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<pb facs="00057708_0001"/>
Sire ?aat (Earnittrian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.51<lb/>
Tuesday, April 2, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Legislators Pass Amendment<lb/>
To End Political Patronage<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
rhe doors of the SGA<lb/>
. slature were barred and the<lb/>
Speaker's gavel echoed<lb/>
throughout the room as<lb/>
parlimentary procedures were in<lb/>
full swing Monday night, allow-<lb/>
ing legislators to fulfill their<lb/>
ties and finally agreeing that<lb/>
an amendment to the ECU<lb/>
Refrigerator Board Constitution<lb/>
r?e passed.<lb/>
Speaker of the Legislature Kirk<lb/>
Shelley stepped down from his<lb/>
position and told the legislators,<lb/>
"Ihis bill does not, in any way,<lb/>
make any reference to former,<lb/>
present or future presidents or<lb/>
managers" of SGA or the<lb/>
Refrigerator Board.<lb/>
"However, there have been ac-<lb/>
cusations made through the<lb/>
media and the past elections<lb/>
forum that the Refrigerator<lb/>
Manager position may oe used by<lb/>
SGA presidents to &amp;el votes he<lb/>
said. Shelley's bill states that<lb/>
future appointments of the<lb/>
Refrigerator Rental Manager will<lb/>
be made during a closed session<lb/>
of the legislature, where<lb/>
legislators will have the chance to<lb/>
screen two candidates previously<lb/>
selected by the Refengerator<lb/>
Board.<lb/>
"1 feel that it would be in the<lb/>
best interest of every student if<lb/>
the SGA president did not have<lb/>
so much influence on the selec-<lb/>
tion of the manager. It should be<lb/>
a professional relationship,<lb/>
which is hard to do when they're<lb/>
such good friends. I think the ser-<lb/>
vices will be better, as well as in-<lb/>
creasing student input in deciding<lb/>
this important position<lb/>
SGA president-elect David<lb/>
Brown told the legislators that he<lb/>
had no objections to the amend-<lb/>
ment, and he also said he had no<lb/>
intentions of letting this happen<lb/>
when he took office. "However,<lb/>
I would like to have some say in<lb/>
the final decision<lb/>
Mike McPartland, SGA vice<lb/>
president, recommended the bill<lb/>
be passed, allowing for more stu-<lb/>
dent input in the selection pro-<lb/>
cess. Assistant Refrigerator<lb/>
Rental Manager David Brooks<lb/>
said after the meeting that, "it is<lb/>
a good thing this bill has passed,<lb/>
because it will do away with any<lb/>
possiblities of political patronage<lb/>
by the SGA president. It is<lb/>
definitely a victory for ECU<lb/>
students<lb/>
In other SGA action, a recom-<lb/>
mendation was made to the Dept.<lb/>
of Public Safety that would allow<lb/>
them to review a proposal to ex-<lb/>
pand the parking lot behind the<lb/>
infirmary, at the expense of<lb/>
several trees, many of which are<lb/>
dying.<lb/>
Legislator Coralie Patterson<lb/>
told the SGA that she had spoken<lb/>
with Joseph Caulder, director of<lb/>
Public Safety. "There is a shor-<lb/>
tage of parking places behind the<lb/>
Student Health Center Patter-<lb/>
son said, "and more spaces could<lb/>
be made if trees located in the<lb/>
middle of it were cut down. Mr.<lb/>
Caulder also said more room<lb/>
could be made if some trees were<lb/>
cut down at the rear of the lot<lb/>
Approximately 30 ? 40 new<lb/>
parking spaces would be created<lb/>
if the trees were cut down, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Arguing against the recom-<lb/>
mendation was Richard Wynne.<lb/>
"Some students do not want any<lb/>
more trees cut down on<lb/>
campus he said. "Other<lb/>
possibilities should be looked in-<lb/>
to, such as the removal of staff<lb/>
parking along the street in front<lb/>
of the Student Health Center.<lb/>
Refrigerator rental management and<lb/>
at Monday's meeting.<lb/>
This would serve the patients'<lb/>
needs Patterson said other op-<lb/>
tions had been considered by<lb/>
Caulder, but no feasible solutions<lb/>
were found.<lb/>
Another SGA legislator, John<lb/>
Agnew, said, "there is no sense in<lb/>
us calling for the cutting down of<lb/>
more trees on campus. Already<lb/>
the arboretum is scheduled to be<lb/>
torn up Agnew was referring to<lb/>
the wooded area behind Rawl<lb/>
building, where a new classroom<lb/>
will be located.<lb/>
MALGOSIA DUBLINSKY - ECU Photo Lit<lb/>
?l?uii? UUBLINSKT ? ECU PhOtO L,<lb/>
tree preservation were among the topics discussed by SGA legislators<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne said that while<lb/>
he thought every effort had been<lb/>
made to preserve natural areas of<lb/>
campus, he said, "there are a lot<lb/>
of trees that have died and need<lb/>
to be removed<lb/>
Another bill was passed by ac-<lb/>
clamation that would let ECU's<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell and<lb/>
Athletic Director Ken Karr know<lb/>
that when minor athletic teams<lb/>
go to out of town meets, alter-<lb/>
native modes of transportation<lb/>
should be considered.<lb/>
Kilcoyne, author of the bill,<lb/>
said the death of sprinter Erskine<lb/>
Evans was tragic and the ad-<lb/>
ministration needs to consider<lb/>
ways to avoid such an occurrence<lb/>
from happening again.<lb/>
Brown said he had spoken to<lb/>
Howell, who said lack of funds<lb/>
made it impossible for the<lb/>
Athletic Department to hire<lb/>
anyone to drive the teams. "He<lb/>
was very sorry about the<lb/>
incident Brown said.<lb/>
May<lb/>
Exec<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nnr? MMor<lb/>
A petition calling for the recall<lb/>
of SGA President-elect David<lb/>
Brown is currently being cir-<lb/>
culated on the ECU campus. The<lb/>
petition cites deficits in Brown's<lb/>
leadership abilities and deception<lb/>
on his part during his campaign.<lb/>
According to Student Govern-<lb/>
ment Association documents,<lb/>
"the power to recall any elected<lb/>
official shall be vested in the con-<lb/>
stituency of that official, which<lb/>
shall be defined as that body of<lb/>
students who are qualified to vote<lb/>
for that official The documents<lb/>
further state that "a petition to<lb/>
recall either the President, Vice-<lb/>
President, Secretary or Treasurer<lb/>
of the Student Government<lb/>
Association must contain the<lb/>
signatures of at least 15 percent<lb/>
of the entire student body<lb/>
Brown will not be sworn in as<lb/>
president until April 20.<lb/>
The petition to recall must be<lb/>
given to the student attorney<lb/>
general, who will hold it for ten<lb/>
days to determine its validity, and<lb/>
then, if it is valid, direct the SGA<lb/>
to hold a new election.<lb/>
Student Attorney General<lb/>
Scott Sutker said he does not feel<lb/>
the petition is a good idea. He ad-<lb/>
ded that, because of the time-<lb/>
frame involved, it will be difficult<lb/>
to hold an election before the end<lb/>
Athletic Department Receives Criticism<lb/>
of the school year. "We can't<lb/>
have an election in the summer<lb/>
he added. "I'd like to work it so<lb/>
we had a president in the fall he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The petition cites three reasons<lb/>
for Brown's recall. The first<lb/>
states that Brown failed "to at-<lb/>
tain a majority of the votes and<lb/>
this puts his viability as a leader<lb/>
in doubt<lb/>
The petition then goes on to<lb/>
state that Brown "captured hun-<lb/>
dreds of votes by deceiving art<lb/>
and music students of his perfor-<lb/>
mance in the legislature" on their<lb/>
behalf.<lb/>
Finally, the petition states that<lb/>
Brown has not demonstrated<lb/>
leadership qualities in the Senate.<lb/>
"I think we've had one election<lb/>
and that should be sufficient<lb/>
Brown said. "If these people are<lb/>
so interested in the election then<lb/>
they should have voted the first<lb/>
time around ? that's what an<lb/>
election is for<lb/>
Brown went on to add that the<lb/>
individuals circulating the peti-<lb/>
tion "do not have the best in-<lb/>
terests of ECU in mind, rut<lb/>
rather their own particular self-<lb/>
interest The candidates elected,<lb/>
he said, are not biased and "are<lb/>
willing to work for the<lb/>
majority<lb/>
Department Responds To Regulations<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Co-SporU Editor<lb/>
After track team member Er-<lb/>
skine Evans, 21, was killed in an<lb/>
accident involving an ECU van<lb/>
driven by a student driver, the<lb/>
ECU athletic department was<lb/>
criticized for the policy which<lb/>
allows team members to drive<lb/>
athletic vans.<lb/>
ECU policy allows individual<lb/>
coaches to designate which<lb/>
athlete will drive and determine<lb/>
how often rest stops will be<lb/>
made.<lb/>
"The coach is responsible for<lb/>
the team from the time they leave<lb/>
until they get back. We leave<lb/>
discretion to the coaches as to<lb/>
who will drive and how often rest<lb/>
stops occur ECU Associate<lb/>
Athletic Director Bob Helmick<lb/>
said. "They are there and are bet-<lb/>
ter able to determine what should<lb/>
be done rather than me setting<lb/>
any strict guidelines for them to<lb/>
follow<lb/>
In some cases, Helmick said, a<lb/>
person might get tired after 30<lb/>
minutes while another athlete<lb/>
may be able to drive longer.<lb/>
Evans' girlfriend, Jewel Har-<lb/>
dy, was quoted earlier as saying<lb/>
the accident could have been<lb/>
prevented. "They take care of the<lb/>
football and basketball teams,<lb/>
but they need to take care of all<lb/>
of the athletes Hardy said.<lb/>
"Maybe by all of us talking<lb/>
about it, this sort of thing can be<lb/>
prevented from happening<lb/>
again<lb/>
Helmick said school officials<lb/>
are reviewing the policy. State<lb/>
law allows student-athletes to<lb/>
drive the vans, Helmick said.<lb/>
"Nearly every university in the<lb/>
nation engages in this practice<lb/>
(student-driven transportation)<lb/>
Helmick continued. "I was at a<lb/>
golf tournament this weekend in<lb/>
Durham and 24 of the 25 teams<lb/>
there transported themselves in<lb/>
vans<lb/>
Helmick said the university has<lb/>
logged more than 1.5 million<lb/>
miles while transporting 30,000<lb/>
athletes on 3,000 road trips since<lb/>
he's been at ECU. The March 23<lb/>
accident is the first to occur dur-<lb/>
ing this time.<lb/>
"I feel as bad about the loss of<lb/>
this young man as anyone<lb/>
Helmick said. "The thing that<lb/>
nobody will accept is that it was<lb/>
an accident. Accidents do happen<lb/>
and always will, as long as there<lb/>
are people involved<lb/>
Evans' teammate Phil Estes<lb/>
also was quoted earlier as saying<lb/>
the accident could have been<lb/>
prevented. "It's unfair that we<lb/>
have to drive such long<lb/>
distances Estes said.<lb/>
Much of the criticism has<lb/>
centered around the lack of funds<lb/>
in the athletic department budget<lb/>
forcing the team to make the long<lb/>
trip back from Athens, Ga. on<lb/>
the night of the accident.<lb/>
Helmick sees no correlation bet-<lb/>
ween the lack of money and the<lb/>
"designated driver system<lb/>
"The rich and poor schools<lb/>
drive the vans Helmick said.<lb/>
"It's just the most feasible,<lb/>
logical way to do it. I don't think<lb/>
I would change our policy even if<lb/>
our budget was eight million<lb/>
dollars. Carolina and State both<lb/>
have the same policy as we do<lb/>
and both have much larger<lb/>
budgets<lb/>
All ECU athletic teams use the<lb/>
designated driver system, except<lb/>
the football and the men's and<lb/>
women's basketball teams.<lb/>
Media Heads Selected On Monday<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Three 1985-86 campus media<lb/>
heads were named by the ECU<lb/>
Media Board in their meeting<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Beth Davis will succeed Gary<lb/>
Patterson as editor of the 1986<lb/>
Buccaneer. Davis, 20, a<lb/>
sophomore computer science ma-<lb/>
jor, said she plans to include<lb/>
more photography in the 1986<lb/>
Buccaneer. -<lb/>
In addition, Davis said she<lb/>
wants to "make deadlines the<lb/>
main goal She said she feels<lb/>
meeting the first deadline is im-<lb/>
portant for staff morale. "Once<lb/>
you meet the first one, you know<lb/>
you can do it again she said.<lb/>
Davis served as organizations<lb/>
coordinator for the 1985 Buc-<lb/>
caneer and said she "learned a lot<lb/>
from the staff" and wants to ap-<lb/>
ply the knowledge to next year's<lb/>
book.<lb/>
Kate Abbott was chosen as<lb/>
general manager of WZMB, the<lb/>
campus radio station. Abbott,<lb/>
27, is a senior art major. "I hope<lb/>
to continue in the fine tradition<lb/>
set by our current general<lb/>
manager, Susan Duncan she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Abbott added that she would<lb/>
make some improvements at the<lb/>
station, but has no immediate<lb/>
plans. "I want to continue to<lb/>
provide an excellent alternative<lb/>
broadcast media to ECU she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
At least two major promotions<lb/>
are planned by Abbott, and she<lb/>
also plans to obtain information<lb/>
which will determine exactly who<lb/>
WZMB's audience is.<lb/>
Photo Lab will be run by Jon<lb/>
Jordan, 23, a chemistry major.<lb/>
Jordan said his major project<lb/>
would be the institution of an<lb/>
equipment checkout system<lb/>
which would allow staff members<lb/>
to be able to account for all<lb/>
equipment.<lb/>
?!? Bv Tracy D?IHii<lb/>
The Thrill Of Victory<lb/>
East Carolinian staffer Greg Rideout aided in the oaper's defeat of<lb/>
WZMB 25-14 in a Sunday softball same.<lb/>
Abbott<lb/>
Davis<lb/>
Jordan<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2 softball and rugby. See Sports,<lb/>
Editorials4 page 8.<lb/>
Style6<lb/>
Classifieds7<lb/>
Sportsg<lb/>
?Catch up on the latest in<lb/>
ECU men's baseball, women's<lb/>
?What really happened at the<lb/>
East Carolinian ? WZMB<lb/>
softball game? See Editorials,<lb/>
page 4.<lb/>
'BUJlHfi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057708_0002"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
Hypnosis<lb/>
Would you like to be hypnotized? Can you be<lb/>
hypnotized? Dr Daugherty of the<lb/>
Psychology department will present his In<lb/>
terestlng and Informative discussion of this<lb/>
tipic. ending with actual hypnosis The most<lb/>
talked about presentation on campus will be<lb/>
Tues April 2 at 7 30 p m In Sprlghf 129<lb/>
Don't miss itl<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will have it's next<lb/>
meeting after Easter on Tues . April 9, at 7<lb/>
pm in room 248 of Mendenhall This will be<lb/>
an important meeting because new officers<lb/>
will be chosen and end of the semester ac<lb/>
'v.fies win be discussed All members and<lb/>
those interested are invited to come For<lb/>
more information, call AAike Gardner<lb/>
7M S672<lb/>
Batter Up!<lb/>
Registration for the IRS home run derby will<lb/>
be held April 9 n The competition will take<lb/>
place on the Lady Pirate Softball Field adja<lb/>
