<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057635_0001"/>
Stou<lb/>
(Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since W5<lb/>
voi.58 0.r 5z<lb/>
Thursday, March 29, 1984<lb/>
Loan Defaulters Get<lb/>
Stricter Penalties<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
NnMBfltoi<lb/>
Widespread abuse of the SGA<lb/>
loan funds has necessitated the en-<lb/>
ticement of strict measures<lb/>
against students who have<lb/>
defaulted on their loans.<lb/>
According to SGA Treasurer<lb/>
Becky Talle, there are currently<lb/>
46 emergency medical loans<lb/>
outstanding, a total of $6,093.<lb/>
These loans can be taken out for<lb/>
up to six months. Of the 46<lb/>
outstanding loans 70 percent are<lb/>
six months old or older. 10 per-<lb/>
cent are less than six months old<lb/>
and 20 percent are current.<lb/>
The depletion of the loan fund<lb/>
is so severe that, 3 weeks ago,<lb/>
Talley said, "we couldn't even<lb/>
make any loans; we didn't have<lb/>
any money<lb/>
In order to try and rebuild the<lb/>
loan fund, Universin Attorney<lb/>
David Stevens began mailing out<lb/>
letters in mid-February to<lb/>
students delinquent in loan repav-<lb/>
ment. The letters told the student<lb/>
the amount owed to the SGA and<lb/>
also stated that, if the loans were<lb/>
not repaid within two weeks, the<lb/>
school would file suit against<lb/>
them.<lb/>
Some loans were repaid follow-<lb/>
ing receipt of the letters, Talley<lb/>
said. However, the majority were<lb/>
not and Stevens is now in the pro-<lb/>
cess of filing suit against some of<lb/>
the offenders. The students will be<lb/>
sued in Magistrates' Court in their<lb/>
home counties and, upon convic-<lb/>
tion, will be required to repay<lb/>
their loans and all court costs in-<lb/>
curred.<lb/>
"It's bad that students who use<lb/>
it will not pay it back so that<lb/>
others can use it Talley said. "It<lb/>
makes me mad when we can't give<lb/>
somebody money because so-<lb/>
meone else hasn't paid back a<lb/>
loan added outgoing SGA<lb/>
President Paul Naso.<lb/>
Previously, students who did<lb/>
not repay loans had their records<lb/>
tagged in order to prevent them<lb/>
from graduating until restitution<lb/>
was made. Unfortunately, Talley<lb/>
said, they were graduating<lb/>
anyway. The new system should<lb/>
"provide a safeguard for student<lb/>
monies said Mike Dixon, chair-<lb/>
man of the rules and judiciary<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
A rescue worker searches through the remains of a mobile home in<lb/>
Taylor s Trailer Park on Highway 43 outside Greenville. Several<lb/>
houses and trailers were destroyed in the area. At least 10 people died<lb/>
from tornados hitting Pitt County Wednesday night, and at least 43<lb/>
Gov. Hunt To Visit Hendrix<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Gov. James Hunt will present a<lb/>
speech on the topic of "Nuclear<lb/>
Defense and Arms Control" on<lb/>
Tuesday night in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
The speech is being presented as<lb/>
an extension of this year's Phi<lb/>
Kappa Phi symposium said Dr.<lb/>
Fred Broadhurst of the School of<lb/>
Technology. The svmposium<lb/>
topic is Peace and War 1984:<lb/>
Power and Moral Responsibility,<lb/>
and this is the first time the pro-<lb/>
gram has been extended in such a<lb/>
manner.<lb/>
Broadhurst stressed that this<lb/>
"major policy address" will be<lb/>
g'ven in a "scholarly<lb/>
perspective Hunt will hold a<lb/>
press conference in Mendenhall<lb/>
prior to the event and the speech<lb/>
itself will start at 8 p.m.<lb/>
After Hunt speaks, there will be<lb/>
a controlled question and answer<lb/>
session. Dr. Angelo Volpe, vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs<lb/>
will be in charge of preparing the<lb/>
questions and Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell will perform introduc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The event is open to the public<lb/>
and all interested students are in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
were killed throughout North Carolina. About 126 people were admit-<lb/>
ted to Pitt County Memorial Hospital, where a spokeswoman called it<lb/>
the worst disaster since the Village Green apartment explosion one vear<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
Rep. Martin Speaks To<lb/>
Pitt County Supporters<lb/>
Martin<lb/>
Ten Dead In Pitt County<lb/>
Tornados Devastate Region, Kill 43<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
and DARRVL BROWN<lb/>
with suff and I PI rrports<lb/>
Tornados smashed through<lb/>
North Carolina Wednesday night,<lb/>
killing at least 43 people and caus-<lb/>
ing hundreds of injuries,<lb/>
authorities said.<lb/>
A spokeswoman for Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty Memorial Hospital confirmed<lb/>
early Thursday morning at least<lb/>
ten people dead and 126<lb/>
hospitalized from tornados<lb/>
throughout the county.<lb/>
The number of dead and in-<lb/>
jured has "been going up every 15<lb/>
minutes or so the<lb/>
spokesowoman said. The hospital<lb/>
was at a level three disaster alert<lb/>
about midnight, meaning at least<lb/>
50 to 75 incoming patients, but<lb/>
went to level two by 2 a.m.<lb/>
Twenty-three people were treated<lb/>
and released.<lb/>
There was no way to determine<lb/>
if any ECU students were injured.<lb/>
the spokeswoman said.<lb/>
Taylor's trailor park on<lb/>
Highway 43 outside Greenville<lb/>
was one of hardest hit areas, with<lb/>
several houses and mobile homes<lb/>
completely destroyed. "They've<lb/>
got one hellacious mess out<lb/>
there said Greenville Fire-<lb/>
Rescue Chief Tony Brannon.<lb/>
"There's nothing left" of several<lb/>
houses and trailers, he said.<lb/>
An evacuation center was set up<lb/>
at D. H. Conley High School out-<lb/>
side Greenville for those left<lb/>
homeless or released from the<lb/>
hospital.<lb/>
The National Guard was called<lb/>
out to help local authorities cope<lb/>
with blocked roads, power<lb/>
outages and general confusion in<lb/>
the aftermath of the storms.<lb/>
In Porterstown near Greenville,<lb/>
one person was reported dead.<lb/>
Cars were thrown several hundred<lb/>
See RESIDENT, page 3<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Staff Hrllcr<lb/>
"The East Carolina School of<lb/>
Medicine is a vital part of rural<lb/>
medical care in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina said Republican can-<lb/>
didate for governor Jim Martin.<lb/>
Martin visited Greenville Mon-<lb/>
day and spoke at a fund raising<lb/>
dinner at Greenleaf Hall that<lb/>
night. There were 416 in atten-<lb/>
dance, including Democrats as<lb/>
well as Republicans.<lb/>
Martin said ECU and Pitt<lb/>
County's ability to achieve their<lb/>
goals inspired him to believe he<lb/>
could become the next governor.<lb/>
"I remember when they told you<lb/>
there could be no med school at<lb/>
ECU said Martin, "but vou did<lb/>
it<lb/>
The Republican candidate went<lb/>
on to discuss his goals for North<lb/>
Carolina if elected governor. Mar-<lb/>
tin cited his top priority as being<lb/>
teacher salaries. At a reception<lb/>
before the dinner Martin said<lb/>
many students no longer want to<lb/>
enter the field of education<lb/>
because they can't make a living<lb/>
from it. "Paying the sarre thin<lb/>
whether a teacher is good, bad, or<lb/>
brillant is not enough said Mar<lb/>
tin.<lb/>
Martin pointed out when<lb/>
Governor Holdshouser held office<lb/>
North Carolina teacher pay rose<lb/>
from 2th in the nation to 20th<lb/>
Currently, however. North<lb/>
Carolina has dropped to -Uth in<lb/>
teacher pay in the U.S.<lb/>
Martin also cited his wish u<lb/>
eliminate the North Carolina in-<lb/>
tangible and inventory taxes, sav<lb/>
ing these taxes drived industry<lb/>
away from the state thus causing<lb/>
unnecessary unemployment,<lb/>
"these taxes are self-imposed han-<lb/>
dicaps on those who don t have<lb/>
jobs because the taxes drive<lb/>
business out of our state said<lb/>
Martin.<lb/>
At the end of the dinner Mar<lb/>
tin, a member of the ECU Pirate<lb/>
Club, was presented with an ECl<lb/>
football jersey by Sandy Hardy,<lb/>
chairman of the "Martin for<lb/>
Governor" campaign on campus<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Z?m College Financial Aid Offices 'Bothered'<lb/>
' �� j ��'��������������������Mi<lb/>
Qunpuses May Lower Requirements<lb/>
CPS and Staff Reports<lb/>
Despite howls of controversy<lb/>
during debates over new rules re-<lb/>
quiring students to make<lb/>
"satisfactory academic progress"<lb/>
in order to get financial aid, cam-<lb/>
pus aid offices have been bothered<lb/>
by it more than students so far,<lb/>
reports from around the country<lb/>
suggest.<lb/>
Some observers, moreover, say<lb/>
mission on Student Financial<lb/>
Assistance reported that, while all<lb/>
schools require students to main-<lb/>
tain satisfactory academic pro-<lb/>
gress in order to get aid, few col-<lb/>
leges actually monitored their aid<lb/>
recipients' porgress very closely.<lb/>
The commission, created in<lb/>
1980 to draw up student aid bills<lb/>
for Congress, could find few ex-<lb/>
the new rules - aimed at forcing amples of colleges taking away aid<lb/>
students who don't keep their<lb/>
grades up off the federal aid roles<lb/>
- may actually convince some<lb/>
campuses to lower their minimum<lb/>
grade requirements to qualify for<lb/>
federal aid.<lb/>
The new federal rule, which<lb/>
went into effect on January 1st<lb/>
and which aid offices around the<lb/>
from students with bad grades or<lb/>
who took too long to get through<lb/>
college.<lb/>
Colleges individually must now<lb/>
publish guidelines for just how<lb/>
Martin says the rule, however,<lb/>
could convince some schools to<lb/>
lower their academic standards<lb/>
for making satisfactory progress<lb/>
in order to make the new federal<lb/>
paperwork easier to do.<lb/>
Indeed, the major impact of the<lb/>
new rule will be on campus aid ad-<lb/>
ministrators, not students,<lb/>
sources suggest.<lb/>
"I'm sure intentions were<lb/>
good says Clint Cooper, district<lb/>
dean of students for Miami-Dade<lb/>
Community College. But he adds<lb/>
that keeping track of the academic<lb/>
records of the thousands of<lb/>
fast a student must progress over students who drop in and out of<lb/>
The typical early-morning mass of students wending their ways down<lb/>
College Hill. No matter where you go on campus, there are lines.<lb/>
six years toward 120 hours, and<lb/>
submit reports on each aid reci-<lb/>
pient's compliance with those<lb/>
country are now trying to imple- guidelines.<lb/>
mem for the first time, stiffens Financial aid offices must also<lb/>
old academic progress" re- identify recipients as part- or full-<lb/>
quirements time, account for dropped courses<lb/>
the U.S. Department of in computing students' aid<lb/>
Education now requires colleges eligibility, and be ready to bar aid<lb/>
to make students maintain to students who don't keep pro-<lb/>
satisfactory academic progress" gressing toward their degrees at<lb/>
toward completing 120 credit the pace prescribed by the<lb/>
hours within six years. school's guidelines<lb/>
That means students must keep "I don't know that there's go-<lb/>
making the progress during terms ing to be any measurable impact<lb/>
in which they don't receive any on students says Dennis Martin<lb/>
.�Z' � of the National Association of<lb/>
Sohie institutions are just to Student Financial Aid Ad-<lb/>
darn lenient' in letting students ministrators<lb/>
with bad grades or without a clear The major chance is that, when qucu�c t siet<lb/>
dqgmprosram keep getting aid, being checked for eligibility for undergraduate aid director<lb/>
rv rtf,nCHclmn?'a US" ,fedcral �� a studcnts entirc 'ol- The new regulation has not had<lb/>
Dept. of Education spokesman. lege academic record - not just a a great effectlt ECU mJtotat<lb/>
Last April, the National Com- part of it - will be examined. Boudreaux ���' 7�<lb/>
urban commuter schools, ever<lb/>
when they're not receiving any<lb/>
aid, puts a big new burden on the<lb/>
aid office.<lb/>
Cooper questions "the real<lb/>
need for such a regulation"<lb/>
because Miami-Dade, for one,<lb/>
already enforces its satisfactory<lb/>
progress guidelines.<lb/>
"We've been doing it for<lb/>
years adds Marcia Sexton, aid<lb/>
director at the University of Col-<lb/>
orado, although "we were not<lb/>
previously monitoring those<lb/>
students who have not been on<lb/>
aid<lb/>
At Yale, the regulation "is not<lb/>
going to require any change in<lb/>
academic policy reports Jac-<lb/>
queline Foster, Yale's<lb/>
<lb/>
financial aid. "When a s:udent<lb/>
applies for financial aid, until<lb/>
Jan. 1, we did only a qualitative<lb/>
evaluation, not a quantitive<lb/>
evaluation Boudreaux said.<lb/>
He added that, with the reten-<lb/>
tion period being used, while they<lb/>
were technically using only a<lb/>
qualitative evaluation, the reten-<lb/>
tion period added a quantitative<lb/>
aspect.<lb/>
"Now we're using the<lb/>
qualitative, which is the same as<lb/>
we've always used, but in addition<lb/>
we've added a quantitatie re-<lb/>
quirement that is a minimum of<lb/>
12 hours per semester passed, not<lb/>
just attempted anymore<lb/>
Boudreaux said.<lb/>
Students must pass twelve<lb/>
hours per semester with a<lb/>
specified grade point average and<lb/>
must also be making "satisfactory<lb/>
progress" which indicates degree<lb/>
completion within 11 semesters.<lb/>
"The government says you<lb/>
can't use 'satisfactory progress'<lb/>
only for those terms for which the<lb/>
student wants to get financial aid.<lb/>
You have to look at his overall<lb/>
record Boudreaux said.<lb/>
"It's going to effect those who<lb/>
attempt hours but do not pass<lb/>
he said. If a student does not pass<lb/>
the required number of hours dur-<lb/>
ing a semester in which he has<lb/>
received aid, he is put on<lb/>
automatic probation, and re-<lb/>
quired to pass the number of<lb/>
hours necessary by the end of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
N<lb/>
-  �- � ��� � -<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
'n<lb/>
m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MARCH 27<lb/>
1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
?<lb/>
TV East Carolinian<lb/>
PwMiaitad awry TucMay and<lb/>
Thursday dwrlng m acadamic<lb/>
V- arw avary Wednesday dwr<lb/>
��� ���� wnmr.<lb/>
The Cast Carolinian it fha of<lb/>
?Iclal newspaper of Eaaf Carolina<lb/>
University, owned operated and<lb/>
published for and by ma thxtentt<lb/>
of Cast Carolina University<lb/>
Uniaaa otharwtaa notad. unslgn<lb/>
ad editoriait on tna opinion page<lb/>
���� ma newspapers opinion,<lb/>
oonarally wrlftan by tna mmn<lb/>
Ing editor<lb/>
Subscription Rate uo yaarly.<lb/>
The Kaat Carolinian offices art<lb/>
located In the Publications<lb/>
building on tna campus of ECU.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Sand addreaa<lb/>
chenga to The Eaaf Carolinian,<lb/>
md Floor. Publication building.<lb/>
ECU. Greenville, N.C TTtU.<lb/>
Telephone: 7S7-4M. M7, too<lb/>
SPRING FLING �4<lb/>
Spring Fling 14 It coming.<lb/>
Everyone It Invited to com to tna<lb/>
PHI TAU nous April em to party.<lb/>
There la alto a raffle for a Beach<lb/>
Weekend for two at Ramada Inn at<lb/>
Atlantic Beach. The trip include a<lb/>
tank of gat and ISO tpending money.<lb/>
Gat tickets from any phi TAU<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLUB<lb/>
We'd Ilka to invite you to tna Silent<lb/>
Dinner at fc 00 on Thurs. night at the<lb/>
Blue Moor, cat. Com on out and<lb/>
tign with usi Also w will be having<lb/>
Fantasy Rehearsal at 7:30 after the<lb/>
Silent Dinner in the Library Lab. See<lb/>
va'll there!<lb/>
NAACP ELECTIONS<lb/>
Th ECU Chapter NAACP NM t5<lb/>
�lection will b held April 3. tu at<lb/>
 00 p.m. room to be announced. Ap-<lb/>
plication may be picked up March<lb/>
M April S. l4 at Mendenhall's Infer<lb/>
matlon desk. ISO Jervls Oorm or 50!<lb/>
Greene Dorm Return application to<lb/>
.10 Jervli Oorm by April 5. IffM, 5 00<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
BIG BROTHER RUSH<lb/>
For Alpha Phi Sorority will be held<lb/>
today at the Tree House from 4.00 to<lb/>
7 oo Come out and party with m Big<lb/>
Brothers end Sisters of Alpha Phi.<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
The Society for Advancement of<lb/>
Menagement will be meeting Thurs<lb/>
dey. March 79 at 3 00 In Rawl 104<lb/>
Discussed In the meeting will be an<lb/>
overview of the activities for the rest<lb/>
of the semester Guest speaker will<lb/>
be William C. Bowen owner of the<lb/>
wash Houses In this area. All<lb/>
members r asked to please attend.<lb/>
NAACP WORKSHOP<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of NAACP will<lb/>
sponsor a workshop this Saturday.<lb/>
March 31. at l30 p.m in<lb/>
Mendenhall The guest speaker will<lb/>
be Mist Rosa Shearion White, a<lb/>
Iwayer The topic will be "Blacks on<lb/>
Black and White Campuses "<lb/>
Everyone Is cordially Invited!<lb/>
AUCTION<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsllon and Alpha<lb/>
Omlcron Pi will sponsor th First An<lb/>
nual PRE GREEK WEEK � KICK<lb/>
OFF AUCTION. Sunday. April 1st, at<lb/>
7 p m Pr-jrfc waak cup will be<lb/>
on tl Com start off Greek Week<lb/>
th right way, party with th REAL<lb/>
DONKEYS!<lb/>
AMBASSADOR<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Th Past Pr�idnrt club of th<lb/>
ECU alumni Association Is offering a<lb/>
scholarship to an Ambassador in<lb/>
order to express their deep apprecia<lb/>
tlon for the vast amount of volunteer<lb/>
service that the ECU Ambassadors<lb/>
contribute to the progress end<lb/>
waHare of ECU The recipient must<lb/>
be an ECU student who it a member<lb/>
m good standing of the ECU Am<lb/>
bassadors and must be of such<lb/>
classification as to be a senior in the<lb/>
fall semester of 1W4. Any Am<lb/>
bassedor who is Interested should<lb/>
pick up an application after March ji<lb/>
in the TaylorSlaughter Alumni<lb/>
Center Applications should be com<lb/>
pieted end turned in by April 4.<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
will meet Monday, April 1 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m Th meeting will be held at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center, fS3 E. 10th<lb/>
St (at the bottom of College Hill). All<lb/>
interested persons rt cordially In-<lb/>
vited to attend<lb/>
NUTRITION T-SHIRTS<lb/>
The Student Dietetic Association<lb/>
will be selling T-shirts and sweat<lb/>
shirts on the first floor of the Home<lb/>
Economic Building. If no 009 is pre-<lb/>
sent contact Eliene OKIeff or another<lb/>
SDA member The theme of the shirt<lb/>
is "Nurtriflon is the Cove There ere<lb/>
many siies and colors available to<lb/>
select from so come by and BUY a<lb/>
T-shirt before the Deadline. Wednes<lb/>
day April 4. 14.<lb/>
TRACK<lb/>
Registration begins Monday, April<lb/>
2 for the annual Track Meet This<lb/>
