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<pb facs="00057630_0001"/>
<lb/>
?he<lb/>
(Earnlttttan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
NCATE Revisiting<lb/>
Education School,<lb/>
Reviewing Programs<lb/>
R TIN. 4 V4?ss iiii P?lt. .I.? i . . <lb/>
The recent installation of a sidewalk along 10th Street should make the voyage to class somewhat<lb/>
Brewster Building and Memorial Gym easier on those all-too-frequent rainy days.<lb/>
ECU NmkuMu<lb/>
By TINA MARCSCHAK<lb/>
Co-Nrwi Miior<lb/>
After much revamping and<lb/>
reorganizing, the ECU School of<lb/>
Education is awaiting a revisit<lb/>
from the National Council for Ac-<lb/>
creditation in Teacher Education<lb/>
(NCATE). The 13 - member team<lb/>
is visiting ECU March 18-21 to<lb/>
review the school and determine<lb/>
whether or not it has met ac-<lb/>
creditation standards. The School<lb/>
of Education was denied ac-<lb/>
creditation last March because of<lb/>
administration, maintenance and<lb/>
supervision problems.<lb/>
Dr. Charles R. Coble, dean of<lb/>
the School of Education said he<lb/>
didn't think the school would<lb/>
have any problem getting reac-<lb/>
credited. He added, however, that<lb/>
any program can be approved.<lb/>
"Without a doubt they're going<lb/>
to find needed improvements. If<lb/>
they don't then they won't have<lb/>
done their job Coble said.<lb/>
The NCATE team, chaired bv<lb/>
. Dennis Hinkle. professor of<lb/>
Polytechnic Institute and State<lb/>
University, will meet with selected<lb/>
faculty members, students and<lb/>
teachers. Coble said the commit-<lb/>
tee members will review all the<lb/>
programs, not just the ones who<lb/>
failed to meet required standards.<lb/>
In efforts to improve the<lb/>
teacher education programs,<lb/>
several multicultural education<lb/>
awareness lectureworkshops<lb/>
vvere given throughout the year.<lb/>
"They represent a substantial step<lb/>
in the right direction Coble<lb/>
said. "We think the activities and<lb/>
workshops we've had have been<lb/>
effective He stressed, however,<lb/>
that the school will continue to<lb/>
work on that component.<lb/>
Also implemented were three<lb/>
new programs ? a home<lb/>
economics program, a media<lb/>
supervision program and a middle<lb/>
school undergraduate and<lb/>
graduate program.<lb/>
Although the official NCATE<lb/>
report will not be released until<lb/>
this summer, Coble said the<lb/>
school will ultimately know the<lb/>
Three Become Academic Deans<lb/>
Coble, Ryan, Stevens Chosen<lb/>
ByTINAMAROSCHAK<lb/>
( o-N??, rdllor<lb/>
Three ECU faculty members,<lb/>
Charles R. Coble, Eugene Ryan,<lb/>
and Charles E. Stevens were ap-<lb/>
pointed to academic deanships by<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Board of Governors.<lb/>
Coble, who was elevated to<lb/>
dean of the School of Education,<lb/>
served as acting dean of the schooi<lb/>
for the past 10 months. He has a<lb/>
degree in botany, a graduate<lb/>
degree in science education and a<lb/>
doctorate from UNC - Chapel<lb/>
Hill in cirriculum and instruction.<lb/>
Coble is a professor of science<lb/>
education and has been a faculty<lb/>
member here since 1972.<lb/>
Professor and chairman of the<lb/>
ECU Department of Philosophy,<lb/>
Eugene Ryan, was appointed to<lb/>
dean of the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences. Ryan served as acting<lb/>
dean of the school beginning in<lb/>
January and has been a faculty<lb/>
member since 1968. Holding a<lb/>
doctorate from Pontifical<lb/>
Gregorian University in Rome,<lb/>
Ryan's interests include ancient<lb/>
Greek philosophy and medieval<lb/>
philosophy.<lb/>
Stevens was promoted to dean<lb/>
of the School of Music after serv-<lb/>
ing as a faculty member for 24<lb/>
years. During that time Stevens<lb/>
Educational Research at Virginia decision next Wednesday.<lb/>
,<lb/>
Coble<lb/>
has served as professor and chair-<lb/>
man of the Keyboard faculty, ac-<lb/>
ting dean and associate dean of<lb/>
the School of Music, chairman of<lb/>
the choral and piano teachers sec-<lb/>
(<lb/>
<lb/>
W<lb/>
Ti m<lb/>
Ryan<lb/>
tions of the NC Music Teachers<lb/>
Association and director of<lb/>
graduate studies. Stevens received<lb/>
his doctorate in music from UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
Mankiewicz To Speak<lb/>
On 'Campaign Trail'<lb/>
Stevens<lb/>
All three men were nxommend-<lb/>
ed by separate search :ommittees<lb/>
and approved by the ECU board<lb/>
of trustees and administration.<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
The 1984 Spring Lecture-<lb/>
Seminar Series, to be held March<lb/>
19-21, will feature famed jour-<lb/>
nalist and political analystad-<lb/>
visor Frank Mankiewicz The title<lb/>
of the series, "On the Electronics<lb/>
Campaign Trail: the Straws, the<lb/>
Primaries, and the General Elec-<lb/>
tion will center on the role of<lb/>
television in national elections.<lb/>
Besides being a well known<lb/>
writer and eminent attorney,<lb/>
Mankiewicz was also press<lb/>
Niewald Pleased With Outcome<lb/>
secretary to the late Senator<lb/>
Robert F. Kennedy and national<lb/>
campaign manager for Senator<lb/>
George McGovern's 1971-72<lb/>
presidential campaign.<lb/>
Mankiewicz has also been a col-<lb/>
umnist for the Washington Post<lb/>
and president of National Public<lb/>
Radio.<lb/>
Mankiewicz will open the series<lb/>
with a lecture Monday, March 19,<lb/>
8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium. The<lb/>
initial lecture is entitled "The<lb/>
General Role of Television and<lb/>
Other Media in Politics and Na-<lb/>
i i <lb/>
SGA Legislature Rebuffs Vote On<lb/>
Referendum For Campus PIRG<lb/>
Th? sr.A i o?;ru. wi<lb/>
Mankiewicz<lb/>
tional Elections Faculty will be<lb/>
given an opportunity to respond<lb/>
to this lecture on Tues March 20,<lb/>
9:30 a.m. to 11:30 a.m. and 2<lb/>
p.m. to 4 p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, room 224. A rap<lb/>
session between students and<lb/>
See JOURNALIST, page 5<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monday<lb/>
refused to suspend the rules to<lb/>
vote on a bill allowing a student<lb/>
referendum on a Public Interest<lb/>
Research Group at ECU, sending<lb/>
the bill into committee and<lb/>
possibly dimming the chances of<lb/>
PIRG question being on the SGA<lb/>
election ballot next week.<lb/>
The bill will have to be brought<lb/>
out of committee at next<lb/>
Monday's SGA legislative<lb/>
meeting if it to be enacted, accor-<lb/>
ding to Student Welfare Commit-<lb/>
tee Chairman David Brown,<lb/>
whose committee will consider the<lb/>
bill this week. Brown said two<lb/>
other committees are also review-<lb/>
ing the bill this week.<lb/>
The SGA is holding elections<lb/>
next week for 1984-85 executive<lb/>
officers, and sponsors of the bill<lb/>
would like to have the PIRG issue<lb/>
brought to a student referendum<lb/>
on the same ballot.<lb/>
The bill, if passed, would allow<lb/>
ECU students to vote on whether<lb/>
they want a PIRG on campus,<lb/>
funded by a $2-per-semester fee<lb/>
that could be refunded upon re-<lb/>
quest.<lb/>
In other business Monday, after<lb/>
hearing gubernatorial candidate<lb/>
D. M. Faircloth speak, the<lb/>
legislature heard a report by three<lb/>
members who went to a student<lb/>
government convention in Texas<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
A member of the Screenings<lb/>
and Appointments Committee an-<lb/>
nounced that vacancies are open<lb/>
for SGA representatives from<lb/>
Jones, Fletcher and Jarvis dor-<lb/>
mitories and from off campus.<lb/>
Quiet Dorm Proposal Approved<lb/>
ILLY BUSH rrcol w out tkrnnu ii ?. . .<lb/>
By MOLLY BUSH<lb/>
Slarf Writer<lb/>
The Committee on Residence<lb/>
life unanimously approved the<lb/>
Quiet Dorm proposal for Fall<lb/>
Semester 1985 last Thurs. Discus-<lb/>
sion on the dorm that will be used<lb/>
begins on March 22. The only<lb/>
stipulation put on the proposal<lb/>
was that the Quiet Dorm will be<lb/>
governed by the students who live<lb/>
there.<lb/>
SRA President Mark Niewald<lb/>
said "I'm very pleased this pro-<lb/>
posal went through as well as it<lb/>
did. "We proposed the quiet<lb/>
dorm about five or six weeks<lb/>
ago Niewald said. "It was great<lb/>
to see it start out as an idea and<lb/>
work its way through Niewald<lb/>
praised the SRA for it's hard<lb/>
work.<lb/>
According to survey results,<lb/>
students are interested in a quiet<lb/>
dorm. Out of the 1322 surveys<lb/>
that were turned in, approximate-<lb/>
ly 841 agreed that it was a good<lb/>
idea. That number dropped con-<lb/>
m<lb/>
siderably when the students were<lb/>
asked if they would consider liv-<lb/>
ing in the quiet dorm- only 417<lb/>
said they would.<lb/>
"When considering location -<lb/>
we must be realistic said<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, associate dean<lb/>
and director of Residence Life.<lb/>
"Students should understand the<lb/>
factors when choosing which<lb/>
dorm will be chosen to be the<lb/>
quiet dorm Fulghum said.<lb/>
Some of these factors are the<lb/>
number of students the building<lb/>
The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment6<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
Classifieds10<lb/>
? For a wrap up of the ECAC<lb/>
South Basketball Tourna-<lb/>
ment, see Sports, page 8.<lb/>
? ECU gets a sneak preview<lb/>
?f the new movie Police<lb/>
Academy,tor a pre-release<lb/>
screening, see Entertainment,<lb/>
Page 6.<lb/>
will house, the size of the<lb/>
building, the accessability for the<lb/>
handicapped students, and<lb/>
whether or not the building is or<lb/>
can be coed<lb/>
"We will have a Quiet Dorm "<lb/>
Fulghum said. "As to which<lb/>
butlding - we are looking at the<lb/>
options<lb/>
The quiet dorm issue has en-<lb/>
countered a great deal of opposi-<lb/>
tion on campus, especially from<lb/>
students in Jarvis.<lb/>
Paper Sponsoring Campus Forum<lb/>
For SGA Presidential Candidates<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
NcwiUHar<lb/>
Candidates for the position ot<lb/>
SGA President will have a chance<lb/>
to present their platforms and<lb/>
answer questions on campus<lb/>
issues at a forum to be held Tues-<lb/>
day, March 20 at 2:30 p.m. on the<lb/>
university Mall. The forum is be-<lb/>
ing sponsored by The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian.<lb/>
There are currently four can-<lb/>
didates for the SGA presidency:<lb/>
Mark Niewald, a junior and SRA<lb/>
president; Jay Brigel, a junior<lb/>
marketing major is also a resident<lb/>
advisor.Greg Shelnutt, a senior<lb/>
sculpture major a former member<lb/>
of the SGA Legislature, president<lb/>
of the Scuplture Group, and a<lb/>
member of several School of Art<lb/>
committees; and John Rainey, a<lb/>
junior, is chairman of the SGA<lb/>
Appropriations Committee.<lb/>
The candidates will answer a<lb/>
series of questions presented by a<lb/>
student panel and will also be<lb/>
given a chance to inform students<lb/>
of their platforms. Outgoing SGA<lb/>
President Paul Naso will serve as<lb/>
moderator for the forum. (Any<lb/>
students who want to submit<lb/>
questions for consideration by the<lb/>
panel should use the form on page<lb/>
three of today's issue and bring the<lb/>
questions to The East Carolinian<lb/>
office by Thursday, March 15.)<lb/>
There are two candidates for<lb/>
the position of SGA Treasurer,<lb/>
Lee Lane and Georgia Mooring.<lb/>
Candidates for the other two of-<lb/>
fices are running uncontested.<lb/>
Mike McPartland is running for<lb/>
vice president and Jay Johnson<lb/>
for secretary. Elections will be<lb/>
held March 21.<lb/>
Democratic go<lb/>
the SGA Monday<lb/>
orial candidate<lb/>
ory, page 5.<lb/>
"Laach"<lb/>
Faircloth spoke to<lb/>
?iro-nt<lb/>
MStarSteii? "<lb/>
<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH IV 1?U<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
tine 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday aw<lb/>
Ing the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
f Iclel newspaper of East Carolina<lb/>
University, owned, operated and<lb/>
published for and by the students<lb/>
? East Carolina University.<lb/>
Unless otherwise noted, unslgn<lb/>
?d editorials on the opinion page<lb/>
?re the newspaper's opinion,<lb/>
oenerally written by the manec<lb/>
Ing editor.<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $30 yearly.<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices are<lb/>
located In the Publications<lb/>
building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian,<lb/>
2nd Floor, Publications building,<lb/>
ECU, Greenville. N C 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 757-6366. 6367. ?309<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
Welcome back sisters. Hope you all<lb/>
t?ad a great spring break. Don't<lb/>
forget the meeting tonight at 4:30. See<lb/>
ya' there.<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
There will be a Lacrosse match this<lb/>
weekend at Chapel Hill against the<lb/>
UNC Lacrosse club The match will<lb/>
start at 200 pm. Saturday. March 17<lb/>
on the asfroturf beside Carmical<lb/>
Gym So If you like watching<lb/>
Lacrosse or have not seen it before,<lb/>
come on out and get the excitement of<lb/>
Lacrosse<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity has a lot<lb/>
going on within the next couple of<lb/>
weeks To start out this Wed. (March<lb/>
U) we have an all campuis party at<lb/>
?he house starting at 10:00 Thursday<lb/>
(March is) at 700 we have a pre<lb/>
induction party with all of the new lit<lb/>
tie sisters, then at 800 the Induction<lb/>
and after we all party at the 200 WEst<lb/>
Happy Hour. This Saturday is<lb/>
Parents Day starting at 12:00 with a<lb/>
pig pickin starting at 3:00. P.U.S.H.<lb/>
aay (Play Units for the Severely Han<lb/>
dicapped) Is March 31 (Sat.)<lb/>
Everyone help support this cause.<lb/>
Rose Ball is right around the corner<lb/>
also<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
will meet Monday, March 19, at 7 30<lb/>
pm The meeting will be held at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center, 953 E 10th<lb/>
St.(at the bottom of College Hill). All<lb/>
interested persons are cordially in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
U.S. GENERAL<lb/>
ACCOUNTING OFFICE<lb/>
A Representative from the U.S.<lb/>
General Accounting Office will be on<lb/>
campus March 15, 1M4 to interview<lb/>
coop students who would like to work<lb/>
as GAO E valuator Accounting and<lb/>
Finance majors who have completed<lb/>
40 semester hours and have a 2.9 or<lb/>
higher GPA should contact me Co-op<lb/>
Office, 313 Rawl Bldg to arrange an<lb/>
interview immediately!<lb/>
BLOOD PRESSURE<lb/>
Here's your chance to get a free<lb/>
blood pressure screening Come on<lb/>
out on Sunday, March ltth between<lb/>
12:30 and 5:00 pm to Sycamore Hill<lb/>
Baptist Church 226 W 8th St. We the<lb/>
members of me Pre Professional<lb/>
Health Alliance and the Student Na-<lb/>
tional Medical Association will be<lb/>
glad to serve you. Thanksl<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL<lb/>
Team Handball, the fast action<lb/>
Olympic sport returns to me ECU In<lb/>
tramural program immediately after<lb/>
spring break Registration will be<lb/>
held March 12 13 with competition<lb/>
beginning March 19. Fourteen In-<lb/>
tramural team handball participants<lb/>
have been selected for National<lb/>
Sports Festival competition within<lb/>
the past three years, and Leora<lb/>
"Sam"jortes will represent the USA<lb/>
m the 1984 Olympics. Remember to<lb/>
sign up your team for team handball!<lb/>
CO-OP JOBS<lb/>
Currently there are cop positions<lb/>
available at International Trade Ad<lb/>
ministration and U.S. Dept. of<lb/>
Transportation in various areas of<lb/>
the US Requirements: maiors in<lb/>
economics. International trade<lb/>
relations, marketing, business and or<lb/>
finance, criminal lustice, public ad<lb/>
ministration, personnel, computer<lb/>
science, and industrial policy<lb/>
analysis. Undergraduates must have<lb/>
a minimum overall GPA of 2.5 and a<lb/>
2 9 GPA in major course of work. The<lb/>
pay range is from $11,017 to S20.965<lb/>
depending on education completed<lb/>
and or prior Federal employment<lb/>
Stop by the co op office in Rawl 313<lb/>
ASAP These positions need to be fill<lb/>
ed quickly.<lb/>
WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service In the Bloxton House is<lb/>
ottering mas on hour sessions to aid<lb/>
you in developing better Interviewing<lb/>
skills for us in your ob search A<lb/>
film and discussion of how to inter<lb/>
vlw through this service will be<lb/>
shared. Each session will be held in<lb/>
the Career Planning Room at 3 pm<lb/>
Come on any of the following dates<lb/>
March 21 and 27.<lb/>
BLOODMOBILE<lb/>
A bloodmobile will be held on Can<lb/>
tral Campwt In umstead Dorm (lob<lb/>
by). Everyone is invited to give. The<lb/>
tours are between 12 4 pm.<lb/>
TENNIS DOUBLES<lb/>
Registration will be held March 12<lb/>
for me tennis doubles tournament.<lb/>
Find a partner and come on over to<lb/>
Memorial gym and sign up for<lb/>
doubles tennis.<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Registration begins March 12-13 for<lb/>
the Preseason MMM Tournament.<lb/>
Competition will be held me weekend<lb/>
of March 16. Start forming your team<lb/>
now.<lb/>
RACQUETBAKL<lb/>
DOUBLES<lb/>
Registration for Intramural Co-Rec<lb/>
Racquetball doubles will be held<lb/>
March 19 ?. Play will begin March<lb/>
26.<lb/>
VIDEOSHOWING<lb/>
The Department of intramural-<lb/>
Recreatlonal Services in co-operation<lb/>
with Mr. Gattl's Pizza is showing on<lb/>
video tape, me divisional Fraternity<lb/>
basketball final between Kappa<lb/>
Alpha and Kappa Alpha Psl. This<lb/>
feature will be shown Thursday,<lb/>
March 15, at 8:15 pm.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
What was it like helping meet the<lb/>
spiritual needs of me troops In Viet<lb/>
nam? Hear former U.S. Army<lb/>
Chaplain Nevln Snyder speak at<lb/>
PAUSE at the Baptist Student union<lb/>
on Thursday, March 15 at 7 pm.<lb/>
Everyone Is welcome.<lb/>
NIH<lb/>
National institute of Health - a<lb/>
representative from NIH. Bethesda,<lb/>
MD will be on campus March 19 and<lb/>
20 to interview studnts who would<lb/>
like to work In a clinical setting as<lb/>
Normal Volunteers, students will be<lb/>
paid dally stipends. All interested<lb/>
students must attend a general<lb/>
maatlng ?? 700 pm on Monday.<lb/>
March 19 In Rawl 302 before having<lb/>
interviews on the 20th Students ma<lb/>
ioring in Allied Health. Nursing, and<lb/>
related fields are encouraged to app<lb/>
?V Contact the Coop Office, 313<lb/>
?awl, for details and applications<lb/>
DIETETIC<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
The Student Dietetic Association<lb/>
will be meeting on Tuesday, March 13<lb/>
at 5:30 In room 121 (Dining Hall)<lb/>
They will be featuring Angela Rich<lb/>
who works with the WIC Program<lb/>
(Women, infant, and Children). Rich<lb/>
will explain the purpose, functions,<lb/>
and special events performed by the<lb/>
WIC Program which aids in main<lb/>
taining the Nutritional requirements<lb/>
of the mother, infant, and children of<lb/>
all ages. Please come. Everyone is<lb/>
Welcome.<lb/>
SUMMER CO-OP<lb/>
Thomas Nelson Inc. is offering ten<lb/>
positions In their Summer Co-op pro<lb/>
gram. Students selected are<lb/>
guaranteed $200 a week Students<lb/>
must be a hardworker, independent,<lb/>
and willing to relocate for the sum<lb/>
mer. Students will gain skills in com<lb/>
munication, time and money<lb/>
management, accounting,<lb/>
psychology, management and<lb/>
marketing. All students may apply at<lb/>
313 Rawl building in the Cooperative<lb/>
Education department.<lb/>
SIGMA THETATAU<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau, the National<lb/>
honor society of nursing, will have a<lb/>
called business meeting on Monday,<lb/>
March 19 at 7 pm in the School of<lb/>
Nursing, rm 203. All members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
CLASSIFIED AM 'Nbj<lb/>
You may us? tt? form at right 1 . or use a separate sheet of 1 papar if you need more lines. 1 Thr? in 11 it. ? 11? '<lb/>
<lb/>
 w. m , uiimi pot iinv. ? Each lettar, punctuation mark s0Urn ?-???rl rat mmnmm 1 1 f<lb/>
?.tv wv? apace counts as one ? unit. Capitalize and hyphenate ?<lb/>
words properly. Leave space 1<lb/>
at and of line if word doesn't fit. No ads will be accepted over I the phone we reserve the right ? to reiect any ad. AM ads must !<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?? prepaid. Enclose 75 cants ?<lb/>
per line or fraction of a Una. ! Please print legibfy! Use ! capital and lower case letters !<lb/>
<lb/>
Return to the Media Board 1mm mm?<lb/>
secretary by 3 p.m. the day 1?4?<lb/>
before publication.1,? <lb/>
PIRATE CLUB<lb/>
Applications are now being ac-<lb/>
cepted from persons interested In<lb/>
assisting the Pirate Club during<lb/>
