<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057716_0001"/>
(51je lEast (ftarnltntatt<lb/>
Serving (he East arolina campus communit<lb/>
 ol.59 n.<lb/>
Wednesday Ma 29, P85<lb/>
 irecnville, V(<lb/>
10 Yaws<lb/>
 in ulation 5.XH)<lb/>
f j f .<lb/>
-<lb/>
F<lb/>
ling Homosexual<lb/>
Groups Could End<lb/>
ROI ? J(? m-k<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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BRVANMUVBE ?t fc<lb/>
(cf .4 G7<lb/>
lirrel appears (?n thii it scent before setting foot on<lb/>
s seem to be lurking in the distance<lb/>
1<lb/>
-<lb/>
Me ided ' il<lb/>
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I<lb/>
SGA President David Bi<lb/>
't thin!<lb/>
a j i<lb/>
<lb/>
.ernment Asso<lb/>
. islature on wha<lb/>
Id be left u<lb/>
it East<lb/>
ecoj<lb/>
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and Observer ?<lb/>
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Drug Proposal Aimed<lb/>
At Larger Contributors<lb/>
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Bv HAROI I) i) NhK<lb/>
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lid. "V-<lb/>
those at the I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Rebel Wins Prestigious<lb/>
A CP Magazine A ward<lb/>
i<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
'Hang A Right Mac'<lb/>
Ibis ECU student seems to be giiny directions to n truck driver wh<lb/>
can't find his wa around campus.<lb/>
B) K N. i ns<lb/>
Rebel<lb/>
<lb/>
ite Press j<lb/>
. a<lb/>
in it:<lb/>
. ach t.t lent of the<lb/>
Pacemaker not only<lb/>
masters each area, hut<lb/>
also shows<lb/>
innovation. "<lb/>
?Paul Buys<lb/>
h i is one ol<lb/>
? es ' eceive the annual<lb/>
ed a- an Ac P U-<lb/>
erican<lb/>
award based<lb/>
ies:<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 r y.<lb/>
? I ayout and forma<lb/>
? Photography and an<lb/>
? Content, writiri b<lb/>
? Concept.<lb/>
According to Paul Buys, Ac p<lb/>
manager ci services,<lb/>
"Each recipient of the<lb/>
Pacemaker noi onl) masters each<lb/>
area (those listed above), but also<lb/>
shows innovation<lb/>
u ?<lb/>
Redb ?-<lb/>
:eld<lb/>
I<lb/>
i Tmost<lb/>
vet<lb/>
<lb/>
Rebel, wa<lb/>
ment. Howe<lb/>
er the follow s<lb/>
vl :<lb/>
i <lb/>
? Ac<lb/>
i<lb/>
cep .<lb/>
. ver formal<lb/>
id (i.e the<lb/>
s masthea<lb/>
? " . The sheei contribui or<lb/>
. i<lb/>
? Its amb<lb/>
egiate<lb/>
and er<lb/>
.?<lb/>
? The show case<lb/>
in the well's Gallen seel<lb/>
inspiration, as are the selecl<lb/>
themselves "<lb/>
The Rebel is published am<lb/>
ly, and is usuallv distributed<lb/>
ECl' and the surroudinc cc<lb/>
Three persons affiliated with munity in April of each yeat<lb/>
Representative Lives Up To American Ideals<lb/>
B H AKOI I) 1) M R<lb/>
I  Sf?. I<lb/>
people are tun<lb/>
mply b tuse they d m't<lb/>
: their sometime i<lb/>
ticai philosophy, Bui look closer<lb/>
 ' ount) and one will find<lb/>
tha Farmville native and state<lb/>
Rep Walter B Jones fr is the<lb/>
eption, rather than the rule<lb/>
ones, 42, says he likes to live<lb/>
up to what people like to see in<lb/>
their state representative ?<lb/>
straightforward answers, honesty<lb/>
and the ability to get the job<lb/>
done. Although this is only<lb/>
Jones' second term, he has been<lb/>
politically active since 1957, when<lb/>
he was a legislative page<lb/>
Recently, he has sponsored<lb/>
several bills in the General<lb/>
Assembly aimed at keeping<lb/>
politics honest and protecting the<lb/>
counties he represents.<lb/>
Viewed as a longshot by critics,<lb/>
one of his most recent bills would<lb/>
allow voters in the state to amend<lb/>
the state constitution by making<lb/>
it illegal for a candidate to libel<lb/>
his opponent.<lb/>
'The public heard so many<lb/>
half-truths during the last elec-<lb/>
tion Jones said. "I think the<lb/>
public was being cheated because<lb/>
they never really got all the facts.<lb/>
people will <lb/>
a p a ho is honest and .<lb/>
le need the<lb/>
ting<lb/>
with it) in i fes<lb/>
and 1 don't think it belongs<lb/>
in this one "<lb/>
iB wj<lb/>
Walter B. Jones Jr.<lb/>
Jones mentioned that several<lb/>
people in the area had written to<lb/>
him concerning the bill, and he<lb/>
said one person told him that<lb/>
after last year's bitter elections<lb/>
she was "ashamed to be a<lb/>
Tarheel She lauded Jones's ef-<lb/>
forts to get rid of smear cam-<lb/>
paign tactics and putting an end<lb/>
to political slandering.<lb/>
Politics is a hard game, I<lb/>
realize that lones said, "But,<lb/>
other professions that sell a pro-<lb/>
duct will draw attention to what a<lb/>
particular product can do foi<lb/>
you. I don't know why we an't<lb/>
do that during campaigns<lb/>
lones' libel bill is similar to a<lb/>
( aliforma law, which says any<lb/>
person found guilty of libeling or<lb/>
slandering an opponent can be<lb/>
disqualified from the elections<lb/>
and or lose his elected seat.<lb/>
lones recently had one ol his<lb/>
bills made law Now, it is illegal<lb/>
for anyone to use sulfites to<lb/>
preserve vegatables or fruits<lb/>
available at retail and wholesale<lb/>
markets Sulfites are additives<lb/>
that keep perishables, such as let-<lb/>
tuce, looking fresh, but have also<lb/>
been found to cause adverse reac-<lb/>
tions in people with respiratory<lb/>
problems<lb/>
lones said idea to ban sulfites<lb/>
came about when he received<lb/>
word from a constituent who got<lb/>
sick after eating lettuce with the<lb/>
additive He did some research<lb/>
and found many people with<lb/>
respiratory ailments were allergic<lb/>
to the additive. After hearing<lb/>
about an 11-year-old girl m<lb/>
Oregon who died after a reaction<lb/>
to the sulfites, he decided to take<lb/>
action.<lb/>
"It iok a while to get the bill<lb/>
introduced, hi: 1 was a I at<lb/>
theamounl of suppon tc ban this<lb/>
additive Jones also said the bill<lb/>
"will now finally put an end to<lb/>
this serious problem in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Because so man) iI students<lb/>
aie from a different county oi<lb/>
state, they mav not see lones as<lb/>
an one o their people to be con<lb/>
cerned with However. Jones said<lb/>
ECU is nonetheless "well<lb/>
represented in Raleigh<lb/>
Sens lorn Taft, D-Pitt, and<lb/>
Bob Martin, D Pitt, both hold<lb/>
seats on the Appropriations<lb/>
Committee, as well as Rep Id<lb/>
Warren, D-N.C . Jones said<lb/>
"Probably the most important<lb/>
thing in educational institutions<lb/>
is funding Jones said, "and<lb/>
E:ast Carolina Universit students<lb/>
can be assured that thev are well<lb/>
represented in the House ami<lb/>
Senate It is the students that<lb/>
make a university strong We're<lb/>
delighted to be able to represent<lb/>
them<lb/>
Jones' response to the recent<lb/>
passage of a bill which would<lb/>
make happy hours illegal in<lb/>
North Carolina after Aug. 1 was<lb/>
that "it was done in the best in-<lb/>
terest of the state, not anything<lb/>
against college students<lb/>
He said many legislators saw<lb/>
that bars in the state's larger<lb/>
cities were drawing a large<lb/>
number of people after work,<lb/>
many o' whom were tired and<lb/>
had not eaten for several hours<lb/>
"Before the bill, happv hours<lb/>
were encouraging people to drink<lb/>
more than they should, therebv<lb/>
endangering main others<lb/>
The bill received no opposition<lb/>
from the State Restaurant<lb/>
?Vsociation, which Jones said<lb/>
was a positive move. He also add-<lb/>
ed that the Association wanted<lb/>
the Alcoholic Beverage Control<lb/>
Commission to make a decision.<lb/>
not the legislators<lb/>
lones' latest bill will probablv<lb/>
have the greatest influence in pro-<lb/>
tecting state employees from los<lb/>
mg their jobs if thev fail to make<lb/>
political contributions or support<lb/>
an elected or appointed political<lb/>
candidate.<lb/>
"It is the right of every<lb/>
American to support whoever he<lb/>
chooses. It is also his right to<lb/>
choose not to support someone.<lb/>
It's just not the American way<lb/>
for someone to fear losing his or<lb/>
her job because they don't sup-<lb/>
port a particular candidate<lb/>
In supporting Jones' bill. The<lb/>
Raleigh Times said in a<lb/>
editorial that "Pressure foi cam-<lb/>
paign contributions<lb/>
manv corrupting abuses ?<lb/>
follow from letting ele ons<lb/>
decided bv who can raise tthe<lb/>
most money, bv fair means or<lb/>
foul. We should noi tolerate I<lb/>
abuse. To keep state employment<lb/>
honest and productive, and state<lb/>
emplovees free to do their work<lb/>
without fear, (this) bill must<lb/>
pass<lb/>
'I have faith in state<lb/>
emplovees lones said "1 think<lb/>
when this bill is passed, taxpayers<lb/>
will be helped as well ? state<lb/>
emplovees will be able to do their<lb/>
iob. instead of worrying if thev Ml<lb/>
lose it or not<lb/>
Jones declined to comment on<lb/>
the specifics of who was being<lb/>
threatened, but said, "the situa-<lb/>
tion has gotten out of hand<lb/>
Jones' political career is grow-<lb/>
ing everyday and some suspect<lb/>
he'll probably run for his father's<lb/>
congressional seat when the time<lb/>
comes. But right now, Jones said,<lb/>
"I'll run for the State house in<lb/>
'86. I may seek another office ?<lb/>
I'm very interested in doing that<lb/>
? and with the Lord's help and<lb/>
the help of my friends, I'll just<lb/>
have to wait for that opportunity<lb/>
to arise<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0002"/><lb/>
1 Hi" EAS1 CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 29, 198<lb/>
May's Campus Crimes Top Record<lb/>
More crimes were reported on<lb/>
campus during the month of<lb/>
April than in any other month of<lb/>
the 1984-85 school year, accor-<lb/>
ding to Uniform Crime Reports<lb/>
filed b the Dept. of Public Safe-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
 total of 90 crimes were<lb/>
reported to campus Public Safety<lb/>
officers during that period, which<lb/>
included four assaults, 30<lb/>
burglaries. 54 larcenies and two<lb/>
? vehicle thefts. Nineteen of<lb/>
the incidents were either cleared<lb/>
b arrest or by other means.<lb/>
Property stolen was valued at<lb/>
$14,847. Public Safety officers<lb/>
also recovered $8,563 worth of<lb/>
property and arrested 29 people.<lb/>
During the last two years, we<lb/>
have witnessed a changing pat-<lb/>
tern of crime on campus accor-<lb/>
ding to It. Gene McAbee, Crime<lb/>
Prevention Officer for the ECU<lb/>
Public Safety Department.<lb/>
McAbee also said that prior to<lb/>
those years, campus crimes usual-<lb/>
ly decreased during the final<lb/>
months of the regular school year<lb/>
as students were preparing for ex-<lb/>
ams. But. for the last two years,<lb/>
crime has increased during that<lb/>
period. "The totals for April<lb/>
mus! be close to an all-time mon-<lb/>
thly high says McAbee.<lb/>
e previous high crime totals<lb/>
the year were for Oct. and<lb/>
when 86 crimes were<lb/>
Tied.<lb/>
V ith the end of the spring<lb/>
semester, reports of crime<lb/>
decreased as indicated in the<lb/>
crime log for May 1 to May 27:<lb/>
May I. 1:45 p.m. ? A bicycle<lb/>
reported stolen from the west<lb/>
ide of Jarvis Dorm. 6 p.m. ?<lb/>
Three books were reported stolen<lb/>
from a room on the 7th floor of<lb/>
White Dorm. 7:45 p.m. ? Dar-<lb/>
rell Ray Woody, 18, of Jones<lb/>
Dorm was arrested for larceny of<lb/>
pedals from a bicycle.<lb/>
May3, 3:20p.m. ? A painting<lb/>
was reported stolen from the Art<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
May 4, 12:55 a.m. ? A break-<lb/>
in of a room was reported on the<lb/>
first floor of Garrett Dorm. 12:15<lb/>
p.m. ? A break-in and larceny<lb/>
was reported at a room on the 4th<lb/>
floor of Scott Dorm. 3:IS p.m.<lb/>
? A refrigerator was reported<lb/>
stolen in a break-in of a room on<lb/>
the 3rd floor of Garrett Dorm.<lb/>
4:15 p.m. ? A wallet was<lb/>
reported stolen from a room on<lb/>
the second tloor of Umstead<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
May 6. 12:30p.m. ? A larceny<lb/>
was reported from the Resident<lb/>
Director's office at Umstead<lb/>
Dorm.<lb/>
May 11, 1 p.m. ? A larceny of<lb/>
money from a wallet was<lb/>
