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<pb facs="00057638_0001"/>
$he<lb/>
QlutalMun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus c<lb/>
ommunity since 1925<lb/>
Vol. 58 No. 5 55<lb/>
Tuesday, April 10, 1984 Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Dest Rules On Legislature's Powers<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK a ? , M. k7<lb/>
?????ka?ia? decision last month hut ch?,M rw <lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nw? Editor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature has the<lb/>
power to propose a referendum<lb/>
and legislators demonstrated that<lb/>
ability as recently as 1978, Student<lb/>
Attorney General Harry Dest told<lb/>
the legislature Monday.<lb/>
Dest made the ruling in<lb/>
response to an appeal filed by-<lb/>
legislator Mike Dixon protesting<lb/>
the legislature's decision last<lb/>
month not to call for a referen-<lb/>
dum on a Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group at ECU. Speaker of the<lb/>
Legislature Kirk Shellev inter-<lb/>
preted the SGA Constitution to<lb/>
mean that only the student body,<lb/>
with a petition, can call for "a<lb/>
referendum, and the legislature<lb/>
has no pow-r to do so. The<lb/>
legislature upheld his decision.<lb/>
Dest's ruling Mondav had no<lb/>
bearing on the PIRG referendum<lb/>
decision last month, but should<lb/>
serve as a guideline for future ac-<lb/>
tion. He said the "ruling shall<lb/>
stand unless disputed and ap-<lb/>
peals on the decision must be<lb/>
made to the Review Board.<lb/>
"The meaning of Student In-<lb/>
itiative in Article VII in my judge-<lb/>
ment, unequivocally grants the<lb/>
student body the right to re-<lb/>
quest a referendum on issues they<lb/>
feel the SGA is not addressing<lb/>
Dest said in a prepared statement.<lb/>
"However, in Article VII in no<lb/>
way or form denies the right of<lb/>
the legislature to propose a<lb/>
referendum. Therefore, Article<lb/>
VII does not limit the power of<lb/>
referendum to the student body<lb/>
Dest cited a resolution passed<lb/>
by the legislature on Feb. 9, 1978,<lb/>
calling for a student referendum<lb/>
on campus publications.<lb/>
Dest said he consulted Dean of<lb/>
Orientation and Judiciary James<lb/>
Mallory and chairman of the<lb/>
political science department<lb/>
Tinsley Yarbrough on the inter-<lb/>
pretation.<lb/>
The decision says in effect that<lb/>
the legislature's action last month<lb/>
was unconstitutional. However,<lb/>
the action will stand and a new<lb/>
referendum will have to be<lb/>
brought out to test Dest's ruling.<lb/>
"At this point there seems to be<lb/>
a deliberate impasse between the<lb/>
attorney general and the<lb/>
legislature Shelley said after<lb/>
Dest made the ruling. "The point<lb/>
itself is moot right now about that<lb/>
resolution" calling for the<lb/>
referendum last month, he said.<lb/>
In other business, David<lb/>
Brown, chairman of the student<lb/>
welfare committee, reported that<lb/>
results from the student welfare<lb/>
survey should be available bv next<lb/>
Student Governments OK<lb/>
New System Of Delegation<lb/>
week. The committee is also look-<lb/>
ing into the feasibility of pro-<lb/>
viding a bulletin board listing<lb/>
students selling textbooks and<lb/>
students wanting to buy textbooks<lb/>
in order to aid in cutting down the<lb/>
amount of money spent on books.<lb/>
The welfare committee also met<lb/>
with Ira Simon, director of dining<lb/>
services to discuss some of the<lb/>
problems students are having with<lb/>
the cafeteria situation. Several<lb/>
changes in service hours have been<lb/>
made due to the meeting.<lb/>
Former Speaker of the<lb/>
Leg.slature Chris Townsend<lb/>
spoke on the need for student in-<lb/>
volvement in politics, citing the<lb/>
fact that the public often counts<lb/>
on student apathy when propos-<lb/>
ing issues such as the raising of the<lb/>
drinking age.<lb/>
A resolution supporting the<lb/>
voting rights of non-Pitt County<lb/>
residents was passed by the<lb/>
legislator. "Voting is a right'and a<lb/>
privilege said Glenn Maughan<lb/>
who initiated the resolution!<lb/>
"Many students are being denied<lb/>
the right to vote and participate<lb/>
He said the use of absentee ballots<lb/>
is too difficult and students<lb/>
should be able to vote where thev<lb/>
are living.<lb/>
There was a good deal of debate<lb/>
on the resolution, with Kirk<lb/>
Shelley opposing the idea. Shelley<lb/>
said he was not opposed to stu-<lb/>
dent voter registration in general<lb/>
but felt that "students would be<lb/>
better off voting in their home<lb/>
counties He said the date of the<lb/>
primaries is after the end of the<lb/>
semester and therefore most<lb/>
students will already be at home<lb/>
Dixon replied by saving the<lb/>
absentee ballot process is cumber-<lb/>
some and an inconvenience. "In<lb/>
Dest<lb/>
other counties this inconvenience<lb/>
is no inconvenience he said. The<lb/>
resolution was passed and will be<lb/>
mandated to the Pit! County<lb/>
Board of Elections.<lb/>
A bill proposing the selection<lb/>
an SGA secretarty pro tempore to<lb/>
preside in the case of the<lb/>
secretary's absence was also<lb/>
presented. After much debate on<lb/>
the status of the person as a<lb/>
legislator, the bill was sent bac -<lb/>
committee and will be introdu<lb/>
again next week.<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
News Mnor<lb/>
A new system of student delega-<lb/>
tion to the University of North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Student<lb/>
Governments was initiated for the<lb/>
first time at last weekend's<lb/>
meeting in Chapel Hill.<lb/>
This was the last meeting for<lb/>
outgoing SGA presidents and the<lb/>
first for newly elected presidents.<lb/>
Outgoing President Paul Naso<lb/>
and President-Elect John Rainey<lb/>
attended the meeting along with<lb/>
ECU students Scott Epting. Jim-<lb/>
mi- Hackett and Mark Niewald.<lb/>
A new system which allows for<lb/>
two student delegates from each<lb/>
school has just been put into ef-<lb/>
fect. Permanent delegates will be<lb/>
appointed next year by Rainey.<lb/>
'The meeting was very produc-<lb/>
tive and positive Naso said. One<lb/>
topic discussed was the formation<lb/>
of the legislative assembly, Epting<lb/>
said. It is hoped that this assembly<lb/>
will perpetuate more student in-<lb/>
volvement in the system. The<lb/>
students attending this weekend<lb/>
were attending on a trial basis.<lb/>
Mark Niewald was elected<lb/>
treasurer of the organization. One<lb/>
of the major goals for next year,<lb/>
according to Epting, is to get the<lb/>
financial situation secure and to<lb/>
provide more funding for ac-<lb/>
tivities. Naso has requested a $1<lb/>
per student fee increase, approx-<lb/>
imately $.10 of which will go to<lb/>
the UNCASG. "We want to pro-<lb/>
mote the organization Epting<lb/>
said. "One of our major assets is<lb/>
the sharing of ideas<lb/>
Rainey said he was pleased with<lb/>
the meeting and feels the SGA<lb/>
should take a more active role in<lb/>
the UNCASG. "I plan to take a<lb/>
very active role as president he<lb/>
said. "We need to take the<lb/>
organization and reach out fur-<lb/>
ther and have a greater voice He<lb/>
included another meeting at ECU<lb/>
in his plans, and said he would<lb/>
also like to look into the possibili-<lb/>
ty of a regional meeting which<lb/>
would include the student govern-<lb/>
ments from several states. "We<lb/>
share a lot of ideas, hopefullv next<lb/>
year we'll be a bigger voice he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"The potential power of the<lb/>
organization may never be realiz-<lb/>
ed until they reach out into the<lb/>
various campuses and make the<lb/>
average student aware of the op-<lb/>
portunities they have to be involv-<lb/>
ed with the UNCASG Hackett<lb/>
said<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
J<lb/>
Y<lb/>
;i<lb/>
"Ml<lb/>
rv<lb/>
i<lb/>
C 1 Tfc SeCm enJ?inR tHe feStivUieS ?f ,he annual Partv at Moier's Farm  CU Ph?'?L"<lb/>
!i!?l?ro8rams ?ff?- Help Finding Summer Employment<lb/>
????; UKAaiAK everywhere there is a business " interns for th cm? ? -?.mi VY MMM VII I<lb/>
The career olannin. ,?HnL SZ? IS "Z.? Often, perience. "The more work ex- Th,v ?   , . <lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Newi Editor<lb/>
For many students, finding a<lb/>
summer job is a necessity,<lb/>
whether they need experience<lb/>
money or just a diversion.<lb/>
However, finding the right sum-<lb/>
mer job, or even finding a job at<lb/>
all, is often not an easv task.<lb/>
Several ECU services have pro-<lb/>
grams to help.<lb/>
Everywhere there is a<lb/>
business, there is a potential job<lb/>
said Furney James, director of the<lb/>
career planning and placement<lb/>
service. When looking for a job,<lb/>
he said, students should "go to<lb/>
everywhere there is a business<lb/>
The career planning and place-<lb/>
ment service has several programs<lb/>
to provide students with summer<lb/>
job opportunities. There is an an-<lb/>
nual camp day, which is co-<lb/>
sponsored with the cooperative<lb/>
education department. Approx-<lb/>
imately 20 camps participate. The<lb/>
service also has the College Place-<lb/>
ment Annual on file. The annual<lb/>
lists companies that provide sum-<lb/>
mer employment for students.<lb/>
James cited internships as a<lb/>
good source of summer employ-<lb/>
ment. Companies such as BB&amp;T<lb/>
and Purdue often hire students as<lb/>
interns for the summer. Often,<lb/>
James said, the companies are<lb/>
"looking at the students as poten-<lb/>
tial full-time employees<lb/>
Another summer job oppor-<lb/>
tunity mentioned by James is sell-<lb/>
ing books with companies such as<lb/>
Southwestern Publishing and The<lb/>
Varsity Company. This, he said,<lb/>
"provides good experience for a<lb/>
select few ? you get paid for what<lb/>
you do<lb/>
Students often go looking for a<lb/>
job and expect a high wage. Many<lb/>
summer jobs pay only minimum<lb/>
wage, James said, but added that<lb/>
what is really important is the ex-<lb/>
perience. "The more work ex-<lb/>
perience you have, the better off<lb/>
you'll be he said. "Summer<lb/>
work experience is invaluable<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
Cooperative Education also has<lb/>
services available to job-hunting<lb/>
students. They maintain a bulletin<lb/>
board listing all summer jobs and<lb/>
also occasionally list jobs in The<lb/>
East Carolinian. Carolyn Powell,<lb/>
a coordinator for the department<lb/>
said students can come by the<lb/>
department, located on the third<lb/>
floor of Rawl and register and<lb/>
talk to one of the coordinators.<lb/>
They can suggest which com-<lb/>
panies are hiring and also give job<lb/>
leads.<lb/>
"It is getting a little late for<lb/>
summer jobs and the situation is<lb/>
very competitive Powell said.<lb/>
"We can't guarantee students<lb/>
anything, but we can give them in-<lb/>
formation she said.<lb/>
ECU will hire some students<lb/>
this summer, said Melvin Buck,<lb/>
director of personnel. Each sum-<lb/>
mer approximately 20 students are<lb/>
hired to fill on-campus painting<lb/>
jobs. Some of the positions have<lb/>
been filled, but there are still<lb/>
openings. Buck said<lb/>
The Employment Security<lb/>
Commission in Pitt County plac-<lb/>
ed 996 students in jobs last year,<lb/>
said Jim Hannan, commission<lb/>
manager. "We have jobs he<lb/>
said, "the important ning is to<lb/>
get registered right new Last<lb/>
year, he said, there was one full<lb/>
crew of students working in the<lb/>
cucumber fields. In addition, the<lb/>
office also has openings for retail<lb/>
positions ? nine students were<lb/>
placed in retail jobs last week. The<lb/>
commission does not charge a fee<lb/>
for its services and has special stu-<lb/>
dent applications.<lb/>
Edmisten Claims Campaign<lb/>
Is Pitt County's Biggest<lb/>
I.) y k i<lb/>
Ust weekend ?? UNC-Chnpel Hill, ECU Irackster Craig While qualified in the high hurdles<lb/>
MICHABL SMITH - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
for the 1984 Olympic trials.<lb/>
Annual SOULS On The Mall Scheduled<lb/>
SOULS on the Mall will take<lb/>
Place on Thursday from 2 p.m. to<lb/>
5 p.m. and again from 6 p.m. to<lb/>
Jj P.m. The Society of United<lb/>
Liberal Students is sponsoring this<lb/>
annual event which will feature<lb/>
f?od, fun and information.<lb/>
The event is a "chance for<lb/>
students to discover the different<lb/>
organizations on campus said<lb/>
SOULS President Jimmie<lb/>
Hackett. Organizations such as<lb/>
the Preprofessional Health<lb/>
Alliance, the NAACP and The<lb/>
Ebony Herald will have booths to<lb/>
provide information about their<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
Hotdogs and hamburgers will<lb/>
be sold and there will be games<lb/>
and prizes. One event scheduled is<lb/>
?<lb/>
a volleyball tournanrit. The<lb/>
event is open to the public.<lb/>
The Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity<lb/>
will be having a slave auction and<lb/>
the Omega Psi Phi fraternity will<lb/>
be performing in a block show at<lb/>
5 p.m. In addition, there will be a<lb/>
dating game and SOULS<lb/>
members will be selling raffle<lb/>
tickets for a UNIVEGA bicycle to<lb/>
be given away at Barefoot on the<lb/>
Mall. Proceeds from the raffle<lb/>
will benefit SOULS and sickle cell<lb/>
anemia research.<lb/>
There will be music from 6p.m.<lb/>
to 11 p.m. and WZMB will pro-<lb/>
vide the disc jockeys. "We hope<lb/>
that all students will come out and<lb/>
join us for this day of fun in the<lb/>
sun Hackett said.<lb/>
This article is the first in a series<lb/>
of brief features on the major<lb/>
gubernatorial candidates.<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
M .nnjmg Editor<lb/>
The Edmisten campaign now<lb/>
claims it holds the record for the<lb/>
biggest political fundraiser in Pitt<lb/>
County history ? about 1,075<lb/>
people in the Sheraton last week.<lb/>
And that's par for the course in<lb/>
the Edmisten campaign, they say<lb/>
? people come from everywhere<lb/>
to support the Democratic can-<lb/>
didate.<lb/>
Rufus has earned his wide base<lb/>
of support, staffers say, by wat-<lb/>
ching out for the average North<lb/>
Carolina citizen during his tenure<lb/>
as attorney general. Throughout<lb/>
his campaign literature there are<lb/>
constant references to his work on<lb/>
comsumer issues and homeowner<lb/>
policies. He strengthened the<lb/>
Consumer Protection Section of<lb/>
the attorney general's office in the<lb/>
10 years he has been there, and<lb/>
has sponsored 21 bills that are<lb/>
now N.C. laws protecting citizens<lb/>
with some of the nation's toughest<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
Edmisten has fought mortgage<lb/>
overcharges and recovered<lb/>
$300,000 in fines when in-<lb/>
vestigating illegal operations in<lb/>
the Southern Bell Corporation.<lb/>
But looking out for the average<lb/>
guy is supposed to come to Ed-<lb/>
misten naturally; after all. he grew<lb/>
up on a small family farm near<lb/>
Boone, N.C. He later went to the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, where he graduated<lb/>
with honors in political science<lb/>
and religion. He worked for<lb/>
North Carolina's veneranle Sen.<lb/>
Sam Ervin and managed to an<lb/>
outstanding law school tenure.<lb/>
Such an upbringing gives Ed-<lb/>
misten the same values as most<lb/>
North Carolinians, and triis com-<lb/>
mon bond allows him to work<lb/>
closely with them, on ther needs.<lb/>
Edmisten was the first state-wide<lb/>
official to call for a Victims Com-<lb/>
pensation Fund and he fought to<lb/>
have the bill made law. He created<lb/>
the N.C. White Collar Crime Unit<lb/>
to investigate crime in business,<lb/>
and he pushed for the stave's first<lb/>
drug squad in the State Bureau of<lb/>
Investigation.<lb/>
On the hot topic of the political<lb/>
season, education, Edmisten<lb/>
drafted the legislation lor the<lb/>
Teacher Competency Testing Pro-<lb/>
gram and defended it in court. He<lb/>
has also pushed for other educa-<lb/>
tion legislation such as the<lb/>
monitoring of academic progress<lb/>
in public schools.<lb/>
Fighting for the real n:ds of<lb/>
the citizen is why Edmistei: draws<lb/>
a strong and wide base of support<lb/>
from people across the state, staf-<lb/>
fers say.<lb/>
 ?i?? ?.??? <lb/>
" ? !?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CARmiNiAM<lb/>
APRIL 10. 1984<lb/>
l <lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving tkt campus community<lb/>
11923.<lb/>
Pvbllahed ever Tueaday and<lb/>
Thursday during me academic<lb/>
yaer and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
Ing the aummar.<lb/>
The Em( Carolinian It ma of<lb/>
flclal newtpeper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
oparatad, and published for and<lb/>
by ?na students of East Carolina<lb/>
Unl varsity.<lb/>
Suaecrletten Rate: tM yearly<lb/>
The Cast Carolinian efftces<lb/>
are locate m Dm OM Seat<lb/>
ftvlMint an ttta campus i tCU<lb/>
Oreenvtfle. M.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Sand address<lb/>
changes to Tha Ea?f Carolinian,<lb/>
Old South Building, ECU Green<lb/>
vllla. NC 2734<lb/>
Telephone: RJNNi 4347, tm<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Applications ara now being ac<lb/>
cepfed for the RAY JONES<lb/>
MEMORIAL SCHOLARSHIP for full<lb/>
time student- at East Carolina<lb/>
University, sophomore or above, who<lb/>
meat the following criteria: Must be a<lb/>
resident of Pitt County, Demonstrate<lb/>
financial need. Demonstrate an In<lb/>
terest in the field of alcoholism, and<lb/>
Agree to a concentration (6 s.h<lb/>
minimum) In alcohol andor<lb/>
alcoholism related courseworli dur<lb/>
Ing tha term of the scholarship<lb/>
Tha scholarship will be awarded for<lb/>
a period of one academic year<lb/>
??? and shall be for In state tul<lb/>
tion and fees.<lb/>
Application are available (and<lb/>
should be returned to) AlcoholDrug<lb/>
Education Committee. Room 306, Er<lb/>
win Hall Deadline April ?. )s4.<lb/>
For more information, call 757649<lb/>
FANTASY<lb/>
Coma oln tha Sign Language Club<lb/>
for an evening of mime, sign, and<lb/>
?ong. The club will be performing<lb/>
popular movie and broadway themes<lb/>
and current popular songs. Sign<lb/>
language skills are not necessary to<lb/>
appreciate the performance. Enjoy<lb/>
tha Fantasy. Tuesday. April 10 at 7 30<lb/>
p.m. In Wright Auditorium. Admit<lb/>
slon Is free to everyone.<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
Now Is your chance to keep up with<lb/>
events at ECU. after you graduate.<lb/>
The Pirate Club is offering free<lb/>
"Crew Club" memberships for<lb/>
graduating seniors. This consists of a<lb/>
purple and gold report, dacals, priori<lb/>
ty on season football and basketball<lb/>
tickets and much more end thit is<lb/>
completely free. Contact the Pirate<lb/>
Club office at 757-417S, or Mark<lb/>
Niewald at 757-4009 or stop by our<lb/>
booth at the Student Supply April lj &amp;<lb/>
13, or Barefoot on the Mall April 19<lb/>
HOME RUN DERBY<lb/>
Regittration for the home rvn der<lb/>
by will end April u the event being<lb/>
held that same day on the Women's<lb/>
varsity Softball field. Sign up through<lb/>
April lj for this slugging activity.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Applications ara new being ac<lb/>
ceoted for tha David B. and Wllla H.<lb/>
Stevens Scholarship for<lb/>
undergraduates enrolled In tha Dlvi<lb/>
?ion of Social Work. Tha 1500.00<lb/>
Scholarship will be awarded for the<lb/>
fall semester of 194. The recipient<lb/>
will be selected on the basis of<lb/>
academic excellence, financial need,<lb/>
good citizenship, and dedication to<lb/>
the Social Work andor Criminal<lb/>
Justice professions. Applications are<lb/>
available from and should be return<lb/>
ad to The Dlvltlnn of Social Work,<lb/>
Room 314. Allied Health (Carol Balk)<lb/>
Building. Deadline: April 20, 114.<lb/>
For more Information call 57S-e96l,<lb/>
ext. 219.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA<lb/>
The Brothers of me Eta Nu chapter<lb/>
of Alpha Phi Alpha Fraternity inc. In-<lb/>
vite everyone to view their display of<lb/>
fraternal paraphenalla, in the west<lb/>
area show case. Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
FLATBALL PLAYERS<lb/>
Attention: All Flatbed Playert: the<lb/>
Irates are going to Raleigh this<lb/>