event will offer both field and running<lb/>
events, and will be held at Bunting<lb/>
Track Registration will end Thurs<lb/>
day, April 5.<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be an important meeting<lb/>
on Tues April 3 at 5:30 In room 247<lb/>
Mendenhall We will be electing new<lb/>
officers for next year. We will also be<lb/>
discussing the upcoming initiations<lb/>
and bake sale All members should<lb/>
attend<lb/>
THE HOLOCAUST<lb/>
A Symposium on the Holocaust is<lb/>
being conducted on ECU campus, it<lb/>
will take place i Saturday, March<lb/>
31. starting at 1000 am Many<lb/>
speakers will be available to inform<lb/>
and share with you the events and<lb/>
rememberances of the event<lb/>
10:00-11:30 session will be at Room<lb/>
102 In Brewster-B. 2:00-3:00 session<lb/>
will be In Mendenhall Student Canter,<lb/>
Room 244 Everyone Is welcome and<lb/>
there is no admission charge The<lb/>
event Is being sponsored by ECU<lb/>
Hillel.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS<lb/>
Th English Department Invite<lb/>
applications for th Ruti M<lb/>
Chrlstm�n Memorial Scholarship,<lb/>
�warded annually to a lunior English<lb/>
mior for exceptional academic<lb/>
achievement, outstanding potential<lb/>
In the field of English, and significant<lb/>
Involvement In extracurricular ac-<lb/>
tivities The amount of the award Is<lb/>
tSOO 00 Applicants should complete<lb/>
the Student Scholarship Form<lb/>
(available from th Student Flnan<lb/>
clal Aid Office) and sand It. together<lb/>
with a brief letter describing their<lb/>
academic achievements, extrecur<lb/>
ricuiar activities, and plans for fur-<lb/>
ther study or career goals to Russell<lb/>
M Chrlstman Memorial Scholarship<lb/>
Committee, co The Department of<lb/>
English. The deadline for appllce<lb/>
tlons Is April 13, 134. For further In-<lb/>
formation contact Erwln Hester, 101<lb/>
English Department Annex.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Cooperative Education is e pro-<lb/>
gram which helps students gain<lb/>
valuable experience related to their<lb/>
career goals through alternating<lb/>
periods of academic study with<lb/>
periods of off-campus employment.<lb/>
The Co-op Office, located in 313 Rawl,<lb/>
currently has ob openings for sum-<lb/>
mer and fall '04. interested students<lb/>
should stop by today to get more In-<lb/>
formation, to complete the necessary<lb/>
forms, and to sign up for Interviews.<lb/>
GOLF<lb/>
Registration begins Monday, April<lb/>
2 for the Intramural Golf Classic.<lb/>
This event will be held at the Ayden<lb/>
Country Club. Registration ends<lb/>
Wednesday, April 4. Teams and par<lb/>
ticipants will play 11 hot of Golf<lb/>
ALPHASIG BROTHERS<lb/>
The Alpha Slg Brothers, along with<lb/>
Crystal Coast Charter Service, will be<lb/>
selling raffle tickets this Friday and<lb/>
next weak. Tickets will cost one<lb/>
dollar. The winner of the drawing, on<lb/>
April 12, will be entitled to a full day<lb/>
crusie on a 30 foot sail boat with five<lb/>
friends. You may claim the cruise on<lb/>
any weekend in April or May. For<lb/>
more info, call 757 351. PS. We hop<lb/>
all of the Tri Slgs are ready to<lb/>
partylll<lb/>
EDUCATION STUDENTS<lb/>
The Department of Speech<lb/>
Language �, Auditory Pathology will<lb/>
b providing make-up of speech and<lb/>
"��ring screening for the studr�tt<lb/>
who missed It In January.<lb/>
The screening will be held on Tue<lb/>
day, March 37 and Wednesday,<lb/>
March 20 from 5:00-7:00 p.m. In the<lb/>
SLAP Department which Is located In<lb/>
a trailer edlecent to Balk Building on<lb/>
Charles Street<lb/>
No appointment Is needed<lb/>
IRATES<lb/>
Congredutatlons Irate for hosting<lb/>
another successful end fun filled<lb/>
Ultimate Tournament, 3rd Place �<lb/>
not bad I Thank you I All Plastic Flat<lb/>
ball Pheneflcks re expected to play<lb/>
every Tues Thurs. and Sun. at bot<lb/>
torn of Hill t 3:30 p.m. We are going<lb/>
to Raleigh April 14 l 15 to play In an<lb/>
A.C.C. Ultimata Tournay for place<lb/>
ment In our conference Be there, or<lb/>
be oblong.<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
Attention members � We will be<lb/>
mtlng Thursday, March 2th. at<lb/>
5 30 In Mendenhall room 230 Please<lb/>
b on time for this vry Important<lb/>
meeting, if y0u have not paid your<lb/>
���. you will be expected to do so<lb/>
�nd you are to turn In your money for<lb/>
the fund raiser. Reports will also be<lb/>
made regarding the special prolects<lb/>
mat have been completed. So don't<lb/>
forget end be on timed I<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA<lb/>
Alpha XI Delta and IFC happy<lb/>
hour, this Friday at the Attic with<lb/>
Mexx Warrior, 4 00<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA<lb/>
The brothers of Phi Beta Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity inc. wilt be sponsoring a<lb/>
Jr. Miss Phi-Beta Sigma Pageant on<lb/>
April 27, 1904 at the Ramada inn<lb/>
Anyone who would like to share in<lb/>
this event with a talent that you would<lb/>
like to perform on this date are asked<lb/>
to contact Richard Dawklns at<lb/>
7SI 9405 or any brother of the fraterni<lb/>
ty at soon as possible<lb/>
CLA88IF1ED ADS<lb/>
1 - o nay us m form t right<lb/>
ot use a separate sh�t of<lb/>
paper if you need mor linos<lb/>
Thoco art 33 units per line<lb/>
Each itHor. punctuation mark<lb/>
and work space counts as ana<lb/>
unit Capitalize and hyphenate<lb/>
wor� properly. Leave space<lb/>
at end of line If word doesn't fit.<lb/>
No ads will be accepted over<lb/>
the phone We reserve the right<lb/>
to reieo any ad. All ads must<lb/>
be prepaid Enclose 75 cent<lb/>
or ne or fraction of a line.<lb/>
p"�� print legibly) Use<lb/>
capital and tower case tetters.<lb/>
Return to the Media Board<lb/>
secretary by 3 p.m. the day<lb/>
Before publication<lb/>
 j  1�lliiMIIMIM<lb/>
DIETETIC ASSOC<lb/>
The Student Dietetic Association<lb/>
will have their last meeting of this<lb/>
semester on April 3, 1914. The<lb/>
meeting will be held in the Dining<lb/>
Hall In th Horn Economics Building<lb/>
at 5:30. Everyone I Invited to attend<lb/>
and get Involved with the Student<lb/>
Dietetic Association.<lb/>
JUNIORS<lb/>
Starting a resume now mmy be a big<lb/>
help when you look for a summer fob<lb/>
or as you take stock of your education<lb/>
or past work experience If you have<lb/>
worked on a farm or had a paper<lb/>
route, then you have had some ex-<lb/>
perience Your part time work can<lb/>
have a lot to do with the 100 or career<lb/>
In which you begin after graduation<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
The next general meeting of Gam<lb/>
ma Beta Phi will be held on Thurs<lb/>
day, March 29, 194 at 7:00 p.m. In<lb/>
Speight Room 139. Please attend and<lb/>
don't forget to bring tickets and ticket<lb/>
money Also, final plans for going to<lb/>
National Convention will be announc<lb/>
ed<lb/>
YARD SALE<lb/>
Alpha XI Delta house. 501 East<lb/>
Eleventh St 9:00 em. 3-31-14.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
Summer Cimp work in the<lb/>
Poconos A representative from<lb/>
Camp Starlight located In the Nor<lb/>
them Poconos, approximately 150<lb/>
miles north west of New York, will be<lb/>
on Campus, April 4 to conduct inter<lb/>
views. Sign up now for an interview<lb/>
time at the COOP office in Rawl 313<lb/>
interviews will be held at the Career<lb/>
Pfenning and Placement Center in<lb/>
the B1 ox ton House<lb/>
PLANNING<lb/>
AND ZONING<lb/>
The Greenville Planning and Zon<lb/>
Ing Commission will hold a workshop<lb/>
session on Tuesday, April 3, 1914 at<lb/>
7:30 p.m. in the Council Chambers of<lb/>
the Municipal Building located at the<lb/>
corner of Fifth and Washington<lb/>
Streets to discuss the land use Intensi<lb/>
ty rating system.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
The PHI TAUS are having a happy<lb/>
hour this Thurs March 29 from 9 12<lb/>
at th Tree House. Si admission �<lb/>
discount pitchers Come out and Par<lb/>
tyll<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
Brothers, Pledges, and Little<lb/>
Sisters, the annual Champagne<lb/>
Breakfast will be held Saturday.<lb/>
April 7 at 8 30 am at the Ramada<lb/>
Inn. Come by the house and sign the<lb/>
list. Parent's Weekend Is April 14 and<lb/>
the Bahama Mama Beach Party will<lb/>
be April 19 Be ready to party next<lb/>
II<lb/>
TRIBESON<lb/>
THE HILL<lb/>
No, not college hill, however it's<lb/>
the title of a best selling book by Dr<lb/>
J Mclver Weatherford. Dr Weather<lb/>
ford will make two presentations on<lb/>
Friday, March 30th The first presen<lb/>
tatlon, TRIBES ON THE HILL: The<lb/>
Rituals and Realities of the US Con<lb/>
gross, will begin at 12:00 noon in<lb/>
Brewster D 112 The second presenta<lb/>
tlon, METHOD AND MADNESS IN<lb/>
SOCIAL SCIENCE RESEARCH<lb/>
How do we KNOW what we think we<lb/>
KNOW?, begins at 2:30 p.m in<lb/>
Brewster D 303. For more informa<lb/>
tlon, please contact the department of<lb/>
Sociology, Anthropology and<lb/>
Economics at 757 443 Don't miss<lb/>
these stimulating presentations!<lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
k rnc k mcai <lb/>
AvAiAiJOr'AMtAL<lb/>
105 AlRPOPT Ro<lb/>
GHECNVILLI. NC 27834<lb/>
IS 1 S) 75B-0327<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
Trout, Shrimp<lb/>
and Devited Crab<lb/>
BLUE MOON<lb/>
CAFE<lb/>
Happy 1st Birthday<lb/>
Register (with each purchase to WIN.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
SUBS<lb/>
(Drawing 428)<lb/>
 BONUS PRIZE<lb/>
I cup of Tea<lb/>
Everyday ALL YEAR Long! i i<lb/>
???������u<lb/>
1 st price 50 Subs<lb/>
2nd price 30 Subs<lb/>
3rd price 20 Subs<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
Needs Chairpersons For The<lb/>
Following Committees<lb/>
� Forum Committee - Selects and promotes lectures, symposiums, or other related pro-<lb/>
grams that will interest the student body and University community.<lb/>
 Public Relations &amp; Publicity Committee - Will package publicity and coordinate total<lb/>
promotion of the Union.<lb/>
� Recreation Committee - Plans and promotes the following activities:<lb/>
� ACU-I Tournaments (i.e. bowling, billiards)<lb/>
� Qubs (Table Tennis, Chess, Backgammon)<lb/>
� Special Recreation Activities (Ice GeamBingo, Watermelons, etc.)<lb/>
� College Bowl<lb/>
Production Committee - Responsible for programs -Dinner Theatre, Madrigal Dinner,<lb/>
Student Center decorations, receptions, and other programs - not contracted out.<lb/>
Travel Committee - Plans and promotes.the following types of trips: weekend excur-<lb/>
sions, trips scheduled during the holidays and during the breaks, and also sponsors the<lb/>
Travel Adventure Film Series.<lb/>
Applications for committee chairpersons are available at Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Information Desk, or the Student Union Office (Room 234 -Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center). For more irrfonriation contact the Student Union Office at 757-6611 ext.<lb/>
4b I Jm<lb/>
MOOOOOOOOOOOOOQ,<lb/>
REP WANTED<lb/>
The department of Intramural Rec<lb/>
Services is looking for interested<lb/>
students to assume the role of Ad-<lb/>
visory Council Representatives A<lb/>
representative from each partlclpa<lb/>
tlon division is needed (President,<lb/>
Fraternity, Sorority, Residence,<lb/>
men. women, caed independents<lb/>
and Clubs) Applications deadline is<lb/>
April 2, and they may be picked up in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 204<lb/>
"WHAT'S NEW"<lb/>
The ACM is sponsoring a lecture<lb/>
series, "What's New one of which<lb/>
will be held Thursday, March 29, at<lb/>
7:00 P M. In BC 103. The lecture will<lb/>
feature a representative from IBM to<lb/>
discuss mainframe computing All in<lb/>
terested students are welcome to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
The Pi Kapps are collecting for<lb/>
PUSH (Play Units for the Severly<lb/>
Handicapped) this week in front of<lb/>
ttie Student Store There is also a<lb/>
Push a thon in Greenville this Satur<lb/>
day Everyone help support this wor<lb/>
thy cause The newly elected ex<lb/>
ecutive Archon � Steve Hall, Vice<lb/>
Archon Executive � Jeff Luedeke.<lb/>
Vice Archon Revenue � Jimmy<lb/>
Hardee, Treasure � Steve LaRoque.<lb/>
Secretary � Bob Canupe, Warden �<lb/>
Kevin Manning, Historian � Jerry<lb/>
Smith, and Chaplain � Scott Smith<lb/>
will meet at Mendenhall Thurs at<lb/>
4 00 p.m.<lb/>
PIRATE WALK<lb/>
Closing date is April 15th � There<lb/>
will be a mandatory meeting for all<lb/>
persons associated with Pirate Walk<lb/>
and those interested on April nth All<lb/>
escorts please return their jackets at<lb/>
this time Ron Langley and the Stu<lb/>
dent Government appreciate<lb/>
everyone cooperation throughout<lb/>
the year Thank you<lb/>
ANTIQUE AUCTION<lb/>
An antique auction to be held in<lb/>
Tarboro's National Guard Armory on<lb/>
March 31 will feature hundreds of<lb/>
items from all over Edgecombe<lb/>
County Some of the proceeds of the<lb/>
auctions will go to benefit historic<lb/>
preservation projects throughout<lb/>
Edgecombe County Of the items sold<lb/>
at the auction, there will be an early<lb/>
Victorian walnut bed, a mid l?th cen<lb/>
tury oak wardrobe, several dining<lb/>
room sideboards, a workable oak<lb/>
pump organ, a pair of early 19th cen<lb/>
tury brass andirons, a large two-tier<lb/>
mantel, lots of antique furniture,<lb/>
glassware, china collectibles, and<lb/>
much more<lb/>
BEACH WEEKEND<lb/>
The Catholic Newman Center is go<lb/>
ing to the beach for a retreat, Aprn<lb/>
A The theme of the weekend is<lb/>
"Newman � Coming Together " it<lb/>
will be a time for reflection and fun on<lb/>
the beach! The cost is 115 and a 3<lb/>
deposit is required Sunday, April 1st<lb/>
after Mass Come to the beach with us<lb/>
and help make Newman a better<lb/>
placeI<lb/>
CHI OMEGA<lb/>
The Chi Omega Sorority will be try<lb/>
ing to party with the Pi Kapps tonight<lb/>
(March 29) at the Pi Kapp House The<lb/>
party starts around 9 00 pm You<lb/>
girls go ahead and get your som<lb/>
breros out and get ready to party<lb/>
Western Mexican style<lb/>
JOSH FILM SERIES<lb/>
Josh McDowell is one of the most<lb/>
popular speakers on university cam<lb/>
puses today In the last 15 yrs , he has<lb/>
spoken to more than seven million<lb/>
students and faculty at 400 univer<lb/>
sities in 62 countries Josh is the<lb/>
author of 21 best selling books ana<lb/>
has been featured in 19 films and 2 TV<lb/>
specials. Come and hear Josh at Hen<lb/>
drix Theatre April 1'2, 8 X p.m This<lb/>
Sun and Mon<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA PSI<lb/>
The Brothers of the Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Psi Fraternity inc would like to ex<lb/>
tend to everyone a cordial invitation<lb/>
to attend their Semi Formal Kappa<lb/>
Koronation Ball to be held Sat , April<lb/>
7, at the Ramada Inn from 9pm to 2<lb/>
a.m Admission will be tS 00 smgie<lb/>
and MOO couple Tickets may be pur<lb/>
chased from any brother of Kappa<lb/>
Alpha Psi or any Kappa Sweetheart<lb/>
We look forward to seeing you there'<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board will<lb/>
sponser a car wash March 31, at<lb/>
Hardees located on Greenville Blvd<lb/>
10 am 4pm Cost $2<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a video games<lb/>
contest in the Amusement Games<lb/>
area of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
The contest will run from Monday<lb/>
April 2. 1984 at 8 30 A.M. until Mon<lb/>
day. April l6. 194 at 5 00 P M Each<lb/>
score must be verified with the<lb/>
Billiards Center Supervisor Highest<lb/>
scorers on each video game will<lb/>
receive a prize For further details<lb/>
P'Ck up the rules at the Billiards<lb/>
Center on the bottom floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
UGLY MAN<lb/>
ON CAMPUS<lb/>
Attention come vote lor the ugliest<lb/>
man on campus Campus organua<lb/>
tions wii' oe sending their represen<lb/>
tatives to the Student Supply Store O"<lb/>
April 2 April 6 Proceeds from the<lb/>
contest will be going to the new<lb/>
Ronald MacDonaia house to be built<lb/>
here in Greenville Come out ana sup<lb/>
port your favorite organ.zation vote<lb/>
tor a good cause<lb/>
PLANT SALE<lb/>
Hey It that time of year once<lb/>
more when you ran find some<lb/>
fabulous buys on plants Once agam<lb/>
the B'Oiogy Club along with the<lb/>
Biology department ,s sponsoring the<lb/>
plant sale it will oe Thurs Apr.I 5<lb/>
and Fri . April a from 7 30 a m 1 00<lb/>
P m So. don't forget and come early<lb/>
for the Dest selection<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
There wil: be a speoai meeting of<lb/>
the College Republicans ton,grt A iti<lb/>
Wimtlspeaker Sylvan aVS ��ersor<lb/>
Sr Mr Wilkerson will he speaking on<lb/>
Minority Affiars ana how the govern<lb/>
ment works for mmorit.es Anyone<lb/>
interested is welcome to attend The<lb/>
meeting will begin at 5 30 m room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall See you there'<lb/>
ZBT LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
This weeks htt'e s.sters meeting<lb/>
will be held n the basen-ent gj<lb/>
Umstead Dorm at 5 p m Thursday<lb/>
March 29 1984<lb/>
FELLOWSHIP<lb/>
inter vars't, Chr.5t.an Fellowship<lb/>
meets every Wednescay n.gh? at t 30<lb/>
in Jenkins Auditorium We sng<lb/>
fellowship, ana praise the iora Don't<lb/>
you want to oe a part of us7 You<lb/>
meet some great people '<lb/>
COOP<lb/>
Stuaent wantea to orx a' a o&amp;.<lb/>
care center with ranaca.seo<lb/>
children tor the summer One pos<lb/>
tion in Rocky Mount ana one posit.or<lb/>
in Tarboro Minimum wage Student<lb/>
must quality tor financ al aid Dy com<lb/>
pleting confidential statement m the<lb/>
financial a'O office See Co OP Ra<lb/>
310 for additional information<lb/>
INSANITY<lb/>
Dr Seiwyn Rose Forensic<lb/>
Psychiatrist, Attorney wm speak at<lb/>
Jenkins Aud on April 6 at 10 00 a m<lb/>
"Are Killers insane In North<lb/>
Carolina is the fascinating topic<lb/>
Oon't mi� this exciting lecture'1'<lb/>
Also Psi Chi scholarships are still<lb/>
available Deadline is April 2<lb/>
STUDENTS WITH HART<lb/>
Now is the time for a new genera<lb/>
tion of leadership if you are feo up<lb/>
with the politics of nostalgia ano look<lb/>
mg for new solutions to the nat.on s<lb/>
problems ioin students with Hart we<lb/>
are the vanguard of a new<lb/>
democracy We will be meeting at<lb/>
Menoenhall. every Thursaay at 8 pm<lb/>
1 ask receptiontst for room number<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA PSI<lb/>
it you lixe to party, e sure to come<lb/>
party with the KAPPA ALPHA PSi<lb/>
Fraternity mc at the Cultural<lb/>
Center Friday night. March X from<lb/>
ICOOpm 200am Refreshments<lb/>
may be purchased Admission is 7J<lb/>
��. See you there'<lb/>
FILM SERIES<lb/>
campus Crusade tor Christ .s soon<lb/>
sor ng the Josh Film Ser.es I 5<lb/>
Sun and Mon n.ghts at 8 30 p m ,c<lb/>
Mencirix Theatre The topics wilt te<lb/>
Sun - Skeptics Quest ana Mon �<lb/>
How to be a Good Lover" These<lb/>
Him will be entertaining, open a- j<lb/>
