is a battered suitcase.<lb/>
Thus Walter Hill introduces, with all the<lb/>
portentous significance his directorial skills<lb/>
can muster, the mvthic lead of his latest<lb/>
film. Street oj Fire, the first in a project-<lb/>
ed film trilogy titled The Adientures of Tom<lb/>
Cody. Subsequent installments have been<lb/>
dubbed The Far City and Cody's Return<lb/>
Cody is. from the get-go. a character con-<lb/>
siderabh larger than lite ? a kind ot I)irt<lb/>
Harrv.Travis Bickle concoction with liberal<lb/>
doses ot Brando and Dean added tor the<lb/>
appropriate smolder and menace.<lb/>
Streets of Fire takes Hill full circle. le-<lb/>
yond the grim black humor of his biggest<lb/>
hit 4H MRS past the queasv bloodletting<lb/>
of Southern Comfort and Long Riders, hark-<lb/>
ing all the way back to an especially grip-<lb/>
ping modern urban nightmare called The<lb/>
Warriors. Hill's first directorial effort (he<lb/>
started out as a screenwriter). The Warriors<lb/>
told the tale of roving, rival street gangs<lb/>
and sported speed-editing, street talk and<lb/>
a surfeit of spectac ular violence. Billed as a<lb/>
"rock and roll action fantasy Streets of Fire<lb/>
takes place in some gloomy, dim future<lb/>
and revolves around the kidnapping of a<lb/>
rock and roll smget (played In Diane Lane<lb/>
of The Outsiders and Rumble Fish tame) In a<lb/>
gang ot bizarre bikers.<lb/>
"The following story takes place in the<lb/>
Other World w i lies Hill and co-scenarist<lb/>
Larry Gross on the very first page ot the<lb/>
film's script, "a tar-oft place where genres<lb/>
collide ? in this case, futuristic Fantas)<lb/>
meets the Western, gets married and has<lb/>
Rock and Roll babies . .  On that same<lb/>
page- is a couplet from the Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen tune from which the movie<lb/>
draws its name. "I live now onl with<lb/>
strangers howls The Boss. "I talk onh to<lb/>
strangers ? I walk with angels that have no<lb/>
place ? Streets of Kite . .  No one could<lb/>
ever accuse Walter Hill of not knowing<lb/>
exacth the kind of movie he has in mind.<lb/>
Hill needed a face, a personality to<lb/>
mate h his consuming vision of the ultimate<lb/>
action hero. The search tot an actor to<lb/>
portray, project and embody Iom Cod)<lb/>
stopped dead at the clean lines ot Michael<lb/>
Pane's aw.<lb/>
"He had the right quality Hill savs. "He<lb/>
was the onh person I found who was right<lb/>
for the part  a striking combination of<lb/>
toughness and innocence<lb/>
It takes some kind ot toughness to en-<lb/>
dure the scorching set on the San Fer-<lb/>
nando Yalle backlot where the shooting ot<lb/>
Streets of Fire is in its final week. To seed<lb/>
up the schedule, the entire set, six blocks<lb/>
of carefully detailed New York Cky streets,<lb/>
complete with elevated train tracks and a<lb/>
full-scale movie marquee, has been rooted<lb/>
over with an enormous expanse of plastic<lb/>
tarp to allow night shooting during the<lb/>
day.<lb/>
In the midst ot this sweltering chaos<lb/>
I H E M () V I E M A G A Z I N E<lb/>
The brooding, smoldering face of Michael<lb/>
Pare (above left) as hero Tom Cody, mythical<lb/>
creation of veteran action director Walter<lb/>
Hill (above). Streets of Fire harkens back to<lb/>
one of Hill's biggest hits. The Warriors:<lb/>
both films take place in their own time,<lb/>
neither past, present, nor future, where<lb/>
Western legend combines with fiery urban<lb/>
madness (below).<lb/>
Diane Lane (opposite), who debuted as the<lb/>
precociously adorable young girl in A Little<lb/>
Romance, has grown up; she's a rock stf roll<lb/>
singer, Tom Cody's former lover, whom he<lb/>
must rescue from a gang of leather-jacketed<lb/>
motorcycle bullies.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0020"/><lb/>