Athletic events, socials, membership<lb/>
solicitations, and community ban<lb/>
quets during the 1984 year. Contact<lb/>
Charles Shavltz, Assistant Director,<lb/>
at 757 6178. or go by the Pirate Club<lb/>
office behind Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Deadline for applications is 4 00 pm<lb/>
Friday, March 16.<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
The Society for Advancement of<lb/>
Management will be meeting Thurs<lb/>
day. March 15 at 300 In Rawl IX. In<lb/>
eluded in the meeting will be Indue<lb/>
tions of new members, certificates<lb/>
awarded to past members, presenta-<lb/>
tion of groundwork for the rest of the<lb/>
semester, and a discussion about ac<lb/>
tivities for the rest of the semester.<lb/>
This is the last chance to apply and<lb/>
pay for membership, so make one of<lb/>
your smartest college moves, and get<lb/>
involved in ECU'S new exciting socie-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
FALLSEMEMSTER<lb/>
ROOM REGISTRATION<lb/>
Students enrolled Spring Semester<lb/>
1984 who plan to return to East<lb/>
Carolina University Fall Semester<lb/>
and who wish to be guaranteed<lb/>
residence hall housing will be re-<lb/>
quired to reserve rooms during the<lb/>
week of March 19 23. Prior to reserv<lb/>
ing a room, a student must make an<lb/>
advance room payment of $60. These<lb/>
payments, which must be accom-<lb/>
panied by housing applications<lb/>
contracts will be accepted in the<lb/>
Cashier's Office, Room 105, Spllman<lb/>
Bldg beginning March 15. Students<lb/>
now living in residence halls should<lb/>
obtain housing applications from<lb/>
their residence hall office. Students<lb/>
residing off campus should obtain the<lb/>
applications from the Office of Hous-<lb/>
ing Operations, Room 201, Whlchard<lb/>
Bldg. These will be available beginn-<lb/>
ing March 13.<lb/>
We are the vanguard of a new<lb/>
democracy. We willbe meeting at<lb/>
Mendenhall (Ask receptionist for<lb/>
room number, every Thursday at<lb/>
8:00 p.m. For more information call<lb/>
752 4935 or 757 3566.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
The Little Sisters of Delta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Fraternity invite anyone In-<lb/>
terested in becoming a Little Sister to<lb/>
a meeting on Wednesday. March 14 at<lb/>
B pm at the Delta Sigma House<lb/>
located on Tenth St. Come find ou<lb/>
what Little Sisterhood is all about!<lb/>
SUMMER RETAIL<lb/>
SALES POSITIONS<lb/>
Positions are available for retail<lb/>
sales jobs in the Nags Head area.<lb/>
Retail sales experience preferred but<lb/>
not necessary. For more Info contact<lb/>
the Co-op Office in Rawl 313.<lb/>
WEIGHT CLUB<lb/>
Attention all weight lifters and in<lb/>
terested individuals: There will be a<lb/>
very important meeting on Tuesday<lb/>
March 13 in 105 B Memorial Gym!<lb/>
Please be prompt in your attendance<lb/>
because dues and additional weight<lb/>
room hours will be discussed.<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Cam-<lb/>
pus Alcohol and Drug Program on<lb/>
Thursday. March 15 at 5:00 pm in 210<lb/>
Erwln Hall. Elections and busisness<lb/>
will discussed.<lb/>
BIKINI CONTEST<lb/>
Ladlesl Tim to show off the results<lb/>
of diet, exercise, and Florida! Com<lb/>
Ing soon to me Elbo- Fame, Fortune,<lb/>
and Fun!<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Registration for Intramural Soft<lb/>
ball will be held March 12 13 In<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Play will begin<lb/>
March 19. Start forming your teams<lb/>
now.<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Deadline for Psl Chi Scholarships Is<lb/>
April 2,194. The Initiation for all new<lb/>
members in Psi Chi will be held on<lb/>
Mar. 20 at 7.00 in 244 Mendnhall. All<lb/>
members are urged to attend. Elec-<lb/>
tions for officers for Psi Chi 84-85 will<lb/>
be held following initiation.<lb/>
Refreshments will be served.<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED<lb/>
College Rep Wanted to distribute<lb/>
"Student Rate" subscription cards at<lb/>
this campus. Good income, no seidng<lb/>
involved. For information send a<lb/>
self addressed, stamped envelope to<lb/>
Allen s. Lowrance, Director, 251<lb/>
Glenwood Dr Mooresville, NC 28115<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
We are having a meeting on<lb/>
Wednesday at 6:00 pm at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. Turn in your money<lb/>
for the tickets by Wed , March 14th to<lb/>
Hector or Mildred.<lb/>
PLANNING AND ZONING<lb/>
TASK FORCE<lb/>
The Greenville Planning and Zoo<lb/>
ing Task Force will hold Its March<lb/>
meetings on Tuesday, March 13 and<lb/>
Tuesday, March 27, 1984 at 1000 am<lb/>
In the third floor Conference Room of<lb/>
the Community Building located at<lb/>
the corner of Fourth and Greene<lb/>
Streets<lb/>
ALA BIKE TREK<lb/>
An informational meeting about the<lb/>
American Lung Association Bike<lb/>
Trek will be held Wed March 14 at<lb/>
7:15 pm at the Lung Association of<lb/>
fice, 112 S Pitt St. This 100 mile event<lb/>
will be held In the Wilmington area<lb/>
April 13-15. Anyone who Is interested<lb/>
In participating or who would like to<lb/>
know more should plan to attend or<lb/>
call me office at 752 5093<lb/>
EDMISTEN'84<lb/>
All students interested in joining<lb/>
the campus organization to elect<lb/>
Rufus Edmisten as Governor In 184<lb/>
please contact Betty Casey or Mecon<lb/>
Moye (ECU coordinatlor at 752-0312.<lb/>
ASSERTIVENESS<lb/>
TRAINING<lb/>
A three part workshop offered to<lb/>
students at NO COST by the Universi<lb/>
ty Counseling Center on Thursday,<lb/>
March 15. 22 and 29. All three sessions<lb/>
will be conducted from 3 4 pm in 306<lb/>
Wright Annex Please call Counseling<lb/>
Center for registration (757-661).<lb/>
ART SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Two Art Scholarships are available<lb/>
to lunlors, art mafors only. Applica<lb/>
tions are due by March 25, 1984. For<lb/>
application information and forms<lb/>
contact the School of Art office<lb/>
SUBDIVISION REVIEW<lb/>
BOARD<lb/>
The Greenville Subdivision Review<lb/>
Board will hold its March meetings<lb/>
on Wednesday. March 14 and<lb/>
Wednesday. March 28 at 2:00 p.m. In<lb/>
the third floor conference room of the<lb/>
Community Building located at the<lb/>
corner of Fourth and Greene Streets.<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The American Marketing Assocla<lb/>
tion presents a Pepsi Marketing Pro-<lb/>
gram, with special guest Steve Sloan,<lb/>
marketing manager for Pepsi Cola.<lb/>
Current advertising campaigns will<lb/>
be featured with emphasis in me<lb/>
"Pride fo the Carolines" campaign j<lb/>
and Michael Jackson's "New Genera-<lb/>
tion" advertisements. Be at <lb/>
Mendenhall, room 221 at 2:00 April<lb/>
13th for a program you will no forget<lb/>
NOW REORGANIZING<lb/>
The Greenville Chapter of the Na<lb/>
tlonal Organization for women is In<lb/>
the process of reorgalnlzlng There<lb/>
will be a dinner meeting on March 14<lb/>
at 6 00 pm at the Three Steers<lb/>
Restaurant, 2725 Memorial Drive,<lb/>
Greenville. Following dinner, there<lb/>
will be a goal setting brainsforming<lb/>
session to determine upcoming ac-<lb/>
tivities for the group. For further in<lb/>
formation, please contact Fran Par<lb/>
rott at 825 0186<lb/>
BOARD OF ADJUSTMENT<lb/>
The Greenville Board of Adust-<lb/>
ment will hold Its March meeting on<lb/>
Thursday, March 22.194at 7:30p.m.<lb/>
in the third floor Council chambers of<lb/>
the Municipal Building located at me<lb/>
corner of Fifth and Washington<lb/>
Streets<lb/>
COASTAL ECOLOGY<lb/>
"A Naturalist Looks at Coastal<lb/>
Ecology" is me theme of me March<lb/>
12th Sierra Club Meeting. Mike Dunn,<lb/>
NC State Eastern District Naturalist,<lb/>
will present a slide show exploring<lb/>
the rich flora and fauna indigeneous<lb/>
to me NC coast. He will also talk<lb/>
about the special attractions for NC<lb/>
coastal parks. The meeting will be<lb/>
held at 8:00 pm at the First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, 14th and Elm<lb/>
Streets In Greenville and is open to<lb/>
the public.<lb/>
ASIS<lb/>
April 10 and 11, 1984, in Charlotte,<lb/>
NC The American Society for in-<lb/>
dustrial Security Carolina's Security<lb/>
Seminar and Exhibits The theme<lb/>
"Liability in the Workplace" The<lb/>
program. Small Retail Crime, Bad<lb/>
Checks, Credit Card Abuse, Drug<lb/>
Abuse at me Workplace, Product<lb/>
Tampering, Perimeter Control and<lb/>
Stress Management Fee: $75,<lb/>
Students $20. For more information<lb/>
call: please list person closest to your<lb/>
area.<lb/>
BINGO ICE CREAM<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
The Department of Umversit,<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a Bingo ice<lb/>
Cream Party to be held on Tuesday<lb/>
March 13. 1984 at 7 00 pm in me<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Mult.<lb/>
Purpose Room All ECU students<lb/>
faculty, staff, their dependents M<lb/>
guests are welcome Admission ,s 50<lb/>
cents Eight different Bingo games<lb/>
will be played and delicious ice<lb/>
cream wilt be served all in the cost of<lb/>
the admission<lb/>
(Silt iEaat (Earnlinian<lb/>
SUBCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Amount Paid $.<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Individual<lb/>
Date Paid<lb/>
Students wanting to have their parents receive<lb/>
The East Carolinian can fill out the form<lb/>
above and drop it by The East Carolinian of-<lb/>
fices on the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
building, across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Rates are $30 for one year and $20 lor<lb/>
six months.<lb/>
OVERTON'S<lb/>
University Econo Wash<lb/>
t<lb/>
-WASHES<lb/>
N<lb/>
NOW. <lb/>
1M E Sta Si.<lb/>
7?-l4l7<lb/>
Moa-Haf 10? m -vp ?<lb/>
j 8.98 List SpeciaJ SaJe<lb/>
Price 5.49 $<lb/>
Quiet Riot<lb/>
Ozzy Osbourne<lb/>
Adam Ant<lb/>
Pat Benatar<lb/>
Paul McCartney<lb/>
 - 8.98 List ? Sale Price 5.99 <lb/>
April Wine<lb/>
Mkhael Schenker Group<lb/>
Scorpions<lb/>
Queen<lb/>
David Qlmour<lb/>
Judas Priest<lb/>
China Crisis<lb/>
Romantics<lb/>
Thomas Dolby<lb/>
Reflex<lb/>
Culture Club<lb/>
John Cougar<lb/>
??MM ??<lb/>
I<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thurs.<lb/>
Doc Holiday<lb/>
Fii<lb/>
An Exciting Alternative for Today's Singles<lb/>
Pursuit of Acceptable<lb/>
Intelligent Relationships<lb/>
You choose: are rsnfe, educational level, whether or not you prefer<lb/>
non-smokers, etc. <lb/>
An Organization<lb/>
Designed for Discriminating<lb/>
And Busy People<lb/>
TO request information and questionaires contact<lb/>
PAIR<lb/>
304 Woodland Church Road. Goldsboro. North Carolina, 27530<lb/>
Ph. 919735-2306 ?<lb/>
locally owned and operated<lb/>
8 Video Game<lb/>
Night Attendant on Duty<lb/>
Open 7am-11 pm Seven Days a Week<lb/>
TTIIT<lb/>
Custom crafting<lb/>
OP<lb/>
mmmf Repair<lb/>
fairprices<lb/>
guaranteed work<lb/>
?ring This Ad for<lb/>
25OFF<lb/>
MKCUnlUpain<lb/>
byUt Jewlery<lb/>
120 E. 5th Street<lb/>
759-2127 10-5 Tues.Sat,<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 Mon 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/>
<lb/>
PAPA LKATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Greenville's First and Still No. 1<lb/>
LADES Lock-out<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
8:30 -10:00<lb/>
FREE DRAFT &amp; WINE<lb/>
?<lb/>
:1<lb/>
i I<lb/>
Papa Kant Is A Private Clur<lb/>
For .Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
We Have Ail A3C ??rm:ts<lb/>
10th St. Ext. At<lb/>
Riverbiurf Rd.<lb/>
w m,??? myim iaj.i w? ?i<lb/>
Comm<lb/>
ByTINAMAROSCHAK it<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
Although the com- ment<lb/>
mencement memoran- Ma<lb/>
dum recently distributed Stadi<lb/>
contains much vital infor- incler<lb/>
mation. Commencement cerer<lb/>
Committee Chairman inden<lb/>
Claiborne C. Rcme said lseurrl<lb/>
many of the approx- a<lb/>
imately 2900 eligible pose<lb/>
graduates will either "l<lb/>
misread the information sea: d<lb/>
or will never een receive iseu:<lb/>
Europ<lb/>
B DENNIS KILCOVNE<lb/>
Maff ? nttr<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Loren Campion of the<lb/>
History Department, the<lb/>
once-ignored European<lb/>
Studies minor is being<lb/>
resurrected because of<lb/>
"new enthusiasm among<lb/>
faculty and students "<lb/>
"In tie past, theEui<lb/>
pean Studies Group<lb/>
mainly presented national<lb/>
anc<lb/>
speai<lb/>
the<lb/>
p;or<lb/>
d:s<lb/>
featuj<lb/>
Kulsl<lb/>
HIT<lb/>
 I<lb/>
NatK<lb/>
A :<lb/>
pear<lb/>
- . :<lb/>
histo<lb/>
Hunger<lb/>
To Hea<lb/>
B MIKE HAMER<lb/>
M?ff ? rtt?r<lb/>
Three ECU students<lb/>
are heading up Greer-<lb/>
ville's 12th Annual<lb/>
CROP Walk for<lb/>
Humanity. The Walk will<lb/>
be held on Sun March<lb/>
25, at 12:30 p.m. It will<lb/>
begin a: Green Springs<lb/>
Park on East Fifth Street<lb/>
and will wind its wa<lb/>
through the city for 20<lb/>
kilometers, or 12 miles.<lb/>
The three students<lb/>
heading up the walk are<lb/>
all members of the ECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition. Joe<lb/>
Hughes, a graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in history, is in<lb/>
charge of arrangements<lb/>
for the walk. Karin<lb/>
Akers, a senior in<lb/>
sociology, is recruitment<lb/>
Soap Box<lb/>
Forum On<lb/>
Nuclear<lb/>
Weapons<lb/>
"Nuclear Weapons:<lb/>
Deterrent Securin and<lb/>
Armageddon" will be the<lb/>
topic of a Soap Box<lb/>
Forum to be held Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 15 at 11 p.m.<lb/>
in front of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store.<lb/>
The open-mike forum<lb/>
is sponsored by the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
and all students are in-<lb/>
vited to participate. Time<lb/>
will be allowed for both<lb/>
presentation of view-<lb/>
points and for rebuttal<lb/>
Topics in the past have<lb/>
included the Kissinger<lb/>
Commission and U.S.<lb/>
Policy in Central<lb/>
America. Some of the<lb/>
forums have drawn a<lb/>
great deal of student par-<lb/>
ticipation<lb/>
cha:<lb/>
Duls<lb/>
tiom<lb/>
tj u<lb/>
Sd<lb/>
reas.<lb/>
vol<lb/>
Hud<lb/>
heaal<lb/>
Can<lb/>
a-j<lb/>
S5.CK<lb/>
togej<lb/>
worl<lb/>
pro.<lb/>
geti<lb/>
beenl<lb/>
for<lb/>
?"or<lb/>
pei p<lb/>
and<lb/>
trnfm<lb/>
 V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MRC H II IM4<lb/>
T'T<lb/>
T<lb/>
-f-<lb/>
ii<lb/>
u<lb/>
?<lb/>
BINGO ICE CREAM<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
nenl o university<lb/>
?; a 8 ngo ice<lb/>
? 'Ow Tuesday.<lb/>
' " 00 pm m the<lb/>
?' Center Multj<lb/>
? ecu students,<lb/>
lepenoents ana<lb/>
'omission ,j jQ<lb/>
" Bmgo games<lb/>
delicious Ice<lb/>
? in me cost of<lb/>
iltntan<lb/>
RM<lb/>
 ents receive<lb/>
ut rhe form<lb/>
arolinian of-<lb/>
Publication<lb/>
:e of Joyner<lb/>
and $20 for<lb/>
'$ Singles<lb/>
of Acceptable<lb/>
t Relationships<lb/>
If not you prefer<lb/>
ie tame preferences<lb/>
ing<lb/>
irei contact<lb/>
th Carolina. 27530<lb/>
HIT<lb/>
t<lb/>
N<lb/>
H<lb/>
,)<lb/>
Ext A:<lb/>
3<lb/>
H<lb/>
Commencement Instructions Disseminated<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Ce-NewiEdHor<lb/>
Although the com-<lb/>
mencement memoran-<lb/>
dum recently distributed<lb/>
contains much vital infor-<lb/>
mation, Commencement<lb/>
Committee Chairman<lb/>
Claiborne C. Rowe said<lb/>
many of the approx-<lb/>
imately 2900 eligible<lb/>
graduates will either<lb/>
misread the information<lb/>
or will never even receive<lb/>
it.<lb/>
This year's commence-<lb/>
ment will be held on Sat<lb/>
May 5 in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. In the event of<lb/>
inclement weather, the<lb/>
ceremony will be moved<lb/>
indoors to Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum. Rose said this was<lb/>
a situation that could<lb/>
pose much confusion.<lb/>
"Because of limited<lb/>
seating in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum, all graduates who<lb/>
will participate in Com-<lb/>
mencement, 1984 and<lb/>
who expect to invite fami-<lb/>
ly members and friends<lb/>
must obtain guest invita-<lb/>
tions for them Rowe<lb/>
said. The deadline for<lb/>
these requests is April 13.<lb/>
From April 2 to April<lb/>
13 "each participating<lb/>
graduate will be allowed<lb/>
to initially receive two<lb/>
guest invitations by<lb/>
presenting the completed<lb/>
guest invitation request<lb/>
card in the lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall, weekdays<lb/>
between 2 p.m and 5 p.m.<lb/>
Rowe said. Those unable<lb/>
to be on campus during<lb/>
this time may request that<lb/>
their invitations be mail-<lb/>
ed to them by returning a<lb/>
self addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope and completed<lb/>
request card.<lb/>
During the period of<lb/>
April 18 to April 27 guest<lb/>
invitations not claimed<lb/>
during April 2-13 will be<lb/>
equally distributed to<lb/>
participating graduates<lb/>
who have requested addi-<lb/>
tional guest invitations.<lb/>
Therefore, Rowe said, it<lb/>
is imperative that "all<lb/>
particating graduates re-<lb/>
quest the total number of<lb/>
guest invitations they<lb/>
would like to receive<lb/>
Several other dates<lb/>
contained in the<lb/>
memorandum are of im-<lb/>
portance to graduates<lb/>
who expect to participate<lb/>
in commencement. A<lb/>
rehearsal is set for Sat<lb/>
April 28 at 9 a.m.<lb/>
"Graduates will form the<lb/>
processional lines in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum bet-<lb/>
ween 9 a.m. and 9:30<lb/>
a.m Rowe said.<lb/>
Students who have<lb/>
paid the graduation fee<lb/>
may pick up caps and<lb/>
gowns in the Student<lb/>
Supply Store. Anyone<lb/>
unable to do so may have<lb/>
his or her cap and gown<lb/>
mailed. Commencement<lb/>
announcements are also<lb/>
on sale in the Student<lb/>
Supply Store. AH orders<lb/>
for caps, gowns, and an-<lb/>
nouncements should be in<lb/>
the store by April 8.<lb/>
Women candidates<lb/>
should wear dark dresses<lb/>
nad black shoes with their<lb/>
academic robes. Men<lb/>
should wear dark<lb/>
trousers, white shirts and<lb/>
dark shoes, preferably<lb/>
black, with their robes.<lb/>
Coats should be worn by<lb/>
men receiving graduate<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
Rowe said diplomas<lb/>
are mailed to students at<lb/>
the end of the semester in<lb/>
which they complete their<lb/>
graduation requirements.<lb/>
Minor<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Surf Writer<lb/>
According to Dr.<lb/>
Loren Campion of the<lb/>
History Department, the<lb/>
once-ignored European<lb/>
Studies minor is being<lb/>
resurrected because of<lb/>
"new enthusiasm among<lb/>
faculty and students<lb/>
"In the past, the Euro-<lb/>
pean Studies Group<lb/>
mainly presented national<lb/>
and world-renowned<lb/>
speakers, but didn't push<lb/>
the minor said Cam-<lb/>
pion. One of the many<lb/>
distinguished speakers<lb/>
featured was Wladislaw<lb/>
Kulski, one of the last<lb/>
surviving representatives<lb/>
of the defunct League of<lb/>
Nations.<lb/>
Although the Euro-<lb/>
pean Studies minor in-<lb/>
cludes courses from<lb/>
history, political science,<lb/>
language, and other<lb/>
departments, it also has<lb/>
its own special courses,<lb/>
starting with ASEU 3000<lb/>
for the fall of 1984. This<lb/>
course, which is being<lb/>
specially emphasized, ex-<lb/>
amines the influence on<lb/>
European culture of the<lb/>
Romantic movement,<lb/>
from its beginnings in the<lb/>
19th century to the pre-<lb/>
sent.<lb/>
The Romantic move-<lb/>
ment began to flourish in<lb/>
the early 19th century and<lb/>
is considered by scholars<lb/>
the most fascinating and<lb/>
productive intellectual-<lb/>
emotional fever to grip<lb/>
European civilization<lb/>
since the rise of Chris-<lb/>
tianity. It downgraded<lb/>
the rational mind and<lb/>
said that human emotions<lb/>
and feelings were the best<lb/>
source of truth. An ex-<lb/>
traordinarily powerful<lb/>
Hunger Coalition Members<lb/>
To Head Up CROP Walk<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff W rtler<lb/>
Three ECU students<lb/>
are heading up Green-<lb/>
ville's 12th Annual<lb/>
CROP Walk for<lb/>
Humanity. The Walk will<lb/>
be held on Sun March<lb/>
25, at 12:30 p.m. It will<lb/>
begin at Green Springs<lb/>
Park on East Fifth Street<lb/>
and will wind its way<lb/>
through the city for 20<lb/>
kilometers, or 12 miles.<lb/>
The three students<lb/>
heading up the walk are<lb/>
all members of the ECU<lb/>
Hunger Coalition. Joe<lb/>
Hughes, a graduate stu-<lb/>
dent in history, is in<lb/>
charge of arrangements<lb/>
for the walk. Karin<lb/>
Akers, a senior in<lb/>
sociology, is recruitment<lb/>
Soap Box<lb/>
Forum On<lb/>
Nuclear<lb/>
Weapons<lb/>
"Nuclear Weapons:<lb/>
Deterrent Security and<lb/>
Armageddon" will be the<lb/>
topic of a Soap Box<lb/>
Forum to be held Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 15 at 11 p.m.<lb/>
in front of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store.<lb/>