reported at WZMB.<lb/>
May 12, 4 a.m. ? Gary Ber-<lb/>
nard Nobles, 20, of Ayden was<lb/>
arrested for driving without an<lb/>
operator's license.<lb/>
May 19, 1:40 a.m. ? Matthew<lb/>
Michael Nagem, 19, of Jarvis<lb/>
Dorm was arrested for being in-<lb/>
toxicated and disruptive on the<lb/>
west side of Hetcher Dorm.<lb/>
May 20, 4p.m. ? A larceny of<lb/>
athletic equipment was reported<lb/>
at Harrington Field.<lb/>
May 21, 6p.m. ? A larceny of<lb/>
personal items was reported from<lb/>
a locker at the swimming pool at<lb/>
Minges.<lb/>
May 22, 2:40 a.m. ? Leigh<lb/>
Cole Poland, 22, of Greenville<lb/>
was arrested for DW1 and<lb/>
careless and reckless driving at<lb/>
Ninth and Charles St. 4:40 a.m.<lb/>
? Jessie Thurman Mitchell, Jr<lb/>
32, of Greenville was arrested for<lb/>
DWI at Fifth and Meade St.<lb/>
May 24, 11:25 a.m. ? A<lb/>
break-in of a vehicle and larceny<lb/>
of a stereo equalizer was reported<lb/>
in the parking lot at the east end<lb/>
of Ninth St.<lb/>
May 25, 2:44 a.m. ? Billy Joe<lb/>
Bunting, 20, of Farmville was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI on the east side of<lb/>
Umstead Dorm.<lb/>
May 26, 12:45 a.m. ?<lb/>
Christopher James O'Brien, 20,<lb/>
of Pinehurst, N.C was arrested<lb/>
for DWI on the north side of<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
GPA<lb/>
The Counseling Center is offering, free of<lb/>
charge, the following session on helping you<lb/>
increase your g p a and still have fun Tak<lb/>
mg Exams Setting yourself Up To Win,<lb/>
Tuesday. June, 4, 12 M PM The session<lb/>
will be held in Wright Annex No advance<lb/>
registration necessary For further mforma<lb/>
tion, please call 757 66I<lb/>
National Teacher Examination<lb/>
There is a special National Teacher Ex<lb/>
amination scheduled for Saturday, June 11<lb/>
Candidates must contact the testing center<lb/>
pric to June 5 to register for the test To<lb/>
save candidates travel time, you should oe<lb/>
aware that tests are also being given at<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College. Wilson N C<lb/>
Weslyan Rocky Mount Fayetfeville State<lb/>
and New Bern High School<lb/>
Ambassadors<lb/>
Frisbee<lb/>
Attention Feesh and Bisoo and anyone in<lb/>
terested in playing fr.sbee 'his somme' r<lb/>
Greenv.Me The ECU Fnstoe OjB ana ?rv<lb/>
Ultimate irates extend ?her warmest shot<lb/>
invitaion to everyone to come out ana ' .<lb/>
it it you don t know how to wh.p .t w?<lb/>
teach you Bottom of College Mill Tjesoa.<lb/>
Thursday and Sunday at 5 30 Be 'here o? o<lb/>
ofciong I<lb/>
We will have a m<lb/>
in room 147 MSC<lb/>
etmg Thursday a? 4 PV<lb/>
Camp Starlight<lb/>
interested in working with children and<lb/>
young people in a beautiful setting? Camp<lb/>
Starlight is located in the Poconos Mountains<lb/>
of Pennsylvania They need counselors and<lb/>
water skiing instructors For more informa<lb/>
tion contact Cooperative Education, 3)3<lb/>
Rawl 757 6979<lb/>
Environmental Health<lb/>
Position available for Environmental<lb/>
Health student m INDT with background m<lb/>
safety with chemical company m Wiim<lb/>
mgton area Salary of 6 per hour and<lb/>
assistance in finding housing Excellent op<lb/>
portunity for summer Contact Co op Office<lb/>
room 314 Rawl Bldg<lb/>
Construction Management<lb/>
Positions A?aiabie tor cons<lb/>
management maiors wth Easte'r sw<lb/>
Carolina Building Corporation For'more r<lb/>
formation contact Coope'a' ve Educal<lb/>
Office Ra<lb/>
Correction<lb/>
In the May 22 issue, the amount of faculty raises was incorrectly<lb/>
reported. According to James L. Smith, chairman of the Faculty<lb/>
Senate, not all of ECU's faculty received a 10 percent across the board<lb/>
raise. All other state employees did, however. Smith explained that the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors believed university teachers should receive<lb/>
pay raises based partly on merit.<lb/>
Therefore, each department, including faculty and staff, received a<lb/>
10 percent raise based on salaries. The money was divided in each<lb/>
department and went towards merit awards, promotions, past salary<lb/>
inequities and upgrading of positions.<lb/>
The Plaza Deli located at<lb/>
THE PLAZA<lb/>
Offers a New Concept In Deli Foods<lb/>
We Offer<lb/>
Daily Specials Orders to Go<lb/>
Happy Hour 5 til Closing<lb/>
Good Music Good Times<lb/>
11AM-9PM Mon. Ihru Sal. 756-4024<lb/>
Are We Having Fun Yet?<lb/>
A dvertise<lb/>
Eyeglass Frame Sale<lb/>
30 to<lb/>
60 OFF<lb/>
AM<lb/>
Frames<lb/>
In Stock<lb/>
a h purchase of RX Lenses)<lb/>
QftO ALL NON-PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
OU O off SUNGLASSES.<lb/>
B8.L Rayban<lb/>
v&amp;<lb/>
u d e d<lb/>
Sale Ends May 31, 1985 (NoOther Discounts Valid)<lb/>
c?ar<lb/>
V'UE<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
CALLUS FOR AN<lb/>
EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
WITH THE DOCTOR<lb/>
OF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Phone 752-1446<lb/>
Other Locations In Kinston, Goldsboro &amp; Wilson<lb/>
Open Mon. Fri. 9 AM til 5:30 PM<lb/>
Beecher Kirkley Dispensing Opticiar<lb/>
?m? 50 OFF<lb/>
Process &amp; Print<lb/>
13VaC<lb/>
From<lb/>
I print y<lb/>
Ex uiit ? ?; . 1<lb/>
i-xpires ftp 8?<lb/>
mm -  lor print niir.<lb/>
? ? ftartfe reg  M<lb/>
NOW $4.73!<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
7?t:<lb/>
7<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Bivd Greenville<lb/>
ODDS CHART<lb/>
ODDS TO WIN<lb/>
Odds vary depending on the number o? Game TicKets you ootair<lb/>
Trie more Tickets vou collect the better your chances of ?inmn(<lb/>
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE May 11, IMS<lb/>
! NUMBER ' ODOSFOR I OOOS FOR OOMToT<lb/>
PRIZE OF ONE OAME 2 QAME 4QJUIE<lb/>
VAUJE , PRIZES TICKET TKKETS ? TV-Krn<lb/>
12.000<lb/>
1 In . y . 14 1<lb/>
11.000<lb/>
1 In<lb/>
1 In<lb/>
4-<lb/>
1 m<lb/>
? ' '985<lb/>
1<lb/>
? <lb/>
items ma pces<lb/>
WIN<lb/>
OP TO<lb/>
1 In<lb/>
I 200<lb/>
S 100<lb/>
t 20<lb/>
S K<lb/>
$ 5<lb/>
f 1<lb/>
TOTAL  -v?<lb/>
$2,000!<lb/>
AIIft J<lb/>
$100<lb/>
FREE GROCERIES<lb/>
DIET COKE SPRITE<lb/>
DIET SPRITE TAB OR<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
Puffs<lb/>
REGULAR AND L ?<lb/>
Budweiser<lb/>
JKobfW&amp;ild.<lb/>
F5-<lb/>
KROGER ALL MEAT OR<lb/>
All Beef<lb/>
Wieners<lb/>
J2P<lb/>
CREAMi OR<lb/>
CP.  - ?<lb/>
imiSi<lb/>
? ? ?? ? ?.<lb/>
80 OFF<lb/>
Beprints<lb/>
 ' ' ?'?' ?? or print film<lb/>
Juirt 39c each eg 37c<lb/>
Exp,rcl 85 tPhx&amp;PW&amp;Lbd F3-22<lb/>
iiS?<lb/>
A" A<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Color Enlargements<lb/>
B7 ? ? mm ii as<lb/>
a? 10 reg i ' row ta so<lb/>
nxi4 r?? iii 50 mm ?8 7B<lb/>
12 5x5 ftxH 35mr md ??,<lb/>
rn; rr.<lb/>
Expires 6-17 85<lb/>
JilQkfW&amp;lld<lb/>
Carolina East Mall 756-6078<lb/>
(North entrance - Near Belks)<lb/>
Open AonSat. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Su.days 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
1 Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
COUNTRY OVEN PLAIT<lb/>
Sugar<lb/>
Donuts<lb/>
Jif<lb/>
Peanut Butter<lb/>
16 Ct<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
COST CUTTER<lb/>
HOT DOG OR<lb/>
V.<lb/>
LEMON LIMf<lb/>
? ?? " UNCH or<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Gatorade<lb/>
BUY ONE 14 OZ CUP<lb/>
MEXICAN SALSA OR<lb/>
NACHO CHEESE SAUCE ($2.99)<lb/>
GET ONE 14 OZ. BAG DELI<lb/>
Hamburger i JJi<lb/>
Bun JZw-<lb/>
4b OZ<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
Nacho Chips<lb/>
?? " ? v SAVE<lb/>
? - $189<lb/>
AOVEBTISED ITEM POllCV<lb/>
Eacn o? tnese .lOvertisea items<lb/>
is rpauireo to oe reaany<lb/>
?fvaiiaoi for saie m earn Kroger<lb/>
Sav on except as soeofiraiiy<lb/>
notea m tnis ?a i? we ao run<lb/>
Out o an item we wm ofer you<lb/>
your cnoice o a comparable<lb/>
item when avanaoie reflecting<lb/>
me same savings or a ramenecx<lb/>
wnicn win entitle you to pur<lb/>
cnase the advertised item at<lb/>
tne advertised pnee within jo<lb/>
days Only one vendor coupon<lb/>
,mii oe accepted per item<lb/>
J<lb/>
INCLUDES 1-PT<lb/>
POTATO SALAD AND 6 ROLLS<lb/>
WISHBONE<lb/>
Fried<lb/>
Chicken<lb/>
SWEET Ripe<lb/>
Largeib<lb/>
S.ze<lb/>
$<lb/>
Pc<lb/>
Bkt<lb/>
499<lb/>
HAVE YOU CHECKED<lb/>
YOUR PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
PRICES LATELY?<lb/>
Compare what you<lb/>
presently pay with<lb/>
the price at the<lb/>
KROGER PHARMACY!<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
MFG'S<lb/>
FOR IJcSv FACE VA-UE)<lb/>
?-UR EVERY S10 PURCHASE'<lb/>
??? mm teton. -1lL<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1 pi iiQi<lb/>
MHMcnq<lb/>
I - ?<lb/>
?arf?<lb/>
Coll<lb/>
(CPS) V<lb/>
heav congn<lb/>
National<lb/>
hae di<lb/>
campaigr<lb/>
to "a<lb/>
IMicarajj<lb/>
The g<lb/>
"Save th?<lb/>
onl awi ?<lb/>
??<lb/>
humor <lb/>
Ilcge -<lb/>
Din<lb/>
The ge Repul<lb/>
ched the<lb/>
publicize ;<lb/>
back<lb/>
relic ?<lb/>
MedS<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
-<lb/>
Dia<lb/>
Dr<lb/>
Ticks Posi<lb/>
Summerti<lb/>
Complica<lb/>
Rock M<lb/>
Fevei<lb/>
eastern N"X No<lb/>
?reather is <lb/>
ow<lb/>
-<lb/>
Rock M<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
COLUMN,<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ticks nfes<lb/>
i anism Ricke<lb/>
may he I 1<lb/>
heay brush<lb/>
a1 e pic ked up "<lb/>
?? om ? d<lb/>
nil the d w as<lb/>
humariN.<lb/>
S ? ?- Rock<lb/>
Spotted Feei isua i<lb/>
three to ten da- <lb/>
- continuous fe 1<lb/>
are present. A ras<lb/>
? aKsas preseni<lb/>
starts on the wrists, -<lb/>
and palms j<lb/>
then spreads to the<lb/>
of the bodv Cither s<lb/>
may include musck<lb/>
pain, sci<lb/>
tiredness, sweltini<lb/>
? estlessness<lb/>
Prevention of Rocl<lb/>
Spotted Feer is to a<lb/>
areas such as woods<lb/>
brush areas It's aio a<lb/>
to appl tick repellent w<lb/>
into a tick-infested area)<lb/>
If a tick is found on yj<lb/>
01 clothing. remoe it<lb/>
with some paper or si <lb/>
touch the tick with unj<lb/>
hands ? Rocky Mount;<lb/>
ted Fever can be<lb/>
crushing a tick and<lb/>
laminating the broken<lb/>
infectious tick secretion<lb/>
If you think you ha'<lb/>
Mountain Spotted Fee<lb/>
our health provider a-<lb/>
possible. Treatment tcj<lb/>
Mountain Spotted Fei<lb/>
to obtain and er e?<lb/>
started in the early stag<lb/>
disease. Rocky Mountan<lb/>
Fever cannot be transmij<lb/>
one person to another<lb/>
also a vaccine available!<lb/>
sons with regular e<lb/>
Rocky Mountain Spotu<lb/>
More information<lb/>
disease may be obtained I<lb/>
Student Health Center<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0003"/><lb/>
THEJAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 29, 1985<lb/>
ts<lb/>
Fnsbee<lb/>
B sor aria anyoo n<lb/>
?.ex mil summer in<lb/>
snee C 'vib ana fh?<lb/>
rfM ?'mfsl hott<lb/>
? f ou' a"d wriip<lb/>
 n p t we 11<lb/>
? , H Toesday<lb/>
M rHec? or t?<lb/>
If jn Management<lb/>
J15 'ruction<lb/>
?s'??- Nortrt<lb/>
re in<lb/>
i iia'ion<lb/>
oods<lb/>
04<lb/>
? - Saw on<lb/>
<lb/>
?. sgr?rs Beservec!<lb/>
id Pnces<lb/>
? tnru Sat<lb/>
jnel '985<lb/>
CERIES<lb/>
ese<lb/>
iffs<lb/>
8<lb/>
Jif<lb/>
iut Butter<lb/>
69<lb/>
ripe<lb/>
exas<lb/>
iteloupe<lb/>
8?<lb/>
OUBLE<lb/>
MFCS<lb/>
,UPONS<lb/>
K WE WILL DOUBLE 5<lb/>
UP TO 50 FACE VALUE)<lb/>
fRY S10 PURCHASE'<lb/>
??? deta4? ? ,??<lb/>
College Republicans End Contra Campaign<lb/>
iCPSl ? Aft?   <lb/>
(CPS) After encountering<lb/>
heavy congressional pressure, the<lb/>
National College Republicans<lb/>
have dropped a half-facetious<lb/>
Reagan administration win ap- Since Congress, upon discover-<lb/>
nroval for renewed eovernment ing the CIA's program last year,<lb/>
funding for the rebels. angrily stopped the aid, a dozen<lb/>
Pandin says the "campaign" or so U.S. conservative organiza-<lb/>
campaign to get college students was really just a poster "roughly" tions have been raising funds to<lb/>
adopt' individual modeled on a "Save the ?JH thP rohok<lb/>
Nicaraguan rebels.<lb/>
The group has dropped its<lb/>
"Save the Contras" fund drive,<lb/>
only a week after it was launched!<lb/>
"Some people have no sense of<lb/>
humor about this sort of thing<lb/>
College Republican Depu'tv<lb/>