o<lb/>
i<lb/>
Michael Pare sits calmlv smoking a<lb/>
Marlboro, watching Walter Hill set up vet<lb/>
another take of a shot thev have been<lb/>
laboring over all afternxn. The 24-vear-<lb/>
old actor is. incrediblv, dressed in heavy<lb/>
suede britches and a long-sleeved woolen<lb/>
undershirt ? Tom Cody's costume and a<lb/>
horrifying reminder of the price stardom<lb/>
sometimes exacts. Pare seems to mind<lb/>
neither the gruelling heat nor the hurrv-<lb/>
up-and-wait pace on the set. He has ap-<lb/>
parently wound some internal clock to half<lb/>
speed, his lids at half mast over pale blue<lb/>
eves, his blond hair occasionally re-ruffled<lb/>
by a harried make-up woman. He seems to<lb/>
be saving himself up. holding himself in<lb/>
careful reserve, forcing himself to move.<lb/>
talk and react with slow deliberation. The<lb/>
impression created is striking and a little<lb/>
unsettling ? its uncertain whether Michael<lb/>
Pare is about to explode or fall asleep.<lb/>
"Walter has a vivid picture of what he<lb/>
wants Pare observes, pulling the final<lb/>
cloud of smoke from the Marlboro and<lb/>
expelling it into the saturated air. "There"s<lb/>
never a question of 'do I have what he<lb/>
needs You wouldn't be here if you didn't<lb/>
He has a point. The reason Pare is here<lb/>
is precisely because Hill saw in his classi-<lb/>
cally enisled features and tightlv self-<lb/>
contained presence the makings of a<lb/>
genuine American hero ? Hill's own de-<lb/>
(idedh jaundiced version of the right<lb/>
stuff. Pare, even on first impressions, is<lb/>
uniquely qualified to ht Tom Cody's boots.<lb/>
He bloods and Hares with all the panache<lb/>
ot a Matt Dillon or Richard (ere. resem-<lb/>
bling, albeit slightly, a considerably<lb/>
younger and healthier Nick Nolle with a<lb/>
touch of down-home Gerard Depardieu.<lb/>
- !?<lb/>
ft<lb/>
"Of course I'm lucky" Pare admits, while<lb/>
around him crew and extras slog through<lb/>
their jobs like penitants in hell. "I'm the<lb/>
luckiest guv I know Biographical details<lb/>
bear out the assertion. Born in Brooklvn.<lb/>
eighth in a line of ten children, Michael's<lb/>
earliest ambition was in a held far from<lb/>
acting. "I went to the Culinarv Institute in<lb/>
Hvde Park he explains, "because that was<lb/>
the first real job I had after mv father died<lb/>
and I got out of high school. It was some-<lb/>
thing I could do and get at least a middle-<lb/>
class income. But I never considered it my<lb/>
life's work<lb/>
Well, mavbe. If cooking was a temporary<lb/>
gig. Pare certainly took it seriously. He<lb/>
graduated from the Institute with a cook-<lb/>
ing degree and quicklv landed a series of<lb/>
apprenticeship jobs that would in time cer-<lb/>
tainly have resulted in full-fledged chef-<lb/>
dom. At 21 he became an assistant baker at<lb/>
New fork's tres chic Tavern on the Green.<lb/>
It was just about then that Opportumt<lb/>
knocked, or rather tapped.<lb/>
"Streets of Fire is a<lb/>
rock &amp; roll fable<lb/>
Hill says, "in the sense<lb/>
that the situation and<lb/>
totems of the fibn are<lb/>
identical with the con-<lb/>
cerns of most rock fcf<lb/>
roll songs.<lb/>
99<lb/>
"I was waiting in a bar for mv girl-<lb/>
friend he recounts, "when I felt a tap on<lb/>
m shoulder Beckoning him to stardom<lb/>
was a New York-based talent scout who<lb/>
eventuallv put the rather bewildered Pare<lb/>
in touch with the late legendary agent<lb/>
Joyce Selnick "She helped me get acting<lb/>
lessons he explains. "I quit cooking and<lb/>
gave mvself a vear to make it as an actor<lb/>
Even someone with Pares phenomenal<lb/>
good luck can hardlv be expected to hit the<lb/>
big time in 12 short months. It took two<lb/>
full years before he landed a supporting<lb/>
role in a short-lived TV series called<lb/>