r-onest Aamission is tree tor a<lb/>
students and facui'v<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Applications are now being a;<lb/>
cepted for the 1984 Student<lb/>
Homecoming Committee ChaIrpsr<lb/>
son Apphcations can be p.ckeo up a'<lb/>
e-fher the Mendenhall intormat.on<lb/>
Desx or the Alumn, Center The<lb/>
deadline for appylmg for this posif.or<lb/>
s r.oar April 13<lb/>
SPRING FASHIONS.<lb/>
- Aes' Aa Residence Counc<lb/>
s presenting a Spr og Fashion ex<lb/>
travagania on Apr.i 5th at 7 p m in<lb/>
Garrett Dorm Fashions will be pro<lb/>
� �ded 0, area stores So lump into<lb/>
Spring w,th wne. Roses. 8, Dreams<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA PARTY<lb/>
Banama Mama Party comma<lb/>
soon April ,9tn ar Kapca<lb/>
Sigma House The party starts at 4 x<lb/>
so get your t.ckets erly See a<lb/>
brother or little s.ster tor tickets<lb/>
BLOOD DRIVE<lb/>
Army ROTC w.il be sponsoring 8<lb/>
ciooo ar.ve Apni no 11 Any campus<lb/>
organization with 20 or member, can<lb/>
compete for tooc ana other pr,2es<lb/>
oonatec oy local merchant by hv.<lb/>
n 'he best turnout ip�rcen,w,<lb/>
P-ecare to party when your group<lb/>
wms For further information can<lb/>
757 6967<lb/>
SPRING TUNIE-UI<lb/>
THE SAVINGS ARE IN HIGH GEAR!<lb/>
DAN FOGELBERG<lb/>
WINDOWS AND WALLS<lb/>
including<lb/>
The Language Of LoveBelieve In Me<lb/>
Let Her GoGone loo Far<lb/>
Sweet Magnolia (And The<lb/>
Travelling Salesman)<lb/>
"I<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
NO PARLEZ<lb/>
including<lb/>
ever I Lay My Hal (Thais My Momei<lb/>
Come Back And Stay<lb/>
Iron Out The Rough Spots Sen<lb/>
Love Will Tear Us Apart<lb/>
6.919<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TARE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
FOOTLOOSE<lb/>
ORIGINAL MOTION Pl( Tl KK<lb/>
SWMVTR.M k<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
BONNIE TYLER�Holding Out For A Hero<lb/>
KENNY LOGGINS- I m Free<lb/>
(Heaven Helps The Mam<lb/>
MIKE RENO (of Loverboy 1 and<lb/>
ANN WILSON (of Heart (-Almost<lb/>
Paradise Love Theme From Footloose<lb/>
SHALAMAR�Dancing InjC<lb/>
CYNDI<lb/>
LAUPER<lb/>
SHE'S SO<lb/>
UNUSUAL<lb/>
including:<lb/>
Money Changes<lb/>
Everything<lb/>
Girls Just Want<lb/>
lb Have Fun<lb/>
When You Were Mine<lb/>
Time After Time<lb/>
All Through The Night<lb/>
7.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
NENA<lb/>
99 LUFTBALLONS<lb/>
including<lb/>
99 Red Balloons�'Just A Dream<lb/>
99 LuttballonsRette Mich<lb/>
0<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
CBS RECORDS AND TAPES SPECIALLY PRICED THROUGH APRIL 4TH<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
RECORDS, TAPES &amp; A LITTLE BIT MORE.<lb/>
PITT PLAZA CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
Rescue worktrs �earch t<lb/>
outside Greenvilii<lb/>
"there's nothing left i,f several<lb/>
from tank. hut no fire u<lb/>
le High School near <lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
Lectures<lb/>
B SI hPHr <lb/>
HARDIM,<lb/>
 tt<lb/>
1<lb/>
"fgM<lb/>
� iw i� laiffsjff)! n, ���� ��<lb/>
- � - � -<lb/>
� �"� � � �ia�a�nm��i e. m<lb/>
r�. v<lb/>
Dr J.<lb/>
Weathe<lb/>
anthropoid g<lb/>
two ta <lb/>
Ma :<lb/>
ment of Soc<lb/>
thropc<lb/>
Econoni<lb/>
The firsi lecture<lb/>
titled "Tribe<lb/>
� The Rituals<lb/>
Realities of the U.S. (<lb/>
gress It will be<lb/>
noon m Brewster, D<lb/>
The talk �<lb/>
an investig<lb/>
rituals of U.S. C<lb/>
and will be pi<lb/>
much the same w a<lb/>
imes:igat:on<lb/>
ciem tribe.<lb/>
A second<lb/>
held a: 2 3<lb/>
Brewster, D � :<lb/>
"Method a<lb/>
Social Science R<lb/>
� How Do w e Kri<lb/>
This will he a :�.<lb/>
discussion on methods<lb/>
research as<lb/>
thropologists<lb/>
Vea<lb/>
e :he spc<lb/>
department<lb/>
6 p.m<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
Weathc<lb/>
investigations<lb/>
areas as well.<lb/>
Violence<lb/>
Discussed<lb/>
B KIMCRA1C<lb/>
S �" ife<lb/>
Puniti e a- . e<lb/>
violence will bt<lb/>
of the 23rd annual Fa-<lb/>
Life Conference<lb/>
held April 2 enkin<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Dr. Gertrude v<lb/>
will be the<lb/>
speaker. -<lb/>
sight into cultu-<lb/>
social forces<lb/>
the a 11 i t u <lb/>
behaviors l<lb/>
violence if the<lb/>
Presen t at v is n<lb/>
elude: Violence ga<lb/>
Children. Child and V<lb/>
Battering and Incest<lb/>
General Background.<lb/>
W i 11 i a n s a<lb/>
psychologist in private<lb/>
practice in St. I<lb/>
where part oi her work is<lb/>
reserved for abused<lb/>
children and adults<lb/>
is a diplomate in chmcal<lb/>
psychologv of the<lb/>
American Board oi Pro-<lb/>
fessional Psychology and<lb/>
has served as director and<lb/>
chief psychologist at the<lb/>
Child Guidance Clinics oi<lb/>
the City of St. Louw<lb/>
Williams w as the foun<lb/>
ding editor of the Journal<lb/>
of Clinical Child<lb/>
Psychology and also a<lb/>
member of the first Task<lb/>
Force on the Rights of<lb/>
Children and Youth of<lb/>
tn� American<lb/>
Psychological Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
N<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0003"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
E MS WITH HART<lb/>
a -lew anera<lb/>
� ftm are ��, up<lb/>
��"V8 a and too<lb/>
� "ahon $<lb/>
-  Hart vVe<lb/>
a new<lb/>
-eeng a�<lb/>
' rwrsday at I Dm<lb/>
X " L'Tiber:<lb/>
ALPHA PSI<lb/>
e to come<lb/>
-  �ha PSl<lb/>
� e Cultural<lb/>
 - 30 from<lb/>
- � esrirnenfs<lb/>
-son is 75<lb/>
SERIES<lb/>
" Si ssoon<lb/>
-� i�t es NHa<lb/>
� 3C p m in<lb/>
. .5 will be<lb/>
SOd MOD �<lb/>
T rtese<lb/>
 ' ng open ana<lb/>
�or all<lb/>
BECOMING<lb/>
- rie.ng ac<lb/>
indent<lb/>
"te Chairper<lb/>
ea up at<lb/>
"ation<lb/>
"�" Tne<lb/>
" s position<lb/>
UNG FASHIONS<lb/>
- 3e�ce Council<lb/>
is"on ex<lb/>
' i ' p m in<lb/>
 a pro<lb/>
-np into<lb/>
� � i D eamj<lb/>
A PARTY<lb/>
C om I ng<lb/>
 appa<lb/>
I �5(1 4 X<lb/>
'� � See any<lb/>
' ' ' Ctofl<lb/>
-CD DRIVE<lb/>
nsortng a<lb/>
� :ampus<lb/>
mttara can<lb/>
 prixn<lb/>
s . mv<lb/>
r Broup<lb/>
� �a' on call<lb/>
UP<lb/>
GEAR!<lb/>
PARLEZ<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
NENA<lb/>
IFTBALLONS<lb/>
iiOons'jusi A Dream<lb/>
Rene Mich<lb/>
6.99<lb/>
LP&amp;<lb/>
TAPE<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
�H APRIL 4TH<lb/>
4<lb/>
(<lb/>
Resident Tells Of Glass Breaking,<lb/>
Trailer Shaking, Falling Into Pieces<lb/>
Wreckage From Tornado<lb/>
� Lab<lb/>
ouSud: :�z;?2 -Si'Jrsti mobe home in ihrt t��" - ���<lb/>
Sociology<lb/>
Lectures<lb/>
HARDING STOHEN<lb/>
�Uff Writer<lb/>
Dr. J. Mclver<lb/>
Weatherford, a cultural<lb/>
anthropologist, will give<lb/>
two talks on Frida,<lb/>
March 30. The talks are<lb/>
sponsored by the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Sociology, An-<lb/>
thropology, and<lb/>
Economics.<lb/>
The first lecture is en-<lb/>
titled "Tribes on the Hill<lb/>
� The Rituals and<lb/>
Realities of the U.S. Con-<lb/>
gress It will be held at<lb/>
noon in Brewster, D-l 12.<lb/>
The talk will be concern<lb/>
an investigation of the<lb/>
rituals of U.S. Congress<lb/>
and will be presented in<lb/>
much the same way as an<lb/>
investigation of an an-<lb/>
cient tribe.<lb/>
A second lecture to be<lb/>
held at 2:30 p.m. in<lb/>
Brewster. D-302). is titled<lb/>
"Method and Madness in<lb/>
Social Science Research<lb/>
� How Do We Know<lb/>
This will be a technical<lb/>
discussion on methods of<lb/>
research as used by an-<lb/>
thropologists.<lb/>
Weatherford will also<lb/>
be the special guest at the<lb/>
department's banquet at<lb/>
6 p.m. in the Holida<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
Weatherford has done<lb/>
investigations in other<lb/>
areas as well.<lb/>
Violence<lb/>
Discussed<lb/>
By KIM CRAIG<lb/>
Nllff � filer<lb/>
Punitive and sexual<lb/>
violence will be the theme<lb/>
of the 23rd annual Family<lb/>
Life Conference to be<lb/>
held April 2 in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Dr. Gertrude Williams<lb/>
will be the featured<lb/>
peaker, sharing her in-<lb/>
sight into cultural and<lb/>
social forces that shape<lb/>
'he attitudes and<lb/>
behaviors leading to<lb/>
violence in the family.<lb/>
Presentations will in-<lb/>
clude: Violence Against<lb/>
Children, Child and Wife<lb/>
Battering and Incest:<lb/>
General Background.<lb/>
Williams is a<lb/>
psychologist in private<lb/>
practice in St. Louis<lb/>
where part of her work is<lb/>
reserved for abused<lb/>
children and adults. She<lb/>
is a diplomate in clinical<lb/>
Psychology of the<lb/>
American Board of Pro-<lb/>
fessional Psychology and<lb/>
has served as director and<lb/>
chief psychologist at the<lb/>
Child Guidance Clinics of<lb/>
the City of St. Louis.<lb/>
Williams was the foun-<lb/>
ding editor of the Journal<lb/>
of Clinical Child<lb/>
Psychology and also a<lb/>
member of the first Task<lb/>
force on the Rights of<lb/>
Children and Youth of<lb/>
L"e American<lb/>
Psychological Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
 '�ntinurd t mm r'�g J<lb/>
frr-<lb/>
Off I<lb/>
cd with  �<lb/>
teir; �<lb/>
�trcn ,n.<lb/>
I Nftfi ibeei<lb/>
wrapped<lb/>
Utlllt) poicv<lb/>
A local resident, k.r.<lb/>
BusltCT, described <lb/>
n.ido rutting his bone<lb/>
H famil) heard .� - imM<lb/>
uiK and .i<lb/>
in their mobile h. <lb/>
five got undei<lb/>
matress, heard more win-<lb/>
dows breaking, l<lb/>
trailei shaking, .ind ii<lb/>
seemed like it (the trailer)<lb/>
just rolled ova real slow<lb/>
ly, and the next thing we<lb/>
knew we were outside<lb/>
behind the car<lb/>
The sides of the trailer<lb/>
were blown awa)<lb/>
"We looked around<lb/>
and saw our neighbors<lb/>
crawling from under their<lb/>
trailer Banker said. "It<lb/>
was where ours used to<lb/>
SSZZ ���"�"<lb/>
 ' a ;��<lb/>
I � � .<lb/>
��<lb/>
r weft a<lb/>
' people r -<lb/>
High Sen  : <lb/>
' e using<lb/>
rmrrftrrus shelter. anj<lb/>
I<lb/>
'�<lb/>
 " ' '  I �� r<lb/>
W ' � : mayoi<lb/>
 � AnJc. saJ Nfvrr,<lb/>
Ithl had bec<lb/>
: Bertie C ount)<lb/>
before midnight<lb/>
Wiliiford, speaking<lb/>
from the command post<lb/>
for the county, said there<lb/>
had been "extensive pei<lb/>
s' ll injuries "<lb/>
Wiliiford said the<lb/>
storm hit the area around<lb/>
9 p.m leveling several<lb/>
homes.<lb/>
"There's nothing left<lb/>
hut the foundations he<lb/>
S<lb/>
r<lb/>
� <lb/>
u � , ,<lb/>
I I<lb/>
� "� -an,<lb/>
tit Ccru<lb/>
a �<lb/>
See John Kiun pjijjr 6<lb/>
MAKE TRACKS FOR THE<lb/>
BESTEATIN'ALL AROUND!<lb/>
The next time you stop by for the Best Eatin brinq<lb/>
along this money-savin' coupon.<lb/>
" "sTemk!IbFbTscuhThd<lb/>
0rm6e juice $1.29<lb/>
I oZ T� SSanv 0,h8r 0ff8rs 0Her o duf-8 � KSKSS<lb/>
 only a, part.c.pat.ng Hardees Restaurants � m � � I<lb/>
ghMay31 '984 �4� J' 1<lb/>
I � co.ki Systems inc 1 lll WlflbVj �� I<lb/>
tBuuuloMsrldrDmm �Iul<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVEtS<lb/>
TRAVEL-SUMMER of 1984 j<lb/>
Eurail Youthpass$290<lb/>
Britrail Youthpass$ 95<lb/>
New York to Luxemburg$589<lb/>
round trip with FREE bus connection<lb/>
to Germany Holland Belgium<lb/>
In Britain: 5 days car &amp; hotelfrom185<lb/>
p.person (no air included)<lb/>
Book early for best fares - call for brochures:<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.<lb/>
lc; Cotanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N. C. 27834<lb/>
Phone 75-u2j<lb/>
1<lb/>
I DCn,o MBrS OP<lb/>
ONE PRICE SALE<lb/>
X -���<lb/>
� SPORT COATS Vaws.ssoo S65.00<lb/>
l ir �� �<lb/>
� PANTS V.IUOS6000 $15.90<lb/>
Onedoup 2 $30.00<lb/>
SWEATERS v.iuettosso.oo $17.90<lb/>
1 -oog Sleeve<lb/>
� SPORTSH1RTS v�ms.oo S17.90<lb/>
VEST $1000<lb/>
1 n� Sleeve<lb/>
TS�$10.00<lb/>
SWEATERS$1000<lb/>
-OOg &amp; Short Sleeve<lb/>
DRESS SHIRTS20 Off<lb/>
ALLSAIFSFfHAi<lb/>
� Alterations Extra<lb/>
i Cash, Checks, or Bank Cards<lb/>
STEINBECK'S<lb/>
Downtown<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
I p JiBi momsmami nii<lb/>
I rombmaiion w.th any other offers Offer good after 10 vT AM VT<lb/>
Iparncipatrng Hardee . Restaurants through � " "<lb/>
May 31. 1984<lb/>
Har,ie�s Food Systems inc<lb/>
Haideer<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
� WEIGH<lb/>
STATION<lb/>
Weight Control Service<lb/>
Will Meet You 12 Way!<lb/>
To salute the students, faculty &amp;<lb/>
personnel of ECU, We're Cutting the<lb/>
Cost of A Six Week Program in Hall!<lb/>
The First Fifty ECU students, faculty<lb/>
f Personnelto Bring In This Ad Will<lb/>
Receive A 6-Week Reducing<lb/>
Program for ONLY<lb/>
$62.50<lb/>
(Regular cost $119.70<lb/>
plus $5.00 registration)<lb/>
Offer good ONLY until April 4<lb/>
Call 758-8889<lb/>
tor a free, no obligation consultation<lb/>
You can lose 16-28 lbs. in 6-weeks<lb/>
No contracts, shots, drugs, or pre packaged foods<lb/>
Our Reducing Program offers food selections from ALL of<lb/>
The Basic Food Groups<lb/>
Daily Weigh-ins &amp; Counseling provide a Strong Support Base<lb/>
Our Daily Vitamin Supplement Contains No Harmful Drugs<lb/>
IT ONLY TAKES TWO<lb/>
THE WEIGH STATION AND YOU!<lb/>
214 E. Arlington<lb/>
(Next to Bond's) Open 7:30am-5.30pm MWF. 7:30-5.00 TTH<lb/>
� � <lb/>
 . <lb/>
.�acij .j<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0004"/><lb/>
�H Cant (Eawltafan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, g,<lb/>
Darryl Brown. - B-ir.<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mmm, j T Piftb?<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. cv MlK� McPartland. �.<lb/>
tD N.CKLAS. w,�. ToM Norton crrdt<lb/>
Gordon Ipock. Eduor <lb/>
Mark RaB,pB athy Fuerst. �,Managtr<lb/>
mark barker, ow MlKE Ma<lb/>
March 29, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Writing<lb/>
More Verbs, Less TAnd F<lb/>
True or false<lb/>
1.) The writing skills of<lb/>
American students today are in dire<lb/>
need of improvement.<lb/>
2.) Writing is becoming a<lb/>
specialized trade, one that certain<lb/>
people are trained especially for<lb/>
and the rest are barely capable of.<lb/>
3.) Specialized writing programs<lb/>
are good for those who major in<lb/>
them but will never replace writing<lb/>
requirements in regular classes;<lb/>
they tend to foster the image of<lb/>
writing as a specialized trade rather<lb/>
than a basic skill required of all col-<lb/>
lege graduates.<lb/>
4.) Colleges today need to re-<lb/>
quire more written assignments.<lb/>
5.) Students in all majors should<lb/>
be required to write essays on tests.<lb/>
6.) In classes smaller than 30<lb/>
students, teachers should never give<lb/>
in multiple choice form what can be<lb/>
done by essay tests.<lb/>
7.) There is no excuse for tests in<lb/>
majors such as English and history<lb/>
to be in the form of multiple<lb/>
choice, fill-in-the-blank or true-<lb/>
false.<lb/>
8.) Term papers of at least three<lb/>
or four pages in length should be<lb/>
required in all senior-level liberal<lb/>
arts and humanities courses, and in<lb/>
most classes at the sophomore and<lb/>
junior level.<lb/>
9.) In subjects such as science,<lb/>
math and computer science, where<lb/>
essay tests and term papers are<lb/>
often not applicable, teachers<lb/>
should when possible require<lb/>
briefs, chapter summaries or book<lb/>
abstracts.<lb/>
10.) No English, history,<lb/>
philosophy, language, social<lb/>
science, business or political science<lb/>
major should be allowed to<lb/>
graduate without having written at<lb/>
least one paper of ten pages or<lb/>
more.<lb/>
11.) The ECU College of Arts<lb/>
and Sciences needs to make a major<lb/>
overhaul in its writing re-<lb/>
quirements, creating a college-wide<lb/>
policy of mandatory term papers in<lb/>
all majors, with the possible excep-<lb/>
tion of some science and math<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
12.) The college should banish<lb/>
forever multiple choice and true-<lb/>
false tests, and reprimand any<lb/>
teacher with a class of fewer than<lb/>
40 students for giving one.<lb/>
13.) The college needs to study<lb/>
the feasibility of an optional (but<lb/>
encouraged) undergraduate thesis,<lb/>
and departments need to push<lb/>
senior honors thesis programs more<lb/>
among their better students.<lb/>
14.) Students will rarely do more<lb/>
than what is required of them.<lb/>
15.) The administration needs to<lb/>
take the lead in making these im-<lb/>
provements; they cannot wait for<lb/>
students to ask for more classwork<lb/>
and tougher requirements.<lb/>
Answers: all of the above are true.<lb/>
People Get Fed Up When<lb/>
The Sewage Starts Flying<lb/>
In Commissioner's Race<lb/>
By DARKYL BROWN<lb/>
There's a hotly contested race this year<lb/>
that's being swept under the rug by the<lb/>
media but deserves a lot more attention.<lb/>
The neck-and-neck race for Greenville Ci-<lb/>
ty Drainage and Sewer Commissioner bet-<lb/>
ween Tim Blunt and Jesse Shmeltch is tur-<lb/>
ning into quite a heat indeed, with a<lb/>
mutual banter of negative campaigning<lb/>
and counterattacks rarely equalled in<lb/>
Down East politics.<lb/>
It all started when Shmeltch raised a lit-<lb/>
tle money with some friends over in<lb/>
Beaufort County for his Greenville cam-<lb/>
paign. He started raking in such a pile of<lb/>
loot, in fact, that the opposition got ner-<lb/>
vous, then started charging that of<lb/>
Shmeltch might be more beholding to the<lb/>
neighbors than the homefolk. What kind<lb/>
of sewer man is he going to be, anyway,<lb/>
always thinking of that garbage in the nor-<lb/>
thern counties?<lb/>
Bye and bye, Blunt just had to do<lb/>
something. Shlemtch was just hauling in<lb/>
the dough by the truckload and nobody<lb/>
was paying attention. Shlemtch had a cam-<lb/>
paign coffer so full the commissioner's job<lb/>
looked like it was in the bag. Blunt figured<lb/>
what's good for the goose is good for the<lb/>
gander, so he snuck down to Craven<lb/>
County, where some in-laws helped him<lb/>
raise a little campaign loot.<lb/>
Thing is, at the same time he started say-<lb/>
ing the sewer commissioner shouldn't be a<lb/>
?<lb/>
commissioner from Beaufort or Martin cr<lb/>
Bertie Counties, but ought to be the com-<lb/>
missioner for Pitt County, since that's<lb/>
where all the sewage is that his supposed to<lb/>
be managing.<lb/>
Shmeltz jumped on that. Next thing you<lb/>
know, all over Pitt County were signs say-<lb/>
ing:<lb/>
Blunt For Greenville Sewer Commissioner<lb/>
P.O. Box 4, Highway 9<lb/>
Whiskey Lick, N.C Craven County<lb/>
Under it were the words: "Something is<lb/>
wrong here. What's a Pitt County native<lb/>
doing raising funds in Craven County?<lb/>
And all the time saying the commissioner<lb/>
ought not be from Beaufort or Bertie<lb/>
County. What's going on, Tim? Where do<lb/>
you stand?"<lb/>
Blunts people were steaming. Never<lb/>
mind that Shelmtch raised three times as<lb/>
much money in Beaufort as Tim raised in<lb/>
Craven, the ads were making them look<lb/>
bad.<lb/>
"But they was all cousins the Blunt<lb/>
spokesman said. "Everyone one of them<lb/>
Craven County people have kin in Pitt<lb/>
County. I bet Shmeltch don't have no kin<lb/>
in Beaufort County<lb/>
But Shmeltch wouldn't stop. He kept on<lb/>
about Blunt raising money outside the<lb/>