cent to the Baseball field Look for the action<lb/>
April 18 For more info call 757 6387 or come<lb/>
by room 204 Memorial Gym Bring your own<lb/>
pitcher<lb/>
Golf Classic<lb/>
Registration for the 1985 golf classic begins<lb/>
April 1 Don T be a fool?come down to room<lb/>
20-4 Memorial Gym and swing into the golf<lb/>
classic Registration ends April 2 For more<lb/>
mfo come by room 204 Memorial Gym or<lb/>
call 757 6387<lb/>
Aerobic Fitness<lb/>
Instructors<lb/>
Tryouts for the 1985 W school year aerobic<lb/>
? ,riess instruction begins April 13 The class<lb/>
is required for anyone interested in teaching<lb/>
for the In Rec Aerobic Fitness Program On<lb/>
Apr.l 13 from 11 12 30 in room 108 Memorial<lb/>
Gym The tryouts will be held For more In<lb/>
to come by room 204 Memorial Gym or call<lb/>
'57 6387<lb/>
Yippie vs.<lb/>
Yippie Debate<lb/>
Tne famous Abbie Hoffman rYlPPiEand<lb/>
Jerry Rubm YUPPlE will debate here at<lb/>
ECU! The date is Tues , April 16, at8p m in<lb/>
Hendrx Theatre The topic for this debate<lb/>
will be YiPPiE vs YUPPIE The<lb/>
Challenge of the I980's vs The idealism of the<lb/>
60 s Tickets will go on sale April 2 at the<lb/>
Central ticket Office Prices will be J2 for<lb/>
ECU Students, 14 tor Faculty and Staff, and<lb/>
$6 tor the Public<lb/>
Society For Advancement<lb/>
of Management<lb/>
There will be an organizational meeting<lb/>
April 3 at 3 m Rawl 104 Members planning to<lb/>
go to Richmond April 9 are asked to attend<lb/>
?Ve wi review the activities remaining for<lb/>
this semester Elections are coming soon!<lb/>
Memoers ?vno cannot attend please contact<lb/>
Rck at 752 8787<lb/>
Special Olympics<lb/>
volunteers are needed to assist with special<lb/>
Oimpic preparation Thurs April 4 The<lb/>
meeting will be from 4 9pm at J C Park on<lb/>
Ceaer lane Volunteers are needed to check<lb/>
entry forms, sort t shirts, and prepare rib<lb/>
bons if you have any tree time to share call<lb/>
758 4731 ext 201, for directons or additional<lb/>
information<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
All brothers, little sisters and pledges are<lb/>
reminded of the brothers dinner on Wed at 6<lb/>
p m The procedes will go towards PUSH<lb/>
Student Loan Fund<lb/>
All National Direct Student Loan Borrowers<lb/>
are reminded of the exit interview require<lb/>
menf upon graduation or those otherwise not<lb/>
returning to ECU Fall Semester, 1985, as an<lb/>
undergraduate or graduate student. The in<lb/>
ferview is necessary to inform NDSL Reci<lb/>
pients of the repayment schedule, provisions<lb/>
for loan conceiiafion, and other pertinent in<lb/>
formation You are requested to report to the<lb/>
Conference Room 221 of the Mendenhall Shj<lb/>
dent Center at 5 30 p m on either April 3, or<lb/>
April 17 if you connot meet on either date,<lb/>
then, you would want to call 757 6817 for an<lb/>
appointment<lb/>
NIH<lb/>
The National Institutes of Health is<lb/>
recruiting for the Fall, 1985 Co-op work<lb/>
period Positions avilable for students in the<lb/>
following disciplines Biology, Microbiology,<lb/>
Computer Science, Chemistry, Biomedical<lb/>
or Behavioral Sciences Contact the Co-op of<lb/>
fice in Rawl 313 immediately! Applications<lb/>
must be in by April 5<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
There will be a meeting of ail Psi Chi<lb/>
members tonight at 6 p m in Speight 129.<lb/>
Nominations for new officers will be con<lb/>
ducted People who are now applying are<lb/>
also invited This meeting is extremely im<lb/>
portanf<lb/>
Episcopal Worship<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of Holy Commu<lb/>
nion will be celebrated on Tues evening,<lb/>
April 2 m the chapel of St Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church, 406 4th st (one block from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm) The service will be at 5 30 p.m with<lb/>
the Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev. Bill Had<lb/>
den, celebrating Supper will follow.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU Racquetball Club<lb/>
There will be a meeting on Tues , April 2. at 6<lb/>
p.m. In Memorial Gym rm. 102 You guys<lb/>
who are going to intercollegiate tourney<lb/>
need to be there Important practices on<lb/>
Tuesl Thurs 9 to 12 p.m. and Sat 8 to 10<lb/>
am All members and anyone interested are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
will be having a meeting today at 5 15 in<lb/>
room 212 of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Topics for the meeting Include election of<lb/>
new officers and discussion of Initiation of<lb/>
new members this Thurs All members are<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
Attention Everyone<lb/>
Spring brings the 2nd annual All Sing! Spon<lb/>
sored by Alpha Xi Delta it is a music televi<lb/>
slon take off No cover charge April 11th in<lb/>
Wright Auditorium Be there for free fun and<lb/>
laughs<lb/>
ECU Surfing Club &amp; Team<lb/>
The nexl meeting will be on Tues April 2nd<lb/>
at 8 in the Mendenhall Cotfehouse Featured<lb/>
video is the 1984 Stubbies Surfing Contest In<lb/>
California Everyone planning to go on the<lb/>
Easter trip to Hatteras must attend this<lb/>
meeting. New members can still go on the<lb/>
trip also. ECU Surfing a club for all beach<lb/>
lovers and a team for competitive surfing.<lb/>
Testing Center<lb/>
Due to the fact that the ECU Testing Center,<lb/>
Speight Building, Room 105 will be closed on<lb/>
April 10, 1985, the MAT regularly scheduled<lb/>
for that date will not be administered Ad<lb/>
ministration of the MAT will resume on<lb/>
Wed , April 17 at 2 30 p m<lb/>
Honors Program<lb/>
Any graduating senior who has taken 24<lb/>
semester hours in Honors and wants a stamp<lb/>
on his or her transcript should see Dr<lb/>
Sanders (212 Ragsdale) by April 15 Any<lb/>
Honors student receiving any special honor<lb/>
or getting a job or getting into graduate<lb/>
school should inform Dr Sanders for<lb/>
publicaton in the Honors newsletter<lb/>
English Scholarship<lb/>
The English Department invites applica<lb/>
fions for the Russell M Chnsfman Memorial<lb/>
Scholarship, awarded annually to a iunior<lb/>
English maior for exceptional academic<lb/>
achievement, outstanding potential in the<lb/>
field of English, and significant involvement<lb/>
in extracurricular activities The amount of<lb/>
the award is 1500 Applicants should com<lb/>
plete the Student Scholarship Form<lb/>
(available from the Student Financila Aid<lb/>
Office) and send it, together with a brief let<lb/>
ter descrirbing their academic<lb/>
achievements, extracurricular activities,<lb/>
and plans for further study or career goals to<lb/>
the Russell M Christman Memorial Scholar<lb/>
ship Committee, co The Department of<lb/>
English The deadline for applications is<lb/>
April 121 For further Information contact Er<lb/>
win Hester, 101 English Department Annex<lb/>
Video Games Contest<lb/>
The Student Union Recreaiton Committee Is<lb/>
sponsoring a video games contest Beginning<lb/>
Tues . April 9, at 9 am and continuing<lb/>
through Fri . April 19, at 10 pm during<lb/>
regular operating hours of Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center All ECU students, facuty, staff<lb/>
and their dependants are eligible to par<lb/>
ticipate The hlghtest scorer on each<lb/>
machine at the end of the allotted time will<lb/>
win a trophy. For further information call<lb/>
the billiards center at Mendenhall 757 6611<lb/>
ext 239<lb/>
Resume Workshops<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
in the Bloxton House is offering one hour ses<lb/>
sions to help you prepare your own resume<lb/>
Many employers request a resume showing<lb/>
your education and experience Come to<lb/>
either session to receive handouts and an<lb/>
overview They will be held in the Career<lb/>
Planning room of the Bloxton House at 3<lb/>
p.m. on April 1 and 9<lb/>
ECUCouncillOf<lb/>
Honor Societies<lb/>
Is having a meeting Thurs April 4, at 7 In<lb/>
Mendenhall room 238 There will be an elec<lb/>
tion of new officers! Representatives of all<lb/>
honor societies are urged to attend<lb/>
Varsity Cheerleader<lb/>
Tryouts<lb/>
Organizational meeting: Wed April 3, 5:30<lb/>
pm lobby Mmges Coliseum. Practice<lb/>
Clinics April 4, 9, 10 Final tryouts to be an<lb/>
nounced We need enthusiastic guys and<lb/>
girlsl For more Intoramaiton call: 757 0118<lb/>
or 752 6353<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug Program will be<lb/>
presenting Mr Fobert Braxton In a lecture<lb/>
on "Addiclton in the 8Cs " This lecture will<lb/>
be held on April 4 In room 244, at630 p m In<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center This lecture is<lb/>
open to everyone.<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee<lb/>
Become Involved! Applications are now be<lb/>
ing accepted for a studnet position on the<lb/>
theatre arts committee Applications can be<lb/>
picked up in Mendenhall 234 from 8 to 5 And<lb/>
must be returned to this office by April 19.<lb/>
r?-?33Vi<lb/>
DIVE<lb/>
PENNYKAMP<lb/>
mm<lb/>
DIVE SHOP<lb/>
M?y 5-10 Key Largo, Florida<lb/>
Dive Pennykamp with Capt. Slate (ECU Class of '71), Atlantis<lb/>
Dive Center, on the only natural coral reef in the continental<lb/>
U.S. Five days and nights, a two tank boat dive daily, one<lb/>
night dive, a dive with the dolphins, includes tanks, air,<lb/>
backpacks and weights. Lodging at Howard Johnsons, full<lb/>
breakfast daily, welcome drink, swimming pool, Tiki Bar, on<lb/>
the bay. Non-diver package available.<lb/>
For Information Gill 758-1444<lb/>
mauBBumBBBmnKaaaumssdi<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Sierra Club Meeting<lb/>
"Scanning the Summer Skies" will be the<lb/>
topic of a lecture and demonstration by Dr<lb/>
Floyd Matthels, Chairman of ECU Science<lb/>
Ed at the Sierra Club meeting Mon , AprM 8<lb/>
at 8pm Dr Matthels will also advise would<lb/>
be stargaiers on the choice and use of<lb/>
telescopes In time for observing HaHey's<lb/>
Comet passing through out skies The Sierra<lb/>
Club meets at the First Presbyterian<lb/>
Church, 14th and Elm in Greenville<lb/>
Interviewing Workshops<lb/>
The Career Planning ano Placemen' Service<lb/>
in the Bloxton House is offering these one<lb/>
hour sessions to aid you in developing better<lb/>
Interviewing skills for use in your it seatch<lb/>
A film and discussion of how to interview on<lb/>
and off campus will be shared These ses<lb/>
sions will be held In the Career Planning<lb/>
room at 3 p m on April 3 and 11 Seniors are<lb/>
especially encouraged to attend either of<lb/>
these sessions<lb/>
Blood Drive<lb/>
ECU Army ROTC will be sponcermg a blood<lb/>
drive on Mon , April 1 and 2 from 12 to 6 p m<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Ce tr Give as if<lb/>
YOUR life depended on it!<lb/>
Epsilon Pi Tau<lb/>
EPT wi I hold It's Spring initiation banquet<lb/>
for new members on Fri , April 19 in room<lb/>
244 Mendenhall and dinner will follow at the<lb/>
Ramada Inn Initiates must attend m order<lb/>
to attain membership Banquet reservations<lb/>
with J8.50 must be received by April 15.<lb/>
Spring Plant Sale<lb/>
The ECU Biology Club will have it's<lb/>
semesterly plant sale on Tues April 2 and<lb/>
Wed , April 3 ,n the Biology Greenhouse, rm<lb/>
S 111 There will be an excelent selection of<lb/>
hearty plants that have been wen taken care<lb/>
of by our Greenhouse expert. Mrs Ann<lb/>
Bellis The sale will begin at 7 30 am so that<lb/>
we may enable those who work to also come<lb/>
by and make their selections before work<lb/>
hours The sale will end at 1 p m each day<lb/>
Please support the Biology Club by coming<lb/>
by and purchasing your choice of plants for<lb/>
your home or office Plants also make<lb/>
beautiful and lasting gifts All lovers of<lb/>
plants will appreciate this remarkabe sale1<lb/>
Need A Massage?<lb/>
"The Physical Therapy Club is having the last<lb/>
massage chnic of the year it will be held on<lb/>
the 1st floor Belk Bldg on April 2nd from 7 10<lb/>
P m The charge will be S2 for 15 mm You<lb/>
can by as many minutes as you want Come<lb/>
and enioy!<lb/>
Public Service Announ<lb/>
The Eastern Region North Carolina<lb/>
Rehabilitation Association (a chapter of the<lb/>
National Rehabilitation Association) is<lb/>
distributing complementary supplies of Han<lb/>
dlcapped Parking Reminders on request to<lb/>
any citizen, business, or organization In<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina These parking<lb/>
reminders are designed to be placed on the<lb/>
windshields of cars that are improperly<lb/>
oarked In handicapped spaces<lb/>
When requesting your free supply, simply<lb/>
indicate the approximate number of han<lb/>
dicapped Parking Reminders needed and<lb/>
forward your request to Chaper IV North<lb/>
Carolina. Rehabilitation Association. PG<lb/>
Box 797, Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
Crabbing With<lb/>
Paul Gauguin<lb/>
Thurs , April 11 at 7pm. The ECU School of<lb/>
Art will present a 50 min performance by<lb/>
visiting artist David Wheeler, Crabbing<lb/>
with Gauguin ' Mr Wheeler is a perfor<lb/>
mance artist, playnght, and sculptor, cur<lb/>
renfly living in New Orleans The perfor<lb/>
mance is free and the public is encouraged to<lb/>
attend ECU Arts Alive<lb/>
Mascots<lb/>
The Athletic Department is looking for<lb/>
athletic, talented and good humored<lb/>
students to fulfill the position of the Pnate<lb/>
Mascot for the IV85 86 school iear Anyone<lb/>
interested In information about this position<lb/>
should meet at Mmges Coliseum, Thurs<lb/>
April 4 at 5 30 The responsibilities, excite<lb/>
rnent a"d advantages of being involved In<lb/>
Pirate Athletics should be worth our time to<lb/>
attend the first meeting! See you there!<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma Teta Tau (Nrus<lb/>
mg Honor Society! will conduct its Srping In<lb/>
duction Ceremony on April 13 at II a m In<lb/>
the Jenkins Auditorium The speaker wu be<lb/>
Eldean Pierce, a faculty member at the<lb/>
School of Nursing Topic Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
and you partners m excellence "<lb/>
Also the annual Spirng Banquet on Apri!<lb/>
18, at 7pm Regis'ration fee is$ll Dr Ma?<lb/>
me Loomis from the university of S C win<lb/>
speak on Practice Relevant Research<lb/>
Development " Please see an, member for<lb/>
registration information<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
will have a mini skirt contest at the<lb/>
Unlimited Touch on Thurs April 4 There<lb/>
will also be a 9 11 happy hour and ail pro<lb/>
ceeds will go to the Achievement Week Pro<lb/>
gram Rides will be provided between<lb/>
9 10 30 at MSC<lb/>
Air Band Contest<lb/>
Sigma Nu little sisters will be sponsoring an<lb/>
Air Band Contest at Beau's Ap'? 4 To<lb/>
register call 758 2464 Prizes will re award<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Club-Cert Entertainment<lb/>
Attention all ECU student groups and<lb/>