weekend (April 14 &amp; 15) to dominate<lb/>
over all the other Plastic Fiatball<lb/>
Phanatickt In our conference. Total<lb/>
irate participation it of utmotf Im<lb/>
portance for this ideal opportunity<lb/>
Irates ? get psyched tor an excep<lb/>
Nonai performance Be there!<lb/>
LOAN FUND<lb/>
All Naltonai Direct Student Loan<lb/>
Borrowers art reminded of the exit<lb/>
interview requirement upon gradua<lb/>
tion or those otherwise not returning<lb/>
" ECU Fall Semester, 19?4. at<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate ttudents.<lb/>
The Interview Is necessary to Inform<lb/>
NDSL recipients of the repayment<lb/>
tchedule, provltiont for loan<lb/>
cancellation, and other pertinent In-<lb/>
formation. You ara requested to<lb/>
report to the Multipurpose Room of<lb/>
the Mendenhall Student Center at<lb/>
5:30 p.m. on either April 3, April 9, or<lb/>
April ll, i9t4<lb/>
SPORT CLUB COUNCIL<lb/>
The eighth and last meeting for the<lb/>
1W3 U Sport Club Council will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, April la, 19?4at4:00p.m<lb/>
In Room 105B of Memorial Gym<lb/>
nasJum. Attendance Is required of<lb/>
representatives of active sport clubs<lb/>
Representatives must submit at the<lb/>
meeting the following: Spring<lb/>
Semester Report, 1984 15 Fall<lb/>
Semester Schedule. 194 (5 Facility<lb/>
Request, MM-15 Club Officers, and,<lb/>
I9t3?4 Club Notebook. Persont or<lb/>
groupt interested In the Sport Club<lb/>
Program are Invited to attend the<lb/>
meetingSport Club Council<lb/>
Meeting, Weds. April l?, 19?4, 4:00<lb/>
p.m Rm. 105B, Mem. Gym.<lb/>
ICE HOCKEY<lb/>
If you ara interested In playing ice<lb/>
hockey at ECU next year, please con-<lb/>
tact George at 752525. Games will<lb/>
be played against teams tuch at<lb/>
UNC, N. C. STATE, DUKE, ASU. and<lb/>
Fort Bragg. Anybody, regardless of<lb/>
experience or skill. Is encouraged to<lb/>
inquire.<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA<lb/>
The brothers of Phi Beta Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity inc. will be sponsoring a<lb/>
Jr. Miss Phi Beta Sigma Pageant on<lb/>
April 27, 194 at the Ramada Inn.<lb/>
Anyone who would like to share In<lb/>
thit event with a talent that you would<lb/>
like to perform on this date art atked<lb/>
to contact Richard Dawkins at<lb/>
7S 905 or any brother of the f raterni<lb/>
ty as soon as possible<lb/>
WOMEN IN<lb/>
MINISTRY<lb/>
A panel discussion will take place<lb/>
Thursday, April 12, 19?4, 7:30 PM at<lb/>
the Newman Center, 953 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
on the role of women In ministry.<lb/>
Come and hear women Invllved In<lb/>
various types of minittry answer<lb/>
questions about their ministry. The<lb/>
discussion It for women who ara In-<lb/>
terested in ways of being involved In<lb/>
ministry and who would like to hear<lb/>
of more optiont or who want to know<lb/>
how women already In minittry<lb/>
perceive their effectiveness, this will<lb/>
be a good opportunity to learn.<lb/>
PRIME TIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ It soon<lb/>
soring "Prime Time" thit Thursday<lb/>
at 7 p.m. In the Old Joyner Library<lb/>
room 221. Please loin ut for fun,<lb/>
fellowship, and Bible study. We are<lb/>
looking forward to meeting you.<lb/>
FEAR OF FINALS<lb/>
The ECU Counseling Center will of<lb/>
fer a free workshop to assist students<lb/>
who experience high levels of stress<lb/>
over final exams. Relaxation skills<lb/>
will be taught and practiced, and<lb/>
strategies for taking exams will be<lb/>
covered. The workshop will meet<lb/>
from 3-4 PM in 305 Wright Annex on<lb/>
Tuesdays, April 17 and 24, and on<lb/>
Wednesdays, April is and 25<lb/>
Students should plan to attend all four<lb/>
sessions. For further Information or<lb/>
to sign up. Call the ECU Couteling<lb/>
Center at 7S7-?6?i. or stop by room 307<lb/>
Wright Annex.<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
Practice this week, Tues Wed<lb/>
Thur at 4:00 pm. A team election<lb/>
will be after practice on Tues. Home<lb/>
same this weekend against UNC CH,<lb/>
at 2:00 pm, behind Stratford Armt<lb/>
?ring your coolers, rain or thine<lb/>
Now players welcome<lb/>
PHI SIGMA IOTA<lb/>
Dr Linda Kauff man, a fellow at the<lb/>
National Humanities Center, will<lb/>
speak on "Discourses of Desire:<lb/>
Ovid's Heriodes, The Letters of<lb/>
Helorse. Letters of a Portuguese<lb/>
Nun on Thursday, April 12 at 7.30<lb/>
p.m in Mendenhall Multipurpose<lb/>
room. Everyone is invited to attend.<lb/>
TWIRLERTRYOUTS<lb/>
When: April 15th, 29th and May 5th<lb/>
Where: Meet In the Lobby of the<lb/>
Music Building at 2:00, Tryouts ttart<lb/>
at 300<lb/>
For more information contact.<lb/>
Tom Gooltby 757 e982 or Beth<lb/>
Webster 752 5690<lb/>
STUDENTS WITH HART<lb/>
Now Is the time for a new genera<lb/>
tion of leadership, if you are fed up<lb/>
with the politics of nostalgia and look<lb/>
ing for new solutions to the nation's<lb/>
problems loin Students With Hart. We<lb/>
ara the vanguard of a new<lb/>
democracy We will be meeting at<lb/>
Mendenhall. Ask receptionist for<lb/>
room number) every Thursday at<lb/>
p.m For more Information call<lb/>
752 4935 or 757 3566.<lb/>
HOMECOMING<lb/>
Applications are now being ac<lb/>
cepted for the 194 Student<lb/>
Homecoming Committee Chairper<lb/>
son. Applications can be picked up at<lb/>
either the Mendenhall Information<lb/>
Desk or the Alumni Center. The<lb/>
deadline for applying for this position<lb/>
is Friday. April 13.<lb/>
FERRARA SUMMER<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
A few openings still remain In the<lb/>
ECU Ferrara Summer Program,<lb/>
May 7 June 8, 1904. Through the Col<lb/>
lege of Arts and Sciences In coopera<lb/>
tion with the University of Ferrara,<lb/>
Italy, ECU ttudents who participate<lb/>
will earn 6 hourt of general education<lb/>
credits. All Courses will be conducted<lb/>
In English at the University of Fer<lb/>
rara and lodging provided in unlver<lb/>
slty housing. Contact Dr Eugene<lb/>
Ryan, BA 102, or Geraldine Laudatl,<lb/>
757 6250 before April 15<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
SOULS, on the mall ? The Stu<lb/>
dent Body of East Carolina Univerti<lb/>
ty it cordially invited to this annual<lb/>
event sponsored by the Society of<lb/>
United Liberal Stduents. Please loin<lb/>
us. There will be food and fun in the<lb/>
sun for everyone. April 12,1904 from 2<lb/>
p.m. to 11 p.m. Please loin us in our<lb/>
Annual Spring Celebration.<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
Finally If t here, Lacrosse at ECU<lb/>
There will be a Lacrosse match at<lb/>
ECU for the first time. Come on out<lb/>
and enoy the game of excitement.<lb/>
The game will be played on Saturday,<lb/>
April 14. The time and place will be<lb/>
posted. Practice will be T, TH, and<lb/>
Fri. from 3-5 p.m.<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIP<lb/>
Ladonla S. Wright Memorial<lb/>
Scholarship - Criteria: Afro<lb/>
American student enrolled full time,<lb/>
Af least 2.5 overall GPA, At least 32<lb/>
semester hourt to be completed by<lb/>
the end of Spring semester Amount &amp;<lb/>
Date of Award: Two(2) two hundred<lb/>
(200) scholarships to be awarded for<lb/>
the 1904-I5 academic year $ioo each<lb/>
semester). Application Procedure<lb/>
Application forms are located In the<lb/>
Financial Aid Office, Complete and<lb/>
return to: Dr Dennis Chestnut,<lb/>
Ptychology Department, Speight 109<lb/>
Application Deadline. Wednesday<lb/>
April 11, 1904.<lb/>
Recipients to be announced April 13.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI ALPHA<lb/>
The Brothers of Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
Fraternity inc. announce their Miss<lb/>
Black and Bold Pageant 1904. All in<lb/>
terested young ladies should call<lb/>
752 9741 or contact any brother to<lb/>
tecure an application.<lb/>
EDMISTEN'M<lb/>
All students Interested In loining<lb/>
the campus organliatlon to elect<lb/>
Rufus Edmlsten as Governor In 194<lb/>
please contact Betty Casey or Mecon<lb/>
Moye (ECU coordinators at 7S2-0311.<lb/>
SPRING RETREAT<lb/>
On tha weekend of April 13 15 tha<lb/>
Baptist Student Union will be having<lb/>
a Spring Retreat at Emerald Isle.<lb/>
Rev. W. H. Murphy will be leading on<lb/>
the topic of Resurrection: Appilca<lb/>
tion of tha Holy Weak, cost is $25,<lb/>
which includes Transportation,<lb/>
mealt, and housing. For details call<lb/>
752 4646.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI SIGMA<lb/>
End of the year party open to all<lb/>
tocial work and corrections maors<lb/>
ttudents and faculty ara welcome<lb/>
Thit will be held on April 16 af 91i Col<lb/>
lege View Apts. The fun will begin at I<lb/>
15:30 with food and your favorite I<lb/>
beverage. Hope to see you therel <lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
Tha Eaat Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
will have it-s last meeting of the<lb/>
?ameater Monday, April 14 at 7.30<lb/>
p.m. Tha meeting will be held at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Cantor. 953 E Win<lb/>
St. (at the bottom of College Hill).<lb/>
Afterwards, their will be a social. Br<lb/>
ing your favorite beverage andor<lb/>
something to snack on. All interested<lb/>
persons are cordially invited to at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Brothers, remember that the an<lb/>
nual Rose Ball Is this weekend.<lb/>
Everyone be ready for a malor party<lb/>
at the Armada at Nags Head. This<lb/>
week it "Brother Appreciation<lb/>
Week You little sisters do your big<lb/>
brother right.<lb/>
Everyone listen out tor the Pi Kapp<lb/>
"End of the Year Party " it will be<lb/>
the day before reading day by the<lb/>
lake at the PI Kapp House<lb/>
AIR BAND CONTEST<lb/>
. At the Elbo. April 17, 194. at 1 00<lb/>
p.m Sponsored by PRC Sign up ?t<lb/>
the Elbo.<lb/>
BAHAMA MAMA PARTY<lb/>
Bahama Mama Party coming<lb/>
soon April 19th at the Kappa<lb/>
Sigma House The party starts at 4 30<lb/>
so get your tickets early See any<lb/>
brother or little sister for tickets<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
There will be a meeting Thursday<lb/>
April 12 for all members of SAM in<lb/>
room 104 Rawl at 3 00 Elections will<lb/>
be held during the meeting. All<lb/>
members interested in holding a of<lb/>
flee please sign up at Dr Ecksteins<lb/>
office room 209 Rawl before April 12<lb/>
BIBLE DISCUSSION<lb/>
Co-ed Group Bible discussions on<lb/>
Tuesday, 730 P.M. In Mendenhall i<lb/>
room 212 Everyone is welcome<lb/>
Classified ADS<lb/>
Vou may use the form at right or<lb/>
tm a teparata ahaat of paper if<lb/>
you neod more Hoes. There are 33<lb/>
units per line. Each latter, punc<lb/>
tuaflon mark and word space<lb/>
counts as one unit. Capitalize and<lb/>
hyphenate words properly. Leave<lb/>
?Pce ?t end of line If word<lb/>
esn't fit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
'?serve the right to reject any ad.<lb/>
AH ads must be prepaid. Eadoat<lb/>
75 per lime or fracboo of a baa.<lb/>
Ptceat print legibly! Use capital sad<lb/>
lower cat letters.<lb/>
??? THE EAST CAftOUNlA<lb/>
???? 7 tm Teeaaar before<lb/>
r-?'r1r ,?<lb/>
GOLDEN GIRLS<lb/>
Tryouts for the ECU Pirates<lb/>
"Golden Girls" dance squad will be<lb/>
April 14 15. the flrtt mandatory<lb/>
meeting and practice will be 10 AM.<lb/>
Saturday, April 14. Don't miss your<lb/>
chance to dance with ne mighty<lb/>
"Marching Plratesl"<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 11th. All<lb/>
escorts please return their jackets at<lb/>
this time. Ron Langley and the Stu-<lb/>
dent Government appreciate<lb/>
everyones cooperation throughout<lb/>
the year. Thank you.<lb/>
Library Expenditures Lagging<lb/>
(CPS) ? Total<lb/>
operating expenditures<lb/>
for the nation's college<lb/>
and university libraries<lb/>
lagged nearly seven per<lb/>
cent behind the inflation<lb/>
rate between the 1978-79<lb/>
and 1981-82 school years,<lb/>
according to a new study<lb/>
by the National Center<lb/>
for Education Statistics<lb/>
(NCES).<lb/>
But it was only one of a<lb/>
number of severe<lb/>
economic blows college<lb/>
libraries have suffered<lb/>
over the last several<lb/>
years, the study points<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Salary increases for<lb/>
library workers also fell<lb/>
seven percent behind the<lb/>
inflation rate for the<lb/>
same three-year period.<lb/>
Total federal funding for<lb/>
libraries dropped over 23<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Moreover, total book<lb/>
acquisitions at the 3000<lb/>
campus libraries surveyed<lb/>
decreased by over nine<lb/>
percent, the study shows.<lb/>
"Overall we found<lb/>
that, while costs have<lb/>
continued to go up,<lb/>
library expenditures have<lb/>
really been lower than the<lb/>
inflation rate notes<lb/>
David Sweet of NCES's<lb/>
Office for Educational<lb/>
Research and Improve-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"We're not sure if the<lb/>
decreases are part of the<lb/>
general (funding cutback)<lb/>
phenomenon that hit all<lb/>
colleges and universities,<lb/>
or if libraries were hit<lb/>
more severly than col-<lb/>
leges in general he says.<lb/>
Likewise, a 26 percent<lb/>
cut in funding for the<lb/>
University 0f<lb/>
Oklahoma's library<lb/>
"may bring us down to a<lb/>
low academic level says<lb/>
library assistant Lenore<lb/>
Clark.<lb/>
After the cuts go<lb/>
through, "we won't be<lb/>
any better than a com-<lb/>
munity college library<lb/>
she laments.<lb/>
Similar problems are<lb/>
occurring at campus<lb/>
libraries nationwide<lb/>
NCES's Sweet<lb/>
acknowleges.<lb/>
A<lb/>
3<lb/>
?s<lb/>
Sidewalk<lb/>
One Table <lb/>
Books 25lb.<lb/>
New Remainder<lb/>
Books Up to 65<lb/>
Off Pub. Suggested<lb/>
SQe<lb/>
FOOD &amp; DRINKS<lb/>
Popcorn ? Candy Apples<lb/>
15-PEPS!<lb/>
Cotton Candy<lb/>
STUDENT SUPPLY STORE<lb/>
WRIGHT BUILDING<lb/>
Owned &amp; operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
J<lb/>
ffP'l ? ? ? -?????? - - - m miamammm<lb/>
mmmm wipumw<lb/>
visn<lb/>
repor<lb/>
ing p<lb/>
Moo<lb/>
Wash<lb/>
arrest<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
of40:<lb/>
in vio<lb/>
visita<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
Staab<lb/>
was<lb/>
dison<lb/>
use o!<lb/>
the e<lb/>
Libra<lb/>
Hous<lb/>
reque<lb/>
a dis<lb/>
11:35<lb/>
studei<lb/>
verba<lb/>
of Fie<lb/>
Api<lb/>
repori<lb/>
vehicl<lb/>
Scott<lb/>
A rep<lb/>
purse<lb/>
voice<lb/>
Musi<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
larcen<lb/>
from<lb/>
p.m. -<lb/>
dalisra<lb/>
minal<lb/>
105 in<lb/>
p.m. ?<lb/>
larcen<lb/>
and 1<lb/>
the ;<lb/>
door (<lb/>
of wbj<lb/>
Apt<lb/>
report<lb/>
propei<lb/>
La<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
In.<lb/>
An<lb/>
sexuai<lb/>
studer<lb/>
has t<lb/>
Mickl<lb/>
ing "e<lb/>
blem i<lb/>
no jok<lb/>
proble<lb/>
perfeci<lb/>
getting<lb/>
it U<lb/>
Alth<lb/>
vestiga<lb/>
he sail<lb/>
cover?<lb/>
of har<lb/>
talking<lb/>
ing as<lb/>
coffee,<lb/>
talking<lb/>
ing pr<lb/>
or beii<lb/>
manipt<lb/>
have a<lb/>
about<lb/>
fate<lb/>
La&amp;<lb/>
of EC<lb/>
respon<lb/>
and do<lb/>
up a 1-<lb/>
dividuf<lb/>
so fir i<lb/>
pie mai<lb/>
OH BO!<lb/>
student<lb/>
scared,<lb/>
leaves i<lb/>
again 1<lb/>
girl or<lb/>
conduo<lb/>
intervie;<lb/>
who f a<lb/>
sexual!<lb/>
ECU. 1<lb/>
contact<lb/>
so at<lb/>
732-03-<lb/>
Gary<lb/>
? PS) - When i .<lb/>
?ndidate named Gaj<lb/>
Han visited Aiban<lb/>
May, -? kn Ma<lb/>
( uorno was too I<lb/>
see him<lb/>
Hans organize! .<lb/>
up trvmg to book a<lb/>
at the State I nive<lb/>
Nan York-All .<lb/>
pus because, a<lb/>
? imer retro<lb/>
the were wor:<lb/>
candidate couldn't<lb/>
a crowd big enougl<lb/>
one<lb/>
S<lb/>
In<lb/>
volunteers, a-<lb/>
wh<lb/>
M<lb/>
coord ii<lb/>
Radio<lb/>
Bv K!VJRH,<lb/>
M?ff ??<lb/>
<lb/>
we r-T<lb/>
Will<lb/>
Fede-a.<lb/>
Commj<lb/>
fro<lb/>
plication<lb/>
near G:e:<lb/>
David Wrij<lb/>
In -<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
pr<lb/>
station in I<lb/>
Ai-<lb/>
the C.<lb/>
Green <lb/>
Bo .<lb/>
WUNC<lb/>
pre -<lb/>
Nanona!<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fa.<lb/>
un<lb/>
e i<lb/>
La y i<lb/>
phe<lb/>
a Ik<lb/>
publK rad<lb/>
to the Public 11<lb/>
munications Fa<lb/>
Pre<lb/>
funds Eve<lb/>
func g<lb/>
fou<lb/>
PTFP w<lb/>
grant the : .<lb/>
because the FCC a<lb/>
tion ha-<lb/>
to .<lb/>
tion WECT-T<lb/>
nnel 6 ha-<lb/>
petition to jen"<lb/>
con-<lb/>
rad i<lb/>
I e b e c a I<lb/>
commercial ra<lb/>
Kapp<lb/>
BA<lb/>
Bi<lb/>
Date:<lb/>
Place<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Featuring th<lb/>
Miss<lb/>
Raffle Grand<lb/>
To Nassau in<lb/>
Miss Hawaiian T<lb/>
Sponsors:<lb/>
L<lb/>
?afawimmmiammiii n??????<lb/>
0tf"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0003"/><lb/>
I AIR BAND CONTEST<lb/>
I e Eibo April 17. 194 at too<lb/>
I NDortKxeo bv PRC Slfln up ?r<lb/>
If bo<lb/>
tHAMA MAMA PARTY<lb/>
i-ra W?r"? Party corning<lb/>
Apr i i?tti at tt?? Kappa<lb/>
ous Tte oarr starts at 4:30<lb/>
.our r.ckr? early See any<lb/>
iff- m ?!? S'S'er tor tickets<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
e ? oe a "lee'ing, Thursday<lb/>
: ?or an memberi of SAM in<lb/>
104 ??? a' 3 00 Election will<lb/>
held 0nrtn ??? rr?e?ftng All<lb/>
nt?ri nrrested .n holding a ot<lb/>
r ?? Sign op a' Or Ecusfeinj<lb/>
r room x Ha! oetore April ?j.<lb/>
BIBLE DISCUSSION<lb/>
M Srojp B'bie discussions on<lb/>
'? p? in Mendenhall,<lb/>
2 Ever or is welcome<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
-i?c<lb/>
1?aland<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
i . .<lb/>
1 t I ,?<lb/>
i?4i?<lb/>
f<lb/>
"i?1<lb/>
1 j j<lb/>
 11 I<lb/>
<lb/>
I 1?<lb/>
ng<lb/>
in funding for the<lb/>
diversity 0 f<lb/>
Iklahoma's library<lb/>
lay bring us down to a<lb/>
academic level says<lb/>
frary assistant Lenore<lb/>
la-k<lb/>
tter the cuts go<lb/>
;ugh, "?e won't be<lb/>
l better than a com-<lb/>
lity college library<lb/>
laments,<lb/>
similar problems are<lb/>
curnng at campus<lb/>
'anes nationwide,<lb/>
Sweet<lb/>
enow leges.<lb/>
1<lb/>
DRINKS<lb/>
indy Apples<lb/>
'EPS!<lb/>
Candy<lb/>
(CPS) - When a lone-<lb/>
ly candidate named Gary<lb/>
Hart visited Albanv in<lb/>
May, 1983, Gov. Mario<lb/>
Cuomo was too busy to<lb/>
see him.<lb/>
Hart's organizers gave<lb/>
up trying to book a room<lb/>
at the State University of<lb/>
New York-Albany cam-<lb/>
pus because, as one<lb/>
organizer remembers it,<lb/>
they were worried the<lb/>
candidate couldn't draw<lb/>
a crowd big enough to fill<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Things have changed.<lb/>
In the weeks before the<lb/>
April 3 New York<lb/>
primary, the campus<lb/>
chapter of Americans<lb/>
with Hart had about 100<lb/>
volunteers, about 40 of<lb/>
whom were "active<lb/>
says Michael Schmall, the<lb/>
campus campaign's co-<lb/>
coordinator.<lb/>
Hart Receives Much<lb/>
gglCAOtJNjj mm i0lvw<lb/>
And while there is stu-<lb/>
dent support for both<lb/>
Walter Mondale and<lb/>
Jesse Jackson on the<lb/>
campus, Patty Salkin, the<lb/>
officially-uncommitted<lb/>
head of the Albany State<lb/>
Young Democrats, con-<lb/>
cedes that "from what<lb/>
I've seen and personal<lb/>
contact, I'd say there's a<lb/>
lot of student interest in<lb/>
Hart<lb/>
Indeed, for the first<lb/>
time since 1972, a<lb/>
Democratic presidential<lb/>
candidte seems to have<lb/>
caught fire among a<lb/>
broad cross section of<lb/>
students around the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Over 5000 students<lb/>
heard Hart speak at the<lb/>
University of Illinois two<lb/>
weeks ago. About 1200<lb/>
showed up to listen to<lb/>
him at Cal-Berkeley,<lb/>
while another 300<lb/>
couldn't get in. During<lb/>
the Massachusetts<lb/>
primary. Hart handily<lb/>
won student precincts in<lb/>
Amherst.<lb/>
Now Eric Schwartz,<lb/>
Hart's youth coor-<lb/>
dinator, speaks of<lb/>
mobilizing a nationwide<lb/>
volunteer corps of 10,000<lb/>
students to match Walter<lb/>
Mondale's volunteers<lb/>
from organized labor.<lb/>
At Marquette, Hart<lb/>
seems to be drawing a lot<lb/>
of support on a campus<lb/>
that is "about 80 percent<lb/>
Republican reports<lb/>
Kevin Jereczek, president<lb/>
of Marquette's Young<lb/>
Democrats' chapter.<lb/>
With the possible ex-<lb/>
ception of schools in New<lb/>
York and Pennsylvania,<lb/>
adds the nominally-<lb/>
uncommitted Dave Smith<lb/>
Radio Request Halted<lb/>
By KIM CRAIG<lb/>
Suff W rltrr<lb/>
A petition filed bv<lb/>
WECT-TV, Channel 6 in<lb/>
Wilmington to the<lb/>