Greatest American Hero, where he staved for<lb/>
another vear-and-a-half. leaping in a single<lb/>
bound over the obl.gatorv acting hurdles<lb/>
of oft-off-Broadwav. soap operas and<lb/>
commercials. "It was a good experience<lb/>
he allows. "I learned how to hit mv mark<lb/>
and get to make-up and wardrobe on<lb/>
time<lb/>
He also, it seems, learned how to project<lb/>
a considerable on-camera appeal. Writer<lb/>
director Martin Davidson, spotting Pare on<lb/>
Greatest American Hero, recognized the<lb/>
former sous-chef's natural talent at convev-<lb/>
ing all manner of alluring and dangerous<lb/>
undercurrents and cast him in the title role<lb/>
of the turgid rock and roll melodrama<lb/>
called Eddie and the Cruisers. "It was a big<lb/>
gamble for both of us Pare confides. "I<lb/>
THE MOVIE MAGAZINE<lb/>
reullv felt the prevsure. but in the end.<lb/>
being able to get up on stage and let lcw.se<lb/>
it all tell together Apparentlv it didn't tall<lb/>
together tar enough One ot the most sub-<lb/>
stantial emlwrravsments ot the "83 film sea-<lb/>
son. Eddie and the Crmism perished despite<lb/>
a massive publicity campaign, but Pare<lb/>
hardlv went down with the ship Even be-<lb/>
fore the movie's release he'd been cast tor<lb/>
both Sttfetts ut Fire ("Saw him in Eddie and<lb/>
tht Cruisers Hill sas tersely; 'Met a tew<lb/>
times. Talked. That nas enough tor me "i<lb/>
as well as a co-starring spot m Umirra ??<lb/>
an Australian effort directed b David Ste-<lb/>
vens ot A Bm Like Atkt tame "I plav a<lb/>
New York promotion man in the 1920s<lb/>
who goes Down Under to sell corsets.<lb/>
Pare explains, while stage hands roll a<lb/>
tire-engine-red. chopped and channeled<lb/>
Mercury onto the set "Undettmoei is a kind<lb/>
ot C.arv Grant and Dons Dav screwball<lb/>
comedv and it was a lot ot tun to make "<lb/>
Hill summons him to the set (. limbing<lb/>
into the Merc. Pare waits tor his cue. then<lb/>
jumps out and strides through a collection<lb/>
ot vintage '51 bullet-nose Studehakers.<lb/>
decked out to look like 2Kt Century squad<lb/>
cars. He glares menacinglv at the camera<lb/>
lens and Hill cries "cut"<lb/>
One gets the impression that Pare is not<lb/>
as interested in keeping his private lite<lb/>
private as many a more established and<lb/>
warv him star might be. What he does with<lb/>
his off-camera hours seems calculated to<lb/>
be quite normal and average T spend<lb/>
lime with mv wife he vivs with a shrug<lb/>
"Sometimes we go out with friends Some-<lb/>
limes we stav at home and watch TV<lb/>
Michael met Lisa, a lavs student who works<lb/>
as an assistant m the l.os Angeles IVA's<lb/>
office, in New York. "She was a blind date<lb/>
tor mv brother lerrance, who writes ro-<lb/>
mance novels tor a living We were mar-<lb/>
ried two years ago and moved out to Hol-<lb/>
lywood. When she finishes school well<lb/>
find a little place in upstate New York<lb/>
It all sounds quite, well, idvlln. but one<lb/>
wonders whether Pare, given his current<lb/>
status as a bankable propertv. will ever<lb/>
have the chance to indulge his bucolic<lb/>
dreams. It. as seems certain. Streets ot Fin<lb/>
is another Walter Hill hit. Pare will be<lb/>
caught up m the destinv of Tom Codv for<lb/>
the foreseeable future when the film opens<lb/>
June 8. It's a fate that suits him well<lb/>
A<lb/>
U.A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0021"/><lb/>
Where Does<lb/>
James Garner Drive His Tank?<lb/>
Anywhere He Wants To!<lb/>
BY CHRIS MORRIS<lb/>
James Garner is tank jockey Zack Carey<lb/>
in Irwin Yablans' forthcoming produc-<lb/>
tion Tank, directed by Marvin J.<lb/>
Chomskv from a screenplav by Dan Gor-<lb/>
don. It's a plum role for Garner. Carey is a<lb/>
tough, acid-tongued professional soldier<lb/>
with some sturdy, old-fashioned ideas<lb/>