organizations Club Cert Entertainmer ?v<lb/>
suppi J12000 of concert sound eouipmen'<lb/>
light and music 'or your event 'o raise<lb/>
mone,r for the Cancer Society and the hw<lb/>
Fund To apply for sponsorship can Club<lb/>
Cert Entertainment 355 6339 or ' t?- p q<lb/>
Box 842. Greenvlle NC<lb/>
IBM<lb/>
American Marketing Association hos's<lb/>
Steve Murphree from IBM on Wed Ac<lb/>
3rd at 3 X p m in Mervqenhan 244 The<lb/>
presentation will cover the marketing of m<lb/>
formation processing products and sales<lb/>
management Nor memoers and memoers<lb/>
please come1 '<lb/>
Music Department<lb/>
Scott Sward m Junior reotai on piano 9pm<lb/>
Tues Apni 2nd, va'n come'<lb/>
NC Student Legislature<lb/>
NCSl Will Tee' Mot. t.r? v and Tues<lb/>
Apr ' 9th at 7 in the Menoenhah r of tee house<lb/>
Perr-Cie von Apr 8 s a noddar -<lb/>
memoe'S shou'o consder r.jnmng tor on? ?<lb/>
"?- ?cnowing offices Secretary TrMsurvf<lb/>
 Carao Char man Electionswll 'a?<lb/>
piace Tues April 9 Also on tna? date ,? <lb/>
have our picture 'atien for 'he Buccaneer<lb/>
rearoook and a pari.amer'ar, procedure<lb/>
workshop to test our delegates anc<lb/>
Governor s s IS Hopeful. Mor Apr mt<lb/>
? "ave h? new resolutions The ne?'<lb/>
 be Apr ?; 13 a iNC A The ECU ses<lb/>
( 'Our' s 15 ano "Sing uuRRR<lb/>
ECU Boomerang Club<lb/>
??- ? " Scott of E iaoe" C 'y as s<lb/>
npw president Cliff sas 'he boomerang s<lb/>
very popuia' In his home town ana he hopes<lb/>
nteresf aril ncease at ECU C " sa.s he<lb/>
tr.eo other c obs at ECo like 'he sur <lb/>
reels 'he boomerang club S 'or m<lb/>
ferested pe'sons shooic c? ?? tl "se ?<lb/>
This Summer<lb/>
Jf vfU'RE COMING TO SUMMER SCHOOL ANV UEEV A PLACE TO LIVE, 'ALL US<lb/>
A htW R1NG3CLV TOWERS UNITS ARF AVAILABLE TO SUBLET FlR THE S(<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At Vie Campus ?East Carolina University<lb/>
 Uriei' ndc ? t' umpm<lb/>
 lie aad real<lb/>
 ort-site nun4 yeweiit<lb/>
  - -? ?? per<lb/>
 ' ? ??' im ad<lb/>
? - - v . .c ? -??-<lb/>
 ? ? - pp j-if. fur<lb/>
? ;??. part 109 a ten<lb/>
i<lb/>
VARl PROPERTY BROKERS<lb/>
Jfe-<lb/>
! ?-???? ' ? - -<lb/>
<lb/>
? ' ?- ' ? : " . . ?<lb/>
919 "756 8-4<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
Vy<lb/>
1<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
WbM<lb/>
ger Saw on<lb/>
Ouant  B gnt! 9? -<lb/>
None so 7. . crs<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
April 6 1985<lb/>
)<lb/>
WIN<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
ODDS CHART<lb/>
000s to wm<lb/>
? .rv .)?(j?r?0v r "e lumtw of darre 'ickgu ou otrtun<lb/>
Tha rniwn Tturts , ,i?( I "i? tft?r yrxji chanc?? a winning<lb/>
OOOS OtAJrt IOTECTTVI AS O MAKM 16 19S3<lb/>
wutrtfR ' ooos r o? ' ooo?ro? I ooot m<lb/>
'?i Of ome autt 10 (jaik n uw<lb/>
mjM I mas nckrt nckrrs ncsn<lb/>
<lb/>
' m<lb/>
1 m ??  i hi - -v-<lb/>
i  i m m<lb/>
1 tn . ? r<lb/>
I 10<lb/>
1 -  1 in mm<lb/>
B5i i n ??<lb/>
i m <lb/>
$2,000<lb/>
$100<lb/>
FREE GROCERIES<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
v.<lb/>
; ?<lb/>
i m t tn<lb/>
<lb/>
WE WILL BE<lb/>
Open Normal<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
EASTER SUNDAY<lb/>
Pharmacies closed<lb/>
fr<lb/>
<lb/>
v:<lb/>
V,j<lb/>
r<lb/>
9 '<lb/>
from the folks at Kroger Savon,<lb/>
<lb/>
PEPSI FREE. DIET<lb/>
PEPSI OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
KROGER GRADE A<lb/>
Large<lb/>
REGULAR OR<lb/>
LIGHT<lb/>
Coors <lb/>
Beer<lb/>
 !<lb/>
2 Ltr<lb/>
NRB<lb/>
Doz<lb/>
m<lb/>
LIMIT 2 PLEASE<lb/>
V : DOZEN<lb/>
12 Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
REGULAR<lb/>
Wise Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
65<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
(EXCEPT ANGEL FOOD)<lb/>
Duncan Hines<lb/>
Cake Mix<lb/>
Countiy Vyte<lb/>
Country Sryte<lb/>
Minute<lb/>
Maid<lb/>
ORANGE<lb/>
v JUICE<lb/>
MINUTE MAID<lb/>
CHILLED<lb/>
COUNTRY STYLE<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
m<lb/>
WHOLE M9-23 LB<lb/>
AVG WGT ?<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
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ASSORTED VAHiET<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Brown 'N<lb/>
Serve Rolls<lb/>
185<lb/>
Oz<lb/>
Box<lb/>
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2 Gal<lb/>
Ctn<lb/>
LIMIT 2 PLEASE<lb/>
AOVERTISED ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Ecn of these advertised items<lb/>
is required to oe readily<lb/>
avauanie tor saie in eacn Kroger<lb/>
Sav on except as specifically<lb/>
noted in this ad if we do run<lb/>
out of an item we win offer you<lb/>
your choice of a comparaoie<lb/>
item when available reflecting<lb/>
the same savings or a rameneck<lb/>
which win entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase<lb/>
the adver<lb/>
oays Or<lb/>
win oe<lb/>
Easter Candy<lb/>
GO KROGERING FOR A HUGE SELECTION<lb/>
OF<lb/>
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DOUBLE<lb/>
MFCs l <lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
EOR EVERY $10 PURCHASE'<lb/>
Pease see details in-store<lb/>
At<lb/>
Stu<lb/>
Supre-<lb/>
a rulii .<lb/>
from<lb/>
door :<lb/>
rehg<lb/>
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Seeking<lb/>
Bv hi<lb/>
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Greenv<lb/>
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75&amp;-2T<lb/>
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PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
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Wm Ml Jq cm rXi pXa mm<lb/>
M M ?A? ? ? ?? fc?<lb/>
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GreenviU<lb/>
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plac-<lb/>
move in<lb/>
We are a<lb/>
 Call our<lb/>
atU I<lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057708_0003"/><lb/>
IBM<lb/>
n irVeo April<lb/>
I ttMll 244 Th?<lb/>
?'iietirg o? in<lb/>
t dj sales<lb/>
"embers<lb/>
Department<lb/>
 ?r?o p m<lb/>
S'udent Legislature<lb/>
Si ana TWJ<lb/>
"eehous<lb/>
? i ? Holiday am<lb/>
v 'oi one Of<lb/>
" usurer<lb/>
?? ? 'atie<lb/>
?'? ?? M II<lb/>
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? roure<lb/>
M rv'es arid Lt<lb/>
Apr l we<lb/>
' hf "e?t iC<lb/>
rxcECuin<lb/>
RRR!<lb/>
mg Club<lb/>
? S II s<lb/>
? xvnerang is<lb/>
?no e lopes<lb/>
M says he<lb/>
?? Su'f.rvg c. lub<lb/>
him n<lb/>
It ' S? 40<lb/>
-<lb/>
AVERS<lb/>
.? University<lb/>
ct;cned<lb/>
inces furr.ishm<lb/>
<lb/>
I -ten<lb/>
:rs<lb/>
<lb/>
.1 pi's<lb/>
' ie Th<lb/>
! PncesV<lb/>
Thin i C-sf-V<lb/>
ru Sar<lb/>
1985<lb/>
r<lb/>
0<lb/>
in<lb/>
OCERIES<lb/>
r Savon.<lb/>
- R .RADE A<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
58<lb/>
- IQ <lb/>
?<lb/>
Smoked<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
ASSORTED VAHIETY<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Brown 'N<lb/>
Serve Rolls<lb/>
$<lb/>
;JS<lb/>
119<lb/>
UBUE<lb/>
MRJ.S !<lb/>
UPONS<lb/>
JEK WE WILL DOUBLE 5<lb/>
I (UP TO 50 FACE VALUE)<lb/>
ERY $10 PURCHASE!<lb/>
ee details n-store<lb/>
i<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 2, 1985<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPD-Thei<lb/>
Supreme Court Monday let stand<lb/>
a ruling that state universities<lb/>
constitutionally may ban students<lb/>
from soliciting other students<lb/>
door-to-door to promote their<lb/>
religious beliefs.<lb/>
The justices rejected arguments<lb/>
by a Raleigh student who said his<lb/>
fundamentalist faith required<lb/>
him to spread the gospel per-<lb/>
sonally.<lb/>
Scott Chapman was a student<lb/>
Denied Right To Solicit In Dorms<lb/>
at North Carolina State Universi-<lb/>
ty in 1980 when he canvassed<lb/>
door to door in some of the cam-<lb/>
pus dormitories to invite fellow<lb/>
students to attend a series of<lb/>
discussions on scripture. Chap-<lb/>
man was an active member of the<lb/>
Boorks Avenue Church of<lb/>
Christ, an evangelical Christian<lb/>
church, which conducted the Bi-<lb/>
ble study sessions.<lb/>
As a result, college officials<lb/>
threatened to expel Chapman for<lb/>
violating the school's no solicita-<lb/>
tion policy. The only exceptions<lb/>
to the policy were for students<lb/>
campaigning for student govern-<lb/>
ment posts.<lb/>
Chapman was tried by a stu-<lb/>
dent body disciplinary group and<lb/>
acquitted when no one testified<lb/>
that he was soliciting door-to-<lb/>
door. But the university con-<lb/>
tinued to threaten him with<lb/>
academic sanctions if he con-<lb/>
tinued his solicitation activities.<lb/>
Chapman sued university of-<lb/>
ficials in November 1980, claim-<lb/>
ing the no solicitation rule<lb/>
violated his First Amendment<lb/>
free speech rights. Federal courts<lb/>
upheld the university policy,<lb/>
reasoning that it did not prohibit<lb/>
all solicitation by Chapman in-<lb/>
side the dormitories. Solicitation<lb/>
in dorm lobbies and fraternity<lb/>
houses and in students' in-<lb/>
dividual rooms was permitted by<lb/>
the policy.<lb/>
Seeking More Involvement<lb/>
NAA CP Elects New President<lb/>
Chapman asked the Supreme<lb/>
Court to review the decisions,<lb/>
saying they barred him from<lb/>
soliciting fellow students, but<lb/>
allowed student politicians from<lb/>
engaging in the same activity.<lb/>
The rule amounted to censor-<lb/>
ship of religious and political ex-<lb/>
pression, Chapman argued.<lb/>
"A student could knock on a<lb/>
fellow student's door and request<lb/>
the student to vote for him to be<lb/>
student body president, but could<lb/>
not ask that student to vote for<lb/>
Ronald Reagan to be President of<lb/>
the United States<lb/>
A university "by its very<lb/>
nature is supposed to be a place<lb/>
that encourages the free exchange<lb/>
of all kinds of ideas and view-<lb/>
points, including those in two of<lb/>
the areas most precious to a free<lb/>
society ? religion and politics<lb/>
Chapman argued.<lb/>
Lacy Thornburg, North<lb/>
Carolina Attorney General,<lb/>
responded that university of-<lb/>
ficials have the right to impose<lb/>
reasonable restrictions on First<lb/>
Amendment activities on cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
B ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
SurfH rltrr<lb/>
I eadership changed hands in<lb/>
the NAACP recently as Antonio<lb/>
Grisson took over the job of<lb/>
president from Wilma Case.<lb/>
According to Case, "the<lb/>
NAACP will be off to a good<lb/>
start. We have a good slate of of-<lb/>
ficers that have interacted enough<lb/>
this year to know how to plan<lb/>
next year Case added that<lb/>
Glisson's main goal is "to try and<lb/>
write the black organizations on<lb/>
campus, which should help get<lb/>
more people involved<lb/>
Case said she felt her role as<lb/>
president "served as a learning<lb/>
experience She said she ac-<lb/>
Club Receives Honors<lb/>
At District Convention<lb/>
complished personal goals which<lb/>
she had set for herself. "I learned<lb/>
more about the organization<lb/>
she said. "I wish more people<lb/>
had participated and gotten as<lb/>
much out of it as I did<lb/>
Other new officers include:<lb/>
Eric Hughes, first vice president;<lb/>
Annette Artis, second vice presi-<lb/>
dent; Grinder Spencer, third vice<lb/>
president; Howard Manley,<lb/>
treasurer; Vivian Phason,<lb/>
secretary; and Touanda Coley,<lb/>
assistant secretary.<lb/>
NAACP activities have includ-<lb/>
ed a lecture on self-assertion by<lb/>
Sydney Barnwell, assistant dean<lb/>
of the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
and Minority Visitation Day on<lb/>
March 30. During Minority<lb/>
Visitation Day, slide shows and<lb/>
other activities were presented for<lb/>
visiting parents and students.<lb/>
The NAACP currently has a<lb/>
membership drive in progress.<lb/>
The drive will end Wednesday.<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
ulstam Newt Editor<lb/>
ECUs Circle K Club walked<lb/>
away with eight awards at the<lb/>
Carolina District Convention<lb/>
convention held in Winston-<lb/>
Saiem recently.<lb/>
According to Nikki Jardine,<lb/>
secretary, the club won the most<lb/>
outstanding award in the Gold<lb/>
Leaf division category, along<lb/>
with most improved club in the<lb/>
state. Currently there are 16<lb/>
members at the ECU chapter, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
John Minges received the<lb/>
Governor's Award for Outstan-<lb/>
ding Service to the District and<lb/>
the most outstanding district<lb/>
member award was given to<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
b lower Shop<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
Corner Ean. &amp; ilTn St<lb/>
Joyce Languell, Jardine said.<lb/>
John Little, vice president of the<lb/>
ECU chapter, won the Presiden-<lb/>
tial Appreciation Award.<lb/>
Jardine said the Circle K club<lb/>
provides leadership training and<lb/>
service to members, as well as ser-<lb/>
ving the ECU campus and com-<lb/>
munity. "We also encourage<lb/>
group activities, fellowship and<lb/>
scholarship within the club she<lb/>
said. The club also assists univer-<lb/>
sity administration officials, she<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Other officers of the Circle K<lb/>
club include, Sue Steiman, presi-<lb/>
dent and Chris Ackiss, treasurer.<lb/>
"We invite everyone to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the club and have the<lb/>
chance to become active within<lb/>
the commun;v.<lb/>
5TH STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
WE REPAIR TOYOTA, HONDA, VW,<lb/>
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LUNCHEON SPECIALS<lb/>
Mon. STEAK 'N CHEESE fc<lb/>
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Tues. CHICKEN<lb/>
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Wed. MIXED SNACK<lb/>
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Thurs. CHICKEN N GRAVY<lb/>
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$1.89<lb/>
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Fri. STEAK &amp; FRENCH<lb/>
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MARILYN<lb/>
THOMPSON<lb/>
Soprano<lb/>
Tuesday, April 2, 1985 8:00 P.M<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre ?<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Admission ? $1.00<lb/>
Tickets on sale at the Central Ticket<lb/>
Office ? 757-6611, ext. 266<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
a?p???i umiENNEehw. m?i?. ? l?f??i ? ???? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057708_0004"/><lb/>
?hi East (Karoltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton. omerat Manager<lb/>
GREG RIDEOUT, Managing Editor<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. m. b Tom Luvender. a?,  .4<lb/>
Scon Cooper, co, ?, Anthony Martin, ????,Mana(?<lb/>
Tina M aroschak. ?&amp;? jOHn Peterson, c? Wflna<lb/>
Bll 1 MlTCHELl . OmM Manager Bill DAWSON. Product.on Manager<lb/>
Doris Rankins. s?? RlCK Mccormac. c?w ??<lb/>
DANIEI MAURER. Emmrmmmm, ?? DeCHANILE JOHNSON. Ad r,cnn,aa,<lb/>
April 2, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Accident<lb/>