Federal Communications<lb/>
Commission has placed a<lb/>
freeze on the license ap-<lb/>
plication for a public<lb/>
radio station to be based<lb/>
near Greenville, said<lb/>
David Wright, director of<lb/>
engineering at public<lb/>
radio station WUNC in<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
In September 1982,<lb/>
Greenville citizens and<lb/>
members of ECU faculty<lb/>
agreed to support the<lb/>
proposal of a public radio<lb/>
station in Pitt County.<lb/>
Along with the support of<lb/>
the City Council, the<lb/>
Greenville City School<lb/>
Board, and the mayor,<lb/>
Vn UNC agreed to help the<lb/>
proposed station meet<lb/>
National Public Radio<lb/>
standards. The ECU<lb/>
Faculty Senate also voted<lb/>
unanimously last week to<lb/>
help support the pro-<lb/>
posal.<lb/>
Last year, WUNC ap-<lb/>
plied to both the FCC for<lb/>
a license to operate a new<lb/>
public radio station and<lb/>
to the Public Telecom-<lb/>
munications Facilities<lb/>
Program for construction<lb/>
funds. Even though the<lb/>
funding proposal was<lb/>
found favorable, the<lb/>
PTFP was unable to<lb/>
grant the requested funds<lb/>
because the FCC applica-<lb/>
tion has been delayed due<lb/>
to opposition from Sta-<lb/>
tion WECT-TV.<lb/>
Channel 6 has filed a<lb/>
"petition to deny" the<lb/>
construction of a public<lb/>
radio station in Green-<lb/>
ville because non-<lb/>
commercial radio stations<lb/>
at the bottom end of the<lb/>
FM dial can interfere<lb/>
with the reception of TV<lb/>
Channel 6.<lb/>
Station 88.3 was the<lb/>
original proposed fre-<lb/>
quency, but it is located<lb/>
close to the lower limit of<lb/>
the FM dial.<lb/>
The FCC has now im-<lb/>
posed a freeze on all ap-<lb/>
plications for public<lb/>
radio stations which<lb/>
could potentiallv in-<lb/>
terfere with Channel 6<lb/>
reception.<lb/>
Attorneys for WUNC<lb/>
said the freeze should not<lb/>
apply to the proposed<lb/>
Greenville station and the<lb/>
FCC has no legal or<lb/>
regulatory basis to delay<lb/>
or deny the grant of a<lb/>
license. The Chapel Hill<lb/>
station recently learned<lb/>
that the FCC has an<lb/>
"unannounced policy"<lb/>
of freezing all public<lb/>
radio applications which<lb/>
are opposed by TV Chan-<lb/>
nel 6, without reviewing<lb/>
the validity of the com-<lb/>
plaints, according to<lb/>
Director of Radio Gary<lb/>
Shivers. The attorneys<lb/>
feel the FCC has frozen<lb/>
the new station applica-<lb/>
tion even though the sta-<lb/>
tion does not meet all the<lb/>
requirements of delaying<lb/>
license application.<lb/>
"The FCC is not acting<lb/>
in accordance with public<lb/>
rules and regulations<lb/>
said WUNC Engineering<lb/>
Director David Wright.<lb/>
In January, funding<lb/>
proposals were reac-<lb/>
tivated to the PTFP and<lb/>
construction funds<lb/>
should be granted this<lb/>
spring if the FCC acts<lb/>
favorably on the applica-<lb/>
tion for the new station,<lb/>
Shivers said.<lb/>
In case the FCC does<lb/>
not grant the license,<lb/>
WUNC is working on<lb/>
proposing a new frequen-<lb/>
cy (90.5) which would be<lb/>
higher on the FM dial. If<lb/>
the station is given this<lb/>
frequency, Channel 6 has<lb/>
agreed to lift the "peti-<lb/>
tion to deny as long as<lb/>
the frequency will not in-<lb/>
terfere with their station,<lb/>
said Jim Rees, a Green-<lb/>
ville member of the<lb/>
WUNC Advisory Coun-<lb/>
cil. However, a religious<lb/>
station in Wilson has also<lb/>
applied for this new fre-<lb/>
quency.<lb/>
Another public radio<lb/>
station (89.5) in New<lb/>
Bern at Craven County<lb/>
Community College<lb/>
which is scheduled to go<lb/>
on the air in May, has<lb/>
also objected to the Pitt<lb/>
County station.<lb/>
Representatives of the<lb/>
New Bern station feel<lb/>
public radio in Greenville<lb/>
would represent a<lb/>
duplication of service.<lb/>
If the FCC grants the<lb/>
license, Rees stated, the<lb/>
earliest the station would<lb/>
begin operating would be<lb/>
next spring. The station<lb/>
would be built over a<lb/>
period of five years, but<lb/>
would begin transmitting<lb/>
out of WUNC. At the<lb/>
end of the five years, the<lb/>
new station would have<lb/>
full studio facilities and<lb/>
be locally operated.<lb/>
Jim Ensor, manager of<lb/>
WZMB, also supports the<lb/>
proposal of a public radio<lb/>
station. Rees commented,<lb/>
"The station in no way<lb/>
will conflict with WZMB,<lb/>
but will enhance because<lb/>
they will no longer feel<lb/>
obligated to play certain<lb/>
types of music, and will<lb/>
become more student<lb/>
oriented<lb/>
of Young Democrats'<lb/>
headquarters in<lb/>
WAshington, D.C<lb/>
"campuses are pro-Hart<lb/>
as opposed to Mondale<lb/>
"I sense a great lack of<lb/>
enthusiasm and lack of<lb/>
inspiration for<lb/>
Mondale says Cathy<lb/>
Campbell, Berkeley's stu-<lb/>
dent body president.<lb/>
Campbell believes<lb/>
Hart's "spunk" and<lb/>
faithful evocation of the<lb/>
Kennedy style probably<lb/>
help attract student sup-<lb/>
port as much as anything.<lb/>
Mondale's student<lb/>
organizers contend their<lb/>
volunteers are more con-<lb/>
cerned with issues than<lb/>
Hart's.<lb/>
"Students who look at<lb/>
the issues and not at ap-<lb/>
pearance are swinging to<lb/>
Mondale claims<lb/>
Valarie White, national<lb/>
student coordinator at<lb/>
Mondale headquarters in<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Mondale's campus<lb/>
supporters, adds Sean<lb/>
O'Brien of SUNYA's<lb/>
Students for Mondale<lb/>
chapter, are more "com-<lb/>
mitted" than Hart's.<lb/>
"Rather than jumping on<lb/>
the bandwagon, they are<lb/>
a determined group<lb/>
In a sort of reverse<lb/>
bandwagon effect,<lb/>
O'Brien says "we got 10<lb/>
new members" after Hart<lb/>
beat Mondale in the New<lb/>
Hampshire primary in<lb/>
early March.<lb/>
"Since New Hamp-<lb/>
shire, (the campaign) has<lb/>
really started to roll<lb/>
adds Schmall of Hart's<lb/>
campus group. Schmall<lb/>
says he has 40-45 active<lb/>
volunteers. O'Brien says<lb/>
he has 30.<lb/>
Both have been cour-<lb/>
ting student support ?<lb/>
and the immensely<lb/>
valuable free labor that<lb/>
comes with it ? for a<lb/>
long time.<lb/>
Hart, for example,<lb/>
made campaign hops<lb/>
through northern<lb/>
California and Colorado<lb/>
campuses as early as spr-<lb/>
ing, 1982.<lb/>
Hart spoke against the<lb/>
nuclear arms buildup to<lb/>
University of Denver<lb/>
students in May. 1982<lb/>
The month before,<lb/>
Mondale delivered the<lb/>
same message at Yale.<lb/>
Mondale and his fami-<lb/>
ly have worked campuses<lb/>
in all the big caucus and<lb/>
primary states for the last<lb/>
two years. Hart's reach<lb/>
has been a little shorter,<lb/>
due primarily to having<lb/>
less money to spend.<lb/>
Still, by last<lb/>
November, Patti Grogan,<lb/>
president of the national<lb/>
Young Democrats, told<lb/>
College Press Service,<lb/>
"There is no student can-<lb/>
didate. No one has really<lb/>
touched the hearts and<lb/>
minds of students across<lb/>
the nation<lb/>
The early primaries<lb/>
and caucuses appear to<lb/>
have changed that.<lb/>
"I think there is a<lb/>
revival of student ac-<lb/>
tivism contends Chris<lb/>
Phillips, a Hart national<lb/>
student support coor<lb/>
J mat or<lb/>
"Student activism is<lb/>
coming around a little<lb/>
bit sayj Brian<lb/>
Grossman, president of<lb/>
the University of Illinois'<lb/>
College Democrats, of<lb/>
the campus support for<lb/>
Hart But "we still have a<lb/>
little way to go to get<lb/>
students involved<lb/>
Involved or not,<lb/>
students historically<lb/>
don't vote. Only 30 per-<lb/>
cent of the registered<lb/>
college-aged voters ac-<lb/>
tually cast ballots in the<lb/>
1980 presidential race.<lb/>
"The problem is get-<lb/>
ting people out to vote<lb/>
points out Ilise Levine, a<lb/>
Hart worker at SUNYA.<lb/>
The Jackson cam-<lb/>
paign, which appears to<lb/>
have wilted after a<lb/>
uproarious campus start<lb/>
last fall, has had the most<lb/>
success in actually bring-<lb/>
ing new voters into the<lb/>
system, the observers sug-<lb/>
gest<lb/>
At SUNYA, the stu-<lb/>
dent Democrats' am-<lb/>
bitious voter registration<lb/>
plan has run out of<lb/>
money, and now relies on<lb/>
"word of mouth Salkm<lb/>
says.<lb/>
The College<lb/>
Republicans, on the other<lb/>
hand, say they have a<lb/>
registration budget,<lb/>
which they'll use for the<lb/>
general election.<lb/>
At SUNYA, College<lb/>
Republicans chapter<lb/>
President Will<lb/>
Kamishlian says that, un-<lb/>
til the general election in<lb/>
the fall, his group will<lb/>
"sit back and watch the<lb/>
Democrats slit each<lb/>
others' throats<lb/>
"The interes: is there"<lb/>
in supporting President<lb/>
Reagan's re-election<lb/>
drive, Kamishiian says,<lb/>
though "it's not on the<lb/>
surface<lb/>
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?1? last (Earnltnfan<lb/>
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JENNIFER JENDRASIAK. v? J.T. PlETRZAK. ,v? ((V 0,f,umf<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. m. a, mike McParti and. m. <lb/>
Ed Nicklas. im MM tom Norton. ? - u<lb/>
Gordon Ipock. m, a, rathy Fuerst. , tr,<lb/>
Mark Barker, (m m Mike Mayo. mwaj.g<lb/>
April 10. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SGA Duties<lb/>
Knowledge of System Essential<lb/>
Members of the SGA Legislature<lb/>
ought to do more than pass ap-<lb/>
propriations by consent. A little<lb/>
knowledge is a dangerous thing,<lb/>
especially when mixed with a<lb/>
moderate amount of power.<lb/>
The SGA, like most large<lb/>
organizations, has a few people<lb/>
who carry the load and do all the<lb/>
work; the rest show up enough to<lb/>
hang on, but invest precious little<lb/>
real time and energy.<lb/>
The legislature has an important<lb/>
job, and its members are given a<lb/>
trust by the student body. There is<lb/>
considerable power in the SGA<lb/>
Legislature to shape university life,<lb/>
and its servants must accept the<lb/>
work that goes along with the<lb/>
privilege and responsibilityof their<lb/>
offices.<lb/>
That's why the events last night<lb/>
and of a few weeks previous in the<lb/>
legislature are so disturbing. Far<lb/>
too many of the legislators are not<lb/>
knowledgeable enough in routine<lb/>
parliamentary procedure to con-<lb/>
duct a standard meeting; Speaker<lb/>
Kirk Shelley regularly takes time to<lb/>
explain the rules and procedures<lb/>
legislators must follow to carry out<lb/>
items of business. And worse yet,<lb/>
virtually none are familiar enough<lb/>
with the SGA Constitution to ex-<lb/>
plain or debate what it really says.<lb/>
That point became woefully ob-<lb/>
vious a few weeks ago when there<lb/>
was a major question of constitu-<lb/>
tional interpretation concerning the<lb/>
legislature's power to call for a<lb/>
referendum. The situation was<lb/>
sticky and complex, and virtually<lb/>
only one person in the room knew<lb/>
the Constitution well enough to in-<lb/>
terpret it ? Shelley.<lb/>
The trouble is, interpretation is<lb/>
just that ? one person's idea of<lb/>
what he thinks the Constitution<lb/>
says. In this case, the Constitution<lb/>
did not expressly say anywhere that<lb/>
the legislature can call for a<lb/>
referendum, but neither did it say<lb/>
that it could not. It said only that<lb/>
the student body can ? Shelley<lb/>
took that to mean only the students<lb/>
can, and the legislature absolutely<lb/>
cannot.<lb/>
Things get murkier. The referen-<lb/>
dum concerned an ECU Public In-<lb/>
terest Research Group, something<lb/>
Shelley opposes and even made a<lb/>
special trip to his former committee<lb/>
to vote against. Now, let's give him<lb/>
the dubious benefit of the doubt<lb/>
and say he did the right thing and<lb/>
kept personal feelings out of this,<lb/>
i.e he didn't make his interpreta-<lb/>
tion to stop PIRG. After all, he is<lb/>
a man of good conservative convic-<lb/>
tions, and such a strict interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the constitution, implying<lb/>
no powers that are not expressly<lb/>
writ, would probably suit him. But,<lb/>
if he or anyone else in his position,<lb/>
with the power to control the<lb/>
debate, were to abuse their office<lb/>
and construe rules to suit their own<lb/>
ends, the legislators would be<lb/>
powerless to stop it. You see, no<lb/>
one else in the room that night<lb/>
knew enough about the constitu-<lb/>
tion or the interpretation of it to of-<lb/>
fer more than token challenge to<lb/>
Shelley. Though the legislature<lb/>
ostensibly debated it, in the end<lb/>
Shelley's decision was rub-<lb/>
berstamped by the legislators, part-<lb/>
ly because they knew no better,<lb/>
partly because they wanted to get<lb/>
home. (Things really turned far-<lb/>
cical when Shelley had to explain<lb/>
the procedure legislators could use<lb/>
to argue for or against him; he had<lb/>
to tell the rules of how they could<lb/>
challenge his interpretation ?<lb/>
"trust me)<lb/>
Monday, three weeks later, we<lb/>
find out that Attorney General<lb/>
Harry Dest considers Shelley's in-<lb/>
terpretation, and the legislature's<lb/>
decision, all wrong. He studied the<lb/>
case, asked advice of professional<lb/>
scholars, and came to the conclu-<lb/>
sion that the legislature can call for<lb/>
a referendum. (In fact, it was done<lb/>
in 1978.) Now, no one expects a<lb/>
legislator to match Dest's hours of<lb/>
research when a question pops up<lb/>
quickly on the house floor. But one<lb/>
does expect a legislator to be<lb/>
familiar with the constitution,<lb/>
familiar enough to be able to inter-<lb/>
pret it and use it: as familiar with it<lb/>
as their colleague Kirk Shelley.<lb/>
There were obviously those who<lb/>
disagreed with Shelley's interpreta-<lb/>
tion, and with valid reasons; but<lb/>
they just were not able to articulate<lb/>
their reasons within the rules of the<lb/>
forum.<lb/>
So, a little knowledge is a<lb/>
dangerous thing ? the knowledge<lb/>
of how to pass a bill or ruling but<lb/>
without knowledge of what it really<lb/>
does or means. There are times<lb/>
when the responsibility of the<lb/>
legislature is considerable ? it's<lb/>
not all just appropriating $50 for<lb/>
some awards banquet ? and it is<lb/>
then that legislators need most to<lb/>
live up to their obligation and the<lb/>
trust students have placed in them.<lb/>
It is then when the shirking of their<lb/>
responsibilities is most harmful and<lb/>
dangerous.<lb/>
Bill Prediction Is No Trick<lb/>
sdfcr<lb/>
?<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
Interesting things should be passed<lb/>
along. That is the job of a newspaper ?<lb/>
telling you things you don't know. A col-<lb/>
umnist usually gives out his information in<lb/>
an opinionated way, but sometimes, as<lb/>
"Dragnet's" Jack Webb used to intone,<lb/>
it's "just the facts<lb/>
Neat and keen to one person is dull and<lb/>
boring to another. My gee-wiz tidbit is for<lb/>
those of us who enjoy technology and<lb/>
politics. It seems as if two researchers can<lb/>
figure out the fate of a bill via a statistical<lb/>
model in a computer. I know. It doesn't<lb/>
sound novel. But think of the implica-<lb/>
tions. The two inventers have.<lb/>
Economist W. Mark Crain and graduate<lb/>
student Donald R. Leavens analzyed more<lb/>
than 1,500 bills and deduced about a<lb/>
dozen factors that influence passage. They<lb/>
then took these 12 criteria and predicted<lb/>
seven bills in committee would make it to<lb/>
the House floor. Seven did.<lb/>
The neat thing is that technology just ac-<lb/>
celerated a process known to savvy Capitol<lb/>
Hill dwellers. The factors, you see, had<lb/>
nothing to do with the merits of the bill<lb/>
itself. No, the factors all related to the<lb/>
"folkways" of Congress.<lb/>
The adherence to the traditions of<lb/>
seniority and specialization, the two<lb/>
researchers knew, had a lot to do with<lb/>
what legislation gets enacted. So, among<lb/>
the bits of information they threw into<lb/>
their computer were how powerful the<lb/>
people who supported a particular bill<lb/>
were and their ranking within committee.<lb/>
They also only studied committees because<lb/>
the researchers knew a favorably-reported<lb/>
bill usually passed a full vote.<lb/>
What all this leads to is that they're sell-<lb/>
ing their "Billcast" services to lobbyists.<lb/>
This new device could manage and direct<lb/>
lobbying efforts by corporations and in-<lb/>
terest groups to areas that indicate need.<lb/>
Lobbying would be streamlined. Some are<lb/>
already convinced.<lb/>
Exxon, Union Carbide and<lb/>
Westinghouse have signed up for the<lb/>
George Mason University professor's and<lb/>
grad student's services. They will be pay-<lb/>
ing up to $10,000 for them.<lb/>
Technology and politics are now united<lb/>
in yet another way. Pretty soon, it seems,<lb/>
politics will be more machine than people<lb/>
oriented. I do not favor one way over the<lb/>
other. Politics must march onward, and<lb/>
innovations such as this are part of the<lb/>
trail of time.<lb/>
Me, I just think it's neat. The way the two<lb/>
guys figured all this out and are now sell-<lb/>
ing it. Only in America.<lb/>
OF COURSE IT5A SUCCESS I JUST WISH WE HAP PUT IT<lb/>
IN k LITRE HIGHER ORBIT<lb/>
Hart Should Be Democrats' Bet<lb/>
With<lb/>
By MORTON KONDRACKE<lb/>
Throughout his cold, lonely year in<lb/>
the single digits, Gary Hart never<lb/>
doubted that he would emerge tirst as<lb/>
Walter Mondle's chief rival, then as the<lb/>
Democratic nominee. He has reached<lb/>
the first goal in dazzling style and<lb/>
though the second remain a lutie<lb/>
beyond his grasp, Hart says he is sure<lb/>
not only about getting nominated but<lb/>
also about getting elected president.<lb/>
"I hate to say things like that because<lb/>
it always comes out in black and white<lb/>
sounding more arrogant than 1 intend<lb/>
it he said in an interview aboard his<lb/>
campaign plane, "but I'm telling you<lb/>
that my instincts tell me I can do it<lb/>
How? "Look he said, "the Reagan<lb/>
strategy is to do two things ? blame all<lb/>
the problems on the Demo rats and<lb/>
practice what I call the politics of<lb/>
distraction ? try and get people to pay<lb/>
attention to abortion, school prayer and<lb/>
other highly polarized social issues and<lb/>
not deficits and the arms race I'll take<lb/>
both those away from him, and I'll be a<lb/>
smaller target for Reagan than a tradi<lb/>
tional Democrat would be<lb/>
On the issues level of general election<lb/>
strategy, Hart plans to put Reagan on<lb/>
the defensive on such issues as the<lb/>
federal budget deficit, the continuing<lb/>
unemployment of 9 million workers<lb/>
("the only people back at work in the<lb/>
recovery are the ones he put out of work<lb/>
in the recession"), the failure to rebuild<lb/>
basic American industry, the deteriora-<lb/>
tion of the infrastructure, and the loss of<lb/>
U.S. leadership in trade and technology.<lb/>
Assuming Hart is nominated, a major<lb/>
tactic of his race against Reagan will be<lb/>
to play upon fears of what a second<lb/>
Reagan term would be like. Hart said<lb/>
that in spite of the economic recovery<lb/>
and generally favorable public attitudes<lb/>
about Reagan, "people will vote against<lb/>
him out of fear of nuclear war, a Pen-<lb/>
tagon out of control, and fear of the loss<lb/>
of American lives in Central America,<lb/>
the Persian Gulf and Lebanon<lb/>
Hart has found a compelling way to<lb/>
attack Reagan on the budget deficits: he<lb/>
raises the issue to the level of ethics.<lb/>
"The Reagan deficits threaten the sur-<lb/>
vival and competitiveness of the<lb/>
economy for decades to come he told<lb/>
a University of Georgia audience. "I<lb/>
believe these unjustified and unaffor-<lb/>
dable deficits represent an economic<lb/>
Vietnam that will come back to haunt<lb/>
your generation as long as you live. For<lb/>
the first time in this nation's history, one<lb/>
generation is stealing from future<lb/>
generations to pay for the immediate<lb/>
greed of a handful of interests and to get<lb/>
President Reagan re-elected. This is an<lb/>
example of economic immorality<lb/>
Another line of attack that Hart in-<lb/>
tends to employ is "corruption" among<lb/>
Reagan appointees. In a late-January<lb/>
speech in Cedar Rapids, Iowa, Hart<lb/>
charged that "almost 50 high-ranking<lb/>
officials in the Reagan administration<lb/>
have faced serious allegations involving<lb/>
criminal wrongdoing, unethical<lb/>
behavior or abuses of power and<lb/>