county, and who he'd be beholding to,<lb/>
God forbid he should become commis-<lb/>
sioner, and wouldn't the people rather<lb/>
have a man who was a loyal servant of the<lb/>
people and a God-fearing Christian.<lb/>
But more annoyed than anyone else<lb/>
were the people who had to put up with all<lb/>
the bickering. No one was talking about<lb/>
who was going to run the sewage treatment<lb/>
plant better, or who had the new ideas<lb/>
about dumping in the Tar River, or who<lb/>
would bring a new generation of leader-<lb/>
ship to the sewage commission. They<lb/>
didn't talk about anything that people like<lb/>
to hear about in a candidate. All they<lb/>
heard was who was raising money in the<lb/>
next county, and whether it was OK<lb/>
because they were kin or in-laws or<lb/>
whether they'd be beholding to some<lb/>
strangers over the county line.<lb/>
A point came when people were just<lb/>
about fed up with Blunt and Shemltch<lb/>
They figured they both belonged in the<lb/>
sewage business, being how they were<lb/>
already so good at handling a lot of it.<lb/>
Unions Better Than Alternatives<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Every now and then, the Supreme<lb/>
Court hands down a ruling which<lb/>
receives little publicity yet promises to<lb/>
have a tremendous impact, this time on<lb/>
labor-employee relations. A recent deci-<lb/>
sion, which will allow financially troubl-<lb/>
ed companies � not necessarily<lb/>
bankrupt ones � to scrap union con-<lb/>
tracts, is one such decision.<lb/>
The five-to-four vote allows any com-<lb/>
pany which declares itself in financial<lb/>
quicksand to tear up union-negotiated<lb/>
contracts. This is a dangerous and sur-<lb/>
prising decision which will return to<lb/>
haunt company executives who will now<lb/>
gleefully take advantage of it.<lb/>
Let's face it. Many conservatives, in-<lb/>
cluding those on the Court, have a<lb/>
lingering suspicion of labor unions.<lb/>
After all, they say, unions are mainly �<lb/>
but not solely � responsible for the<lb/>
decline of America's industries, par-<lb/>
ticularly in the import-export area,<lb/>
because of their excessive wage<lb/>
demands. I agree. But what are the alter-<lb/>
natives to our present unions? And are<lb/>
these alternatives more desirable than<lb/>
what we have now?<lb/>
One alternative is hard-core socialist<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
and Marxist labor organizations similar<lb/>
to many of those in Britain. How do we<lb/>
get these? Simple. We get our corporate<lb/>
big-shots to concentrate on constricting<lb/>
the unions now in existence. For exam-<lb/>
ple, companies nationwide can begin<lb/>
declaring that their money problems are<lb/>
caused by the excessive wage demands<lb/>
unions have forced on them. They can<lb/>
chuck the contracts and compel the<lb/>
workers to accept lower wages and<lb/>
benefits. Then we'll hear the Marxists<lb/>
shout, "See, you cannot compromise<lb/>
with capitalist. They're interested only<lb/>
in squeezing every dime's worth of sweat<lb/>
and tears from you before you are<lb/>
discarded. Make us your union leaders.<lb/>
We won't knuckle under. You'll get<lb/>
more money because we'll show the<lb/>
capitalist pigs who's boss Voila!<lb/>
Although it will take time, before you<lb/>
know it, our unions will really be left-<lb/>
wing. If anyone thinks today's<lb/>
brotherhoods of workers are radical, he<lb/>
ain't seen nothin' yet.<lb/>
Another alternative is to pre-empt the<lb/>
need for militant unions, as Japan has<lb/>
done. There, although workers salaries<lb/>
are low, side benefits are high. Com-<lb/>
panies provide housing, paid vacations,<lb/>
dating services, recreational facilities.<lb/>
cheap medical insurance, etc Executives<lb/>
go out of their way to experience and<lb/>
understand how their workers live.<lb/>
Result: workers trust and admire their<lb/>
company superiors and see no need for<lb/>
adversarial unions American-style.<lb/>
In the U.S the best example of a<lb/>
paternalistic company is the Adolph<lb/>
Coors Brewing Company of Colorado<lb/>
The benefits it provides its workers are<lb/>
similar to those in Japan. Consequently.<lb/>
Coors employees have gone beyond the<lb/>
Japanese example by rejecting AFL-CIO<lb/>
attempts to organize them.<lb/>
American unions, now over 100 vears<lb/>
old, may have already fulfilled their ma-<lb/>
jor purpose. Membership represents on-<lb/>
ly twenty percent of the work force, and<lb/>
that number continues to decline. But if<lb/>
the unions, which have been a vital force<lb/>
in shaping representative democracv, are<lb/>
destined to fade away, the process<lb/>
should take place naturally. If the<lb/>
government takes any actions allowing<lb/>
companies to hasten their demise, a<lb/>
serious labor backlash could begin m<lb/>
tant, left-wing unions, like the kinds<lb/>
which nearly wrecked Britain, are just<lb/>
what our unstable economv does not<lb/>
need.<lb/>
Real Men Don 7 Editorialize News<lb/>
r.�l LX 1 . . <lb/>
Ah, real men! Men who dash out of<lb/>
a crowd to approach the speaker's plat-<lb/>
form. (Men like Patrick O'Neill). Men<lb/>
who carry placards of protest in front<lb/>
of the post office. (Men like Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill). Men who are convicted and<lb/>
spend time in prison. (Men like Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill). Men who would give away<lb/>
our country's freedom at the expense<lb/>
of a weakened defense capability.<lb/>
(Men like Patrick O'Neill).<lb/>
Real men? The real men are those<lb/>
willing to stand tall for America,<lb/>
defending liberty and freedom. Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill stands cowering behind his<lb/>
weekly protest sign, a yellow belly if<lb/>
ever there was one. Face it folks,<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill is totally without<lb/>
worth. If he were a horse he would<lb/>
have been shot long ago.<lb/>
I would like to commend the staff<lb/>
and management of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian for working hard to give the<lb/>
students, faculty and staff a newspaper<lb/>
we all can be proud of on our campus.<lb/>
The improvement in news and editorial<lb/>
content and balance has resulted in the<lb/>
finest' newspaper I have seen since I<lb/>
first came to this campus in 1977<lb/>
Please do not allow your efforts to be<lb/>
set back by those such as Patrick<lb/>
O'Neill who attempt to manipulate the<lb/>
press by editorializing the news.<lb/>
Charles D. Shavitz<lb/>
Pirate Club<lb/>
East Carolina for their outstanding<lb/>
contribution to our community, and<lb/>
for their continuing faithful support of<lb/>
the Red Cross bloodmobile.<lb/>
Annette Dawkins<lb/>
Greenville Service League<lb/>
Students Supportive<lb/>
The Greenville Service League has<lb/>
assisted the Red Cross with blood col-<lb/>
lection in Pitt County for a number of<lb/>
years. While the general population<lb/>
and industry have provided significant<lb/>
support, the single largest group of<lb/>
contributors are the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University. Although tem-<lb/>
porary members of our community,<lb/>
they take the time and effort to donate<lb/>
blood with their only reward being the<lb/>
knowledge that they are helping so-<lb/>
meone in need.<lb/>
Tbe Greenville Service League would<lb/>
like to formally thank the students of<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the ad<lb/>
South Building, across from Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Utters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
You Want ro iake.<lb/>
PIWER, ACTING AMD CRBffioM<lb/>
sniffMee Oust what are. you<lb/>
5T0DV1M6 To BE ?<lb/>
Classri<lb/>
(CPS) � Minontv<lb/>
students tend to arrive<lb/>
earlier for class than their<lb/>
white counterparts, and<lb/>
cluster themselves near<lb/>
the back and sides of<lb/>
classrooms when the<lb/>
choose their seats, accor-<lb/>
ding to one L'niversitv of<lb/>
Maryland researcher<lb/>
"There seems to be an<lb/>
unspoken, natural agret<lb/>
ment between minontv<lb/>
25th Annual Evei<lb/>
and<lb/>
the<lb/>
choJ<lb/>
plan<lb/>
fesJ<lb/>
pan<lb/>
arm<lb/>
'Gree<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
C�-Nr�, Mho,<lb/>
ECU fraternities and<lb/>
sororities will participate<lb/>
in the 25th annual<lb/>
"Greek Week" April 2-8<lb/>
According to James B<lb/>
Mallory, associate dean<lb/>
of Orientation s<lb/>
Judiciary and Inter<lb/>
Fraternitv Council ad-<lb/>
visor, the event startec 23<lb/>
years ago as a banquet<lb/>
eoi<lb/>
T<lb/>
dam<lb/>
I<lb/>
re "A<lb/>
wil<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
ni<lb/>
Buy,<lb/>
Sell<lb/>
And Trade<lb/>
With<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ON the<lb/>
April<lb/>
1 to 6<lb/>
V If rain conceri<lb/>
held ini<lb/>
Wright Audit.<lb/>
THE ped:<lb/>
Bringing us Bad<lb/>
tnaje<lb/>
fjrif Co�ege Press Service<lb/>
mmmMm&amp;<lb/>
� . . - �<lb/>
i.i lin u � � ��<lb/>
nno m m ����<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0005"/><lb/>
!HJ I AST AKOI IMAS<lb/>
MAR H 2V vk4<lb/>
<lb/>
aOKr-<lb/>
atives<lb/>
ranee, etc. Executives<lb/>
t) to experience and<lb/>
their uorkers live.<lb/>
rust and admire their<lb/>
and see no need for<lb/>
mis American-style.<lb/>
he best example of a<lb/>
any is the Adolph<lb/>
in) of Colorado.<lb/>
s workers are<lb/>
Japan. Consequently,<lb/>
nave gone beyond the<lb/>
ting AFL-CIO<lb/>
:hem.<lb/>
ver 100 years<lb/>
fulfilled their ma-<lb/>
ibership represents on-<lb/>
work force, and<lb/>
decline. But if<lb/>
nave been a vital force<lb/>
�native democracy, are<lb/>
vay, the process<lb/>
c naturally If the<lb/>
an actions allowing<lb/>
r demise, a<lb/>
could begin. Mili-<lb/>
is, u'ke the kinds<lb/>
ain, are just<lb/>
I economy does not<lb/>
Vews<lb/>
their outstanding<lb/>
our community, and<lb/>
thful support of<lb/>
mobile.<lb/>
Annette Dawkins<lb/>
� He Service League<lb/>
mm Rules<lb/>
,arolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
p points of view. Mail or<lb/>
our office in the Old<lb/>
mg, across from Joyner<lb/>
- cation, all let-<lb/>
the name, major and<lb/>
address, phone number<lb/>
f the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
two typewritten pages,<lb/>
neatly printed. All<lb/>
t to editing for brevi-<lb/>
md libel, and no personal<lb/>
he permitted. Students,<lb/>
taff writing letters for this<lb/>
inded that they are limited<lb/>
five issues<lb/>
iRM you<lb/>
177<lb/>
h��nL<lb/>
w<lb/>
Classroom Behavior Of Minorities Studied<lb/>
(CPS) � Minority<lb/>
students tend to arrive<lb/>
earlier for class than their<lb/>
white counterparts, and<lb/>
cluster themselves near<lb/>
the back and sides of<lb/>
classrooms when they<lb/>
choose their seats, accor-<lb/>
ding to one University of<lb/>
Maryland researcher.<lb/>
"There seems to be an<lb/>
unspoken, natural agree-<lb/>
ment between minority<lb/>
and white students as<lb/>
they arrive for class and<lb/>
choose their seats ex-<lb/>
plains sociologv Pro-<lb/>
fessor Gilda Haber, who<lb/>
recently completed a<lb/>
study of student seating<lb/>
patterns at five Maryland<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
"The minority students<lb/>
arrive early for class, and<lb/>
choose to sit around the<lb/>
peripheries of the<lb/>
25 th Annual Event Scheduled<lb/>
classroom, leaving the<lb/>
front and center sections<lb/>
untouched she reports<lb/>
"The WASPS (white,<lb/>
Anglo-Saxon Pro-<lb/>
testants) arrive later, and<lb/>
quickly occupy the center<lb/>
of the classroom<lb/>
Ninety-four percent of<lb/>
the seats in the back of<lb/>
the average college<lb/>
classroom are filled by<lb/>
minority students, Haber<lb/>
found.<lb/>
"Minority she adds,<lb/>
might mean black,<lb/>
Hispanic, Indian, Jewish<lb/>
or Catholic students.<lb/>
Although her ongoing<lb/>
study has yet to yield con-<lb/>
crete reasons why some<lb/>
students voluntarily<lb/>
segregate themselves,<lb/>
Haber believes it may<lb/>
have something to do<lb/>
with the way the<lb/>
minorities feel toward<lb/>
society in general.<lb/>
"It could be they simp<lb/>
ly won't identify with be-<lb/>
ing at the front of the<lb/>
class, or that they don't<lb/>
relate to their professors,<lb/>
who are usually white<lb/>
she speculates.<lb/>
The same pattern oc-<lb/>
curs at all-black colleges,<lb/>
too. Black students there<lb/>
will also leave the front<lb/>
and center sections of the<lb/>
classroom vacant the<lb/>
longest.<lb/>
Haber found that<lb/>
students generally don't<lb/>
change seats, either.<lb/>
"Once a student sits in<lb/>
a seat even one or two<lb/>
times, the rest of the class<lb/>
seems to remember and<lb/>
leave that seat empty<lb/>
even if the student misses<lb/>
class several times or<lb/>
'Greek Week' Set For April 2-8<lb/>
V1AROSCHAK and a tew tu�n�- -r,<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Co-Newi Mtloc<lb/>
ECU fraternities and<lb/>
sororities will participate<lb/>
m the 25th annual<lb/>
"Greek Week" April 2-8.<lb/>
According to James B.<lb/>
Mallory, associate dean<lb/>
of Orientation and<lb/>
Judiciary and Inter<lb/>
Fraternity Council ad-<lb/>
visor, the event started 25<lb/>
years ago as a banquet<lb/>
and a tew events and<lb/>
evolved into what it is to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
The Greek banquet and<lb/>
dance will be the first<lb/>
event of the week. It will<lb/>
be held Monday, April 2<lb/>
at the Moose Lodge and<lb/>
will begin at 7 p.m. and 9<lb/>
p.m respectively. "STA<lb/>
Express" will provide<lb/>
music for the evening.<lb/>
Other activities for the<lb/>
Buy,<lb/>
Sell<lb/>
week include the follow-<lb/>
ing: Tuesday, 4 p.m<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Track<lb/>
Meet, to be held at E.B.<lb/>
Aycock Junior High<lb/>
School; Wednesday, 3<lb/>
P-m Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Tug-A-War, to be held at<lb/>
the fraternitv house;<lb/>
Thursday, 3 p.m Kappa<lb/>
Sigma "Funky Nassau<lb/>
to be held at the fraterni-<lb/>
l house; Friday, 3 p.m<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau "Spring<lb/>
Fling (all-campus par-<lb/>
ty),to be held at the<lb/>
fraternity house.<lb/>
Weekend activities in-<lb/>
clude a party at Moser's<lb/>
Farm on Saturday and Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Field Day on<lb/>
Sunday. Moser's Farm<lb/>
will begin at 12 noon and<lb/>
will feature the band,<lb/>
"The Sponge Tones<lb/>
Sunday's event will begin<lb/>
moo<lb/>
at 11 a.m. and will be<lb/>
held at the fraternity<lb/>
house.<lb/>
All activities are ex-<lb/>
cluded to greeks with the<lb/>
exception of "Spring Fl-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Panhallenic and IFC<lb/>
will split the cost of the<lb/>
bands, however each in-<lb/>
dividual sorority and<lb/>
fraternity must pav for<lb/>
the amount of beverages<lb/>
changes to a different<lb/>
seat she discovered.<lb/>
She even found grades<lb/>
are related to where<lb/>
students sit in class.<lb/>
"Grades tend to be<lb/>
highest in the front and<lb/>
center, and drop as you<lb/>
jo to the back and sides<lb/>
�f 'he classroom she<lb/>
says.<lb/>
But she thinks those<lb/>
grade patterns have more<lb/>
to do with how students<lb/>
perceive their instructors<lb/>
and places in the<lb/>
classroom than with<lb/>
sutdents' intellectual<lb/>
abilities.<lb/>
Yet "that's what I'm<lb/>
trying to find out now<lb/>
she adds.<lb/>
Register To Vote<lb/>
And Trade<lb/>
With<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
i hurs.<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Ladies Lite<lb/>
Nite<lb/>
'The<lb/>
Trend9'<lb/>
r fee Girls<lb/>
Tri-State<lb/>
Auto Body<lb/>
Fri. IFC<lb/>
wgJHappy Hour<lb/>
MAXX<lb/>
WARRIOR<lb/>
�XJ Admission<lb/>
I<lb/>
50 limited Be<lb/>
er<lb/>
 Expert body repairs, paint Jj<lb/>
 jobs, frame straightening, and jj<lb/>
S 24 hour towing. �<lb/>
107, Discount to all ECU<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
un.<lb/>
"The Pedestrians"<lb/>
$1.00 ECU<lb/>
Free Beer on Admission &amp;<lb/>
Super H.H. All Night<lb/>
(Bring in Ad)<lb/>
24 kcu,<lb/>
tOWINC<lb/>
SFRVICC<lb/>
(over the bridge)<lb/>
1512 N.Greene St.<lb/>
Day 758-0778<lb/>
Night 756-4775<lb/>
756-8604<lb/>
PIRATE WAL<lb/>
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL<lb/>
 Positions for PIRATE WALK<lb/>
EXECUTIVE COUNCIL<lb/>
are now open.<lb/>
 Please apply in Mendenhall<lb/>
Rm. 228 from 9-5 M-F.<lb/>
ON the Mall<lb/>
April 1st<lb/>
1 to 6 pm<lb/>
MILLER HIGH LIFE<lb/>
<lb/>
 If rain concert will be<lb/>
held in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium, �<lb/>
9 6 4<lb/>
Cups<lb/>
T-shirts<lb/>
Posters<lb/>
and Painter<lb/>
Caps<lb/>
given away!<lb/>
r<lb/>
tyjm<lb/>
THE PEDESTRIANS<lb/>
Bringing us Back to the Future.<lb/>
�'�<lb/>
fHAXX<lb/>
.�<lb/>
:S"?3<lb/>
 �� -<lb/>
-<lb/>
�35,�H<lb/>
THE FABULOUS KNOBS<lb/>
Welcome to Miller Time<lb/>
Mill<lb/>
M<lb/>
'<lb/>
� ft m,m,fi i Hi,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0006"/><lb/>
�IHEEAST CAROLINIAN MABrn 29, 1984<lb/>
Black Market In Computers Causes Worry<lb/>
(CPS) � Rumors that<lb/>
a substantial campus<lb/>
black market in com-<lb/>
puters has arisen in recent<lb/>
weeks appear to be false,<lb/>
but campus officials<lb/>
worry that one may ap-<lb/>
pear soon along with a<lb/>
difficult sales war with<lb/>
off-campus computer<lb/>
dealers.<lb/>
A USA Today<lb/>
newspaper story in late<lb/>
February alleged a large<lb/>
computer black market<lb/>
was forming on campuses<lb/>
as students buy the<lb/>
machines at a discount<lb/>
from their schools, and<lb/>
then re-sell them to others<lb/>
at a profit.<lb/>
But a College Press<lb/>
Service check with a<lb/>
number of campuses now<lb/>
selling computers at a dis-<lb/>
count indicates that,<lb/>
while officials worry that<lb/>
a black market may ap-<lb/>
pear, none seems to be<lb/>
functioning yet.<lb/>
Apple, for one, had<lb/>
shipped only about 48 of<lb/>
its new Macintosh com-<lb/>
puters by the end of last<lb/>
week, making a black<lb/>
market in the machines<lb/>
very small, if it exists at<lb/>
all, says company<lb/>
spokesman Daniel Lewin.<lb/>
"It's not like scalping<lb/>
football tickets adds<lb/>
Gregory Marks, who<lb/>
oversees computing pro-<lb/>
grams at the University of<lb/>
Michigan. "For student<lb/>
to buy 10 computers (to<lb/>
re-sell) is beyond most<lb/>
students' means<lb/>
Nevertheless, all con-<lb/>
cerned say they're wat-<lb/>
ching campuses closely<lb/>
for telltale signs of<lb/>
emerging illegal computer<lb/>
traffic, newspaper ads of-<lb/>
fering to buy "used"<lb/>
computers, students in-<lb/>
dividually of collectively<lb/>
buying more than one<lb/>
machine at a time, etc.<lb/>
"We're going to<lb/>
monitor the campuses<lb/>
real closely Lewin cau-<lb/>
tions. "I would not want<lb/>
to have any of our plans<lb/>
published<lb/>
Besides the 24 schools<lb/>
that recently arranged to<lb/>
sell Apple Macintoshes at<lb/>
a $1,200 discount to their<lb/>
students, scores of other<lb/>