Travel Policies Need Review<lb/>
The March 23 accident that kill-<lb/>
ed an ECU track team member<lb/>
should never have happened. No<lb/>
death is more tragic than one that<lb/>
could have been prevented, and<lb/>
Erskine Evans' could have been.<lb/>
Ah, but there was money involv-<lb/>
ed. The athletic department, which<lb/>
last year raised more than a million<lb/>
dollars and this year is seeking to<lb/>
buy out former football coach Ed<lb/>
Emorv's contract for more than<lb/>
$100,000, didn't have enough<lb/>
money to put up a handful of track<lb/>
players in a motel so they wouldn't<lb/>
have to drive all the way back from<lb/>
Athens, Ga after competing all<lb/>
day.<lb/>
No, not enough money. Ap-<lb/>
parently, safety is not the number-<lb/>
one concern of the powers-that-be.<lb/>
Now, granted, nothing probably<lb/>
would have been made of the<lb/>
policies concerning non-revenue<lb/>
sports if this tragedy had not oc-<lb/>
curred, but it did. And, now it is<lb/>
time to re-evaluate our athletic<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
But, the sports administration<lb/>
doesn't agree. After the accident,<lb/>
the sports people released<lb/>
statements saying no changes in<lb/>
policy would be made at this time.<lb/>
That reflex reaction to protect the<lb/>
school's image was unnecessary<lb/>
and stupid. The people who say<lb/>
Ah, Spring.<lb/>
Spring slammed ECU this<lb/>
weekend. Oh, what a feeling. It's<lb/>
about time, too. Old Man Winter<lb/>
was wicked and walloped us with<lb/>
some of his best snow woes, but we<lb/>
survived. And now we're getting<lb/>
even.<lb/>
The first sign of spring had to be<lb/>
the Chancellor in shorts (sources<lb/>
say they saw this, but we couldn't<lb/>
confirm it). There he was, they<lb/>
said, sunning himself over by<lb/>
Wright Fountain. And once Dr.<lb/>
John got in the act, the rest of the<lb/>
school followed his lead in a<lb/>
gracious fashion.<lb/>
There were shorts everywhere.<lb/>
Girls, boys, men, women, dog,<lb/>
cats ? even a few new-wavers got<lb/>
into the act. Sun and warm sum-<lb/>
mer breezes skimmed off the white<lb/>
legs of winter, turning them all a<lb/>
hazy, brownish-red.<lb/>
Then came the bikinis and tann-<lb/>
there will be no changes in policy<lb/>
in fact needed to say, "Hey, this is<lb/>
terrible and we'll look into it<lb/>
But, they didn't. And now we<lb/>
are going to tell them what they<lb/>
should look into and what they<lb/>
should do.<lb/>
First, team members shouldn't<lb/>
drive. Period. This includes track,<lb/>
baseball, tennis, soccer ? every<lb/>
sport. People who have been com-<lb/>
peting all day in a physical activity<lb/>
shouldn't be asked to drive long<lb/>
distances. Especially as long a<lb/>
distance as from here to Georgia.<lb/>
Hire someone. At $3.35 an hour, a<lb/>
driver is certainly worth a life.<lb/>
If you can't afford the money,<lb/>
which we're sure the athletic<lb/>
department can come up with<lb/>
somewhere, don't send the team.<lb/>
It's that simple. We can unders-<lb/>
tand maybe not being able to put<lb/>
up a group of swimmers in a hotel,<lb/>
but we can't tolerate making them<lb/>
drive back all the way from<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
We hope the athletic department<lb/>
wasn't serious when it said<lb/>
everything is all right the way it is.<lb/>
Some closer looks need to be taken<lb/>
and some new perspectives drawn<lb/>
on ECU athletics. We know there<lb/>
are a lot of complications, but<lb/>
nothing should take the place of<lb/>
safety ? nothing.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ing trunks. And then gallons of<lb/>
every oil known to man. From the<lb/>
Hill down to Central Campus and<lb/>
over to Clement and White dorms,<lb/>
students outdid themselves in the<lb/>
quest for the look of the<lb/>
"beautiful people<lb/>
But, then the second side of spr-<lb/>
ing hit. Along came the frisbees<lb/>
and grills. Every spot on campus<lb/>
had at least two or three ECUers<lb/>
cooking out and tossing the play-<lb/>
ing disc. Fun and frolic took the<lb/>
place of darkness and cold despair.<lb/>
Studying became harder and<lb/>
harder to do as the warm calls of<lb/>
the outside world beckoned us<lb/>
from our dorms and library<lb/>
cubicles.<lb/>
And, alas, on Monday, after the<lb/>
spring of the weekend, we stomped<lb/>
to class. In shorts, students proud-<lb/>
ly displayed the redness of their<lb/>
days in the sun.<lb/>
Nicaraguan History<lb/>
The history of U.S. relations with<lb/>
Nicaragua is tragic. It is a chronicle of<lb/>
dominion and colonial servitude, for the<lb/>
most part. The small country has been<lb/>
treated frequently as a colony of the<lb/>
United States since the 1850s when<lb/>
private adventurers moved out of New<lb/>
Orleans, New York and Baltimore to<lb/>
conquer Central America for personal<lb/>
gain, the extension of slave territory, or<lb/>
both.<lb/>
According to Walter Lafeber, author<lb/>
of Inevitable Revolutions, this script was<lb/>
repeated in its basic features in the 1920s<lb/>
when the United States sent Marines into<lb/>
Nicaragua and named Adolfo Diaz the<lb/>
country's new president to replace<lb/>
Emiliano Chamorro. The move was a<lb/>
reaction to Mexico's revolutionary<lb/>
movement which threatened U.S. oil in-<lb/>
terests and to changes which Chamorro<lb/>
was beginning to make in Nicaragua.<lb/>
The fear was that revolution would<lb/>
spread throughout the region, under-<lb/>
mining U.S. influence there. After Diaz<lb/>
replaced Chamorro, the United States<lb/>
promptly began training a native-<lb/>
national guard force to keep order in<lb/>
Nicaragua. After U.Ssupervised elec-<lb/>
tions were held in 1928 resulting in the<lb/>
election of General Jose Maria Mon-<lb/>
cada, a popular revolt that had begun in<lb/>
1927 re-emerged to contest Yankee domi-<lb/>
nion. It was led by a popular and<lb/>
charismatic figure named Augusto San-<lb/>
dino who fought a guerrilla-style war<lb/>
against U.S. troops and the U.Strained<lb/>
National Guard until 1934. Though he<lb/>
had been raised in a wealthy home, San-<lb/>
dino had worked for Standard Fruit and<lb/>
U.Sowned mining companies<lb/>
throughout Central America, shaping<lb/>
his growing anti-Yankeeism.<lb/>
After more than seven years of<lb/>
fighting, he forced the withdrawal of<lb/>
U.S. troops. Because of the depression<lb/>
and the ominous cloud of militarism<lb/>
that was settling in over Europe and<lb/>
Asia, the U.S. government was less will-<lb/>
ing to spend the money necessary to<lb/>
maintain a garrison in Nicaragua. In<lb/>
1932 Henry Stimson, an American<lb/>
diplomat, instructed the Nicaraguans to<lb/>
hold open elections which were supervis-<lb/>
ed by the 400 Marines still in the coun-<lb/>
try. Juan Sacasa, a radical in<lb/>
Washington's opinion, won the election<lb/>
and the last U.S. troops left the country<lb/>
on Jan. 2, 1933.<lb/>
As Sandino promised, once the<lb/>
Marines left he was ready to negotiate.<lb/>
Fully sensitive to the National Guard's<lb/>
new authority, he asked that it be<lb/>
disbanded and even offered to protect<lb/>
President Sacasa against it. After a<lb/>
meeting with Sacasa in 1934, Sandino<lb/>
was driving to Managua when he was<lb/>
seized by soldiers and, along with two of<lb/>
his generals, taken to a nearby field and<lb/>
shot. The National Guard's com-<lb/>
mander, General Anastasio Somoza,<lb/>
admitted issuing the order for execution<lb/>
and claimed he received approval from<lb/>
the U.S. minister, Arthur Bliss Lane.<lb/>
Lane later denied involvement in the<lb/>
shooting, yet Somoza went on to<lb/>
militarily seize control of Nicaragua and<lb/>
establish himself as dictator in June<lb/>
1936.<lb/>
From Thn Left<lb/>
Ja Stone<lb/>
For 43 years, Somoza and his two<lb/>
sons ruled Nicaragua as a private fief-<lb/>
dom. Their rule was marked by cruelty,<lb/>
brutality and injustice and it was sup-<lb/>
ported throughout by the U.S. govern-<lb/>
ment. Finally in 1979, it came to an<lb/>
abrupt end amid charges that the Carter<lb/>
administration had "lost" Nicaragua to<lb/>
Cuban and Soviet expansionism because<lb/>
it had failed to support Somoza en-<lb/>
thusiastically.<lb/>
In fact, nothing was farther from the<lb/>
truth. As late as May 1979, two months<lb/>
before Somoza fled his country, the<lb/>
United States supported his request for a<lb/>
$66-million loan from the International<lb/>
Monetary Fund. In addition, the United<lb/>
States provided $14 million in arms for<lb/>
the 8,000-man Somoza Guard. And<lb/>
when it became evident that the Somoza<lb/>
regime could not stand against a San-<lb/>
dinista movement that had overwhelm-<lb/>
ing popular support, the Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration called an emergency<lb/>
meeting of the Organization of<lb/>
American States to urge the creation of<lb/>
an inter-American force that could m -e<lb/>
into Nicaragua, stop the fighting and<lb/>
establish an acceptable regime<lb/>
The proposal ran into united op;<lb/>
tion from the other OAS member<lb/>
remembered earlier examples of<lb/>
American intervention with sometr<lb/>
less than enthusiasm.<lb/>
The final blow to the Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration's attempts to "save"<lb/>
Nicaragua came on June 20, 1979, when<lb/>
most Americans witnessed a nor:<lb/>
pushed their mistrust of the Sandinistas<lb/>
from their minds. Somoza National<lb/>
Guard Soldiers took ABC-TV newsman<lb/>
Bill Stewart out of his car, made him<lb/>
kneel in the middle of the street and shot<lb/>
him in the head. Unknown to the k:i:ers.<lb/>
Stewart's camera crew caught ever mo-<lb/>
ment of the murder on film Within<lb/>
hours after Stewart's death Sorth<lb/>
American television viewers ;a far<lb/>
themselves the senseless brutality thai<lb/>
Nicaraguans had suffered at Somcza's<lb/>
hands for vears.<lb/>
Confronted with total failure. U.S.<lb/>
officials scrambled to make the best<lb/>
possible deal with the Sandiniv-a Thej<lb/>
made three demands on the revolu-<lb/>
tionaries: l)No mass executions be h(<lb/>
after the revolution, 2)the revolutionary<lb/>
junta be enlarged and 3elemen of a<lb/>
"purged" National Guard be preserved<lb/>
and brought into the government The<lb/>
Sandinistas readily agreed to the I<lb/>
condition because they had promised<lb/>
allow no mass killings, even of the hated<lb/>
National Guard officers.<lb/>
The second condition caused strife.<lb/>
though the Sandinistas showed the<lb/>
were willing to compromise when they<lb/>
appointed an 18-member "cabinet"<lb/>
with only one Sandinista representative;<lb/>
the remainder were businessmen and<lb/>
professionals. But the five-member<lb/>
revolutionary junta was not enlarged<lb/>
However, the third condition ultimately<lb/>
brought about the collapse of negotia-<lb/>
tions. On this point no compromise was<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
With the collapse of negotiations with<lb/>
the Sandinistas, the United States was<lb/>
forced to live with a revolutionary<lb/>
government whose authoritv it had<lb/>
fought to the end.<lb/>
Uecker Leads Carolinian To Romp Of ZMB<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
It wasn't just any ballgame. No, not<lb/>
any game at all.<lb/>
I had just got into town, you see. I ar-<lb/>
rived early, on the 8:15 bus. The town,<lb/>
Greenville, was new to me. It looked like<lb/>
any other town ? you know, trees,<lb/>
leaves, buses, cars, trash, people. I<lb/>
wondered why I was here.<lb/>
Three days earlier, I had received the<lb/>
weirdest phone call from some guy at a<lb/>
college newspaper in Greenville. All that<lb/>
he said was, "Uecker, we need ya' bud-<lb/>
dy. Grab your gear, pack a suit case<lb/>
and fill a cooler with Lite Beer and take<lb/>
the next bus to Greenville<lb/>
Well, I'm not just any Joe ballplayer.<lb/>
I demanded that this fella tell me more.<lb/>
Seems this ECU newspaper, The East<lb/>
Carolinian, was going to clash with the<lb/>
campus radio station, WZMB, in an all-<lb/>
or-nothing, do-or-die softball game. The<lb/>
gauntlet had been thrown down and the<lb/>
match to decide which media on campus<lb/>
was tops was about to be played.<lb/>
"Bob the guy said, "we need a<lb/>
ringer. Someone who can hit with<lb/>
power, run with speed and glove with<lb/>
goodness. Bob, we need a superstar. So-<lb/>
meone who can drink and spray paint at<lb/>
the same time. Bob, you've got to hop<lb/>
the next Trail ways coach and come on -<lb/>
to town. There's fifty bucks in it for<lb/>
ya<lb/>
Well, I wasn't bought so easy. But the<lb/>
guy came up to seventy-five, bus fare<lb/>
and all the Pizza Transit Authority pizza<lb/>
I could eat. Well, ho, ho, you know<lb/>
there's now way ol' Uke could turn<lb/>
down delicious FT A pizza. I raced to the<lb/>
bus station.<lb/>
So, now I was in Greenville. Well, not<lb/>
actually. Somehow, I went to Green-<lb/>
ville, S.C. I got back on the bus.<lb/>
So, now I was in Greenville. The right<lb/>
Greenville. I was supposed to be picked<lb/>
up at the bus station by a Craig Rider.<lb/>
Well, he and a friend came a minute or<lb/>
so after the bus dumped me off.<lb/>
"Hey, Uke Rider screamed. "You<lb/>
must have rode on the front seeeeaaaat.<lb/>
I'm Greg Rideout and this is Rick Mc-<lb/>
Cormac. We're the Carolinian's one-<lb/>
two punch. Hell, and with you behind<lb/>
the plate, we're a cinch to wollop<lb/>
ZMB<lb/>
Well, I don't like people using my<lb/>
lines. Right off I could tell this Rideout<lb/>
was the cocky sort. (I figured out this<lb/>
was who "Craig Rider" was.) So I deck-<lb/>
ed him. He was out cold for a good three<lb/>
minutes. Me and this McCormac fella<lb/>
threw some beer on the dude, and<lb/>
Bingoooo, he was up.<lb/>
4 Sorry about that Greg I said.<lb/>
"Now we can be teammates. I did that<lb/>
to John Madden during the first com-<lb/>
mercial we did together. Hell, now every<lb/>
thing's A.O.K<lb/>
Well, Greg and Rick, who just kinda<lb/>
nodded a lot, loaded me in a big, white<lb/>
van and whisked me away to Allied<lb/>
Health. I thought to myself, "Gee, I<lb/>
know I'm over that double dose of<lb/>
Singapore woopie disease. But, if they<lb/>
want a physical exam before we play.<lb/>
Hell, it's okay with ol Uke<lb/>
But, as it turned out, Allied Health<lb/>
was the name of the field. Me, Rick,<lb/>
who was still nodding and I began to<lb/>
wonder if he was really all rightand<lb/>
Greg set the field up, drank a few cold<lb/>
ones (Budweiser, but don't tell Bubba<lb/>
Smith) and ate some PTA pizza.<lb/>
Soon the rest of the team started to ar-<lb/>
rive. And so did the opposing team. You<lb/>
know, the radio station guys.<lb/>
Greg pointed out the Carolinian<lb/>
Crunchers to me.<lb/>
"That there is Sluggin' Tom, the<lb/>
G.M he said. "That's Brett "knock-<lb/>
the-shit-out-of-it" Morris. There's<lb/>
"Too-much" Tommy Pharo,<lb/>
"Terrible" Tom Luvender, "Thrasher"<lb/>