privilege<lb/>
He cited such cases as Richard Allen's<lb/>
acceptance of $1,000 and three watches<lb/>
from a Japanese inerviewer; Anne Bur-<lb/>
ford's coziness with industrial polluters;<lb/>
stock market investigations involving a<lb/>
former National Security Council of-<lb/>
ficial, Thomas Reed, and a former depu-<lb/>
ty defense secretary, Paul Thayer; and at<lb/>
least five cases of potential conflict of<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
1 he speech got tittle notice a the time.<lb/>
but it will be ievived in an effort to show<lb/>
that officials of this anti-government<lb/>
don't mind using government to enrich<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Unlike the sort of Democrats Reagan<lb/>
could lambast as "captives of an anti-<lb/>
growth, dinosaur mentality Hart of-<lb/>
fer ; an appealing future of growth, pro-<lb/>
sperity and opportunity ? and also of<lb/>
equalitv. justice, peace and idealism.<lb/>
Does the country yearn for<lb/>
its first two-term<lb/>
presidency since Ike's, or<lb/>
does it want yet another<lb/>
"fresh start'1?<lb/>
Hart's vision is every bit as optimistic<lb/>
as Reagan's, and he tops it off in talking<lb/>
to college audicnccb with this dig: "Our<lb/>
nation hasn't passed its prime. Our<lb/>
leaders have That line brings almost as<lb/>
much applause as the never-failing, "We<lb/>
should not send American boys to die<lb/>
unnecessarily in Lebanon, for Persian<lb/>
Gulf oil, or to serve as bodyguards for<lb/>
Central American dictators<lb/>
Hart's political strategy is to hold the<lb/>
traditional Democratic base ?<lb/>
minorities, liberals, workers and issue<lb/>
activists ? while reaching out (as Walte;<lb/>
Mondale couldn't) to independents and<lb/>
moderate Republicans.<lb/>
Reagan's strategy meanwhile, is to<lb/>
peel off so-called "weak Democrats" ?<lb/>
southern whites and urban blue-collar<lb/>
workers ? as he did in 1980. That is<lb/>
crucial constituency, representing 25<lb/>
percent of the electorate and the<lb/>
"politics of distraction" is crucial to<lb/>
keeping it.<lb/>
According to the public opinion<lb/>
analyst William Schneider, Reagan also<lb/>
is trying to pull at this group by<lb/>
"neutralizing the economic issue" ?<lb/>
talking up the current recovery to get<lb/>
workers to forget the 1982 recession.<lb/>
Hart will try to remind them about 1982,<lb/>
scare them about 1985, and inspire them<lb/>
about the future.<lb/>
He is also relying on his Senate record<lb/>
? "perfectly acceptable to all elements<lb/>
of the Democratic party in the North<lb/>
and Northeast Hart says ? and on the<lb/>
unifying desire of labor and other<lb/>
groups to be rid of Ronald Reagan. And<lb/>
Hart, like Mondale, will try to expand<lb/>
the core Democratic turnout by en-<lb/>
couraging voter registration and get-out-<lb/>
the-vote efforts among southern blacks,<lb/>
Hispanics, younger women and others.<lb/>
He said he knows he needs to reach out<lb/>
more to blacks and he plans to do so by<lb/>
"symbolic actions such as visiting<lb/>
Tuskegee Institute.<lb/>
Hart's "new generation" appeal is<lb/>
designed to overcome ideological dif-<lb/>
ferences withing the 61-million-strong<lb/>
cohort of voters between 25 and 44 years<lb/>
old, and especially within the "baby<lb/>
boom" group, aged 29 to 38, which<lb/>
represents 23 percent of the electorate.<lb/>
The most salient characteristic of<lb/>
younger voters, according to Schneider,<lb/>
is their independence from the two par-<lb/>
ties and their formative political ex-<lb/>
periences of Vietnam, Watergate and the<lb/>
economic insecurity of the 1970s. Hart is<lb/>
offering them non-interventionism, an<lb/>
aversion to special-interest politics and a<lb/>
renewal of the economy.<lb/>
Accusations that Hart is a cool, <lb/>
piagmativ . lb I help<lb/>
him with thi. group, manv of v horn<lb/>
voted for John nderson lasi time<lb/>
Anderson's "national unity" campaign<lb/>
plans for 1984 would b? . lercul bj a<lb/>
Hart candidacy Indeed, Har; telis<lb/>
young audiences he'll establish a<lb/>
government I <lb/>
without saying shat that means beyond<lb/>
equalit) foi women.<lb/>
On one level, this campaign really<lb/>
may boil down to a generational con-<lb/>
flic does the country yearn for its first<lb/>
two-term president since Ike's, or does<lb/>
it want yet anothci ' fresl -tart"1<lb/>
If Hart is the nominee, it wil. mean<lb/>
that the Deomc iriv. Par at leasl, was<lb/>
ready for its own generational leap this<lb/>
year rather than in 1988 as on Gary<lb/>
Hart, among politicians of his age<lb/>
group, seeniv to ha- e seen. Tne televi-<lb/>
sion networks, anothei leading<lb/>
American institution. hac replaced an<lb/>
older generation of anchormen<lb/>
(Cronkite. Chancellor. Reynolds) with a<lb/>
new generation (Rathe. Brokaw, Jenn-<lb/>
ings). We'll see in November if the coun-<lb/>
try wants the same sort of toothy new<lb/>
face behind the big anchor desk in the<lb/>
Oval Office studio.<lb/>
Hart currently leads th; president in<lb/>
the Gallup Poll, but the president has<lb/>
the White House and the capacity to <lb/>
shape the terms of the debate. Neither<lb/>
side would be wise to underestimate the<lb/>
other. Ronald Reagan has been beaten<lb/>
by Republicans, but never by a<lb/>
Democrat.<lb/>
Gary Hart, it he wins the nomination,<lb/>
will have done it by shrewdly exploiting<lb/>
the flaws m Walter Mondaie's s:rateg<lb/>
of inevitability and by toughing it out<lb/>
against the establishment of his party.<lb/>
Reagan vs. Hart ought to be some con-<lb/>
ies<lb/>
"Campus Forum<lb/>
One Question:<lb/>
English To<lb/>
Anthropology?<lb/>
In response to Alex Albnght's<lb/>
criticism of Charles D. Shavitz in the<lb/>
Thursday, April 4 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian. I ask the reading public to<lb/>
ponder:<lb/>
How does a so called lecturer in the<lb/>
English department become an over-<lb/>
night expert in anthropology?<lb/>
Jay B. Shavitz<lb/>
Grernville<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. M,ii! or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<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 authorfsl. Letters<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. Stuaents<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
Crime B<lb/>
?y STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
Vandalism and larceny<lb/>
contributed to the rise in<lb/>
campus crime last week<lb/>
along with a number of<lb/>
DWI's and curfew and<lb/>
visitation policy viola-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
On April 4 a computer<lb/>
was reported stolen. The<lb/>
Public Safety Depart-<lb/>
ment is offering a $100<lb/>
reward for information<lb/>
leading to the arrest and<lb/>
conviction of person(s)<lb/>
involved in the larceny.<lb/>
The School of Business<lb/>
added $150 to the reward<lb/>
for a total or" $250.<lb/>
Incidents reported to<lb/>
the ECU Public Safety<lb/>
Department from April 2<lb/>
through 9 were:<lb/>
April 2, 12:45 a.m. ?<lb/>
A female student<lb/>
reported receiving narass-<lb/>
ing phone cads; 1:30a.m.<lb/>
? John Durwood<lb/>
Moore, Jr. of<lb/>
Washington, N.C. was<lb/>
arrested for DWI; 3:45<lb/>
a.m. ? Teresa M. Faison<lb/>
of 402 Fletcher w as found<lb/>
in violation of curfew and<lb/>
visitation policy; 8:42<lb/>
a.m. ? Margaret A.<lb/>
Staabof 413-D Belk Hai<lb/>
was written ud for<lb/>
disorderly conduct for<lb/>
use of vulgar language on<lb/>
the east side of Joyner<lb/>
Library; 5:12 p.m. ?<lb/>
Housekeeping Services<lb/>
requested assistance with<lb/>
a disgruntled employee;<lb/>
11:35 p.m. ? A female<lb/>
student reported being<lb/>
verbally assaulted north<lb/>
of Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
April 3, 3:10 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of vandalism to a<lb/>
vehicle parked west of<lb/>
Scon Hall; 3:45 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of larceny of a<lb/>
purse from a third floor<lb/>
voice practice room in the<lb/>
Music Building; 4:20<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
larceny of PA speakers<lb/>
from Fletcher Hall; 4:48<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of van-<lb/>
dalism to a computer ter-<lb/>
minal in reference room<lb/>
105 in Joyner Library; 11<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
larceny of the panic bar<lb/>
and lock assembly from<lb/>
the southwest curfew<lb/>
door of Jones Hall, some<lb/>
of which was recovered.<lb/>
April 4, 1:20 a.rr ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of<lb/>
property from the nor-<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
Studies<lb/>
Incidents<lb/>
An investigation of<lb/>
sexual harassment of<lb/>
students by professors<lb/>
has been initiated by<lb/>
Mick LaSalle. An upcom-<lb/>
ing "expose" on the pro-<lb/>
blem is planned. "This is<lb/>
no joke. There's a serious<lb/>
problem here and I'm<lb/>
perfectly serious about<lb/>
getting to the bottom of<lb/>
it LaSalle said.<lb/>
Although LaSalle's in-<lb/>
vestigation is still young,<lb/>
he said he's already un-<lb/>
covered many incidents<lb/>
of harassment. "I'm not<lb/>
talking about students be-<lb/>
ing asked to dinner or<lb/>
coffee he said. "I'm<lb/>
talking about women be-<lb/>
ing pressed against walls<lb/>
or being psychologically<lb/>
manipulated by men who<lb/>
have a great deal to say-<lb/>
about their academic<lb/>
fate<lb/>
LaSalle sa d that most<lb/>
of ECU's professors are<lb/>
responsible individuals<lb/>
and doesn't expect to dig<lb/>
up a lot of involved in-<lb/>
dividuals. "The pattern<lb/>
so far indicates a few peo-<lb/>
ple making a lot of moves<lb/>
on mosthvywa women<lb/>
students. The girl gets<lb/>
scared, keeps quiet, and<lb/>
leaves the guy free to try<lb/>
?fain later, on the same<lb/>
 girl or on a new one<lb/>
LaSalle is currently<lb/>
conducting confidential<lb/>
interviews with students<lb/>
who fed they have been<lb/>
exually harassed at<lb/>
Those interested in<lb/>
LaSalle can do<lb/>
io at 758-9474 or<lb/>
'52-0341.<lb/>
?5<lb/>
flf " ' "? m ???'???(<lb/>
mm ????!<lb/>
 m m<lb/>
????? nmm pin m in<lb/>
II II ? V<lb/>
?ywi'S<lb/>
<lb/>
jt&amp;<lb/>
 !??.  . .i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0005"/><lb/>
i i<lb/>
I <lb/>
I ??.<lb/>
K<lb/>
pus f omm<lb/>
Question:<lb/>
h To<lb/>
tropology?<lb/>
the<lb/>
1 I Greenville<lb/>
Lrum Rules<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 Mail t)r<lb/>
1 ice in (he Old<lb/>
1 toy net<lb/>
1 Ment nation, all tet-<lb/>
1 fw Iuh, major and 1 foew, phone number V :he author(s). 1 etiers<lb/>
I vpewritten pages, I 1 or near I printed. All eel to editing for been-h nJ ftfee, ? j no personal I be pt 'nuted Students, ? ' ror (his minded that they art limited K five issue<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?y STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
SMTWiMw<lb/>
Very<lb/>
Vandalism and larceny<lb/>
contributed to the rise in<lb/>
campus crime last week<lb/>
along with a number of<lb/>
DWI's and curfew and<lb/>
visitation policy viola-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
On April 4 a computer<lb/>
was reported stolen. The<lb/>
Public Safety Depart-<lb/>
ment is offering a $100<lb/>
reward for information<lb/>
leading to the arrest and<lb/>
conviction of person(s)<lb/>
involved in the larceny.<lb/>
The School of Business<lb/>
added $150 to the reward<lb/>
for a total of $250.<lb/>
Incidents reported to<lb/>
the ECU Public Safety<lb/>
Department from April 2<lb/>
through 9 were:<lb/>
April 2, 12:45 a.m. ?<lb/>
A female student<lb/>
reported receiving harass-<lb/>
ing phone calls; 1:30 a.m.<lb/>
? John Durwood<lb/>
Moore, Jr. of<lb/>
Washington, N.C. was<lb/>
arrested for DWI; 3:45<lb/>
a.m. ? Teresa M. Faison<lb/>
of 402 Fletcher was found<lb/>
in violation of curfew and<lb/>
visitation policy; 8:42<lb/>
a.m. ? Margaret A.<lb/>
Staab of 413-D Belk Hall<lb/>
as written up for<lb/>
disorderly conduct for<lb/>
use of vulgar language on<lb/>
the east side of Joyner<lb/>
Library; 5:12 p.m. ?<lb/>
Housekeeping Services<lb/>
requested assistance with<lb/>
a disgruntled employee;<lb/>
11:35 p.m. ? A female<lb/>
student reported being<lb/>
verbally assaulted north<lb/>
of Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
April 3, 3:10 p.m. ?A<lb/>
report of vandalism to a<lb/>
vehicle parked west of<lb/>
Scott Hall; 3:45 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report of larceny of a<lb/>
purse from a third floor<lb/>
voice practice room in the<lb/>
Music Building; 4:20<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
iarceny of PA speakers<lb/>
from Fletcher Hall; 4:48<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of van-<lb/>
dalism to a computer ter-<lb/>
minal in reference room<lb/>
105 in Joyner Library; 11<lb/>
p.m. ? A report of the<lb/>
larceny of the panic bar<lb/>
and lock assembly from<lb/>
the southwest curfew<lb/>
door of Jones Hall, some<lb/>
of which was recovered.<lb/>
April 4, 1:20 a.m. ?A<lb/>
report of the larceny of<lb/>
property from the nor<lb/>
theast corner of Aycock<lb/>
Hall, some of which was<lb/>
recovered; 2:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
James Marion Pearce of<lb/>
Hamlet, N.C. was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI and driv-<lb/>
ing while license was<lb/>
revoked on College Hill<lb/>
Drive; 10:10 a.m. ? A<lb/>
report of breaking, enter-<lb/>
ing and larcency from a<lb/>
pastry machine in the<lb/>
canteen of Greene Hall;<lb/>
7:50 a.m. ? A report of<lb/>
breaking, entering and<lb/>
larceny of a computer<lb/>
from room 238 Rawl<lb/>
Building; 10:40 a.m. ?A<lb/>
report of larceny from<lb/>
the basketball area of<lb/>
Minges Coliseum; 7:48<lb/>
p.m. ? A report the<lb/>
coins in a candy vending<lb/>
machine in the Garrett<lb/>
Hall canteen were accessi-<lb/>
ble.<lb/>
April 5, 1:38 a.m. ? A<lb/>
report of the larceny of<lb/>
the receiver and cord<lb/>
from the house phone in<lb/>
the lobby of Belk Hall;<lb/>
6:05 p.m. ? A report<lb/>
that the sandwich<lb/>
machine on the second<lb/>
floor of the Allied Health<lb/>
Building was unsecured;<lb/>
6:15 p.m. ? Shequita<lb/>
Ratliff of 501 Greene<lb/>
Hall reported being<lb/>
threatened by Danetta<lb/>
Moore of 711 Greene<lb/>
Hall; 10:20 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of a disturbance<lb/>
on the tenth floor of Cle-<lb/>
ment Hall; 10:45 p.m. ?<lb/>
A report the glass panel<lb/>
of a phone booth nor-<lb/>
thwest of Scott Hall was<lb/>
broken; 10:50 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report of Vandalism to a<lb/>
basketball goal post east<lb/>
of Belk Hall.<lb/>
April 6, 1:25 a.m. ?<lb/>
Christopher Keith Hardy<lb/>
of Jay, Fla. was arrested<lb/>
for DWI and found<lb/>
operating a vehicle<lb/>
reported stolen to the<lb/>
Escambia County<lb/>
Sheriff's Office in Pen-<lb/>
sacola, Fla; 1:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
Kurt Dennis Feike of 172<lb/>
Aycock Hall was arrested<lb/>
for DWI; 4 p.m. ?<lb/>
Danetta Moore of 711<lb/>
Greene Hall was arrested<lb/>
for communicating<lb/>
threats to Shequjta<lb/>
Ratliff of 501 Greene<lb/>
Hall; 10:20 p.m. ? Jeff<lb/>
Michael Ramey of 210-A<lb/>
Scott was found<lb/>
operating a vehicle after<lb/>
consuming alcohol; 11:45<lb/>
p.m. ? Joan Marian<lb/>
Holder of 219 Unstead<lb/>
Hall and Cora Elizabeth<lb/>
Clark of 202 Umstead<lb/>
Hall were reported con-<lb/>
ducting themselves in a<lb/>
disorderly manner in<lb/>
Greene Hall; 11:58 p.m.<lb/>
? A report of a<lb/>
suspicious and<lb/>
unescorted, black male in<lb/>
Greene Hall.<lb/>
April 7, 12:24 a.m. ?<lb/>
A report the inside galley<lb/>
door to the cafeteria in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center was unsecured; 3<lb/>
a.m. ? Marianne<lb/>
Vischetti of 310 Gotten<lb/>
Hall and Christopher. S.<lb/>
Miele of 482 Jones Hall<lb/>
were found in violation<lb/>
of curfew and visitation<lb/>
policy in 310 Cotten Hall;<lb/>
8:38 a.m. ? A report of<lb/>
two black males acting<lb/>
suspicious in the Spilman<lb/>
Building; 5:30 p.m. ? A<lb/>
report the doors to the of-<lb/>
fices of Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
and the secretarv were<lb/>
unlocked; 10:10 p.m. ?<lb/>
Curtis R. Hall, Samuel E.<lb/>
Tyson, and Yul Wells, all<lb/>
from Greenville, were<lb/>
banned from campus for<lb/>
disorderly conduct in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and at the<lb/>
southeast corner of<lb/>
Greene Hall; 11:40 p.m.<lb/>
? A report of vandalism<lb/>
to a motorcycle parked<lb/>
south of the Bloxton<lb/>
House.<lb/>
April 8, 12:25 a.m. ?<lb/>
Sean Kevin Olson of<lb/>
101-B Belk Hall was<lb/>
given a campus citation<lb/>
for exceeding the posted<lb/>
speed limit by 15 mph or<lb/>
more on College Hill<lb/>
Drive; 1:15 ? A report<lb/>
of vandalism to the win-<lb/>
dow between first and se-<lb/>
cond floors in the central<lb/>
stairwell in Slay Hall;<lb/>
Allan Rainford Watkins<lb/>
of 201 E. 8th St. and<lb/>
Gregory Ryan of 217-D<lb/>
Board Action<lb/>
Belk Hall were found in<lb/>
possession of and<lb/>
discharging pyrotechnics<lb/>
on the second northwest<lb/>
wing bathroom; 9 a.m. ?<lb/>
A report the medeco lock<lb/>
of door number 2<lb/>
Ragsdale was unlocked<lb/>
and malfunctioning; A<lb/>
report art type murals<lb/>
were stapled to a wall on<lb/>
the main floor of<lb/>
Ragsdale; 9:20 a.m. ?<lb/>
Bill Congdon of 203-D<lb/>
Belk Hall was found in<lb/>
possession of a key to<lb/>
door number 8 of the<lb/>
Music Recital Hall; 10:25<lb/>
a.m. ? Demetra Jay<lb/>
Gooding of 123 Fletcher<lb/>
Hall and Bill E. Mc-<lb/>
Collum, a non-student,<lb/>
were found in violation<lb/>
of curfew and violation<lb/>
policy in room 123 Flet-<lb/>
cher Hall; 11.10 a.m. ?<lb/>
The windows to room 117<lb/>
Flanagan were found to<lb/>
have no locks and were<lb/>
temporarily secured; 7:05<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Possession of mari- Guiltv<lb/>
luana ?<lb/>
Possession<lb/>
firearms<lb/>
of Guilty<lb/>
Decision<lb/>
Probation for one year<lb/>
Fine ? $125<lb/>
Written reprimand<lb/>
Voluntary work ? 40<lb/>
hours<lb/>
Junior<lb/>
Stealing<lb/>
Guilty<lb/>
Fine ? $50<lb/>
Written reprimand<lb/>
Probation for one year<lb/>
Restitution<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Possession of<lb/>
counterfeit dr ugs<lb/>
Guilty<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Possession of drug<lb/>
paraphernalia<lb/>
Guilty<lb/>
Drug and Alcohol<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
Probation for one year<lb/>
Voluntary work ? 40<lb/>
hours<lb/>
Written reprimand<lb/>
Fine ? $60<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
? '?Gree .vilie Blvd<lb/>
754 3023-24 HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
4 hour Towing Service<lb/>
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Mon. &amp; Tues.<lb/>
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FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
Studies<lb/>
Incidents<lb/>
An investigation of<lb/>
sexual harassment of<lb/>
students by professors<lb/>
has been initiated by<lb/>
Mick LaSalle. An upcom-<lb/>
ing "expose" on the pro-<lb/>
blem is planned. "This is<lb/>
no joke. There's a serious<lb/>
problem here and I'm<lb/>
perfectly serious about<lb/>
getting to the bottom of<lb/>
it LaSalle said.<lb/>
Although LaSalle's in-<lb/>
vestigation is still young,<lb/>
he said he's already un-<lb/>
covered many incidents<lb/>
of harassment. "I'm not<lb/>
talking about students be-<lb/>
ing asked to dinner or<lb/>
coffee he said. "I'm<lb/>
talking about women be-<lb/>
ing pressed against walls<lb/>
or being psychologically<lb/>
manipulated by men who<lb/>
have a great deal to say<lb/>
about their academic<lb/>
fate<lb/>
LaSalle said that most<lb/>
of ECU's professors arc<lb/>
responsible individuals<lb/>
and doesn't expect to dig<lb/>
up a lot of involved in-<lb/>
dividuals. ?'The pattern<lb/>
so far indicates a few peo-<lb/>
ple making a lot of moves<lb/>
on mostly young women<lb/>
students. The girl gets<lb/>
scared, keeps quiet, and<lb/>
?caves the guy free to try<lb/>
again later, on the same<lb/>
girl or on a new one<lb/>
LaSalle is currently<lb/>
conducting confidential<lb/>
interviews with students<lb/>
who feel they have been<lb/>
sexually harassed at<lb/>
ECU. Those interested in<lb/>
contacting LaSalle can do<lb/>
so at 758-9474 or<lb/>
752-0341.<lb/>
1 OS Airport Ro<lb/>
Greenvcle. NC 27834<lb/>