campuses recently have<lb/>
started to sell computers<lb/>
cheaply to their com<lb/>
muni ties.<lb/>
Fourteen universities<lb/>
nave signed up to uuy and<lb/>
sell new DEC 350 com-<lb/>
puters at 65 percent dis-<lb/>
counts.<lb/>
This fall, Drew Univer-<lb/>
sity will give all incoming<lb/>
freshmen Epson QX-10<lb/>
micros for about $1,700<lb/>
each. Normal retail price<lb/>
for the machines is over<lb/>
$4,000.<lb/>
Zenith, IBM, and<lb/>
Texas Instruments,<lb/>
among many others, are<lb/>
developing similar dis-<lb/>
count arrangements with<lb/>
hundreds of campuses.<lb/>
And many others are<lb/>
letting students choose<lb/>
their own brands in cam-<lb/>
pus bookstores. All the<lb/>
?<lb/>
If<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Wire nails<lb/>
6 Rent<lb/>
11 Feast<lb/>
13 Continued<lb/>
story<lb/>
14 Faroe Islands<lb/>
whirlwind<lb/>
15 Corrupt<lb/>
17 Note of scale<lb/>
18 Away<lb/>
20 Food<lb/>
programs<lb/>
21 Ocean<lb/>
22 Secluded<lb/>
valley<lb/>
24 Vehicle<lb/>
25 Imitates<lb/>
26 Irritate<lb/>
28 Game fish<lb/>
30 Linger<lb/>
32 Couple<lb/>
33 Pertaining to<lb/>
the mind<lb/>
35 Post<lb/>
37 Unit of Italian<lb/>
currency<lb/>
38 Comparative<lb/>
ending<lb/>
40 Play leading<lb/>
role<lb/>
42 Possessive<lb/>
pronoun<lb/>
43 Escapes<lb/>
45 Nahoor<lb/>
sheep<lb/>
46 Saint abbr<lb/>
47 Succeed<lb/>
49 Roman gods<lb/>
50 Bed canopy<lb/>
52 Went by<lb/>
water<lb/>
54 Golfer Slam-<lb/>
min' Sam<lb/>
55 Burdens<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Progeny<lb/>
2 Close-fitting<lb/>
heavy jacket<lb/>
3 Symbol for<lb/>
silver<lb/>
4 Parent:<lb/>
colloq<lb/>
5 Winter<lb/>
vehicle<lb/>
6 Units of<lb/>
Bulgarian<lb/>
currency<lb/>
7 Before<lb/>
8 Three-toed<lb/>
sloth<lb/>
9 Glossy fabric<lb/>
10 Man's name<lb/>
12 Heroic event<lb/>
13 Petty ruler<lb/>
16 Paper<lb/>
measure<lb/>
19 Blossoms<lb/>
21 Liquor<lb/>
23 Climbing<lb/>
plant<lb/>
25 Assumed<lb/>
name<lb/>
27 Illuminated<lb/>
29 Male<lb/>
sheep<lb/>
31 Clothes-<lb/>
maker<lb/>
brands normally are sold<lb/>
at discount prices.<lb/>
Not surprisingly, then,<lb/>
ads have already ap-<lb/>
peared at Drexd and at<lb/>
Notre Dame, asking<lb/>
students if they want to<lb/>
sell their new computers.<lb/>
Notre Dame officials,<lb/>
among others, have<lb/>
developed a few stop-gap<lb/>
measures to abort the<lb/>
market.<lb/>
Students who buy from<lb/>
Notre Dame's store must<lb/>
sign a "first refusal<lb/>
clause" that "states the<lb/>
person cannot sell the<lb/>
computer for a period of<lb/>
one year bookstore<lb/>
manager Ric Haley says.<lb/>
The university will sue<lb/>
if it finds out the student<lb/>
violates the agreement, he<lb/>
warns.<lb/>
The University of<lb/>
Michigan is branding all<lb/>
the machines it sells with<lb/>
a "U of M" symbol and<lb/>
serial number to<lb/>
discourage black<lb/>
marketeers.<lb/>
Michigan also makes<lb/>
students promise not to<lb/>
re-sell the machines for<lb/>
two years, or to pay a<lb/>
$2,000 "liquidation fee"<lb/>
to the school if they do.<lb/>
Apple will now ask<lb/>
students for a "moral<lb/>
commitment" to use the<lb/>
discounted Macintoshes<lb/>
only for school work, to<lb/>
keep them for a minimum i<lb/>
of two years, and to<lb/>
understand that re-selling<lb/>
them may be grounds for<lb/>
expulsion at some<lb/>
And though other<lb/>
schools are kerptng a<lb/>
data base of serial<lb/>
numbers and name, and<lb/>
involve banks to<lb/>
a partner to help<lb/>
future legal fees<lb/>
when pursuing black<lb/>
marketeers, anti-crime<lb/>
measures come down to<lb/>
"people beheving they'll<lb/>
be in trouble" if they re-<lb/>
sell the computers, Marks<lb/>
ya.<lb/>
"It's not goint to be<lb/>
water-tight he con-<lb/>
"I don't think Apple<lb/>
will pursue 50,000 peo<lb/>
pie. do you?" asks Peter<lb/>
Lang, sales manager of<lb/>
Mighty Byte Computer<lb/>
Center in Medford, NJ<lb/>
"I don't think a lot of<lb/>
this has been thought<lb/>
out laments Gam<lb/>
Distelhorst, head of the<lb/>
National Association of<lb/>
College Stores.<lb/>
Distelhorst worries not<lb/>
only that stores will lose<lb/>
sales to Mack marketeers,<lb/>
but that colleges that do<lb/>
sell computers often<lb/>
aren't set up to service the<lb/>
machines afterward.<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
33 Fmgerless<lb/>
glove<lb/>
34 Dregs<lb/>
36 Alit<lb/>
37 Rosters<lb/>
39 Corded<lb/>
cloth: pi.<lb/>
41 Forays<lb/>
43 Man's<lb/>
nickname<lb/>
44 Fur-bearing<lb/>
mammal<lb/>
47 School<lb/>
group: abbr.<lb/>
48 Spanish for<lb/>
"river"<lb/>
51 Compass<lb/>
point<lb/>
53 Pelican state:<lb/>
abbr.<lb/>
Original<lb/>
It's been nearly 25 years<lb/>
since Domino's Pizza<lb/>
delivered it's first pizza.<lb/>
With that pizza, we<lb/>
ushered in a new era of<lb/>
free, pizza delivery in 30<lb/>
minutes or less.<lb/>
Since then, we've grown.<lb/>
Now, we're delivering hot<lb/>
delicious pizza to homes,<lb/>
offices, dormitories and<lb/>
barracks all across America.<lb/>
Whenever you want the<lb/>
taste of delicious freshly<lb/>
baked pizza without the<lb/>
hassle of going out, call<lb/>
the original: Domino's<lb/>
Pizza Delivers.<lb/>
Check the Yellow Pages<lb/>
for the store near you<lb/>
Limited delivery areas<lb/>
Drivers carry under $20<lb/>
'1984 Domino s Pizza, Ire.<lb/>
DOMINO'S<lb/>
PIZZA .<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
'SSSSSsfSSSS'SSS.<lb/>
All fraternities<lb/>
talk brotherhood.<lb/>
PiKai<lb/>
doi<lb/>
I IK<lb/>
Phi is<lb/>
something<lb/>
'it<lb/>
B$ Chapter<lb/>
Wheelchair Push Athon in Greenville<lb/>
Pfeaschdpusheiptheia SatMarckai<lb/>
Tornadoes Hit Down East<lb/>
(MM Fro. P.K 3 �� � communities in �nd the rett would be<lb/>
Robison. S.mp. 2? .e llowed to ,o home<lb/>
Duplin, Lenoir, Wayne,<lb/>
Pitt, Gates, Hereford,<lb/>
Cumberland, Bertie and<lb/>
Chowan counties.<lb/>
Fdmonston said of-<lb/>
ficials in Robison, Lenoir<lb/>
and Pitt counties had re-<lb/>
quested assistance from<lb/>
the National Guard.<lb/>
"We are activating<lb/>
guardsmen to respond to "uurinburgsdRrxsrt<lb/>
the requests Ed- Martin, hospital ad-<lb/>
monstonsaid. ministrator. He said<lb/>
Mike Tardis, director about a dozen of the in- .<lb/>
of Scotland County jured probably would be <lb/>
emergency services, said admitted to the hospital<lb/>
hit by the storm<lb/>
"It just made Martin said injured<lb/>
toothpicks of some of our people began to arrive<lb/>
homes Tardis said, about 8 p.m. with injuries<lb/>
"There is extensive ranging from cuts and<lb/>
damage to busineses, bruises to chest pains,<lb/>
tobacco barns and farm Martin said a "large<lb/>
equipment number" of the injured<lb/>
About 93 people were came from cities in South<lb/>
treated at Scotland Carolina.<lb/>
Memorial Hospital in f<lb/>
CAMP-SPECIALISTS<lb/>
romianc for Jra Sn and Faculty Staff a<lb/>
�pedalim quaitfied to teach youngrtm in Tennis. Land<lb/>
' SYmm6a' DMCe' Am &amp; G�h�' Ceramc. Water<lb/>
�eg. Nature at one of the leading coed camp, in N E. P�<lb/>
fBfSSH,p 0ffice for � CMI,PU� �" on April 4 a,<lb/>
I (305) 389-4050 until April 2.<lb/>
Reproductive Health Care<lb/>
Under�nding. non-judgmental care that<lb/>
includes abortion for women of � ages<lb/>
Counseling for both partners is available<lb/>
Special SetVcas and rates for students<lb/>
PHI KAPfrA1<lb/>
TAU<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR AT<lb/>
TREEHOUSE<lb/>
Discount Pitchers<lb/>
Thurs. March 29 9-12<lb/>
?�e<lb/>
i<lb/>
Student Condos<lb/>
SALES PRICES START AT $27,500<lb/>
W TO 95! F1NAHC1HG<lb/>
RINGGOLDTCMRS<lb/>
At The Campus �East Carolina University<lb/>
Were building s special place for East Carolina University snidenr. �<lb/>
campus in your own privste. secure air-condirZtZSS. ?�" 2? �" � neat�<lb/>
three side, bv afZ��ZZZ "lL� is dL stZ�5M�'<lb/>
on-campus dormitories. � ctoiroma than tome<lb/>
Recent changes in tax laws make ownership of this tvne nmn� i�<lb/>
investor, and parent, of student Wed Ufato"hoTyT tZX? boch<lb/>
provide . specisl plsce for you to live snd pmlaTC oremfSS? TOmm CM<lb/>
investment requiring very little down payment   m �"�<lb/>
Sales information:<lb/>
Ringgold Development Co Inc.<lb/>
105 Commerce Street<lb/>
P.O. Qrawer 568<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 355-2698<lb/>
Rental Information:<lb/>
910 7<lb/>
Guest Po<lb/>
Lecture,<lb/>
On Raku<lb/>
B GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
itrmn r an v<lb/>
"The market for crafts is i<lb/>
strong right row, that if you'i<lb/>
professional about what vou'i<lb/>
doing, there's no reason to be<lb/>
starving artist, ' says And 5 I<lb/>
A potter by trade. Smith j<lb/>
visiting ECU this Friday an<lb/>
Saturday to give a lecture si<lb/>
presentation and to conduci<lb/>
ceramics workshop. He a ill fo<lb/>
on raku potter his specials<lb/>
Basically, Smith explain<lb/>
raku is a firing technique tit<lb/>
from the Japarese. It got it- j<lb/>
from the tea ceremony. Somali<lb/>
when a piece is firec in the<lb/>
the kiln is allowed tc ceo! to ai<lb/>
bient temperature before the pi<lb/>
is removed. But with rak j, the<lb/>
is taken from the kiln at<lb/>
temperature.<lb/>
"It crazes the glaze or<lb/>
it explained Smith. "You<lb/>
call the process a therm;<lb/>
shotgun. You can hear h pinginj<lb/>
The clay I use is designed tc<lb/>
that kind of shot Smith also a<lb/>
plained that raku pots are fired<lb/>
a lower temperature. 51<lb/>
degrees, than normal potte<lb/>
which is fired at about 22(<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
In a telephone interview froi<lb/>
his home in Marseille, S.C .<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
Cherry B<lb/>
Each year the cherry trees<lb/>
blossoms, our first sign that<lb/>
WhyB,<lb/>
By Gregory S. Hennemuth<lb/>
IO<lb/>
<lb/>
The last time I tasted whit<lb/>
store-bought "bread" 1 m<lb/>
amazed at how people can reall<lb/>
P�y good money for such a poc<lb/>
product. The low quality<lb/>
understandable once you look<lb/>
the ingredients. Most likely, t.<lb/>
first four ingredients of yot<lb/>
store-bought white bread are,<lb/>
descending order, "enrichedl<lb/>
flour (bleached, high<lb/>
Processed), water, corn sweetn<lb/>
and lard. After these "principle;<lb/>
"Jfredients you will find yeas)<lb/>
sah and seven or more chemk<lb/>
ranging from potassium bromaj<lb/>
to calcium propionate This<lb/>
wait some people � not I �<lb/>
hread? I hardly believe these<lb/>
the ingredients to produce "<lb/>
staff of hfe<lb/>
Pcppciidge Farm does make<lb/>
P�ty food loaf of bread, but yc<lb/>
Pay 51,35 or more for their<lb/>
&amp;gmim0Gmmmk �� -<lb/>
� ft-4-m '?��� m ��mii mini ,�� �i�ii.ih� .as- �� �-��-<lb/>
 "���-� �� i�0�� em.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0007"/><lb/>
rry<lb/>
�vill pursue 50,000 peo-<lb/>
ple, do you?" asks Peter<lb/>
Lange, sales manager of<lb/>
Mighty Byte Computer<lb/>
enter in Medford, N.J.<lb/>
"1 don't think a lot of<lb/>
.his has been thought<lb/>
;ut laments Garis<lb/>
Distelhorst, head of the<lb/>
National Association of<lb/>
College Stores.<lb/>
Distelhorst worries not<lb/>
only that stores will lose<lb/>
ales to black marketeers,<lb/>
ut that colleges that do<lb/>
ell computers often<lb/>
ren't set up to service the<lb/>
machines afterward.<lb/>
Ml' 1<lb/>
V USTS<lb/>
-� . Sn and Faculty Staff a j<lb/>
K"h voumwm in Tennis. Landf<lb/>
&amp; Cfifu. Ceramics. Water<lb/>
mg coed camps in N.E. Penna.<lb/>
campus interview on April 4 orj<lb/>
?��?�� j��MMO�i<lb/>
�???��?<lb/>
A<lb/>
AT<lb/>
12<lb/>
����??<lb/>
rOO<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL1NJAN<lb/>
I will be<lb/>
ting to<lb/>
rboth<lb/>
in can<lb/>
kellent<lb/>
Guest Potter Gives T<lb/>
Lecture, Workshop<lb/>
On Raku Technique<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK �  <lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Ftatarn Idlior<lb/>
"The market for crafts is so<lb/>
strong right now, that if you're<lb/>
professional about what you're<lb/>
doing, there's no reason to be a<lb/>
starving artist says Andy Smith<lb/>
A potter by trade, Smith is<lb/>
visiting ECU this Friday and<lb/>
Saturday to give a lectureslide<lb/>
presentation and to conduct a   �<lb/>
ceramics workshop. He will focus been ri5K hingl "he said<lb/>
BaascUaf.vtterLi;ShSPeCify- � 'n I was aidX family<lb/>
Basically, Smith explained, ed on a dairy farm I was con<lb/>
SHSftsras ss&amp;raS5<lb/>
trom the tea ceremony. Normally make them. I could only pm mv<lb/>
asked Smith if his work as a potter<lb/>
was a vocation or an avocation.<lb/>
"I put in about 80 hours a week<lb/>
making pottery said Smith.<lb/>
"That's pretty full time. It's<lb/>
definitely a vocation. However,<lb/>
Smith explained it had taken hini<lb/>
a while to make the transition<lb/>
from amateur to professional pot-<lb/>
ter. <lb/>
"Ever since I was little, I've<lb/>
bient temperature before the piece<lb/>
is removed. But with raku, the pot<lb/>
is taken from the kiln at full<lb/>
temperature.<lb/>
"It crazes the glaze or cracks<lb/>
it explained Smith. "You might<lb/>
call the process a thermal<lb/>
shotgun. You can hear it pinging.<lb/>
Tl.  � . . , .  �"e- nine, omiin woi<lb/>
 'J"L5 52'i?�- �o.�� a living.<lb/>
medium with which I could both<lb/>
design and make things.<lb/>
Smith's first instruction came at<lb/>
nearby Wingate College. Later he<lb/>
went to Arrowmont in Gatlin-<lb/>
burg, Tennessee to continue<lb/>
perfecting his craft. In the mean-<lb/>
time, Smith worked at other jobs<lb/>
MARCH 29. 1V84 Paje 7<lb/>
A sample of visiting craftsman Andy Smith's work:<lb/>
trasted his growth as an artist and Carolina Designer Craftsmen for<lb/>
craftsman as a steadv nmarcJor, u. -  cn Ior<lb/>
a raku pot.<lb/>
that kind of shot Smith also ex-<lb/>
plained that raku pots are fired at<lb/>
a lower temperature, 1500<lb/>
degrees, than normal pottery<lb/>
which is fired at about 2200<lb/>
degrees.<lb/>
In a telephone interview from<lb/>
his home in Marshville, N.C I<lb/>
craftsman as a steady progression.<lb/>
"But this past year, I haven't<lb/>
been able to make enough pots<lb/>
he said. "I've had such a demand<lb/>
for work that I decided to go into<lb/>
it full time<lb/>
"I've been heading in this direc-<lb/>
tion for about six years Smith<lb/>
said. "I knew it would take<lb/>
awhile. I've seen a lot of people<lb/>
get excited about working in pot-<lb/>
tery, charge into the field all at<lb/>
once and fall flat on their face by<lb/>
trying to go too fast Smith con-<lb/>
the past five years. He has also<lb/>
shown with the Ohio Designer<lb/>
Craftsmen Winterfair and<lb/>
American Craft Council fairs in<lb/>
Baltimore and Rhinebeck. He has<lb/>
participated in juried and invita-<lb/>
CnL ,  F�"�.ipaicu in lunea and invita-<lb/>
Smith works exclusively with tional shows with the Leaiue of<lb/>
SSS?1? About a Quarter Charlotte Artists s7or?oook<lb/>
of his sales are through retail craft<lb/>
shows. The rest of his sales come<lb/>
through galleries and interior<lb/>
design firms, the latter being a<lb/>
rapidly expanding market, he<lb/>
said<lb/>
Crafts in Springfield, Ohio, the<lb/>
High Point Art League and the<lb/>
Elm Street Gallery in Greensboro.<lb/>
Andy Smith's work is currently<lb/>
being shown in over 30 galleries<lb/>
along the East Coast (from<lb/>
Smithhawn work with ft, Sachf?o'F&amp;� �SZ<lb/>
It's Spring Again<lb/>
far west as Chicago and Dallas.<lb/>
Smith's Greenville visit is being<lb/>
sponsored by the Clay Artists<lb/>
Guild of Ayden, N.C. His March<lb/>
30 lecture and slide presentation<lb/>
begins at 8 p.m. in Jenkins Fine<lb/>
Arts Auditorium. A reception will<lb/>
follow. The following day, Satur-<lb/>
day, March 31, Smith will give<lb/>
two demonstrations at the ECU<lb/>
Ceramics Department: a 10 a.m.<lb/>
decoration and glazing session,<lb/>
and a 2:30 p.m. raku firing and<lb/>
summation. The events are free<lb/>
and open to the public.<lb/>
Want to buy<lb/>
pot, cocaine?<lb/>
Call Havana;<lb/>
ask for Fidel<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Fntara E4M�r<lb/>
Last month, East Carolinian<lb/>
staff writer and fellow conser-<lb/>
vative Dennis Kilcoyne wrote a<lb/>
book review on Monimbo, the<lb/>
latest effort by Robert Moss and<lb/>
Arnaund de Borchgrave. The<lb/>
novel, based on real facts, people<lb/>
and events, is a thriller ihat details<lb/>
the Soviet plot to hasten the over-<lb/>
throw of the United States by or-<lb/>
chestrating most of the world's<lb/>
drug trade through client states<lb/>
Bulgaria and Cuba.<lb/>
Of course, our trendy liberal<lb/>
friends (the ones enamored of<lb/>
Gary Hart) laugh and snicker at<lb/>
such simplistic tales, just as they<lb/>
laugh when we suggest Moss and<lb/>
de Borchgrave's first novel, The<lb/>
Spike which details how the Soviet<lb/>
KGB manipulates the U.S. media<lb/>
through sympathetic front groups<lb/>
of the radical left, is also based on<lb/>
fact. There have been extensive<lb/>
articles on both topics, Com-<lb/>
munist involvement in media<lb/>
Conservative's<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
a view from the right.<lb/>
Time To Get Rid Of<lb/>
Winter's Stored-Up Fat<lb/>
Cherry Blossoms Mean Spring<lb/>
Each year the cherry trees in front of Austin and Rawl nut forth tkir<lb/>
blossoms, our first sign that spring is finally here.<lb/>
lovely<lb/>
Why<lb/>
By SHARON LEWIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Contrary to popular belief, spring is not<lb/>
characterized by the gopher, or whatever<lb/>
the little rodent is, finding his shadow on a<lb/>
sunny morning. The first certain sign of<lb/>
spring is a boost in the profits at the Dex-<lb/>
atrim Company.<lb/>
My eyes grew large and my mouth fell<lb/>
open as I stared blankly into the full-<lb/>
lenght mirror before me who on earth<lb/>
was this blubbery ghost?<lb/>
"Two-pieces are in this year, huh?" I<lb/>
said to the saleslady beside me.<lb/>
"Oh, yes! And that one is just your col-<lb/>
or she replied with a "you-sucker-you"<lb/>
look in her eyes. She must have meant<lb/>
literally because the suit was as white as a<lb/>
hospital sheet and did nothing for my<lb/>
figure.<lb/>
Once again, folks, it's here that<lb/>
dreaded (for some of us, anyway) time of<lb/>
year when we must, for comfort's sake,<lb/>
reveal the meat we've accumulated over<lb/>
the winter and ever-so-carefully hidden<lb/>
beneath our bulky sweaters. The standard<lb/>
questions always come to mind: Will my<lb/>
friends still want to be seen with me? Will<lb/>
strangers laugh at me? And if the answer<lb/>
to either of these questions is uncertain, we<lb/>
quickly pull on the faithful sweater until<lb/>
we're more comfortable with ourselves.<lb/>
Does anyone else feel a chill?<lb/>
"Sweatpants syndrome as I like to<lb/>
call it, is also spreading across campuses.<lb/>
Sweatpants can be a functional asset to<lb/>
one's wardrobe. They can serve many pur-<lb/>
poses: First and foremost, they hide the<lb/>
pork; second, they give the impression that<lb/>
you're at least attempting to get into shape<lb/>
(though people are catching on to this),<lb/>
and third, sweats come in handy when<lb/>