Director Jeff Pandin says.<lb/>
The College Republicans laun-<lb/>
ched their drive, Pandin says, to<lb/>
publicize private-sector efforts to<lb/>
back the Nicaraguan rebels with<lb/>
relief supplies, and to help the<lb/>
Children" poster, which solicits<lb/>
donations by pointing out that<lb/>
for just a few cents a day, patrons<lb/>
can support an improverished<lb/>
child abroad.<lb/>
"For 53 cents a day, you can<lb/>
support a Nicaraguan freedom-<lb/>
fighter the College Republican<lb/>
poster says.<lb/>
Until last June, the Central In-<lb/>
telligence Agency aided rebels<lb/>
fighting the Nicaraguan govern-<lb/>
ment regime.<lb/>
aid the rebels.<lb/>
Now the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion favors renewed aid to the<lb/>
rebels, claiming Nicaragua's<lb/>
government and the Soviet Union<lb/>
are allied to export revolution to<lb/>
other Central American coun-<lb/>
tries.<lb/>
To help the administration and<lb/>
the private fundraisers, the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans' national board<lb/>
authorized the posters in<lb/>
January. The group distributed<lb/>
some 5,000 posters in mid-<lb/>
Med School Sponsors Camp<lb/>
March, but quickly was attacked<lb/>
in Congress.<lb/>
On March 19th, Reps. Jim<lb/>
Leach, R-Iowa, and Mel Levine,<lb/>
D-California, brandished a copy<lb/>
of the College Republican poster<lb/>
on the floor of the House of<lb/>
Representatives as they introduc-<lb/>
ed legislation to ban all forms of<lb/>
private U.S. aid for the rebels.<lb/>
Leach contends the Founding<lb/>
Fathers believed the "American<lb/>
citizens should not be allowed to<lb/>
wage war on governments with<lb/>
which the U.S. is at peace, and<lb/>
with which Congress has<lb/>
specifically proscribed interven-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The groups funneling aid to the<lb/>
Nicaraguan rebels have "decided<lb/>
to take foreign policy into their<lb/>
own hands Leach says.<lb/>
Several congressmen endorsed<lb/>
the College Republican cam-<lb/>
paign, Pandin claims but the<lb/>
overall reaction suggested it<lb/>
would not help renew congres-<lb/>
sional support for the rebels.<lb/>
"Because we're associated with<lb/>
the Republican Party, people<lb/>
take what we do as having party<lb/>
approval he says. "We have to<lb/>
be sensitive to that<lb/>
The Save the Children Founda-<lb/>
tion was unhappy too, claiming<lb/>
the College Republican poster<lb/>
violated the copyright on its<lb/>
poster.<lb/>
Pandin says any funds donated<lb/>
will be returned to the sender.<lb/>
The GOP organization had<lb/>
Dlanned to purchase non-militarv<lb/>
supplies such as medicine. Pan-<lb/>
din declined to say how the group<lb/>
planned to transport the supplies<lb/>
to the rebels.<lb/>
Pandin says College<lb/>
Republican leaders did not<lb/>
estimate how much the campaign<lb/>
would raise.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR. Q &amp; FRI.<lb/>
Buster Brown<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
Brice Street<lb/>
(Phil Collins Video)<lb/>
HI Nr?sBurrau<lb/>
A special camp for youngsters<lb/>
and teenagers who have diabetes<lb/>
is planned for June 16-2! ii a<lb/>
waterfront camp sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU School of Medicine and<lb/>
the Carteret County Diabetic<lb/>
Support Group.<lb/>
Camp Needles In The Pines<lb/>
will be held at Camp Mitchell, the<lb/>
4-H camp located on Bogue<lb/>
Sound at Swansboro. This water-<lb/>
front location will enable<lb/>
campers aged 8-16 to enjoy swim-<lb/>
ming, canoeing, sailing, baseball,<lb/>
softball, volleyball, tennis, arts<lb/>
and crafts, square dancing,<lb/>
nature study and folklore classes.<lb/>
Special activities will include a<lb/>
beach outing with campfire,<lb/>
storytelling and a talent show.<lb/>
Diabetes education is a very<lb/>
important aspect of the camp,<lb/>
said Dr. James P. Gutai,<lb/>
Ticks Pose<lb/>
Summertime<lb/>
Complications<lb/>
Rocky Mountain Spotted<lb/>
Fever-weather has arrived in<lb/>
eastern N.C. Now that the<lb/>
leather is warm, many people<lb/>
enjoy camping, hiking and other<lb/>
outdoor activities. But students<lb/>
should be advised of the potential<lb/>
dangers of ticks, the carrier of<lb/>
Rocky Mountan Spotted Fever.<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
COLUn<lb/>
Ticks infested with the<lb/>
organism Rickettsia rickettsii<lb/>
may be found in woods and<lb/>
heavy brush areas. These ticks<lb/>
have picked up the organism<lb/>
from rodents and dogs and may<lb/>
transmit the disease by biting<lb/>
humans.<lb/>
Symptoms of Rocky Mountain<lb/>
Spotted Fever usually appear<lb/>
three to ten days after exposure.<lb/>
A continuous fever and headache<lb/>
are present. A rash is often (but<lb/>
not always) present and usually<lb/>
starts on the wrists, ankles, soles<lb/>
and palms of feet and hands, and<lb/>
then spreads to the central parts<lb/>
of the body. Other symptoms<lb/>
may include muscle and joint<lb/>
pain, sensitivity to light,<lb/>
tiredness, swelling, insomnia and<lb/>
restlessness.<lb/>
Prevention of Rocky Mountain<lb/>
Spotted Fever is to avoid infected<lb/>
areas such as woods and heavy<lb/>
brush areas. It's also a good idea<lb/>
to apply tick repellent when going<lb/>
into a tick-infested area.<lb/>
If a tick is found on your body<lb/>
or clothing, remove it carefully<lb/>
with some paper or sticks. Never<lb/>
touch the tick with unprotected<lb/>
hands ? Rocky Mountain Spot-<lb/>
ted Fever can be caught by<lb/>
crushing a tick and then con-<lb/>
taminating the broken skin with<lb/>
infectious tick secretions<lb/>
If you think you have Rocky<lb/>
Mountain Spotted Fever, contact<lb/>
your health provider as soon as<lb/>
possible. Treatment for Rocky<lb/>
Mountain Spotted Fever is easy<lb/>
to obtain and very effective if<lb/>
started in the early stages of the<lb/>
disease. Rocky Mountain Spotted<lb/>
Fever cannot be transmitted from<lb/>
one person to another. There is<lb/>
also a vaccine available for per-<lb/>
sons with regular exposure to<lb/>
Rocky Mountain Spotted Fever.<lb/>
More information about this<lb/>
disease may be obtained from the<lb/>
Student Health Center.<lb/>
associate professor of pediatrics<lb/>
at the ECU medical school and a<lb/>
specialist in childhood diabetes.<lb/>
"It is imperative that young peo-<lb/>
ple with diabetes learn to manage<lb/>
their disease early in life he<lb/>
said, "in order to avoid needless<lb/>
complications later<lb/>
Teaching the youngsters about<lb/>
proper diet, new types of insulin<lb/>
and glucose monitoring at home<lb/>
are integral parts of the camping<lb/>
program. Last year, a number of<lb/>
campers learned for the first time<lb/>
to give themselves insulin injec-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
All these activities will be<lb/>
supervised by Gutai, and a<lb/>
specially trained camp staff made<lb/>
up of pediatric residents from<lb/>
ECU, diabetes nurse educators<lb/>
from Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital, recreation specialists<lb/>
from Carteret Technical Institute<lb/>
and members of the Carteret<lb/>
County Diabetic Support Group.<lb/>
All are unpaid volunteers.<lb/>
This year's camp is limited to<lb/>
60 participants and will cost them<lb/>
$100 each, which includes<lb/>
medications, supplies, food and<lb/>
lodging.<lb/>
This Summer<lb/>
7F VOW RE COMING TO SUMMER SCHOOL ANV NEED A LACE TO LIVE, CALL US<lb/>
A FEW RJNGG0LV TOt'JERS UNITS ARE AVAILABLE TO SUBLET FOR THE SUMMFR.<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At The Campus ?East Carolina University<lb/>
student condos at ECU campus<lb/>
vale and rental units<lb/>
on-site management<lb/>
night security personnel<lb/>
fully furnished and accessorized<lb/>
 carpeted &amp; air conditioned<lb/>
 kitchen appliance fjrr.shed<lb/>
 lxjry facilities<lb/>
 resilient parking stitters<lb/>
h<lb/>
WARD PROPERTY BROKERS<lb/>
IOB :cERCE SRE E I<lb/>
r-RAA er see<lb/>
GREE . .E N C 2-83S<lb/>
919 756-84.0<lb/>
2510 E. 10th St. Next To Pizza Hut<lb/>
 'If you have to do laundry<lb/>
do it in style<lb/>
New Student Initiation<lb/>
To Campus<lb/>
Organizations<lb/>
Student Government requests any<lb/>
campus organization interested in the<lb/>
opportunity of meeting new ECU<lb/>
Students to contact the Student<lb/>
Government offices by Friday May<lb/>
31st. (757-6611, ext. 218). Thank You.<lb/>
S3<lb/>
- ' : '??"?" C.  7<lb/>
i'm?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0004"/><lb/>
2Uib iEaat (Earflltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton, c?, sianager<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, mmm nam<lb/>
Harold Joyner. co-s e? Tom Luvender. nmrvM,<lb/>
Randy Mews, cos &amp;?, Anthony Martin, inW m<lb/>
Rick McCORMac, spomEduo, John Peterson, cmm<lb/>
Bill Mitchell, crcui,? bill Dawson, ???? hmt<lb/>
Daniel Maurer. .?.?.? ?? DeChanile Johnson. ??<lb/>
May 29, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Discrimination<lb/>
Decision Should Be Students'<lb/>
A bill filed in the state legislature<lb/>
which would prohibit campus<lb/>
recognition of homosexual<lb/>
organizations is a step back to the<lb/>
dark ages as well as an infringement<lb/>
on the rights of student govern-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
The bill, which was filed by Rep.<lb/>
Michael P. Decker, R-Forsyth,<lb/>
would not allow university recogni-<lb/>
tion of a n y "avowedly<lb/>
homosexual'1 organization or one<lb/>
which advocated homosexuality.<lb/>
The recognition andor funding<lb/>
of individual groups should be left<lb/>
up to individual student government<lb/>
associations. Any gro'ip can be<lb/>
recognized by the ECU SGA simply<lb/>
by presenting a constitution for ap-<lb/>
proval by the SGA legislature.<lb/>
When universities acted in loco<lb/>
parentis, they had the power to<lb/>
determine what was considered to<lb/>
be "moral" behavior for students.<lb/>
It seems as if the state is now trying<lb/>
to acquire that power by determin-<lb/>
ing which groups deserve recogni-<lb/>
tion by the SGA.<lb/>
The state has no place in the<lb/>
determination of which groups will<lb/>
be officially recognized. SGA<lb/>
legislators pay student fees, as do<lb/>
the students they represent, in-<lb/>
cluding homosexuals. If the SGA<lb/>
wants to recognize homosexual<lb/>
organizations and provide them<lb/>
with funding from student fees,<lb/>
they should be able to do so.<lb/>
The implications of state involve-<lb/>
ment in the SGA recognition of<lb/>
groups are frightening. For exam-<lb/>
ple, could the state then decide they<lb/>
didn't want schools to recognize<lb/>
left-wing groups because they con-<lb/>
sidered their beliefs to be wrong?<lb/>
From Decker's proposal, one<lb/>
could almost assume he was in-<lb/>
spired by massive uprisings of<lb/>
homosexual organizations<lb/>
throughout the UNC system. It's<lb/>
actually extremely ditticult for a<lb/>
homosexual organization to get<lb/>
started on a campus.<lb/>
When the East Carolina Gay<lb/>
Community attempted to get<lb/>
recognition and funding several<lb/>
years ago, there was a tremendous<lb/>
furor. The group wanted a small<lb/>
amount of money to print literature<lb/>
addressing homosexual concerns.<lb/>
Thev were finally funded.<lb/>
Prohibiting recognition of<lb/>
homosexual organizations might<lb/>
well affect a significant proportion<lb/>
of the student body. According to<lb/>
many surveys, approximately 10<lb/>
percent of the adult population is<lb/>
homosexual. Discriminating against<lb/>
10 percent of the tuition- and fee-<lb/>
paying student body is un-<lb/>
forgivable.<lb/>
Also, discrimination against<lb/>
homosexual organizations can have<lb/>
strong legal consequences, as of-<lb/>
ficials at Georgetown University<lb/>
discovered recently. Georgetown's<lb/>
trustees voted to recognize twc<lb/>
organizations for homosexual<lb/>
students to settle a discriminatior<lb/>
lawsuit brought against the universi-<lb/>
ty-<lb/>
One of the purposes of a college<lb/>
education is hopefully to expose a<lb/>
student to different values anc<lb/>
lifestyles, thus broadening theii<lb/>