(919)758-0327<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
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For n instant replay, see your neicbornood Mr GaHi's.<lb/>
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RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
i 1? f C ??" "cm - a" "Reels'<lb/>
Hush $J f0r m.cur,enl306Dagecaia<lb/>
, 'og Custom research S -hes.s ass.s<lb/>
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Rr.?rrh. i '322 loano A?e .206 WA.<lb/>
I I os Ange'es. CA 90025 (21 3i 47' 8226<lb/>
Souls on The MaII<lb/>
The Student Body<lb/>
of<lb/>
East Carolind University<lb/>
is cordially invited<lb/>
to this annual event<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
Society of United Liberal Students<lb/>
Please join us. There will be food and fun in th<lb/>
sun for everyone<lb/>
Apml 12, 1984<lb/>
2 p.M. - 11 p.M.<lb/>
Pe?).se torn us in our<lb/>
Annu.il Spring ("elcbr.ition<lb/>
fyrWml<lb/>
? ? ?"??? i' J a -?<lb/>
"fi '? ?'<lb/>
jf l<lb/>
i<lb/>
-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0006"/><lb/>
1 HI I S1 CAROl IN!AN<lb/>
APRIi 10, 1984<lb/>
Genital Herpes Studied<lb/>
By TINA MAROSC HAK<lb/>
A study on genital<lb/>
herpes indicates that the<lb/>
need exists for both in-<lb/>
creased quantity and im-<lb/>
proved quality of educa-<lb/>
tion. "Date reveal that<lb/>
these (ECU) college<lb/>
students have little ac-<lb/>
curate knowledge about<lb/>
genital herpes except that<lb/>
it is incurable said Pro-<lb/>
fessor and Counselor<lb/>
lona J. Ryan and<lb/>
Associate Professor of<lb/>
Health Education<lb/>
Patricia C. Dunn, after a<lb/>
recent study.<lb/>
Dunn and Ryan col-<lb/>
lected data from 1,011<lb/>
ECU students in 35 sec-<lb/>
tions of the Health 1000<lb/>
classes by questioning<lb/>
them on their actual<lb/>
knowledge of herpes.<lb/>
'Perhaps no other<lb/>
disease in recent times,<lb/>
with the possible excep-<lb/>
tion of AIDS, has<lb/>
generated such fear and<lb/>
wariness about sexual<lb/>
contact among sexually<lb/>
active individuals as<lb/>
genital herpes they<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Among the<lb/>
respondents (60 percent<lb/>
female and 40 percent<lb/>
male), females tended to<lb/>
know slightlv more about<lb/>
the symptons of genital<lb/>
herpes than the males.<lb/>
However, no significant<lb/>
difference existed bet<lb/>
ween students who were<lb/>
educated on the subject.<lb/>
Approximately 72.8 per-<lb/>
cent of the students<lb/>
surveyed were freshmen.<lb/>
During the fall of 1983,<lb/>
"students were asked to<lb/>
respond to 16 multiple-<lb/>
choice questions relatie<lb/>
to the situation in terms<lb/>
of cause, transmission,<lb/>
symptoms, recurring<lb/>
symptoms, stages of in-<lb/>
fectiousness, complica-<lb/>
tions, treatment, and<lb/>
diagnosis of genital<lb/>
herpes Ryan said.<lb/>
Results showed that<lb/>
females responded cor-<lb/>
rectly to questions in five<lb/>
areas more frequently<lb/>
than males. "Females in<lb/>
significantly greater pro-<lb/>
portion than males knew<lb/>
1) the agent that causes<lb/>
genital herpes is similar to<lb/>
the one that causes cold<lb/>
sores; 2) the symptoms of<lb/>
active herpes in the male;<lb/>
3) the symptoms in the<lb/>
female; 4) the most ac-<lb/>
curate means of diagnos-<lb/>
ing herpes is by having a<lb/>
viral culture; and 5) a per<lb/>
son can have both Herpe,<lb/>
Type I and Herpes Typo<lb/>
II infections at the same<lb/>
time stated the report.<lb/>
Seventy percent of the<lb/>
students said they receiv-<lb/>
ed most information<lb/>
about herpes (in terms of<lb/>
mass media sources) from<lb/>
magazine articles. Televi-<lb/>
sion and radio were<lb/>
sources for 63 percent of<lb/>
the respondants. "Only<lb/>
42 (.04 percent) students<lb/>
indicated that they had<lb/>
not received any informa-<lb/>
tion about herpes<lb/>
through the mass<lb/>
media stated Dunn and<lb/>
Ryan's report.<lb/>
"Despite the exposure<lb/>
of these students to con-<lb/>
siderable mass media in-<lb/>
formation about genital<lb/>
herpes and, in the case of<lb/>
22 percent of the<lb/>
students, actual<lb/>
classroom instruction<lb/>
about the disease, this<lb/>
study reveals the level of<lb/>
accurate knowledge<lb/>
about herpes is meager<lb/>
stated the report.<lb/>
Ryan and Dunn found<lb/>
that "students not only<lb/>
lack accurate understan-<lb/>
ding about genital herpes<lb/>
but have insufficient<lb/>
knowledge to take the<lb/>
necessary steps to control<lb/>
the spread of the disease<lb/>
and to get treatment<lb/>
The two will present<lb/>
the paper this month at<lb/>
the American College<lb/>
Health Association<lb/>
meeting in Atlanta,<lb/>
Georgia.<lb/>
lfcY Vnni , Lt-i i?Nt<lb/>
A 5J.N1- '<lb/>
feT3<lb/>
? <lb/>
iTA<lb/>
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Rose Cites Previous<lb/>
Case As Precedent<lb/>
For Insanity Pleas<lb/>
ByDALESWANSON<lb/>
sun Wrllrr<lb/>
"North Carolina,<lb/>
along with many other<lb/>
states, is still using a<lb/>
140-year-old case as the<lb/>
precedent for its 'guilty<lb/>
by reason of insamt'<lb/>
plea said Dr. Selwin<lb/>
Rose, forensic<lb/>
psychiatrist and attorney,<lb/>
in a Friday lecture entitl-<lb/>
ed "Are Killers Insane In<lb/>
North Carolina?"<lb/>
Rose began his lecture<lb/>
with a short history of the<lb/>
law as it applies to the<lb/>
mentally ill. He described<lb/>
the 1843 case of Daniel<lb/>
McNaughton, a paranoid<lb/>
schizophrenic who tried<lb/>
to kill Sir Robert Peele.<lb/>
McNaughton was<lb/>
declared insane by the<lb/>
court and was sent to an<lb/>
institution. This historic<lb/>
case has since been used<lb/>
extensively as a precedent<lb/>
for handeling insanity<lb/>
pleas both in Europe and<lb/>
the U.S.<lb/>
The rest of Rose's lec-<lb/>
ture dealt with three dif-<lb/>
ferent cases in North<lb/>
Carolina whereby he was<lb/>
used as an authority to<lb/>
determine the<lb/>
defendant's mental state.<lb/>
In each case he stressed<lb/>
how the present laws for<lb/>
handling insanit pleas in<lb/>
North Carolina are not<lb/>
compatible with the ad-<lb/>
vances psychiatric study<lb/>
has made since 1843. He<lb/>
also stressed the problem<lb/>
of juries that respond<lb/>
more to emotion than to<lb/>
the directions of the court<lb/>
and how these responses<lb/>
bring about gross incon-<lb/>
stancies.<lb/>
Many states in the U.S.<lb/>
are changing their laws<lb/>
and updating them to<lb/>
work better for both the<lb/>
defendant and society,<lb/>
bul North Carolina seems<lb/>
to remain behind when<lb/>
handeling the criminally<lb/>
insane, Rose said.<lb/>
Applied Philosophy<lb/>
Sponsors Conference<lb/>
On Pharmaceuticals<lb/>
Bv TINA MAROSC HAK<lb/>
C MMM Fditur<lb/>
"Business Ethics And<lb/>
The Drug Industry" will<lb/>
be the topic of an April<lb/>
12 and 13 conference in<lb/>
Applied Philosophy.<lb/>
Various company and<lb/>
university representatives<lb/>
will present papers on<lb/>
issues relating to the<lb/>
marketing of phar-<lb/>
maceuticals , drug safety<lb/>
in the U.S. and abroad,<lb/>
and business ethics used<lb/>
by companies pursuing<lb/>
profit.<lb/>
The first session will be<lb/>
held Thursday at 3 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Tal Scriven of<lb/>
California Polytechnic<lb/>
State University, San<lb/>
Luis Obispo, will present<lb/>
a paper entitled "Utility,<lb/>
Autonomy, and Drug<lb/>
Regulation "Post-<lb/>
Marketing Survelliance:<lb/>
New Challenges, New<lb/>
Problems" will be the<lb/>
topic of the second lec-<lb/>
ture given during this<lb/>
time. It will be presented<lb/>
by Dt HuRh Tilson of<lb/>
the Burroughs-Wellcome<lb/>
Company.<lb/>
That evening at 7:30,<lb/>
Elizabeth Clark of the<lb/>
Upjohn Company will<lb/>
speak on "Ethical Con-<lb/>
siderations in Phar-<lb/>
maceutical Marketing in<lb/>
the Developing World<lb/>
Westminster Institute for<lb/>
Ethics and Human<lb/>
Values speaker Dr.<lb/>
Michael Bayles will give a<lb/>
paper entitled "Brand<lb/>
Name Extortionists, In-<lb/>
tellectual Prostitutes, and<lb/>
Genetic Free Riders<lb/>
The third session at<lb/>
9:30 a.m. on Friday will<lb/>
feature Dr. Bert Spilker<lb/>
also of the Burroughs-<lb/>
Welcome Company.<lb/>
Spilker will speak on<lb/>
"Ethical Considerations<lb/>
in Designing and Con-<lb/>
ducting Clinical Drug<lb/>
Studies "Risk and<lb/>
Regulation in the Drug<lb/>
Industry" will be the<lb/>
Final paper of the con-<lb/>
ference. Dr. Mark Sagoff<lb/>
of the University of<lb/>
Maryland, College Park<lb/>
will address the issue.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057638_0007"/><lb/>
THE EASTCAROI INI AN<lb/>
?<lb/>
Features<lb/>
APRIL 10. 1984<lb/>
TheCradle Will Rock<lb/>
1937 Original<lb/>
Plays Hendrix<lb/>
The Acting Company, on tour from the John F.<lb/>
Kennedy Center, will present Marc Blitzstein's con-<lb/>
troversial musical theater piece The Cradle Hill<lb/>
Rock, directed by John Houseman, producing ar-<lb/>
tistic director for the company. This critically ac-<lb/>
claimed production, which was originally staged off-<lb/>
Broadway for a limited run with alumni of The Ac-<lb/>
ting Company, will be performed at McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre on the ECU campus Tuesday April 10 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
The Cradle Hill Rock, when first produced in<lb/>
1937, combined musical comedy with a strong pro-<lb/>
labor statement in the midst of the Great Depression.<lb/>
The play is satire on the evils of a town run by a cor-<lb/>
poration.<lb/>
The original Mercury Theatre production, produc-<lb/>
ed by Houseman and directed by Orson Welles, was<lb/>
to be nresented under the auspices of the Federal<lb/>
Theatre Project when word came to halt production.<lb/>
On June P. 193 a single performance was given<lb/>
under extraordinary circumstances with Blitzstein sit-<lb/>
ting at an on-stage piano while his cast sang and<lb/>
spoke their roles from their seats in the audience. The<lb/>
audience had gathered outside the original theater<lb/>
from which the production was banned and waited<lb/>
for word as Houseman and Welles frantically search-<lb/>
ed for an alternative place to present the show. Once<lb/>
the announcement was made, the audience followed<lb/>
the actors uptown to the new theatre, almost doubl-<lb/>
ing in size by the time the show went on later. Six<lb/>
months after, on December 6. the play opened to<lb/>
unanimous rae reviews on Broadway. Ten years<lb/>
later, a revival under Leonard Bernstein's baton was<lb/>
an enormous success at New York Center.<lb/>
The current production has been staged by Mr.<lb/>
Houseman in the style of the 1937 original. Perform-<lb/>
ed on a bare stage, the production incorporates<lb/>
Brechtian staging techniques with the on-stage piano<lb/>
player again delivering scene-setting announcements.<lb/>
Mr. Houseman has had a long and auspicious<lb/>
career in the theatre and movies as director, producer<lb/>
and Oscar-winning actor. In addition to the projects<lb/>
Houseman and Welles produced for the Federal<lb/>
Theatre, they were responsible for the famous<lb/>
oodoo MacBeth, the 193" modern dress version of<lb/>
Julius Ceasar and on radio the renowned "Men<lb/>
From Mars" broadcast that staggered America in<lb/>
1938.<lb/>
In 1968 Houseman was appointed head of the<lb/>
drama division of Julliard. He contiued to hold that<lb/>
position, and in 19"2 he also assumed the artistic<lb/>
direction of The Acting Company, initially formed<lb/>
with Julliard graduates. His latest book, Final Dress,<lb/>
the third volume of his autobiography series, will be<lb/>
published this year.<lb/>
Musical direction for The Cradle Hill Rock will be<lb/>
by Charles Berigan. costume design by Judith Dolan,<lb/>
sets by Mark Fitzgibbons and lighting by Dennis<lb/>
Parichy.<lb/>
Tickets are S5 for ECU students, S7 for vouth age<lb/>
14 and under and S10 for ECU faculty, staff and the<lb/>
public. All tickets are S10 at the door. Tickets are on<lb/>
sale at the Central Ticket cfice, Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center.<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Demand facts;<lb/>
don Y give in<lb/>
to argument of<lb/>
intimidation.<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
fnimrn f Allot<lb/>
I was in Kroger's late Sunday<lb/>
evening with Mick LaSalle. I was<lb/>
telling Mick about the wimpy-<lb/>
looking men in Jane Fonda's<lb/>
workout book for pregnant<lb/>
women when an old friend<lb/>
came marching around the frozen<lb/>
food aisle where we were talking.<lb/>
The girl is 19, pretty and I'd<lb/>
always considered her intelligent<lb/>
and mature for her age.<lb/>
Conservative's<lb/>
Commentary<lb/>
.a view from tie right.<lb/>
Ella Hammer (Davenia McFadden) sings of the workingman's fate as reporters look on in The Cradle Will Rock<lb/>
1984 Is Here<lb/>
Book Exposes Media Manipulation<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Featam W filer<lb/>
The tragedy in Orwell's 1984 was not<lb/>
that the people were slaves to govern-<lb/>
ment, but that they were slaves and did<lb/>
not know it. Their government kept<lb/>
them enslaved by total control of the<lb/>
media, including the manipulation of<lb/>
the language itself. The thought police<lb/>
were everywhere in case someone<lb/>
mangaged to think beyond the media<lb/>
output.<lb/>
Well, we're smack in the middle of<lb/>
1984, and Orwell's prophetic<lb/>
nightmare is already a reality for a<lb/>
third of the world's people ? those<lb/>
under the spreading yoke of com-<lb/>
munism.<lb/>
In his book Target America: The In-<lb/>
fluence of Communist Propoganda on<lb/>
U.S. Media James Tyson explains that<lb/>
the West has much stronger economic<lb/>
systems than the Soviets and possesses<lb/>
a decisive edge in technology ? even<lb/>
weapons technology ? over the<lb/>
Soviets. But because of their mastery<lb/>
of propaganda, the Soviets are winning<lb/>
the struggle with the free West for<lb/>
domination of the world.<lb/>
Before Lenin ever went to Russia, he<lb/>
was a publisher, the managing editor<lb/>
of the Communist newspaer Iskra (The<lb/>
Spark) and later a pamphleteer. He<lb/>
understood that the struggle for the<lb/>
control of men's minds was of more<lb/>
importance than military victory. Thus<lb/>
today, the Soviets employ more than<lb/>
six million propoganda agents and<lb/>
spend more than $3 billion a year<lb/>
within the Soviet Union to keep their<lb/>
own population subjugated much in<lb/>
the manner of Orwell's 1984.<lb/>
Tyson points out that the Soviets<lb/>
also realize the value of propaganda in<lb/>
spreading communism outside the<lb/>
U.S.S.R. In 1950 Stalin said, "If I<lb/>
could control the movies, 1 could con-<lb/>
trol the world (This was before<lb/>
Stalin knew of the power of television.)<lb/>
And as Molotov said, "Who reads the<lb/>
Communist papers? Only a few people<lb/>
who are already Communists. We<lb/>
don't need to propagandize them.<lb/>
What is our subject? Who do we have<lb/>
to influence? We have to influence the<lb/>
non-Communists if we want to make<lb/>
them Communists or to fool them. So<lb/>
we have to try and infiltrate the big<lb/>
press, to influence millions of people<lb/>
and not merely thousands Thus<lb/>
states Tyson, "While Americans were<lb/>
developing methods of mass produc-<lb/>
tion, mass advertising and market<lb/>
research ? techniques for producing<lb/>
and selling goods ? the Bosheviks<lb/>
were devising methods of selling Com-<lb/>
munism to the world by clandestine<lb/>
propaganda, understood as a method<lb/>
not of intellectual argumentation but<lb/>
of political warfare<lb/>
Tyson goes on to explain that the<lb/>
Soviets have more than half a million<lb/>
agents working around the world out-<lb/>
side the Soviet Union spending another<lb/>
See GARY, Page 8<lb/>
Prima Ballerina Gives Master Class<lb/>
Prima ballerina Mellisa Hayden potca en attitude. Miss Hayden win conduct master classes In ballet daring<lb/>
ECU's seventh annual Day of Dance.<lb/>
Renowned ballet artist Melissa<lb/>
Hayden will be featured at East<lb/>
Carolina University's seventh an-<lb/>
nual Day of Dance workshop to<lb/>
be held Sunday, April 15, in the<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Center in<lb/>
Greenville. The workshop, for<lb/>
dancers at all levels of training,<lb/>
will include classes in ballet,<lb/>
modern dance, jazz and tap<lb/>
dance. Miss Hayden will conduct<lb/>
master classes in ballet. Other<lb/>
classes will be taught by ECU<lb/>
dance faculty members Mavis<lb/>
Ray, Jerome Jenkins, and private<lb/>
studio dance instructors Sherryl<lb/>
Mercer and Pat Downey-Kuhn.<lb/>
Miss Hayden has earned a<lb/>
secure place in the history of<lb/>
American ballet through her suc-<lb/>
cessful career as a performer and<lb/>
now as a teacher of young<lb/>
dancers. For 28 years she was a<lb/>
leading ballerina with the New<lb/>
York City Ballet and American<lb/>
Ballet Theatre. At the beginning<lb/>
of Miss Hayden's professional<lb/>
career, John Martin of the New<lb/>
York Times wrote: "A more<lb/>
powerful dramatic dancer or a<lb/>
more technically superb one<lb/>
would be hard to find On the<lb/>
20th anniversary of her associa-<lb/>
tion with the New York City<lb/>
Ballet, dance critic Clive Barnes<lb/>
wrote: "She has survived and sur-<lb/>
vived, and more pertinently, she<lb/>
has gotten better and better. (New<lb/>
York City Ballet's) Melissa<lb/>
Hayden is its greatest dancer<lb/>
In 1945, she joined American<lb/>
Ballet Theatre, and in less than a<lb/>
year she was a soloist performing<lb/>
with the company here and<lb/>
abroad for two-and-a-half years.<lb/>
There followed an extended tour<lb/>
of Cuba and South America with<lb/>
Alicia Alonso's company. In<lb/>
1949, George Balachine and Lin-<lb/>
coln Kirstein invited her to join<lb/>
their newly formed company,<lb/>
New York City Ballet. For the<lb/>
next 24 years, except for a two-<lb/>
year return to American Ballet<lb/>
Theatre, Melissa Hayden was a<lb/>
leading ballerina of this world-<lb/>
famous company, the closest<lb/>
thing to a star in Balanchine's<lb/>
starless system.<lb/>
Miss Hayden announced her<lb/>
retirement in 1973, and her final<lb/>
session with the New York City<lb/>
Ballet was a personal and artistic<lb/>
triumph. In her honor, Balan-<lb/>
chine choreographed a farewell<lb/>
ballet, "Cortege Hongrois and<lb/>
the company's Spring Gala in<lb/>
May 1973 was marked by the<lb/>
presentation to Miss Hayden of<lb/>
the Handel Medallion, New York<lb/>
City's highest cultural award.<lb/>
Following her retirement, Miss<lb/>
Hayden spent three years as artist -<lb/>
in-residence and director of ballet<lb/>
at Skidmore College. She has been<lb/>
honored with the Albert Einstein<lb/>
Award, the Dance Educators<lb/>
Award and the Mademoiselle<lb/>
Award, and she holds honorary<lb/>
degrees from Skidmore College<lb/>
and Siena College.<lb/>
Today she heads Melissa<lb/>
Hayden, Inc her dance studio in<lb/>
New York City where in-<lb/>
termediate and advanced students<lb/>
and young professionals from all<lb/>
over the country have a chance to<lb/>
study with one of America's most<lb/>
distinguished ballerinas. This year<lb/>
Miss Hayden is teaching ballet at<lb/>
the North Carolina School of the<lb/>
Arts in Winston Salem.<lb/>
Registration for the Day of<lb/>
Dance is limited to dancers<lb/>
10-years-old or older. The fee is<lb/>
$10 per person. Because classes<lb/>
will be filled on a "first come,<lb/>
first serve" basis, pre-registration<lb/>
is encouraged; however, registra-<lb/>
tion will be accepted in person the<lb/>
morning of April 15 subject to<lb/>
class availability. Additional<lb/>
details and pre-registration forms<lb/>
for the workshop are available<lb/>
from the Department of Theatre<lb/>
Arts, East Carolina University in<lb/>
Greenville. Offices are located in<lb/>
the Messick Theatre Arts Center,<lb/>
"Gordon Ipock she said with<lb/>
hate seething from her brow. "I<lb/>
think you're a disgusting,<lb/>
sick I won't repeat the exact<lb/>
words that made up her profane<lb/>
invective. But with her finger wag-<lb/>
ging and her long hair flying, she<lb/>
finished her tirade with a threat of<lb/>
putting both her feet up my ass.<lb/>
LaSalle was dumbfounded, and<lb/>
so was I. Before I could get an ex-<lb/>
planation, she'd stomped off up<lb/>
the kitchen-ware aisle, perhaps<lb/>
waiting with a frying pan if I<lb/>
should follow and ask fo: one. I<lb/>
headed to the check-out rattled.<lb/>