you've busted out the zipper in your last<lb/>
pair of jeans. Also, for those who are in<lb/>
shape, sweatpants can provide an excellent<lb/>
opportunity to display what you'd like (no<lb/>
underwear please!).<lb/>
But now spring is here, and as the days<lb/>
grow warmer our deceitful games can no<lb/>
longer be justified. It's time to face our<lb/>
alternatives.<lb/>
1. We can get as fat as a hog and not<lb/>
worry about it.<lb/>
2. We can go on a diet and excercise pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
3. We can be weird and wear sweatpants<lb/>
and sweaters.<lb/>
Having tried all three, I know the pros<lb/>
and cons of each. As for number one, guys<lb/>
won't break your heart because they won't<lb/>
have a thing to do with you. And if<lb/>
number three suits you (pun), then fear<lb/>
not. Girls won't have anything to do with<lb/>
you either. And to be crudely frank about<lb/>
number two, dieting sucks. Surely there<lb/>
must be an easier way to get the fat off.<lb/>
This is gross, I know, but when I was lit-<lb/>
tle well, younger I secretly wanted to<lb/>
get a tapeworm so I could eat all I wanted<lb/>
and still be thin. Then I found out that you<lb/>
can die from them. Oh, well. Plan B?<lb/>
They can make babies in a test tube.<lb/>
They can put men on the moon. Wouldn't<lb/>
you think they'd have invented an anti-fat<lb/>
pill by now? I found an advertisement in a<lb/>
magazine hawking an amazing new pill<lb/>
that would just "eat off" the fat. Stupidly<lb/>
enough, I ordered it. You know what it<lb/>
eats? Your stomach lining I threw up for<lb/>
a week!<lb/>
And I guess everyone has taken the stan-<lb/>
dard diet pill at some time. They do me ab-<lb/>
solutely no good. Maybe it's because I<lb/>
don't eat because I'm hungry. (I have no<lb/>
concept of hungry or full.) I eat simply to<lb/>
hear myself chomp.<lb/>
I Firmly believe in the importance of be-<lb/>
See TIME, Page 9<lb/>
By Gregory S. Hennemuth<lb/>
Staff WrMw<lb/>
The last time I tasted white<lb/>
store-bought "bread" I was<lb/>
amazed at how people can really<lb/>
pay good money for such a poor<lb/>
product. The low quality is<lb/>
understandable once you look at<lb/>
the ingredients. Most likely, the<lb/>
first four ingredients of your<lb/>
store-bought white bread are, in<lb/>
descending order, "enriched"<lb/>
ffour (bleached, highly<lb/>
processed), water, corn sweetner<lb/>
and lard. After these "principle"<lb/>
ingredients you will find yeast,<lb/>
salt and seven or more chemicals<lb/>
ranging from potassium bromate<lb/>
to calcium propionate. This is<lb/>
what some people � not I � call<lb/>
bread? I hardly believe these are<lb/>
the ingredients to produce "the<lb/>
staff of life<lb/>
Peppcridge Farm does make a<lb/>
Pretty good loaf of bread, but you<lb/>
pay 11,35 or more for their pro-<lb/>
Your Own Bread.<lb/>
duct. However, and this may be a<lb/>
new idea to many ECU students,<lb/>
why not make your own bread?<lb/>
For the price of a pretty good loaf<lb/>
of store-bought bread, you can by<lb/>
Five pounds of whold wheat bread<lb/>
flour. At Kroger and Food Lion,<lb/>
five pounds of whold wheat flour<lb/>
will cost approximately $1.15, and<lb/>
white, unbleached flour, will cost<lb/>
79 cents.<lb/>
Now, I don't want to calculate<lb/>
a cost benefit analysis for baking<lb/>
bread because many variables are<lb/>
involved: opportunity cost,<lb/>
energy cost, nutrition benefit, etc.<lb/>
It's probably cheaper dollar-wise<lb/>
to buy bread. The real reward of<lb/>
homemade bread is eating it and<lb/>
knowing you made it with your<lb/>
own two hands. I would like to<lb/>
clear up a couple of misconcep-<lb/>
tions about baking bread: It takes<lb/>
too much time, and it is hard to<lb/>
do. The bread-baking schedule<lb/>
See WHY, Pate 9<lb/>
the caeamkab. Try baking your own nutritions whole-wheat<lb/>
������liiMiBannnnannnnnnnBl<lb/>
manipulation and the drug trade,<lb/>
in Reader's Digest, but that silly<lb/>
little publication isn't<lb/>
sophisticated enough for liberals<lb/>
to bother picking up, riuch less<lb/>
reading. Our trendy liberal friends<lb/>
continue to believe Dennis and I<lb/>
are suffering from delusions of<lb/>
commie paranoia.<lb/>
My delusions were heightened<lb/>
considerably last week when<lb/>
NBC's Nightly News ga e details<lb/>
of the evening's top news story: A<lb/>
large force of Columbian govern-<lb/>
ment troops and police made the<lb/>
biggest drug bust in the history of<lb/>
the world. They fought a fierce<lb/>
battle with communist jiuerrillas<lb/>
in the jungle of Columbia and<lb/>
eventually siezed 13.8 tons of co-<lb/>
caine worth an estimated $1.2<lb/>
billion. As all TV new is, the<lb/>
report was superficial. I watched<lb/>
the same story a half-hour later on<lb/>
ABC's evening news. T ley also<lb/>
covered the drug bust bui: did not<lb/>
mention that communi.it guer-<lb/>
rillas were running the operation.<lb/>
Knowing all TV network news<lb/>
organizations take their cues from<lb/>
the New York Times and<lb/>
Washington Post, I weni to the<lb/>
Times for details.<lb/>
There was the story on page one<lb/>
(March 20): "biggest drug bust in<lb/>
history of the world About 40<lb/>
Columbian government troops<lb/>
had flown in to the jungle airstrip<lb/>
(It even had landing lights) and<lb/>
captured a huge cocaine process-<lb/>
ing plant. Then they fouglit off a<lb/>
fierce counterattack by an<lb/>
estimated 100 communis: guer-<lb/>
rillas. U.S. Ambassador to Col-<lb/>
umbia Lewis A. Tambs had ac-<lb/>
companied the government forces<lb/>
and verified the facts.<lb/>
According to Tambs, the secret<lb/>
complex consisted of 10 cocaine<lb/>
processing laboritories, a com-<lb/>
missary, housing, showers � a<lb/>
virtual community � on the<lb/>
banks of the Yari River in Ca-<lb/>
queta Province in the jungles of<lb/>
southern Columbia. What's<lb/>
more, the U.S. Drug Enforcement<lb/>
Administration estimates the total<lb/>
U.S. yearly consumption of co-<lb/>
caine to be about 50 tons; so the<lb/>
13.8-ton bust represents potential-<lb/>
ly a quarter of the entire U.S. co-<lb/>
caine consumption for the year.<lb/>
The bulk of the cocaine originated<lb/>
in Bolivia and Peru but wtis pro-<lb/>
cessed at the guerrilla complex in<lb/>
Columbia.<lb/>
According to Tambs, two guer-<lb/>
rilla groups, both factions of the<lb/>
Columbian Communist Party<lb/>
operate the drug trade: the Col-<lb/>
umbian Revolutionary Armed<lb/>
Forces and the April 19 Move-<lb/>
ment. A guerrilla defector ex-<lb/>
plained how the guerrillas run a<lb/>
Mafia-style drug system where<lb/>
they offer protection to growers in<lb/>
return for payment money a<lb/>
single group collets nearly $3 4<lb/>
million a month in this manner<lb/>
according to the defector.<lb/>
Several airplanes and helicon-<lb/>
tors were also confiscated atthe<lb/>
jungle complex. The Columbian<lb/>
government said they had strona<lb/>
evidence that the communn ts us-<lb/>
See CASTRO, Page t<lb/>
!i�wWta�i�n��'� n �m mtum �<lb/>
� n, fm<lb/>
�-� .<lb/>
�;��� fc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0008"/><lb/>
THEEASIRQHN1AN MARCH29. 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Delta Releases 'Disturbing The Peace<lb/>
Richard Vates is con<lb/>
tinually gaining recogni-<lb/>
tion as one of America's<lb/>
masterful contemporary<lb/>
novelists. His view of or-<lb/>
dinary people coping with<lb/>
the complexities of<lb/>
modern life has been hail<lb/>
ed as "built to last" rhe<lb/>
Chicago Tribune Book<lb/>
World) and "wonderfull)<lb/>
perceptive brilliantly<lb/>
written" (The Boston<lb/>
Globe).<lb/>
This May, Delta<lb/>
Books Se mou r<lb/>
I awerence will publish<lb/>
Richard Yates' long<lb/>
unavailable novel,<lb/>
Disturbing The Peace. It<lb/>
will join Revolutionary<lb/>
Road. liars In love,<lb/>
Eleven hinds of<lb/>
I onliness and The Faster<lb/>
Parade in the Richard<lb/>
Vates Delta<lb/>
Books Seymo u r<lb/>
1 awerence library.<lb/>
When originally<lb/>
published in 1975. Distur-<lb/>
bing The Peace was<lb/>
awarded a Literary<lb/>
Award b the American<lb/>
Academy of Arts and<lb/>
Letters, and was a Book<lb/>
of-the-Month Club Alter-<lb/>
nate Selection. The New<lb/>
York Times described<lb/>
Disturbing The Peace as<lb/>
"powerful a terribly<lb/>
human hue and cry and<lb/>
The Atlantic Monthly<lb/>
called it "realistic<lb/>
brilliantly rendered<lb/>
Vates novel is a<lb/>
psychological profile of<lb/>
John Wilder, a successful<lb/>
New York advertising<lb/>
salesman. Wilder has at-<lb/>
tained "the American<lb/>
dream he has an attrac-<lb/>
tive Manhattan apart-<lb/>
ment, a country home<lb/>
and a wife and son who<lb/>
care for him. But despite<lb/>
his obvious ac-<lb/>
complishments, Wilder<lb/>
discovers that his success<lb/>
is hollow, and he slowly<lb/>
embarks on a self-<lb/>
destructive downward<lb/>
spiral that finds him, at<lb/>
last, in a mental hospital.<lb/>
With family and friends<lb/>
unable to help him,<lb/>
Wilder begins the long<lb/>
journey on the road to<lb/>
recovery. His relapses<lb/>
and tentative victories are<lb/>
portrayed from his<lb/>
perspective with "deadly<lb/>
precision" (Publishers<lb/>
Weekly).<lb/>
Disturbing The Peace<lb/>
is an extraordinary ac-<lb/>
complishment � the<lb/>
story of Richard Wilder<lb/>
demonstrates the<lb/>
frightening consequences<lb/>
of insecurity. Richard<lb/>
Yates captures the pain,<lb/>
clarity and uncertainty of<lb/>
one man's steady loss of<lb/>
control in today's<lb/>
modern world.<lb/>
 � <lb/>
In addition to his<lb/>
novels in the<lb/>
DeltaSeymour<lb/>
Lawerence collection,<lb/>
Richard Yates is also the<lb/>
author of A Good School<lb/>
(which will be released in<lb/>
a Delta edition this fall to<lb/>
coincide with the publica-<lb/>
tion of Mr. Yates' newest<lb/>
novel, Young Hearts Cry-<lb/>
ing). His awards include a<lb/>
National Institute of Arts<lb/>
and Letters grant as well<lb/>
as a Guggenheim<lb/>
fellowship.<lb/>
Castro<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
ed the aircraft to feriy 'ho<lb/>
processed cocaine to<lb/>
Cuba where it is traded<lb/>
tor guns. The planes then<lb/>
fly the guns back to the<lb/>
Columbian communists<lb/>
who are beginning a<lb/>
Marxist revolution<lb/>
similar to the one in El<lb/>
Salvador. According to<lb/>
the New York Times arti-<lb/>
cle. "I eftist geurillas and<lb/>
drug traffickers were<lb/>
working together in a<lb/>
Jrugs-for-guns deal that<lb/>
'hreatened Columbia's<lb/>
democracy Tamhs<lb/>
stated the operation had<lb/>
been m existence for a!<lb/>
least two and mavbe three<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
I was curious wh ABv<lb/>
News, in their broadcast,<lb/>
did not mention the com<lb/>
n:anis( guerrillas at ali<lb/>
But the major media hai<lb/>
been consistently guilt<lb/>
not exposing Cuban<lb/>
ar.d Soiet subversive ac-<lb/>
tions agains the U.S. �<lb/>
een when the evidence<lb/>
has been blatantly as-<lb/>
tound i<lb/>
For example. Colonel<lb/>
Stefan Serdle. one of<lb/>
Dope<lb/>
the most important oi-<lb/>
ficials ever to defect from<lb/>
the Soviet block, worked<lb/>
with the Bulgarian Com-<lb/>
mittee for State Security<lb/>
(KDS). a sister organiza-<lb/>
tion of the Soviet KGB.<lb/>
He brought with him 500<lb/>
sensitive KDS<lb/>
documents, one concern-<lb/>
ing the subject of<lb/>
destabilizing Western<lb/>
society through, among<lb/>
other tools, the narcotics<lb/>
trade. There is presently<lb/>
overwhelming evidence<lb/>
that Bulgaria is the<lb/>
Soviet's central conduit<lb/>
for drugs and weapons<lb/>
deals. Reader's Digest<lb/>
editor Nathan M. Adams<lb/>
in his Nov. 'S3 article<lb/>
details how drugs from<lb/>
the Middle and Far East<lb/>
are exchanged in com-<lb/>
munist Bulgaria to pur-<lb/>
chase guns for guerrilla<lb/>
and terrorist groups<lb/>
around the world through<lb/>
the Bulgarian state trade<lb/>
enterprise known as<lb/>
klNTEX. The media has<lb/>
ignored this evidence.<lb/>
Closer to home. Cuba<lb/>
operates as the hub for<lb/>
drug trading in the<lb/>
Western hemisphere. The<lb/>
press has also ignored<lb/>
this. The Febuarary issue<lb/>
of Conservative Digest<lb/>
pointed out that little was<lb/>
reported in the press<lb/>
"about testimony before<lb/>
a Miami grand jury by a<lb/>
confessed Cuban spy,<lb/>
Mario Estevez Gonzalez,<lb/>
on drug-running between<lb/>
Havanna and the U.S.<lb/>
Later it was retold to a<lb/>
Senate hearing chaired by<lb/>
Senator Paul Hawkins by<lb/>
Estevez himself � again<lb/>
receiving no nationwide<lb/>
press coverage.<lb/>
Here is what Estevez<lb/>
told the grand jury and<lb/>
the Senate panel:<lb/>
After receiving inten-<lb/>
sive training in espionage<lb/>
in Cuba, he was smuggled<lb/>
into the U.S. as part of<lb/>
the Mariel boatlift in<lb/>
1980. Among the 125,000<lb/>
Cuban refugees in that<lb/>
immense migration,<lb/>
Estevez said. Castro's in-<lb/>
telligence agency, the<lb/>
DG1, selected not only an<lb/>
estimated 5,000 to 8000<lb/>
hardened criminals but<lb/>
also between 300 and 400<lb/>
secret agents Estevez<lb/>
421 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Phone 756-0825<lb/>
2 For 1<lb/>
Special<lb/>
(Pizza Only)<lb/>
Offer Good Thru '�. � I W<lb/>
No Good With Any Other Speoais<lb/>
Buy One Pizza at Regular Price<lb/>
nd Get Another of Same Va.ue<lb/>
Or Leas 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 -<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<lb/>
specials)<lb/>
EXPIRES APRIL 30. 19H4<lb/>
5-9 PM<lb/>
jThurs.&amp; Fri.<lb/>
r.<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-ifem Soup n Salad Bar. $549<lb/>
went on to say he had<lb/>
received specific instruc-<lb/>
tions from the highest-<lb/>
ranking Cuban<lb/>
authorities "that it was<lb/>
important to fill the U.S.<lb/>
with drugs<lb/>
State Department<lb/>
Deputy Secretary James<lb/>
Michel told a Miami drug<lb/>
caucus hearing in May<lb/>
1983 that Fidel Castro in<lb/>
early 1979 considered a<lb/>
scheme "to begin dealing<lb/>
with narcotics smugglers,<lb/>
using Cuba as a bridge<lb/>
and support base for the<lb/>
networks to the U.S. and<lb/>
as a means to aid Cuba<lb/>
economically and to con-<lb/>
tribute to the deteriora-<lb/>
tion of American<lb/>
society<lb/>
Estevez said the huge<lb/>
profits from the Cuban<lb/>
drug trade were used to<lb/>
finance and arm terrorists<lb/>
operating in Central<lb/>
America and Columbia.<lb/>
Michel has testified that<lb/>
there is also strong<lb/>
evidence the Nicaraguan<lb/>
Sandinistas partially<lb/>
financed their successful<lb/>
revolution through drug<lb/>
trafficking and are still<lb/>
doing so.<lb/>
All this information<lb/>
has been available but ig-<lb/>
nored by the major print<lb/>
and broadcast media.<lb/>
Thus the trendy liberals<lb/>
snicker and scoff at the<lb/>
idea of a "communist<lb/>
threat "How absurd<lb/>
they laugh. But when<lb/>
communist guerrilla<lb/>
groups are making the<lb/>
munist threat" like Uncle<lb/>
Ronnie and Uncle Jesse<lb/>
tell us there is. I know it<lb/>
flys in the face of radical<lb/>
chic, but the man selling<lb/>
them their coke just may<lb/>
be a commie.<lb/>
Is Your Car Ready For That Trip To<lb/>
The Beach?<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
R�tr�ad Tlr�s<lb/>
$7.00 Up<lb/>
evening TV news and the Considering all the name<lb/>
front page of the New changes, birth date<lb/>
York Times with their changes, signature<lb/>
massive narcotics deal- changes and his get-the-<lb/>
ings, when the evidence is U.Sout-of-Central-<lb/>
so overwhelming, maybe America-because-the-<lb/>
even trendy liberals (the Cubans-are-reallv-prettv-<lb/>
kind enamored of Gary good-people foreign<lb/>
Hart) will have to pull policy, I almost wonder if<lb/>
their heads out of the Gary Hart didn't come to<lb/>
sand and admit that yes, the U.S. on the Mariel<lb/>
there just may be a "com- boatlift.<lb/>
Hereos &amp; Villans Deli Restaurant<lb/>
Full &amp; Part-time Help, profit sharing. hospitali.ation. -ppl u<lb/>
person 9-5 dailv. Mile post 9 2. Highwa I 58 By-pass Kill<lb/>
Delvil Hill, NC or Apply at F. Rav Moore Oil Co. 1 fighwa<lb/>
264 XVst Washington. NC 8-5.<lb/>
J5ERVICJE<lb/>
coupo�<lb/>
Complete 5 Point<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
so Check<lb/>
cou-<lb/>
CAR SHAKES? I<lb/>
WE ELIMINATE<lb/>
$14.88<lb/>
For<lb/>
F.LTEa-LUBE<lb/>
AlignmentJU<lb/>
OfflCIAl NDRIH CAROLINA S1AU INSPlCllON SIAI<lb/>
WE SERVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
�FGoodrich<lb/>
TIRE CENTER<lb/>
' A1�I,�.U<lb/>
4-Cylinder<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
6 and 8 cylinder<lb/>
.lightly higher<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
� 00 A M 1:00P M<lb/>
OPENMON FRI<lb/>
I 00 A.M. ' 10 PM<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
� '�Gree svtlle Blvd.<lb/>
7M-3023 �24HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
?4 hour Towing Service<lb/>
jU-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
' 'Consider us your cars '<lb/>
I Home Away From Home w<lb/>
Cog gins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
3 20 West Greenville Blvd<lb/>
�???????�????�??���;<lb/>
m? fever I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
.�.�.<lb/>
MNMMMMMIMfimM<lb/>
Why B<lb/>
Continued r-mm Paie "<lb/>
that follows will not<lb/>
much time to prepare,<lb/>
and it is ea<lb/>
For those of you <lb/>
have done little oo<lb/>
the initial overhead<lb/>
buying supplies ma seem<lb/>
expensive Remen<lb/>
that the benefits w<lb/>
be realized. To succec<lb/>
this recipe you will net<lb/>
large mixing bowl (se<lb/>
quart size), tw<lb/>
sheets measuring<lb/>
long-handle woo<lb/>
plastic spoon ai<lb/>
dy, flat surl 1<lb/>
bread. Firs! the<lb/>
dients The Irm<lb/>
Cooks C3ordon,<lb/>
1. 1 cup oatn<lb/>
cup oatmeai and<lb/>
cracked whea-<lb/>
2. 1 tablespo<lb/>
is an opt<lb/>
enhancer)<lb/>
3. 1 tabiesp<lb/>
Pkg)<lb/>
4,<lb/>
molasses<lb/>
5 iil.<lb/>
6. 1 cup c<lb/>
reduce cost<lb/>
Time To Peel<lb/>
Winter's Sto<lb/>
Continued From P�j<lb/>
ing organized<lb/>
dieting situati<lb/>
a stan<lb/>
dard time I<lb/>
I stick to it religi<lb/>
it's always tomorr<lb/>
But this time i<lb/>
going to do it. It's<lb/>
and time has come<lb/>
ing these gam<lb/>
And what better<lb/>
than Marc I<lb/>
American Die<lb/>
Associatio:<lb/>
"National Nut<lb/>
From<lb/>
lau<lb/>
be<lb/>
SAT-SUN<lb/>
3:05-5:10-7:1 j � <lb/>
V.V.V.V.V.V.W.V.V.VV.V<lb/>
'  �.�.�.�-�.�fV3 f ��-�.�.�<lb/>
SAT-SIN<lb/>
. "S.V<lb/>
� AJUUUAI3PCCP0CCO3<lb/>
ililil<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
6<lb/>
w<lb/>
St!<lb/>
AW<lb/>
BURG!<lb/>
USUALLY<lb/>
BREAKF<lb/>
AFT<lb/>
SUBW<lb/>
ST<lb/>
m<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
� � �. ���v.v:�:�x?:<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0009"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL1NMANmaRCH 29. 1984 9<lb/>
rolinian Staff<lb/>
 1 o X isfi<lb/>
ietrzak<lb/>
i .<lb/>
h or Thar Trip To ?<lb/>
The Beach?<lb/>
rEa-LUBE<lb/>
14.88 -<lb/>
29.95 size<lb/>
3Dle<lb/>
SMTI INSPCCriONSTAriLh<lb/>
nl I NTS<lb/>
SATORDAY<lb/>
I 00 A M ' KPW<lb/>