Todd Patton, "Bad Boy" Billy Dawson,<lb/>
"Downtown" Tony Brown and "Jam-<lb/>
min" Jon Jordan.<lb/>
And there's the reserves ? Tina<lb/>
"Mauler" Maroschak, "Big Stick" Bill<lb/>
Mitchell and "Hitting" Harold Joyner.<lb/>
"Well I said to myself, "This is<lb/>
quite a team. Heck, I'm kinda proud to<lb/>
be out here with these terrific guys<lb/>
Greg. Let's play ball<lb/>
Well, most of the ZMBers were a<lb/>
good, but not great, lot. A couple of<lb/>
them hit pretty good in B.P but their<lb/>
defense looked like a wad of Swiss<lb/>
Cheese. Greg won the toss and we took<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
Well, let me tell you, it felt great to<lb/>
strap on the ol gear again. Heck, I was<lb/>
in catcher heaven. But it didn't last long.<lb/>
In the top of the first, that stellar defen-<lb/>
sive alignment of the Carolinian<lb/>
Cruchers curtailed any hopes the<lb/>
ZMBers had of taking an early lead.<lb/>
One, two, three ? Bingo, we were up.<lb/>
That first inning we must of went<lb/>
through the whole batting order. We<lb/>
grabbed six runs, with Morris, Patton<lb/>
and Luvender smacking in a couple. Of<lb/>
course, I grounded out to the pitcher ?-<lb/>
but it was a power ground-out for sure.<lb/>
The second inning saw sluggin' Tom-<lb/>
my Norton slam a triple and Rideout<lb/>
singling him in. Ail told, we snagged<lb/>
three runs. WZMB notched up another<lb/>
goose egg. And even though I made<lb/>
several errors, we still played stellar<lb/>
defense.<lb/>
I<lb/>
The rest of the innings seem like a blur<lb/>
to me. Never have I seen such awesome<lb/>
power hitting. And even though the<lb/>
ZMB nine ended up with 14 runs, those<lb/>
Carolinian guys and girl still executed<lb/>
marvelously on defense. Heck, all 14 of<lb/>
their runs came on lousy calls. "He<lb/>
missed the tag. He missed the tag 1<lb/>
would yell, but to no avail.<lb/>
All in all, the Carolinian Crunchers<lb/>
had an easy time of it. The final was<lb/>
25-14. The newspaper didn't dog the<lb/>
radio-ites as good as the last time these<lb/>
two powerhouses met. But, then again,<lb/>
the last time they didn't have the ol'<lb/>
Uke.<lb/>
Of course, it was time to head back to<lb/>
the bus station. After a round of hand-<lb/>
shaking and posing for pictures (I didn't<lb/>
understand why I couldn't be in them),<lb/>
we departed. As I settled back on the bus<lb/>
and threw a lady out of the seat I<lb/>
wanted, I reflected on my trip to Green-<lb/>
ville. "Heck, both those teams had good<lb/>
people on them. It was lots of fun I'm<lb/>
glad I got all their addresses. I just<lb/>
wonder why all of them put Nome,<lb/>
Alaska. Oh well, Bingooo, back to the<lb/>
big leagues<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Greg Rideout is Bob<lb/>
Uecker s pen name. He say s he hopes<lb/>
to come back from Fudge Pudge, Ark<lb/>
and play again next year.)<lb/>
Adv<lb/>
Dehatit<lb/>
A many<lb/>
355 29e<lb/>
$end out<lb/>
Hone<lb/>
a<lb/>
Bunn<lb/>
ha<lb/>
B<lb/>
oc<lb/>
1 ihni' ?<lb/>
E<lb/>
t<lb/>
'?i<lb/>
Call usfor eye<lb/>
examination hjth<lb/>
Doctorof ourCM<lb/>
reiv-tmumrn<lb/>
V?U&amp;<lb/>
?i-a<lb/>
<pb facs="00057708_0005"/><lb/>
I HI I ASIAROI INIAN<lb/>
Pkii  ik<lb/>
'RAL<lb/>
:ons<lb/>
7b<lb/>
ild move<lb/>
fighting and<lb/>
m ted opposi-<lb/>
Xs members that<lb/>
tmples of<lb/>
mething<lb/>
Carter ad-<lb/>
"save"<lb/>
: 1979, when<lb/>
 a horror that<lb/>
Sandinistas<lb/>
a National<lb/>
T newsman<lb/>
. made him<lb/>
treel and shot<lb/>
to the killers,<lb/>
ighl every mo-<lb/>
m. Within<lb/>
ith, North<lb/>
saw for<lb/>
itality that<lb/>
at Somoza's<lb/>
; lure, U.S.<lb/>
ike the best<lb/>
istas. They<lb/>
the revolu-<lb/>
ecutions be held<lb/>
1 the revolutionary<lb/>
iements of a<lb/>
be preserved<lb/>
he government. The<lb/>
?:ed to the first<lb/>
had promised to<lb/>
even of the hated<lb/>
:aused strife,<lb/>
showed they<lb/>
mise when they<lb/>
r "cabinet"<lb/>
ta representative;<lb/>
nessmen and<lb/>
five-member<lb/>
noi enlarged.<lb/>
I ion ultimately<lb/>
ipsp of negotia-<lb/>
t no compromise was<lb/>
I negotiations with<lb/>
United States was<lb/>
a revolutionary<lb/>
authoritv it had<lb/>
ZMB<lb/>
eem like a blur<lb/>
 en such awesome<lb/>
even though the<lb/>
?d up with 14 runs, those<lb/>
- and girl still executed<lb/>
fn defense. Heck, all 14 of<lb/>
Ime on lousy calls. "He<lb/>
k He missed the tag I<lb/>
to no avail.<lb/>
I Carolinian Crunchers<lb/>
It:me of it. The final was<lb/>
lewspaper didn't dog the<lb/>
pod as the last time these<lb/>
es met. But, then again,<lb/>
they didn't have the ol'<lb/>
t was time to head back to<lb/>
After a round of hand-<lb/>
ling for pictures (I didn't<lb/>
iv I couldn't be in them),<lb/>
ks I settled back on the bus<lb/>
iady out of the seat I<lb/>
beted on my trip to Green-<lb/>
xnh those teams had good<lb/>
i. It was lots of fun. I'm<lb/>
II their addresses. I just<lb/>
1 all of them put Nome,<lb/>
Jell, Bingooo, back to the<lb/>
e Greg Rideout is Bob<lb/>
tame. He say s he hopes<lb/>
'om Fudge Pudge, Ark<lb/>
next year.)<lb/>
Advertisers Aim At Responsible Drinking<lb/>
" (1 PI) Beer<lb/>
Jers arc turning their atten-<lb/>
is from college students as the<lb/>
: federal governments<lb/>
utting the heat on drinkers<lb/>
i c youngei than 21.<lb/>
tigress decided last year that<lb/>
state that had not raised its<lb/>
ige to 21 b 1986 would<lb/>
leral highway funds.<lb/>
the state House passed<lb/>
raise North Carolina's<lb/>
ig tor beer and wine<lb/>
vi;o 21 (it is already 21 for<lb/>
bill would $.o into ef-<lb/>
. 1986, saving the state<lb/>
n in highway money.<lb/>
vernmental cogs<lb/>
i dealers are mov-<lb/>
i hange then image and<lb/>
1 - college-age chug-<lb/>
Debating Club<lb/>
Among Other<lb/>
B El AINEPERR1<lb/>
suff Writer<lb/>
ECL Forensic Society<lb/>
I) 'raveled to Shippensbury<lb/>
mpete in its first<lb/>
urnament. Thirty-three<lb/>
and universities, in-<lb/>
enn State. St John's and<lb/>
I Richmond, par-<lb/>
he event.<lb/>
pants from ECU<lb/>
: the tournament, which<lb/>
events such as public<lb/>
. oral interpretation.<lb/>
per, the club's ad-<lb/>
lid 'the F rensic Society<lb/>
. for the university to<lb/>
ration. It is a means of<lb/>
n<lb/>
 a. ophy was won<lb/>
Viai Kate Cunningham in the<lb/>
Im a Interpretation<lb/>
ai category . a con-<lb/>
355-2961<lb/>
end Your<lb/>
Honey<lb/>
a<lb/>
Bunny<lb/>
h. : . iter Basket and<lb/>
' uquet. lOtfaDiscoui<lb/>
 ECU Students.<lb/>
ril -April 7<lb/>
5 Memorial Drive<lb/>
gers. During a fraternity's annual<lb/>
three-man chug contest on the<lb/>
North Carolina State University<lb/>
campus this week, the sudsy brew<lb/>
was provided by a local<lb/>
nightclub, not the beer<lb/>
distributor.<lb/>
"We have taken the majority<lb/>
of our presence off the campuses<lb/>
in an effort to get the point across<lb/>
to the kids that we don't want<lb/>
them abusing our products said<lb/>
John Saputo, a beer distributor.<lb/>
'The object is not to get smash-<lb/>
ed. The object is to promote<lb/>
sociability and a gregarious at-<lb/>
mosphere in a campus setting<lb/>
Another beer dealer, Willie<lb/>
Hunt, said, "This whole thing of<lb/>
seeing how much we can hold and<lb/>
how fast and how much we can<lb/>
Participates<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
testant was handed a story and<lb/>
then expected to give an inter-<lb/>
pretation of the piece involving<lb/>
change of voice and look and<lb/>
conveying to the audience the dif-<lb/>
ference in characters and events.<lb/>
"It is difficult to do on the spur<lb/>
of the moment Schreiber said.<lb/>
"Anyone can join the club<lb/>
Schreiber said. "The team will be<lb/>
picked according to those who<lb/>
have worked the hardest on get-<lb/>
ting speeches and readings<lb/>
Schreiber said she would like to<lb/>
see the club expand. "Since this<lb/>
year will be our fist year in full<lb/>
swing, we would like to stay<lb/>
within the North Carolina,<lb/>
Virginia and South Carolina<lb/>
area she said, adding that she<lb/>
would like to see the team com-<lb/>
pete in national tournaments<lb/>
"but you have to compete in a<lb/>
certain amount of tournaments<lb/>
to go<lb/>
ECU Discount<lb/>
Call us for eye<lb/>
examination with<lb/>
Doctor of your choice.<lb/>
$15 Off Single Vision Lenses<lb/>
$20 Off Bi-Focal Lenses<lb/>
20 Off Ray Ban Sunglasses<lb/>
For Students and Faculty<lb/>
on all prescription eyeglasses<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Open? 5:30<lb/>
AAon. Fri.<lb/>
pllCianS 752-1446 Jg<lb/>
hurt ourselves is out<lb/>
What is in, several distributors<lb/>
said, is a more conservative at-<lb/>
mosphere on campus and a more<lb/>
cautious attitude around alcohol<lb/>
now that the state has stiffened<lb/>
its drunk driving laws.<lb/>
Saputo said the Raleigh market<lb/>
usually buys about 33,000 kegs of<lb/>
all brands of beer a year. Uast<lb/>
year, it was down by 6,000 kegs<lb/>
? an 18-20 percent decrease.<lb/>
"The pendulum has swung<lb/>
Hunt said. "We don't as an in-<lb/>
dustry necessarily agree with<lb/>
some of the laws that have been<lb/>
passed. We don't think we're<lb/>
dealing with something that can<lb/>
be legislated. But we think that<lb/>
the preferred route is education,<lb/>
awareness. Maybe the industry<lb/>
has been slower than it should<lb/>
have been in coming around to<lb/>
this position<lb/>
Beer sales pitches are concen-<lb/>
trated on drinking more sensibly,<lb/>
DAY STUDENTS<lb/>
DO YOU WANT TO<lb/>
MAKE A DIFFERENCE?<lb/>
Apply now for position of<lb/>
Day Student Representative<lb/>
on the ECU Media Board.<lb/>
Help set policies for operation of:<lb/>
WZMB The Rebel, Buccaneer,<lb/>
The East Carolinian, Expressions &amp;<lb/>
THE PHOTO LAB.<lb/>
Apply in Media Board Office 757-6009<lb/>
Filing Dates 4-2-85 thru 4-1 1 -85<lb/>
215 East 4th Street<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
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After Happy Hour Special<lb/>
Every Tuesday<lb/>
FREE Nachos with<lb/>
Purchase of 60 oz. Pitcher<lb/>
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Thurs, Fri, Sat &amp; Sun<lb/>
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.?<lb/>
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$200 REWARD<lb/>
COMPUTER THEFT ?<lb/>
REWARD OFFERED<lb/>
1. For information leading to the return of<lb/>
the Apple lie computer stolen from Rawl An-<lb/>
nex March 19 ? up to $100, depending on<lb/>
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2. For information leading to the arrest and<lb/>
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If you have information that may qualify<lb/>
for either or both rewards, please call Detec-<lb/>
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??????????.?,??<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<lb/>
not drinking more, dealers said.<lb/>
One wholesaler recently set up<lb/>
tables in the food areas on the<lb/>
state campus to push the "buddy<lb/>
program" that calls for organiza-<lb/>
tions to set up telephone banks so<lb/>
students can call for a ride when<lb/>
they are too drunk to drive.<lb/>
Other beer dealers give out<lb/>
pamphlets on how to dea) with<lb/>
alcohol and urging moderaton in<lb/>
drinking.<lb/>
m<lb/>
$5<lb/>
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P<lb/>
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TOP 100 u.98List LP's &amp; Cassetes ON SALE<lb/>
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Tuesday April 2, 1985<lb/>
8:30- 1:00A.M.<lb/>
Admission $1.50<lb/>
18 Yrs. SI.00<lb/>
10DRAFT<lb/>
ALL NITE<lb/>
&amp; Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
Present<lb/>
Ladies Draft Nite<lb/>
Wed. April 3, 1985 8:30-1:00 A.M<lb/>
Guys$1.50 LadiesSl.OO I8yrs.$1.00<lb/>
10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
Plus a free keg to the sorority with the most attendance.<lb/>
SHAKESPEARE<lb/>
NEVER KNEW<lb/>
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He wrote beautifully without our<lb/>
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lHt AS1 iAROl 1NJAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
APR1I 2, 1985 Page <lb/>
Bauer's New Passion<lb/>
?<lb/>
Steen Bauer<lb/>
By JAY&amp; KLLIOTT KRAVETZ<lb/>
Inlrrnatloaal Pholo Se?<lb/>
Steven Bauer, who electrified movie audiences<lb/>
with his screen debut in Brian De Palma's Scar-<lb/>
face and his starring role in Thief of Hearts, will<lb/>
be seen next in a special film presentation of<lb/>
Alfred Hitchcock Present's The Man From The<lb/>
South.<lb/>
"I just finished a show for NBC Bauer told us<lb/>
during a recent interview. "It is a special movie<lb/>
which is a remake of an 'Alfred Hitchcock Pre-<lb/>
sent's' series. It's a special that stars John Juston,<lb/>
myself, my wife Melanie Griffith (Body Heat), her<lb/>
mom Tippi Hedren (The Birds), and Kim Novak.<lb/>
It's a great show<lb/>
Bauer is the son of a Cuban airlines pilot who,<lb/>
with his school-teacher wife and three-year-old<lb/>
son, fled their Cuban homeland in 1959, never to<lb/>
return. The family came to Miami and joined the<lb/>
burgeoning Cuban expatriate community.<lb/>
"I was born in Havana and I grew up in Miami<lb/>
until I was 20 Bauer recalled. "We were all<lb/>
hungry for American culture when we arrived here<lb/>
and movies, especially musicals, were an impor-<lb/>
tant part of our lives<lb/>
With his parent's encouragement, Bauer studied<lb/>
guitar and trumpet, joining both his high school<lb/>
choir and the Foreign Studies league, whose stu-<lb/>
dent members spend their summers in Europe.<lb/>
"I came from a musical family the 28-year-<lb/>
old actor recalled. "As a child I played violin and<lb/>
trumpet. I switched to the guitar so I could sing<lb/>
because my original passion was singing.<lb/>
"I made some records, but they have yet to be<lb/>
released he continued. "I am looking for a<lb/>
record deal out West. I really didn't always want<lb/>
to be an actor. I really wanted music, rock'n'roll.<lb/>
After high school, after I went to Europe and<lb/>
traveled, I started acting in college.<lb/>
"I started at Miami Dade South and then 1<lb/>
transfered to the University of Miami he added.<lb/>
"It's a good school<lb/>
It was while attending Miami Dade Community<lb/>
College that Bauer became interested in acting.<lb/>
Cast in a small role in Summer and Smoke, he<lb/>
soon enrolled in any courses he could connect with<lb/>
theatre ? drama, ballet, voice, and modern<lb/>
dance.<lb/>
His commitment deepened when he won a role<lb/>
as one of the Jets in a University of Miami produc<lb/>
tion of West Side Story. Impressed with his poten-<lb/>
tial, the school's drama department helped cut the<lb/>
red tape to enroll him as a full-time student.<lb/>
'The program at the University of Miami gave<lb/>
me the training Bauer explained. "It was a com-<lb/>
bination of their program and their theatre. I<lb/>
spent all m free time at the theatre. I was there<lb/>
for about three years<lb/>
Studying with Actors Studio alumnus Robert<lb/>