about love, duty, familv and honor. He ar-<lb/>
rives at his new post. Fort Clemmons in<lb/>
the rural South, with his wife LaDonna<lb/>
(Shirlev Jones) and his son Billy (C.<lb/>
Thomas Howell), davdreaming of his im-<lb/>
minent retirement. His arrival at the fort<lb/>
attracts some immediate attention ? after<lb/>
all, it isn't every officer who arrives on base<lb/>
with a completely restored tank in tow.<lb/>
The tank is Zack's hobbv; it's been pain-<lb/>
stakingly reconditioned over the past fif-<lb/>
teen years. Asked why anyone would want<lb/>
a Sherman tank, he replies, "Because the<lb/>
odds against accidentally shooting vourself<lb/>
while cleaning it are incredible<lb/>
The trouble starts for Zack Carev when<lb/>
he leaves the base one night and drives to<lb/>
neighboring Clemmonsville in search of a<lb/>
cold beer and a friendly alternative to the<lb/>
dull pleasures of the officers' club. In a<lb/>
Clemmonsville roadhouse, he strikes up a<lb/>
conversation with Sara (Jenilee Harrison),<lb/>
a young prostitute who works for the local<lb/>
vice lord. Sheriff Buelton (G.D. Spradlin).<lb/>
10<lb/>
The two stars ? Shermans finest vin-<lb/>
tage armament (above, crushing a car<lb/>
and at least one brick building), and<lb/>
James Garner (inset left) as the Sergeant<lb/>
Major who restores the World War II mobile<lb/>
destroyer and then finds good use for it.<lb/>
When one of the sheriffs deputies roughs<lb/>
up the girl. Zack retaliates by beating the<lb/>
deputv senseless.<lb/>
Buelton then strikes back at Zack by ar-<lb/>
resting his son Billy in a trumped-up drug<lb/>
bust. When Billv is finally sentenced to the<lb/>
state prison farm, Zack decides he's had<lb/>
enough of Southern justice and moves his<lb/>
own armament into action.<lb/>
Zack Carey's vengeful tank raid on the<lb/>
Clemmonsville jail is just the beginning of<lb/>
an uproarious, explosive cross-country<lb/>
chase which pits the crazed Sheriff Buel-<lb/>
ton and his minions against the armor-clad<lb/>
firepower of the Sherman tank manned bv<lb/>
fyvinA was just a joy. It will be a great<lb/>
1 little part for me Jenilee Harrison<lb/>
says of her role as the 17-year-old pros-<lb/>
titute Sara. "The best thing for me was<lb/>
wearing absolutely no makeup, with my<lb/>
hair up on top of my head in a<lb/>
ponytail. They only cared about my act-<lb/>
ing, they didn't care how I looked A<lb/>
welcome relief for the actress after her<lb/>
stint on ABC's Threes Company and her<lb/>
"surf chick" role in the TV movie,<lb/>
Malibu, where much fuss was made<lb/>
over appearance.<lb/>
"James Garner is great, we became<lb/>
good friends she says enthusiastically.<lb/>
"We played cards every night for three<lb/>
months. We played Jerry's Rules. Jerry<lb/>
is his chiropractor. It's a great card<lb/>
game<lb/>
As for the near legendary difficulty<lb/>
of star Garner, Harrison is clearly on<lb/>
Garner's side. "He takes an authorita-<lb/>
tive position many times, but that's just<lb/>
THE MOVIE MAGAZINE<lb/>
Z.u k. Billv and Sara.<lb/>
Tanks high-spirited action is perfect-<lb/>
ly suited to the talents of James Gar-<lb/>
ner. The durable and charismatic leading<lb/>
man, known to millions as TV's Bret<lb/>
Maverick and Jim Rockford, is himself no<lb/>
stranger to the role of military man.<lb/>
Some of Garner's best-remembered films,<lb/>
including The Creat Escape, Sayonara and<lb/>
The Americaruzation of Emily, featured the<lb/>
actor as a wise-cracking American in<lb/>
uniform.<lb/>
Shirlev Jones has been one of America's<lb/>
most wholesome actresses since the Fifties.<lb/>
to protect himself. James Gamer has<lb/>
made himself a star, nobody else has<lb/>
done it. He never got out of line, never<lb/>
dictated anybody else's job<lb/>
Tank spent those three months on lo-<lb/>