The open-mike forum<lb/>
is sponsored by the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center<lb/>
and all students are in-<lb/>
vited to participate. Time<lb/>
will be allowed for both<lb/>
presentation of view-<lb/>
points and for rebuttal.<lb/>
Topics in the past have<lb/>
included the Kissinger<lb/>
Commission and U.S.<lb/>
Policy in Central<lb/>
America. Some of the<lb/>
forums have drawn a<lb/>
great deal of student par-<lb/>
ticipation.<lb/>
chairperson; and Theresa<lb/>
Dulski, senior in occupa-<lb/>
tional therapy, is publici-<lb/>
ty chairperson.<lb/>
Speaking about his<lb/>
reasons for becoming in-<lb/>
volved in the walk,<lb/>
Hughes said, "Last year I<lb/>
headed up a walk in<lb/>
Cary, North Carolina,<lb/>
and not only did it raise<lb/>
$5,000, but it also pulled<lb/>
together 500 people<lb/>
working together on a<lb/>
project ? people who<lb/>
normally would not be<lb/>
getting together He ad-<lb/>
ded that, "there have<lb/>
been two good reasons<lb/>
for my becoming involv-<lb/>
ed, one is to raise money<lb/>
for CROP for hungry<lb/>
people here and abroad,<lb/>
and the other thing is<lb/>
having the opportunity to<lb/>
educate people to the fact<lb/>
that world hunger does<lb/>
actually exist. It is good<lb/>
for people to know that<lb/>
by walking they are ac-<lb/>
tually doing something to<lb/>
alleviate the problem;<lb/>
they're not just talking<lb/>
about it<lb/>
According to Dulski,<lb/>
three-fourths of the pro-<lb/>
fits from this years walk<lb/>
will go toward overseas<lb/>
relief projects which are<lb/>
funded through Church<lb/>
World Service. CROP is<lb/>
the name given to local<lb/>
community efforts at<lb/>
hunger education and<lb/>
fundraising for Church<lb/>
World Service. Some pro-<lb/>
jects that are being fund-<lb/>
ed through CROP are: an<lb/>
immunization project in<lb/>
Maharastra, India, that<lb/>
reaches 10,000 children; a<lb/>
village water resource<lb/>
development in the Bul-<lb/>
ing Arkhala area in Nepal<lb/>
with 2,000 villagers doing<lb/>
the work; and technical<lb/>
consultants for<lb/>
agriculture and cattle<lb/>
production in the remote<lb/>
Alto Beni region of<lb/>
Bolivia.<lb/>
One-fourth of the pro-<lb/>
fits from the walk will go<lb/>
to Church Ministries<lb/>
United for emergency<lb/>
relief funds for the<lb/>
Greenville-Pitt County<lb/>
area. Mrs. Liz Wilkerson,<lb/>
administrator of Church<lb/>
Ministries United, said<lb/>
that $1,100 was raised<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
THE AMERICAN RED CROSS<lb/>
wants you to<lb/>
GIVE A GIFT OF LIFE<lb/>
when:<lb/>
TODAY<lb/>
3-13-84<lb/>
12-5pm<lb/>
w<lb/>
here:<lb/>
In the lobby<lb/>
of<lb/>
UMSTEAD DORM<lb/>
Sponsored by Central Campus<lb/>
Snacks &amp; Refreshments will be provided.<lb/>
Buy<lb/>
Sell<lb/>
And<lb/>
Trade<lb/>
With<lb/>
The<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
SNACK BAR<lb/>
???????<lb/>
salad Jbar<lb/>
Hot sandwiches<lb/>
daily specials<lb/>
conveniently located<lb/>
continuous service<lb/>
7s 30 am- 730pm<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
east Carolina<lb/>
amiri? services<lb/>
stimulant, Romanticism<lb/>
unleashed a burst of<lb/>
creativity from music,<lb/>
poetry, and visual arts to<lb/>
religion, philosophy, and<lb/>
science.<lb/>
Always interested in<lb/>
the dark side of life and<lb/>
the human mind, Roman-<lb/>
ticism spawned sub-<lb/>
movements that drifted<lb/>
away from the more<lb/>
benign concerns of its<lb/>
first generations and<lb/>
became involved with the<lb/>
satanic and violent.<lb/>
After spending several<lb/>
generations of digesting<lb/>
realistic literature and<lb/>
philosophy, Romanticism<lb/>
burst forth again in the<lb/>
uproar beat of rock-n-roll<lb/>
and the personalistic cults<lb/>
and religions of the<lb/>
1960s. "Although<lb/>
Romanticism is rooted in<lb/>
the past said Campion,<lb/>
"it is alive and well In<lb/>
fact, he says, it is so<lb/>
dominant that anyone<lb/>
who wants to understand<lb/>
the present worlds of art,<lb/>
entertainment, and even<lb/>
religion and science had<lb/>
better familiarize himself<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
ASEU 3000 is a two-<lb/>
hour course being offered<lb/>
this fall on Tuesday even-<lb/>
ings from 6:30-9:30.<lb/>
Anyone needing further<lb/>
information should con-<lb/>
tact Dr. Campion in<lb/>
BA-320or call 757-6485.<lb/>
; SGA Candidates Forum<lb/>
Students wanting to suggest topics for the SGA <lb/>
presidential candidates forum can use the space I<lb/>
below and bring the form to The East<lb/>
Carolinian offices in the Publications building<lb/>
by March 15.<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
??oaoooooooooooooooooooooooooooe<lb/>
Interested in becoming a x<lb/>
BUCCANEER BABe<lb/>
Come meet the members on S<lb/>
March 20th 7-9:00 at Scales Field House <lb/>
For more info, call 758-2856<lb/>
lOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOO<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At Hie Campus<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
We are now taking applications for rental of Ringgold Towers units.<lb/>
If you are interested in living at the Towers this fall, vou will<lb/>
need to come by the office and fill out an application.<lb/>
WARD PROPERTY BROKERS<lb/>
1O0 COMMERCE aTTMTCT<lb/>
DRAWKM ???<lb/>
OMUMVIIlK. N. C.<lb/>
919 756-8410<lb/>
LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
Lounge<lb/>
Video Games (Dragons Lair)<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/>
? - - ?<lb/>
 ????? l? 4? ?? ? - m ??.? f .<lb/>
? - -i;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0004"/><lb/>
Stye lEaat (Hutalinxun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, gmmhwt<lb/>
Darryl Brown. ??? ??,<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mm a j.t. Pietrzak. ????, o,??<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. cm. ?o, Mike McPartland,<lb/>
Ed Nicklas. sport Bdi,or Tom Norton, o???i m.<lb/>
Gordon Ipock. m. a? Kathy Fuerst. Pro m?.<lb/>
Mark Barker. o?w Mmv Mike Mayo, ?? .??"?<lb/>
March 13, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
PIRG Vote<lb/>
SGA Should Permit Referendum<lb/>
Both sides were at fault in Mon-<lb/>
day's SGA meeting during the<lb/>
debate over whether to allow a stu-<lb/>
dent referendum on the establish-<lb/>
ment of a Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group at ECU. There were<lb/>
technicalities and mumbled name<lb/>
calling, but the issue itself is pretty<lb/>
clear-cut: the referendum should<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
PIRG organizer Jay Stone<lb/>
presented a bill to the legislature,<lb/>
asking that they allow all ECU<lb/>
students to vote next week on<lb/>
whether or not they would like to<lb/>
see a PIRG established at ECU,<lb/>
and funded by an $2-per-semester<lb/>
increase in student fees, which<lb/>
could be refunded upon request.<lb/>
The question is to be posed to<lb/>
students on the SGA ballot next<lb/>
week during executive officer elec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The trouble was, Stone waited<lb/>
until last night to present the bill,<lb/>
when it could have been presented<lb/>
any time this year. As a result, the<lb/>
bill could not take time to go<lb/>
through committee, but instead its<lb/>
sponsor, legislator Glenn<lb/>
Maughan, had to ask for a suspen-<lb/>
sion of the legislature's rules to<lb/>
have the bill voted on immediately.<lb/>
The legislators voted not to sus-<lb/>
pend the rules, thus the bill went to<lb/>
committee, and cannot be acted<lb/>
upon until next Monday ? a tight<lb/>
squeeze should it be approved for<lb/>
the Wednesday ballot.<lb/>
Suspension of the rules is no big<lb/>
deal; it happens more weeks than<lb/>
not in the legislature. Business is<lb/>
routinely passed in that way. Trou-<lb/>
ble came when some legislators<lb/>
thought Stone had purposely<lb/>
waited until the last minute to try to<lb/>
ram the bill through before anyone<lb/>
had a chance to really examine it.<lb/>
Legislator Dennis Kilcoyne called it<lb/>
"the most sneaky, underhanded<lb/>
thing I've ever seen" in three years<lb/>
of legislative experience. That was<lb/>
hyperbole, but his point was taken.<lb/>
Stone could have (and should<lb/>
have for such an important issue)<lb/>
prepared the bill sooner and<lb/>
presented it in ample time. His<lb/>
PIRG committee is disorganized<lb/>
and understaffed to be sure, but<lb/>
this was something they should<lb/>
have given priority, for now the bill<lb/>
is in jeopardy of not passing<lb/>
because of a technicality and time<lb/>
limits. They've had a year to get<lb/>
ready, and Stone knew there would<lb/>
be some opposition to the effort; he<lb/>
shouldn't have given his opponents<lb/>
extra ammo.<lb/>
Still, there is a difference in slow<lb/>
or disorganized preparation and a<lb/>
"sneaky, underhanded" motive.<lb/>
Stone spent a lot of time, and a<lb/>
considerable amount of his own<lb/>
money, preparing detailed packets<lb/>
explaining PIRG and its funding<lb/>
method, and handed them out to<lb/>
the legislators. Such an effort to<lb/>
make the issue clear doesn't seem<lb/>
like he was trying to sneak anything<lb/>
through.<lb/>
Too, for those who claim Stone<lb/>
was trying rush the issue before<lb/>
anyone understood it, the<lb/>
legislature's delay adds more to<lb/>
that problem than Stone's efforts.<lb/>
Because the bill must wait a week<lb/>
and be approved only two days<lb/>
before it goes to the student body,<lb/>
students will have little time to ex-<lb/>
amine the issue. If it had been ok'd<lb/>
last night, there would have been<lb/>
ten days to make information<lb/>
available to students.<lb/>
But, all nitpicking and name call-<lb/>
ing aside, the legislature should re-<lb/>
quire little debate on the issue. The<lb/>
bill is a chance for students<lb/>
themselves to voice their opinion<lb/>
on an issue, and the legislature has<lb/>
no business denying that.<lb/>
Representative democracy is no<lb/>
substitute for direct democracy.<lb/>
Students opposing the referendum<lb/>
are opposing PIRG, for they fear it<lb/>
will be approved by students. But<lb/>
are they really representing their<lb/>
constituents when they claim to<lb/>
speak for students, but won't let<lb/>
students speak for themselves? In<lb/>
fact, a legislator with his priorities<lb/>
in the right place would welcome<lb/>
finding out how constituents feel,<lb/>
for then he can represent them, as<lb/>
he was elected to do, not hide from<lb/>
the majority opinion to pursue his<lb/>
own political goals.<lb/>
Again, it's cut and dried, clear<lb/>
and simple: let the people vote<lb/>
directly, expressing their opinion.<lb/>
The resolution is non-binding<lb/>
anyway ? it just shows students'<lb/>
feelings on the issue. Legislators<lb/>
not interested in that are not<lb/>
representing students, and<lb/>
shouldn't be legislating for them.<lb/>
How Khomeini Could<lb/>
Re-Elect Ron Reagan<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
There's a good argument that farfetched<lb/>
hypotheticals are a waste of printer's ink,<lb/>
but let's consider one anyway. You never<lb/>
know.<lb/>
What if: Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini,<lb/>
follows through on his threat to block the<lb/>
flow of oil through the Persian Gulf at the<lb/>
Strait of Hormuz, cutting off the West's<lb/>
vital supply of petroleum.<lb/>
Then: Reagan will be re-elected.<lb/>
The conclusion is a fairly simple one to<lb/>
make. There is no way the United States<lb/>
will tolerate an Iranian blockade in the<lb/>
Persian Gulf, assuming for the moment<lb/>
they can pull off an effective one. A U.S.<lb/>
Naval task force already is stationed near<lb/>
by in the Arabian Sea, and you can be sure<lb/>
Reagan will send it in to break up the Ira-<lb/>
nian stone wall.<lb/>
The hitch is this: if Reagan could pull<lb/>
off an effective, decisive victory (which<lb/>
couldn't help but be reminiscent of<lb/>
Grenada) there would be another ground-<lb/>
swell of patriotic support for the<lb/>
Republican incumbent, with the presiden-<lb/>
tial election just around the corner.<lb/>
Nothing speaks so well as success, and the<lb/>
ariinsnisfTation could block out the press<lb/>
for a couple of days to make things<lb/>
look even better.<lb/>
And this would be no simple Grenada<lb/>
victory, whipping some little Caribbean<lb/>
island the size of Raleigh where the<lb/>
Cubans are building an airport. No, this<lb/>
. would be sweet revenge, a gallant touche<lb/>
against that same loathsome rival who<lb/>
brought America to its knees in 1980. That<lb/>
same Ayatollah who held America hostage<lb/>
would be whipped, sent home with his tail<lb/>
betwenn his legs, when he tried another<lb/>
stunt against the red, white and blue.<lb/>
Oh, the irony it would be, the inevitable<lb/>
comparison. Picture Democrat Jimmy<lb/>
Carter, impotent for 444 days against the<lb/>
Iranian God-King, his only rescue attempt<lb/>
a resounding failure in the dark, windy<lb/>
desert ? not even able to confront the<lb/>
enemy. Four years later, the Ayatollah<lb/>
tries to pull it off again against the swag-<lb/>
gering, blustering California cowboy and<lb/>
is stopped cold, his ships limping back to<lb/>
port like Argentine vessels after two weeks<lb/>
at sea with the British. It's a scenario sweet<lb/>
enough to make a conservative's eyes<lb/>
water. Reagan, riding high on a crest of<lb/>
patriotic success right into Nov. 6!<lb/>
America is back, and standing tall!<lb/>
Forget it. It'll never happen. Go back to<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
H? PROMJSEPME WE AMKAAPORSHP<lb/>
TO THE COURT OF 51 JAME3,m<lb/>
Candidates Do Can-Can<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Those of us in the media have had a<lb/>
humbling (and humiliating) experience<lb/>
in the last week or two with the ever<lb/>
changing events of presidential politics.<lb/>
Who would have thought we would see a<lb/>
candidate who is almost a political<lb/>
unknown come up from no where and<lb/>
threaten the big shots with "new ideas"?<lb/>
But that is precisely what has happen-<lb/>
ed. What once seemed like a two-man<lb/>
race with a few also-rans thrown in for<lb/>
good measure has been turned upside<lb/>
down, along with all our predictions.<lb/>
Just a month ago, no one in this crazy<lb/>
business of political journalism would<lb/>
have thought the well-oiled political<lb/>
organization of John Rainey could be<lb/>
stopped in his bid for the presidency.<lb/>
And the close second, and only real<lb/>
threat, had to be Mark Niewald, presi-<lb/>
dent of the RSA (Right Stuff Associa-<lb/>
tion).<lb/>
It looked flawless for Rainey. As the<lb/>
only Greek running, he had the endorse-<lb/>
ment of the AFL-GIO (Alpha Fly<lb/>
Lamba-Gamma Iota Omega) and a<lb/>
claim to the most experience, since he is<lb/>
chairman of the Legislature's most<lb/>
powerful committee, appropriations.<lb/>
His slogan summed it up: "I have<lb/>
enough fire in the belly. I am ready to be<lb/>
president<lb/>
In recent days he had even stopped at-<lb/>
tacking other candidates and addressed<lb/>
the incumbent Naso himself, saying that<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
when elected he would do away with<lb/>
"voodoo decor a reference to Naso's<lb/>
neo-Italian furnishings in the SGA of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
And Niewald was running strong too.<lb/>
Seen around campus lately wearing a lot<lb/>
of red, white and blue, he repeatedly<lb/>
blasted Rainey as "the candidate of<lb/>
special interests" and claimed only he<lb/>
himself had shown courage and "laid<lb/>
my life on the line for this campus" over<lb/>
the quiet dorm issue.<lb/>
Then of course there is the darkhorse<lb/>
candidacy of Jay Brigel. He is by all<lb/>
counts one of the best orators of our<lb/>
time, but never even having held elected<lb/>
office on campus, most people take his<lb/>
candidacy as a drive to raise voter par-<lb/>
ticipation among party animals.<lb/>
(Remember that ringing line, "There's a<lb/>
party train a comin but you got to<lb/>
register to ride)<lb/>
Then out of no where came Greg<lb/>
Shelnutt. Making a call for "a new<lb/>
generation of leadership Shelnutt's<lb/>
underfinanced campaign run by a ragg-<lb/>
ed crew from the art school seemed to be<lb/>
going no where until the Jarvis dorm<lb/>
caucus, where he scored a strong second<lb/>
place showing, and the Fleming Hall<lb/>
primary, where he pulled off a major<lb/>
upset over Rainey.<lb/>
Shelnutt first gathered real attention<lb/>
in the presidential debate, where he<lb/>
challenged Rainey to "name one time he<lb/>
had disagreed with organized Greeks<lb/>
Rainey's overly cautious, front-runner<lb/>
style continued, and he evaded the ques-<lb/>
tion, causing many voters to think he<lb/>
was just the candidate of special in-<lb/>
terests, in the pocket of big frats.<lb/>
There is a question, too, of whether<lb/>
AFL-GIO chief Glenn Conway can keep<lb/>
the rank and file in line to vote for<lb/>
Rainey. Shelnutt, with "Big Mo<lb/>
momentum, behind him, seems to be<lb/>
gathering strong support where once<lb/>
Rainey seemed a shoo-in. "I like nis<lb/>
beard said one sorority member about<lb/>
Shelnutt. "I think if Kennedy had had a<lb/>
beard, that's what it would have looked<lb/>
like<lb/>
The big test, of course, comes on what<lb/>
is being called "Super Tuesday lhe<lb/>
day all College Hill dormitories hold<lb/>
primaries or caucuses. It's a battle of<lb/>
Shelnutt's momentum versus Rainey's<lb/>
organization, plus a last ditch effort by<lb/>
the Niewald campaign to convince<lb/>
voters he has "the right stuff to be<lb/>
president. Brigel, too, is expected to do<lb/>
well in areas such as Belk, which have a<lb/>
high percentage of voting-age partiers.<lb/>
The SGA Legislature, throughout the<lb/>
whole event, has been rather quiet, giv-<lb/>
ing an almost de facto endorsement to<lb/>
its favorite son, Rainey. Speaker of tie<lb/>
Legislature Kirk Shelley is obviously<lb/>
pulling for his old crony to win the elec-<lb/>
tion, for then he can graduate to that job<lb/>
he has always secretly dreamed of, the<lb/>
ambassadorship to Ireland.<lb/>
Helms9 Record Easy To Knock<lb/>
I was very surprised when Mr. Ipock<lb/>
wrote that he's never heard an ar-<lb/>
ticulate attack against Senator Helms<lb/>
("Don't attack Sen. Jesse Helms<lb/>
Feb. 28). Has he ever seen Sen. Helms'<lb/>
voting record on environmental issues?<lb/>
Sen. Helms is a walking environmen-<lb/>
tal disaster! According to a 1982<lb/>
League of Conservation Voters study,<lb/>
Jesse was the only senator to vote anti-<lb/>
environment each time on their list of<lb/>
the fifteen most critical conservation<lb/>
bills for 1982 (their 1983 study is soon<lb/>
to be released).<lb/>
These issues included bills pertaining<lb/>
to soil conservation, mine safety, oil<lb/>
and gas drilling in wilderness areas,<lb/>
EPA research funding, hazardous<lb/>
waste regulation, states rights to<lb/>
regulate pesticides, water conservation,<lb/>
coastal barrier protection, etc. As I'm<lb/>
writing this, I'm afraid he's going to<lb/>
ammend a vitally important N.C.<lb/>
wilderness bill that was overwhelmingly<lb/>
passed by the House of Represen-<lb/>
tatives. (I hope I'm wrong!)<lb/>
I appreciate Mr. Ipock's point of<lb/>
view, but please don't nominate Jesse<lb/>
Helms for sainthood until you look fur-<lb/>
ther at his disasterous voting record on<lb/>
environmental issues.<lb/>
John Anema<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Mick's Enlightenment<lb/>
Greatness does not often descend<lb/>
upon a city the size of Greenville, which<lb/>
is yet another reason that Mick LaSalle<lb/>
stands out as just what ECU needed ?<lb/>
a secular deity.<lb/>
As a film reviewer, Mick is infinitely<lb/>
qualified by virtue of his outspoken<lb/>
nature and sheer knowledge on the sub-<lb/>
ject of films. His sheer knowledge on<lb/>
the subject of women has been scream-<lb/>
ingly apparent since his debut article on<lb/>
An Officer and a Gentleman. Mick has<lb/>
personality, which he combines charm-<lb/>
ingly with wit in a way that certainly ap-<lb/>
peals to the student masses.<lb/>
Except, of course, for Barbara<lb/>
Dobyns, who should probably take her<lb/>
literal-minded, humorless ideals<lb/>
straight to the National Organization<lb/>
for Women. There, perhaps, she will<lb/>
find comfort in the presence of others<lb/>
who cannot handle the notion of men<lb/>
being Men, as opposed to domesticated<lb/>
wimps.<lb/>
Kim Albin<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
English<lb/>
Tobacco Facts Needed<lb/>
I had an intelligent young man come<lb/>
to visit this weekend. One could say<lb/>
that he was a representative of the<lb/>
tobacco industry. He said that his fami-<lb/>
ly had made it big in tobacco.<lb/>
He seemed to think that there was no<lb/>
proof that tobacco caused cancer.<lb/>