Lowery brought Bauer his first formal training<lb/>
and his first leading role - I enn in a production<lb/>
of Of Mice and Men Roles in university produc-<lb/>
tions of Okalahoma andandide followed, and<lb/>
they led to his breakthrough a continuing role<lb/>
in the 18-episode series tor public television, "One<lb/>
Pasa U.S.A<lb/>
The unusual Miami-based television show<lb/>
caught the eye of Hollywood, and Bauer soon<lb/>
found himself signed with Columbia Television<lb/>
"When I went out to Hollywood and needed a<lb/>
manager, a teacher from the University of Miami,<lb/>
Norm Freiberg, served as mv manager Bauer ex-<lb/>
plained. "He reallv introduced me to the film<lb/>
business and television<lb/>
Moving to California, the young actor made his<lb/>
television debut on "The Rock ford files, follow-<lb/>
ed by a guest-starring role on "Doctors Private<lb/>
lives Bauer then spent six months as a series<lb/>
regular opposite William Devane in "From Here<lb/>
to Eternity<lb/>
"It is important not to focus on results a<lb/>
dreams of glory and stardom Bauer explain<lb/>
"Someone should only get into acting if they have<lb/>
a passion for that form of expression and for the<lb/>
love of telling stones and ol being a part of story<lb/>
telling, which acting is<lb/>
After amassing further credits with the hit series<lb/>
"Hill Street Blues" and "One Day V Time"<lb/>
and starring in the television films "She's in the<lb/>
Army Now "Nichols and Dymes" and "An In-<lb/>
nocent Love Bauer moved to New Yorl :dy<lb/>
with famed drama i Stella Adle<lb/>
The actor also renewed his commitment<lb/>
theatre, appearing in Off-Broadway produci<lb/>
of Hailing for lefty dnd Mozart and Salien<lb/>
"It's hard work Bauer explained. "It's i<lb/>
road and you can find satisfaction only if you I<lb/>
it to begin wnh. not if you're looking f<lb/>
and fame "<lb/>
At the end ol his year worl : .<lb/>
New York, Bauer was cast in the c itarrii .<lb/>
o Manny Rivera in Brian De Raima's Scarface<lb/>
"Al Pacino is great Bauer sa;d. He's<lb/>
man and just a wonderful human being. He<lb/>
very good natured and generous p<lb/>
great actor. So w was a learning experiei<lb/>
besides all the fun "<lb/>
For his brilliant portrayal ol the funny, flashy,<lb/>
volatile lieutenant to Al Pac<lb/>
king, Bauer was honored w I :en G!<lb/>
nomination for Best Supporting Actor. He<lb/>
ed good reviews for his role as Scott Mulle:<lb/>
Thief of Hearts, a role which has billed him as j.<lb/>
sex symbol of the 1980s.<lb/>
"1 am looking for quahtv m mv work.<lb/>
quantity he said. "However the audience thinks<lb/>
of me is alright as long as they recognize the qn.<lb/>
tv in mv work<lb/>
For Those Who Need Another Spring Break<lb/>
Hv KHITI M Al 1 (,S<lb/>
, :mn<lb/>
 e fe1 ei is jump-<lb/>
. and the only<lb/>
; sun, sand<lb/>
val need pounds<lb/>
the beach! Just<lb/>
behind and<lb/>
B ' arise. Florida<lb/>
beyond your expenses. How<lb/>
ut Myrtle Beach? No. I ike<lb/>
Bea t's sinking under<lb/>
Virginia<lb/>
V<lb/>
:h?<lb/>
i v ho wants to go<lb/>
time oi year? It ain't<lb/>
yet.<lb/>
Where then to expunge<lb/>
winter's clammy<lb/>
i ike Botticelli's Venus ris-<lb/>
im the waves, an old TV ad<lb/>
V I I HI I IGHTHOUSE<lb/>
? youi mind.ape<lb/>
Hal 'twixt sound and sea.<lb/>
? Nothing but miles<lb/>
I miles ol white pristine<lb/>
But 1 ? gel there. Drag out<lb/>
ad map. Route 264 is a<lb/>
k red line all the wav from<lb/>
Greenville to Manteo, and it's<lb/>
only from there to there. Just<lb/>
three inches, maybe four. Make<lb/>
that in no time at all.<lb/>
Grab the supplies and load the<lb/>
car. Towel, blanket, surfboard,<lb/>
sun tan oil, munchies, and beer.<lb/>
Especially beer, need plenty of<lb/>
suds. Wait a second. Remember<lb/>
DWI? Let's not get carried away<lb/>
with the beer. Just a half-case,<lb/>
right0 Okay, make 'em tall boys.<lb/>
Maybe they'll last.<lb/>
Everything's loaded, so head<lb/>
down Tenth Street to the bypass<lb/>
and turn left at Hastings Ford.<lb/>
Cross the river and turn right at<lb/>
the first stop light. Can't you<lb/>
hear the surf already? After a few<lb/>
miles, the highway switches from<lb/>
four lanes to just two. But don't<lb/>
worry. After all, the PR boys in<lb/>
Raleigh do call this "The Good<lb/>
Roads State don't they? So<lb/>
crank up the stereo and watch the<lb/>
farms, forests, Pactolus, and<lb/>
Wharton whi by.<lb/>
The next wide spot in the road<lb/>
is Washington, a.k.a. The<lb/>
Original Washington (what the<lb/>
city fathers prefer) and little<lb/>
Washington (what everyone calls<lb/>
it). Its 25 m.p.h. speed limit<lb/>
demands that you take your time.<lb/>
Just relax, the beaches aren't<lb/>
eroding away that fast. They'll be<lb/>
waiting for you. Can't you smell<lb/>
the salt air?<lb/>
Pop anothei top and bid<lb/>
farewell to Washington in your<lb/>
rearview mirror. Put a few more<lb/>
decibels on the stereo and watch<lb/>
Down East roll by. Trees, fields,<lb/>
utility poles, and a rare house.<lb/>
Buzz through Bunyan and bypass<lb/>
Bath; Yeatesville goes by in a zip.<lb/>
Take it slow through Pantego,<lb/>
mind the sharp curves. Then on<lb/>
to Belhaven and a 90-degree left<lb/>
turn. They've got to find some<lb/>
way to make people slow down.<lb/>
Back to the open road and<lb/>
watch the miles click by. There<lb/>
certainly isn't much else to<lb/>
watch. Cross the Intercoastal<lb/>
Waterway between Leechville<lb/>
and Scranton. Can't you feel the<lb/>
sand between your toes? Bypass<lb/>
Swan Quarter and the likewise<lb/>
named national wildlife refuge.<lb/>
Forget the toll ferry to Ocracoke.<lb/>
Too expensive. Anyway, on the<lb/>
road you command your own<lb/>
destiny.<lb/>
Swing south of Lake Mat-<lb/>
tamuskeet and another national<lb/>
wildlife refuge. Zip through New<lb/>
Holland and Lake Landing. By<lb/>
the time you reach Engelhard,<lb/>
you'll be plenty sick of one-horse<lb/>
towns. You'll also realize the beer<lb/>
ran out in Belhaven. That's no<lb/>
problem though. Can't be much<lb/>
further, right?<lb/>
Wrong. At Engelhard, you<lb/>
jump off into the Great Void.<lb/>
Thirty-eight miles of the bum-<lb/>
piest, loneliest road east of the<lb/>
Mississippi. A few miles into this<lb/>
desolation and, like civilization,<lb/>
any semblance of a buzz is long<lb/>
gone. By now, even Van Halen<lb/>
stopped jumping. Thirty-eight<lb/>
miles of country fit only for<lb/>
growing pine trees, bears and rat-<lb/>
tlesnakes. Enough to make you<lb/>
wish you had never heard of Rod<lb/>
Serling, or beer, or your bladder.<lb/>
Don't turn back. Suffer<lb/>
through it. Remember what lies<lb/>
waiting at the end of your trave<lb/>
Just think of those blue combers<lb/>
rolling onto the beach. Can't you<lb/>
hear the foam hiss?<lb/>
Manns Harbor is welcome<lb/>
relief. Civilization at last. There<lb/>
is something out here besides the<lb/>
edge of the earth. Then onto<lb/>
Roanoke Island and slip through<lb/>
Manteo. And beyond lies the ho-<lb/>
ly of holies: the Outer Banks.<lb/>
Salvation.<lb/>
At last you have made it. All<lb/>
those miles, those rinky-dink<lb/>
towns, those beer-emancipating<lb/>
stops. You're here. Cape Hat-<lb/>
teras. 'Fraid not. This is Bodie<lb/>
Island; Hatteras is the second<lb/>
island south of here.<lb/>
But that's no problem. Turn<lb/>
right onto Route 12. Disregard<lb/>
the sign welcoming you to Cape<lb/>
Hatteras National Seashore. This<lb/>
is Bodie Island. Remember you<lb/>
did say Hatteras, so keep driving.<lb/>
Cross over to Pea Island and,<lb/>
you guessed it, another national<lb/>
wildlife refuge. This refuge takes<lb/>
up an entire island, almost.<lb/>
Another bridge and you're finally<lb/>
on Hatteras Island . an<lb/>
believe it? four hours of drr-<lb/>
and you've reached the prom:<lb/>
land. Sun. sand and sea. It's<lb/>
yours. But don't stop now It's to<lb/>
the lighthouse or bust, rig1<lb/>
Through Rodanthe. thro<lb/>
Waves, and on to Avon. Above<lb/>
the dunes, you finall) see your<lb/>
objective. The Cape Hatter.?<lb/>
Lighthouse. Forget Venus; hang<lb/>
Botticelli; this is paradise Turn<lb/>
left just before Buxton and <lb/>
can't miss it.<lb/>
But something is still wrong<lb/>
Not much partying happening at<lb/>
a national historic site, is there1<lb/>
Where you really wanted to go<lb/>
was Nags Head. Not to worrv<lb/>
Just head back through A<lb/>
back through Waves, back<lb/>
through Rodanthe. back across<lb/>
Pea Island, back onto Bodie<lb/>
Island, then through Whaler<lb/>
and there is Nags Head. Relax.<lb/>
it's only an hour's drive from<lb/>
Cape Hatteras. And what's in<lb/>
hour when you've alreadv wa <lb/>
most of the dav?<lb/>
Hannibal Celebrates Twain's Birthday<lb/>
(l PI) The quiet Mississippi River town that gave birth to the<lb/>
fictional characters Tom Sawyer and Huckleberry Finn hasn't<lb/>
changed all that much since Samuel Clemens was born 150 years<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The population has increased from the 2,000 of Clemens' day to<lb/>
its present 19,000, but the man who took the name Mark Twain<lb/>
would not get lost walking through today's streets.<lb/>
Hannibal is expecting about 500,000 visitors for Twain's 150th<lb/>
birthday celebration. A series of events have been planned from<lb/>
May to November to commemorate the author who puts this small<lb/>
river town on the international map. This vear also marks the 100th<lb/>
anniversary of U.S. publication of Huckleberry Finn.<lb/>
Twain was born in nearby Florida, Mo on Nov. 30, 1835, but<lb/>
it's Hannibal, where the family moved five years later, that holds<lb/>
claim to Missouri's most famous author.<lb/>
Hannibal is still very much the river town of Twain's boyhood.<lb/>
Warehouses and docks line the Mississippi. The railroad tracks<lb/>
that run along the river's banks were in place when Twain first<lb/>
returned home as an adult.<lb/>
Then it was the Hannibal-St. Joseph line. Today it's owned by<lb/>
the Burlington Northern and Wabash railroads.<lb/>
And, although Hannibal residents enjoy the amenities of 20th<lb/>
century living, the physical appearance of the downtown area has<lb/>
not been seriously altered. Many of the structures built while Twain<lb/>
roamed Cardiff Hill, a playground later attributed to Tom and<lb/>
Huck, still stand.<lb/>
Gone are the cattle and hogs that were slaughtered for shipment<lb/>
downriver to St. Louis. And the town's once-thriving lumber in-<lb/>
dustry is bust.<lb/>
But what particularly hasn't changed is the neighborly, natural<lb/>
charm of a small Midwestern river town.<lb/>
Twain's nostalgic view of his boyhood home was that of a refuge<lb/>
from the disappointments of modern America; a village where the<lb/>
best in the nation's tradition was presumed to thrive.<lb/>
In a sense, he wasn't all that far from the truth. Hannibal is still<lb/>
an uncomplicated town where a child can grow up with few cares,<lb/>
where everyone knows everyone else, and where one can go to sleep<lb/>
at night without locking the door.<lb/>
The Mississippi still flows as wide as ever, but the river is no<lb/>
longer the town's biggest industry. There is a meat packing com-<lb/>
pany, a cement plant, a prefabricated steel manufacturer, a shoe<lb/>
factory and a rubber company. Although they all contribute to the<lb/>
town's economy, Twain is Hannibal's biggest moneymaker.<lb/>
Thanks to his novels, Hannibal is one of America's bestknown<lb/>
small towns. In the summer months as many as 250,000 people<lb/>
from all over the world come to Hannibal to relive Mark Twain's<lb/>
carefree boyhood.<lb/>
In fact, Kristen Lokemoen, director of the Hannibal Tourism<lb/>
Commission, readily admits that if it weren't for Twain, "Han-<lb/>
nibal would be just another river town, like hundreds of others up<lb/>
and down the Mississippi River<lb/>
The Clemens family's small white clapboard house, in which<lb/>
Twain spend his ,4Tom Sawyer" boyhood, has been restored and<lb/>
furnished with furniture from the period.<lb/>
David Levin?<lb/>
Mark Twain<lb/>
Adjoining the home is the Mark Twain Museum. It is filled<lb/>
Clemens memorabilia such as a desk at which Tom Sawver has<lb/>
written. y<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 2. IV8<lb/>
I  ?<lb/>
Pirates Down Madison In EC AC Action<lb/>
r<lb/>
? "?<lb/>
r?L<lb/>
?. ? .?<lb/>
 A<lb/>
w ?<lb/>
- ' P'<lb/>
Winfred Johnson (25) steps on home plate in action against James<lb/>
Madison oer the weekend.<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
On Sunday, a Greg Hardison<lb/>
double in the ninth inning enabl-<lb/>
ed ECU to take an 11-10 win over<lb/>
the visiting Dukes of James<lb/>
Madison.<lb/>
Hardison's double scored<lb/>
Robert Langston from second<lb/>
base with two outs in the bottom<lb/>
of the ninth.<lb/>
ECU led 10-6 going into the<lb/>
top of the ninth, but JMU's Eric<lb/>
Metzger smacked a three-run<lb/>
homer over the rightfield fence<lb/>
against Pirate reliever Winfred<lb/>
Johnson. Later in the inning,<lb/>
Scott Mackie delivered a solo<lb/>
shot to tie the score at 10.<lb/>
The leading hitters for ECU<lb/>
were Mont Carter, who went 2-5<lb/>
with a home run. Hardison and<lb/>
Jay McGraw both were 2-4 with<lb/>
three RBI's apiece.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson picked up<lb/>
the win, increasing his record to<lb/>
6-1 on the season.<lb/>
March 28, 1985<lb/>
Number twelve was the<lb/>
charmer for the Ohio University<lb/>
baseball team Thursday at Harr-<lb/>
ington Field. The Bobcats<lb/>
defeated ECU 6-5 for their first<lb/>
win in twelve tries against the<lb/>
Pirates since their rivalry began.<lb/>
ECU opened the scoring in the<lb/>
bottom of the first on two<lb/>
straight doubles by Chris<lb/>
Bradberry and Winfred Johnson<lb/>
to take a 1-0 advantage ? the<lb/>
first of many lead changes in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In the top of the fourth, Ohio<lb/>
took a 2-1 advantage as Wes Har-<lb/>
Feisty Pirates Beat 'Cocks;<lb/>
Salvage Split Of Twinbill<lb/>
B JFANNKTTEROTH<lb/>
Miff r1lef<lb/>
It might as well have been the<lb/>
f'nal game of the national tour-<lb/>
nament for the Lady Pirate soft-<lb/>
all team because the smiles<lb/>
mid not have been brighter as<lb/>
ECU split a doubleheader Satur-<lb/>
with the Gamecocks of South<lb/>
arolina.<lb/>
Ranked third in the region,<lb/>
USC came out hot in the first<lb/>
j me scoring a devastating five<lb/>
runs in only their second time at<lb/>
II Their game plan was simple<lb/>
hit, bunt, score and count on<lb/>
All-America pitcher Darlene<lb/>
I owrey to keep ECU from doing<lb/>
e same.<lb/>
I owrey allowed only two hits<lb/>
 hich came from freshman Susie<lb/>
lerce and "Muffin" Zmuda.<lb/>
Pierce scored on a pick-off error<lb/>
in the third, giving the Pirates<lb/>
their only run. USC continued to<lb/>
execute perfectly, totalling eight<lb/>
runs to ECU's one. ECU pitcher<lb/>
Pam Young dropped only her se-<lb/>
c nd game and holds an 11-2<lb/>
overall record on the year. Depite<lb/>