horizons. It's not as if students art<lb/>
being forced to understand and con-<lb/>
done the homosexual lifestyle.<lb/>
Like any other minority<lb/>
on campus, homosexuals should<lb/>
have the right to organize and<lb/>
students should have the chance to<lb/>
hear what the groups have to say.<lb/>
Students themselves should be<lb/>
able to determine what they con-<lb/>
sider morally permissible legislation<lb/>
for the student government, not the<lb/>
state legislature.<lb/>
Russians Are Worse<lb/>
Apartheid Not So Bad<lb/>
For God's sake, will all the bleeding<lb/>
hearts please stop yelling about South<lb/>
Africa's apartheid? Let them turn off<lb/>
their tear glands, forget about their silly<lb/>
slogans, and listen to some reason for a<lb/>
change.<lb/>
There are so many misconceptions<lb/>
and misunderstandings about the apar-<lb/>
theid issue that it's hard to know which<lb/>
one to attack first. One thing that must<lb/>
be cleared up concerns how repressive<lb/>
South African society is compared to<lb/>
others. Congressman Walter Fauntroy,<lb/>
D-D.C, represents the contemporary<lb/>
warped thinking here ? on CNN's<lb/>
"Crossfire" program, he branded<lb/>
South Africa "the most repressive<lb/>
society in the world He was denounc-<lb/>
ing the arrest of hundreds of blacks,<lb/>
some of whome died in custody.<lb/>
His solo denunciation is a sign of the<lb/>
mentality among many American<lb/>
leaders. South Africa arrests hundreds<lb/>
of blacks and Fauntroy and Company<lb/>
are filled with righteous but selective in-<lb/>
dignation. The Soviet Union and its ilk<lb/>
throw millions into slave labor camps to<lb/>
be worked to death, and Fauntroy is<lb/>
silent. South Africans have some<lb/>
religious freedom; communist countries<lb/>
like Albania enforce atheism by killing<lb/>
the religious. But according to Faun-<lb/>
troy's logic, South Africa is worse.<lb/>
Such thinking, if it deserves to be called<lb/>
that, is pathetic.<lb/>
Now let's talk about disinvestment.<lb/>
Some apartheid opponents want total<lb/>
disinvestment in order to pressure<lb/>
South Africa to grant full civil rights to<lb/>
its black and colored population.<lb/>
Despite evidence to the contrary, they<lb/>
proclaim that such a move would work.<lb/>
Actually, disinvestment would give only<lb/>
moral comfort to its opponents. What<lb/>
does this mean?<lb/>
Unpleasant reality would whack us in<lb/>
the face if we disinvested We cannot<lb/>
escape the fact that South Africa is<lb/>
loaded with precious metals we simply<lb/>
can't do without, many of which aren't<lb/>
found elsewhere. As one steel executive<lb/>
The Right Word<lb/>
Dennis Kilcovne<lb/>
puts it, "Without these (minerals), you<lb/>
couldn't build a jet engine or an<lb/>
automobile, run a train, build an oil<lb/>
refinery or a power plant. You couldn't<lb/>
process food, or run a sanitary<lb/>
restaurant, or a hospital operating<lb/>
room, or build a computer In other<lb/>
words, if we disinvested and cut<lb/>
ourselves off from these minerals, we<lb/>
would simply have to write off any fur-<lb/>
ther technological advance. We could<lb/>
kiss our economy goodbye and watch<lb/>
national security go down the tubes.<lb/>
Consider also the regime that might<lb/>
emerge if the present government is<lb/>
overthrown. For decades the blacks<lb/>
have been denied education and ex-<lb/>
perience in civil affairs and, conse-<lb/>
quently, are probably not ready to<lb/>
assume full control of a democratic<lb/>
government. A look at all the other<lb/>
states of Africa, where self-government<lb/>
usually fails, is not reassuring. The<lb/>
same situation exists in neighboring<lb/>
Rhodesia. International pressure was<lb/>
applied there, white rule ended, and<lb/>
black tribal rule, led by Marxist Robert<lb/>
Mugabe, began. Today Rhodesia,<lb/>
known as Zimbabwe, is a poverty-<lb/>
stricken, chaotic mess. The minority<lb/>
tribes are severly oppressed, whites are<lb/>
fleeing the country and takine their<lb/>
money with them, and a one-par j<lb/>
tatorship has emerged fina<lb/>
primarily by communist North K ?<lb/>
I'm not saying that such a scci u<lb/>
necessarily happen in South Africa<lb/>
it seems the liberals have ,<lb/>
thought to such possibilities Thev &amp;<lb/>
mand South Africa grant c mp :<lb/>
rights to blacks in a day ? it to .<lb/>
100 years after slavery to do the tanu<lb/>
for American blacks so who th<lb/>
are we to be lecturing them0 And <lb/>
tainly when vou compare South V-<lb/>
to the U.S there is a big differenct<lb/>
But South Africa is an African rial<lb/>
not a western one. It is Africa's<lb/>
prosperous nation, especialh<lb/>
blacks, for whom wages rose 275 re-<lb/>
cent from 19"1 to 1982. In faci<lb/>
reason. South Africa has a seri<lb/>
blem with illegal immigration.<lb/>
Hey, maybe we should ask South<lb/>
Africa's blacks what they think 7<lb/>
are overwhelmingly opposed tc<lb/>
disinvestment. Gatsha Buthetezei,<lb/>
leader of the Zulu tribe (the couain i<lb/>
largest) said, "it is moralh impenswe<lb/>
that American firms remain active here<lb/>
U.S. Ambassador to Sou ft a<lb/>
Herman Nickel pointed out thai theen-<lb/>
tire history of racial progre- is linked<lb/>
to economic progress. Economic ad-<lb/>
vancement under free-markei<lb/>
economics has been the most powerful<lb/>
force for integration and civil rights<lb/>
because economic power is political<lb/>
power. Disinvestment would soi i<lb/>
the miserable position of South Africa's<lb/>
blacks, isolate them economical!), arc<lb/>
sentence them permanently to the suf-<lb/>
fering which is so often decried b<lb/>
disinvestment proponents.<lb/>
Getting Mentioned Key To Presidential Race<lb/>
By Charles Lane<lb/>
Th? New Republic<lb/>
From his perch in a small office on the<lb/>
top floor of a glass and steel tower<lb/>
somehwere between Capitol Hill and the<lb/>
Potomac, the Great Mentioner scans the<lb/>
crop of promising politicians in search<lb/>
of the lucky few who deserve to be Men-<lb/>
tioned as possible presidential con-<lb/>
tenders in 1988 and, believe it or not<lb/>
1992.<lb/>
AW York Times columnist Russell<lb/>
Baker first discovered the Great Men-<lb/>
tioner, who has never been seen or inter-<lb/>
viewed, in 1963. Since then, the G.Ms<lb/>
only media contact has come in<lb/>
clandestine phone calls to a select group<lb/>
within the Washington press corps who<lb/>
dutifully report his early predictions.<lb/>
The G.Ms work is critical. Getting<lb/>
Mentioned lends that elusive yet essen-<lb/>
tial quality ? credibility ? to a fledgl-<lb/>
ing campaign. It often means further<lb/>
press coverage and early financial com-<lb/>
mitments. Indeed, the contest to catch<lb/>
the eye of the G.M. is, in many ways, the<lb/>
first "primary" of the 1988 campaign ?<lb/>
and it's already under way.<lb/>
Why do some get Mentioned and<lb/>
others do not? The Mentioner, of<lb/>
course, could not be reached for com-<lb/>
ment. But those who know him best,<lb/>
Washington's political consultants, col-<lb/>
umnists and other insiders, supplied<lb/>
clues.<lb/>
The Automatics Kennedys and incum-<lb/>
bent vice presidents are automatically<lb/>
Mentioned. So is anyone who ran last<lb/>
time and lost without appearing<lb/>
ridiculous ? Gary Hart, but not Rubin<lb/>
Askew. Governors from big states like<lb/>
New York, California, Illinois and<lb/>
Texas almost always get Mentioned,<lb/>
mainly because these states contain the<lb/>
largest media markets.<lb/>
Chris Matthews, House Speaker Tip<lb/>
O'Neill's administrative assistant, says<lb/>
Ohioans are also automatics, because<lb/>
somewhere along the line the G.M.<lb/>
noticed that the state supplies big-name<lb/>
politicians for both parties.<lb/>
Grooming Counts Wherever possible,<lb/>
the Great Mentioner prefers to Mention<lb/>
heroes. Astronauts, former atheletes<lb/>
and veterans are practically shoo-ins.<lb/>
Otherwise, it's usually enough to be<lb/>
young and handsome.<lb/>
"You have to comport yourself in a<lb/>
certain way that's not flaky says a<lb/>
political reporter. "That means appear-<lb/>
ing at all the right parties, making solid,<lb/>
non-flamboyant speeches Colorado<lb/>
Gov. Richard Lamm used to get Men-<lb/>
tioned, but then he made a speech about<lb/>
letting elderly people die.<lb/>
It helps to come from a famous<lb/>
political family, but the Mentioner has<lb/>
grown tolerant of would-be candidates<lb/>
who don't have pedigrees. Those close<lb/>
to the Mentioner say this is why Lee<lb/>
Iacocca, Jeane Kirkpatrick and<lb/>
Elizabeth Dole are being Mentioned.<lb/>
But, they add, the G.M. is probably ex-<lb/>
perimenting and will revert to traditional<lb/>
preferences when the campaign gets<lb/>
serious.<lb/>
Go Against the Grain The G.M. loves<lb/>
it when a poitician defies "conventional<lb/>
wisdom Bruce Babbitt of Arizona,<lb/>
who has taken on non-means-tested en-<lb/>
titlements and labor unions, has scored<lb/>
big here.<lb/>
The Great Mentioner favors pols like<lb/>
Babbitt and Virginia Gov. Chuck Robb,<lb/>
both elected in states where the other<lb/>
party traditionally dominates. He<lb/>
believes this demonstrates a moderate<lb/>
ideology that has national appeal, and<lb/>
ever since Jimmy Carter surprised him,<lb/>
the G.M. has been big on "outsiders<lb/>
The Importance of Timing The G.M.<lb/>
looks for a "good calendar He ad-<lb/>
mires the tidy logic of politicians who ar-<lb/>
range careers so they leave a lower office<lb/>
precisely when a higher one is opening<lb/>
up. One Democratic media consultant<lb/>
cited Gov. Bob Graham of Florida as so-<lb/>
meone with a good calendar.<lb/>
"His timing is perfect. If he wins his<lb/>
race against Paula Hawkins for Senate<lb/>
in '86, he can serve six years and then be<lb/>
coming right up in '92<lb/>
Of course, those who possess these<lb/>
qualities can't sit idly by. There are at<lb/>
least three tried-and-true methods of<lb/>
catching the Mentioner's eye.<lb/>
Come Up with a New Idea Making a<lb/>
lot of noise about a major national issue<lb/>
is a good way to start. Mario Cuomo's<lb/>
Notre Dame speech on religion and<lb/>
politics set the Mentioner on his ear.<lb/>
The G.M. also likes tax bills. Both<lb/>
Sen. Bill Bradley and Rep. Richard<lb/>
Gephardt have parlayed their "Fair<lb/>
Tax" into heavy Mentioning. Jack<lb/>
Kemp first burst onto the Mentioning<lb/>
scene with his Kemp-Roth tax cut and<lb/>
has been keeping the pressure on with<lb/>
his own FAST tax reform plan.<lb/>
Break Up the Monotony "You have<lb/>
to find out where the Mentioners gather,<lb/>
and do something in that place says<lb/>
political consultant Bob Squier, ap-<lb/>
parently confusing the G.M. himself<lb/>
with his associates in the press.<lb/>
 "Things like the National Governors<lb/>
Conference, or a convention convened<lb/>
for the nomination of a candidate<lb/>
everyone knows is going to lose, are bor-<lb/>
ing, awful events that the Mentioners<lb/>
have to cover, so they're a great place to<lb/>
do something impressive<lb/>
Creative Schmoozing Probably the<lb/>
oldest trick in the book is to plant your<lb/>
name. It's bad form to call up the Men-<lb/>
tioner and ask to be Mentioned, but it's<lb/>
acceptable to call up one of his press<lb/>
associates and offer to buy dinner.<lb/>
"Anyone who sits down with a col-<lb/>
umnist and can comment on his column<lb/>
is an 'insightful' guy says Post colum-<lb/>
nist Mark Shields. "And, if he does it in<lb/>
a way that doesn't look rehearsed, then<lb/>
he must certainly know his way around<lb/>
New Hampshire<lb/>
Those who do get Mentioned usually<lb/>
fulfill some combination of these condi-<lb/>
tions. No single condition is necessary or<lb/>
sufficient. Hence Babbitt gets mention-<lb/>
ed because he's an outsider who<lb/>
schmoozes well, but also because he's<lb/>
gone against the grain and has good<lb/>
calendar. Massachusetts Gov. Michael<lb/>
Dukakis is an able official with decent<lb/>
calendar, but he's almost Unmen-<lb/>
tionable ? a Democrat from a heavily<lb/>
Democratic state, he doesn't go against<lb/>
the grain.<lb/>
Oddly, the Great Mentioner has rarely<lb/>