However, I have read that the heat<lb/>
from the tobacco smoke breaks down<lb/>
the lining of the protective covering of<lb/>
the lung, thus making it easier for<lb/>
foreign organisms to enter the lung.<lb/>
However, we laymen could find out<lb/>
what causes the death of our people if<lb/>
we could get the state legislature to pass<lb/>
a law making the death certificate more<lb/>
detailed.<lb/>
A more detailed death certificate<lb/>
would also help the pharmaceutical<lb/>
(companies) tell if some of their drugs<lb/>
might be death traps instead of benefits<lb/>
to mankind. I know of one drug com-<lb/>
monly given for mental illness. The on-<lb/>
ly thing is I have learned of at least<lb/>
three persons who have shot themselves<lb/>
while on this medication.<lb/>
I wonder if this medication might br-<lb/>
ing a person down out of the world of<lb/>
unreality too fast? The first indication<lb/>
that the medical profession had that<lb/>
tobacco might be harmful to a person's<lb/>
health was when they had a look at the<lb/>
statistics on the death rate of WW I<lb/>
soldiers.<lb/>
Just because the tobacco industry<lb/>
earns billions from selling cigarettes<lb/>
gives them no more right to poison the<lb/>
world than the fact that wars provide<lb/>
jobs, thus giving the munitions industry<lb/>
a license to kill off our young people.<lb/>
A lot of money provided to the<lb/>
military could be put into research (of)<lb/>
new goods and processes which would<lb/>
also provide new jobs. Right now<lb/>
tomatoes are quite high priced, but I<lb/>
have an idea for cutting the cost of<lb/>
heating a green house that I think is<lb/>
quite practical. I wonder if some day<lb/>
science won't develop a process so that<lb/>
trees can be slowed from blooming in<lb/>
the early spring? Thus the price of fruit<lb/>
won't go sky high because of frost<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
I wonder what makes people want to<lb/>
be creative and inventive? Time<lb/>
magazine thinks that men invent<lb/>
because they are greedy. Mankind can<lb/>
be quite inventive when they want to<lb/>
use their invention to kill their fellow<lb/>
man. Thus the air plane went from a<lb/>
glorified kite in 1903 to a vehicle of<lb/>
death in just a few short years.<lb/>
I wonder if any school or university<lb/>
has ever taught a course in the study of<lb/>
patents and how to get a patent? The<lb/>
fact that some patents sound crazy and<lb/>
impractical doesn't mean that all inven-<lb/>
tors are crazy.<lb/>
I once had a dentist who was also a<lb/>
pilot in WW II. He told me that he had<lb/>
an idea that he went all the way to<lb/>
Washington with and paid all the fees<lb/>
necessary in order to do a patent search.<lb/>
Sure enough, someone else had already<lb/>
patented Doc's idea. But in this day and<lb/>
age of computers, copiers, etc I see no<lb/>
reason why patent research should be<lb/>
costly or time consuming.<lb/>
BUI J. Bloomer<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
TheEast<lb/>
expressing ait<lb/>
drop them by<lb/>
South<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Thomas letters<lb/>
of view. Mail or<lb/>
off ? the Old<lb/>
?cross from<lb/>
m i niKum'<lb/>
Trespas<lb/>
HARD!V,B S"P"EN<lb/>
staff ? nit<lb/>
Crimes for the week<lb/>
preceeding Spnng Break<lb/>
WCT slightly above nor-<lb/>
mal while crime during<lb/>
spring break was down<lb/>
There were no crimes<lb/>
reported on March 9.<lb/>
Many incidents were<lb/>
caused b non-students<lb/>
on campus There were<lb/>
also a tew reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to vehicles.<lb/>
Alcohol related crimes<lb/>
were near normal. One<lb/>
student a as assaulted by<lb/>
a thrown beer gj<lb/>
Another student was ar-<lb/>
rested for allowing<lb/>
meone else to drive wl<lb/>
impared The rep<lb/>
from the ECL Police<lb/>
Department's Daily Or-<lb/>
fense and Arrest Log for<lb/>
Feb. r thru March 11<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Feb. 27, 1:10 a.m. ?<lb/>
Jefferv L. Merrill of<lb/>
40B Scott Hall and<lb/>
Robert T. Finer of 407-A<lb/>
Scott Hal! were found in<lb/>
possession of stolen pro-<lb/>
perty; 12:45 p.m ? Eric<lb/>
O. Stevens had his ID<lb/>
card confiscated tor in-<lb/>
terfering with an officer;<lb/>
5 p m. ? A female stu-<lb/>
dent reported receiving<lb/>
obscene<lb/>
S 5 p.m<lb/>
P<lb/>
ver.<lb/>
Bel Ha<lb/>
p.m. -<lb/>
env<lb/>
;<lb/>
Me<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
of (<lb/>
summons<lb/>
repc<lb/>
goic J<lb/>
286<lb/>
Fee<lb/>
Grc<lb/>
fou-<lb/>
Drama.<lb/>
Bu<lb/>
report (<lb/>
car pan<lb/>
Hali I<lb/>
plaii<lb/>
side<lb/>
152<lb/>
p.m ?<lb/>
nor<lb/>
Re.<lb/>
Building!<lb/>
ma<lb/>
Feb. :<lb/>
The<lb/>
Journa<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Mankiewicz will be<lb/>
held Wed March 21 in<lb/>
the main lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall, 11 to 12<lb/>
a.m. The series will close<lb/>
Wednesday nigh: with a<lb/>
lecture by Mankiewicz on<lb/>
"The Particular Uses of<lb/>
Television and Other<lb/>
Media in the General<lb/>
Elec<lb/>
in tt -<lb/>
The<lb/>
anc<lb/>
T<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
Chance<lb/>
A: airs<lb/>
The -<lb/>
enla<lb/>
bev<lb/>
Former C<lb/>
?<lb/>
Dr. A.D. Frank, ECU<lb/>
professor emeritus<lb/>
history, who died Satur-<lb/>
day at his retirement<lb/>
home near Nashville.<lb/>
Tenn coached East<lb/>
Carolina's first worn,<lb/>
basketball team to a<lb/>
perfect record in its in-<lb/>
augural season, 1933<lb/>
Professor Frank, who<lb/>
was a member and chair-<lb/>
man of the ECTC athletic<lb/>
committee. had<lb/>
volunteered to coach<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
team. "The Ramble-<lb/>
when President Ro<lb/>
Wright gave perrn.ssjor.<lb/>
dow<lb/>
AssOQaJ<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
j<lb/>
prer<lb/>
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Offer GoodTtv<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Specials<lb/>
Buy One Pizza at Reco ar Pnce<lb/>
Anc Get Another of Same . atue<lb/>
Of Less FREE PCUl<lb/>
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Adm $1.50<lb/>
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?<lb/>
3tt?e Eaat (Eawlfcriatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. cw.w?ar<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ??,?o,<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mm &amp;, j.t. Pietrzak. nao, oa<lb/>
Tina Maroschak, co-nt mu? Mike McPartland,<lb/>
Ed Nicklas. spcns uitor Tom Norton, o, m<lb/>
Gordon Ipock, ??, E,or Kathy Fuerst. mm?<lb/>
Mark Barker, 0? m Mike Mayo, 7cw &amp;????<lb/>
March 13, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
PIRG Vote<lb/>
SGA Should Permit Referendum<lb/>
Both sides were at fault in Mon-<lb/>
day's SGA meeting during the<lb/>
debate over whether to allow a stu-<lb/>
dent referendum on the establish-<lb/>
ment of a Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group at ECU. There were<lb/>
technicalities and mumbled name<lb/>
calling, but the issue itself is pretty<lb/>
clear-cut: the referendum should<lb/>
pass.<lb/>
PIRG organizer Jay Stone<lb/>
presented a bill to the legislature,<lb/>
asking that they allow all ECU<lb/>
students to vote next week on<lb/>
whether or not they would like to<lb/>
see a PIRG established at ECU,<lb/>
and funded by an $2-per-semester<lb/>
increase in student fees, which<lb/>
could be refunded upon request.<lb/>
The question is to be posed to<lb/>
students on the SGA ballot next<lb/>
week during executive officer elec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The trouble was, Stone waited<lb/>
until last night to present the bill,<lb/>
when it could have been presented<lb/>
any time this year. As a result, the<lb/>
bill could not take time to go<lb/>
through committee, but instead its<lb/>
sponsor, legislator Glenn<lb/>
Maughan, had to ask for a suspen-<lb/>
sion of the legislature's rules to<lb/>
have the bill voted on immediately.<lb/>
The legislators voted not to sus-<lb/>
pend the rules, thus the bill went to<lb/>
committee, and cannot be acted<lb/>
upon until next Monday ? a tight<lb/>
squeeze should it be approved for<lb/>
the Wednesday ballot.<lb/>
Suspension of the rules is no big<lb/>
deal; it happens more weeks than<lb/>
not in the legislature. Business is<lb/>
routinely passed in that way. Trou-<lb/>
ble came when some legislators<lb/>
thought Stone had purposely<lb/>
waited until the last minute to try to<lb/>
ram the bill through before anyone<lb/>
had a chance to really examine it.<lb/>
Legislator Dennis Kilcoyne called it<lb/>
"the most sneaky, underhanded<lb/>
thing I've ever seen" in three years<lb/>
of legislative experience. That was<lb/>
hyperbole, but his point was taken.<lb/>
Stone could have (and should<lb/>
have for such an important issue)<lb/>
prepared the bill sooner and<lb/>
presented it in ample time. His<lb/>
PIRG committee is disorganized<lb/>
and understaffed to be sure, but<lb/>
this was something they should<lb/>
have given priority, for now the bill<lb/>
is in jeopardy of not passing<lb/>
because of a technicality and time<lb/>
limits. They've had a year to get<lb/>
ready, and Stone knew there would<lb/>
be some opposition to the effort; he<lb/>
shouldn't have given his opponents<lb/>
extra ammo.<lb/>
Still, there is a difference in slow<lb/>
or disorganized preparation and a<lb/>
"sneaky, underhanded" motive.<lb/>
Stone spent a lot of time, and a<lb/>
considerable amount of his own<lb/>
money, preparing detailed packets<lb/>
explaining PIRG and its funding<lb/>
method, and handed them out to<lb/>
the legislators. Such an effort to<lb/>
make the issue clear doesn't seem<lb/>
like he was trying to sneak anything<lb/>
through.<lb/>
Too, for those who claim Stone<lb/>
was trying rush the issue before<lb/>
anyone understood it, the<lb/>
legislature's delay adds more to<lb/>
that problem than Stone's efforts.<lb/>
Because the bill must wait a week<lb/>
and be approved only two days<lb/>
before it goes to the student body,<lb/>
students will have little time to ex-<lb/>
amine the issue. If it had been ok'd<lb/>
last night, there would have been<lb/>
ten days to make information<lb/>
available to students.<lb/>
But, all nitpicking and name call-<lb/>
ing aside, the legislature should re-<lb/>
quire little debate on the issue. The<lb/>
bill is a chance for students<lb/>
themselves to voice their opinion<lb/>
on an issue, and the legislature has<lb/>
no business denying that.<lb/>
Representative democracy is no<lb/>
substitute for direct democracy.<lb/>
Students opposing the referendum<lb/>
are opposing PIRG, for they fear it<lb/>
will be approved by students. But<lb/>
are they really representing their<lb/>
constituents when they claim to<lb/>
speak for students, but won't let<lb/>
students speak for themselves? In<lb/>
fact, a legislator with his priorities<lb/>
in the right place would welcome<lb/>
finding out how constituents feel,<lb/>
for then he can represent them, as<lb/>
he was elected to do, not hide from<lb/>
the majority opinion to pursue his<lb/>
own political goals.<lb/>
Again, it's cut and dried, clear<lb/>
and simple: let the people vote<lb/>
directly, expressing their opinion.<lb/>
The resolution is non-binding<lb/>
anyway ? it just shows students'<lb/>
feelings on the issue. Legislators<lb/>
not interested in that are not<lb/>
representing students, and<lb/>
shouldn't be legislating for them.<lb/>
How Khomeini Could<lb/>
Re-Elect Ron Reagan<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
There's a good argument that farfetched<lb/>
hypotheticals are a waste of printer's ink,<lb/>
but let's consider one anyway. You never<lb/>
know.<lb/>
What if: Iran's Ayatollah Khomeini,<lb/>
follows through on his threat to block the<lb/>
flow of oil through the Persian Gulf at the<lb/>
Strait of Hormuz, cutting off the West's<lb/>
vital supply of petroleum.<lb/>
Then: Reagan will be re-elected.<lb/>
The conclusion is a fairly simple one to<lb/>
make. There is no way the United States<lb/>
will tolerate an Iranian blockade in the<lb/>
Persian Gulf, assuming for the moment<lb/>
they can pull off an effective one. A U.S.<lb/>
Naval task force already is stationed near<lb/>
by in the Arabian Sea, and you can be sure<lb/>
Reagan will send it in to break up the Ira-<lb/>
nian stone wall.<lb/>
The hitch is this: if Reagan could pull<lb/>
off an effective, decisive victory (which<lb/>
couldn't help but be reminiscent of<lb/>
Grenada) there would be another ground-<lb/>
swell of patriotic support for the<lb/>
Republican incumbent, with the presiden-<lb/>
tial election just around the corner.<lb/>
Nothing speaks so well as success, and the<lb/>
administration could block out the press<lb/>
again for a couple of days to make things<lb/>
look even better.<lb/>
And this would be no simple Grenada<lb/>
victory, whipping some little Caribbean<lb/>
island the size of Raleigh where the<lb/>
Cubans are building an airport. No, this<lb/>
. would be sweet revenge, a gallant touche<lb/>
against that same loathsome rival who<lb/>
brought America to its knees in 1980. That<lb/>
same Ayatollah who held America hostage<lb/>
would be whipped, sent home with his tail<lb/>
betwenn his legs, when he tried another<lb/>
stunt against the red, white and blue.<lb/>
Oh, the irony it would be, the inevitable<lb/>
comparison. Picture Democrat Jimmy<lb/>
Carter, impotent for 444 days against the<lb/>
Iranian God-King, his only rescue attempt<lb/>
a resounding failure in the dark, windy<lb/>
desert ? not even able to confront the<lb/>
enemy. Four years later, the Ayatollah<lb/>
tries to pull it off again against the swag-<lb/>
gering, blustering California cowboy and<lb/>
is stopped cold, his ships limping back to<lb/>
port like Argentine vessels after two weeks<lb/>
at sea with the British. It's a scenario sweet<lb/>
enough to make a conservative's eyes<lb/>
water. Reagan, riding high on a crest of<lb/>
patriotic success right into Nov. 6!<lb/>
America is back, and standing tall!<lb/>
Forget it. It'll never happen. Go back to<lb/>
sleep.<lb/>
HHI!WLE PROMISEPMi THE AMBA5SAP0RSHP<lb/>
TO THE CQURTQF 51 JAMES.TPQ<lb/>
Candidates Do Can-Can<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Those of us in the media have had a<lb/>
humbling (and humiliating) experience<lb/>
in the last week or two with the ever<lb/>
changing events of presidential politics.<lb/>
. Who would have thought we would see a<lb/>
candidate who is almost a political<lb/>
unknown come up from no where and<lb/>
threaten the big shots with "new ideas"?<lb/>
But that is precisely what has happen-<lb/>
ed. What once seemed like a two-man<lb/>
race with a few also-rans thrown in for<lb/>
good measure has been turned upside<lb/>
down, along with all our predictions.<lb/>
Just a month ago, no one in this crazy<lb/>
business of political journalism would<lb/>
have thought the well-oiled political<lb/>
organization of John Rainey could be<lb/>
stopped in his bid for the presidency.<lb/>
And the close second, and only real<lb/>
threat, had to be Mark Niewald, presi-<lb/>
dent of the RSA (Right Stuff Associa-<lb/>
tion).<lb/>
It looked flawless for Rainey. As the<lb/>
only Greek running, he had the endorse-<lb/>
ment of the AFL-GIO (Alpha Fly<lb/>
Lamba-Gamma Iota Omega) and a<lb/>
claim to the most experience, since he is<lb/>
chairman of the Legislature's most<lb/>
powerful committee, appropriations.<lb/>
His slogan summed it up: "I have<lb/>
enough fire in the belly. I am ready to be<lb/>
president<lb/>
In recent days he had even stopped at-<lb/>
tacking other candidates and addressed<lb/>
the incumbent Naso himself, saying that<lb/>
-Campus Forum<lb/>
when elected he would do away with<lb/>
"voodoo decor a reference to Naso's<lb/>
neo-Italian furnishings in the SGA of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
And Niewald was running strong too.<lb/>
Seen around campus lately wearing a lot<lb/>
of red, white and blue, he repeatedly<lb/>
blasted Rainey as "the candidate of<lb/>
special interests" and claimed only he<lb/>
himself had shown courage and "laid<lb/>
my life on the line for this campus" over<lb/>
the quiet dorm issue.<lb/>
Then of course there is the darkhorse<lb/>
candidacy of Jay Bngel. He is by all<lb/>
counts one of the best orators of our<lb/>
time, but never even having held elected<lb/>
office on campus, most people take his<lb/>
candidacy as a drive to raise voter par-<lb/>
ticipation among party animals.<lb/>
(Remember that ringing line, "There's a<lb/>
party train a comin, but you got to<lb/>
register to ride)<lb/>
Then out of no where came Greg<lb/>
Shelnutt. Making a call for "a new<lb/>
generation of leadership Shelnutts<lb/>
underfinanced campaign run by a ragg-<lb/>
ed crew from the art school seemed to be<lb/>
going no where until the Jams dorm<lb/>
caucus, where he scored a strong second<lb/>
place showing, and the Fleming Hall<lb/>
primary, where he pulled off a major<lb/>
upset over Rainey.<lb/>
Shelnutt first gathered real attention<lb/>
in the presidential debate, where he<lb/>
challenged Rainey to "name one time he<lb/>
had disagreed with organized Greeks<lb/>
Rainey's overly cautious, front-runner<lb/>
style continued, and he evaded the ques-<lb/>
tion, causing many voters to think he<lb/>
was just the candidate of special in-<lb/>
terests, in the pocket of big frats.<lb/>
There is a question, too, of whether<lb/>
AFL-GIO chief Glenn Conway can keep<lb/>
the rank and file in line to vote for<lb/>
Rainey. Shelnutt, with "Big Mo<lb/>
momentum, behind him, seems to be<lb/>
gathering strong support where once<lb/>
Rainey seemed a shoo-in. "I like his<lb/>
beard said one sorority member about<lb/>
Shelnutt. "I think if Kennedy had had a<lb/>
beard, that's what it would have looked<lb/>
like<lb/>
The big test, of course, comes on what<lb/>
is being called "Super Tuesday the<lb/>
day all College Hill dormitories hold<lb/>
primaries or caucuses. It's a battle of<lb/>
Shelnutt's momentum versus Rainey's<lb/>
organization, plus a last ditch effort oy<lb/>
the Niewald campaign to convince<lb/>
voters he has "the right stuff to "be<lb/>
president. Brigel, too, is expected to do<lb/>
well in areas such as Belk, which have a<lb/>
high percentage of voting-age partien<lb/>
The SGA Legislature, throughout the<lb/>
whole event, has been rather quiet, giv-<lb/>
ing an almost de facto endorsement to<lb/>
its favorite son, Rainey. Speaker of the<lb/>
Legislature Kirk Shelley is obviously<lb/>
pulling for his old crony to win the elec-<lb/>
tion, for then he can graduate to that job<lb/>
he has always secretly dreamed of, the<lb/>
ambassadorship to Ireland.<lb/>
Helms' Record Easy To Knock<lb/>
I was very surprised when Mr. Ipock<lb/>
wrote that he's never heard an ar-<lb/>
ticulate attack against Senator Helms<lb/>
("Don't attack Sen. Jesse Helms<lb/>
Feb. 28). Has he ever seen Sen. Helms<lb/>
voting record on environmental issues?<lb/>
Sen. Helms is a walking environmen-<lb/>
tal disaster! According to a 1982<lb/>
League of Conservation Voters study,<lb/>
Jesse was the only senator to vote anti-<lb/>
environment each time on their list of<lb/>
the fifteen most critical conservation<lb/>
bills for 1982 (their 1983 study is soon<lb/>
to be released).<lb/>
These issues included bills pertaining<lb/>
to soil conservation, mine safety, oil<lb/>
and gas drilling in wilderness areas,<lb/>
EPA research funding, hazardous<lb/>
waste regulation, states rights to<lb/>
regulate pesticides, water conservation,<lb/>
coastal barrier protection, etc. As I'm<lb/>
writing this, I'm afraid he's going to<lb/>
ammend a vitally important N.C.<lb/>
wilderness bill that was overwhelmingly<lb/>
passed by the House of Represen-<lb/>
tatives. (I hope I'm wrong!)<lb/>
I appreciate Mr. Ipock's point of<lb/>
view, but please don't nominate Jesse<lb/>
Helms for sainthood until you look fur-<lb/>
ther at his disasterous voting record on<lb/>
environmental Issues.<lb/>
John Anema<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Mick's Enlightenment<lb/>
Greatness does not often descend<lb/>
upon a city the size of Greenville, which<lb/>
is yet another reason that Mick LaSalle<lb/>
stands out as just what ECU needed ?<lb/>
a secular deity.<lb/>
As a film reviewer, Mick is infinitely<lb/>
qualified by virtue of his outspoken<lb/>
nature and sheer knowledge on the sub-<lb/>
ject of films. His sheer knowledge on<lb/>
the subject of women has been scream-<lb/>
ingly apparent since his debut article on<lb/>
An Officer and a Gentleman. Mick has<lb/>
personality, which he combines charm-<lb/>
ingly with wit in a way that certainly ap-<lb/>
peals to the student masses.<lb/>
Except, of course, for Barbara<lb/>
Dobyns, who should probably take her<lb/>
literal-minded, humorless ideals<lb/>
straight to the National Organization<lb/>
for Women. There, perhaps, she will<lb/>
find comfort in the presence of others<lb/>
who cannot handle the notion of men<lb/>
being Men, as opposed to domesticated<lb/>
wimps.<lb/>