LaSalle and I decided thai maybe<lb/>
my articles in this paper had<lb/>
something to do with this old<lb/>
friend's suddenly abusive<lb/>
behavior. We could think of no<lb/>
other reasons.<lb/>
I have a reason for mentioning<lb/>
this personal episode. The girl's<lb/>
attack is an extreme example of<lb/>
the argument of intimidation, a<lb/>
favorite device the left uses to<lb/>
browbeat its critics into submis-<lb/>
sion. (This young lady has ex-<lb/>
cellent left-liberal credentials:<lb/>
she's an art student and has<lb/>
parents who teach at ECU.) Ac-<lb/>
tually, such an argument isn't an<lb/>
argument at all, but a substitue<lb/>
for an argument. No facts are<lb/>
mentioned; no rational dialogue<lb/>
or logical debate of the issue is<lb/>
raised. However, mos: left-<lb/>
liberals temper their criticisms<lb/>
much more effectively. For exam-<lb/>
ple, a class discussion may go like<lb/>
this:<lb/>
"I was reading an ar:icle in<lb/>
Reader's Digest you say, "and<lb/>
the writer said " You hear<lb/>
snickering and stop in mid-<lb/>
sentence. "What's wrong?" you<lb/>
ask the guy across the room.<lb/>
"Reader's Digest?" he says<lb/>
with a sick giggle. "Is that the best<lb/>
source you can give?" Then the<lb/>
entire liberal goon squad breaks<lb/>
into laughter.<lb/>
If your're the average guy or<lb/>
girl, you'll clam up right then<lb/>
because you suddenly feel unsure,<lb/>
even foolish. You feel like these<lb/>
liberals know something you<lb/>
don't, and if you make some sort<lb/>
of plea to the professor for<lb/>
fairness, he's likely to join the<lb/>
snub too. (Often, it's the pro-<lb/>
fessor who plays the liberal goon<lb/>
squad like a violin: they re his<lb/>
chorus section.) At best the prof<lb/>
will smile, offer you a look of<lb/>
false comfort, clear his threat and<lb/>
say, "Next question<lb/>
You've had. your argument<lb/>
beaten without uttering a word,<lb/>
and you go home feeling whipped.<lb/>
However, if you'd ignored the<lb/>
laughs and condescending looks,<lb/>
the odds are good that mister<lb/>
liberal wise guy wouldn't have<lb/>
had a credible counter. He pro-<lb/>
bably doesn't know any more<lb/>
than you do, but you've sur-<lb/>
rendered to a bluff and a threat:<lb/>
the bluff that he knows something<lb/>
he probably doesn't, and the<lb/>
threat of being ostracized by the<lb/>
group. You've succumbed to peer<lb/>
pressure and intimidatior, not<lb/>
logic or facts.<lb/>
If you really want to see this<lb/>
liberal browbeating at high form,<lb/>
try mentioning the Bible as a<lb/>
source for an argument. Oh, the<lb/>
howls and shrieks of derision that<lb/>
will erupt if you quote God's<lb/>
word. "Surely you're not<lb/>
serious?" someone will assert<lb/>
pompously. And if you're like<lb/>
most students, you'll fall all over<lb/>
yourself apologizing for your ef-<lb/>
frontery to logic.<lb/>
But listen. You want to really<lb/>
know why most left-liberals refuse<lb/>
to argue the Bible with you. (This<lb/>
is just between the two of us,<lb/>
See DON'T, Page 9<lb/>
rt<lb/>
 . . - - -???,?.<lb/>
. ? a ? ? i ? ? ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN APRII 0, 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
-s??Sfe<lb/>
<lb/>
Senator Sponsors Celebration<lb/>
Gary Hart Link<lb/>
Continued From Page 7 world hunger pover<lb/>
$3 billion a ty. Granted, dismantling<lb/>
year spreading propagan- the Pentagon might tern-<lb/>
da and disinformation - porarily provide more<lb/>
is<lb/>
and the United States is<lb/>
their number-one target.<lb/>
He explains the methods<lb/>
these agents use to recruit<lb/>
citizens both within and<lb/>
outside the media. Few<lb/>
citizens knowingly<lb/>
cooperate with Soviet<lb/>
agents by becoming<lb/>
traitors or Communists<lb/>
themselves ? though<lb/>
some do, often in-<lb/>
dividuals in positions of<lb/>
power and influence. But<lb/>
many good citizens join<lb/>
what appear to be grass-<lb/>
roots movements that<lb/>
have ostensibly noble<lb/>
purposes: to end world<lb/>
hunger, stop racism and<lb/>
sexism or promote peace.<lb/>
But ultimately, these<lb/>
group's goals only further<lb/>
Soviet foreign policy.<lb/>
How often have you<lb/>
heard left-wing activists<lb/>
condemning the U.S.<lb/>
defense budget by saving<lb/>
defense money could bet-<lb/>
ter be spent fighting<lb/>
U.S. that consistently no idea that the KGB<lb/>
support Communist calling the shots<lb/>
goals. These groups are Understanding<lb/>
money for social welfare nown s the ft lob- America's obsession with<lb/>
money ior social welfare by, and most are h ghly legalities and the im<lb/>
programs, but obviously, respected and often mense influence of the<lb/>
quoted in the<lb/>
the real benefactor would<lb/>
be the Soviet drive for<lb/>
world conquest. Tyson<lb/>
also explains how Soviet<lb/>
propoganda agents try to<lb/>
link such themes as sex-<lb/>
ism and racism (which<lb/>
we're all against) to anti-<lb/>
war and disarmament<lb/>
propoganda. It's worth<lb/>
noting that although<lb/>
racist, South Africa is the<lb/>
lone major obstacle to a<lb/>
Communist takeover of<lb/>
the southern half of<lb/>
Africa: thus the constant<lb/>
in the major<lb/>
American media as im-<lb/>
portant sources of infor-<lb/>
mation. For example, the<lb/>
World Peace Council<lb/>
located in Helsinki,<lb/>
Finland is funded directly<lb/>
from Moscow. About 60<lb/>
percent of its staff are<lb/>
KGB agents. It works<lb/>
directly through the U.S.<lb/>
Peace Concil in this coun-<lb/>
try. The U.S. Peace<lb/>
Council is headed by<lb/>
veteran American Com-<lb/>
munist Pauline Rosen.<lb/>
legal profession within<lb/>
the U.S. prompted the<lb/>
formation of the Na-<lb/>
tional Lawyers Guild,<lb/>
another Communist front<lb/>
group with considerable<lb/>
influence. The National<lb/>
Emergency Civil Liberties<lb/>
Committee is another<lb/>
known Communist front<lb/>
group. Its members in-<lb/>
clude Jane Fonda and<lb/>
husband Tom Hayden<lb/>
(former SDS<lb/>
and Jackson<lb/>
barrage against the racist These two groups direct<lb/>
South Africans aimed at the "nuclear freeze" and<lb/>
the media to take a soft<lb/>
line on Communism,<lb/>
whether in the form of<lb/>
our former struggle in<lb/>
Vietnam or the present<lb/>
one in Central America,<lb/>
or promoting disarma-<lb/>
ment. Women Strike for<lb/>
Peace, Clergy and Laity<lb/>
Concerned and the Fund<lb/>
for Peace are just a few<lb/>
of these think tanks. But<lb/>
perhaps the most influen-<lb/>
tial is the Institute for<lb/>
Policy Studies. Establish-<lb/>
ed in 1963, it recently<lb/>
celebrated its 20th birth-<lb/>
day. U.S. Senator and<lb/>
presidential candidate<lb/>
member Gary Hart organized its<lb/>
the 20th anniversary celebra-<lb/>
tion and George<lb/>
front groups like the<lb/>
World Peace Concil to in-<lb/>
fluence U.S. foreign<lb/>
policy through the media<lb/>
and directly. For exam-<lb/>
Pic, the Institute for<lb/>
Policy Studies frequently<lb/>
gives journalistic<lb/>
workshops that well-<lb/>
known and respected<lb/>
journalists attend, in-<lb/>
cluding, for example,<lb/>
present and past editors<lb/>
of the Washington Post.<lb/>
Tyson explains that in<lb/>
the past, Soviet pro-<lb/>
paganda consisted mainly<lb/>
of the party line pumped<lb/>
out by the official Soviet<lb/>
press and broadcast<lb/>
media. It was obvious<lb/>
and ineffective. But now,<lb/>
getting America to sever<lb/>
trade and diplomatic ties<lb/>
with Pretoria. Only the<lb/>
Soviets would benefit<lb/>
from such a move.<lb/>
Tyson devotes a large<lb/>
chapter of the book to ex-<lb/>
posing the network of<lb/>
Communist front groups<lb/>
and think tanks in the<lb/>
"world peace"<lb/>
movements through an<lb/>
extensive organization of<lb/>
grass-roots peace groups<lb/>
affiliated with<lb/>
"mainstream" church<lb/>
groups and citizens<lb/>
organizations. The<lb/>
average concerned citizen<lb/>
involved on this level has<lb/>
LaSalle Abandons<lb/>
Pregnant Girlfriend<lb/>
publisher of Scientific<lb/>
American. (Ever notice McGovern was the'prin- wS'lhiiS <lb/>
oftTn 'auT5 S2S- 22 Wpuka- " net JoS of tort group'<lb/>
otten quote Scientific these two men's foreign the Soviets work to ce<lb/>
American when needing policies in regard to ap- their patylirTprintedin<lb/>
?y?sZtJret PCaSing .W?rld C?m- themainstreaAmericaS<lb/>
nihtary is no threat.) munism. McGovern was press. Then, Tass and<lb/>
a strident advocate of<lb/>
abandoning Vietnam to<lb/>
the Communists, and<lb/>
Gary Hart now advocates<lb/>
a similar U.S. pull out of<lb/>
El Salvador. Both have<lb/>
consistently supported<lb/>
sharp reductions in U.S.<lb/>
defense capabilities.<lb/>
Tyson goes on to show Washington Post<lb/>
how these groups of the highly critical of<lb/>
plied by your adversary is<lb/>
highly effective ? both<lb/>
on the Soviet people and<lb/>
abroad. "You don't<lb/>
believe us?" the Soviet<lb/>
leaders say. "Then will<lb/>
you believe Tom Wicker<lb/>
of the New York<lb/>
Times?"<lb/>
I experienced first-<lb/>
hand recently how these<lb/>
front groups work to get<lb/>
their message into the<lb/>
mainstream imedia. A<lb/>
group called Promoting<lb/>
Enduring Peace sent me,<lb/>
the Features Editor, a<lb/>
press release and letter<lb/>
promoting their "Third<lb/>
Annual Peace Cruise on<lb/>
the Volga Their letter<lb/>
began: "In a recent arti-<lb/>
cle in the New York<lb/>
used. The story in the<lb/>
April 5 East Carolinian<lb/>
called "Central America<lb/>
Discussed" is a good ex-<lb/>
ample. A group of leftists<lb/>
working through the<lb/>
ECU Newman Center us-<lb/>
ed a young idealistic staff<lb/>
writer and a sympathetic<lb/>
editor to publish a biased<lb/>
denunciation of U.S.<lb/>
policy in Central<lb/>
America. Perhaps all felt<lb/>
they were genuinely doing<lb/>
good and were sincere in<lb/>
their beliefs, but the end<lb/>
product might just as well<lb/>
have been written in<lb/>
Moscow and mailed to<lb/>
this paper as a press<lb/>
release. The majority of<lb/>
university newspapers are<lb/>
just as easily<lb/>
Times Anthony Lewis (a manipulated, arid unfor<lb/>
long-time liberal colum- tunately, so is most of the<lb/>
Tyson also explains<lb/>
how certain liberal foun-<lb/>
dations support research<lb/>
and publications that<lb/>
ultimately support the<lb/>
spread of Communism:<lb/>
The Stern Fund, Rubin<lb/>
Foundation, The Fund<lb/>
for Peace and others.<lb/>
Tyson also exposes the<lb/>
many left-liberal think<lb/>
tanks whose purpose is to<lb/>
influence Congress and<lb/>
far-left lobby cooperate<lb/>
with known Communist<lb/>
Ivestia (the Soviet Media)<lb/>
simply quote the<lb/>
American press to pro-<lb/>
mote their goals. A<lb/>
typical evening news<lb/>
broadcast in the U.S.S.R.<lb/>
contains numerous<lb/>
quotes from the New<lb/>
York Times and<lb/>
- all<lb/>
U.S.<lb/>
policy. This type of in-<lb/>
direct propoganda sup-<lb/>
nist) stated that the only<lb/>
way to lessen the danger<lb/>
of nuclear war was to im-<lb/>
prove relations Well I<lb/>
hope you see the techni-<lb/>
que used now, a front<lb/>
group quoting a left-<lb/>
liberal columnist sym-<lb/>
pathetic to communism<lb/>
uses the media to further<lb/>
Soviet goals and give<lb/>
them the credibility of the country as the right<lb/>
T,mes- Leftist murderers<lb/>
Sometimes, neither the usually called rebels lef-<lb/>
paper nor the reporter in- tists. revolutionaries or<lb/>
volved realizes he is being See COMMUNIST Page 9<lb/>
professional press.<lb/>
Look at the coverage<lb/>
on El Salvador, for in-<lb/>
stance. Notice how fre-<lb/>
quently the term "right-<lb/>
wing death squads" is us-<lb/>
ed but never "left-wing<lb/>
death squads despite<lb/>
the fact that leftist guer-<lb/>
rillas have killed ten times<lb/>
as many peopl; in that<lb/>
has.<lb/>
are<lb/>
The following letter<lb/>
and accompanying<lb/>
photograph were sent to<lb/>
the East Carolinian. We<lb/>
can neither confirm nor<lb/>
deny the truth of its con-<lb/>
tents, but we will print it.<lb/>
To the East Carolinian<lb/>
If you guys only knew<lb/>
half the stuff I could mail<lb/>
in on this Mick LaSalle<lb/>
fellow. Where did you<lb/>
ever get a hold of that<lb/>
slime? Its taken me seven<lb/>
months to track him<lb/>
then things hit the<lb/>
but<lb/>
fan.<lb/>
"Out he said.<lb/>
"I think I love ya,<lb/>
Mick I said. "I think<lb/>
I'm gonna have your<lb/>
baby" ? and bang! he<lb/>
split like a bat out of hell.<lb/>
I had a hunch he'd try to<lb/>
write (or what he calls<lb/>
writin') when I couldn't<lb/>
find my typewriter.<lb/>
It's your baby, Mick ?<lb/>
and your number's corn-<lb/>
in' up soon, so you better<lb/>
cover yourself good<lb/>
Love,<lb/>
Vivian LaSalle<lb/>
down.<lb/>
geez! I must'av<lb/>
been to every post office<lb/>
bulletin board on the East<lb/>
Coast and Mexico, and it<lb/>
turns out you're lettin'<lb/>
this turkey work for you!<lb/>
What's worse, is you're<lb/>
lettin' healthy, normal<lb/>
people read the twisted<lb/>
stuff he puts out. My<lb/>
God! They're just kids,<lb/>
and they're readin' stuff<lb/>
about dead legs and<lb/>
things like that. You guys<lb/>
have gotta be nuts.<lb/>
And what's all this<lb/>
about "broads?" Yeah,<lb/>
Mick knows a lot about<lb/>
broads all right. He's had<lb/>
some of the finest money<lb/>
can buy. But that's gonna<lb/>
stop after I get my hands<lb/>
on him. I mean, how was<lb/>
I supposed to know that<lb/>
he'd been in the sack with<lb/>
half of Newark! You<lb/>
know, he "seemed" OK<lb/>
when I first met him<lb/>
Wed.<lb/>
The Trend<lb/>
Proteus<lb/>
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deserted her; but she's on his trail<lb/>
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igade<lb/>
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Comni<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
popular liberation<lb/>
fighters ? but rarely the<lb/>
terrorist killers they are-<lb/>
Tyson goes on to pre-<lb/>
sent several extensive case<lb/>
studies that document<lb/>
and examine how Soviet<lb/>
propaganda was used in<lb/>
the media to ultimately<lb/>
influence U.S. foreign<lb/>
policy. These studies in-<lb/>
clude Vietnam, Cam-<lb/>
bodia, the campaign<lb/>
against the Agency for<lb/>
International Develop<lb/>
ment, the campaign<lb/>
against Vietnamese labor<lb/>
unions, getting the Carter<lb/>
administration not to<lb/>
deploy the neutron bomb<lb/>
and the Soviet -drected<lb/>
U.S. media war against<lb/>
the CIA in the 0s(lt is<lb/>
worth noting that u.mle a<lb/>
senator and as vice-<lb/>
president, Walter Mor<lb/>
Don't Form,<lb/>
On Popular<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
reader.) It's became the<lb/>
majority of them know<lb/>
almost nothing aboj! the<lb/>
good book. Other le:<lb/>
have told them it's just a<lb/>
collection of old-<lb/>
fashioned, unscientific<lb/>
nonsense not wortnv cf<lb/>
being read. So they've<lb/>
never read it and arc<lb/>
capable of holding an in-<lb/>
telligent discussion on its<lb/>
contents. Rather than ac-<lb/>
mit their ignorance, they<lb/>
simply refuse to accept it<lb/>
as evidence and gie you<lb/>
puzzled looks or snicker<lb/>
at you until you back off.<lb/>
Peer pressure is a big<lb/>
part of the argument cf<lb/>
intimidation, and no<lb/>
college-age person likes<lb/>
to feel rejected or laghe<lb/>
at by "the group It's<lb/>
the same sort of pressure<lb/>
tactic you get u,<lb/>
friends are exhorting<lb/>
to smoke pot or<lb/>
drunk. You never get an<lb/>
intelligent argumen: on<lb/>
the wonderful benifits of<lb/>
pot You're threatened<lb/>
with group rejection<lb/>
you don't conform.<lb/>
da I<lb/>
th<lb/>
thi<lb/>
mi<lb/>
?<lb/>
re<lb/>
I<lb/>
C(<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
(<lb/>
cl<lb/>
(<lb/>
d<lb/>
Ap<lb/>
MAKE<lb/>
All I<lb/>
tapes in<lb/>
Sale <lb/>
111<lb/>
Many Album,<lb/>
Check<lb/>
204 E. 5th St.<lb/>
phone<lb/>
752-3172<lb/>
Moi<lb/>
Pfl<lb/>
Oce<lb/>
Seaf<lb/>
Frem<lb/>
Tossed Salad rrn<lb/>
nnyigiipil????.?<lb/>
wpip??npffl"p?w?ll<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0009"/><lb/>
zation<lb/>
used. The story in the<lb/>
Vpril 5 East Carolinian<lb/>
ailed "Central America<lb/>
I ? usscd" is a good ex-<lb/>
c v group of leftists<lb/>
g through the<lb/>
Newman Center us-<lb/>
ung idealistic staff<lb/>
a ?-vmpathetic<lb/>
mblish a biased<lb/>
on of U.S.<lb/>
c in Central<lb/>
Perhaps all felt<lb/>
? e genuinely doing<lb/>
were sincere in<lb/>
but the end<lb/>
ghl just as well<lb/>
been written in<lb/>
 A"d mailed to<lb/>
- Is a press<lb/>
e The majority of<lb/>
euspapersare<lb/>
easily<lb/>
? and unfor-<lb/>
so is most of the<lb/>
IMF hASIAROl IMAN<lb/>
AHKI1 i <lb/>
'he coerage<lb/>
r, for in-<lb/>
No ce how f re-<lb/>
arm "nght-<lb/>
.ad" is us-<lb/>
w "left-wing<lb/>
despite<lb/>
' st guer-<lb/>
 ten times<lb/>
pie in that<lb/>
as the r.chi has.<lb/>
derers are<lb/>
Jbels, lef-<lb/>
maries or<lb/>
?MMl MM. page 9<lb/>
RLD<lb/>
I<lb/>
adie uh<lb/>
ate Free<lb/>
s<lb/>
CREFA<lb/>
?U<lb/>
$399<lb/>
e.<lb/>
$349<lb/>
re<lb/>
ow.<lb/>
it enlarged,<lb/>
cuter.<lb/>
Communist<lb/>
Continued From Page 8<lb/>
popular liberation<lb/>
fighters ? but rarely the<lb/>
terrorist killers they are.<lb/>
Tyson goes on to pre-<lb/>
sent several extensive case<lb/>
studies that document<lb/>
and examine how Soviet<lb/>
propaganda was used in<lb/>
the media to ultimately<lb/>
influence U.S. foreign<lb/>
policy. These studies in-<lb/>
clude Vietnam, Cam-<lb/>
bodia, the campaign<lb/>
against the Agency for<lb/>
International Develope-<lb/>
ment, the campaign<lb/>
against Vietnamese labor<lb/>
unions, getting the Carter<lb/>
administration not to<lb/>
deploy the neutron bomb<lb/>
and the Soviet-directed<lb/>
U.S. media war against<lb/>
the CIA in the '70s. (It is<lb/>
Try<lb/>
and Aaron, Congressional in<lb/>
dale was instrumental in Party, he made many Mondale<lb/>
the virtual dismantling of concessions to the backed up by elements of vestigative com<lb/>
mL ? nat,?nr McGov?" wing and their the far-left lobby com- uncovered Communist<lb/>
most effective means of sympathizers, including pletcd their hatchet job of working withinTe U S<lb/>
w I,? V,cf-Prcsident' the CIA. mcdia. This was in the<lb/>
Walter Mondale. Large Notice how denuncia- 40s and 50s before the<lb/>
members of appoint- tions of the CIA are a Soviets had developed<lb/>
combating the spread of<lb/>
Communism. During his<lb/>
tenure as vice-president,<lb/>
Mondale either fired or<lb/>
retired 800 CIA agents ?<lb/>
half the agency ? and<lb/>
most were personnel in<lb/>
covert intelligence or<lb/>
counter intelligence.)<lb/>
Tyson devotes about 40<lb/>
pages to the far left's war<lb/>
against the CIA. This is<lb/>
just a bit of it: "When<lb/>
Carter took office in<lb/>
1977, the war against the<lb/>
CIA was widened to an<lb/>
entirely new battlefront.<lb/>
Carter himself and his<lb/>
associates had no<lb/>
preconceived ideas about<lb/>
worth noting that while a further limiting American<lb/>
senator and as vice- intelligence. But in order<lb/>
president, Walter Mon- to unify the Democratic<lb/>
ments in the new ad<lb/>
ministration went to<lb/>
ultra-liberal and radical<lb/>
followers of this group,<lb/>
including Anthony Lake,<lb/>
who took charge of<lb/>
Carter's transition team<lb/>
for the State Department,<lb/>
and David Aaron, who<lb/>
became second in com-<lb/>
mand of the National<lb/>
Security Council under<lb/>
Brezenski. Lake had close<lb/>
ties to the Institute for<lb/>
Policy Studies, and<lb/>
Aaron had been on the<lb/>
Board of the Center for<lb/>
International Policy, one<lb/>
of the Fund for Peace<lb/>
radical think tanks<lb/>
Infilti<lb/>
groups had a 100 percent<lb/>
pro-Soviet balance.<lb/>
Several writers showed<lb/>
the same 100 percent<lb/>
bias, specifically<lb/>
Seymour Hersh, Gareth<lb/>
Porter, Morten H.<lb/>
Halperin and Saul Lan-<lb/>
dua.<lb/>
I applied this balance-<lb/>
sheet method to former<lb/>
East Carolinian staff<lb/>
writer and news editor<lb/>
liberal Congressmen have Patrick O'Neill's entire<lb/>
But what is the purpose dismantled most of the output over the last two<lb/>
PIRG<lb/>
common theme of cam-<lb/>
pus leftists. They never<lb/>
mention the KGB.<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill even did<lb/>
an anti-CIA book review<lb/>
in this paper by an author<lb/>
of the radical left.<lb/>
their present capabilities<lb/>
But in the past two<lb/>
decades, laws have been<lb/>
passed making it illegal<lb/>
for the FBI to investigate<lb/>
internal subversion, and<lb/>
Don't Formulate Your Values<lb/>