DPENMOM PR<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Var Care<lb/>
y2?ZBuy? Bake Your Own Home Bread,<lb/>
 water and '�: cup milk)  m wW I<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
that follows will not take<lb/>
much time to prepare,<lb/>
and it is easy.<lb/>
For those of you who<lb/>
have done little cooking,<lb/>
the initial overhead of<lb/>
buying supplies may seem<lb/>
expensive. Remember<lb/>
that the benefits will soon<lb/>
be realized. To succeed at<lb/>
this recipe you will need a<lb/>
large mixing bowl (seven-<lb/>
quart size), two cookie<lb/>
sheets, measuring cups, a<lb/>
long-handle wooden or<lb/>
plastic spoon and a stur-<lb/>
dy, flat surface to knead<lb/>
bread. First the ingre-<lb/>
dients The lrregardless<lb/>
Cooks, Gordon, 1982.):<lb/>
1. 1 cup oatmeal or <lb/>
cup oatmeaJ and '2 cup<lb/>
cracked wheat or bran.<lb/>
2. 1 tablespoon salt (this<lb/>
is an optional flavor<lb/>
enhancer).<lb/>
3. 1 tablespoon veast (1<lb/>
pkg).<lb/>
4. Vx cup honey or<lb/>
molasses.<lb/>
5. X cup oil.<lb/>
6. 1 cup cold milk (to<lb/>
reduce cost, use Vi cup<lb/>
water and ' 2 cup milk)<lb/>
7. 1 cup unbleached white<lb/>
flour.<lb/>
8. 5 cups whole wheat<lb/>
flour.<lb/>
9. Vi cup ground raisins<lb/>
(optional flavor<lb/>
enhancer).<lb/>
10. Vi cup ground<lb/>
sunflower seeds (optional<lb/>
protein booster).<lb/>
11. corn meal.<lb/>
Now the schedule: A<lb/>
good time to plan on bak-<lb/>
ing bread is on the<lb/>
weekend or after work or<lb/>
classes when you get<lb/>
home. Plan on staving<lb/>
home for two-and-a-half<lb/>
hours.<lb/>
When you come back<lb/>
from classes or whatever,<lb/>
you usually kick back<lb/>
veg out, go running, or<lb/>
go biking to wind down<lb/>
right? Well before you do<lb/>
your relaxation ritual, set<lb/>
aside 30 minutes and run<lb/>
to the kitchen, pull out a<lb/>
saucepan and add 1 Vi<lb/>
cups of water and 1 teas-<lb/>
poon of salt. Bring the<lb/>
water to a boil; then add<lb/>
the oatmeal or oatmeal<lb/>
and cracked wheat. Off<lb/>
the heat, let this pan sit<lb/>
for 10 minutes. Mean-<lb/>
while, pour the package<lb/>
of yeast into a bowl with<lb/>
V2 cup of warm water;<lb/>
hot water will kill the<lb/>
yeast, and your bread<lb/>
won't rise; so make sure<lb/>
it is luke warm. After the<lb/>
yeast is dissolved stir it<lb/>
up. Ten minutes have<lb/>
passed, and now combine<lb/>
the oatmeal mixture,<lb/>
honey or malasses, oil<lb/>
and cold milk in the large<lb/>
mixing bowl. Mix this<lb/>
thoroughly for 30<lb/>
seconds, stirring with<lb/>
your long-handle spoon.<lb/>
Pour in the yeast mixture,<lb/>
and then stir in the white<lb/>
flour and beat vigorously<lb/>
for three minutes. Add all<lb/>
at once the five cups of<lb/>
whole wheat flour and<lb/>
amalgamate until it is<lb/>
unstirable and non-<lb/>
sticky<lb/>
The next procedure,<lb/>
kneading the dough, is<lb/>
not complicated and can<lb/>
be a very relaxing ex-<lb/>
perience. Now ladies and<lb/>
gents, let your imagina-<lb/>
tion run wild! Dump the<lb/>
dough on your flat<lb/>
kneading surface sprinkl-<lb/>
ed with flour, and<lb/>
sprinkle more flour on<lb/>
top of the dough. Begin<lb/>
kneading by pushing your<lb/>
palms down on the<lb/>
dough, fold over, push<lb/>
down again, turn dough<lb/>
over repeat. If you had<lb/>
a bad day, karate chop,<lb/>
punch or spank the<lb/>
dough. The main thing is<lb/>
to work the flour into the<lb/>
dough until it is a com-<lb/>
pact, elastic and smooth<lb/>
mass. Keep adding flour<lb/>
as needed to prevent the<lb/>
dough from sticking to<lb/>
the counter or your<lb/>
hands. This will take ap-<lb/>
proxiamtely 5-7 minutes<lb/>
Place the dough in a<lb/>
large, well-oiled mixing<lb/>
bowl, (I only have one<lb/>
large mixing bowl, so I let<lb/>
it soak while I'm<lb/>
kneading for easy clean-<lb/>
ing) and turn it over a<lb/>
couple of times. Cover<lb/>
the bowl with a small<lb/>
towel and set in a warm<lb/>
place to rise for one hour.<lb/>
This may seem like a<lb/>
time-consuming process,<lb/>
but once you get the hang<lb/>
of it, believe me, this part<lb/>
takes about 30 minutes.<lb/>
While your bread is ris-<lb/>
ing, go for your run or<lb/>
just veg out � it's called<lb/>
time management. It does<lb/>
not matter if you let it rise <lb/>
a little over an hour.<lb/>
When you come back<lb/>
to your pride and joy,<lb/>
punch down the dough<lb/>
and slap it on a clean, flat<lb/>
surface. Sprinkle corn on<lb/>
the cookie sheets. Pull off<lb/>
small handfulls of dough<lb/>
and roll on the counter-<lb/>
top into a ball-shaped<lb/>
roll. If they are sticking<lb/>
to your hands, rub your<lb/>
hands with oil (next time<lb/>
add more flour to your<lb/>
dough). Put all the rolls<lb/>
two inches apart from<lb/>
one another and not too<lb/>
close to the sides of the<lb/>
cookie sheets. If they are<lb/>
sticky, rub the tops with<lb/>
oil. Cover with towels<lb/>
and let rise for 30 minutes<lb/>
m a warm place (warm<lb/>
oven). Use this time to<lb/>
veg out or to take a<lb/>
shower. Don't bang the<lb/>
rolls at this time, and<lb/>
when you come back,<lb/>
preheat the oven to 425<lb/>
degrees � make sure you<lb/>
have taken out the rolls<lb/>
first! Bake for 20-30<lb/>
minutes until golden<lb/>
brown. Cool on racks.<lb/>
Right out of the oven<lb/>
they are delicious with<lb/>
butter or just plain.<lb/>
Freeze the ones you won't<lb/>
eat for a few days to keep<lb/>
them fresh. Try steaming<lb/>
the rolls for dinner; I like<lb/>
them best this way! Good<lb/>
luck, and from now on,<lb/>
don't waste your money<lb/>
on processed flour, lard<lb/>
and worthless chemicals.<lb/>
Time To Peel Off<lb/>
Winter's Stored Fat<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
mg organized in any<lb/>
dieting situation. I've set<lb/>
a stan<lb/>
dard time for dieting, and<lb/>
I stick to it religiously<lb/>
it's always tomorrow<lb/>
But this time I'm reallv<lb/>
going to do it. It's spring,<lb/>
and time has come to br-<lb/>
ing these games to a halt.<lb/>
And what better time<lb/>
than March. It's the<lb/>
American Dietetic<lb/>
Association's 12th annual<lb/>
"National Nutrition<lb/>
Time This year's theme<lb/>
is, "Everyone wins with<lb/>
good nutrition Maybe<lb/>
I'll go on a diet with low-<lb/>
calorie balanced meals �<lb/>
the four food groups<lb/>
even. Wouldn't it be a<lb/>
scream if I became a<lb/>
health nut� That would<lb/>
beat drugs and worms.<lb/>
And small balanced<lb/>
meals are supposed to be<lb/>
the best way to lose<lb/>
weight.<lb/>
It's spring, and two-<lb/>
piece bathing suits are in<lb/>
this year vou know.<lb/>
LADIES<lb/>
'THE ULTIMATE FANTASY<lb/>
HAS ARRIVED<lb/>
To give you the Best<lb/>
LADIES NIGHTOUT<lb/>
Tho ou have ever experienced<lb/>
The Ultimate Fantasy show presents<lb/>
6 of the Top Male Exotic Dancers<lb/>
from across the US A<lb/>
in a High Powered Show<lb/>
that s guaranteed to please'<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
THE HOLLYWOOD SWINGER<lb/>
rn TNT .ace<lb/>
. �� DALIAN STALLION<lb/>
AND Special Guest From the<lb/>
Peter Adonis Show<lb/>
LORD JIM<lb/>
SO LADIES LET YOUR<lb/>
"ULTIMATE FANTASY-<lb/>
COME TRUE'<lb/>
Ladies The Ultimate Fantasy<lb/>
will be coming to the<lb/>
Where's the beef?<lb/>
Tuesday April 3. 1 984 Lad.es Lockout til 1 O OO ,<lb/>
Adm.ss.on $3 50 Doors Open at 7 00 P<lb/>
Show Starts at 7:30<lb/>
Don t Miss Our Special Ladies Nite<lb/>
JUST FOR YOU'<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
BARGAIN MATINEE $2.25 SAT-SUN TIL 6PM<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST CENTER<lb/>
756 1449<lb/>
SAT-SUN<lb/>
From the first<lb/>
laugh, you'll<lb/>
be hooked!<lb/>
nn<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
TJk<lb/>
� INlllIO-7:l 5'9:7n 7i,l ESI1Z�3� 2jj l��:S<lb/>
?What an<lb/>
Institution!<lb/>
o LH<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of thM advartiMd items .1 ra<lb/>
qu.ratj to 0 raadily available for<lb/>
saia m MCh Krogt Savon aicapt<lb/>
m apaciticaiiv notad m thia ad H �<lb/>
do run out of n ,t�m � will off�r<lb/>
you your cho.c of a comparabta<lb/>
�t�m when available, reflecting the<lb/>
sam� uvmgi o, a ramcheck wh.ch<lb/>
will entitle you to purchaee the<lb/>
�Overused item at the advertised<lb/>
once within 30 days<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
April 7 1984<lb/>
11 :<lb/>
Ks<lb/>
THIS IS THE STORY<lb/>
OF A SMALL<lb/>
TOWN THAT LOST<lb/>
ITS DREAMS<lb/>
SAT-SUN<lb/>
Vjo&amp;L-<lb/>
Weekdavs<lb/>
Against all<lb/>
odds<lb/>
RACHEL<lb/>
WARD<lb/>
JEFF<lb/>
BRIDGES<lb/>
SAT-SUN<lb/>
�c<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
�Fbpen Mon. thru Sat. 8am to Midnight - Sun. 9 am to 9 <lb/>
- 600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
�w�<lb/>
Weekdays<lb/>
3:25-5:25-7:25-9:25 7:25-9:25 I 2:30-4:45-7:00-9:1 5 7:00-9:1 5<lb/>
M<lb/>
?�:<lb/>
. �&amp;<lb/>
ro food<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
8<lb/>
f<lb/>
A WARMED OVER<lb/>
BURGER TYPE FOOD<lb/>
USUALLY COOKED BEFORE<lb/>
BREAKFAST AND SERVED<lb/>
AFTER LUNCH. LET<lb/>
SUBWAY CURE YOUR<lb/>
STYRO BLUES.<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
sandwich<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
RIPE<lb/>
Sweet<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
!137<lb/>
ot<lb/>
r-i<lb/>
.�. � eX�,<lb/>
.vee<lb/>
KROGER 2<lb/>
Lowfat<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
jug<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
MMRMRWiojggg<lb/>
I<lb/>
 �<lb/>
(T<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
7V� 02-<lb/>
BOX<lb/>
TAKE N BAKE<lb/>
PEPPERONI, MUSHROOM<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
26<lb/>
�<lb/>
DIET PEPSI, PEPSI FREE<lb/>
DIET PEPSI FREE OR '<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
$119<lb/>
ANHEUSER BUSH<lb/>
Natural<lb/>
Light<lb/>
$439<lb/>
2 Ltr �<lb/>
N.R. "<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
12<lb/>
12 02<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
L<lb/>
U.S.D.A. conjNSPfD<lb/>
OUALITY CONTROLLED<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
LAMBRUSCO. BlANO<lb/>
OR<lb/>
ROSATO<lb/>
CeHa<lb/>
Wines<lb/>
$6S9<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
MMffMMlfS<lb/>
�<lb/>
fc.<lb/>
 ; fc<lb/>
,  . . .<lb/>
 '�<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
�JHEEAST CAROL IN I AN MARCH 29, 1984<lb/>
FHfc EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
Sfiorts<lb/>
HR's.Hurler<lb/>
Pace Pirates<lb/>
Bucs Beat 4th-Ranked Heels<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
Sportj F.dltof<lb/>
How does it feel to beat<lb/>
Carolina?<lb/>
"Feels great said ECU's win-<lb/>
ning pitcher Jim Peterson.<lb/>
"I'd be lying if I said it wasn't<lb/>
nice said ECU coach Hal Baird.<lb/>
In fact, it was so nice ECU's<lb/>
Winfred Johnson shook his fist as<lb/>
he rounded first base following<lb/>
his sixth inning home run that<lb/>
gave ECU a 4-2 lead � a lead thev<lb/>
kept until the final out when<lb/>
shortstop Greg Hardison received<lb/>
a toss from second baseman Steve<lb/>
Sides and stepped on second.<lb/>
"We've been telling our kids all<lb/>
along we can beat the best<lb/>
teams said Baird, whose club<lb/>
had just defeated the fourth-<lb/>
ranked Tar Heels.<lb/>
The Pirates ended up winning<lb/>
by a 6-4 margin, but anyone leav-<lb/>
ing after the first inning would<lb/>
have thought differently.<lb/>
ECU looked nervous in the<lb/>
opening frame. UNC's Walt<lb/>
Weiss singled, moved to second<lb/>
on a passed ball then took third<lb/>
on a ground out. He then came<lb/>
home when catcher Jim Riley<lb/>
mishandled a Peterson curve ball,<lb/>
and the Tar Heels quickly held a<lb/>
1-0 advantage.<lb/>
Scott Johnson followed with a<lb/>
line drive home run over the right<lb/>
field fence, and it looked as<lb/>
though the Tar Heels were going<lb/>
to repeat last year's 9-1 trouncing.<lb/>
But Peterson (5-0) kept the<lb/>
Pirates in the game, giving up on-<lb/>
ly three hits and no runs over the<lb/>
next five innings in stifling the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
It looked as though Peterson's<lb/>
effort would be wasted, however,<lb/>
as the Pirates were unable to get a<lb/>
hit off of UNC's Mike Bryant,<lb/>
who shut down the Pirates<lb/>
through the fourth inning.<lb/>
The fifth inning was a different<lb/>
story for the Pirates, as junior<lb/>
centerfielder Mark Shank ignited<lb/>
ECU with a two-run homer. Sud-<lb/>
denly, the score was tied 2-2, and<lb/>
the Shank's blast would become<lb/>
contagious later in the contest.<lb/>
Clutch fielding by the Pirates<lb/>
kept the score tied in the top of<lb/>
the sixth. After Jeff Hubbard flew<lb/>
out to Hardison, Scott Johnson<lb/>
and Todd Wilkinson followed<lb/>
with singles. Baird came out to the<lb/>
mound to talk to Peterson, and<lb/>
the next batter. Matt Merullo,<lb/>
grounded to Sides, who flipped to<lb/>
Hardison, who gunned the ball to<lb/>
first for the inning-ending double<lb/>
play.<lb/>
In the bottom half of the inn-<lb/>
ing, the Pirates looked as if they<lb/>
were going to blow the game<lb/>
open. Sides led off with a walk<lb/>
and moved to second on perfect<lb/>
sacrifice bunt by Hardison. Sides<lb/>
then moved to third on a groun-<lb/>
dout, and the righthanded-hitting<lb/>
Johnson sent his homer over the<lb/>
opposite field fence to give the<lb/>
Pirates a 4-2 lead.<lb/>
UNC narrowed the lead to 4-3<lb/>
on a Devy Bell solo homer in the<lb/>
seventh, but Hardison smashed<lb/>
ECU's third two-run home run of<lb/>
the day in the bottom half of the<lb/>
inning to give the Pirates a 6-3<lb/>
lead going into the final two<lb/>
frames.<lb/>
In the eighth. UNC's Walt<lb/>
Weiss led off with a double down<lb/>
the right field line and scored<lb/>
following two consecutive<lb/>
sacrifice flies. Third baseman<lb/>
David Wells took the pressure off<lb/>
Peterson, however, making a nice<lb/>
fielding play on a hard hit ball to<lb/>
his left to end the inning.<lb/>
The Tar Heels threatened again<lb/>
in the ninth inning with one out,<lb/>
as Peterson walked Mike Jedzinak<lb/>
and gave up a single to Bell. Peter-<lb/>
son got the next hitter to ground<lb/>
to short, but the Pirates couldn't<lb/>
turn the double play and runners<lb/>
were left on first and third with<lb/>
two outs.<lb/>
It was then that Baird came to<lb/>
the mound to talk to Peterson,<lb/>
who was about to face the left-<lb/>
handed hitting B.J. Surhoff.<lb/>
Baird let Peterson pitch to<lb/>
Surhoff, who had gone hitless in<lb/>
three previous trips to the plate<lb/>
against the ECU pitcher. Peterson<lb/>
didn't let Baird down, as Surhoff<lb/>
grounded out to end the game.<lb/>
"The kid (Peterson) had pitch-<lb/>
ed so well said Baird, when ask-<lb/>
ed why he didn't play the percen-<lb/>
tages and bring in a lefthander to<lb/>
face Surhoff. "He had done well<lb/>
before against Surhoff and he had<lb/>
thrown only 80 pitches up until<lb/>
the final inning.<lb/>
"He did a great job. He battled<lb/>
back and kept the ball in the<lb/>
ballpark<lb/>
For Peterson, the strategv was<lb/>
to get the ball over the plate. "We<lb/>
have a good defensive team he<lb/>
said. "I threw strikes and let them<lb/>
play<lb/>
The Pirates will take a 16-5<lb/>
record into this weekend's impor-<lb/>
tant conference games against<lb/>
William and Mary and James<lb/>
Madison. The team plays the In-<lb/>
dians at Williamsburg but returns<lb/>
home Sunday to play the Dukes at<lb/>
2 p.m.<lb/>
Mark Shank rips an 0-2 pitch over the right field fence<lb/>
t<lb/>
 5 �m p<lb/>
Mike SnMrvaa awaits the alga five' cereaoaJei.<lb/>
How sweet it is<lb/>
Will Need Quarterback to Get Ball To Hnnri Kerr<lb/>
Photos by GARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
� ECU 4, UNC 2<lb/>
By DON GROSS<lb/>
Sl.ff Writer<lb/>
such notables as Terry Long,<lb/>
Kevin Ingram, Norwood Vann<lb/>
The Pirate football team is Clint Harris and Ernest Byner<lb/>
coming off one of its finest years Four more players have been lost<lb/>
ever, having sported an 8-3 record through academic deficiencies<lb/>
and been ranked 20th in the coun- "We are very, very young in<lb/>
try by the Associated Press. most areas comments Emory<lb/>
days into spring "You just don't lose that many<lb/>
Emory: 'We Want To Win In '84'<lb/>
es as Trrv I nnr, 1�. .j " �<lb/>
training, there are many question<lb/>
marks concerning the team.<lb/>
Twenty-six players from last<lb/>
year's squad have been lost<lb/>
players and not bleed internally.<lb/>
One of the biggest problems<lb/>
facing the team will be filling the<lb/>
quarterback slot. Ingram and<lb/>
through graduation, including back up John Williams were both<lb/>
lost to graduation. "If we can get<lb/>
one of our present quarterbacks<lb/>
to emerge says Emory, " it will<lb/>
mean a lot to the success of our<lb/>
offense because we have one of<lb/>
the best receiving corps in the na-<lb/>
tion. But, you've got to get the<lb/>
ball to them<lb/>
Henry Williams, Ricky Nichols,<lb/>
Stefon Adams, Amos Adams and<lb/>
Damon Pope are the receivers<lb/>
Emory speaks so highly of. "I<lb/>
would put them up against<lb/>
anybody he boasts.<lb/>
Emory plans on running<lb/>
basically the same offense as last<lb/>
year � the Option-I.<lb/>
The defensive squad was the<lb/>
most hard-hit by the graduations.<lb/>
The line lost four ends, three<lb/>
tackles and last year's starting<lb/>
noseguard. There are nothing but<lb/>
rookies to fill the vacated posi-<lb/>
tions. "We look like a nursery<lb/>
school out there admits Emory,<lb/>
"We're that young<lb/>
The linebacking corps and<lb/>
secondary have been plagued with<lb/>
injuries, but Emory thinks the<lb/>
talent is there for a strong<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
Surprisingly, this year's team is<lb/>
physically stronger in the weight<lb/>
room than last year's. "We've<lb/>
had many injuries, but the team<lb/>
has shown great intensitv in the<lb/>
first week of practice adds<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
The Pirates have had a great<lb/>
year recruiting-wise, but Emory is<lb/>
quick to caution that a team can't<lb/>
rely right away on recruits to<lb/>
come in and fill starting positions.<lb/>
Emory is sure that this te im has<lb/>
the potential to become a major<lb/>
power in the future, and he says<lb/>
with a confident look in his eye<lb/>
"We want to win in '84<lb/>
Somehow, you've ,ust got to<lb/>
believe him.<lb/>
EC Weakness Is Inexperience<lb/>
The Key Question:<lb/>
�Ar FATTBMION - 8CU MM, <lb/>
Can the Pirates fill this man's shoes?<lb/>
<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
AMtataal Sports MJlor<lb/>
The ECU women's softball<lb/>
team made the transition from<lb/>
slow to fast-pitch this year, and<lb/>
Pirate head coach Sue Manahan<lb/>
said she is pleased with what she<lb/>
has seen of her team thus far.<lb/>
"The team as a whole was very<lb/>
eager at the outset of the season to<lb/>
learn fast-pitch Manahan said.<lb/>
"A lot of the players had never<lb/>
even played fast-pitch before (the<lb/>
North Carolina high schools sanc-<lb/>
tion slow-pitch), but they didn't<lb/>