Kim Albin<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
English<lb/>
Tobacco Facts Needed<lb/>
I had an intelligent young man come<lb/>
to visit this weekend. One could say<lb/>
that he was a representative of the<lb/>
tobacco industry. He said that his fami-<lb/>
ly had made it big in tobacco.<lb/>
He seemed to think that there was no<lb/>
proof that tobacco caused cancer.<lb/>
However, I have read that the heat<lb/>
from the tobacco smoke breaks down<lb/>
the lining of the protective covering of<lb/>
the lung, thus making it easier for<lb/>
foreign organisms to enter the lung.<lb/>
However, we laymen could find out<lb/>
what causes the death of our people if<lb/>
we could get the state legislature to pass<lb/>
a law making the death certificate more<lb/>
detailed.<lb/>
A more detailed death certificate<lb/>
would also help the pharmaceutical<lb/>
(companies) tell if some of their drugs<lb/>
might be death traps instead of benefits<lb/>
to mankind. I know of one drug com-<lb/>
monly given for mental illness. The on-<lb/>
ly thing is I have learned of at least<lb/>
three persons who have shot themselves<lb/>
while on this medication.<lb/>
I wonder if this medication might br-<lb/>
i g a person down out of the world of<lb/>
unreality too fast? The first indication<lb/>
that the medical profession had that<lb/>
tobacco might be harmful to a person's<lb/>
health was when they had a look at the<lb/>
statistics on the death rate of WW I<lb/>
soldiers.<lb/>
Just because the tobacco industry<lb/>
earns billions from selling cigarettes<lb/>
gives them no more right to poison the<lb/>
world than the fact that wars provide<lb/>
jobs, thus giving the munitions industry<lb/>
a license to kill off our young people.<lb/>
A lot of money provided to the<lb/>
military could be put into research (of)<lb/>
new goods and processes which would<lb/>
also provide new jobs. Right now<lb/>
tomatoes are quite high priced, but I<lb/>
have an idea for cutting the cost of<lb/>
heating a green house that I think is<lb/>
quite practical. I wonder if some day<lb/>
science won't develop a process so that<lb/>
trees can be slowed from blooming in<lb/>
the early spring? Thus the price of fruit<lb/>
won't go sky high because of frost<lb/>
damage.<lb/>
I wonder what makes people want to<lb/>
be creative and inventive? Time<lb/>
magazine thinks that men invent<lb/>
because they are greedy. Mankind can<lb/>
be quite inventive when they want to<lb/>
use their invention to kill their fellow<lb/>
man. Thus the air plane went from a<lb/>
glorified kite in 1903 to a vehicle of<lb/>
death in just a few short years.<lb/>
I wonder if any school or university<lb/>
has ever taught a course in the study of<lb/>
patents and how to get a patent? The<lb/>
fact that some patents sound crazy and<lb/>
impractical doesn't mean that all inven-<lb/>
tors are crazy.<lb/>
I once had a dentist who was also a<lb/>
pilot in WW II. He told me that he had<lb/>
an idea that he went all the way to<lb/>
Washington with and paid all the fees<lb/>
necessary in order to do a patent search.<lb/>
Sure enough, someone else had already<lb/>
patented Doc's idea. But in this day and<lb/>
age of computers, copiers, etc I see no<lb/>
reason why patent research should be<lb/>
costly or time consuming.<lb/>
Bill J. Bloomer<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing ail points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, .cross from Joy?<lb/>
Library. "<lb/>
Trespas<lb/>
HARDIV STEPHEN<lb/>
Crimes for the week<lb/>
preceeding Spring Break<lb/>
ere slightly above nor-<lb/>
mal while crime during<lb/>
spring break was down.<lb/>
There were no crimes<lb/>
reported on March 9.<lb/>
Many incidents were<lb/>
caused b non-students<lb/>
on campus. There were<lb/>
also a lew reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to vehicles.<lb/>
Alcohol related crimes<lb/>
ere near normal. One<lb/>
student was assaulted by<lb/>
a thrown beer glass.<lb/>
Another student was ar-<lb/>
rested tor allowing so-<lb/>
meone else to drive while<lb/>
impared. The rep.<lb/>
from the ECU Police<lb/>
Department' Dailv Of-<lb/>
fense and Arrest Log for<lb/>
Feb. 27 thru March 11<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Feb. 27, 1:10 a.m. ?<lb/>
Jefferv L. Merrill of<lb/>
?0-B Scott Hall and<lb/>
Robert T. Piner of 40A<lb/>
Scott Hall were found in<lb/>
possession of stolen pro-<lb/>
perty 12:45 p.m. ? Eric<lb/>
O. Stevens had his ID<lb/>
card confiscated for in-<lb/>
terfering with an officer;<lb/>
5 p.m. ? A female stu-<lb/>
dent reported receiving<lb/>
Journa<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Mankiewic will be<lb/>
held Wed March 21 in<lb/>
the main lobby of<lb/>
MendenhaL, 11 to 12<lb/>
a.m. The series will close<lb/>
Wednesday night with a<lb/>
lecture by Mankiewicz on<lb/>
"The Particular Uses of<lb/>
Television and Other<lb/>
Media in the General<lb/>
Elec<lb/>
in w -<lb/>
The ent<lb/>
and opei<lb/>
The<lb/>
Seminar<lb/>
sponson<lb/>
Chancel i<lb/>
X1TS<lb/>
The sq<lb/>
enlarge<lb/>
bevend<lb/>
Former C<lb/>
ECt Nr??<lb/>
Dr. A.D. Frank. ECU<lb/>
professor emeritus of<lb/>
history, who died Satur-<lb/>
day at Jus retirement<lb/>
home near Nashville.<lb/>
Tenn coachec East<lb/>
Carolina's first women's<lb/>
basketball team to a<lb/>
perfect record in its" in-<lb/>
augural season, 1933.<lb/>
Professor Frank, who<lb/>
was a member and chair-<lb/>
man of the ECTC athletic<lb/>
committee. had<lb/>
volunteered to coach the<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
team, "The Ramblers<lb/>
when President Robert<lb/>
Wright gave permission<lb/>
for its o<lb/>
den; ?<lb/>
W a m e 1<lb/>
Associa;<lb/>
tear<lb/>
cerr.<lb/>
disp I<lb/>
act<lb/>
A<lb/>
ece m<lb/>
Echo. Dj<lb/>
coui 1<lb/>
change<lb/>
vea: <lb/>
to a one'<lb/>
421 Greenville Bivcs<lb/>
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2 For 1<lb/>
Special<lb/>
(Pizza Only)<lb/>
Offer Good Thru v.<lb/>
Not Gooa With Any Othe Specials<lb/>
Buy One zza at Reoc.ar Price<lb/>
And Get Another o Same Value<lb/>
OrLesaFREE ECU I<lb/>
DRAF<lb/>
Tue. Mar. 13,<lb/>
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<lb/>
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he evaded the ques-<lb/>
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too, of whether<lb/>
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i th 'Big Mo<lb/>
?hind him. seems to be<lb/>
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"I like his<lb/>
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Bni ? Kennedy had had a<lb/>
 it would have looked<lb/>
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Vh as Belk, which have a<lb/>
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Ir to Ireland.<lb/>
ock<lb/>
the munitions industry<lb/>
! off our young people,<lb/>
jioney provided to the<lb/>
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air plane went from a<lb/>
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any school or university<lb/>
a course in the study of<lb/>
)w to get a patent? The<lb/>
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sn't mean that all inven-<lb/>
dentist who was also a<lb/>
He told me that he had<lb/>
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Ider to do a patent search.<lb/>
pomeone else had already<lb/>
idea. But in this day and<lb/>
trs, ropiers, etc I see no<lb/>
itent research should be<lb/>
consuming.<lb/>
Bill J. Bloomer<lb/>
Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
im Rules<lb/>
Yoilman welcomes letters<lb/>
 points of view. Mail or<lb/>
our office in the Old<lb/>
ftg, across from Joyner<lb/>
Trespassers<lb/>
JHEEASTCAROLIMAN MARCH 13. 194 5<lb/>
HARDINC STEPHEN obscene teiephone ca?s.<lb/>
5:45 p.m. - A report of<lb/>
wmmwmm<lb/>
Crimes for the week<lb/>
preceeding Spring Break<lb/>
were slightly above nor-<lb/>
mal while crime during<lb/>
spring break was down<lb/>
There were no crimes<lb/>
reported on March 9.<lb/>
Many incidents were<lb/>
caused by non-students<lb/>
on campus. There were<lb/>
also a few reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to vehicles<lb/>
Alcohol related crimes<lb/>
were near normal. One<lb/>
student was assaulted by<lb/>
a thrown beer glass.<lb/>
Another student was ar-<lb/>
rested for allowing so-<lb/>
meone else to drive while<lb/>
impared. The reports<lb/>
from the ECU Police<lb/>
Department's Daily Of-<lb/>
fense and Arrest Log for<lb/>
Feb. 27 thru March 11<lb/>
are:<lb/>
Feb. 27, 1:10 a.m. -<lb/>
Jeffery L. Merritt of<lb/>
407-B Scott Hall and<lb/>
Robert T. Piner of 407-A<lb/>
Scott Hall were found in<lb/>
possession of stolen pro-<lb/>
perty; 12:45 p.m. ? Eric<lb/>
O. Stevens had his ID<lb/>
card confiscated for in-<lb/>
terfering with an officer;<lb/>
5 p.m. ? A female stu-<lb/>
dent reported receiving<lb/>
possible vandalizing to a<lb/>
vending machine in the<lb/>
Belk Hall canteen; 8:45<lb/>
curfew door of Cotten<lb/>
Hall; Russell Edward<lb/>
Manning of Washington,<lb/>
NC was arrested for<lb/>
DWI; 1.35 a.m. - a<lb/>
east side of Green Hall<lb/>
was found removed; 9<lb/>
a.m. ? Person(s)<lb/>
unknown were found to<lb/>
P.m. - A report of the ApVcXput Tnoom ??????<lb/>
larceny of a gameboard 331 of AusSn; 9:24? ttSttSfj<lb/>
o7AnrveePOmMthe,arCCny Um$tCad H" a.m<lb/>
of five IBM computer - A curfew door was<lb/>
disks and notebook found vandalized? 709<lb/>
holder from room 119 of<lb/>
Rawl;<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
tabletop from<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center; 9:30 p.m. ?<lb/>
William Thomas Mason<lb/>
of 6C Pirate's Landing<lb/>
was served three criminal<lb/>
summons for worthless<lb/>
checks; 10:45 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of a<lb/>
gold bracelet from room<lb/>
286 Aycock Hall.<lb/>
Feb. 28, 10:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
Richard Earl Finch of<lb/>
Greenville, NC was<lb/>
found wandering through<lb/>
Drama, Speight, Nurs-<lb/>
ing, and Austin<lb/>
Buildings; 6.12 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of vandalism to a<lb/>
car parked in the metered<lb/>
zone next to Clement<lb/>
Hall; 10:50 p.m.? Com-<lb/>
plaint of loud noise out-<lb/>
side the window of room<lb/>
152 Fleming Hall; 11:35<lb/>
p.m. ? The lock on the<lb/>
north double doors of the<lb/>
Recital Hall in the Music<lb/>
Building was reported<lb/>
malfunctioning.<lb/>
Feb. 29, 2:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
The ventilator grill on the<lb/>
3:30 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of a<lb/>
watch and $10 cash from<lb/>
a locker in Memorial<lb/>
Gym; 4:30 p.m. ? A ven-<lb/>
ding machine was<lb/>
reported unsecured and<lb/>
items stolen; 5:53 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of the larceny of<lb/>
a jacket from the closet<lb/>
of room 309 of Umstead<lb/>
Hall; 6:02 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of a possible fight<lb/>
a.m. ? Glen A. Geist of<lb/>
230-A Belk Hall and<lb/>
several football players<lb/>
were reported causing a<lb/>
report of vandalism to a<lb/>
vehicle north of Minges<lb/>
Coliseum; 12 noon ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny to<lb/>
two slide projector<lb/>
remote controls from<lb/>
room 2N-86 of the Brody<lb/>
Building; 5:15 p.m. ?<lb/>
George Green of Green-<lb/>
ville, NC was arrested for<lb/>
Daniels, Michael G.<lb/>
Anderson, and Randy J.<lb/>
Norris, all of Farmville<lb/>
were banned from cam-<lb/>
pus for suspicious activi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
March 4, 12:03 a.m. ?<lb/>
Christopher A. King of<lb/>
Kinston, NC was banned<lb/>
from<lb/>
floor of Belk Hall; 9:40 Hopkins, last<lb/>
a.m. ? A report of the White Hall-<lb/>
larceny of the hubcaps<lb/>
from a car in the 14th and<lb/>
Elm Street freshman<lb/>
parking lot; 3 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of<lb/>
the hubcaps from another<lb/>
car in the 14th and Elm<lb/>
 v campus for<lb/>
trespassing southeast of suspicious activity 450<lb/>
White Hall; 11 p.m. - p.m. - Jimmy Earl<lb/>
The Greenville Police Speight of Greenville was 2 5a" Ha wa<lb/>
Department reauest arrtPH f?r . reported malfunctioning.<lb/>
.eques. a.res.ed for trespassing March 6, 4:10 a m -A<lb/>
and entering and larceny<lb/>
of several lockers in the<lb/>
mens locker room at<lb/>
Memorial Gym; 7:30<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of van-<lb/>
dalism to the window<lb/>
glass in the stairwell bet-<lb/>
ween first and second<lb/>
floors of Garrett dorm;<lb/>
11:30 p.m. ? The<lb/>
southwest curfew door in<lb/>
Flanagan Hall was<lb/>
floor of u, Hal 40 Hopkins" taWEj ZSrSSSSr of vandaJ,sm ,? a<lb/>
-  .7 ???- ?" ??a in me jnn and Him<lb/>
ou.s,de Memorial Gyn Street freshman parkin?<lb/>
6.15 ? The glass from lot<lb/>
the fire alarm box near<lb/>
the Jones Hall basement<lb/>
was found broken out;<lb/>
10:07 p.m. ? Cynthia<lb/>
Wright of 309 Tyler Hall<lb/>
and Dwayne Stover,<lb/>
USMC, were reported<lb/>
having a domestic dispute<lb/>
which was settled among<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
March 1, 12:05 a.m. ?<lb/>
A report of a suspicious<lb/>
person at the southeast<lb/>
March 2, 1 a.m.<lb/>
seen near<lb/>
The blue<lb/>
light phone northeast of<lb/>
Tyler dorn was reported<lb/>
malfunctioning.<lb/>
March 3, 1:15 a.m. ?<lb/>
John V. Caggiano, Brian<lb/>
E. Morrill, David F.<lb/>
Wagner, and Tracy P<lb/>
Duval all of Camp Le-<lb/>
juene were banned from<lb/>
campus for suspicious ac<lb/>
being forbidden to come<lb/>
on campus; James Earl<lb/>
Smith of Greenville was<lb/>
banned from campus;<lb/>
11:20 p.m. ? Rachel<lb/>
Emily Pope of Raleigh,<lb/>
NC was arrested for a<lb/>
stop sign violation.<lb/>
March 5, 2:20 a.m. ? A<lb/>
ronnr( - j ' iuuuu unauinon;<lb/>
report of damage to a car Minges Coliseum;<lb/>
Tp?dA u?a, d T , wu"l'U! Ior suspicious ac-<lb/>
Snow HH1 Vwkman ?f !vity near ?? Hall;<lb/>
miow Hill, NC was ar- 11:19 p.m. - Charles t!<lb/>
rested for DWI; 1:57<lb/>
a.m. ? Barbara Partin of<lb/>
823 Tyler reported being<lb/>
assulted by a glass of beer<lb/>
thrown by John L. Mark<lb/>
McDonald of 141<lb/>
Aycock; 2 a.m. ? A<lb/>
Walston, Randy K<lb/>
east of College Hill<lb/>
Drive. 1:30 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report to vandalism to a<lb/>
vehicle on Campus Drive;<lb/>
A report of the breaking<lb/>
stop sign and post nor-<lb/>
thwest of Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center; 5:30<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
glass broken out of a win-<lb/>
dow at the Aycock Hall<lb/>
Canteen; 6:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Four black males were<lb/>
found unauthorized in<lb/>
10:11<lb/>
p.m. ? The alarm in the<lb/>
Student Supply Store was<lb/>
reported activated.<lb/>
March 7, 2:50 a.m. ?<lb/>
The padlock was reported<lb/>
missing from the cour-<lb/>
tyard gate of Garrett<lb/>
Hall; 5:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Charles Blackwell of 386<lb/>
Aycock Hall was<lb/>
reported acting in a<lb/>
suspicious manner north<lb/>
of Aycock HaJl; 6:15<lb/>
p.m. ? A report that Of-<lb/>
fice A-20 at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum was unsecured;<lb/>
8:30 p.m. ? Randolph<lb/>
Powers was seen entering<lb/>
Graham Building<lb/>
through a window.<lb/>
March 8, 1:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
Pamela Peede Tvson of<lb/>
WUhanston, NC was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI; Robert<lb/>
Scott Rollins of Green-<lb/>
ville was arrested for<lb/>
allowing a DWI; 10:53<lb/>
p.m. ? A report that Of-<lb/>
fice A-20 at Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum was unsecured;<lb/>
11:30 p.m. ? The door<lb/>
to the Mendenhall<lb/>
Cafeteria was reported<lb/>
unsecured.<lb/>
'Lauch' Faircloth Speaks To SGA<lb/>
report of a<lb/>
room 141<lb/>
Hall; 10:08<lb/>
Journalist Lectures<lb/>
CnntinnaA r?n Tt? Flf?rtirn of IQfil" ?? a.nn j <lb/>
beer keg in<lb/>
of Aycock<lb/>
a.m. ? A<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Maaagiag E4Hor<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Mankiewicz will be<lb/>
held Wed March 21 in<lb/>
the main lobby of<lb/>
Mendenhall, 11 to 12<lb/>
a.m. The series will close<lb/>
Wednesday night with a<lb/>
lecture by Mankiewicz on<lb/>
"The Particular Uses of<lb/>
Television and Other<lb/>
Media in the General<lb/>
Election of 1984" at 8:00<lb/>
in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
The entire series is free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
The Spring Lecture-<lb/>
Seminar Series at ECU is<lb/>
sponsored by the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic<lb/>
Affairs Angelo Volpe.<lb/>
The series attempt to<lb/>
enlarge students' views<lb/>
beyond the classroom<lb/>
and are primarily for<lb/>
students, said Dr. John<lb/>
Ebbs, English professor<lb/>
andchairman of the<lb/>
Series Arrangement<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
Since this is an election<lb/>
year, said Ebbs, we<lb/>
wanted someone who had<lb/>
been involved with elec-<lb/>
tions and could speak<lb/>
about them. Ebbs ex-<lb/>
pressed his hope that<lb/>
every student take advan-<lb/>
tage of this opportunity<lb/>
to expand their<lb/>
knowledge on this sub-<lb/>
ject, and in a way were<lb/>
obligated to do so if they<lb/>
had any intention of<lb/>
voting in 1984.<lb/>
On a platform of jobs, educa-<lb/>
tion improvements and the con-<lb/>
tainment of state government,<lb/>
?"?? ?? Commerce Secretary business<lb/>
D. M. Lauch" Faircloth spoke<lb/>
to the SGA Legislature Monday<lb/>
night during a campaign swing<lb/>
through Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Faircloth, a Democratic can-<lb/>
didate for governor, emphasized<lb/>
his record as commerce secretary<lb/>
under Gov. James B. Hunt Jr<lb/>
saying he brought 180,000 new<lb/>
jobs to the state while in office.<lb/>
"The most important thing fac-<lb/>
ing you today is jobs<lb/>
Faircloth told the student govern-<lb/>
ment in his 30-minute talk. He<lb/>
claimed that according to national<lb/>
rankings, North Carolina is first<lb/>
or second in the entire nation as a<lb/>
place to live and a place to do<lb/>
He said high technology in-<lb/>
dustries offer the state many "good<lb/>
jobs for citizens, refuting claims<lb/>
that they provide only a few<lb/>
highly technical positions in the<lb/>
Research Triangle Park.<lb/>
Faircloth also called for im-<lb/>
provements in public education<lb/>
based on pay hikes for teachers<lb/>
which he said could be provided<lb/>
through growth in state revenues<lb/>
He claimed the state's revenue is<lb/>
? ?? ?ia:anjuii, aouui mem. t<lb/>
Former Coach Dies<lb/>
growing at a rate of 10.5 percent a<lb/>
year, and the General Assembly<lb/>
will have $260 million in addi-<lb/>
tional revenue with which to in-<lb/>
crease teacher salaries in June.<lb/>
Stressing an issue not heard<lb/>
much in gubernatorial campaign<lb/>
Faircloth said "we've got to stop<lb/>
the growth of state government.<lb/>
He said expanding government<lb/>
programs are making North<lb/>
Carolinians "spread our-elves so<lb/>
thin that we cannot meet' existing<lb/>
obligations to citizens.<lb/>
"When I leave office as eover-<lb/>
nor, there will be no more" state<lb/>
employees than there were the da<lb/>
I got there Faircloth said<lb/>
i Sew Brd-<lb/>
Dr. A.D. Frank, ECU<lb/>
professor emeritus of<lb/>
history, who died Satur-<lb/>
day at his retirement<lb/>
 home near Nashville.<lb/>
Tenn coached East<lb/>
Carolina's first women's<lb/>
basketball team to a<lb/>
perfect record in its in-<lb/>
augural season, 1933.<lb/>
Professor Frank, who<lb/>
was a member and chair-<lb/>
man of the ECTC athletic<lb/>
committee, had<lb/>
volunteered to coach the<lb/>
women's basketball<lb/>
team, "The Ramblers<lb/>
when President Robert<lb/>
Wright gave permission<lb/>
for its organization.<lb/>
A year earlier, Presi-<lb/>
dent Wright had turned<lb/>
down a request by the<lb/>
Women's Athletic<lb/>
Association to form a<lb/>
team because of his con-<lb/>
cern that it might appear<lb/>
unseemly for a public<lb/>
display of such boisterous<lb/>
activity by college girls<lb/>
preparing to be teachers.<lb/>
According to the col-<lb/>
lege newspaper,Teco<lb/>
Echo, Dr. Wright said he<lb/>
could not permit it "until<lb/>
public sentiment in<lb/>
regard to such activities<lb/>
"The Ramblers"<lb/>
coached by Frank<lb/>
defeated teams from<lb/>
Chowan and Wingate<lb/>
Colleges and the YWCA<lb/>
team from Rocky Mount,<lb/>
and posted a perfect 6-0<lb/>
season record.<lb/>
President Wright was<lb/>
so impressed that a week<lb/>
before his death he pro-<lb/>
mised continuing support<lb/>
for the women's inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletic pro-<lb/>
gram at East Carolina.<lb/>
He also announced at<lb/>
chapel that day that<lb/>
henceforth women<lb/>
-ant Ml To Mn<lb/>
ftcut Tiinj lit<lb/>
?urn i? i?4<lb/>
chan ?? th- f?7i ? ucut;crorin women<lb/>
changes. The following students would no loneer<lb/>