cation in Georgia, "in some small<lb/>
towns, and we worked six days a week<lb/>
Ms. Harrison remembers. And how was<lb/>
Georgia? "A lot of red clay she says<lb/>
succinctly.<lb/>
When asked about her career after<lb/>
Tank, Ms. Harrison replies, "I take it<lb/>
day by day. I plan on being in this busi-<lb/>
ness my whole life<lb/>
Judith Sims<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0022"/><lb/>
when she rose to stardom as the singing<lb/>
star of the film versions of Rogers and<lb/>
Hammerstein'sOAaiowM and Carousel. She<lb/>
graduated from girl-next-door roles to her<lb/>
latter-dav identification as everybody's fa-<lb/>
vorite Mom via her stint in the long-<lb/>
running TV series The Partridge Family,<lb/>
which co-starred her real-life stepson<lb/>
David Cassidv. But those accustomed to the<lb/>
squeakv-clean Shirley Jones may be in for<lb/>
a shock: Screenwriter Dan Gordon has<lb/>
conceived the distaff Carey as a tough,<lb/>
sometimes tart-tongued Army wife.<lb/>
C Thomas Howell comes to his role as<lb/>
Billy Carev fresh from his starring debut<lb/>
as Ponvbov Curtis in Francis Ford Coppo-<lb/>
la's film of ST Mm ton's The Outsider. Tank<lb/>
is only Tommy Howell's third film (his first<lb/>
screen role was as one of Henry Thomas'<lb/>
bike-riding buddies in FT), but he's al-<lb/>
ready getting a chance to display his ver-<lb/>
satility ? the fast-paced action of this cur-<lb/>
rent project is in marked contrast to Cop-<lb/>
pola's introspective drama.<lb/>
Not that Tommv Howell isn't at home<lb/>
with action. His dad, Chris Howell. is a<lb/>
well-known stunt man, and Ibmmv him-<lb/>
self is quite the cowbov ? he was California<lb/>
Junior Rodeo Association Champion in<lb/>
1979.<lb/>
Rounding out Tank's cast are a master<lb/>
screen villain and a vivacious young ac-<lb/>
tress. CD. Spradlin is a superb and well-<lb/>
traveled screen heavy If a pan demands a<lb/>
menacing Southern or Southwestern tvpe.<lb/>
Spradlin is the man for the job. The<lb/>
square-jawed, steelv-eved actor is well-<lb/>
known to connoisseurs of movie evil as the<lb/>
hard-nosed coaches m orth Dallas Forty<lb/>
and One on One. the corrupt Nevada<lb/>
senator in The Codfather Part II. and the<lb/>
grim general who dispatches Marlon<lb/>
Brando's assassin in .pocahpse Sow.<lb/>
Tank marks the screen debut of Jenilee<lb/>
Harrison, but she should be no stranger to<lb/>
tans ot the long-running TV comedv<lb/>
Three's Company The blonde, curvaceous<lb/>
auress was prominently featured on the<lb/>
show as the bubble-headed roommate of<lb/>
John Ritter and Joyce DeWitt.<lb/>
Tank- solid cast is put through their<lb/>
sometimes exhausting paces bv Marvin<lb/>
A little family get-together ? Shtrley Jones<lb/>
(center) joins Harrison, Gamer, C. Thomas<lb/>
Howell and the tank -for a joyous homecom-<lb/>
ing after a very tough journey.<lb/>
Chomsky, a veteran director whose credits<lb/>
include some of the most noteworthy TV<lb/>
films of recent years: Holocaust. Roots and<lb/>
Inside the Third Reich (tor which he won the<lb/>
prestigious Director's Guild Award for best<lb/>
director).<lb/>
The Georgia locations serve as a colorful<lb/>
backdrop for a bnghtlv variegated story<lb/>
Tank, opening March 16. offers audiences<lb/>
intimate iamilv drama, raucous comedv.<lb/>
and. most of all. full-tilt action, much of it<lb/>
supplied bv its eponvmous centerpiece. As<lb/>
Zack Carev's Sherman slogs toward the<lb/>
state line at the climax of the film, crouds<lb/>
of onlookers roar ? a response that's sure<lb/>
to be duplicated in movie houses around<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
THEIAST<lb/>
SDWIGHTCR<lb/>
(Continued from page 4)<lb/>
thing Coes, the younger Castle was a film<lb/>
school buddy of John Carpenter. Thev saw<lb/>