predicted winners. The history of<lb/>
presidential politics is littered with can-<lb/>
didates who were Mentioned but either<lb/>
never ran or lost badly: Mark Hatfield<lb/>
William Milliken. Jim Thompsen<lb/>
Harold Hughes, William Scranton. In<lb/>
1972 the G.M. bet on Ed Muskie. but<lb/>
George McGovern won. In 196 the<lb/>
Mentioner never saw Jimmv Carter until<lb/>
the Iowa Caucus. In 1980 the G.M. was<lb/>
high on George Bush and Howard<lb/>
Baker.<lb/>
Indeed, some say the Mentioner has<lb/>
lost touch with the American people.<lb/>
Yet the G.Ms forecasts continue to<lb/>
find their way into print, and to be taken<lb/>
seriously. As long as politicians see an<lb/>
advantage in being Mentioned, thev will<lb/>
clamor for the G.Ms attention. And as<lb/>
long as columnists have to file twice a<lb/>
r w y wiU in thc mket for the<lb/>
j.m. s words of wisdom<lb/>
1 h<lb/>
Award<lb/>
newest maj i a,a<lb/>
ship pi j<lb/>
privau<lb/>
established<lb/>
trav"<lb/>
for lea :<lb/>
cellcn <lb/>
the pr .<lb/>
succci<lb/>
"The<lb/>
end s<lb/>
r ol i n a<lb/>
Wi r<lb/>
the Univei<lb/>
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A n a .<lb/>
bright <lb/>
ville camp<lb/>
in their pr<lb/>
The<lb/>
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and Dul<lb/>
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pensev i h.<lb/>
for up toeig<lb/>
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Although E(<lb/>
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Executive Co<lb/>
make upcomina<lb/>
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SGA President D<lb/>
recently announ<lb/>
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repress es<lb/>
tial members<lb/>
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66T COT OF JAIL FREE CARP<lb/>
Rising<lb/>
Push<lb/>
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thanks to rising utilitv<lb/>
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and inflation ra<lb/>
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Last year<lb/>
an average c'<lb/>
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"There's do i<lb/>
trend contc I<lb/>
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the Association<lb/>
University H, uj <lb/>
"Each instuuuo<lb/>
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and Universitv H<lb/>
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he concurs. "Rates a.<lb/>
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Yet each instuuuo<lb/>
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University of Terl<lb/>
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enrollment will<lb/>
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Ierm<lb/>
CTWC<lb/>
CARP<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The University Scholars<lb/>
Awards program at HCU is the<lb/>
newest major academic scholar<lb/>
ship program in the state. The<lb/>
privately-funded program was<lb/>
established this past year to at-<lb/>
tract students with high potential<lb/>
for leadership and academic ex-<lb/>
cellence to ECU. In its infancy,<lb/>
the program is being hailed as a<lb/>
success.<lb/>
'The University Scholars pro-<lb/>
gram is a splendid addition to the<lb/>
endowment program of East<lb/>
Carolina University says<lb/>
William C. Friday, president of<lb/>
the University of North Carolina.<lb/>
'The University Scholars<lb/>
Awards will bring talented and<lb/>
bright young people to the Green-<lb/>
ville campus, and we will rejoice<lb/>
in their presence<lb/>
The University Scholars<lb/>
Awards program is similar in<lb/>
operation to the Morehead,<lb/>
Caldwell and A.B. Duke scholar-<lb/>
ships at UNC, N.C. State and<lb/>
and Duke University. Each stu-<lb/>
dent selected as a University<lb/>
Scholar will receive $3,000 per<lb/>
year to cover tuition and ex-<lb/>
penses. The awards are renewable<lb/>
for up to eight semesters, provid-<lb/>
ed the recipients maintain 3.0<lb/>
grade point averages.<lb/>
ECU's scholarship program<lb/>
differs from the others, however,<lb/>
in that it is funded by individuals<lb/>
and groups of individuals instead<lb/>
of a single donor or family. To<lb/>
date, 14 donors have endowed 23<lb/>
scholarships, surpassing the<lb/>
university's initial goal by three<lb/>
Ten of the scholarships wen<lb/>
endowed by current or former<lb/>
members of the ECl I board of<lb/>
m<lb/>
trustees or other boards; 18 were<lb/>
endowed by alumni, parents of<lb/>
alumni or former staff members.<lb/>
Included in the list of donors is<lb/>
ECU's Alumni Association,<lb/>
which has endowed four scholar-<lb/>
ships. "Although the Alumni<lb/>
Association sponsors many<lb/>
scholarships each year, the<lb/>
University Scholars Awards pre-<lb/>
sent a distinct opportunity to in-<lb/>
fluence the lives of our future<lb/>
leaders says N.C. Appeals<lb/>
Court Judge Gerald Arnold,<lb/>
ECU Alumni Association presi-<lb/>
dent. 'The program represents<lb/>
an exciting challenge for both<lb/>
donors and recipients, a<lb/>
challenge to uphold and pursue<lb/>
the quality of excellence alumni<lb/>
have already experienced at ECU<lb/>
and a challenge to incoming<lb/>
students to discover and surpass<lb/>
that traditional quality<lb/>
CD. (Don) Langston of<lb/>
Winterville, a long-time sup-<lb/>
porter of ECU, also endowed<lb/>
four scholarships. "ECU has<lb/>
been good to my family and to<lb/>
me over the years Langston<lb/>
said. "The university is an impor-<lb/>
tant asset to all of us in Pitt<lb/>
County, and I'm glad that my in-<lb/>
vestment will help attract deserv-<lb/>
ing students<lb/>
It was Langston's endowment<lb/>
that allowed the university to sur<lb/>
pass its initial goal of securing 20<lb/>
scholarships by the end of the<lb/>
1984-85 school year. "At every<lb/>
stage, the University Scholars<lb/>
wards Piogram has exceeded<lb/>
our dreams says Dr. John M.<lb/>
How ell, ECU Chancellor.<lb/>
Howell began putting the pro-<lb/>
gram together a year ago with the<lb/>
help of James L. I anier Jr vice<lb/>
chancellor of Institutional Ad<lb/>
Executive Council<lb/>
Plans New Seminar<lb/>
B HAROLD .IOYNEK<lb/>
l SNewi Mil r<lb/>
Although ECU's SGA remains<lb/>
inactive during the summer, the<lb/>
Executive Council continues to<lb/>
make upcoming plans and<lb/>
manages to keep the wheels of<lb/>
student government turning.<lb/>
SGA President David Brown<lb/>
recently announced that one of<lb/>
the major activities planned for<lb/>
this summer will be the organiza-<lb/>
tion of campus groups during<lb/>
freshmen orientation, enabling<lb/>
representatives to recruit poten-<lb/>
tial members.<lb/>
'The purpose of this<lb/>
meeting Brown said, "is to give<lb/>
campus groups an initial ex-<lb/>
posure to new students. When<lb/>
they return in the fall, they can go<lb/>
ahead and join these groups<lb/>
The New Student initiation to<lb/>
Campus Organizations, Brown<lb/>
-aid, will comprise of all campus<lb/>
organizations, whether they are<lb/>
funded by the SGA or not, and<lb/>
have a representative on hand to<lb/>
explain to freshmen what the<lb/>
group is about "It will be an ex-<lb/>
cellent opportunity for campus<lb/>
groups to introduce themselves to<lb/>
the freshmen Brown said.<lb/>
"So far, the SGA excutivc<lb/>
council and WZMB-FM have<lb/>
committed themselves to the pro-<lb/>
gram he said. Other groups will<lb/>
have until Friday, May 30, to<lb/>
contact the SGA office to reserve<lb/>
space for the meeting.<lb/>
The program will be offered<lb/>
once to each of the freshmen<lb/>
orientation groups begining June<lb/>
13 at 1 p.m. and ending July 10<lb/>
from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
"I think when we give respon-<lb/>
sibly to freshmen Brown said,<lb/>
"we make responsible students. I<lb/>
encourage all campus groups to<lb/>
become a part of NSICO and get<lb/>
the freshmen involved.<lb/>
Other members of the SGA Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Council include Chris<lb/>
romasic, vice president; Tony<lb/>
Braswell, treasurer and Lisa Car-<lb/>
roll, secretary. Brown added that<lb/>
through their efforts, NSICO was<lb/>
made possible.<lb/>
Rising Living Expenses<lb/>
Push Dorm Costs Up<lb/>
(CPS) ? Students will pay<lb/>
more to live on campus next fall,<lb/>
thanks to rising utility and hous-<lb/>
ing costs, increasing staff salaries<lb/>
and inflation rates, say campus<lb/>
housing officials around the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Last year, dorm rates went up<lb/>
an average of four to seven per-<lb/>
cent, and observers say the same<lb/>
factors that forced up costs last<lb/>
vear will increase 1985-86 dorm<lb/>
rates by about the same percen-<lb/>
tages.<lb/>
"There's no definite dorm<lb/>
trend contends Paul Jahr,<lb/>
fourth consecutive year, thanks<lb/>
to tighter admissions re-<lb/>
quirements.<lb/>
Because there will be fewer<lb/>
students, UT housing rates will<lb/>
go up 5.5 percent next fall, says<lb/>
Residence Director Jim Grubb.<lb/>
"The yearly increase for us is<lb/>
more related to the inflation<lb/>
trend he explains. "In the<lb/>
future, we'll see increases staying<lb/>
at about four to six percent<lb/>
Meanwhile, Michigan State ad-<lb/>
ministrators anticipate the largest<lb/>
freshman enrollment in five<lb/>
years, and a six to seven percent<lb/>
research committee chairman of increase in the rate of returning<lb/>
the Association of College and students.<lb/>
University Housing Officers.<lb/>
"Each institution has its own<lb/>
demographics that determine<lb/>
rates<lb/>
"Dorms closing, opening,<lb/>
rates rising, lowering. They're<lb/>
probably all true adds Jim<lb/>
Grimm, president of the College<lb/>
and University Housing Officers<lb/>
International and housing direc-<lb/>
tor at the University of Florida.<lb/>
"There is no national trend<lb/>
he concurs. "Rates are dependent<lb/>
on each institution and its enroll-<lb/>
ment standards<lb/>
Yet each institution's specific<lb/>
conditions seem to being on dorm<lb/>
hikes whether enrollments rise or<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
University of Tennessee of-<lb/>
ficials, for example, predict<lb/>
enrollment will drop for the<lb/>
But at Michigan State, more<lb/>
students mean "housing will still<lb/>
go up 2.9 percent says Housing<lb/>
Officer Chasrles Gagliano.<lb/>
"We're very proud it's below<lb/>
the inflation factor he says.<lb/>
"It's one of the lowest increases<lb/>
in the nation<lb/>
Gagliano says higher enroll-<lb/>
ment won't offset the increasing<lb/>
costs of institutional<lb/>
maintenance.<lb/>
Indeed, Penn State's rates will<lb/>
go up five percent next fall to<lb/>
cover increased utility and<lb/>
operating costs. School officials<lb/>
predict nearly SOX) students won't<lb/>
be able to get into campus hous-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
"Prices are going up adds<lb/>
UW student Lisa Stewart. "But<lb/>
mostly they're fair. I think the<lb/>
dorms are fine<lb/>
vancement. Their original plan<lb/>
called for five University<lb/>
Scholars to enter ECU in the fall<lb/>
of 1985, followed by five more in<lb/>
1986, five more in 1987, and five<lb/>
more in 1988 for a total of 20<lb/>
scholarships.<lb/>
They decided that endowments<lb/>
of no less than $40,000 would be<lb/>
needed to fund each scholarship.<lb/>
The endowments would be in-<lb/>
vested with $3,000 of the interest<lb/>
going to the recipient to cover tui-<lb/>
tion and expenses. The excess in-<lb/>
terest money would be reinvested<lb/>
to cover any rising costs in the<lb/>
years to come.<lb/>
Each endowment would be<lb/>
presented to its recipient in a<lb/>
name selected by the donor. "We<lb/>
felt that it was important for the<lb/>
students receiving the scholar-<lb/>
ships to understand that there<lb/>
were individuals and families<lb/>
who thought enough of the<lb/>
potential for service that the<lb/>
students exhibited to be willing to<lb/>
make that sort of investment in<lb/>
people they've never seen<lb/>
Lanier commented.<lb/>
Lat fall ECU's Admissions Of-<lb/>
fice began seeking nominations<lb/>
for the first awards from high<lb/>