' oweverhf agreed be required to wear nfts<lb/>
to a one year trial season, when going downwn<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Phone 756-0825<lb/>
2Forl<lb/>
Special<lb/>
(Pizza Only)<lb/>
Offer Good Thru April 30. 1984<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Specials<lb/>
Buy One Pizza at Regular Price<lb/>
And Get Another of Same Value<lb/>
Or Less FREE <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 APRIL 30. 1984 a<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/>
1XPKES APRIL 30,1?M<lb/>
IMPROVED<lb/>
STA-S0F-FR0<lb/>
REGULAR HAIRSPRAY<lb/>
OIL SHEEN AND COMB OUT<lb/>
CONDITIONER FOR NATURAL<lb/>
HAIR STYLES.<lb/>
1199<lb/>
8 0Z. I<lb/>
BTL. ?<lb/>
STA-S0F-FR0<lb/>
EXTRA DRY HAIRSPRAY<lb/>
PROTEIN.<lb/>
 Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NIGHT<lb/>
Tue.Mar. 13, 1984 8:30-l:00am<lb/>
Adm $1.50 18yr. $1.00<lb/>
10Draft All Night I<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
STA-SOF-FR0<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT CONDITIONER<lb/>
CPcRHrcToS!lOHNfli8TNUNATU"flL<lb/>
STA-S0PFR0<lb/>
SPECIAL BLEND<lb/>
STA-SOF-FRO SPECIAL BLEND CURL AC<lb/>
TIVATOR &amp; MOISTURIZER LOTION<lb/>
DARK &amp; LOVELY<lb/>
CREME RELAXER<lb/>
Pf RMANFNT CREME<lb/>
BKAXW SYSTEM WITH<lb/>
MUtTIPU CONOt<lb/>
TtONBB ?ATU?tWC<lb/>
SHAMPOO1 ONLY<lb/>
DARK &amp; LOVELY<lb/>
HAIR COLOR<lb/>
?S- ACTIVATOR <lb/>
Moisturizer<lb/>
LOTION<lb/>
PWTHM CONDITIONING<lb/>
PHIMANtNT SHAMPOO<lb/>
IN HAW COLOR CHOICE<lb/>
Of JET BLACK, OAM<lb/>
B0M tOtNT<lb/>
MNHMN OR AUWtUN<lb/>
TEL'SiPZ? Snnnm? to<lb/>
nrTKM ???!??(?<lb/>
MAGIC<lb/>
SHAVING POWDER<lb/>
?OERUCOMES<lb/>
i?<lb/>
NONE SOlC<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville 756 ?051<lb/>
k<lb/>
-? -?.<lb/>
 ?. <lb/>
?"?? ?"?.?i?Wn?rn<lb/>
nnm?ni??H???.? ?h? ???m -a -? ?? ?<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0007"/><lb/>
n<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROIINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
MA.K( H i y4 k4f ?<lb/>
Warner Brothers Pre-Releases Film<lb/>
Campus selected<lb/>
for special<lb/>
screening of<lb/>
"Police Academy<lb/>
before film's<lb/>
commercial<lb/>
release.<lb/>
Warner Brothers has selected<lb/>
the ECU campus for a pre-release<lb/>
screening of the movie Police<lb/>
Academy. This lively farce will be<lb/>
shown Sunday, March 18 at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
The premise of Police Academy<lb/>
is established at the outset of the<lb/>
film. The lady mayor of a promi-<lb/>
nent American city decides to<lb/>
abandon all restrictions when it<lb/>
comes to eligibility for joining the<lb/>
police department. No longer are<lb/>
there to be any special re-<lb/>
quirements with regard to age,<lb/>
sex, race, weight, height or educa-<lb/>
tional background. As a result,<lb/>
the floodgates are opened to a<lb/>
flock of recruits whose motives<lb/>
for enrolling are as questionable<lb/>
as their fitness for the job. It is a<lb/>
policy which elicits contempt and<lb/>
disgust from the established force,<lb/>
particularly those police officers<lb/>
assigned as instructors to whip the<lb/>
recruits into shape.<lb/>
Police Academy concerns itself<lb/>
particularly with the struggles of<lb/>
Carey Mahoney (Steve Gut-<lb/>
tenberg), a parking lot attendant<lb/>
whose retaliatory treatment of an<lb/>
obstreperous customer results in<lb/>
his facing prison.<lb/>
Fortunately, because<lb/>
Mahoney's father was a<lb/>
policeman, he is provided with an<lb/>
alternative ? go to the Police<lb/>
Academy and become a cop<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Carey does so grudgingly.<lb/>
Knowing he can't quit the<lb/>
Academy without landing behind<lb/>
bars, he is determined to get<lb/>
himself kicked out.<lb/>
The police brass, however, led<lb/>
by mealy-mouthed Commandent<lb/>
Lassard (George Gaynes), deter-<lb/>
mines not to overtly offend<lb/>
Madam Mayor by the expulsion<lb/>
Bubba Smith is all business behind the wheel of a police cruiser.<lb/>
of a single candidate. Lassard slv-<lb/>
ly suggests to instructor Harris<lb/>
(G.W. Baily) and Callahan, a lady<lb/>
sergeant (Leslie Easterbrook),<lb/>
that they put the screws to the new<lb/>
recruits and provoke them into<lb/>
quiting.<lb/>
Carey is, of course, unaware<lb/>
that this is the modus operandi of<lb/>
his instructors which leads him in-<lb/>
to a double bind: the more he acts<lb/>
up in an effort to be given the<lb/>
heave-ho, the more pressure is ex-<lb/>
erted to get him to walk out on his<lb/>
own, an act which would lead to<lb/>
his incarceration.<lb/>
Although there are several<lb/>
dropouts during the training<lb/>
period, other recruits also show<lb/>
surprising stamina in the face of<lb/>
the rigors forced on them bv Har-<lb/>
ris and Callahan.<lb/>
Those who stay include:<lb/>
? Karen Thompson (Kim Cat-<lb/>
trail), the attractive daughter of a<lb/>
wealthy socialite who, bored with<lb/>
the postures and posings of the<lb/>
rich, wants to find a little action<lb/>
among real people, her presence<lb/>
providing Carey with a bright spot<lb/>
in the intolerable existence he is<lb/>
forced to tolerate.<lb/>
? Moses Hightower (Bubba<lb/>
Smith), a gentle giant of a man<lb/>
who, having decided life as a<lb/>
florist smells, seeks in police work<lb/>
a career more in keeping with his<lb/>
massive frame, if not his sensitive<lb/>
nature.<lb/>
? Dr. Monsignor Larvelle Jones<lb/>
(Michael Winslow) who displays<lb/>
an uncanny taJent for using his<lb/>
voice to mimic mechanical noises<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
Sergeant Callahan gives a recruit a smiple lesson in<lb/>
self defense.<lb/>
ST???ZT' ,on"w f"ukockey nnd ??- - ? ???? n?i<lb/>
of every variety, making him a<lb/>
human sound effects system with<lb/>
unpredictable and hilarious<lb/>
results.<lb/>
? Leslie Barbara (Donovon<lb/>
Scott) who joined the police force<lb/>
to avenge a gang attack on the<lb/>
drive-up photo booth at which he<lb/>
was employed before said gang<lb/>
chucked the booth in the river<lb/>
with the luckless Barbara still in-<lb/>
side.<lb/>
 Jorge Martin (Andrew<lb/>
Rubin), a Latino lover who scores<lb/>
so often he has stopped keeping<lb/>
score and whose amorous antics<lb/>
know no limits, not even the<lb/>
women's barricks.<lb/>
 Douglas Fackler (Bruce<lb/>
Maher) who feels he can over-<lb/>
come all obstacles if he can only<lb/>
peel his wife off the hood of his<lb/>
car.<lb/>
 Laverne Hooks (Marion<lb/>
Ramsey) who has a timidity pro-<lb/>
blem that keeps her speaking<lb/>
barely above a whisper.<lb/>
 Eugene Tackleberry (David<lb/>
Graf) who believes that maybe a<lb/>
man can be too rich or too thin.<lb/>
but he can never be too paranoid.<lb/>
Both in the writing and in the<lb/>
performance, director Hugh<lb/>
Wilson worked toward the kind of<lb/>
sharply delineated characteriza-<lb/>
tions that had been his hallmark<lb/>
on the highly successful "WKRP<lb/>
In Cincinnati" television series.<lb/>
The spectacular stunt work seen<lb/>
in Police Academy is credited to a<lb/>
team under the guidance of Joe<lb/>
Dunne, whose skill delighted au-<lb/>
diences in six Pink Panther pro-<lb/>
ductions and who achieves two<lb/>
firsts in this film. One involves a<lb/>
horse's rear quarters and the other<lb/>
a two-wheeled parking job of a<lb/>
Trans-Am, both moving viola-<lb/>
tions extraordinaire.<lb/>
This special pre-release screen-<lb/>
ing is, of course, free for all ECU<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Kagemusha' Wednesday Film,<lb/>
'Holy Grail' Set For Weekend<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
imam Editor<lb/>
This should be an enjoyable<lb/>
week for movie goers. Two superb<lb/>
films ar?- slated for Hendrix:<lb/>
Kagemusha and Monty Python<lb/>
and the Holy Grail.<lb/>
Pianist Anton Kuerti<lb/>
?<lb/>
On Tuesday, March 13 at 8 p.m Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre will come alive with the music of pianist<lb/>
Anton Kuerti.<lb/>
With the release of his complete Beethoven<lb/>
Sonatas on ColumbiaOdyssey, Kuerti's status as<lb/>
one of the most extraordinarily creative per-<lb/>
formers in music today" (Toronto Star) has again<lb/>
been reaffirmed. But Kuerti is not just a<lb/>
"Beethoven specialist his repertoire includes 35<lb/>
concerti by 12 composers, and his recordings of<lb/>
Chopin, Mendelssohn, Schumann, Scriabin and<lb/>
others have been called "unsurpassable indeed" bv<lb/>
High Fidelity. y<lb/>
Born in Vienna, Kuerti soon emigrated to the<lb/>
United States and studied with such eminent musi-<lb/>
cians as Arthur Loeser, Mieczyslaw Horszowski<lb/>
and Rudolf Serkin. He was just 11 when he played<lb/>
his first important concert, the Grieg Concerto<lb/>
with Arthur Fiedler. He shot to prominence a few<lb/>
years later when he won the famous Leventritt<lb/>
Award. Since then he has toured 25 countries and<lb/>
performed with most of North America's most<lb/>
famous conductors and orchestras including Azell<lb/>
and the Cleveland Orchestra, Ormandy and the<lb/>
Philadelphia Orchestra, Steinberg and the Pitt-<lb/>
sburg Orchestra, the New York Philharmonic and<lb/>
the orchestras of San Francisco, St. Louis, Denver<lb/>
and Honolulu. He has given recitals and music per-<lb/>
formances from coast to coast and is heard regular-<lb/>
ly on CBS radio and television (in Canada) not on-<lb/>
ly as a pianist, but also as a commentator, conduc-<lb/>
tor and composer.<lb/>
Tickets are available at the Central Ticket Of-<lb/>
fice, Mendenhall Student Center. Prices are $2 50<lb/>
for ECU students, $3.50 for youth age 14 and<lb/>
under and $7.50 for ECU faculty and staff and the<lb/>
public. All tickets are $7.50 at the door.<lb/>
Wednesday evening's film,<lb/>
Kagemusha, is a tale set in mid-<lb/>
16th century Japan. Three com-<lb/>
peting warlords battle for<lb/>
domination and in the process lay<lb/>
waste to much of the countryside.<lb/>
Shingen Takeda, the strongest<lb/>
warlord, is killed by a sniper's<lb/>
bullet. His followers discover<lb/>
Kagemusha, a petty thief who is<lb/>
about to be crucified. Kagemusha<lb/>
bears a striking resemblence to the<lb/>
fallen warlord, and Takeda's<lb/>
followers devise a plan to salvage<lb/>
their positions. They spare<lb/>
Kagemusha and place him upon<lb/>
the throne as a surrogate, fearing<lb/>
attack from their enemies if they<lb/>
discover their warlord's death.<lb/>
The name Kagemusha<lb/>
translates into "shadow of the<lb/>
warrior and much of the film<lb/>
centers around Kagemusha's<lb/>
evolution into a real leader.<lb/>
Gradually he grows in strength<lb/>
and grandeur until he is no longer<lb/>
impersonating the fallen warlord<lb/>
? he becomes a warlord in his<lb/>
own right.<lb/>
There is also the sub-plot of<lb/>
Takeda's son who struggles to<lb/>
claim the throne of his father, the<lb/>
throne that the former thief<lb/>
Kagemusha now sits upon and the<lb/>
son feels belongs to him. At first,<lb/>
this makes for a complex plot that<lb/>
is difficult to follow with the<lb/>
Japanese subtitles. Actor Tatsuya<lb/>
Nakadai plays both the warlord<lb/>
Takeda and Kagemusha, so it<lb/>
make take a few minutes for the<lb/>
viewer to sort things out.<lb/>
But even if one ignores the plot<lb/>
and the subtitles, Kagemusha is<lb/>
still a rich film. The panoramic<lb/>
battle scenes where masses of war-<lb/>
ring foot soldiers and horsemen<lb/>
clash are spectacular, and the<lb/>
shots of Japanese court life are a<lb/>
feast for the eyes as well. There<lb/>
are 160 minutes of visual splendor<lb/>
in this epic tale of survival.<lb/>
The legendary Japanese film<lb/>
maker Akira Kurosawa Severn<lb/>
Samuri) directed Kagemusha. He<lb/>
completed the film in 1980 at age<lb/>
70, and it shared the Grand Prize<lb/>
at the Cannes Film Festival that<lb/>
year with All That Jazz. Savs the<lb/>
New York Times: "There is beau-<lb/>
ty in Kagemusha, but it is imper-<lb/>
sonal, distant and ghostly. The<lb/>
old master has never been more<lb/>
rigorous<lb/>
Coming on the heels of this<lb/>
serious Japanese drama is a<lb/>
lunatic British comedy. Monty<lb/>
Python and the Holy Grail is Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre's feature film this<lb/>
weekend. The film is irreverent<lb/>
British comedy at its best by the<lb/>
unpredictable comedy troupe of<lb/>
Monty Python's Flying Circus.<lb/>
This collection of non-stop gags<lb/>
was written by the group and<lb/>
directed by members Terry<lb/>
Gilliam and Terry Jones.<lb/>
It is a farcical takeoff on the<lb/>
tales of King Arthur, particularly<lb/>
the segment dealing with the quest<lb/>
for the holy grail. Nothing is safe<lb/>
from parody in this film, and the<lb/>
gags are constant. For example, in<lb/>
order to get into the enemy's cas-<lb/>
tle, Arthur's men build a Trojan<lb/>
rabbit. When the plan proves a<lb/>
flop, Arthur doesn't yell retreat,<lb/>
he calls out, "Run away Back<lb/>
in the comfort of Camelot, rather<lb/>
than singing of his victories, Ar-<lb/>
thur's minstrel sings of his most<lb/>
humiliating defeats. And we are<lb/>
constantly hit over the head with<lb/>
such odd-ball phrases as "The<lb/>
Holy Hand Grenade of Antioch<lb/>
Monty Python and the Holy<lb/>
Grail should have you rolling out<lb/>
of your seat with laughter.<lb/>
Lincoln<lb/>
Virtuoso<lb/>
A juxtaposition of the<lb/>
world's finest musical<lb/>
personalities whose whole<lb/>
is greater than the sum of<lb/>
its parts is coming to East<lb/>
Carolina Universit) m the<lb/>
form of the Chamber<lb/>
Music Society of Lincoln<lb/>
Center The performance<lb/>
will be held Mondav<lb/>
March 19 at 8 p.rr.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
"The musical succt<lb/>
story of the generation,<lb/>
according to the <lb/>
York Times esteemed<lb/>
Harold Schonberg, is the<lb/>
Chamber Music Soaet)<lb/>
of Lincoln Center which<lb/>
Ha.<lb/>
ore;<lb/>
VA&amp;i<lb/>
no<lb/>
Their dress b formal, but<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Fletcher<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
The upcoming wee,<lb/>
promises to be a :<lb/>
for music lovers<lb/>
friends of the Schoc<lb/>
Music. Three mus<lb/>
performances<lb/>
scheduled in the A<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Chamber Music<lb/>
On Wednesdav. Mar.<lb/>
14 at 8:15 p.m. a faculty<lb/>
chamber music recital is<lb/>
scheduled. Ante<lb/>
Dalapas, soprano, is the<lb/>
vocalist. She will be<lb/>
cd by fellow facu<lb/>
members David Haw<lb/>
on oboe. Bnan<lb/>
Schweickhardt on<lb/>
Ms<lb/>
Lied<lb/>
Frank Hoi<lb/>
Dance Co<lb/>
Comes To<lb/>
With Kagemusha director Kurosawa<lb/>
back to feudal Japan.<lb/>
takes us oo an exotic adveatare<lb/>
The Frank Holder<lb/>
Dance Company has been<lb/>
making waves around the<lb/>
world as one of the hot<lb/>
test young dance com-<lb/>
panies in .America. The<lb/>
Greensboro-based troupe<lb/>
of seven dancers will<lb/>
retrun to ECU this Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 15 for an 8:15<lb/>
evening performance at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
The companv was<lb/>
founded in 1973 by<lb/>
dancer and<lb/>
choreographer Frank<lb/>
Holder. Now in its 10th<lb/>
season, the company con-<lb/>
tinues to make dance<lb/>
more accessible to<lb/>
children and adults<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
To make certain that all<lb/>
?f their audiences get<lb/>
something of value and<lb/>
tertainment from the<lb/>
company's public and in-<lb/>
jchool performances, its<lb/>
repertoire is varied, rang-<lb/>
lnS from classical to<lb/>
?hstract and from comic<lb/>
to lyric.<lb/>
Th<lb/>
Dare<lb/>
much<lb/>
dan.<lb/>
work<lb/>
yooaa<lb/>
has a<lb/>
abou;<lb/>
only<lb/>
their<lb/>
each<lb/>
with<lb/>
and<lb/>
win!<lb/>
light<lb/>
Holdi<lb/>
danci<lb/>
audiej<lb/>
herak<lb/>
a<lb/>
deligl<lb/>
Ticl<lb/>
concei<lb/>
Centrl<lb/>
Men,<lb/>
Cenu<lb/>
$5,001<lb/>
$7.fJ0<lb/>
and<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
the pi<lb/>
be$l<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0008"/><lb/>
zcu<lb/>
t<lb/>
mr. a rity cops? Find<lb/>
to a<lb/>
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mrher pro-<lb/>
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lves a<lb/>
c other<lb/>
b of a<lb/>
iola-<lb/>
asc screen-<lb/>
r all ECU<lb/>
nt<lb/>
ay Film,<lb/>
eekend<lb/>
ipe of<lb/>
 Circus.<lb/>
r gags<lb/>
- up and<lb/>
Terry<lb/>
tl " n the<lb/>
I articularly<lb/>
he quest<lb/>
hing is safe<lb/>
and the<lb/>
example, in<lb/>
emy's cas-<lb/>
I a Irojan<lb/>
plan proves a<lb/>
?ell retreat,<lb/>
ay Back<lb/>
imelot, rather<lb/>
' ries, Ar-<lb/>
: gs of his most<lb/>
And we are<lb/>
the head with<lb/>
phrases as "The<lb/>
irenade of Antioch<lb/>
thon and the Holy<lb/>
hae you rolling out<lb/>
laughter.<lb/>
Iibii<lb/>
11-Jn.il<lb/>
v- .itul IkSt 1- h v ? K i ?<lb/>
1M HI A.MRAM K.WXa,<lb/>
NAKKIOR<lb/>
es us on an exotic adventure<lb/>
Lincoln Center's Troupe Of Eleven<lb/>
Virtuoso Musicians Plays Hendrix<lb/>
A juxtaposition of th?? ??t;? . ?<lb/>
A juxtaposition of the<lb/>
world's finest musical<lb/>
personalities whose whole<lb/>
is greater than the sum of<lb/>
its parts is coming to East<lb/>
Carolina University in the<lb/>
form of the Chamber<lb/>
Music Society of Lincoln<lb/>
Center. The performance<lb/>
will be held Monday,<lb/>
March 19 at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
"The musical success<lb/>
story of the generation<lb/>
according to the New<lb/>
York Times esteemed<lb/>
Harold Schonberg, is the<lb/>
Chamber Music Society<lb/>
of Lincoln Center which<lb/>
continues to sell out<lb/>
season after season at<lb/>
New York's Alice Tully<lb/>
Hall, of which it is the of-<lb/>
ficial performing<lb/>
organization. Since 1972<lb/>
the Society has also been<lb/>
presenting annual<lb/>
subscription series in the<lb/>
great concert hall of<lb/>
Washington's Kennedy<lb/>
Center, and its tours and<lb/>
recordings have brought<lb/>
it an enthusiastic au-<lb/>
dience in the hundreds of<lb/>
thousands. The Society,<lb/>
under the artistic direc-<lb/>
tion of Charles<lb/>
Wadsworth. is unconven-<lb/>
tional and arresting in its<lb/>
programing.<lb/>
It blends beloved<lb/>
masterworks with sur-<lb/>
prising rarities from the<lb/>
past and challenging con-<lb/>
temporary compositions<lb/>
for a wide variety of in-<lb/>
strumental and vocal<lb/>
groupings. This lures a<lb/>
brand-new audience to<lb/>
experience new fascina-<lb/>
tion in music performed<lb/>
with superlative skill.<lb/>
Basic to the Society's<lb/>
success has been the br-<lb/>
inging together from all<lb/>
narts of the world stronc<lb/>
musical personalities<lb/>
whose combination and<lb/>
interaction generate real<lb/>
excitement. Thus the<lb/>
Society maintains a per-<lb/>
manent personnel of 11<lb/>
distinguished virtuosi,<lb/>
and each possesses a<lb/>
special reputation in the<lb/>
chamber repertoire to<lb/>
perform together in con-<lb/>
stantly varying combina-<lb/>
tions. Performing in<lb/>
Greenville with the Socie-<lb/>
ty are: James Buswell,<lb/>
violin; Gervase de Peyer,<lb/>
clarinet; Lee Luvisi,<lb/>
niano: Scott Nickering,<lb/>
guest violinist; Leslie Par<lb/>
nas, cello and Paula<lb/>
Robinson, flute.<lb/>
Tickets for the concert<lb/>
are on sale at the Central<lb/>
Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Prices are $2.50<lb/>
for ECU students, $3.50<lb/>
for youth age 14 and<lb/>
under, and $7.50 for<lb/>
ECU faculty and staff<lb/>
and the public. All tickets<lb/>
at the door will be $7.50.<lb/>
The concert is the last<lb/>
of the 1983-84 East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Unions' Artists Series.<lb/>
TJ- . for ??, ,Mr ??, hM - bounds T?e ? Musjc ? - ? ?omts - ?<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
fnlvn Editor<lb/>
The upcoming week<lb/>
promises to be a full one<lb/>
for music lovers and<lb/>
friends of the School of<lb/>
Music. Three musical<lb/>
performances are<lb/>
scheduled in the A.J.<lb/>
Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
Chamber Music<lb/>
Music<lb/>
On Wednesday, March<lb/>
14 at 8:15 p.m. a faculty<lb/>
chamber music recital is<lb/>
scheduled. Antonia<lb/>
Dalapas, soprano, is the<lb/>
vocalist. She will be join-<lb/>
ed by fellow faculty<lb/>
members David Hawkins<lb/>
on oboe, Brian<lb/>
Schweickhardt on<lb/>
clarinet, Kim Peoria on<lb/>
bassoon, Charles Stevens<lb/>
and Timothy Hoekman<lb/>
on piano, and graduate<lb/>
student Kelly Via on<lb/>
flute.<lb/>
The first half of the<lb/>
program will be compris-<lb/>
ed of performances by<lb/>
flute, oboe, clarinet<lb/>
piano and basssoon in<lb/>
varying combinations to<lb/>
music by Camille Saint-<lb/>
Saens and Jean Francaix.<lb/>
Following intermission<lb/>
Ms. Dalapas will be ac-<lb/>
compamied by<lb/>
Schweickhardt and<lb/>
Stevens (clarinet and<lb/>
piano) in a series of six<lb/>
songs by Ludwig Sphor<lb/>
from his Sechs Deutsche<lb/>
Lieder, Opus 103. The<lb/>
evening will conclude<lb/>
with Hawkins, Peoria<lb/>