The Resurrection of Bronco Billy, a project on<lb/>
which they combined talents, win an Oscar<lb/>
in the "short subject" division. Castle later<lb/>
assisted Carpenter with the ahead-of-its-<lb/>
time science fiction movie Dark Star and,<lb/>
also with Carpenter, co-wrote the Kurt<lb/>
Russell-starring Escape from Xew York. The<lb/>
masked role? Castle was seen (anci yet not<lb/>
seen) as the psycho killer in Halloween.<lb/>
The in-kitchen mysteries connected to<lb/>
the preparation of The Last Starfighter con-<lb/>
cern, and I quote the only material avail-<lb/>
able to the press at present,  a facility<lb/>
that can fully utilize the most powerful<lb/>
graphic software ever written, for the most<lb/>
powerful computer that has ever been<lb/>
built, combined with an extremely high<lb/>
level of man-machine interaction<lb/>
Digital Productions, an independent<lb/>
company headed by John Whitney. Jr. and<lb/>
Gary Demos, has been tabbed to make the<lb/>
battles among the stars come alive. Until<lb/>
now, computer-aided images have been lit-<lb/>
tle snippets here and there ? the rugged<lb/>
bolts that spin down on a Chevy truck<lb/>
emblem, to cite one often-seen example.<lb/>
Rather frequently, computer-generated<lb/>
images have been part of a live action<lb/>
scene, a minor overlay intended to create a<lb/>
short-lived "How did thev do that im-<lb/>
pression. For the first time, whole blocks of<lb/>
movie time are going to be high-resolution<lb/>
computer graphics, thanks to what's called<lb/>
the Digital Computer Scene Simulation<lb/>
Process. What appears on the screen will<lb/>
have come directly from the mind of the<lb/>
programmerartist, with the substantial aid<lb/>
of a $6.5 million CRAY' IS1000 computer.<lb/>
Compared to the secrecy surrounding<lb/>
their work at Digital Productions. Demos<lb/>
and Whitnev make the people in charge of<lb/>
Russia's missile programs seem like com-<lb/>
pulsive blabbermouths. At this point only<lb/>
two things are conclusively known outside<lb/>
THE MOVIE M A G A Z 1 N E<lb/>
Robert Preston (above, with Lance Guest)<lb/>
plays an intergalactic con man ? a sort of<lb/>
Music Man in Outer Space. TheUrn's pro-<lb/>
ducer, Gary Adelson (above left), is proud of<lb/>
his movie's technical achievements in special<lb/>
effects ? which have remained top secret.<lb/>
the inner circle of The Last Starjighter's<lb/>
makers: The costumes for the aliens are<lb/>
the weird and whimsical creations of a<lb/>
master costume designer named Robert<lb/>
Fletcher and the space battle sequences are<lb/>
going to be a step bevond anything ever<lb/>
done before. It could be a feast. The Last<lb/>
Starfighter opens June 22.<lb/>
11<lb/>
S.<lb/>
lc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057628_0023"/><lb/>
Teenage Agony and Ecstacy,<lb/>
From the Writer of<lb/>
National Lampoon's Vacation<lb/>
BY MIKE BYGRAVE<lb/>
What's the worst thing that can<lb/>
happen to a teenager? According<lb/>
to Molly Ringwald. having the<lb/>
whole family forget vour sixteenth birth-<lb/>
day mav not be the worst, but it comes<lb/>
i lose. Thai just happens to be the plot of<lb/>
Rtngwald's new him, Sixteen Candles, open-<lb/>
ing May 11, and a subject close to her heart<lb/>
in real life. Her own sixteenth birthday is<lb/>
in February, 1984.<lb/>
"Sixteen is so major. F.xpeciallv if you<lb/>
live in Southern California, like I do.<lb/>
where you really can't go anywhere with-<lb/>
out driving. Turning sixteen and getting<lb/>
vour driver's license is reallv like getting<lb/>
your freedom<lb/>
No one is likely to forget Ringwald's<lb/>
birthday. Indeed, some months prior to<lb/>
the event, negotiations were under way as<lb/>
to what kind of car she would receive as<lb/>
her present. "I want a Rabbit but mv par-<lb/>