school principals and guidance<lb/>
counsellors ? 135 were received.<lb/>
Fifty-three semi-finalists were<lb/>
selected by the admissions office,<lb/>
which were then evaluated by<lb/>
regional selection committees<lb/>
made up of alumni, faculty,<lb/>
trustees and high school guidance<lb/>
counselors. These committees<lb/>
selected 24 regional finalists who<lb/>
were interviewed. From those 24,<lb/>
10 finalists were selected. A final<lb/>
screening committee selected the<lb/>
five recipients and two alternates<lb/>
after talking with the 10 finalists<lb/>
during extensive interviews on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
RL. Jones of Raleigh, a<lb/>
member of that final screening<lb/>
committee, felt so strongly that<lb/>
the two alternates were just as<lb/>
qualified as the five recipients<lb/>
that he personally funded two<lb/>
scholarships for the alternates. "I<lb/>
just couldn't stand to see those<lb/>
two left out he said. "I was just<lb/>
amazed at the quality that was ex-<lb/>
hibited by this group of people<lb/>
Jones said.<lb/>
In addition to the money pro-<lb/>
vided, University Scholars will<lb/>
have many advantages as ECU<lb/>
students. Each scholar will be<lb/>
automatically admitted to the<lb/>
Honors Program, a program<lb/>
which allows exceptional students<lb/>
to take most of their freshman<lb/>
and sophomore requirements in<lb/>
small classes with the best<lb/>
students and professors.<lb/>
University Scholars will also be<lb/>
offered opportunities for<lb/>
research and publication not<lb/>
usually available to<lb/>
undergraduate students. And<lb/>
through the Thomas W. Rivers<lb/>
Foreign Exchange Endowment<lb/>
Fund, University Scholars will<lb/>
have the option of attending a<lb/>
?rvii<lb/>
DONNA EDWARDS<lb/>
Owner<lb/>
Large Selection of Land Hermit Crabs<lb/>
We Carry A Complete Line<lb/>
of Dog, Cat, and Fish Supplies<lb/>
Master Card and Visa are accepted and financing is<lb/>
available.<lb/>
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GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
PHONE 756-9222<lb/>
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RIVERHBUUFF<lb/>
'Spacious Affordable Luxury Apartments"<lb/>
Your Choice of a Microwave Oven or 13<lb/>
Color TV If You Sign A 12 Month's Lease.<lb/>
Limited Time Only Offer For New<lb/>
Residents Only. Present Residents Not Eligi-<lb/>
ble For Offer.<lb/>
? Professional Management and Maintenance<lb/>
? 2 Bedroom Townhouses &amp; 1 Bedroom Garden Apartments<lb/>
? Kitchens Feature Dishwashers &amp; Disposals<lb/>
? Fully Carpeted<lb/>
? Private Laundry Facilities<lb/>
? Large Pool<lb/>
? Cable T.V. Included<lb/>
? Private Balconies<lb/>
? Convenient To Shopping Centers &amp; Restaurants<lb/>
? ECU Bus Service<lb/>
? Security Deposits Negotiable<lb/>
Directions: 10th Street Extension To River Bluff Road<lb/>
Next To Rivergite Shopping Center.<lb/>
PHONE 758-401S<lb/>
university outside the United<lb/>
States for at least one semester.<lb/>
Another unique aspect of the<lb/>
University Scholars Program is<lb/>
its commitment to the handicap-<lb/>
ped. James M. Dixon of<lb/>
Greensboro, an ECU trustee<lb/>
whose daughter participated in<lb/>
ECU's first post-secondary pro-<lb/>
gram for the hard of hearing, en-<lb/>
dowed two scholarships that will<lb/>
be reserved for qualified students<lb/>
who are handicapped.<lb/>
"The University Scholars is a<lb/>
very outstanding program Dix-<lb/>
on said. "I thought that if han-<lb/>
dicapped students could benefit<lb/>
from it, that would make the pro-<lb/>
gram that much more special<lb/>
The first University Scholars<lb/>
were formally introduced in April<lb/>
during ECU's scholars weekend.<lb/>
The seven ? Leslie Council and<lb/>
Erik Johnson of Raleigh, Clay<lb/>
Deanhardt of Greenville, Alan<lb/>
Jones of Rutherfordton, Andy<lb/>
Miskavage of West Newbury,<lb/>
Mass Tommy Pittman of<lb/>
Wilson, and April Weatheringotn<lb/>
of Washington, N.C, ? will be<lb/>
majoring in such fields as pre-<lb/>
med, music, art and applied<lb/>
physics. All are similar<lb/>
academically, participate in ex-<lb/>
tracurricular activities and share<lb/>
excitement about the University<lb/>
Scholars program.<lb/>
"It's about the best thing<lb/>
that's ever happened to me<lb/>
Alan Jones said.<lb/>
Howell's plans for the future<lb/>
of the University Scholars<lb/>
Awards are to continue to seek<lb/>
endowments so that more and<lb/>
more students of the caliber of<lb/>
the first seven recipients will be<lb/>
attracted to ECU. "We're very<lb/>
excited about this new program<lb/>
and what it means for East<lb/>
Carolina Howell said. "Those<lb/>
honored with the award will<lb/>
know they've been selected to at-<lb/>
tend one of the most challenging<lb/>
schools in North Carolina, and<lb/>
one of the great young univer-<lb/>
sities of the south<lb/>
Ort'ICAL<lb/>
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210-212 East 5th Street<lb/>
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Present<lb/>
DRAFTNITE<lb/>
Wednesday, May 29, 1985 9:00-2:00 A M<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies $1 00 18yrs<lb/>
10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
SUMMER COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
Thursday, May 30, 1985<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Guys &amp; 18 yrs.<lb/>
9:00-2:00 A.M.<lb/>
Free for Ladies<lb/>
5 DRAFT WHILE IT LASTS<lb/>
60 CANS TIL MIDNIGHT<lb/>
85 TIL CLOSE<lb/>
????? iii?t<lb/>
?r-?-?-<lb/>
??IHJ? ?<lb/>
,m mum m m mt<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0006"/><lb/>
THE fcAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
Doonesbu<lb/>
MAY 29. 1985<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Travolta Comes Of Age With<lb/>
'Perfect' Role In New Film<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ? John<lb/>
Travolta, 31, says he's come of<lb/>
age as an actor.<lb/>
As the star of Perfect, to be<lb/>
released in threaters next month,<lb/>
Travolta plays a journalist caught<lb/>
up in an intellectual web of pro-<lb/>
fessional ethics and a personal<lb/>
romantic entanglement.<lb/>
"For 10 years I've done the<lb/>
best I could with the roles given<lb/>
me he said. "Now I'm Finally<lb/>
at an age where I can play really<lb/>
interesting roles. I no longer have<lb/>
to settle for the various<lb/>
statements of youth.<lb/>
"I'm at a state in my career to<lb/>
accept roles that went to Red-<lb/>
ford, Beatty, Hoffman and<lb/>
Newman when they were my age,<lb/>
playing guys in their 30's and 40's<lb/>
who have experienced more in-<lb/>
teresting events in life than guys<lb/>
in their 20's<lb/>
Travolta has little competition<lb/>
in his age group. He is older than<lb/>
the horde of new screen heroes,<lb/>
Tim Hutton, Sean Penn, Michael<lb/>
Pare and the rest, and con-<lb/>
siderably younger than the likes<lb/>
of DeNiro, Hoffman and Pacino.<lb/>
"When I was coming up there<lb/>
were only a few actors my age<lb/>
working regularly he said,<lb/>
"guys like Richard Gere, Treat<lb/>
Williams and Henry Winkler.<lb/>
Producers though realized the<lb/>
talent pool was too small and<lb/>
they began developoing new<lb/>
talent to Fill the generation gap<lb/>
Travolta has matured im-<lb/>
pressively since his debut in 1975<lb/>
as Vinnie Barbarino, the high<lb/>
school heart throb in the TV sit-<lb/>
 ???? com "Welcome Back, Kotter<lb/>
Travolta feels he has come of age as an actor with his work in the new film "Perfect" in which he plavs a His electric blue eyes, square jaw<lb/>
Rolling Stone magazine reporter who falls in love with his subject, played by Jamie Lee Curtis, and cleft chin look better on the<lb/>
man than the boy.<lb/>
In the past decade Travolta has<lb/>
starred in only 10 movies, four of<lb/>
which were stunning box-office<lb/>
hits that collectively earned a<lb/>
billion dollars worldwide:<lb/>
? Grease, $400 million, plus 25<lb/>
million records sold.<lb/>
? Saturday Night Fever, $350<lb/>
million, 30 million records.<lb/>
? Urban Cowboy, $100 million, 5<lb/>
million records.<lb/>
? Staying Alive, $150 million, 3<lb/>
million records.<lb/>
Blowout, Moment By Moment<lb/>
and Two of a Kind were less suc-<lb/>
cessful, but did not lose money.<lb/>
Travolta turned down other<lb/>
Films that suceeded beyond all ex-<lb/>
pectations: An Officer and a<lb/>
Gentleman ? which was written<lb/>
for him ? Arthur, Midnight Ex-<lb/>
press and Splash,<lb/>
"I don't regret not making<lb/>
those pictures Travolta said.<lb/>
"They probably served other ac-<lb/>
tors better than they would have<lb/>
me<lb/>
Travolta has wisely avoided<lb/>
over-exposure and type-casting,<lb/>
although he denies following any<lb/>
speciFic career plan. He has tried<lb/>
to counter balance the negative<lb/>
aspects of being a media star by<lb/>
keeping a low proFile in private<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Travolta takes pride in his ver-<lb/>
satility. Since leaving "Welcome<lb/>
Back, Kotter he has starred in<lb/>
comedy, musicals and drama.<lb/>
His range includes high school<lb/>
kid, ballet dancer, bank robber,<lb/>
sound technician and now in<lb/>
Perfect, a journalist.<lb/>
Travolta reads as many as 150<lb/>
scripts and screen treatments a<lb/>
year, never seeing hundreds of<lb/>
others that his agents turn down<lb/>
without consulting him. He<lb/>
chooses his roles by gut reaction<lb/>
rather than with an eye to career<lb/>
moves.<lb/>
"I do mosily what inspires<lb/>
me he said, "and that seems to<lb/>
keep variety in my career. Some<lb/>
of my pictures I've developed<lb/>
myself. But the inspirational<lb/>
qaulities of a script are the bot-<lb/>
tom line personal values and a<lb/>
good story<lb/>
Like other, older successful ac-<lb/>
tors, Travolta is becoming a pi<lb/>
ducer director. He will art pro-<lb/>
duction on lake Forest in<lb/>
September on locations in that<lb/>
Chicago suburb. He will nor.<lb/>
however, appear on screen.<lb/>
"Columbia Pictures is tal<lb/>
gamble with me Travolta said<lb/>
with an easy grin, and I'm<lb/>
determined to make il a fin<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
"I wanted to direct this picture<lb/>
because the material is close I<lb/>
mv heart. It's what I'm all abou(.<lb/>
It reflects my personal alues. 1<lb/>
don't know if I'll ever have the<lb/>
opportunity to act in a film li<lb/>
lake Forest, so I'm taking<lb/>
vantage of this chance to direct.<lb/>
"It's a family drama and I<lb/>
haven't even cast it yet. I'm look-<lb/>
ing for a 40-year-old man to plav<lb/>
the father and an l8-ye?<lb/>
to play his son. It's realh a<lb/>
tragedy, but not as dark as Or-<lb/>
dinary People<lb/>
"I'm also developing another<lb/>
picture based looseh on m own<lb/>
big family with major role tor<lb/>
my brother and sister. I feel<lb/>
strongly about famil) relatii<lb/>
ships and mutual Mirpo I've<lb/>
wanted to put together a Film like<lb/>
this for a lonu tune<lb/>
HOTSPOTS<lb/>
Tu week's entertainment at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
wiii be offered in the form of two<lb/>
motion pictures to be shown in<lb/>
Hendrx Theatre. This Wednes-<lb/>
day's feature is Eddie And The<lb/>
Cruisirs and the following Mon-<lb/>
day's picture will be Eating<lb/>
Raoul.<lb/>
Eddie And The Cruisers is a<lb/>
story of an innovative new band<lb/>
emerging from second-rate clubs<lb/>
to uncertain superstardom. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, just as the band is on<lb/>
the rise the lead singer of the<lb/>
group, Eddie Wilson (Michael<lb/>
Pare), drives off a bridge and is<lb/>
presumed dead. Twenty years<lb/>
later, an investigative reporter<lb/>
(Ellen Baskin) begins an ex-<lb/>
haustive probe into the star's<lb/>
mysterious life.<lb/>
Eddie And The Cruisers is a<lb/>
tale that many critics described as<lb/>
being similar to a Bruce Springs-<lb/>
teen image. The musical score is<lb/>
performed by John Cafferty and<lb/>
The Beaver Brown Band, who's<lb/>
soundtrack has gone gold with<lb/>
over 500,000 copies sold so far.<lb/>
Eating Raoul is an offbeat,<lb/>
satirical look at sex, greed, and<lb/>
modern times. It is the saga of<lb/>