and Hoekman perfoming<lb/>
a Francis Poulenc work,<lb/>
"Trio for Oboe, Bassoon<lb/>
and Piano<lb/>
their program with "Fan-<lb/>
tasia a Due" by Alfred<lb/>
Reed.<lb/>
Guest Vocalists<lb/>
Tuba And Piano<lb/>
Frank Holder<lb/>
Dance Company<lb/>
Conies To ECU<lb/>
On Sunday, March 18<lb/>
at 4 p.m. another facultv<lb/>
recital is scheduled at<lb/>
A.J. Flethcer Recital<lb/>
Hall. David Lewis on<lb/>
tuba and Janice<lb/>
McLaughlin on piano will<lb/>
perform Florian<lb/>
Mueller's "Concert<lb/>
Music for Bass Tuba<lb/>
Alec Wilder's "Suite No.<lb/>
4 for Tuba and Piano In<lb/>
Four Movements<lb/>
Robert Jager's "Reflec-<lb/>
tions and "Sonata for<lb/>
Tuba and Piano" by Ar-<lb/>
thur Frackenpohl. After<lb/>
intermission the two ECU<lb/>
faculty members will con-<lb/>
tinue with Vincent Per-<lb/>
sichetti's "Parable XXII<lb/>
for Solo Tuba, Opus<lb/>
147" and will conclude<lb/>
Following the Sunday<lb/>
afternoon recital bv the<lb/>
two ECU faculty<lb/>
members, an evening per-<lb/>
fomance at 8:15 featuring<lb/>
two visiting faculty<lb/>
members from Roanoke<lb/>
College in Salem,<lb/>
Virginia is scheduled at<lb/>
Fletcher. Penny Dee<lb/>
Johnson, soprano, and<lb/>
Steven L. Stolen, tenor,<lb/>
will sing as soloists and<lb/>
together in a broad pro-<lb/>
gram of music by such<lb/>
composers as G.F.<lb/>
Handel, C. Debussy, G.<lb/>
Verdi, F. Schubert, R.<lb/>
Wright and C. Montever-<lb/>
di among others. Their<lb/>
vocal performances will<lb/>
include songs in English,<lb/>
Italian and French.<lb/>
Miss Johnson and Mr.<lb/>
Stolen hold degrees in<lb/>
music from Simpson Col-<lb/>
lege and the University of<lb/>
Michigan and have been<lb/>
active in recital, opera<lb/>
and concert in varius<lb/>
parts of the United<lb/>
States. Both have won<lb/>
contests sponsored by the<lb/>
National Association of<lb/>
Teachers of Singing and<lb/>
National Federation of<lb/>
Music Clubs. Miss<lb/>
Johnson was recently a<lb/>
winner of the district and<lb/>
regional semi-final levels<lb/>
of the Metropolitan<lb/>
Opera Auditions. Both<lb/>
have performed with the<lb/>
Des Moines Opera,<lb/>
Mississippi Opera<lb/>
Festival of the South,<lb/>
OMNILansing Lyric<lb/>
Opera and others.<lb/>
Pianist Timothy<lb/>
Hoekman, an ECU facul-<lb/>
ty member, will accom-<lb/>
pany the two guest<lb/>
vocalists.<lb/>
Any parking tickets<lb/>
received during concerts<lb/>
may be submitted to the<lb/>
Dean of the School of<lb/>
Music for handling.<lb/>
I<lb/>
 ,  , mtOUwtAN mak. H 13. mi 7<lb/>
advertised<lb/>
lf, k . 'd!?i'd ??"? '?qu.red to b read<lb/>
mi at or beio the ad?ert,sed pr.co ,n each A1P s,o<lb/>
spect.caiiy noted in thi sad<lb/>
'ly available tor j<lb/>
"? ?cept as )<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU S.i M.rO, 1: at aapin , TZ<lb/>
-TEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVA.l ABLE TO OTHER DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
Clip MFCs "Cents-Olf" Coupons from your mail newsnaner<lb/>
and magazines . then bring them to your ASP Food sfore<lb/>
The Frank Holder<lb/>
Dance Company has been<lb/>
making waves around the<lb/>
world as one of the hot-<lb/>
test young dance com-<lb/>
panies in America. The<lb/>
Greensboro-based troupe<lb/>
of seven dancers will<lb/>
retrun to ECU this Thurs-<lb/>
day, March 15 for an 8:15<lb/>
evening performance at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
The company was<lb/>
founded in 1973 by<lb/>
dancer and<lb/>
chore,gapher Frank<lb/>
Holder. Now in its 10th<lb/>
season, the company con-<lb/>
tinues to make dance<lb/>
more accessible to<lb/>
children and adults<lb/>
throughout the country.<lb/>
To make certain that all<lb/>
of their audiences get<lb/>
something of value and<lb/>
entertainment from the<lb/>
company's public and in-<lb/>
school performances, its<lb/>
repertoire is varied, rang-<lb/>
,ng from classical to<lb/>
abstract and from comic<lb/>
r<lb/>
The Frank Holder<lb/>
Dance Company is as<lb/>
much a dance theatre as a<lb/>
dance company. Every<lb/>
work presented by this<lb/>
young, exuberant troupe<lb/>
has an element of drama<lb/>
about it. The dancers not<lb/>
only create moods with<lb/>
their movements, but<lb/>
each piece is enhanced<lb/>
with creative costuming<lb/>
and lighting. The intert-<lb/>
wining of movement,<lb/>
light and costumes are<lb/>
Holder's way of making<lb/>
dance accessible for all<lb/>
audiences. Critics have<lb/>
heralded the company as<lb/>
a "visual and artistic<lb/>
delight<lb/>
Tickets for the dance<lb/>
concert are on sale at the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Ticket prices are<lb/>
$5.00 for ECU students,<lb/>
$7.00 for youth age 14<lb/>
and under and $10.00 for<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff and<lb/>
the public. All tickets will<lb/>
be $10.00 at the door.<lb/>
??riKkmira ?nl,? compel. u? ,? y. ,or gL<lb/>
MM .?u. On jood on -won. micj<lb/>
r 1,?T' 3y Foo? '?'? po -o. kcX<lb/>
"f ?"? ?"rtim cov-poo p,oou. - mc c<lb/>
MM E.PC COopon. ? 101 0?ooor.8 On. ? CA.pon<lb/>
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coupon, MMk, WMM , rn.ni onws o, ,<lb/>
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PLAIN ? SELF-RISING ? BREAD<lb/>
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Discount<lb/>
5 off Total Purchases<lb/>
Oo Wednesdays<lb/>
?"?? rws c)m urn o<lb/>
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Conpuy.<lb/>
Greeiiviile Square Shopping Center<lb/>
703 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, NX.<lb/>
'h<lb/>
L<lb/>
n<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST t AROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MARCH 13 1VM Pa?t H<lb/>
ECAC SOUTH BASKETBALL<lb/>
Spiders, Newman<lb/>
Cruise To NCAA<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
SporU t lr<lb/>
TOP SECRET: Richmond for-<lb/>
ward John Newman. Averaged<lb/>
21.4 points this season. ECAC<lb/>
South tournament most valuable<lb/>
player. Conference player of the<lb/>
vear. Rebounds and passes well.<lb/>
Good court sense. Only a<lb/>
Nophomore. Susceptable to in-<lb/>
creased media coverage in the up-<lb/>
coming NCAA tournament.<lb/>
John Newman was fabi? us.<lb/>
He shot bottom-of-the-net<lb/>
jumpers with no effort. He<lb/>
followed the few shots he missed,<lb/>
leaping over everyone for the re-<lb/>
bound. He took an 'alley oop'<lb/>
pass and ignited the crowd with a<lb/>
vicious slam. He did everything,<lb/>
including a game-high 25 points in<lb/>
the Spiders surprisingly easy 74-55<lb/>
championship victory over<lb/>
favored Navy Saturday night,<lb/>
before 2,750 fans at' James<lb/>
Madison University Convocation<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
This ECAC South tournament<lb/>
championship game, which deter-<lb/>
mines a bid to the NCAA<lb/>
playoffs, was supposed to have<lb/>
been won by a much taller and<lb/>
stronger Navy ballclub, one that<lb/>
had beaten host and defending<lb/>
champion James Madison the<lb/>
previous night.<lb/>
But Richmond used superb<lb/>
shooting (64 percent) and passing,<lb/>
and a "fronting" defense to con-<lb/>
tain Navy's front line of all-<lb/>
(onference Vernon Butler, rookie-<lb/>
'f-fhe-year David Robinson and<lb/>
all-tournament Cliff Maurer, in<lb/>
defeating the Middies.<lb/>
In addition, Richmond's role<lb/>
players performed to perfection.<lb/>
Five-foot eight, all-tournament<lb/>
point guard Greg Beckwith scored<lb/>
a career-high 14 points, on six of<lb/>
seven shooting, mostly on shots<lb/>
from 25 feet out. All-tournament<lb/>
center Bill Five, only 6-8, had 13<lb/>
points and five rebounds, and<lb/>
guard Kelvin Johnson added 12<lb/>
points.<lb/>
"It was a little easier than 1<lb/>
thought it would be said Spider<lb/>
on Beckwith's<lb/>
Tarrant said,<lb/>
come in small<lb/>
coach Dick Tarrant, who shared<lb/>
ECAC South coach of the year<lb/>
honors with George Mason's Joe<lb/>
Harrington. However, Tarrant<lb/>
said, "We've had more success<lb/>
against their size than other<lb/>
teams<lb/>
Commenting<lb/>
performance,<lb/>
"Good things<lb/>
packages<lb/>
"Beckwith just killed us early<lb/>
with his shooting Evans added.<lb/>
"We tried everything and<lb/>
everything went the wrong way<lb/>
Evans said. "We got beat bv a<lb/>
very good team<lb/>
Navy took an early 2-0 lead<lb/>
? hen Butler took the opening tip-<lb/>
off and slammed a basket for the<lb/>
Middies.<lb/>
With six minutes gone, Rich-<lb/>
mond held a relatively narrow<lb/>
12-6 lead. But the Spiders took a<lb/>
ten point advantage, 22-12,<lb/>
helped by three Beckwith top of<lb/>
the key set shots, and were able to<lb/>
hold onto the same margin bv<lb/>
halftime, leading 34-24.<lb/>
Richmonu continued its hot<lb/>
shooting in the second half, and<lb/>
Navy called a timeout following a<lb/>
jumpshot by Newman with 17:26<lb/>
left in the game that gave the<lb/>
Spiders a commanding 42-26 lead.<lb/>
A 20-foot jumper by Rob Ro-<lb/>
maine, Navy's second-leading<lb/>
scorer during the regular season,<lb/>
brought the Middies within 12,<lb/>
44-32, but Maurer picked up his<lb/>
fourth foul with 14:19 left, and<lb/>
the Spiders increased their lead to<lb/>
as many as 20 points.<lb/>
Maurer had 16 points, seven of<lb/>
10 from the floor, and pulled<lb/>
down eight rebounds. Romaine<lb/>
had 15 points and Kyior Whitaker<lb/>
added 10. Butler, Navy's leading<lb/>
scorer and rebounder, had only<lb/>
four points and one rebound for<lb/>
Navy, now 24-8.<lb/>
"I would think we should (get<lb/>
into post season play) said<lb/>
Evans.<lb/>
Richmond, which was 4-22 six<lb/>
years ago, will be competing in the<lb/>
NCAA playoffs for the first time<lb/>
in the school's history.<lb/>
Rodriguez Leads<lb/>
Pirates To Victory<lb/>
. .<lb/>
MARK IMIEI -CCU<lb/>
Tournament MVP John Newman slams on Vernon Butler.<lb/>
Lab<lb/>
MARK BARSCR ? CCU Pttete Lab<lb/>
Richmond's Dick Tarrant was co-coach of the year in the ECAC.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Annual Sport Kdiior<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team won the first ever ECAC-<lb/>
South tournament championship<lb/>
March 4, defeating Richmond<lb/>
54-39.<lb/>
"The girls did a tremendous<lb/>
job Pirate Coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi said. "We knew the tour-<lb/>
nament would be tough, and we<lb/>
went in and worked hard<lb/>
Jody Rodriguez came off the<lb/>
bench to lead ECU with a team-<lb/>
high 17 points, and also sparked<lb/>
the defensive effort with eight<lb/>
steals. "Jody helped on defense,<lb/>
she created offense and she forced<lb/>
turnovers Andruzzi said.<lb/>
Ahead 26-25 at half, the Pirates<lb/>
were unable to pull away until<lb/>
they managed to score seven<lb/>
straight points, giving them a<lb/>
41-31 lead with 8:21 left in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
The Spiders broke the drv spell<lb/>
with a Betsy McCormick layup 20<lb/>
seconds later, but could get no<lb/>
closer than eight as ECU's defense<lb/>
stiffened. "We pressured them<lb/>
from start to finish Andruzzi<lb/>
said of her team's defensive ef-<lb/>
fort. We didn't think they had the<lb/>
stuff to take two hard games<lb/>
back-to-back. We tired them<lb/>
out<lb/>
Most of the Pirates' defensive<lb/>
game plan was centered around<lb/>
ECAC player o( the year Karen<lb/>
Eisner. In the second half ECU<lb/>
played a zone behind Eisner and<lb/>
then sagged back in front when<lb/>
the ball came to her side.<lb/>
"It worked very well Andruz-<lb/>
zi said. "We kept the ball away<lb/>
from her and also boxed out well<lb/>
and did a better job of controlling<lb/>
the boards<lb/>
For the game, the Pirates were<lb/>
outrebounded 35-29, but tur-<lb/>
novers were the decisive factor as<lb/>
ECU had 13 compared to 28 for<lb/>
Richmond.<lb/>
The Pirates got off to a slow<lb/>
start in the contest, falling to a<lb/>
12-6 deficit on a Jackie Isreal<lb/>
jumper with 8:55 left in the first<lb/>
half. But an ECU rally tied it at<lb/>
12, and after an exchange of eight<lb/>
baskets, the Pirates moved in<lb/>
front for good on a Rodriguez<lb/>
jumper, making it 22-20.<lb/>
The Spiders cut the lead to one<lb/>
on three occasions, but were never<lb/>
able to regain the lead as they<lb/>
trailed 26-25 at the break.<lb/>
In addition to Rodriguez' 17<lb/>
points, Sylvia Bragg added 16<lb/>
points and eight rebounds for the<lb/>
Lady Pirates. Eisner was the only<lb/>
Spider in double figures with 15,<lb/>
but was held to just four points in<lb/>
the second half when the Pirate<lb/>
zone focused on her.<lb/>
In ECU's semi-final game, the<lb/>
Pirates routed George Mason<lb/>
68-41.<lb/>
The Lady Patriots jurned out to<lb/>
a quick 6-2 lead in the early going,<lb/>
but once Bragg put the Pirates up<lb/>
11-10 on a free throw at the 13:24<lb/>
mark, the rout was on.<lb/>
Anita Anderson pumped in<lb/>
three straight baskets to make it<lb/>
17-10, and although GMU closed<lb/>
the gap to 19-16, the Pirates<lb/>
outscored the Patriots 17-5 over<lb/>
the final eight minutes cf the half<lb/>
to take 36-21 lead at the break.<lb/>
"The key for us was the tur-<lb/>
novers Andruzzi said. "We lost<lb/>
the last time (58-54 at GMU)<lb/>
because of too many turnovers.<lb/>
We were sloppy and look bad<lb/>
shots, and on defense we allowed<lb/>
them to do what they wanted<lb/>
The Patriots committed 24 tur-<lb/>
novers compared to 16 :or ECU.<lb/>
but the most telling statistic was<lb/>
GMU's 30 percent shooting per-<lb/>
formance from the field<lb/>
Andruzzi said her team took<lb/>
care of the ball in this meeting<lb/>
with George Mason and was able<lb/>
to force them out of their offense.<lb/>
"We pushed them out and made<lb/>
people handle the ball they didn't<lb/>
want handling it<lb/>
The Patriots managed io cut the<lb/>
lead back to 11 at the outset of the<lb/>
See WOMEN, Page 10<lb/>
Pirates lose In First Round, 47-32-<lb/>
Strong Defense Not Enough<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
At a press conference the day<lb/>
before the ECAC South tourna-<lb/>
ment, ECU coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison conveyed his optimism.<lb/>
"We might have had the best<lb/>
practices in the last two weeks<lb/>
than all year he said.<lb/>
The following day, the Pirates<lb/>
performed in accordance with<lb/>
Harrison's expectations ? defen-<lb/>
sively. But when it came down to<lb/>
the object of the game, putting the<lb/>
ball in the basket, the Pirates ex-<lb/>
ecuted disasterously. The result: a<lb/>
47-32 loss to William and Mary in<lb/>
the first round before 1,500 most-<lb/>
ly non-partisan fans at James<lb/>
Madison University Convocation<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
"It's been the story of our team<lb/>
in the second half said Har-<lb/>
rison, whose team trailed only<lb/>
21-17 at the break. "They play<lb/>
with a purpose and sometimes it<lb/>
just doesn't go right.<lb/>
"I can't say enough for our<lb/>
kids. I would say that since Oct.<lb/>
15, we have had no more than<lb/>
four practices that were without<lb/>
effort<lb/>
The Cinderella setting was pre-<lb/>
sent, but the Pirates couldn't<lb/>
capitalize. ECU took 12 more<lb/>
shots and outrebounded the In-<lb/>
dians in the game, and William<lb/>
and Mary shot only 31.2 percent<lb/>
in the second half. But the<lb/>
Pirates' 21.2 percent shooting in<lb/>
the same period was an albatross.<lb/>
"As I told our kids, I thought<lb/>
we had a pretty tough<lb/>
assignment said William and<lb/>
Mary coach Barry Parkhill. "I<lb/>
think the kids handled everything<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"We came out in the second<lb/>
half and didn't shoot well, but we<lb/>
hung in there. More than<lb/>
anything, we're just happy to<lb/>
keep on playing.<lb/>
"I don't think there is any team<lb/>
that plays harder (than ECU).<lb/>
They're quicker than we are. East<lb/>
Carolina has given us a tough time<lb/>
both times they've played us (this<lb/>
year)<lb/>
Guard Curt Vanderhorst, who<lb/>
scored 29 points the last time the<lb/>
two teams met on Feb. 11, led the<lb/>
Pirates with 14, although he con-<lb/>
nected on only seven of 24 shots<lb/>
from the field. Senior Tony<lb/>
Robinson, playing his final game,<lb/>
was next with six points.<lb/>
Kevin Richardson and Herb<lb/>
Harris led a balanced Indian scor-<lb/>
ing attack, each pumping in 10<lb/>
points. Gary Bland, Keith<lb/>
Cieplicki and Tony Traver all had<lb/>
six.<lb/>
The Pirates jumped out to an<lb/>
early 9-6 lead on a 25-foot shot by<lb/>
Vanderhorst, but it was a short<lb/>
advantage as the Indians<lb/>
outscored the Pirates 13-2 over<lb/>
the next six minutes to take 19-11<lb/>
lead with 6:14 left in the half.<lb/>
ECU fought back though, and<lb/>
?<lb/>
North<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
BjMbJMBM<lb/>
Ah! Harrisonburg, Va located<lb/>
in the valley of the Blue Ridge<lb/>
Mountains ? clean air, pictures-<lb/>
que scenery, good-tasting water.<lb/>
Ah! ECAC South basketball tour-<lb/>
nament ? entertaining, enlighten-<lb/>
ing, much more interesting than<lb/>
the typical ACC post season play.<lb/>
Ech! One James Madison student<lb/>
11 met at a party the night ECU lost<lb/>
I ? smug, ignorant, but never-<lb/>
theless entertaining.<lb/>
The party was last Thursday<lb/>
i night, a bitter cold evening. It<lb/>
j snowed that day, leaving the<lb/>
? houses covered with a beautiful<lb/>
: border. ECU photographers<lb/>
Mark Barber, Neil Johnson, Mike<lb/>
j Smith and I scurried to the in-<lb/>
came within four points on a<lb/>
Vanderhorst 15-foot jumper with<lb/>
four seconds left.<lb/>
ECU center Jack Turnbill<lb/>
scored the first basket of the se-<lb/>
cond half, and the Pirates were<lb/>
only down by two points, 21-19<lb/>
with 17:32 left.<lb/>
But William and Mary kept in-<lb/>
ching away as the Pirates could<lb/>
not connect on their shots, pulling<lb/>
out 31-23 lead with 7:13 left.<lb/>
With 6:53 to in the game, it ap-<lb/>
peared the Pirates would make a<lb/>
run of it. Robinson drove to the<lb/>
basket, was fouled, and the ball<lb/>
fell through, cutting the Indian<lb/>
lead to 31-26.<lb/>
Seconds later Vanderhorst stole<lb/>
a pass, and the Pirates set up their<lb/>
offense, hoping to cut the lead to<lb/>
three. ECU missed a shot attempt,<lb/>
and turned ice cold in the waning<lb/>
minutes, only to let the Indians<lb/>
run away from a close contest.<lb/>
Guard Curt Vanderhorst led<lb/>
MARK UUn tco ? lm<lb/>
ECU with 14 points.<lb/>
viting house where the festivities<lb/>
were being held, anxious to meet<lb/>
the hosts ? the JMU and ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders.<lb/>
The change in temperature was<lb/>
swift, as the greeting room was<lb/>
filled with sweating students, dan-<lb/>
cing splendidly.<lb/>
Not to waste time, however, we<lb/>
moved along to the kitchen and<lb/>
quickly to the keg of brewskies.<lb/>
So it was Neil, Mike and 1,<lb/>
chugging, sipping, scanning the<lb/>
crowd, hoping to notice someone<lb/>
familiar. Most of the people in the<lb/>
kitchen were from JMU and were<lb/>
excited with their team's opening<lb/>
round victory earlier in the even-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Then, a recognizable figure<lb/>
walked in the room. The tall,<lb/>
King Duke s Court<lb/>
plump, red-haired fellow ? a<lb/>
baby Huey looking gent ? with a<lb/>
grin largely attributed to his in-<lb/>
ability to hold alcohol, started<lb/>
walking our way. I turned to Neil<lb/>
and said, "Hey, look who's com-<lb/>
ing over here. This is the guy we<lb/>
'cleaned up' on in the media<lb/>
basketball game yesterday<lb/>
"Oh really Neil said. "He<lb/>
looks like he would be<lb/>
"How you fellas doing?" the<lb/>
red-haired Duke asked.<lb/>
"Oh, pretty good Mike<lb/>
answered.<lb/>
"Hey, it's too bad ECTC lost<lb/>
tonight Duke belched.<lb/>
I looked over at Neil and Mike<lb/>
then back to Duke. "Huh?" I<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"BCTC Duke laughed.<lb/>
"East Carolina Teacher's Col-<lb/>
lege<lb/>
I grinned, thinking how pitiful-<lb/>
ly inept this fellow was in the<lb/>
humor department. I decided to<lb/>
grab another brewsky, still listen-<lb/>
ing as I walked away.<lb/>
"Yeah, I heard if you don't get<lb/>
accepted anywhere else, you go to<lb/>
ECTC Duke chuckled.<lb/>
"Man, who is this guy?" Mike<lb/>
said, pointing at Duke.<lb/>
"I don't know, but he's giving<lb/>
JMU a bad name Neil added.<lb/>
Duke kept on going.<lb/>
"Eee say teee say Duke<lb/>
drawled out of the side of his<lb/>
mouth. "If ya cain't git in<lb/>
ainywhar ailse, go ta eee say teee<lb/>
say<lb/>
Suddenly, Mark came into the<lb/>
kitchen, ready for another beer<lb/>
He heard Duke.<lb/>
"Hey, what's he talking abouf<lb/>
Mark asked.<lb/>
?;ECTC Duke answered.<lb/>
"Man, I don't want to hear<lb/>
that Mark snapped, pointing<lb/>
his finger at Duke's chest. "If I<lb/>
hear ECTC one more time, I'm<lb/>
going to kick your tail. It'sE-C-<lb/>
U, not ECTC<lb/>
"Uh well err uh well<lb/>
I'm Duke stammered.<lb/>
"Well what?" asked Mark,<lb/>