ents want me to get a BMW. 1 don't want a<lb/>
BMW because it'll look like I'm driving mv<lb/>
parents' car. A Rabbit is so cute ? a white<lb/>
Rabbit convertible<lb/>
Ringwald has earned her car. She's been<lb/>
performing since she was 4, singing with<lb/>
her father's Great Pacific Jazz Band. She<lb/>
played one of the orphans in the West<lb/>
Coast production of Annie and later be-<lb/>
came a regular on TVs Facts of Life. But it<lb/>
was her role as John Cassavetes" daughter<lb/>
in Paul Maurskv's The Tempest which put<lb/>
her career into overdrive. Since then, she's<lb/>
made a couple of TV movies and the sci-fi<lb/>
epic Spu ehuntei. Adventure m the Forbidden<lb/>
Zone. Sixteen (.undies is one of two films<lb/>
about teenagers in Chicago In-ing made<lb/>
back-to-back bv writer-director John<lb/>
Hughes, both starring Ringwald.<lb/>
"John savs he basically writes about<lb/>
teenagers because he finds them more in-<lb/>
teresting than adults, and I think that's<lb/>
great Ringwald sas. "Sixteen Candles will<lb/>
remind people what it's like to be a teen-<lb/>
ager again. When I read the script I<lb/>
thought, ves. this is exactly how it is to be<lb/>
lb. "<lb/>
Although she's been working most of<lb/>
her young life. Ringwald is the opposite of<lb/>
a "stage kid She's fresh, unspoiled and,<lb/>
according to the highly regarded character<lb/>
actor Paul Doolev, who plavs her father in<lb/>
r<lb/>
Sixteen Candles, "a typical teenager off the<lb/>
set. But w hen she acts, she's charming and<lb/>
interesting to look at on film. You get the<lb/>
camera in close and there are ever-<lb/>
changing, subtle expressions going on un-<lb/>
derneath the surface. She has a face on<lb/>
which emotions play. Meryl Streep has that<lb/>
kind of face, where vou see three or four<lb/>
emotions going on as she says one sen-<lb/>
tence, and Mollv has it too. There's more<lb/>
to her acting than just the words<lb/>
Ringwald acknowledges her life has been<lb/>
extraordinary, but says she never missed<lb/>
"having a normal childhood. I think I've<lb/>
gained much more than I've missed. I<lb/>
haven't had to waste half my life figuring<lb/>
out what I want to do. I've been able to do<lb/>
something sooner than most people and. if<lb/>
1 don't want to keep doing it forever, at<lb/>
least I've had the choice and I know what<lb/>
it's like<lb/>
Her film work has introduced her to<lb/>
other things besides acting. For Tempest<lb/>
she spent two months in Greece and a<lb/>
month in Rome ("the first time I'd ever<lb/>
been abroad"). Working in Canada and<lb/>
meeting French-Canadians on Spacehunter<lb/>
led to her current interest in studying<lb/>
French. "I'm going to a French school now<lb/>
and I hope to learn enough so that, when<lb/>
it's time for me to think about college, I<lb/>
could go to a college in Paris<lb/>
Ringwald credits the support of her fam-<lb/>
ily with helping her to keep a perspective<lb/>
(Continued on page 14)<lb/>
It's Molly Ringwald's sixteenth birthday, but<lb/>
she has to spend it as a member of her sis-<lb/>
ter's wedding party (above). Michael<lb/>
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writerdirector John Hughes) helps her cele-<lb/>
brate more romantically. Paul Dooley (oppo-<lb/>
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looks familiar, it's because he played Dennis<lb/>
Christopher's harried father in Breaking<lb/>
Away.<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE MOVIE M A G A Z 1 N E<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0024"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0025"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0026"/><lb/>
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<pb facs="00057628_0028"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>