Paul and Mary Bland (Paul<lb/>
Bartel and Mary Woronov) a<lb/>
solidly middle class couple, who<lb/>
are trying to raise enough money<lb/>
to open a restaurant. However,<lb/>
their means of earning the money<lb/>
are far from typical methods of<lb/>
income. They lure wealthy<lb/>
perverts into their apartment,<lb/>
bonk them on the head with a<lb/>
frying pan, and steal their cash.<lb/>
The plot thickens as Raoul, a<lb/>
charming psycopath played by<lb/>
Robert Beltran, becomes involv-<lb/>
ed with the couple's mischievous<lb/>
endeavors.<lb/>
Paul Bartel, co-star, co-<lb/>
author, and director, created<lb/>
Eating Raoul in the spirit of fun.<lb/>
However, in the beginning, he<lb/>
found it anything but fun. Even<lb/>
though he was an accomplished<lb/>
director, whose work included<lb/>
Death Race 290$ and Cannon-<lb/>
bmB, Band could not find anyone<lb/>
interesting in using the script.<lb/>
Because of Us offbeat theme and<lb/>
uflustwl title, everyone thought it<lb/>
not sett at the bos office.<lb/>
Writer To Conduct Workshop<lb/>
Emmy A ward-winning<lb/>
playwright John Ford<lb/>
Noonan will be featured at a con-<lb/>
ference for writers of poetry and<lb/>
plays scheduled for June 21-23.<lb/>
The event, the Southeastern<lb/>
Playwrights and Poets Con-<lb/>
ference, will include workshops<lb/>
conducted by Noonan and poets<lb/>
J.W. Rivers and David Chorlton,<lb/>
a seminar on incorporatin of<lb/>
human values into dalogue and<lb/>
poems, readings of works by con-<lb/>
ference participants, and several<lb/>
productions, including the<lb/>
premiere of a Noonan play writ-<lb/>
ten especially for the conference,<lb/>
entitled The Critic and His Wife.<lb/>
The conference is a cooperative<lb/>
project of the state and local arts<lb/>
councils, the N.C. Humanities<lb/>
Committee, Carolina Telephone<lb/>
and Telegraph Co and the<lb/>
Playwrights Fund of North<lb/>
Carolina, Inc. (PRNC), a non-<lb/>
profit corporation based in<lb/>
Greenville. All sessions will be<lb/>
held at the Greenville Sheraton<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
According to Don Roebuck,<lb/>
PFNC president, the conference<lb/>
is the first such program in the<lb/>
southeastern region "devoted in-<lb/>
tirely to poets and writers of new<lb/>
works for the stage<lb/>
"It will be an intensive, hands-<lb/>
on conference workshop, plann-<lb/>
ed to assist playwrights and poets<lb/>
in developing their writing to its<lb/>
fullist explains PFNC Artistic<lb/>
Director Christine Rusch.<lb/>
Two PFNC award winners will<lb/>
present their works ? Terry<lb/>
Cawley of Praleigh, author of<lb/>
Pull, judged best play of the year<lb/>
in PFNC's annual playwriting<lb/>
competition, and Shelby<lb/>
Stephenson of Southern Pines,<lb/>
whose book Carolina Shout! won<lb/>
the PFNC poetry chapbook com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
Noonan won an Emmy Award<lb/>
last year for a "St. Eslewhere"<lb/>
episode he wrote. His play Some<lb/>
Men Seed Help was produced for<lb/>
the PBS series "American<lb/>
Playhouse An earlier play,<lb/>
Older People, received the 1972<lb/>
Drama Desk Award. Most<lb/>
recently, Noonan has written<lb/>
screenplays for films produced<lb/>
for broadcast on ABC and CBS<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Interested persons may write<lb/>
Barbara Gilmore, conference<lb/>
director, at P.O. Box 646 for fur-<lb/>
ther information and registration<lb/>
materials. Conference fee is $50,<lb/>
which includes all sessions, some<lb/>
light meals and a Saturday even-<lb/>
ing buffet reception. Conference<lb/>
participants are responsible for<lb/>
making their own lodging reser-<lb/>
vations, available at a flat rate of<lb/>
$40 per night from the Sheraton<lb/>
Greenville, 203 W. Greenville<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
Since enrollment will be limited<lb/>
in order to keep workshop groups<lb/>
small, early registration is advis-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Trivia<lb/>
1) At one time or another, actor Mark ' enard I<lb/>
played all three principle aliens in the TV and film ver<lb/>
sions of "Star Trek What is the title of each film or<lb/>
episode in which he appeared and the alien he played?<lb/>
2) Who directed the academv-award-winning film<lb/>
Rocky?<lb/>
3) What character in the film Risky Business  1<lb/>
have a Trig test tomorrow and I'm hem.<lb/>
Guido the killer pimp?"<lb/>
4) How many Cecil B. DeMille films featured actress<lb/>
Gloria Swanson?<lb/>
5) Richard Bachman is a pseudonym for what best-<lb/>
selling author?<lb/>
6) What was the color of Blofelds cat in the film Sever<lb/>
Say Sever Again!<lb/>
7) What was the name given to the evil leader of the<lb/>
gremlins in Director Joe Dante's film Gremlins<lb/>
8) Who was the voice of Snow White in Walt Disnev's<lb/>
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs'<lb/>
9) Who produced the television series "I ost in Space?"<lb/>
10 In what Film did Stephen Speilbere make hi- direc-<lb/>
tor ?' cbut?<lb/>
Answers page 1<lb/>
his idea aod<lb/>
fiMgftejng aad tfet htip ef U?<lb/>
iaflrihr and Maids, be wm able to<lb/>
complete tbefibn.<lb/>
Hurt, Cher<lb/>
Get Awards<lb/>
At Cannes<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
CANNES, France (UPI) ?<lb/>
Yogoslav director Emir<lb/>
Kusturica's film Papa is Away on<lb/>
a Business Trip won the Golden<lb/>
Palm Award for best film at the<lb/>
Cannes Film Festival and<lb/>
Americans William Hurt and<lb/>
Cher were named best actor and<lb/>
actress.<lb/>
The awards were presented<lb/>
Monday night at the conclusion<lb/>
of the 38th Cannes Film Festival<lb/>
? one of the most famous film<lb/>
award competitions in the world.<lb/>
Papa is Away on a Business<lb/>
Trip centers on a 6-year-old<lb/>
Moslem boy in 1950s Sarajevo<lb/>
whose civil servant father is sent<lb/>
to a work camp. It deals with<lb/>
Yugoslav resistence to the Soviet<lb/>
Union under Stalin and how<lb/>
events affected the Boy's shat-<lb/>
tered family.<lb/>
Hurt won best actor for his<lb/>
??:? ?;  <lb/>
performance in the film Kiss of<lb/>
the Spider Woman by Brazilian<lb/>
director Hector Babenco. Hurt,<lb/>
34, plays a tragic but warm lead<lb/>
role in the violent, political film.<lb/>
Cher, for her role in the<lb/>
American film Mask, shared the<lb/>
best actress award with Argentine<lb/>
Norma Aleandro, star of Luis<lb/>
Puenzo's The Official Story.<lb/>
Famine LP Proves Top Pop<lb/>
William Hart<lb/>
By MATTHEW GILLIS<lb/>
Staff Wite<lb/>
For some time now, all of us<lb/>
have heard that one song<lb/>
over the radio ? a song featuring<lb/>
45 top pop, rock, soul, and coun-<lb/>
try artists singing to raise funds<lb/>
for the needy in Africa and even<lb/>
here in the United States. Still,<lb/>
the song "We Are The World<lb/>
even with its big success, has been<lb/>
criticized for being too pop-<lb/>
flavored, and many felt the<lb/>
album that was to come might<lb/>
turn out the same way. The<lb/>
album, We Are The World, is out<lb/>
on ColumbiaCBS Records, and<lb/>
even though it is very much like<lb/>
any other pop album, it still turns<lb/>
out to be quite enjoyable.<lb/>
Steve Perry, The Pointer<lb/>
Sister, Tina Turner, and Chicago<lb/>
all feature solo tracks on the LP,<lb/>
all with their own distinctive<lb/>
style. They're not great songs,<lb/>
but any and all of these are still as<lb/>
good as this album can provide,<lb/>
and that's good enough.<lb/>
Prince makes an appearance<lb/>
with a somewhat better song. It's<lb/>
a little intriguing, and well put-<lb/>
together, much like a lot of his<lb/>
work. Kenny Rogers also pro-<lb/>
vides more than the ordinary with<lb/>
his country-flavored track as<lb/>
well, sounding much like his early<lb/>
days as part of the countryrock<lb/>
band The First Edition.<lb/>
However, two of the album s<lb/>
best songs were recorded in con-<lb/>
cert. Huey Lewis and the News<lb/>
provide a little good news with<lb/>
one of their concert classics,<lb/>
"Trouble In Paradise Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen and the E Street<lb/>
Band go full force on the classic<lb/>
Jimmy Cliff tune "Trapped<lb/>
Bruce and the boys must have<lb/>
known what they were doing<lb/>
when they put a lot of effort into<lb/>
this song ? and they do.<lb/>
Still, the album holds one more<lb/>
surprise, a look at the "Northern<lb/>
Lights Actually, it's the "Nor-<lb/>
thern Lights for Africa Society<lb/>
better known as Canada's answer<lb/>
to Band-Aid and USA For<lb/>
Africa. The concept itself is not<lb/>
new, but the song they provide<lb/>
may be good enough to put even<lb/>
both Band-Aid and USA to<lb/>
shame! It's a simple enough<lb/>
song, but the arrangement is ab-<lb/>
solutely dynamic, thanks in part<lb/>
to Grammy-winning producer<lb/>
David Foster and a nice song,<lb/>
written in part by one of today's<lb/>
top Canadian stars, Brvan<lb/>
Adams.<lb/>
Of course, it also helps to have a<lb/>
chorus including Adams, Anne<lb/>
Murray, Joni Mitchell, Gordon<lb/>
Lightfoot, Geddy Lee of Rush<lb/>
Neil Young, Corey Hart, Mike<lb/>
Reno of Loverboy, and other top<lb/>
Canadian stars of music and even<lb/>
of the silver screens (among them<lb/>
?SJ2rSf!ldyJind Eugcnc of<lb/>
M. IV and, more recently, the<lb/>
hit film Splash.)<lb/>
True, the album should have<lb/>
had a chance to feature more ar-<lb/>
Usts but the USA for Africa's<lb/>
E AZ VZ WoHd enough<lb/>
time and dedication put into it to<lb/>
make it worth listening to.<lb/>
7? CAMPLE COAJ-Ok<lb/>
fOBAffttsar-<lb/>
j - AW<lb/>
AWIHAH<lb/>
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1 "<lb/>
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R?AU.y. ?- )<lb/>
SV"GOOC mE ?0<lb/>
set a BOi a i?&amp;<lb/>
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Man-O-Stick<lb/>
,4r w? 77 DA,<lb/>
RAtEV Vu'&amp;y out<lb/>
fWr? fa"?ru&amp;. ?<lb/>
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Tooth<lb/>
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"?'?iim:mii?i?ii wm m-<lb/>
"? ? mmmmmmmmmmmmmmimmm<lb/>
'?4m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0007"/><lb/>
IHE EAST CAROI INIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
Doonesbur<lb/>
MAY 29. IS?X<lb/>
PaKf f<lb/>
Travolta Comes Of Age With<lb/>
'Perfect' Role In New Film<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD (UPI) ? John<lb/>
Travolta, 31, says he's come of<lb/>
age as an actor.<lb/>
As the star of Perfect, to be<lb/>
released in threaters next month,<lb/>
Travolta plays a journalist caught<lb/>
up in an intellectual web of pro-<lb/>
fessional ethics and a personal<lb/>
romantic entanglement.<lb/>
"For 10 years I've done the<lb/>
best I could with the roles given<lb/>
me he said. "Now I'm finally<lb/>
at an age where I can play really<lb/>
interesting roles. 1 no longer have<lb/>
to settle for the various<lb/>
statements of youth.<lb/>
"I'm at a state in my career to<lb/>
accept roles that went to Red-<lb/>
ford, Beatty, Hoffman and<lb/>
Newman when they were my age,<lb/>
playing guys in their 30's and 40's<lb/>
who have experienced more in-<lb/>
teresting events in life than guys<lb/>
in their 20's<lb/>
Travolta has little competition<lb/>
in his age group. He is older than<lb/>
the horde of new screen heroes,<lb/>
Tim Hutton, Sean Penn, Michael<lb/>
Pare and the rest, and con-<lb/>
siderably younger than the likes<lb/>
of DeNiro, Hoffman and Pacino.<lb/>
"When 1 was coming up there<lb/>
were only a few actors my age<lb/>
working regularly he said,<lb/>
"guys like Richard Gere, Treat<lb/>
Williams and Henry Winkler.<lb/>
Producers though realized the<lb/>
talent pool was too small and<lb/>
they began developoing new<lb/>
talent to fill the generation gap<lb/>
Travolta has matured im-<lb/>
pressively since his debut in 1975<lb/>
as Vinnie Barbarino, the high<lb/>
school heart throb in the TV sit-<lb/>
 com "Welcome Back, Kotter<lb/>
iravolta feels he has come of age as an actor with his work in the new film "Perfect" in which he plavs a His electric blue eves, square jaw<lb/>
Rolling Stone magaine reporter who falls in love with his subject, played by Jamie Lee Curtis, and cleft chin look better on the<lb/>