On Popular Opinions of Peers<lb/>
Continued From Page 7 in truth, most people people!<lb/>
reader.) It's because the form their beliefs based Even in Congress'<lb/>
majority of them know on the threat of accep- For example, I've got a<lb/>
almost nothing about the tance or rejection by their transcript of Jesse Helms'<lb/>
;ood book. Other leftists peers. While you're report to the Senate on<lb/>
speaking, your peers need<lb/>
have told them it's just a<lb/>
collection of old-<lb/>
fashioned, unscientific<lb/>
nonsense not worthy of<lb/>
being read. So they've<lb/>
never read it and are in-<lb/>
capable of holding an in-<lb/>
telligent discussion on its<lb/>
contents. Rather than ad-<lb/>
mit their ignorance, they<lb/>
simply refuse to accept it<lb/>
as evidence and give you<lb/>
puzzled looks or snicker<lb/>
at you until you back off.<lb/>
Peer pressure is a big<lb/>
part of the argument of<lb/>
intimidation, and no<lb/>
college-age person likes<lb/>
to feel rejected or laughed<lb/>
at by "the group It's<lb/>
the same sort of pressure<lb/>
tactic you get when<lb/>
friends are exhorting you<lb/>
to smoke pot or get<lb/>
drunk. You never get an<lb/>
intelligent argument on<lb/>
the wonderful benifits of<lb/>
pot.? You're threatened<lb/>
with group rejection if<lb/>
you don't conform.<lb/>
only nod their heads or<lb/>
smile and you follow<lb/>
their cues. "Yes, we need<lb/>
to support a nuclear<lb/>
freeze. It's the very thing<lb/>
to do you'll hear<lb/>
yourself saying. Your<lb/>
peers smile and nod and<lb/>
exhibit all the signs of ap-<lb/>
proval without uttering a<lb/>
word. But perhaps you<lb/>
mention something about<lb/>
a Soviet threat, and im-<lb/>
mediately you see brows<lb/>
raise, heads draw back,<lb/>
hear throats clear and<lb/>
you quickly change your<lb/>
tone. "I meant to say,<lb/>
certainly it's Reagan<lb/>
who's the villian, not the<lb/>
Soviets. Reagan's the<lb/>
problem. Dump<lb/>
Reagan The brows<lb/>
relax, smiles return and<lb/>
Martin Luther King's<lb/>
Communist ties. The<lb/>
evidence is overwhelming<lb/>
and irrefutable. (Come to<lb/>
my office and read it<lb/>
before you send a nasty<lb/>
letter to Campus Forum;<lb/>
at least you'll know some<lb/>
facts.) But not one<lb/>
Senior argued the validi-<lb/>
ty of Helms' facts. They<lb/>
couldn't. So they tried to<lb/>
humble the man with per-<lb/>
sonal attacks and tried to<lb/>
ostracize him Ted Ken-<lb/>
nedy all but threatened to<lb/>
put both his feet up<lb/>
Helms' ass in a vain at-<lb/>
tempt to muzzle the guy.<lb/>
It didn't work on<lb/>
Helms, and it won't work<lb/>
on me. You shouldn't let<lb/>
it work on you. As a<lb/>
friend told me, "Becom-<lb/>
ing a liberal is an emo-<lb/>
the heads nod again, and tional process; becoming<lb/>
you're safe, comforted by a conservative is a learn-<lb/>
their signs of approval. jng, growing process<lb/>
That's the way most Discover the truth, and<lb/>
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of this massive Soviet<lb/>
propoganda war against<lb/>
the U.S.? More than one<lb/>
Soviet defector has told<lb/>
us bluntly ? even before<lb/>
congressional hearings.<lb/>
The Soviets have a three-<lb/>
part strategy: (1) to hide<lb/>
the enormous Soviet arms<lb/>
buildup under a<lb/>
smokescreen of detente<lb/>
and SALT negotiations;<lb/>
(2) a gradual take-over of<lb/>
other weaker countries by<lb/>
pro-Communist regimes,<lb/>
leading to the eventual<lb/>
encirclement of the U.S.<lb/>
on the outside; (3) a<lb/>
massive, secret propogan-<lb/>
da campaign designed to<lb/>
weaken and demoralize<lb/>
America from the inside.<lb/>
Lev Navorzov, a Soviet<lb/>
defector who had worked<lb/>
with their propoganda<lb/>
organs, says "the main<lb/>
Communist propaganda<lb/>
goal is to lull the West in-<lb/>
to complacency and hide<lb/>
the facts of the Soviet<lb/>
military build-up until<lb/>
their superiority is so vast<lb/>
that they can impose<lb/>
Communism on the<lb/>
democrocies without hav-<lb/>
ing to fire a shot (Just<lb/>
as Kruschev boasted they<lb/>
would.)<lb/>
Tyson points out that<lb/>
in the past, the FBI and<lb/>
Congressional commit-<lb/>
tees that once in-<lb/>
vestigated Communist ac-<lb/>
tivities. Other govern-<lb/>
ments have uncovered<lb/>
Communist agents and<lb/>
sympathizers working at<lb/>
semesters he worked at<lb/>
this paper. He failed the<lb/>
test miserably. Many of<lb/>
his news stories dealt with<lb/>
the ECU campus and<lb/>
were therefore neutral.<lb/>
But whenever O'Neill<lb/>
the highest levels of their wrote about matters af-<lb/>
national media ? all who fecting U.S. foreign<lb/>
admitted to slanting the policy, he never deviated<lb/>
press to portray the<lb/>
Soviets or their goals in a<lb/>
favorable way. Since the<lb/>
U.S. is presently<lb/>
powerless to perform the<lb/>
investigative work<lb/>
necessary to expose possi-<lb/>
ble Communist agents<lb/>
within our own media<lb/>
and government, Tyson<lb/>
recommends the use of a<lb/>
balance-sheet method to<lb/>
evaluate organizations<lb/>
and individuals. All<lb/>
books and articles<lb/>
published by individuals<lb/>
or groups are examined<lb/>
to determine how closely well. He combined<lb/>
they follow the official standard themes<lb/>
Soviet propaganda line at<lb/>
that time, to determine<lb/>
whether what the work<lb/>
advocates benefits Soviet<lb/>
or American goals. Tyson<lb/>
applies this balance-sheet<lb/>
method to several of the<lb/>
most noteworthy<lb/>
organizations, such as the<lb/>
Institute for Policy<lb/>
Studies, and all of the<lb/>
from a line that ad-<lb/>
vocated appeasement of<lb/>
communism and U.S.<lb/>
disarmament.<lb/>
Does that make O'Neill<lb/>
a Communist? No, not at<lb/>
all. But the question is<lb/>
worth pondering. O'Neill<lb/>
once admitted to me that<lb/>
he "believed in and sup-<lb/>
ported the idea of a one-<lb/>
world socialist govern-<lb/>
ment Certainly his ar-<lb/>
ticles were a means of<lb/>
promoting that vision<lb/>
and influencing ECU<lb/>
students to accept it as<lb/>
the<lb/>
of<lb/>
racism and sexism in the<lb/>
usual Soviet porpaganda<lb/>
style to hammer away at<lb/>
any U.S. foreign policy<lb/>
that advocated strength<lb/>
and firmness in dealing<lb/>
with the Soviets. And<lb/>
O'Neill had a vague<lb/>
background. He rarely<lb/>
was a student while work-<lb/>
ing at this paper. His sole<lb/>
purpose seemed to be<lb/>
promoting themes consis-<lb/>
tant with Soviet pro-<lb/>
poganda of the moment<lb/>
Considering the loose<lb/>
supervision of this paper<lb/>
and the young idealistic<lb/>
liberals that have<lb/>
dominated it s staff, it<lb/>
would have been an easy<lb/>
target for any subversive<lb/>
who might have wanted<lb/>
to use it.<lb/>
Since ECU students<lb/>
may soon be voting on a<lb/>
PIRG (Public Interest<lb/>
Reserch Group) for this<lb/>
campus, it is worth<lb/>
noting that Tyson also<lb/>
mentioned Ralph Nader's<lb/>
organizations (Nader<lb/>
heads PIRG). Tyson said<lb/>
that several Communist<lb/>
propoganda agents who<lb/>
had defected had men-<lb/>
tioned Nader's organiza-<lb/>
tion was been repeatedly<lb/>
targeted for infiltration.<lb/>
Whether PIRG has been<lb/>
successfully infiltrated by<lb/>
Communist agents at this<lb/>
time is unknown, but<lb/>
PIRGs have recently been<lb/>
active supporting<lb/>
nuclear freeze movement<lb/>
and other typically left<lb/>
causes that adun<lb/>
Soviet goals.<lb/>
1 highly recommeiid<lb/>
Target America to i<lb/>
professional journals'<lb/>
and journalism teacher<lb/>
and students. In it Tyson<lb/>
gives more worthwhile in<lb/>
formation on how tin<lb/>
U.S. media operates thai<lb/>
any textbook I have read<lb/>
in my 21 hours of jour<lb/>
nalism courses at thi<lb/>
school. It should be re-<lb/>
quired reading for Jour<lb/>
nalism 4100. Also<lb/>
anyone who ever watcher<lb/>
TV news or reads a<lb/>
newspaper should read<lb/>
this book for a betk-r<lb/>
understanding of how the<lb/>
news he gets is shaped<lb/>
After all, this is 1984.<lb/>
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Sports<lb/>
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Hurdler Qualifies<lb/>
For Olympic Trials<lb/>
?<lb/>
B PEThrhKNAl l)<lb/>
Miff ?rll?r<lb/>
?S<lb/>
GARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo L?fc<lb/>
ECU took the top three spots in the 100-meter dash in Chapel Hill over the weekend.<lb/>
Henr Williams (first), Erskine Evans (second) and Nathan McCorkle celebrate after the<lb/>
GARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo L<lb/>
race.<lb/>
"We showed the pet pl<lb/>
North Carolina that E<lb/>
have a great track . .<lb/>
Those were the ei<lb/>
words of head trad<lb/>
Carson, as one of his<lb/>
Craig White, qualified foi ihe<lb/>
Olympic trials in the hig<lb/>
at the UNC Relays at Chapel 1<lb/>
over the weekend.<lb/>
"It was a big i<lb/>
there were some real g<lb/>
competing said c a<lb/>
The Pirate comj<lb/>
great array of tal<lb/>
such notables as I N<lb/>
Hill, Wake Fores<lb/>
Virginia Tech, North i<lb/>
Central. St.Augu<lb/>
Seaton Hali.<lb/>
"It was an ?<lb/>
won more events tha<lb/>
Carson added.<lb/>
The lightning Fa<lb/>
Williams, Erskine t<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle domin<lb/>
100 meter dash finishing<lb/>
ond and tl<lb/>
10 48, 10.3 .<lb/>
Nati<lb/>
teammate Mc<lb/>
compete in the 200 metei I<lb/>
finished first and fifth w<lb/>
of 20.88 and 21.88 s<lb/>
Williams fell si<lb/>
for the Nationals<lb/>
meters. But, said<lb/>
Williams time could ha<lb/>
result of an electrons I ii<lb/>
"I feel that the ele<lb/>
was wrong<lb/>
hand timed Henry and<lb/>
him a' 20 seconds "<lb/>
In anothei<lb/>
curance, Mc orkle . a<lb/>
hamstring in the 200 m<lb/>
expected to be out<lb/>
three weeks.<lb/>
Until McCorkle r<lb/>
Penn Re!as in late A<lb/>
plans to substitute hig llei<lb/>
Craig White on the 4x<lb/>
'earn.<lb/>
"Craig is as fast <lb/>
1<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
'<lb/>
:<lb/>
<lb/>
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1<lb/>
s a<lb/>
<lb/>
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? ? -<lb/>
-<lb/>
Two More Fall<lb/>
Pirates Beat Richmond, James Madison<lb/>
 <lb/>
<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
sports Kdlior<lb/>
If the Pirate baseball team ever needed a clutch<lb/>
performance, it was last weekend on the road against<lb/>
conference foes James Madison and Richmond.<lb/>
Behind the pitching of Jim Peterson and Winfred<lb/>
Johnson, the timely hitting of Mike Williams and the<lb/>
lackluster fielding of Richmond, ECU indeed won<lb/>
both games away from friendly Harrington.<lb/>
With the victories, the Pirates raised their ECAC<lb/>
South mark to 6-2 and overall record to 19-8.<lb/>
The wins also put ECU in sole possession of first<lb/>
place in the conference. However, regular season<lb/>
standing is not used in determining the participants<lb/>
for the ECAC South tournament at the end of the<lb/>
regular season. Rather, an ECAC baseball commit-<lb/>
tee, which includes ECU head coach Hal Baird, will<lb/>
meet on May 5 and choose the teams to play in the<lb/>
post-season tournament. "I know we'll have one<lb/>
vote Baird said.<lb/>
"Unless something unforseen happens, it would be<lb/>
hard to envision us not being picked<lb/>
In Saturday's game against Richmond, Winfred<lb/>
Johnson (5-2) went the full nine innings and Rich-<lb/>
mond committed six errors as the Pirates rallied to a<lb/>
6-4 victory. The sophomore righthander gave up<lb/>
seven hits while striking out four and walking the<lb/>
same.<lb/>
"He threw very well said Baird. "He was a little<lb/>
shaky in the early innings, but our fielders kicked really didn't hit that well (in both games)<lb/>
away a few<lb/>
ECU took a 3-2 lead into the third inning, but it<lb/>
didn't last long. In the bottom half of that inning,<lb/>
Richmond's Bobby Woods lashed a double to knock<lb/>
in two runs and give the Spiders a 4-3 advantage.<lb/>
ECU, however, staged its own rally in the sixth,<lb/>
scoring the final three runs. Williams led off the inn-<lb/>
ing with a single and Steve Sides walked to put run-<lb/>
ners on first and second. After Chris Bradberry mov-<lb/>
ed Williams and Sides to second and third on a<lb/>
sacrifice bunt, Mark Shank knocked in Williams on a<lb/>
Spider error and Jim Riley brought home Sides, the<lb/>
go-ahead run, on a sacrifice fly.<lb/>
Greg Hardison provided an insurance run, poun-<lb/>
ding a double to score Shank.<lb/>
Peterson (6-0) matched Johnson and went the<lb/>
distance in Sunday's 3-1 win over James Madison<lb/>
Peterson game up only six hits against a Duke team<lb/>
that was second in the nation in runs scored.<lb/>
"Jim really didn't have his good stuff Baird<lb/>
sajd, "but he located the ball well<lb/>
In view of James Madison's offensive power<lb/>
however, Baird felt Peterson was "really remarkable<lb/>
to allow them to six base hits<lb/>
Williams provided the difference in the score, driv-<lb/>
ing in two runs with a bases loaded single. Bradberry<lb/>
and Sides added two hits apiece in the game.<lb/>
"We played a real sound game on Sunday Baird<lb/>
said. "We played satisfactory game on Saturday. We<lb/>
<lb/>
? ' 1<lb/>
V<lb/>
?<lb/>
ft, r<lb/>
V<lb/>
I<lb/>
Human Backstop<lb/>
ECU catcher Jabo Fulghum warms up a pitcher earlier this ea?i<lb/>
GARY PATTERSON ECU Photo Lak<lb/>
Now that the Pirates have almost assuredlv wrap-<lb/>
ped up a bid to the conference tournament, Baird is<lb/>
eyeing an easier route to the NCAA playoffs ? an at-<lb/>
large bid. And he is quick to remind "his players to<lb/>
avoid complacen j "<lb/>
the schedule like the<lb/>
Series Band said "I'm hoping they'll (the team)<lb/>
understand the significance '<lb/>
going ti<lb/>
seventh game<lb/>
at<lb/>
t le <lb/>
Eight Up, Eight Down ? Ladys Win<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
?i Spam MHm<lb/>
MARK BARBED ? ECU<lb/>
Stacy Boyette was Most Valuable Player.<lb/>
The ECU women's softball<lb/>
team swept through a field of<lb/>
seven teams to capture the George<lb/>
Mason Invitational Softball Tour-<lb/>
nament championship this<lb/>
weekend in Fairfax, Va.<lb/>
"This is the first fast-pitch<lb/>
tournament ECU has ever<lb/>
entered Pirate head coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan said, "and we were<lb/>
pleased to come away with the<lb/>
championship<lb/>
The first two days of the tour-<lb/>
nament consisted of round-robin<lb/>
play in which every team faced<lb/>
each other to determine the pair-<lb/>
ings for the single elimination<lb/>
tourney on the final day.<lb/>
On Friday, the Pirates faced<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
eventual tournament runner up<lb/>
Temple in their opening game and<lb/>
narrowly escaped with a 2-1 vie<lb/>
tory. In its other games Friday,<lb/>
ECU breezed by La Salle 8-1 and<lb/>
Townson State 8-3.<lb/>
On the second day of action,<lb/>
ECU coasted to victory in each of<lb/>
its three games, defeating George<lb/>
Mason 7-0, Virginia Com-<lb/>
monwealth 6-3 and North<lb/>
Carolina 9-2.<lb/>
"We'd been going through a<lb/>
losing streak the past few weeks<lb/>
because we weren't hitting the<lb/>
ball Manahan explained, "but<lb/>
our bats caught up with our<lb/>
fielding this weekend<lb/>
The Pirates had onlv st -red one<lb/>
run in their last four outings prior<lb/>
to the tournament but came back<lb/>
to outscore their opponents 64 14<lb/>
this weekend.<lb/>
ECU was seeded number one<lb/>
going into the final da of single<lb/>
elimination competition and<lb/>
subsequently received a bve in the<lb/>
first round.<lb/>
The Pirates demolished i a Salle<lb/>
18-2 in the semi-finals, and then<lb/>
went on to defeat Temple 3-1 for<lb/>
the championship.<lb/>
ECU got excellent itching<lb/>
from its starting rotation as Stacv<lb/>
Boyette and Robin Graves picked<lb/>
up three victories and Pam Young<lb/>
collected two. However.<lb/>
Manaha the enure tear<lb/>
responsible foi the Pirate su<lb/>
x "everyone had an except<lb/>
tournament<lb/>
Five Pirates made the all-<lb/>
tournament team Carla Alphin<lb/>
and Young made it as ui<lb/>
players, Suyanne Martin at cat<lb/>
sher, I ia Zmuda at shortstop<lb/>
and Boyette at Pitcher.<lb/>
Boyette also collected MVP<lb/>
honors for her pitching perfor-<lb/>
mances She threw a th ee-hitter<lb/>
against Temple in the Pirates'<lb/>
opening game, shutout George<lb/>
Mason 7-0 and only gav- up one<lb/>
run in the championship game<lb/>
ECU improves to 17-9 with the<lb/>
victories and w ill return I o action<lb/>
next weekend to participate in the<lb/>
Liberty Baptist tournament.<lb/>
? - f<lb/>
" -?<lb/>
 9 ? ? .?? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0012"/><lb/>
4<lb/>
?<lb/>
12 TTffiEASTCAMOl NAN<lb/>
MAR i. 29, wm<lb/>
Team,Coach Compel<lb/>
By MEG MOREADITH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's tennis<lb/>
team had seven of its<lb/>
Players and assistant<lb/>
coach Keith Zengel com-<lb/>
pete in the Greenville<lb/>
Open Held over the<lb/>
weekend at the River<lb/>
Birch Tennis Center.<lb/>
The Greenville Open, a<lb/>
USTA sanctioned tourna-<lb/>
ment attracted players<lb/>
from 14 cities in North<lb/>
Carolina, and two cities<lb/>
in Maryland and Ten-<lb/>
nessee.<lb/>
TENNIS<lb/>
In singles, three ECU<lb/>
players advanced to the<lb/>
quarter finals. Galen Tre-<lb/>
ble beat Rar ly Howell of<lb/>
Maryland, 6-0, 6-0. In the<lb/>
second round Treble beat<lb/>
Ruthledge, 6-3, 7-5. Tre-<lb/>
ble lost in the quarter<lb/>
finals to Dean Channell<lb/>
of Freenville Country<lb/>
Club, 6-1, 7-5.<lb/>
Paul Owen defeated<lb/>
Randy Bridgeman of<lb/>
Greenville, 6-2, 6-1.<lb/>
Owen also advanced to<lb/>
the quarter finals<lb/>
although he lost to Allen<lb/>
Farfour, a former player<lb/>
of Wake Forest Universi-<lb/>
ty, 2-6, 6-3, 6-1. Farfour<lb/>
went on to win the tour-<lb/>
nament by defeating<lb/>
Channell 6-4, 7-6.<lb/>
Greg Willis upset fifth-<lb/>
seeded Steve Walker of<lb/>
Washington, 7-5, 7-6.<lb/>
Willis beat Mt. Olive's<lb/>
number one player,Olow<lb/>
km hack, in second round<lb/>
play, 6-4, 6-0. Willis then<lb/>
advanced to the quarter<lb/>
Finals and was defeated<lb/>
by Kevin Burke of<lb/>
Gastonia, 1-6, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
David Creech upset<lb/>
sixth seeded Norman<lb/>
Bryant of Greenville. 6-4,<lb/>
6-0. Creech was defeated<lb/>
in second round play by<lb/>
Paul Owen, 4-6, 7-6, 6-2.<lb/>
David Turner beat<lb/>
Kenny Love of Tennesse,<lb/>
6-2, 6-4 in the First round.<lb/>
Turner lost to fourth<lb/>
seeded Tommy Wilcox,<lb/>
7-5, 6-0 in the second<lb/>
round<lb/>
Greg Lloyd lost to Ken<lb/>
ny House of Wilmington.<lb/>
6-4, 6-3. House advanced<lb/>
to the semi-finals and was<lb/>
defeated by Channell.<lb/>
6-3, 6-4. John Anthony<lb/>
lost to Kuiback in the<lb/>
first round, 6-2, 6-2<lb/>
"The ECU players<lb/>
were not expected to go<lb/>
as far as they did in the<lb/>
tournament said Coach<lb/>
Sherman. "1 was very<lb/>
pleased. All of them<lb/>
played good tennis<lb/>
Pirates End Regular Season In S.C.<lb/>
By GENE WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff W rtln<lb/>
The Linksters of ECU<lb/>
were in action this past<lb/>
weekend at Furman<lb/>
Univesty and finished<lb/>
15th out of 24 teams<lb/>
entered in the NCAA<lb/>
Division-1 tourney.<lb/>
While not up to stan-<lb/>
dard, the Pirates' play<lb/>
GOLF<lb/>
was definitely an im-<lb/>
provement as they shot a<lb/>
three-day total of 942.<lb/>
The score wasn't poor,<lb/>
considering the Pirates<lb/>
were competing against<lb/>
some of the best teams in<lb/>
collegiate golf.<lb/>
Wake Forest, always a<lb/>
national contender,<lb/>
finished with top honors<lb/>
with a three-day total of<lb/>
894, while Clemson came<lb/>
in a close second at 895.<lb/>
Mike Bradley led the<lb/>
Pirates with rounds of 78,<lb/>
74 and 78 to pace the<lb/>
Pirates with a 230 total.<lb/>
Inconsistency once<lb/>
again haunted the<lb/>
Pirates, nevertheless the<lb/>
linksters will take their<lb/>
act to the ECAC South<lb/>
Tournament, April 9, to<lb/>
tee it up against the very<lb/>
best on the Eastern<lb/>
Seaboard.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
The Tournament will<lb/>
be played at the Kings<lb/>
Mill golf course on the<lb/>
James River in<lb/>
Williamsburg, Va. The<lb/>
Pirates could salvage the<lb/>
year by taking the<lb/>
tourney title, which<lb/>
would give them an<lb/>
automatic berth into the<lb/>
NCAA playoffs.<lb/>
In doubles, ()?rn and<lb/>
Channell teamed up I<lb/>