the Pirate loss, South Carolina<lb/>
. oach Lou Piele called the Pirate<lb/>
squad "fiesty<lb/>
In the second game, a scoreless<lb/>
pitching duel between ECU's<lb/>
Stacey Boyette and USC's Gret-<lb/>
en Koemg was finally broken<lb/>
in the fourth inning. The<lb/>
Oamecocks' Cindy Long tripled<lb/>
to drive in Shirley Burton. Se-<lb/>
cond baseman Lisa DaCruz then<lb/>
put the Gamecocks on the board<lb/>
again with a sacrifice, scorings<lb/>
Long from third base.<lb/>
Two runs ahead of the Pirates,<lb/>
it looked as though USC would<lb/>
maintain their winning ways until<lb/>
ECU broke loose with a barrage<lb/>
of base hits. First baseman Robin<lb/>
Graves started the rally with a<lb/>
shot to left field. Three Pirate<lb/>
players followed suit as Carla<lb/>
Alphin, Wendy Ozment and<lb/>
Suzanne Martin punched in<lb/>
singles, loading the bases with<lb/>
two outs.<lb/>
The Gamecock defense<lb/>
tightened, but the Pirates manag-<lb/>
ed to score a run on their second<lb/>
out. ECU's Jeannie Murray<lb/>
followed with a triple to right<lb/>
field, scoring Alphin and Oz-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Immediately, USC began war-<lb/>
ming up ace-pitcher Lowrey.<lb/>
Koenig, obviously shaken up,<lb/>
threw a wild pitch enabling Mur-<lb/>
ray to score from third. Going in-<lb/>
to the fifth, ECU led 4-2.<lb/>
USC got back into the swing of<lb/>
things and threatened to score in<lb/>
the fifth as Karen Sanchelli tripl-<lb/>
ed to center field. DeRose flied to<lb/>
rightfield in an attempt to<lb/>
sacrifice, but ECU freshman<lb/>
Susie Pierce picked Sanchelli off<lb/>
at home on an excellent throw.<lb/>
USC walked away from the fifth<lb/>
empty handed.<lb/>
All-America Lowrey, now<lb/>
back on the mound, received a<lb/>
rude awakening as ECU con-<lb/>
tinued to surge. After a walk to<lb/>
Pierce, Zmuda was safe at first<lb/>
on an attempted sacrifice bunt.<lb/>
But the bottom fell out for USC<lb/>
as ECU's Sandy Kee tripled to<lb/>
center field, scoring pinch runner<lb/>
(for Pierce) Patti Hook and<lb/>
Zmuda. Alphin's sacrifice bunt<lb/>
brought in another Pirate run,<lb/>
giving ECU a 7-2 advantage.<lb/>
USC added one more run in<lb/>
the sixth as hitting sensation<lb/>
Long tripled to centerfield, scor-<lb/>
ing Diener.<lb/>
The seventh inning went like<lb/>
clockwork for the Lady Bucs as<lb/>
only four USC batters made it to<lb/>
the plate before the game was<lb/>
over.<lb/>
The ECU defense backed a<lb/>
strong pitching performance<lb/>
from Boyette as she improves her<lb/>
record to 5-6. The loss gave<lb/>
highly ranked USC a 16-5-4<lb/>
record, while moving the Pirates<lb/>
to 18-10 overall.<lb/>
"I've been telling them all year<lb/>
that they could play with the best<lb/>
of them said coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan. "And that's what they<lb/>
did<lb/>
The next game for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates will be at the the Penn<lb/>
State Invitational on April 5-7 in<lb/>
University Park, Pa.<lb/>
Get A Grip Dude!<lb/>
rington continued to plague the<lb/>
Pirate pitching staff with a two-<lb/>
run homer off starter Craig Van<lb/>
Deventer ? his third homer in<lb/>
the three-game series.<lb/>
The Pirates tied it up in the<lb/>
bottom of the frame. Johnson<lb/>
walked and moved to second on a<lb/>
Mike Sullivan single. Jay<lb/>
McGraw tried to sacrifice the<lb/>
runners up with a bunt, but<lb/>
Johnson was forced out at third.<lb/>
With two outs, catcher Jim Riley<lb/>
singled through the middle to<lb/>
score Sullivan.<lb/>
The Bobcats loaded the bases<lb/>
in the sixth on three straight<lb/>
singles with one out, then Tom<lb/>
Webb came in to relieve Van<lb/>
Deventer. Leftfielder Mark<lb/>
Shank caught a line drive and<lb/>
pegged a fine throw to the infield<lb/>
to prevent a score. Ohio failed to<lb/>
score when an infield out ended<lb/>
the inning.<lb/>
The Pirates went ahead in the<lb/>
fifth on Chris Bradberry's homer<lb/>
with one on to make it 4-2, but<lb/>
Ohio battled back in the seventh.<lb/>
Echstenkamper again singled<lb/>
Adams in from second and Brian<lb/>
Luce followed with a single to tie<lb/>
the score.<lb/>
ECU responded with a run on<lb/>
a Jay McGraw sacrifice after a<lb/>
walk and an error helped load the<lb/>
bases, but the Bobcats rallied<lb/>
again in the eighth. Danny<lb/>
Culpepper came in to relieve<lb/>
Webb, but with two outs Brian<lb/>
Ritter's homer knotted it at 5-5.<lb/>
Ohio scored the winning run in<lb/>
the ninth. Harrington got on with<lb/>
a walk, then Daniel Boone came<lb/>
in on relief as the fourth Pirate<lb/>
pitcher. Two singles by<lb/>
Echstenkamper and Luce scored<lb/>
what proved to be the winning<lb/>
run for a final 6-5 score.<lb/>
On Saturday, the Pirates split a<lb/>
twinbill against ECAC South op-<lb/>
ponent James Madison at Harr-<lb/>
ington Field.<lb/>
James Madison won the first<lb/>
game 9-2, but ECU came back in<lb/>
the nightcap to win 11-6.<lb/>
After errors allowed JMU to<lb/>
take a 1-0 lead in the initial frame<lb/>
of the first game, Winfred<lb/>
Johnson's 13th homer of the year<lb/>
tied the score, but that was the<lb/>
closest the Pirates came to taking<lb/>
a lead in the contest.<lb/>
Madison tallied five runs in the<lb/>
third on three singles, two<lb/>
doubles, a walk and a balk to<lb/>
take a 6-1 lead that was never<lb/>
seriously challenged the rest of<lb/>
the way.<lb/>
The only other ECU score<lb/>
came on a Chris Bradberry<lb/>
homer in the bottom of the third<lb/>
inning. The Dukes came right<lb/>
back in the fourth with two more<lb/>
runs on a walk, single and a liner<lb/>
to right for an 8-2 margin.<lb/>
A sacrifice fly brought in the<lb/>
last Duke run in the seventh to<lb/>
make the final score 9-2.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson was tagged<lb/>
for his first pitching loss of the<lb/>
season, with his mark going to<lb/>
5-1.<lb/>
In the second game of the day<lb/>
the Dukes raced to a 3-0 lead in<lb/>
the top of the first when Mark<lb/>
Cockrell slammed a three-run<lb/>
homer. ECU rallied quickly for<lb/>
five runs in the bottom of the<lb/>
frame to take a two-run ad van-<lb/>
JOH JORDAN - BCU Pf Lafe<lb/>
Pam Young (7) dropped only her second game in 13 decisions against<lb/>
South Carolina on Saturday.<lb/>
tage.<lb/>
After two walks and a single<lb/>
loaded the bases, Johnson laced a<lb/>
single into left, which brougfr<lb/>
two runs in. An error on a Ja<lb/>
McGraw grounder added ti<lb/>
more. McGraw then tallied the<lb/>
fifth run when Jim Riley boun,<lb/>
the ball over the fence for a<lb/>
ground-rule double.<lb/>
Madison tied it up in the se<lb/>
cond on a homer by Scot:<lb/>
Mac key, two singles, a stolen<lb/>
base and a dropped throw to tl<lb/>
plate.<lb/>
The Pirates put together tl<lb/>
second consecutive five-run <lb/>
ing to squash James Mad:<lb/>
comeback attempt.<lb/>
Two walks, these off the<lb/>
cond JMU pitcher, and an en<lb/>
scored Chris Bradberry McGraw<lb/>
followed with a single to load the<lb/>
bases. Cockrell walked,<lb/>
forced Johnson in. R;ie 'hen<lb/>
doubled to right but wa thi<lb/>
out trying to make it to third on<lb/>
the play.<lb/>
The last ECU run came in<lb/>
third on a walk, a single by Gi<lb/>
Hardison and an out.<lb/>
A homer by the Duke' Carev<lb/>
Nemeth in the fifth closed<lb/>
scoring at 11-6.<lb/>
Mike Christopher raised<lb/>
pitching record to 5-0, giving u 3<lb/>
10 hits and striking out t-o<lb/>
ECU is currently 17-7 jv<lb/>
and 3-2 in the ECAC -<lb/>
Madison drops to 8-10 ovc<lb/>
and 1-2 in the conference.<lb/>
The Pirates will be on the :<lb/>
today as they travel to Wilson,<lb/>
N.C to take on Atlantic Chi<lb/>
tian College in a dcublehea<lb/>
Outdoor<lb/>
Season<lb/>
Starts<lb/>
By BILL TATE' MITCHELL<lb/>
The ECU women's track learn<lb/>
has made its presence known in<lb/>
the first two outdoor meets of the<lb/>
1985 season.<lb/>
In the N.C. State Invitational<lb/>
on March 16, the lady tracksters<lb/>
had two first place finishers. Lin-<lb/>
da Gillis, a sophomore from<lb/>
Fayetteville, N.C, took firs:<lb/>
place in the 100-meter dash with a<lb/>
time of 11.8 seconds. Freshman<lb/>
Carolyn Martin gave ECl<lb/>
another first place in the triple<lb/>
jump with an effort of 36 feet, 10<lb/>
inches.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates also scored<lb/>
with two fourth place finishes tn<lb/>
their opening meet. Freshman<lb/>
Wanda Havthe was fourth in the<lb/>
discus with a toss of 128 feet.<lb/>
Sonya Staton took a fourth place<lb/>
finish in the 400-meter dash with<lb/>
a time 61.0 seconds.<lb/>
At the Florida Invitational if?<lb/>
Gainesville, Fla on March 2<lb/>
the Lady Bucs also fared well by<lb/>
placing sixth in two separate.<lb/>
events.<lb/>
Carolyn Martin once agais<lb/>
placed in her triple-jump eve<lb/>
Her leap of 35 feet, three inches:<lb/>
gave her a sixth place finish.<lb/>
Linda Gillis, the only returning-<lb/>
runner on a young Lad Pirate<lb/>
squad, finished sixth in the<lb/>
See TRACKSTERS. Page 10<lb/>
Ruggers Thrash Seahawks;<lb/>
End Season On Good Note<lb/>
ECU ruggers shown In earlier season action, finished 6-4-1 and second in the state.<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
Co-Sjort. Etflor<lb/>
The ECU Rugby club ended<lb/>
their season on a good note<lb/>
Saturday by thrashing the UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington Seahawks, 18-3.<lb/>
One should note that in last<lb/>
year's match, the two team's bat-<lb/>
tled before Wilmington won a<lb/>
hard fought match 10-8. This<lb/>
year's match was different, ac-<lb/>
cording to team president Bill<lb/>
Zimmerman.<lb/>
"We got revenge Zimmer-<lb/>
man said. "The game was a<lb/>
grudge match, we were at each<lb/>
other's throats the whole game.<lb/>
"A couple of fights broke out<lb/>
during the game and the referees<lb/>
almost had to call the game'<lb/>
Zimmerman added. "They took<lb/>
a lot of cheap shots on us, they<lb/>
were really bad sports<lb/>
However, a combination of<lb/>
ECU muscle and the 90 degree<lb/>
heat must have been too much<lb/>
for the Seahawks as ECU battled<lb/>
to a 9-3 halftime lead, before<lb/>
dominating the second half 9-0.<lb/>
Fortunately for Wilmington,<lb/>
ECU started the game with just<lb/>
13 players (two less than re-<lb/>
quired). The other two players<lb/>
joined the squad after the first 10<lb/>
minutes of action.<lb/>
The Seahawks took advantage<lb/>
of the Pirate shortage as they<lb/>
took an early 3-0 lead on a penal-<lb/>
ty kick.<lb/>
The Pirates wasted no time in<lb/>
retaliating as Alan Blankenship<lb/>
darted 35 yards through the<lb/>
Seahawks' defense and scored the<lb/>
only try of the game. Mike<lb/>
Brown's two-point conversion<lb/>
was perfect as ECU took a 6-3<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
The Pirates began to take con-<lb/>
trol of the game. Shortly before<lb/>
the half, Ted Williams scored on<lb/>
his third drop-kick of the season<lb/>
while giving ECU a 9-3 lead at the<lb/>
intermission.<lb/>
The Pirates came out in the se-<lb/>
cond half to dominate play, keep-<lb/>
ing the ball in Wilmington's ter-<lb/>
ritory throughout play. Brown<lb/>
added three more penalty kicks td<lb/>
the Pirate scoring, while holding<lb/>
the Seahawks scoreless.<lb/>
Brown was 4-4 on the dav for<lb/>
11 points. This is the highest in-<lb/>
dividual scoring total all vear as<lb/>
well as a career high for Brown.<lb/>
With the Pirates 18-3 whipping<lb/>
of UNC-W, ECU ends their<lb/>
season with a 6-4-1 record, while<lb/>
being recognized as the No. 1<lb/>
team in the state. However, Zim-<lb/>
merman believes that next year's:<lb/>
team could prove to be even bet-<lb/>
ter. :<lb/>
"We're not losing anybody<lb/>
from this year's team Zimmer<lb/>
man said. "We're going to be a<lb/>
lot stronger next year We're<lb/>
??? good n?? '? H<lb/>
Classi<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057708_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
APRIL 2, 1985<lb/>
i single<lb/>
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v<lb/>
South<lb/>
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Note<lb/>
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lf to dominate play, keep-<lb/>
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iroughout play. Brown<lb/>
Iree more penalty kicks to<lb/>
Je scoring, while holding<lb/>
aks scoreless.<lb/>
as 4-4 on the day for<lb/>
s This is the highest in-<lb/>
coring total all year as<lb/>
career high for Brown<lb/>
he Pirates 18-3 whipping<lb/>
;W, ECU ends their<lb/>
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cognized as the No. 1<lb/>
N state. However, Zim-<lb/>
 believes that next year's<lb/>
lid prove to be even bet<lb/>
P not losing anybody<lb/>
'eam'Zimmer.<lb/>
"Ue're going to be a<lb/>
iger next year. We're'<lb/>
a good name tor rjv<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
wanted<lb/>
COUNSELORS: For western N.C.<lb/>
o ed 8 week summer camp. Room,<lb/>
?eals, laundry, salary, travel<lb/>
.lowance, and possible college<lb/>
edit Experience not necessary,<lb/>
but must enjoy working with<lb/>
children. Only non smoking college<lb/>
students need apply For application<lb/>
and brochure write: Camp<lb/>
Pinewood, 19006 Bob O Link Dr<lb/>
v ami. Florida 33015.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Seeking<lb/>
responsible, non smoking roommate<lb/>
?-hare B unit at Ringgold Towers<lb/>
? r both summer sessions. Com<lb/>
Jetely furnished, air conditioned,<lb/>
essories included, $170 per<lb/>
-onth. Call 752 0998, ask for Dan<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Behind<lb/>
k dorm, Uth St. Rent $135.<lb/>
Private room. Call 758-7470 after<lb/>
i 30 ask for Jane.<lb/>
SUMMER POSITIONS: Do your<lb/>
areer goals include working with<lb/>
people? What are you doing to learn<lb/>
effective people skills? Earn and<lb/>
eam: valuable life experiences,<lb/>
radership abilities and personal<lb/>
growth Camp Kanata (Co-ed resi<lb/>
 camp), Rt. 3, Box 192, Wake<lb/>
Forest, N.C. 27587. (919) 556 2661.<lb/>
'EMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
bedroom at Eastbrook, $113 ?<lb/>
utilities. Starting in May. Call<lb/>
'589334<lb/>
'EMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
FOR SUMMER: Only $130 per<lb/>
onth. Own bedroom, furnished<lb/>
piex on Brownlea Dr Call<lb/>
758-5323. (One mile from campus.)<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
acting in May. 3 bedroom apt. at<lb/>
Easfb"OOk $106 Der month ? "3<lb/>
ties. Call 752 2648 or 757 0016<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
FOR THE SUMMER: Starting in<lb/>
May Very close to campus, totally<lb/>
FURNISHED, large private room,<lb/>
kitchen, bath and hall Big front<lb/>
. 3rd. $135 a month Call 758 1404 any<lb/>
me<lb/>
HARD WORKING STUDENTS: To<lb/>
work part-time for WRIGHTSER<lb/>
v'ICE. INC The Work: various<lb/>
skilled and unskilled jobs The Pay:<lb/>
ABOVE minumun wage. The Hours:<lb/>
make your own Call 756 2719; asK<lb/>