let it bother them and that made<lb/>
the transition a lot easier<lb/>
Manahan said a lot of the<lb/>
younger players were in awe after<lb/>
the Pirates' season-opening loss at<lb/>
nationally-ranked South<lb/>
Carolina, but quickly added,<lb/>
"Once they realized they were<lb/>
capable of competing with<lb/>
anybody on our schedule, there<lb/>
wasn't that much pressure<lb/>
When the Association of Inter-<lb/>
collegiate Athletics For Women<lb/>
closed down its operations, ECU<lb/>
entered fast pitch. The NCAA<lb/>
was the only conference left which<lb/>
offered a post-season tourna-<lb/>
ment, and it only sanctioned fast-<lb/>
pitch.<lb/>
The Pirates entered the NCAA<lb/>
last year, and currently stand at<lb/>
9-5 on the season. Although they<lb/>
are having a successful year,<lb/>
Manahan doubts her team will<lb/>
recieve a bid into post-season<lb/>
play.<lb/>
The NCAA has a committee<lb/>
which selects several participants<lb/>
out of each region based on their<lb/>
record and level of competition,<lb/>
and Manahan said the Pirates are<lb/>
in an extremely tough region that<lb/>
stretches all the way from Virginia<lb/>
to Florida.<lb/>
"We're playing top teams such<lb/>
as Florida State, South Carolina,<lb/>
Penn State and George Mason,<lb/>
but we're not playing enough of<lb/>
these teams to be considered by<lb/>
the selection committee she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Although the chances of ECU<lb/>
making it to the NCAA tourney<lb/>
are slim, Manahan said she has<lb/>
been satisfied from what she's<lb/>
seen out of her team. "We've im<lb/>
proved every game from the<lb/>
beginning of the year, and I think<lb/>
well continue to improve as the<lb/>
season goes on<lb/>
The team set goals at the begin-<lb/>
ning of the season to hav? a<lb/>
30-win season and be the best<lb/>
earn ,n the state, and although<lb/>
the goals will be tough tass to<lb/>
achieve, Manahan thinks thev<lb/>
both are within reach.<lb/>
"We're young, and our<lb/>
weakness is inexperience, bit we<lb/>
dont have any weak positions<lb/>
and I expect our team to get better<lb/>
and better as the season pro<lb/>
gresses pro<lb/>
NN�naMMM<lb/>
PennsvUama i Itim<lb/>
sunda afternoon<lb/>
third in tht<lb/>
AER<lb/>
It Should B<lb/>
"Do8oftl<lb/>
At The Aer<lb/>
We Speciali<lb/>
'� E<lb/>
<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
w<lb/>
W03ShQP<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Bl<lb/>
THJ<lb/>
ea:<lb/>
ARMYNI<lb/>
p,<lb/>
Pen<lb/>
$ij<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0011"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
mJ<lb/>
<lb/>
-S�R5.<lb/>
'�1<lb/>
'pptw��<lb/>
g�tw.� ,�<lb/>
k m<lb/>
am<lb/>
� J0f i<lb/>
3 <lb/>
five' ceranoaks.<lb/>
-<lb/>
84'<lb/>
Pirates have had a great<lb/>
-ruiting-wise, but Emorv is<lb/>
"caution that a team can't<lb/>
?ht away on recruits to<lb/>
and fill starting positions,<lb/>
ry is sure that this team has<lb/>
lential to become a major<lb/>
In the future, and he says<lb/>
confident look in his eye-<lb/>
Ian t to win in '84<lb/>
fhow, you've just got to<lb/>
Ihim.<lb/>
lence<lb/>
t of her team. "We've im-<lb/>
every game from the<lb/>
ig of the year, and I think<lb/>
pntinue to improve as the<lb/>
�oe on<lb/>
?am set goals at the begin-<lb/>
tne season to have a<lb/>
reason and be the best<lb/>
the state, and although<lb/>
Js �u b� tough tasks to<lb/>
Manahan thinks thev<lb/>
within reach.<lb/>
I're young, and our<lb/>
fs is inexperience, but we<lb/>
lave any weak positions<lb/>
pcct our team to get better<lb/>
per as the season pro-<lb/>
�CH 29, m<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU Irates hosted<lb/>
the first Ultimate Frisbee<lb/>
Tournament of the newly<lb/>
formed South Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference this<lb/>
weekend, at the bottom<lb/>
of College Hill.<lb/>
The Irates finished"<lb/>
third among a six-team<lb/>
field, which included<lb/>
clubs from the University<lb/>
of Pennsylvania, Ap-<lb/>
palachian State, UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington, Wake<lb/>
Forest and Duke.<lb/>
The first day of the<lb/>
tourney was played under<lb/>
blue skies and<lb/>
temperatures in the upper<lb/>
60's, but the Irates had a<lb/>
tough time of it, losing to<lb/>
both Penn and UNC-W<lb/>
by the score of 15-9 in<lb/>
their first two matches.<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
ECU came back in its<lb/>
final match of the day,<lb/>
however, by defeating<lb/>
Wake Forest. In other<lb/>
opening-day games,<lb/>
UNC-W defeated Wake<lb/>
and Duke, while Penn<lb/>
also defeated the Blue<lb/>
Devils.<lb/>
Sunday's play started<lb/>
out in a steady downpour<lb/>
with ECU going up<lb/>
against Appalachian. The<lb/>
Irates took an early lead<lb/>
and held on to win a<lb/>
rough match 15-10 and<lb/>
clinch the third place<lb/>
trophy.<lb/>
As the skies cleared,<lb/>
the championship came<lb/>
down to a rematch bet-<lb/>
ween Penn and UNC-W<lb/>
to see who would take the<lb/>
$75 first prize. Penn<lb/>
made it look easy, as they<lb/>
coasted to a 15-6 victory.<lb/>
Pennsylvania<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
Appalachian State<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Duke<lb/>
Final Tournament<lb/>
Standings<lb/>
4-0<lb/>
3-2<lb/>
2-2<lb/>
2-3<lb/>
1-4<lb/>
0-3<lb/>
ODU Defeats Pirates<lb/>
Mudsville?<lb/>
STv'X'rnT FriSb T" M'ebn"eS � � P'�� �"� �<lb/>
<lb/>
By MEG MOREADITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Women's<lb/>
Tennis Team was<lb/>
defeated by Old Domi-<lb/>
nion University by the<lb/>
score of 9-0 yesterday<lb/>
afternoon at ECU's varsi-<lb/>
ty courts.<lb/>
"ODU has been a<lb/>
traditionally strong<lb/>
team said Coach Sher-<lb/>
man. She said ECU is<lb/>
working hard and is im-<lb/>
porving with each match,<lb/>
but the Monarchs were<lb/>
just too powerful.<lb/>
Number four seed Ty<lb/>
Meyers won the most<lb/>
games in singles with a<lb/>
Bucs Unable To Win A Set Fall 9-0<lb/>
Tennis<lb/>
score of 6-2, 6-4. Coach<lb/>
Sherman said that Lynn<lb/>
Wallace played her best<lb/>
match this year and the<lb/>
Janet Russell also played<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"Ty Meyers and Laura<lb/>
Zaloludek played their<lb/>
best (doubles) match even<lb/>
though they lost Sher-<lb/>
man added.<lb/>
The team's next home<lb/>
match is Saturday at 9:00<lb/>
a.m. against the Harvard<lb/>
"B" team, while the men<lb/>
play at 1:00 p.m. against<lb/>
Guilford.<lb/>
Results:<lb/>
No.l Janet Russell vs.<lb/>
Sasee Bacon, ODU<lb/>
6-0,6-0; No.2 Ann<lb/>
Manderfield vs Barbara<lb/>
Hund ODU 6-0,6-2; No 3<lb/>
Lynn Wallace vs. Becky<lb/>
Russell ODU 6-0,6-0-<lb/>
No.4 Ty Meyers vs!<lb/>
Desirei Lecmeto ODU<lb/>
6-2,6-4; No.5 Heidi Bun-<lb/>
ting vs. Sue Holtz ODU<lb/>
6-1,6-1; No.6 Laura<lb/>
Zaloubek vs. Lisa<lb/>
Thearle ODU 6-0,6-0<lb/>
No.l Russell-<lb/>
Manderfield vs. Bacon-<lb/>
Hand ODU 7-6 (7-5), 6-1;<lb/>
No.2 Wallace-Bunting vs.<lb/>
Russell-Leemeto ODU<lb/>
3-6, 6-3 (retire); No.3<lb/>
Zaloubek Meyers vs.<lb/>
Cherin-Thearle ODU 5-7<lb/>
7-6 (6-4).<lb/>
MILLER PICKS <lb/>
It Should Be So Much More Than<lb/>
"Do 8 of this, Do 8 of that"<lb/>
At The Aerobic Workshop it is!<lb/>
We Specialize In Aerobics<lb/>
'The Fun Way i:<lb/>
To Fitness"<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
:<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
Phone 757-1608<lb/>
417 Evan St. Mall<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
NOW<lb/>
AT<lb/>
"A Little Bit of Mexico"<lb/>
Accepting Applications for:<lb/>
Cooks, Waiters, Bartenders<lb/>
Apply April 3-5 Between 10am-5pm<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Employment Securities Commission<lb/>
SOFTBALL MEN<lb/>
I � Gamblers<lb/>
2. Bombers<lb/>
3. Hustlin Stickmen<lb/>
4. SoftbaJlers<lb/>
5. Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
SOFTBALL WOMEN<lb/>
I � Eliminators<lb/>
2. Tyler Enforcers<lb/>
3. Sig Ep Golden Hearts<lb/>
4. Un Kappa Fifth<lb/>
5. Heartbreakers<lb/>
irr<lb/>
iassssftw<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL MEN CO-REC VOLLEYBALL<lb/>
1 � Kappa Alpha "A"<lb/>
2. Phi Kappa Tau "A"<lb/>
3. Trimville Bandits<lb/>
4. Kappa Sigma "A"<lb/>
5. Enforcers<lb/>
1. Body Snatchers<lb/>
2. Sig Ep Plus One<lb/>
3. Biohazards<lb/>
4. Charlie<lb/>
5. De-feet<lb/>
BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
And they're tx)th repre-<lb/>
sented by the insignia you wear<lb/>
as a member of the Army Nurse<lb/>
Corps. The caduceus on the left<lb/>
means you're part of a health care<lb/>
system in which educational and<lb/>
career advancement are the rule,<lb/>
�not the exception. The gold bar' MHMMM<lb/>
on the right means you command respect as an Armyofficer If vouVe<lb/>
NJOTOir" ArmV Okonun BffiEg<lb/>
-Co-sponsored by C.O.Tankurd Co. and<lb/>
Miller Brewing Co.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Two ways to<lb/>
GET IN SHAPE<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center �<lb/>
Presents J<lb/>
Thurs. Nite :<lb/>
Penny Draft All Night j<lb/>
$ 1.00 Members $2.00 Nonmembers j<lb/>
Sat. March 31 st !<lb/>
John Moore's Beach Party <lb/>
Door Open at 8:30 j<lb/>
Ladies Member FREE �<lb/>
H.H. 8:30-9:30 :<lb/>
HEAVY HANDS By AMF American<lb/>
' Aerobic Weights That Upgrade Your<lb/>
Exercise Program<lb/>
 Urge &amp; Regular Handles - $19.95 pr<lb/>
(For Different Hand Sixes; 1 Lb. Each)<lb/>
�Weight Sets-Start At $7.95<lb/>
(210 Lb. Sets Available)<lb/>
�The Book, HEAVYHANDS, The<lb/>
Ultimate Exercise - $8.95 Ea.<lb/>
Buy A Pair Of Handles A Get 25 Off<lb/>
On Any Weight Set Or The Book<lb/>
(Offer Good Mar. 26th-3lst)<lb/>
INTRODUCING<lb/>
LACE WEIGHTS By amf white<lb/>
fhBoWel8hto That An Comfortable<lb/>
And Secure During Uc<lb/>
SiMS? T?.Pr P1 Uce Weight.<lb/>
Wh A.d,usUble Velcro Strap.<lb/>
 Eight W Lb. Weight Bag. P<lb/>
-Only $19.95 <lb/>
�<lb/>
Jogging.<lb/>
rttle.il<lb/>
Papa Kate Is A Private Club For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
We Have All ABC Permits<lb/>
10th St. Ext. At;<lb/>
Ri verbluff Rd. !<lb/>
BONDS<lb/>
tit ARLINGTON BLVD.<lb/>
756-6001<lb/>
H.L HODGES CO.<lb/>
"tJLFfTHST.<lb/>
7S1-41M<lb/>
f � �-� ?���,� ��� �.�<lb/>
� �'�"M O H) ill<lb/>
�-� �-���<lb/>
� "s &amp;1  � -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
m<lb/>
v.s<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
MAR H  is4<lb/>
f?� Slhers Return To Defend Tourney<lb/>
Xollehall Spikes Into<lb/>
Acfion<lb/>
( o Rec Vollevl<lb/>
began Monda s jn<lb/>
M nges Col<lb/>
teams appeal I<lb/>
favorites T'Ik<lb/>
imPs the Bo n<lb/>
SN XI t UK Ks<lb/>
(lames w<lb/>
nights beginning at<lb/>
m I cams conten<lb/>
fo� the title include<lb/>
N�K Kp Plus One. Bod)<lb/>
Snatchers, De-Feets,<lb/>
Biohaards, Ma<lb/>
stailicms andharlie. Be<lb/>
watching foi continued<lb/>
ates<lb/>
learn Handball Rolls<lb/>
On<lb/>
N ' two weeks oi<lb/>
� mam hand<lb/>
asts are mak<lb/>
their run foi <lb/>
npus honors With<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
��? APT<lb/>
� -<lb/>
Call T 6363<lb/>
bathroom<lb/>
�<lb/>
HOC-<lb/>
ROOM AVAILABLE!<lb/>
campy, Ca -<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
�<lb/>
BARBEi<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
- - - 10<lb/>
v<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
�<lb/>
� �<lb/>
PRO<lb/>
� ?S8 S488<lb/>
�<lb/>
t$a. -<lb/>
i ROOM wil<lb/>
' ' � ess than the<lb/>
oom 100 yards from<lb/>
� IO� Randv a' r$1 ua I<lb/>
' D J available on request<lb/>
� v dorm socials<lb/>
I available<lb/>
11 '5' 348'<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
- BIG BROTHER advisor<lb/>
"is tor puttmg up with<lb/>
s. . �   we know we ii<lb/>
i fh your guidance Love<lb/>
� Ph Big Brothers<lb/>
w Sh vou could come �o Myr<lb/>
aster Just wanted to<lb/>
al vou re my hrsl<lb/>
r he Chi Oi are ready to<lb/>
-� ' 10 don t ro � .<lb/>
" i "jnln foi maKmg<lb/>
well imi From youi<lb/>
still two weeks remaii<lb/>
in the regulai sea<lb/>
some favorites include,<lb/>
kappa Sigma, Kappa<lb/>
Alpha. IriimilU Bandits,<lb/>
and Phi kappa I an.<lb/>
In women's action.<lb/>
teams to look for are the<lb/>
Heartbreakers. I instead<lb/>
Jockettes, and I !cr En-<lb/>
forcers.<lb/>
n action lasi<lb/>
Kappa Sig, Marshall<lb/>
Halls tied the men's in-<lb/>
dividual record foi mosi<lb/>
goals scored in<lb/>
He scored I -<lb/>
against Beta '<lb/>
Good luck io i<lb/>
handball ;<lb/>
Still swininy.<lb/>
A<lb/>
tramural softball<lb/>
petition I<lb/>
Bombers<lb/>
regulai i<lb/>
he numbei tv<lb/>
(.amblers<lb/>
teams will a<lb/>
bati<lb/>
wa to pla ��<lb/>
Kappa Xlpha Psi and<lb/>
Hustlin Stiekmen.<lb/>
In omen' i<lb/>
Eliminators appeal I<lb/>
the (cam <lb/>
champs the Heart-<lb/>
breakers<lb/>
pla 1 mstead Jockettes<lb/>
and the I ones<lb/>
Be X Re<lb/>
Next<lb/>
Activities<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
i<lb/>
Bui<lb/>
VX . . V<lb/>
horseback riding<lb/>
Groui<lb/>
mformatioi<lb/>
W A Mil)<lb/>
beds<lb/>
�MM ATE wanted<lb/>
(rom campus :s� Mil<lb/>
People interested ,n com<lb/>
�' Dart Sprmg Fl,ng 84<lb/>
Phi Tau House<lb/>
'��MATE WANTED<lb/>
s" ' 'd �"� "alt u1iii1.es One<lb/>
can Doug at<lb/>
-<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
a or Fall Spring<lb/>
E WANTED H<lb/>
� ous student<lb/>
i<lb/>
�<lb/>
ROOvmatE �<lb/>
:<lb/>
Ove<lb/>
Supermarket, Inc<lb/>
21 1 Jarvis Street<lb/>
2 Blocks from ECU<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats<lb/>
Pabst Blue Ribben Beer<lb/>
S3.59<lb/>
Anheuser-Busch<lb/>
Natural Light Beer<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
�<lb/>
89c<lb/>
thSlO.O - food<lb/>
litioi ' $1 !Q<lb/>
Wash Your Cloth ' t Door While<lb/>
Shopping at)verton'sJ<lb/>
University Econo Wash<lb/>
Washes yg )rr)()ad<lb/>
5 DISCOUNT COUPON<lb/>
Students Only! R, , , a 5� discount on your<lb/>
Srorcn order of10.00 or more. Present ID and<lb/>
oupon lo i ashier al time of pun hase.<lb/>
N<lb/>
a me<lb/>
Address<lb/>
II) Number<lb/>
Limit onedia ounl per Ii) number.<lb/>
Expires 4 �i! 84<lb/>
1 -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0013"/><lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0014"/><lb/>
Hardggj <lb/>
FREE FLORIDA ORANGE JUKE OR<lb/>
COFFEE WITH PURCHASE OF A<lb/>
BACON &amp; EGG BISCUIT<lb/>
Offer good at partcpating Hardees restaurants. Please present coupon before orderma<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good m combination with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours through April 4,1984.<lb/>
BCEB. COFFEE OR 0 J . COUPON. BACON BISC<lb/>
1964 Hardees Food Systems. Inc<lb/>
Mardeer<lb/>
FREE FLORIDA ORANGE JUKE OR<lb/>
COFFEE WITH PURCHASE OF A<lb/>
SAUSAGE &amp; EGG BISCUIT<lb/>
Offer good at partcpating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordennq<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sales tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good m combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours AprH 5-11,1984.<lb/>
SGEG COFFEE OR O J REDUCED, SAUSAGE BISC<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems. Inc<lb/>
.Hardezr<lb/>
FREE FLORIDA ORANGE JUKE OR<lb/>
COFFEE WITH PURCHASE OF A<lb/>
BACON &amp; EGG BISCUIT<lb/>
Offer good at partcpatmg Hardees restaurants. Please present coupon before ordennq<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please. Customer must pay any sales tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good m combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 12-18,1984.<lb/>
BCEB COFFEE OR 0 J COUPON. BACON BISC<lb/>
1984 Hardee s Food Systems Inc<lb/>
.Harden<lb/>
FREE FLORIDA ORANGE JUKE OR<lb/>
COFFEE WITH PURCHASE OFA<lb/>
HAM A EGG BISCUIT<lb/>
Otter good at participating Hardee s restaurants Please present coupon before ordenrw<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sates tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good n combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 19-25,1984.<lb/>
HMEG COFFEE OR O J . COUPON HAM BISC<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems. Inc<lb/>
-Hardecr<lb/>
FREE FLORIDA ORANGE JUKE OR<lb/>
COFFEE WITH PURCHASE OF A<lb/>
CHOPPED BEEFSTEAK &amp; EGG BISCUIT<lb/>
Coupon not good in combination with any other offers. y-wAuue<lb/>
Offer good during regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 26 - May 2,1984.<lb/>
SKEG.COFFEEOROJ COUPON. STEAK BISC 1984. Hardees Food Systems. Ire<lb/>
Hardeex<lb/>
NEW! TURKEYCLUB<lb/>
SANDWICH, REGULAR FRIES<lb/>
AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK $199<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please. Customer must payany sates taxduV<lb/>
Coupon not good m combination with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours through April 4,1984.<lb/>
TCLB. REG FRY . MD DK . MEAL DEAL TCLB<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
.Hardeer<lb/>
BACON CHEESEBURGER,<lb/>
REGULAR FRIES AND MEDIUM<lb/>
SOFT DRINK $199<lb/>
Offer good at partcpating Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordennQ<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sates tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good m combination with any other offers.<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 5-11,1984.<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems Ire<lb/>
BC8.REG FRY MD DK MEAL DEAL BCB<lb/>
.Hardear<lb/>
r<lb/>
Offer good at partKpatmg Hardees restaurants Please present coupon before ordennQ<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, please Customer must pay any sales tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good n combination with any other offers<lb/>
L-s<lb/>
NEW FISHERMAN'S FILLET<lb/>
SANDWICH, REGULAR FRIES<lb/>
AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK SL69<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours Ai<lb/>
BISH. REG FRY . MD DK MEAL DEAL BISH<lb/>
regular bi<lb/>
prfl 12-18,<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
������������������<lb/>
Hatdeer<lb/>
NEW! TURKEYCLUB<lb/>
SANDWICH, REGULAR FRIES<lb/>
AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK $199<lb/>
CcxxlalparticvatrigHrcteesnastaurants Please present coupon before ordenrw<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order ptease Customer must pay any sates tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good n comtanation with any other otters<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 19-25,1984.<lb/>
TCLB REG FRY MD DK MEAL DEAL TCLB<lb/>
1984 Hardees Food Systems Inc<lb/>
Hardecr<lb/>
REGULAR ROAST BEEF<lb/>
SANDWICH,REGULAR FRIES<lb/>
AND MEDIUM SOFT DRINK $L89<lb/>
Offer good at partapatmg Hardees restaurants Ptease rjresertccxxxi before ordenna<lb/>
One coupon per customer, per order, ptease. Customer must pay any sates tax due<lb/>
Coupon not good in combination with any other offers<lb/>
Offer good after regular breakfast menu<lb/>
hours April 26-May 2,1984.<lb/>
ROB, REG FRY . MO DK . MEAL DEAL. ROB<lb/>
<lb/>
1984. Hardees Food Systems. Inc<lb/>
AA,<lb/>
k<lb/>
<pb facs="00057635_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>