defeat Dans and<lb/>
Rauchback, M, 6 1 m<lb/>
the first round, and heat<lb/>
Hostetler and I ne. h J,<lb/>
6-4 Owen and C'hannell<lb/>
went on to the leau-finals<lb/>
but were defeated K<lb/>
Bailev and Blankenhorn.<lb/>
6-4, 6-4<lb/>
Treble and Zengel<lb/>
defeated Ruthledge and<lb/>
Whisnant 6-3. 6-1 In<lb/>
their quarter finals match<lb/>
against Farfour and<lb/>
Wilcox, Treble and<lb/>
Zengel lost by a close<lb/>
score of 7-5, 7-6 Accor-<lb/>
ding to Coach Sherman,<lb/>
it was the best match of<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
Tin;<lb/>
vA illis and I urner were<lb/>
defeated in wad<lb/>
plav bv Farfoui and<lb/>
WUcOI 6-0. 6-2<lb/>
Mono and reeh<lb/>
defeated bb<lb/>
Schaefa 6 Ml rhev<lb/>
dcteatcu Bronson<lb/>
and Hennemuth. 6-4,6-3<lb/>
In the semi final M<lb/>
and C reech lost i f I<lb/>
four and Wikox, whi<lb/>
vanned to 'he finals to<lb/>
win h defeating Bailev<lb/>
and Blankenhorn rS 4.<lb/>
The EC I Men's Tennis<lb/>
Team plavs Pembroke to<lb/>
dav at 3.00 p.m. on<lb/>
Mirtges varsitv courts.<lb/>
I C I V omen s<lb/>
Btl lam j I<lb/>
defeated H, Gutlford rn a<lb/>
? ?  with Russell<lb/>
and M.j nder field in<lb/>
giving I! its<lb/>
onK winning mauh<lb/>
"Guilford is a verv<lb/>
tig, and thev were<lb/>
even stronger this sear<lb/>
Naid Coach Sherman<lb/>
Heidi Bunting and Is<lb/>
Mcvers improve with<lb/>
every match that each<lb/>
plavs Sherman said She<lb/>
also added that Janet<lb/>
Russell plaved well in<lb/>
singles<lb/>
The team next match<lb/>
is todav at 2:30 at the<lb/>
Riser Birch Tennis<lb/>
Center in Greenville.<lb/>
and<lb/>
LADES NIGHT AT<lb/>
THE KING AND<lb/>
QUEEN NORTH<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
BOOM CLOSE te ECU. HOP. 7SH?44<lb/>
LOOKING TO SUBLEASE furnished<lb/>
? pt $270 month plus utll 5 blocks<lb/>
from campus HBO, Showtime, Pool<lb/>
ft lots more Call 7S?-?71<lb/>
FOR SALE Sofa A Chair perfect for<lb/>
student with apt S30 ea or both for<lb/>
SS0 7 End Tables MJ Call 7SJ-4?n<lb/>
after <lb/>
l?M MT FUGI it-Speed 1 Must sell<lb/>
MOO 7S7 170 7fter 7<lb/>
TWO BORM APT available to<lb/>
sublease tor summer sessions further<lb/>
-fo 'S 93'4 Ask tor Dawn<lb/>
FOR SALE Technics SH 1010 Stereo<lb/>
Equalizer. Still under warranty<lb/>
J100 00 or Best offer Call Chuck<lb/>
757 I7?t Please Leave Message<lb/>
POR SALE used but good ei-editor<lb/>
m-chlef of the Buccaneer ? has slight<lb/>
knowledge of 7 production ? good<lb/>
deal ? cheap ? good with first<lb/>
graders but only has mental capabili-<lb/>
ty of kindgardener ? call 757 ?S01<lb/>
anytime day or night Some of us are<lb/>
always working most of the time<lb/>
Thank you very much! 111<lb/>
BEACH CRUISER ll Surfboard<lb/>
7Ml 74<lb/>
THERE ONCE WAS A girl named<lb/>
Roxanne whose one problem was get-<lb/>
ting a man.<lb/>
So she planned and she schemed had<lb/>
all the wet dreams.<lb/>
But finally settled for her hand<lb/>
Happy B Day Charolette A Jennifer<lb/>
TRACY DALLAS N Especially Mar<lb/>
Wva sorry ? the trouble I caused KIO<lb/>
KENNY, JAY Great Jobl Had fon<lb/>
gefn trashedi Kevin Dean PS Thanks<lb/>
4 the firplace<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
GUITARIST NEEDED for full time<lb/>
ttP 40 band. Call Steve at rs-4n for<lb/>
details.<lb/>
LOST: Mary lane the Sheepdog in<lb/>
vicinity of Student St. Big. fluffy<lb/>
black and white. 14 yrs. of age. Needs<lb/>
medication everyday. Call 711 MM.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
LOCAL CHURCH would Ilk person<lb/>
to Keep church nursery 10:45 -1 noon<lb/>
each Sunday. Could possibly be divid-<lb/>
ed with another person. M each Sun-<lb/>
day. Send resume' to Nursery<lb/>
Helper, let Prince Rfl Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27U4.<lb/>
For J ?taroom House, partlcally fur-<lb/>
"Ubed, fully carpeted, central AC,<lb/>
M fireplace tis.OO a month Call<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE wanted for<lb/>
summer and fall, sioo mth. , utilities<lb/>
one block from campus. 7SI-2020<lb/>
TWO WSI'S NEEDED for waterfront<lb/>
at Camp Loach apply to Ed Hodges:<lb/>
Camp Leach Manager Iis E. Mth St.<lb/>
Washington. NC J7M<lb/>
 FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. <lb/>
I FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
Wilson Acres Apts for summer. Rent<lb/>
?J.S7 per month plus utMs Call<lb/>
7M-SIML<lb/>
ROOMMATES NEEDED for sum<lb/>
marfall River Bluff apts. Call<lb/>
HMM<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED for summer.<lb/>
House fully furnished. Private Room<lb/>
Behind Befk Dorm 1M 00 754 7470<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WHEN A FRIEND has stereo system<lb/>
problems, tell them that the audio<lb/>
technicians at the TECH SHOP don't<lb/>
cherge for repair estimates Call us<lb/>
at 7S7Nlneteen Eighty<lb/>
AUTO ACCIDENTS Specializing in<lb/>
personal injury litigation J David<lb/>
Duffus, Jr Attorney. NCNB<lb/>
Building. Greenville, North Carolina.<lb/>
7M-4M0.<lb/>
OUACITY TYPING - IBM<lb/>
Typewriter, 15 years experience Full<lb/>
time typing for feculty A students<lb/>
754 1440<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING Service<lb/>
? Experience, Quality work, IBM<lb/>
Selectric Typewriter Call Lanie<lb/>
Shive 7J? 5101<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
KAPPA DELTAS want to thank all<lb/>
the sororities who supported them<lb/>
during Greek Week Congrats to our<lb/>
new pledges<lb/>
Sigma Tau<lb/>
Gamma<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NIGHT<lb/>
Tues. April 1 01984 8:30-1:00am<lb/>
Adm.$l.50 I8yrs.$l.00<lb/>
10?DRAFT<lb/>
All Nite<lb/>
Come Early<lb/>
Buy, Sell<lb/>
And<lb/>
Trade<lb/>
With The<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
3NORTH WED. April<lb/>
" The Embers '<lb/>
8-12<lb/>
All Dining Customers Admitted Free.<lb/>
College I.DFree Admission<lb/>
Til 7:30<lb/>
Happy Hour 6-8<lb/>
April 25- The Fabulous Kays And Peter Adomis<lb/>
Wed. May 30th- Jerry Butler And The Band Of Oz.<lb/>
Custom crofting<lb/>
ft<lb/>
Jewlery Repair<lb/>
fair prices<lb/>
guaranteed work<lb/>
Bring This Ad for<lb/>
25 OFF<lb/>
14K Chain Repairs<lb/>
by Les Jewlery<lb/>
120 E. 5th Street<lb/>
758-2127 10-5 TuesSat.<lb/>
????<lb/>
RESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
TOLL FREE HOTLINE<lb/>
800-621-5745<lb/>
IN ILLINOIS CALL 312 922 0300<lb/>
AUTHORS' RESEARCH BOO 600<lb/>
.097 S. Oeerbom. Chicago. IL 80605<lb/>
I I I I T<lb/>
Convenient I nran<lb/>
 L vocation<lb/>
breakfast 700-9S30<lb/>
lunch: 11-00-1- 30<lb/>
dinner: 4-306C0<lb/>
ft carolma dining services<lb/>
em<lb/>
LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
Lounge<lb/>
Video Games<lb/>
Large Screen "Cable" TV<lb/>
32 Washers 18 Dryers<lb/>
Outside Patio<lb/>
Fluff &amp; Fold Service<lb/>
Dry Cleaning Pick-Up<lb/>
Ample Parking<lb/>
Attendant On Duty<lb/>
Cold Beverages<lb/>
Open 8 a.m. to Midnight, 7 Days A Week<lb/>
Located Next to the East 10th St. Pizza Hut<lb/>
2510 E. 10th Street Greenville, N.C. 752-5222<lb/>
"If you have to do your own laundry, do it in style at the Wash Pub<lb/>
<lb/>
-nif-i<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
as -<lb/>
HIITT<lb/>
(1<lb/>
PAPA<lb/>
LKATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NITE<lb/>
Greenville's First &amp; Still 1<lb/>
Ladies Lock-Out<lb/>
8:30-10:00<lb/>
Free Draft &amp; Wine<lb/>
At 10:00 For Men<lb/>
One Free Keg Of Beer<lb/>
THURSDAY NITE<lb/>
Penny Draft Nite<lb/>
Doors Open At 8:30<lb/>
Members S1.00<lb/>
Guests S2.00<lb/>
FRIDAY NITE<lb/>
Special Events<lb/>
BACK BY<lb/>
(POPULAR DEMAND H<lb/>
DANCE SPECTACULAR'<lb/>
STARRING<lb/>
LENNY PANARO &amp;<lb/>
PURE HONEY<lb/>
j<lb/>
For<lb/>
Ladies<lb/>
Only!<lb/>
IWhSt Exl<lb/>
At RrverWuH Rd<lb/>
Papa Katr Is A Private CiuO<lb/>
For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
We Have Ail ABC Permits<lb/>
PURE HONEY ,s a nat.onaiiv recognlZed -ate X'ouve from Atlanta starry<lb/>
naL " S?tCUCUUl mS " ? ? ?? acts current ??<lb/>
Friday Night, April 13th<lb/>
One Show Only At<lb/>
H<lb/>
Door Opan 6 00 P M<lb/>
Show Starts 7 00 P M<lb/>
Guy Admmeo 9:00 P.W<lb/>
lUHKJ Saatmg)<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
10th Street Ext<lb/>
at River Bluff Road<lb/>
TicsatsOnSafeNow'<lb/>
u<lb/>
??re? Tickat Hommtb<lb/>
WMMotHnaTo<lb/>
Wait At Th? Doo,<lb/>
SN v S<lb/>
zxz<lb/>
THr I A<lb/>
APRIL<lb/>
Purple- Gi<lb/>
Pigskin Pi<lb/>
Party Sat<lb/>
ECUs spring football<lb/>
game, the annual Purple-<lb/>
Gold clash, will take on<lb/>
ne air this ear with a<lb/>
to-da schedule of<lb/>
festive activities A<lb/>
13 14, surrounding<lb/>
game slated for 4 p.m. on<lb/>
Saturdav<lb/>
All ECU students with<lb/>
a valid identification and<lb/>
activit) card wiS; be ad-<lb/>
mitted to the game<lb/>
charge<lb/>
A majcr tailgate pi<lb/>
motion is planned. h a<lb/>
two-dav ceiebi i<lb/>
call "The Great P<lb/>
Purple-Gold F . I<lb/>
Pigout Party Various<lb/>
events will then <lb/>
a massive p .<lb/>
contest and e- .<lb/>
pigs throughout Sa it<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"We ?<lb/>
a fun day for the er<lb/>
familv in leac .<lb/>
our annua . i<lb/>
said Dave Ha A<lb/>
Athletic Dii ;<lb/>
Marketing. Ha<lb/>
coordinated the<lb/>
with the F<lb/>
the sp<lb/>
cookm' c v<lb/>
Beer.<lb/>
'Our : i .<lb/>
tion wa<lb/>
during th<lb/>
vve<lb/>
Pirate M<lb/>
To Be N<lb/>
Other  "1<lb/>
Pirate what d<lb/>
ECU's mascot1 h<lb/>
worjv<lb/>
of "The Pa:e<lb/>
Well, at preser<lb/>
name reallv exists foi<lb/>
V<lb/>
jr<lb/>
Pirate mascot. Bui<lb/>
will change on A:<lb/>
halftime of the ar<lb/>
Purple-Gold spi <lb/>
ball game.<lb/>
"A contest is underwaj<lb/>
in area elementary<lb/>
schools right now to<lb/>
an appropriate name foi<lb/>
our Pirate mascot ex-<lb/>
plained Assistant tfc<lb/>
Director for Marketing<lb/>
ECU Dave Hart J:<lb/>
Individual . ass<lb/>
within the area schoc -<lb/>
grades one through<lb/>
will be submitting names<lb/>
in a contest to name<lb/>
Pirate. A pane! of judges<lb/>
will review all names sub-<lb/>
mitted and pick the one<lb/>
that is felt to be the be:<lb/>
and most appropriate<lb/>
name to tag our Pirate i<lb/>
mascot.<lb/>
The winning class ?<lb/>
get a picture with the,<lb/>
Pirate to be framed ard<lb/>
placed within the set<lb/>
And each individual stu-<lb/>
dent within the class will<lb/>
get his or her picture<lb/>
made with the Pirate <lb/>
mascot to keep for<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
The current look of the<lb/>
Pirate mascot came about<lb/>
with the beginning of last<lb/>
football season, as the<lb/>
athletic department<lb/>
sought to upgrade the im-<lb/>
age of the Pirate and tc<lb/>
make the mascot more<lb/>
adaptable to the many<lb/>
facets of the athletic pro-<lb/>
gram. The new Pirate<lb/>
mascot, as well as other<lb/>
logos of the university,<lb/>
are now licensed through<lb/>
a professional organiza-<lb/>
tion out of Atlanta.<lb/>
"We've had tremen-<lb/>
dous response to our new<lb/>
Pirate mascot and logo j<lb/>
continue Han, "and wej<lb/>
?a ! ?? t . T ?<lb/>
 ? 1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0013"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 10. 1984<lb/>
13<lb/>
Purple-Gold<lb/>
urney pigSkin Pigout<lb/>
Party Saturday<lb/>
The ECU Women's<lb/>
Tennis Team was<lb/>
defeated by Guilford by a<lb/>
score o 8-1, with Russell<lb/>
and Manderfield in<lb/>
doubles giving ECU its<lb/>
onl winning match.<lb/>
"Guilford is a very<lb/>
strong, and they were<lb/>
even stronger this year<lb/>
?aid Coach Sherman.<lb/>
Heidi Bunting and Ty<lb/>
Meyers improve with<lb/>
every match that each<lb/>
pias Sherman said. She<lb/>
also added that Janet<lb/>
Russell plaved well in<lb/>
singles.<lb/>
The team's next match<lb/>
oday at 2:30 at the<lb/>
Rter Birch Tennis<lb/>
Center in Greenville.<lb/>
HTAT<lb/>
AND<lb/>
EEN NORTH<lb/>
mbers "<lb/>
8-12<lb/>
ed Free.<lb/>
erAdomi,<lb/>
Band Of Oz.<lb/>
.V<lb/>
'king<lb/>
- 930<lb/>
30<lb/>
6O0<lb/>
ervices<lb/>
lAND :<lb/>
0&amp;<lb/>
Y<lb/>
For<lb/>
Ladies<lb/>
Only! IM<lb/>
' Atlanta starring<lb/>
Temiv touring the<lb/>
 On Sal Now'<lb/>
15 00<lb/>
I Tictw? HotO?f i<lb/>
HavtTo<lb/>
AITh?0oor<lb/>
ECU's spring football<lb/>
game, the annual Purple-<lb/>
Gold clash, will take on<lb/>
new air this year with a<lb/>
two-day schedule of<lb/>
festive activities April<lb/>
13-14, surrounding the<lb/>
game slated for 4 p.m. on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
All ECU students with<lb/>
a valid identification and<lb/>
activity card will be ad-<lb/>
mitted to the game free of<lb/>
charge.<lb/>
A major tailgate pro-<lb/>
motion is planned, with a<lb/>
two-day celebration being<lb/>
call "The Great Pirate<lb/>
Purple-Gold Pigskin<lb/>
Pigout Party Various<lb/>
events will then surround<lb/>
a massive pig cookin'<lb/>
contest and eating of the<lb/>
pigs throughout Satur-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"We're trying to create<lb/>
a fun day for the entire<lb/>
family in leading up to<lb/>
our annual spring game<lb/>
said Dave Hart, Assistant<lb/>
Athletic Director of<lb/>
Marketing. Hart has<lb/>
coordinated the event<lb/>
with the Pirate Club and<lb/>
the sponsor of the pig<lb/>
cookin' contest, Miller<lb/>
Beer.<lb/>
"Our tailgate promo-<lb/>
tion was well received<lb/>
during the fall and we<lb/>
wanted to continue this<lb/>
for our spring game but<lb/>
make it bigger. So we've<lb/>
got activities planned for<lb/>
the entire family<lb/>
A special appearance<lb/>
will be made by L.C.<lb/>
Greenwood, compliments<lb/>
of Miller Beer, both Fri-<lb/>
day evening when the pigs<lb/>
start cookin' and Satur-<lb/>
day morning for an<lb/>
autograph session.<lb/>
At 12 noon Saturday,<lb/>
the Pirate football<lb/>
players will stage a tug-o-<lb/>
war with an elephant!<lb/>
The Pirate Mascot will<lb/>
get a new name at<lb/>
halftime and Ed Emory<lb/>
will have some help in<lb/>
celebrating his 46th birth-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
"With the Pig cookin'<lb/>
contest, fun for the entire<lb/>
family, the football<lb/>
game, a broadcast of our<lb/>
spring game on radio, it's<lb/>
all going to make for a<lb/>
great day to be a Pirate<lb/>
continued Hart.<lb/>
"This being alumni<lb/>
weekend will bring lots of<lb/>
folks back to the campus<lb/>
and we plan to provide<lb/>
them with something like<lb/>
they've never seen before.<lb/>
We want to start a tradi-<lb/>
tion on April 14<lb/>
m<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price m each a&amp;p Store eiceot as<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad<lb/>
fWCES OFFERED THRU S.t Apr.l 14 AT AP?NCren.ll?- NC ????????<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
CHECK WITH YOUR LOCAL AAP FOR DETAILS OH DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
3 Beautiful Patterns Hand Painted Baroque<lb/>
STONEWARE<lb/>
)<lb/>
SEE COUPON<lb/>
BELOW ON<lb/>
COMPLETER<lb/>
PIECE<lb/>
This Weeks<lb/>
Feature<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
WITH EVERY 3.00 PURCHASE<lb/>
49<lb/>
Pirate Mascot<lb/>
To Be Named<lb/>
STANLEY LEAR Y - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
The ECU coaching staff is hoping Saturday's Purple-Gold intra-squad<lb/>
scnmmage will produce someone to fill the vacated shoes of star quarterback<lb/>
Kevin Ingram. The game is set for 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
SAVE 50? LB.<lb/>
COUNTRY PRIDE<lb/>
Whole Fryer Legs<lb/>
89?<lb/>
Jumbo Pack<lb/>
SAVE 31 ? LB.<lb/>
Other than "The<lb/>
Pirate what do you call<lb/>
ECU's mascot? In other<lb/>
words, what is the name<lb/>
of "The Pirate?"<lb/>
Well, at present, no<lb/>
name really exists for the<lb/>
look forward to naming<lb/>
the Pirate through our<lb/>
contest<lb/>
So, it will not be long<lb/>
before "The Pirate" can<lb/>
have his or her official<lb/>
name!<lb/>
se(k TuCer<lb/>
Carolina past mall Lnrwnv,iu<lb/>
Pirate mascot. But that<lb/>
will change on April 14 at<lb/>
halftime of the annual<lb/>
Purple-Gold spring foot-<lb/>
ball game.<lb/>
"A contest is underway<lb/>
in area elementary<lb/>
schools right now to find<lb/>
an appropriate name for<lb/>
our Pirate mascot ex-<lb/>
plained Assistant Athletic<lb/>
Director for Marketing at<lb/>
ECU Dave Hart Jr.<lb/>
Individual classes<lb/>
within the area schools,<lb/>
grades one through five,<lb/>
will be submitting names<lb/>
in a contest to name the<lb/>
Pirate. A panel of judges<lb/>
will review all names sub-<lb/>
mitted and pick the one<lb/>
that is felt to be the best<lb/>
and most appropriate<lb/>
name to tag our Pirate<lb/>
mascot.<lb/>
The winning class will<lb/>
get a picture with the<lb/>
Pirate to be framed and<lb/>
placed within the school.<lb/>
And each individual stu-<lb/>
dent within the class will<lb/>
get his or her picture<lb/>
made with the Pirate<lb/>
mascot to keep for<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
The current look of the<lb/>
Pirate mascot came about<lb/>
with the beginning of last<lb/>
football season, as the<lb/>
athletic department<lb/>
sought to upgrade the im-<lb/>
age of the Pirate and to<lb/>
make the mascot more<lb/>
adaptable to the many<lb/>
facets of the athletic pro-<lb/>
gram. The new Pirate<lb/>
mascot, as well as other<lb/>
logos of the university,<lb/>
are now licensed through<lb/>
a professional organiza-<lb/>
tion out of Atlanta.<lb/>
We've had tremen-<lb/>
dous response to our new<lb/>
Pirate mascot and logo<lb/>
continues Hart, "and we.<lb/>
Carolina east mall r'areenvillt<lb/>
FREE BONUS<lb/>
purchase of $7.50 or more<lb/>
"The Talented Five"<lb/>
? Sugar Plum Lip Pencil<lb/>
? Satin Mauve Creamy Busher<lb/>
? Moisturizing Lotion<lb/>
? Beauty Masque<lb/>
? Black Brush-On Mascara<lb/>
Come in beginning today for this free gift<lb/>
cunIque<lb/>
AAP QUALITY FRESH <lb/>
Ground Chuck <lb/>
. I58 )<lb/>
FRESH<lb/>
B&amp;ESSfe<lb/>
Green<lb/>
Cabbage<lb/>
SAVE 34 LB.<lb/>
SAVE5?<lb/>
Ripe Bananas<lb/>
EVEN STRAIGHT AS CAN'T<lb/>
IELP IF YOU FLUNK TUITION.<lb/>
SAVE 40?<lb/>
RED (FAMILY PACK)<lb/>
Ripe tomatoes <lb/>
28 oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
99<lb/>
Seat Grocgp<lb/>
LsAW2tm: Savings ?saveio<lb/>
Today, the toughest thing about going<lb/>
to college is finding the money to pay for it.<lb/>
But Army ROTC can help - two<lb/>
ways!<lb/>
First, you can apply for an Army<lb/>
ROTC scholarship. It covers tuition,<lb/>
books, and supplies, and pays you<lb/>
up to $1,000 each school year it's<lb/>
in effect.<lb/>
But even if you're not a<lb/>
scholarship recipient,<lb/>
ROTC can still help<lb/>
with financial assis- ft ffl ?J<lb/>
tance?up to $1,000<lb/>
a year for your<lb/>
last two years in<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
For more<lb/>
information,<lb/>
contact Captain<lb/>
Heldur Liivak at<lb/>
757-6967, Room<lb/>
324 Erwin Hall. You<lb/>
must act quickly to be<lb/>
eligible for a scholarship<lb/>
this year!<lb/>
"4<lb/>
ZZ&amp;r,<lb/>
COUPON ?!<lb/>
SAVE 20c ON<lb/>
Eight O'Clock Coffee<lb/>
REGULAR BEAN<lb/>
 GOOD TWHU SAT.<lb/>
? 14 AT A4P<lb/>
r one wrm coupon am st jo t<lb/>
I A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 50c ON<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
LORiDAGOLD FROZEN<lb/>
OiTMNU SAT, W 14 AT AAP<lb/>
f ONE WfTM COUPON AND ST M ONDI <lb/>
I A&amp;PCOUPON<lb/>
SAVE 40c ON<lb/>
Red Band Flour<lb/>
PLAIN ? SELf RISING<lb/>
UNTT ONI WTTH COUPON AND S? ? <lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
SAVE 20c ON<lb/>
Chunk Light Tuna<lb/>
In Oii<lb/>
in Ware<lb/>
"yT- ?? www<lb/>
X:<lb/>
?tESst.<lb/>
$1.000FF<lb/>
WITH TMS COUPON<lb/>
AND PURCHASE OF AMY<lb/>
Stoneware<lb/>
ompleter Piece<lb/>
Lwwl Om Cowp? P? CurtHPM.<lb/>
mm&amp; nrvtt 661<lb/>
COUPON ?W<lb/>
Senior Citizens<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
5 off Total Purchases<lb/>
On Wednesdays<lb/>
A P<lb/>
Gimtvill Square TlHpfcim CmlW<lb/>
7W GrMfltvilte Blvd. Grcitvill?, n.C<lb/>
??<lb/>
h JHc ? ?? ??"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057638_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLON1AN APRIL 10. 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Spring Coupon Sale<lb/>
Now thru Saturday<lb/>
Only.<lb/>
Additional Savings On Our Everyday Low Prices!<lb/>
$ 1.00 OFF<lb/>
Crew Necks<lb/>
Reg. $6.95 to $11.95<lb/>
Good thru 4-14-84<lb/>
 <lb/>
$1<lb/>
$1<lb/>
a I<lb/>
$ 1.00 OFF<lb/>
W A<lb/>
Sweat Pants<lb/>
Reg. $6.95 to $8.95<lb/>
Good thru 4-14-84<lb/>
$?<lb/>
$2.00 OFF<lb/>
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