who was half the size of Duke.<lb/>
Duke looked scared, his face<lb/>
color matching his hair, and back-<lb/>
ed off a few steps, trying to<lb/>
?weasel' his way out of the mess<lb/>
he created.<lb/>
Finally, I stepped in. "Hev<lb/>
youve been cracking on our<lb/>
Sk ??1kS hear something bad<lb/>
about JMU I said.<lb/>
"Oh yeah Duke laughed ner-<lb/>
vously. "Did you know we have<lb/>
no doctoral programs. And, uh<lb/>
oh yeah. Our football team was<lb/>
really awful this year<lb/>
He went on and on, anc I BOt<lb/>
bored and proceeded to the<lb/>
bathroom laughing. Duke ha<lb/>
dug his own grave.<lb/>
Perhaps Mark summarized the<lb/>
situation best when ?2?5<lb/>
ater. "It just goes to showhal<lb/>
large size does not tmZSl<lb/>
makeJor a large mentalkT<lb/>
??? i<lb/>
EC<lb/>
Swimmers PI<lb/>
B SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
sport ? ruer<lb/>
The ECU men's s<lb/>
ming team<lb/>
Eastern Intercolleg<lb/>
Swimming and D<lb/>
C h a m p i o nsh : p -<lb/>
weekend and came a<lb/>
with an impresse s?<lb/>
place finish.<lb/>
Pittsburgh succes<lb/>
defended its champ<lb/>
ship, amassing<lb/>
points. ECU easil<lb/>
distanced Mai<lb/>
University for<lb/>
place with 644 -<lb/>
compared to MU's -<lb/>
Individua' winners I<lb/>
the Piraies were<lb/>
Larranaga in th<lb/>
yard freest vie with a<lb/>
of 15:48.06, Steve H<lb/>
in the 100 ard buttei<lb/>
<lb/>
Reproductive Hea<lb/>
TrU U v. s<lb/>
??? at St ?<lb/>
? Tt<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
a't Greeviie Blvd<lb/>
7V 3023 ?24 HRS<lb/>
PLAZA S<lb/>
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l -Haul Rentals<lb/>
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STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
fMon &amp; Tues<lb/>
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M2chopped,<lb/>
sirloin &amp; fl3<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
Fri&amp;Sat !81<lb/>
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<lb/>
?(-??-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0010"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MARCH 13. 1944<lb/>
eads<lb/>
ictory<lb/>
i 55 left in the first<lb/>
C rail) tied it at<lb/>
exchange of eight<lb/>
he Pirates moed in<lb/>
good on a Rodriguez<lb/>
? . 22-20.<lb/>
;ut the lead to one<lb/>
5, but vere never<lb/>
the lead as they<lb/>
25 ai the break.<lb/>
1 Rodriguez' 17<lb/>
Bragg added 16<lb/>
rids for the<lb/>
es. Eisner was the only<lb/>
gures with 15,<lb/>
. d usl four points in<lb/>
a : when the Pirate<lb/>
ler.<lb/>
- semi-final game, the<lb/>
ted George Mason<lb/>
Patriots jumed out to<lb/>
6-2 lead in the early going,<lb/>
. Bragg put the Pirates up<lb/>
a free throw at the 13:24<lb/>
he rout wa on.<lb/>
I Anderson pumped in<lb/>
: baskets to make it<lb/>
although GMU closed<lb/>
-16, the Pirates<lb/>
red the Patriots 17-5 over<lb/>
it minutes of the half<lb/>
36-21 iead at the break.<lb/>
e key for us was the tur-<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "We lost<lb/>
time (58-54 at GMU)<lb/>
too many turnovers.<lb/>
: sloppy and took bad<lb/>
n defense we allowed<lb/>
what they wanted<lb/>
. mmitted 24 tur-<lb/>
pared to 16 for ECU.<lb/>
most telling statistic was<lb/>
percent shooting per-<lb/>
ice from the field.<lb/>
Iruzzi said her team took<lb/>
If the ball in this meeting<lb/>
Korge Mason and was able<lb/>
e them out of their offense.<lb/>
)ushed them out and made<lb/>
dandle the ball they didn't<lb/>
landling it<lb/>
Patriots managed to cut the<lb/>
:k to 11 at the outset of the<lb/>
WOMEN, Page 10<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Wm mT<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
?MARK CA??E ? 1CU nwn u?<lb/>
CCU with 14 points.<lb/>
Court<lb/>
bated.<lb/>
ally. I stepped in. "Hey,<lb/>
Je been cracking on our<lb/>
bl, let's hear something bad<lb/>
1 JMU 1 said.<lb/>
Jfa yeah Duke laughed ner-<lb/>
y. "Did you know we have<lb/>
ctoral programs. And, uh<lb/>
eah. Our football team was<lb/>
awful this year<lb/>
went on and on, and I got<lb/>
I and proceeded to the<lb/>
loom laughing. Duke had<lb/>
Sis own grave.<lb/>
rhaps Mark summarized the<lb/>
ion best when we talked<lb/>
"It just goes to show that<lb/>
size does not necessarily<lb/>
for a large mentality<lb/>
EC A C Excitement<lb/>
TS??! Place Second, Finish Successful Season<lb/>
By SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
Sports W rtltf<lb/>
The ECU men's swim-<lb/>
ming team hosted the<lb/>
Eastern Intercollegiate<lb/>
Swimming and Diving<lb/>
Championships last<lb/>
weekend and came away<lb/>
with an impressive second<lb/>
place finish.<lb/>
Pittsburgh successfully<lb/>
defended its champion-<lb/>
ship, amassing 861<lb/>
points. ECU easily out-<lb/>
distanced Marshall<lb/>
University for second<lb/>
place with 644 points<lb/>
compared to MU's 461.<lb/>
Individual winners for<lb/>
the Pirates were Chema<lb/>
Larranaga in the 1650<lb/>
yard freestyle with a time<lb/>
of 15:48.08, Steve Hollett<lb/>
in the 100 yard butterfly<lb/>
at 51.17, Kevin Richards<lb/>
in the 200 butterfly at<lb/>
1:53.46, and Stan<lb/>
Williams, who was a dou-<lb/>
ble winner for the<lb/>
Pirates. Williams won the<lb/>
50 and 100 yard freestyle<lb/>
events in times of 21.09<lb/>
and 46.37 respectively.<lb/>
The Pirates completed<lb/>
a sweep of the 100 yard<lb/>
freestyle, with Chris Pit-<lb/>
telli and Steve Hollett<lb/>
capturing second and<lb/>
third with times of 46.62<lb/>
and 46.85.<lb/>
The Pirates had<lb/>
numerous second place<lb/>
finishers, including<lb/>
Richards in the 100 yard<lb/>
butterfly, Pittelli in the<lb/>
200 freestyle, Uarranga in<lb/>
the 500 freestyle and<lb/>
Stratton Smith in the<lb/>
1650 freestyle<lb/>
The 400 yard freestyle<lb/>
relay team also captured<lb/>
second place with a time<lb/>
of 3:04.06.<lb/>
Other tc finishers for<lb/>
the Pirates were Scott<lb/>
Eagle, who finished<lb/>
fourth in the one meter<lb/>
diving, Pittelli, who<lb/>
finished third in the 200<lb/>
yard individual dedley,<lb/>
and Smith, who finished<lb/>
fourth in the 400 yard in-<lb/>
dividual medley.<lb/>
The women's team<lb/>
competed in the NCAA<lb/>
Division II Champion-<lb/>
ships at Hampstead, NY<lb/>
last weekend. Several'<lb/>
swimmers had strong<lb/>
finishes for the Pirates.<lb/>
Caycee Poust finished<lb/>
eleventh in the 100 yard<lb/>
backstroke, earning All-<lb/>
America honors.<lb/>
Other top finishers for<lb/>
the Pirates were Jessica<lb/>
Feinberg, who finished<lb/>
13th in the 100 yard<lb/>
breaststroke, and Rene<lb/>
Seech, who finished 20th<lb/>
in the one meter diving<lb/>
events.<lb/>
The 200 and 400 meter<lb/>
medley relay teams both<lb/>
finished 18th for the<lb/>
Pirates.<lb/>
Both teams have com-<lb/>
pleted their seasons, the<lb/>
men finishing at 10-4<lb/>
while the women finished<lb/>
at 9-5.<lb/>
t<lb/>
Reproductive Health Care<lb/>
Under?sndin. non (udqmental carp that<lb/>
includes abortion for women of all ages<lb/>
Counseling for both partner is available<lb/>
Special Services and rates for students.<lb/>
Call 7BI 5550 days, eve rungs, and weekends.<lb/>
V rV4 MfAl <lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
WALj0FAMEAl<lb/>
105 Airport Rd<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
019)758-0327<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
Trout, Shrimp<lb/>
and Deviled Crab<lb/>
r the body shoppe<lb/>
Spring Special<lb/>
Memberships<lb/>
? 1 Month $19.95 (Reg. $24)<lb/>
? 3 Months $49.95 (Reg. $60)<lb/>
Bring in this Ad for an extra week of membership.<lb/>
1530 E. 14th St.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
758-7564<lb/>
Call or Come<lb/>
by TODAY FOR<lb/>
A FREE VISIT.<lb/>
BMrnllkBtaH<lb/>
o?iy ? ??? ioc.de, ha j. a?T)<lb/>
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Kfentucfcy Fried Chickim<lb/>
600 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
and<lb/>
2905 Ernst 5th Street<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
'0 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
754-3023 ? 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
74 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
2 Locations<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
500 W.Greenville Blvd<lb/>
?Won &amp; Tues<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
L<lb/>
ed &amp; Thurs<lb/>
112 chopped Nfte<lb/>
I sirloin &amp; ? Beef Tips<lb/>
Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
&amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
$3.99<lb/>
crll c?t 18ozsirloini<lb/>
iistf &amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
N,te UJ&amp;<lb/>
Now Featuring Fix it<lb/>
yourself potato bar<lb/>
Free with meal.<lb/>
Cliffs<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
Monday thru Thursday<lb/>
Located 1 mite 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/>
J2HL Salad may be substituted for slaw 35- extra<lb/>
5-9 PM<lb/>
Thurs.&amp; Fit<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT. Help Yourself From Our Hot Fish<lb/>
Buffet To All The FISH FILLETS You Can Eat.<lb/>
Fillets Breaded n Seasoned From 4 Different Recipes<lb/>
Help Yourself to 1 or all 4.<lb/>
SERVED WITH<lb/>
SEAFOOD CHOWDER<lb/>
FRENCH FRIES<lb/>
2 VEGETABLES<lb/>
HUSHPUPPIES<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$449<lb/>
with our 50-item Soup n Salad Bar. $5.49<lb/>
?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057630_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
IHJiAgLCAltOLINlAN MA.rn, ? ??<lb/>
'<lb/>
?-gfea<lb/>
?<lb/>
.<lb/>
?wc$ SpiY<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
?I SfKWti fAHoi<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
baseball team split a<lb/>
double-header with Fair-<lb/>
field University at Harr-<lb/>
ington Field yesterday<lb/>
afternoon, dropping the<lb/>
first contest 6-4, then tak-<lb/>
ing the second, 5-2.<lb/>
Pitcher Bob Davidson<lb/>
took the loss for the<lb/>
Pirates in the first game<lb/>
in which Fairfiled scored<lb/>
five unearned runs.<lb/>
Fairfield did all the<lb/>
damage in the second inn-<lb/>
ing, crossing the plate<lb/>
five times. The Stags were<lb/>
only credited with one hit<lb/>
in the inning as the<lb/>
Pirates committed four<lb/>
errors and Davidson<lb/>
threw a wild pitch.<lb/>
ECU got on the<lb/>
scoreboard in the third<lb/>
inning when Greg Har-<lb/>
dison hit a triple, and<lb/>
then was singled in by<lb/>
Todd Evans, making the<lb/>
score 5-1.<lb/>
The Stags picked up<lb/>
another unearned run in<lb/>
the fifth, and Mike<lb/>
Williams doubled home<lb/>
David Wells in the sixth<lb/>
for the Pirates, setting the<lb/>
stage for the seventh inn-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Evans got things<lb/>
started off with a single,<lb/>
and then advanced to se-<lb/>
cond base when Winfred<lb/>
Johnson was walked.<lb/>
Wells was next up, and<lb/>
doubled in Evans. Mark<lb/>
Shank, who was inserted<lb/>
to run for Johnson, ad-<lb/>
vanced to third on the<lb/>
play. Shank then scored<lb/>
on the ensuing play when<lb/>
Williams sacrificed to the<lb/>
outfield, closing the<lb/>
Pirates to within two runs<lb/>
at 6-4.<lb/>
With Wells on third,<lb/>
Mike Sullivan and Chris<lb/>
Bradberry were walked,<lb/>
loading the bases for<lb/>
Mark Cockrell. With the<lb/>
count full and all the run-<lb/>
ners going, Cockrell flied<lb/>
out to left, ending the<lb/>
Pirates chances at vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
The Pirates outhit Fair-<lb/>
field 7-4 for the game,<lb/>
but were plagued by bad<lb/>
fielding as they commit-<lb/>
ted five errors compared<lb/>
to one for the Stags.<lb/>
The Pirates were vic-<lb/>
torious in the second<lb/>
game as Wells was<lb/>
responsible for all the<lb/>
scoring, knocking in all<lb/>
five of ECU's runs in two<lb/>
trips to the plate.<lb/>
With two out in the<lb/>
first inning, Evans singl-<lb/>
ed, Johnson walked, and<lb/>
then Wells blasted a<lb/>
homer to give the Pirates<lb/>
a quick 3-0 lead.<lb/>
The Stags picked up<lb/>
runs in the fourth and<lb/>
sixth innings respectively,<lb/>
and then after a Johnson<lb/>
double in the bottom of<lb/>
the sixth, Wells ham-<lb/>
mered his second homer<lb/>
of the game to close out<lb/>
the scoring at 5-2.<lb/>
Chubby Butler picked<lb/>
up the win for the<lb/>
Pirates, as Jim Peterson<lb/>
was credited with the save<lb/>
after coming on in relief<lb/>
in the sixth inning.<lb/>
ECU now stands at 5-3<lb/>
on the year, and will play<lb/>
Fairfield again at 3:00<lb/>
p.m. today on Harr-<lb/>
ington Field.<lb/>
. .<lb/>
-X<lb/>
r-W kk n i , . STANLEY LEAHY - ECU Pfcoto Lab<lb/>
mnSuJup the win ln ECUs second gtme of the" " " '<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
SEARS ELECTRIC typewriter great<lb/>
condition call 7Sa-MST attarp m<lb/>
OIMETTE SET jjj 7Se-?S after $.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
V,CE ? Experience, quality work.<lb/>
IBM Selectric Typewriter. Call Lanie<lb/>
SMve gMIM ?<lb/>
ROOMS AVAILABLE ? We are now<lb/>
receiving applications for rooms tor<lb/>
the summer and next fall. Applica-<lb/>
tions may be picked up at the<lb/>
Methodist Student Center, sot East<lb/>
Fifth Street. For more information<lb/>
call: 7M-MM.<lb/>
SPRING BREAK M was made for<lb/>
Chester, k-man. j.t. and Beers to the<lb/>
farthest point south in a Wagoneer<lb/>
Our buffet bar to help us steer, diving<lb/>
in water clearer than clear. There<lb/>
were no twinkie losers but many<lb/>
tubers. We Mid we must with eyes of<lb/>
lust, we said we shall with European<lb/>
gals The west key of life with our<lb/>
cards at THE TOP. Our Michigan bar<lb/>
maid wouldn't let us stop, as JIM<lb/>
BEAN was knocked out in the th<lb/>
shot. Back to the FORT we did<lb/>
return, for wet T shirts and to finish<lb/>
our burns Now k-man A j.t. owe<lb/>
Chester big bucks, but every once in a<lb/>
while you've got to say what the ?I<lb/>
Sleeping sometimes gave us cramps,<lb/>
but tor our last SPRING BREAK we<lb/>
were the CHAMPS.<lb/>
THANK ? GOODNESS the Wash Pub<lb/>
is now open on E. 10th St. next to the<lb/>
Piiza Hut.<lb/>
DIRTY CLOTHES - WASH PUB<lb/>
thru exercise toward a positive "a7-<lb/>
tltude about themselves. Call<lb/>
Theresa at 7M-7M4 at THE BODY<lb/>
SHOPPE.<lb/>
PART-TIME EXERCISE instructor<lb/>
individual with positive attitude POS.T.ON OeTri- &amp;? ???"?? I"<lb/>
lip motivate others gram   .c  T,0M' East Fifth Street. Green<lb/>
abut herself to help motivate onr, ,r.m assistant ,V ? vlH NX<lb/>
Watch Yourself at Mr. Gattis.<lb/>
Methodist Student Center<lb/>
Preference is given to graduate<lb/>
students, married without children.<lb/>
Apply by letter to: Wesley Founda-<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
tOLL-FREE HOTLINE<lb/>
800-621 -5745<lb/>
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312-922-0300<lb/>
AUTHORS'RESEARCH. ROOM 600<lb/>
?Of S. Dearborn, Chicago, IL 60605<lb/>
Instant<lb/>
Replay.<lb/>
PART-TIME SOCCER COACHES I<lb/>
Youth Soccer Coaches work part-time. 10-20 hours<lb/>
weekly, beginning March 19 until May 3. Hours normal-<lb/>
ly 3:30-6:30p.m. Monday-Thursday. Salary rate $3.30<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
Applications will be accepted through Monday,<lb/>
March 19, at the Personnel Office. City of Greenville,<lb/>
corner of West Fifth and Washington Streets.<lb/>
At Mr. Garti's your big event can"<lb/>
come to life again. We'll VIDEO<lb/>
taoe ball games, concerts, parades,<lb/>
fraternity &amp; sorority parties, collegiate 6V<lb/>
intramural sporting events just ask and then you<lb/>
can see it all again on our big screen TV while you enjoy<lb/>
the best pizza in town.<lb/>
For an instant replay, see your neighborhood Mr. Garti's.<lb/>
ECU Dumps GW<lb/>
By MEG MOREADITH<lb/>
Spona wniif<lb/>
The ECU men's tennis<lb/>
team defeated George<lb/>
Washington University<lb/>
Sunday afternoon 6-3.<lb/>
"They did an excellent<lb/>
job head coach Pat<lb/>
Sherman said. "This was<lb/>
a great win considering<lb/>
GWU is a good team<lb/>
Assistant coach Zengel<lb/>
was also pleased with the<lb/>
team's play, and thought<lb/>
the top three players did<lb/>
especially well. "The<lb/>
matches started out slow<lb/>
because of the cold<lb/>
weather, but after the<lb/>
players warmed-up, the<lb/>
matches were tough<lb/>
The Pirates now stand<lb/>
at 2-0 on the spring<lb/>
season, and will be in ac-<lb/>
tion today at 3:00 p.m.<lb/>
on the varsity courts next<lb/>
to Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Results<lb/>
Paul Owen (ECU) d.<lb/>
Troy Marguglio 6-3, 6-3;<lb/>
David Creech (ECU) d.<lb/>
Barry Horowitz 6-2, 6-3;<lb/>
Galen Treble (ECU) d.<lb/>
John McConnin 6-4, 6-4;<lb/>
Todd Long (GWU) d.<lb/>
Greg Loyd 6-2, 6-2;<lb/>
Adam Cohen (GWU) d.<lb/>
Davis Bagley 6-4, 6-3;<lb/>
Dan Rosner (GWU) d.<lb/>
David Turner 4-6, 7-6,<lb/>
6-3.<lb/>
Owen-Treble (ECU) d.<lb/>
Marguglio-Long 6-3, 6-1;<lb/>
Creech-Moran (ECU) d.<lb/>
Horowitz-Cohen 6-1,6-1;<lb/>
Bagley-Willis (ECU) d.<lb/>
McConnin-Gomer 6-4,<lb/>
3-6, 7-6.<lb/>
Women Take Tournament<lb/>
ITTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTTT<lb/>
Vote<lb/>
Mark Niewald<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
March 21 st<lb/>
Corner of Cotanchc and 10th ???? 75?-6m<lb/>
The besi puu in town ??<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
?SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
for iust H.39<lb/>
 NoiGoodTVith Any Other Special<lb/>
$2.25 for a Pitcher of Beer<lb/>
fftCO<lb/>
cm<lb/>
Feista Time<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
5:00 unir<lb/>
? A legal<lb/>
mZ career<lb/>
ttj" in three<lb/>
J? short<lb/>
? W. months<lb/>
Get right into law with intensive preparation<lb/>
approved by the American Bar Association<lb/>
After completing the three-month program, you<lb/>
can take your place as a legal assistant. It's<lb/>
one of the fastest growing careers of the 80s.<lb/>
? BacNrtofs degree w aMofney spo requlred<lb/>
? Day and Evwntng classes available<lb/>
? Employment assistance<lb/>
? Classes conducted in Atlanta<lb/>
Mmi us on Campus<lb/>
Monday, March 19. 1984<lb/>
Placement Office<lb/>
9:00-5:00<lb/>
(404 266-1060<lb/>
  IT<lb/>
C?y<lb/>
 dm)<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
second half, but ECU<lb/>
responded with eight<lb/>
unanswered points to put<lb/>
the game out of reach at<lb/>
44-25.<lb/>
"I was absolutely<lb/>
pleased with our perfor-<lb/>
mance Andruzzi said.<lb/>
This is a game in which<lb/>
we played as well offen-<lb/>
TaaaaaaWBE<lb/>
sively as defensively.<lb/>
In the other semi-final<lb/>
game, Eisner poured in<lb/>
21 points to lead Rich-<lb/>
mond to a 67-56 victory<lb/>
over James Madison.<lb/>
The Spiders jumped on<lb/>
Mason early, extending<lb/>
their lead to 27-15 mid-<lb/>
way through the first<lb/>
half. GMU was patient,<lb/>
however, and was able to<lb/>
cut the score to 35-28 at<lb/>
the break.<lb/>
Richmond was able to<lb/>
extend their lead to 51-38<lb/>
with 10:44 left in the<lb/>
game, but another GMU<lb/>
rally narrowed it to 60-54<lb/>
in the final minutes.<lb/>
Mason had the oppor-<lb/>
tunity to cut it to four on<lb/>
five different occasions,<lb/>
but couldn't convert as<lb/>
Richmond coasted to vic-<lb/>
torv.<lb/>
v?M?m??????j????<lb/>
?? ?????????  r ,??rr?t,??m?,?r,?wr.<lb/>
Pirates Landing<lb/>
Ptoleulonolly Manog?d ly<lb/>
IS 'last0<lb/>
? u east,<lb/>
?Vaa inC.<lb/>
EliMWW<lb/>
All new, fully carpeted private rooms,<lb/>
available immediately. Refrigerator, bed,<lb/>
and desk furnished. Sun deck, Gazebo,<lb/>
laundry facilities, and kitchen area in-<lb/>
cluded. Night RemcoEast<lb/>
758-6061<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Including Skates<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
MUSIC TELEVISION with MTV<lb/>
16ft SCREEN<lb/>
STsoQ'C'O'Ooooooocccoooooocoooooooooooooooooeoooetoooo:<lb/>
I<lb/>
viS4<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
CAR<lb/>
PARTS INC.<lb/>
. <lb/>
ML<lb/>
.Ox 90 105 Greeavillc Blvd. GREENVILLE. N.C. h<lb/>
V c ILUiJI V<lb/>
We carry a complete few of parts &amp; accessories.<lb/>
NEW LOCATION<lb/>
756-7114<lb/>
UNIVERSAL KOKO MATS<lb/>
KONTS BMW 2002 SHOCKS<lb/>
AUDI 5000 &amp; 4000 WIND DEFLECTORS<lb/>
Qygjfo Parts at a Reasonable Price<lb/>
W<lb/>
1<lb/>
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p<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ptton. 0?v<lb/>
The National Center for<lb/>
Paralegal Draining<lb/>
3414 PeecNree Roed, N.E Atlanta. GA 30.ra<lb/>
m<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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DONT MISS OUT!<lb/>
Saturday, March 17, 1984<lb/>
From 11:00AM Unit 4:00PM<lb/>
At<lb/>
m<lb/>
Buy One Foot-Long Sub<lb/>
Sandwich And Get One of<lb/>
Equal or Comparable Value<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
m<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
75t-7?7f<lb/>
E. 5th Si<lb/>
JilUUUUiM<lb/>
Limit One Per Customer Per Visit<lb/>
-hirtfe "<lb/>
<pb facs="00057630_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>