tor Ben or please leave a message<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible but party<lb/>
ing roommate(s) for house on golf<lb/>
course near Atlantic Beach. Call<lb/>
Mary at 752 9926<lb/>
?<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: For<lb/>
beautiful 2 bedroom apt 2 full baths,<lb/>
'replace, pool, etc. Call Holly any<lb/>
' me 757 1737<lb/>
2 ROOMMATES NEEDED FOR<lb/>
SUMMER: Starting 1st week in<lb/>
May $100 per month ? '? utilities.<lb/>
. arge house with ac, dishwasher,<lb/>
yard. Call 758 5953. Across from<lb/>
Overton's.<lb/>
PART-TIME WORD PROCESSOR<lb/>
NEEDED: For law firm. Program-<lb/>
ming experience helpful. Call Kim<lb/>
at 758 6200.<lb/>
STUDENTS: Lose those extra<lb/>
pounds before summer! Swimsuit<lb/>
season is upon us, so feel better<lb/>
about yourself this year! Simple<lb/>
easy to follow plan that shows you<lb/>
how to lose weight nutritionally and<lb/>
keep it off! Only $6.95 P.P.J. In-<lb/>
dustries, P.O. Box 59 Carrboro, N.C.<lb/>
27510. Satisfaction Guaranteed or<lb/>
your money back!<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS AVAILABLE:<lb/>
Episcopal Summer Camp looking<lb/>
for college students to fill counselor<lb/>
positions. Dates. July 19 to Aug. 14.<lb/>
For information write: Edward M.<lb/>
Hodges, Jr Episcopal Camp<lb/>
Manager, 101 E. 10th St Washington,<lb/>
NC 27889<lb/>
NEED A SUMMER JOB7: Located<lb/>
in Raleigh. Perfect for the college<lb/>
student who needs to make money<lb/>
over the summer. Five days a week.<lb/>
Easy work. Great Pay! Send name,<lb/>
local address and phone number,<lb/>
major and G.P.A. to: F.D.L. Inc<lb/>
1608 E. 5th St. Greenville, N.C. 27834.<lb/>
3rd ROOMMATE NEEDED: For<lb/>
summer at Wilson Acres. $123<lb/>
month. Mary 758 7292.<lb/>
3rd ROOMMATE NEEDED: For<lb/>
summer and or fall at Wilson Acres.<lb/>
$123 month?call Cary 758-7292.<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED TO MYRTLE<lb/>
BEACH: Would like to leave on<lb/>
Thurs April 4th any time after 5.<lb/>
Call 752 7879.<lb/>
GOT THE SUMMER JOB SEARCH<lb/>
BLUES?: NEED RESUME EX<lb/>
PERIENCE? INTERVIEWS WED.<lb/>
AT 1 OR 4 OR 7 MENDENHALL<lb/>
238 FULL TIME POSITIONS.<lb/>
S1411MONTH AVERAGE. 2.5 GPA<lb/>
NEEDED. BE PROMPT.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SIG EPS: Parents Weekend was a<lb/>
successGood job Scott Short! -The<lb/>
Golden Hearts<lb/>
MOE: it was quite a weekend and I<lb/>
enjoyed every minute of it! Thanks<lb/>
for everything. Love- Jennifer<lb/>
TO THE PERSON(S) WHO<lb/>
REMOVED THE COMPUTER<lb/>
FROM RAWL ANNEX 2 WEEKS<lb/>
AGO: You did a truly professional<lb/>
job, so I suppose congratulations are<lb/>
in order. But see my display ad<lb/>
elsewhere in this issue. RHF<lb/>
THE VIOLENT FEMMES: Want to<lb/>
contact Monika, Stephanie, Karen,<lb/>
Laurel, Jim &amp; Tom. Write: Juan C.<lb/>
Esteves 726 Commonwealth Ave.<lb/>
number 4S, Boston, MA 02215. (617)<lb/>
267 8406.<lb/>
STUDENTS: The heat is on and<lb/>
everyone should get fired up to go<lb/>
see Maxx Warrior April 19 and 20.<lb/>
Greenville, let's show Norfolk we<lb/>
can party hearty!<lb/>
SOFT CONTACTS<lb/>
D'AfLYWtAR 140.00paii<lb/>
EXTENDED<lb/>
WfcAH $60.00pair<lb/>
TINTED $70.00Pal'<lb/>
(blue. aqua.<lb/>
 green, brown)<lb/>
STUDENT ID REQUIRED<lb/>
I hf?UKr prfces do not mtludt- tees tor professional mtms<lb/>
Proft-ssnAl lees depend imi lens type and ftir pr?-KMis soil<lb/>
Jt-ns tMtriviu,e<lb/>
information ? 756-9404.<lb/>
.<lb/>
OfTOMCTlUC<lb/>
CHECAA?C?NT?R<lb/>
Drs Hoilis ?C Subal<lb/>
1 ipion Annex 2H (ireenville Kivd<lb/>
?oe<lb/>
BUSINESS, FINANCE,<lb/>
MARKETING MAJORS: Position<lb/>
open for full-time summer employ-<lb/>
ment $4,000?. interviewing now.<lb/>
Rush name, phone to P.O. Box 4052,<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
GUITAR FOR SALE: Fender<lb/>
Mustang. Two pickups, tremolo,<lb/>
blue with mirrored pickguard, case<lb/>
and strap included. Call 752 0998, ask<lb/>
for Robert.<lb/>
TYPING: Experienced professional<lb/>
woman will provide all typing ser-<lb/>
vices. (IBM correcting typewriter)<lb/>
Call Debbie at 756-6333 for a well<lb/>
typed paper.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Sum<lb/>
mer or longer. Close to campus.<lb/>
Swimming pool and tennis court.<lb/>
758 3676.<lb/>
FOR SALE: General Electric por-<lb/>
table air conditioner. Very good con-<lb/>
dition. Call 752 1989.<lb/>
TYPING NEEDED?: If you want<lb/>
someone to type papers for you at<lb/>
reasonable rates call 355-2510 after<lb/>
6:30.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: 3 bedrooms,<lb/>
living room, dining room. Near<lb/>
university 113 E. 9th St. $255. Call<lb/>
758-5299.<lb/>
ERIC CLAPTON: Tickets will be<lb/>
available next week at Apple<lb/>
Records. Start planning now to see<lb/>
Slow Hand in Durham on April 18th.<lb/>
BE THERE.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Spacious, fully furnish-<lb/>
ed 2 br. apt. available tor summer<lb/>
months. Mid May mid April or any<lb/>
time in between. Rent is $275 per<lb/>
month- low utilities, convenient to<lb/>
campus ? pool privileges. Call after<lb/>
5 p.m. 756-9104.<lb/>
FOR SALE: '73 Datsun 240Z<lb/>
Micheien tires, mag wheels, air<lb/>
dam, driving lights, AM FM<lb/>
cassette, runs well, needs paint.<lb/>
$2,300. Call Todd 757 3347 weekdays<lb/>
after 5 or weekends.<lb/>
FOR RENT: 509 Ringgold Towers.<lb/>
Want to rent 1st session summer<lb/>
school through May. 1 bedroom with<lb/>
twin beds, I bathroom, kitchen and<lb/>
den. $340 monthly. 752-0416.<lb/>
FOR SUBLEASE: One bedroom<lb/>
apt. for sublease May, June and July<lb/>
-may take over new lease. $225<lb/>
month, 2 blocks from ECU. 758-6712.<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING: Contact<lb/>
BECKY LATHAM 752 5998 (8 a.m.<lb/>
5 p.m.) 17 years experience in typing<lb/>
theses, scientific reports,<lb/>
manuscripts, business and form let<lb/>
ters.<lb/>
READY TO MOVE IN: 2 bedroom<lb/>
corner duplex with appliances,<lb/>
drapes, fireplace ? gardening. I<lb/>
year lease ? security. Near<lb/>
hospital. Available April 1st.<lb/>
7569349.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER-<lb/>
VICE: Word processing. The<lb/>
DataWorks specializes in student<lb/>
document services including<lb/>
reports, term papers, dissertations,<lb/>
theses, resumes and more. All work<lb/>
is computer-checked against 50,000<lb/>
work electronic dictionary Rates<lb/>
are as low as $1.75 per page, in-<lb/>
cluding paper. (Call for specific<lb/>
rates.) Call Mark at 757 3440 after<lb/>
5:30 p.m.<lb/>
FOUND: Bracelet outside of Cotton<lb/>
Dorm. Call and identify any time<lb/>
after 6 p.m 757)37?<lb/>
REWARD OFFERED: For the<lb/>
return of or any information leading<lb/>
to the return of the black Peaugot<lb/>
Earth Cruiser stolen from 110 S Jar<lb/>
vis St. (across from Overton's) late<lb/>
Fri. night or Sat. morning. Call<lb/>
758 5953. Thank you.<lb/>
Malpass Muffler and Parts<lb/>
With this coupon your choice<lb/>
of Valvoline or Castrol oil (up<lb/>
to 5 quarts) and Fram oil filter.<lb/>
 $11.99 ?<lb/>
(Thru April)<lb/>
2616 East 10th Street Greenville, NC 27834 758-7676<lb/>
A VyVjAlJ OF A MEAL<lb/>
ESTAURANTS<lb/>
Monday Thru Thursday<lb/>
5-9<lb/>
SHRIMP DINNER<lb/>
served with<lb/>
F. Fries, Slaw<lb/>
Hushpuppies<lb/>
$3.25<lb/>
105 Airport Rd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 758-0327<lb/>
Just Opened!<lb/>
au6<lb/>
3006 E. 10th St. ? 758-4880<lb/>
Open 6 Days A Week At Night By Appt<lb/>
t 20 percent off all haircuts<lb/>
Offer good through April 28 I<lb/>
Put vour entire family's hir in ow<lb/>
esnert cure dnd be deliuhted (n the resufti<lb/>
PERSONAL DENTIST<lb/>
Do you need a caring.<lb/>
professional dentist?<lb/>
?Cleaning done by the doctor<lb/>
?Pain-free restorative dentistry<lb/>
Dr. Robert CargUl<lb/>
University Professional Center<lb/>
608 E. HkhSt. Greenville, NC<lb/>
75S-4W7<lb/>
"i<lb/>
-JJpftoW 50<lb/>
Process 6? Print<lb/>
With This Coupon<lb/>
Prom 110,126, 35mm or Disc Color Print Pilm<lb/>
13Vs0 per print (reg. 27) and 149 dev chg. (reg. $2.98)<lb/>
Example: 24 exp. reg. 19.46 HOW $4,731<lb/>
Limit 1 roll per coupon. Not valid with other offers.<lb/>
Jm cPhottflAGdd E4.2<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL 7564078<lb/>
(North entrance ? Near Belks)<lb/>
Open MonSat. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Sundays 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
1 Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
One test where only<lb/>
you know the scora<lb/>
Yes No<lb/>
DD<lb/>
DD<lb/>
DD<lb/>
DD<lb/>
Do you want to be the<lb/>
only one who knows<lb/>
when you use an early<lb/>
pregnancy test?<lb/>
Would you prefer a test<lb/>
that's totally private to<lb/>
perform and totally<lb/>
private to read?<lb/>
Would you like a test<lb/>
that's portable, so you<lb/>
can carry it with you and<lb/>
read it in private?<lb/>
And how about a simple,<lb/>
one-step test with a dra-<lb/>
matic color change that's<lb/>
easy to read and is 98<lb/>
accurate?<lb/>
If you checked "Yes" to<lb/>
the above, EPT PLUS is for<lb/>
you. Use it, and only you<lb/>
will know your test score.<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
Now Taking<lb/>
Applications For<lb/>
Transit<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
<lb/>
?preteritt<lb/>
k - m ft<lb/>
Apply 228 Mendenhall <lb/>
w<lb/>
&amp;r 4?kken3F ? feculy staff-<lb/>
A?ri -S ?? B 5.0r It. Morfa<lb/>
nalll. "Tusfr brWvg pur Easter<lb/>
fco?VKt.<lb/>
in. wrfm????? i<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057708_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I HI I M K(1 I Man<lb/>
M'KIl<lb/>
Js<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
H IK NFI TE KOIH<lb/>
I his weekend, the outdoor<lb/>
recreation center held Us annual<lb/>
backpacking trip to the I wharne<lb/>
National forest The expedition<lb/>
nas led bv two IRS staff interns.<lb/>
John Savage and 1 isa Ireland.<lb/>
1 he group left ECU Friday at 2<lb/>
and returned safe and sound<lb/>
Sunday a: 2:30 p.m. The<lb/>
. irgeous weather aided in the<lb/>
cess of the trip as the seven<lb/>
pants camped out in the<lb/>
derness Friday and Saturd.n<lb/>
ghts.<lb/>
ke ail wilderness adventures,<lb/>
he bac kpackers had to 'rough it'<lb/>
what Peanut butter and jel-<lb/>
sandwiches, showering in<lb/>
eek and enjoying<lb/>
( snakes and lizzards)<lb/>
- ? the three da event.<lb/>
Overall, the trip was verv sue<lb/>
tnd enjoyed b all who<lb/>
pariake in next year's<lb/>
backpacking excursion.<lb/>
doubles competition is<lb/>
sw g along after the<lb/>
ar round o play. The<lb/>
mrnament begins this week<lb/>
op-notch competition.<lb/>
 an undefeated record<lb/>
tyetta and Al King<lb/>
d No 1 in the<lb/>
b racket The<lb/>
defeated Fecho<lb/>
" 0, (-4 and Render-<lb/>
k -J ftei soundK<lb/>
?cse wo the ran into<lb/>
ch competition but pull-<lb/>
out in the end<lb/>
md Rampersaud<lb/>
nisi :ops in<lb/>
are Jefl echo and<lb/>
Kem Burke fecho. one of last<lb/>
ling champions, ac-<lb/>
't'w partner m Burke<lb/>
are swinging into the<lb/>
.rnament.<lb/>
port-club action, a<lb/>
i-quetballers par-<lb/>
98! State 'B'<lb/>
:nament. Raymond<lb/>
?v ok Yang went head-<lb/>
the nest in the<lb/>
B early in the rounds,<lb/>
? .? ? 'ought back<lb/>
?ake<lb/>
n win in the men's<lb/>
e 'B' d<lb/>
the Tennis Shoe<lb/>
the latest IRS soft-<lb/>
tnd team handball action.<lb/>
da ind Thursday at<lb/>
: ; 3 i WZMB ? controU-<lb/>
? md roll on 91.3<lb/>
u Stephanie Luke<lb/>
he Tennis Shoe Talkshow.<lb/>
Tracksters<lb/>
(Ontinued from Page Fight<lb/>
??-meter dash with a 12.01<lb/>
clocking<lb/>
"I've been very pleased with<lb/>
run first year coach<lb/>
Miller said "I usually on-<lb/>
girls to a meet, so I<lb/>
re how we'd do, but we<lb/>
een very, competitive. I was<lb/>
happy with our first<lb/>
outdoor me<lb/>
? ???????<lb/>
itionaJ facilities will clo i<lb/>
in accordance with the following<lb/>
iuie on Friday, April 5.<lb/>
SUIMMINf, POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
lay 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
Closed<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
Friday 1 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
Closed<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m.<lb/>
EQI IPMFNT<lb/>
CHECK-OUT CENTER<lb/>
(Memorial Gym 115)<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m.<lb/>
OITDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m.<lb/>
All facilities will resume nor-<lb/>
mal hours of operations on Tues-<lb/>
day, April 9.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
M-F 12 noon-l:30p.m.<lb/>
M-F 3:30-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M W-F 8 p.m9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th 9a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th 3 p.m4:45 p.m.<lb/>
(4:45-10 based on availability)<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. l p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
tiV<lb/>
WANTED: Enthusiastic Guys &amp; (.iris<lb/>
ECU VARSITY CHEERLEADER<lb/>
TRY(H IS<lb/>
V V- ? Organizational Meeting: Wednesday, April 3, 1985 iiL<lb/>
5:30 p.m Lobby Minges<lb/>
? Practice Clinics: April 4, 9, &amp; 10<lb/>
<lb/>
"<lb/>
v.<lb/>
Don't Miss The Opportunity For:<lb/>
Travel! Meeting People! tun! <lb/>
For Further Information Call: <lb/>
757-0118 or 752-6353<lb/>
Ca<lb/>
( ? Final Tryouts: To be announced<lb/>
<lb/>
C<lb/>
u-a<lb/>
d<lb/>
i<lb/>
??????,????<lb/>
? ???????44)fj,<lb/>
Swift- Sliced FREE!<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Vfl<lb/>
4 Lb.<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Sunday. April 7 1985.<lb/>
12-30 P.M. -<lb/>
9 P.M.<lb/>
v<lb/>
nb.<lb/>
Grade A Fresh - 10-14 Lbs. Avg.<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Loin<lb/>
Sirloin<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
Whole Or Shank Halves - Sliced FREE! 09-2$ lbs. A??.l<lb/>
Full Quart<lb/>
rt<lb/>
?il?Vi<lb/>
W<lb/>
298<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Loin<lb/>
T-Bone Or<lb/>
a , ? Porterhouse<lb/>
Strawberries; steak<lb/>
499<lb/>
Red Ripe<lb/>
v ' <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Grapes 99<lb/>
32 Ounce<lb/>
Dove<lb/>
Liquid<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Thompson Seedless<lb/>
?. ?-<lb/>
t<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
2 liter Die! Coke Caffeine Free Die! Coke<lb/>
Caffeine Free Coke<lb/>
Pk? of 12 -12 0i.CMtRt9.au<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
5 Liter Ret1 B.r,u.?t Rki??. White Chahlit<lb/>
Ntettr Via Rote<lb/>
Almaden<lb/>
Wine<lb/>
8 Oz. - Frozen Chicken Turkey Pies<lb/>
Crozet<lb/>
Kitchen<lb/>
Beautiful<lb/>
Easter Plants<lb/>
Orchid<lb/>
Corsages E.e, 1.99<lb/>
Easter<lb/>
lilies neh 5.99<lb/>
Hydrangeas e? 5.99<lb/>
Tulips EleN 4.99<lb/>
Hyacinthscek 4.99<lb/>
Colorful Mums Each 3.99<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057708_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>