man than the boy.<lb/>
In the past decade Travolta has<lb/>
starred in only 10 movies, four ot<lb/>
which were stunning box-office<lb/>
hits that collectively earned a<lb/>
billion dollars worldwide:<lb/>
 Grease, $400 million, plus 25<lb/>
million records sold.<lb/>
? Saturday Sight Fever, $350<lb/>
million, 30 million records.<lb/>
ml roan Cowboy, $100 million, 5<lb/>
million records.<lb/>
? Staying Alive, $150 million, 3<lb/>
million records.<lb/>
Blowout, Moment By Moment<lb/>
and Two of a Kind were less suc-<lb/>
cessful, but did not lose money.<lb/>
Travolta turned down other<lb/>
films that suceeded beyond all ex-<lb/>
pectations: An Officer and a<lb/>
Gentleman ? which was written<lb/>
for him ? Arthur, Midnight Ex-<lb/>
press and Splash,<lb/>
"I don't regret not making<lb/>
those pictures Travolta said.<lb/>
"They probably served other ac-<lb/>
tors better than they would have<lb/>
me<lb/>
Travolta has wisely avoided<lb/>
over-exposure and type-casting,<lb/>
although he denies following any<lb/>
specific career plan. He has tried<lb/>
to counter balance the negative<lb/>
aspects of being a media star by<lb/>
keeping a low profile in private<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Travolta takes pride in his ver-<lb/>
satility. Since leaving "Welcome<lb/>
Back, Kotter he has starred in<lb/>
comedy, musicals and drama<lb/>
His range includes high school<lb/>
kid, ballet dancer, bank robber.<lb/>
sound technician and now in<lb/>
Perfect, a journalist.<lb/>
Travolta reads as manv as 150<lb/>
scripts and screen treatments a<lb/>
year, never seeing hundreds of<lb/>
others that his agents I wn<lb/>
without consulting him.<lb/>
chooses hi- role ;b gut reaction<lb/>
rather than with an eye to<lb/>
moves<lb/>
"I do mostly<lb/>
me he said, "an thai<lb/>
keep variety in my<lb/>
of my pictures I've d<lb/>
myself. But t; nal<lb/>
qaulities of s u rip! are tr<lb/>
torn line per m m ? la<lb/>
good story<lb/>
like othei iccessl<lb/>
tors, rravolta<lb/>
Jucer director He ???. ill<lb/>
duction on I ake ltr<lb/>
September on i <lb/>
Chicago suburb<lb/>
however, appear on screen.<lb/>
"Colun<lb/>
gamble wit!<lb/>
with an ea ?<lb/>
deter mined<lb/>
movie<lb/>
"1 wanted<lb/>
because the<lb/>
mv heart. It's what<lb/>
It reflects mv .<lb/>
don't know if I'll <lb/>
opportunity I<lb/>
lake Forest,<lb/>
vantage of this c u<lb/>
"It's a family drama a;<lb/>
haven't even cast it yet. I'n<lb/>
tng for a 40-yea<lb/>
the fai<lb/>
to plav his son<lb/>
tragedy, but no' Or-<lb/>
dinary People<lb/>
"I'm also dev .<lb/>
picture ba<lb/>
big<lb/>
my brother and<lb/>
?nglv ar t fa<lb/>
ships ?<lb/>
wanted to pul<lb/>
this long in<lb/>
Writer To Conduct Workshop<lb/>
Tiis week's entertainment at<lb/>
Mndenhall Student Center<lb/>
mu be offered in the form of two<lb/>
notion pictures to be shown in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. This Wednes-<lb/>
day's feature is Eddie And The<lb/>
 iSirs and the following Mon-<lb/>
day's picture will be Eating<lb/>
Raoul.<lb/>
Eddie And The Cruisers is a<lb/>
story of an innovative new band<lb/>
emerging from second-rate clubs<lb/>
to uncertain superstardom. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, just as the band is on<lb/>
the rise the lead singer of the<lb/>
group, Eddie Wilson (Michael<lb/>
Pare), drives off a bridge and is<lb/>
presumed dead. Twenty years<lb/>
later, an investigative reporter<lb/>
(Ellen Baskin) begins an ex-<lb/>
haustive probe into the star's<lb/>
mysterious life.<lb/>
Eddie And The Cruisers is a<lb/>
tale that many critics described as<lb/>
being similar to a Bruce Springs-<lb/>
teen image. The musical score is<lb/>
performed by John Cafferty and<lb/>
The Beaver Brown Band, who's<lb/>
soundtrack has gone gold with<lb/>
over 500,000 copies sold so far.<lb/>
Eating Raoul is an offbeat,<lb/>
satirical look at sex, greed, and<lb/>
modern times. It is the saga of<lb/>
Paul and Mary Bland (Paul<lb/>
Bart el and Mary Woronov) a<lb/>
solidly middle class couple, who<lb/>
are trying to raise enough money<lb/>
to open a restaurant. However,<lb/>
their means of earning the money<lb/>
are far from typical methods of<lb/>
income. They lure wealthy<lb/>
perverts into their apartment,<lb/>
bonk them on the head with a<lb/>
frying pan, and steal their cash.<lb/>
The plot thickens as Raoul, a<lb/>
charming psycopath played by<lb/>
Robert Beltran, becomes involv-<lb/>
ed with the couple's mischievous<lb/>
endeavors.<lb/>
Paul Bartel, co-star, co-<lb/>
author, and director, created<lb/>
Eating Raoul in the spirit of fun.<lb/>
However, in the beginning, he<lb/>
found it anything but fun. Even<lb/>
though he was an accomplished<lb/>
director, whose work included<lb/>
Death Race 2000 and Cannon-<lb/>
ball, Bartel could not find anyone<lb/>
interesting in using the script.<lb/>
Because of its offbeat theme and<lb/>
unusual title, everyone thought it<lb/>
would not sell at the box office.<lb/>
Bartel remained optimistic about<lb/>
hit idea and through personal<lb/>
financing and the help of his<lb/>
family and friends, he was able to<lb/>
complete the film.<lb/>
Afl features begin at 7 p.m.<lb/>
?ad Wtttm<lb/>
Emmy A w a r d - w i n n i n g<lb/>
playwright John Ford<lb/>
Noonan will be featured at a con-<lb/>
ference for writers of poetry and<lb/>
plays scheduled for June 21-23.<lb/>
The event, the Southeastern<lb/>
Playwrights and Poets Con-<lb/>
ference, will include workshops<lb/>
conducted by Noonan and poets<lb/>
J.W. Rivers and David Chorlton,<lb/>
a seminar on incorporatin of<lb/>
human values into dalogue and<lb/>
poems, readings of works by con-<lb/>
ference participants, and several<lb/>
productions, including the<lb/>
premiere of a Noonan play writ-<lb/>
ten especially for the conference,<lb/>
entitled The Critic and His Wife.<lb/>
The conference is a cooperative<lb/>
project of the state and local arts<lb/>
councils, the N.C. Humanities<lb/>
Committee, Carolina Telephone<lb/>
and Telegraph Co and the<lb/>
Playwrights Fund of North<lb/>
Carolina, Inc. (PRNC), a non-<lb/>
profit corporation based in<lb/>
Greenville. All sessions will be<lb/>
held at the Greenville Sheraton<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
According to Don Roebuck,<lb/>
PFNC president, the conference<lb/>
is the first such program in the<lb/>
southeastern region "devoted in-<lb/>
tirely to poets and writers of new<lb/>
works for the stage<lb/>
"It will be an intensive, hands-<lb/>
on conference workshop, plann-<lb/>
ed to assist playwrights and poets<lb/>
in developing their writing to its<lb/>
fullist explains PFNC Artistic<lb/>
Director Christine Rusch.<lb/>
Two PFNC award winners will<lb/>
present their works ? Terry<lb/>
Cawley of Praleigh, author of<lb/>
Pull, judged best play of the year<lb/>
in PFNC's annual playwriting<lb/>
competition, and Shelby<lb/>
Stephenson of Southern Pines,<lb/>
whose book Carolina Shout! won<lb/>
the PFNC poetry chapbook com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
Noonan won an Emmy Award<lb/>
last year for a "St. Eslewhere"<lb/>
episode he wrote. His play Some<lb/>
Men Seed Help was produced for<lb/>
the PBS series "American<lb/>
Playhouse An earlier play,<lb/>
Older People, received the 1972<lb/>
Drama Desk Award. Most<lb/>
recently, Noonan has written<lb/>
screenplays for films produced<lb/>
for broadcast on ABC and CBS<lb/>
television.<lb/>
Interested persons may write<lb/>
Barbara Gilmore, conference<lb/>
director, at P.O. Box 646 for fur-<lb/>
ther information and registration<lb/>
materials. Conference fee is $50,<lb/>
which includes all sessions, some<lb/>
light meals and a Saturday even-<lb/>
ing buffet reception. Conference<lb/>
participants are responsible for<lb/>
making their own lodging reser-<lb/>
vations, available at a flat rate of<lb/>
$40 per night from the Sheraton<lb/>
Greenville, 203 W. Greenville<lb/>
Blvd.<lb/>
Since enrollment will be limited<lb/>
in order to keep workshop groups<lb/>
small, early registration is advis-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Entertaini<lb/>
Trivia<lb/>
ent<lb/>
1) At one time or another.<lb/>
played all three principle ai ? ??<lb/>
sions of "Star Trek What is th? title I<lb/>
episode in which he appeared and the<lb/>
2) Who directed the academy-aw g<lb/>
Rocky?<lb/>
3) What character in the film ?? ;?<lb/>
have a Trig test tomorrow and I'r<lb/>
Guido the killer pimp?"<lb/>
4) How many Cecil B. DeMille films featured aci<lb/>
Gloria Swanson?<lb/>
5) Richard Bachman is a pse .<lb/>
selling author?<lb/>
6) What was the color of Biofeld tl in the Sever<lb/>
Say Never Again?<lb/>
7) What was the name given to the evil lea ler oi<lb/>
gremlins in Director Joe Dante's film Gr<lb/>
8) Who was the voice of Snow White in Walt Disney's<lb/>
Snow White and the Seven Dwarfs 7<lb/>
9) Who produced the television sene-  ost<lb/>
10 In what film did Stephen Speilberg n<lb/>
tori ' but?<lb/>
Answer pmc 7<lb/>
Hurt, Cher<lb/>
Get Awards<lb/>
At Cannes<lb/>
Festival<lb/>
CANNES, France (UPI) ?<lb/>
Yogoslav director Emir<lb/>
Kusturica's film Papa is Away on<lb/>
a Business Trip won the Golden<lb/>
Palm Award for best film at the<lb/>
Cannes Film Festival and<lb/>
Americans William Hurt and<lb/>
Cher were named best actor and<lb/>
actress.<lb/>
The awards were presented<lb/>
Monday night at the conclusion<lb/>
of the 38th Cannes Film Festival<lb/>
? one of the most famous film<lb/>
award competitions in the world.<lb/>
Papa is Away on a Business<lb/>
Trip centers on a 6-year-old<lb/>
Moslem boy in 1950s Sarajevo<lb/>
whose civil servant father is sent<lb/>
to a work camp. It deals with<lb/>
Yugoslav resistence to the Soviet<lb/>
Union under Stalin and how<lb/>
events affected the Boy's shat-<lb/>
tered family.<lb/>
Hurt won best actor for his<lb/>
performance in the film Kiss of<lb/>
the Spider Woman by Brazilian<lb/>
director Hector Babenco. Hurt,<lb/>
34, plays a tragic but warm lead<lb/>
role in the violent, political film.<lb/>
Cher, for her role in the<lb/>
American film Mask, shared the<lb/>
best actress award with Argentine<lb/>
Norma Aleandro, star of Luis<lb/>
Puenzo's The Official Story.<lb/>
Famine LP Proves Top Pop<lb/>
William Hurt<lb/>
By MATTHEW GILLIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For some time now, all of us<lb/>
have heard that one song<lb/>
over the radio ? a song featuring<lb/>
45 top pop, rock, soul, and coun-<lb/>
try artists singing to raise funds<lb/>
for the needy in Africa and even<lb/>
here in the United States. Still,<lb/>
the song "We Are The World<lb/>
even with its big success, has been<lb/>
criticized for being too pop-<lb/>
flavored, and many felt the<lb/>
album that was to come might<lb/>
turn out the same way. The<lb/>
album, We Are The World, is out<lb/>
on ColumbiaCBS Records, and<lb/>
even though it is very much like<lb/>
any other pop album, it still turns<lb/>
out to be quite enjoyable.<lb/>
Steve Perry, The Pointer<lb/>
Sister, Tina Turner, and Chicago<lb/>
all feature solo tracks on the LP,<lb/>
all with their own distinctive<lb/>
style. They're not great songs,<lb/>
but any and all of these are still as<lb/>
good as this album can provide,<lb/>
and that's good enough.<lb/>
Prince makes an appearance<lb/>
with a somewhat better song. It's<lb/>
a little intriguing, and well put-<lb/>
together, much like a lot of his<lb/>
work. Kenny Rogers also pro-<lb/>
vides more than the ordinary with<lb/>
his country-flavored track as<lb/>
well, sounding much like his early<lb/>
days as part of the countryrock<lb/>
band The First Edition.<lb/>
However, two or the album s<lb/>
best songs were recorded in con-<lb/>
cert. Huey Lewis and the News<lb/>
pi 3vide a little good news with<lb/>
one of their concert classics,<lb/>
"Trouble In Paradise Bruce<lb/>
Springsteen and the E Street<lb/>
Band go full force on the classic<lb/>
Jimmy Cliff tune "Trapped<lb/>
Bruce and the boys must have<lb/>
known what they were doing<lb/>
when they put a lot of effort into<lb/>
this song ? and they do.<lb/>
Still, the album holds one more<lb/>
surprise, a look at the "Northern<lb/>
Lights Actually, it's the "Nor-<lb/>
thern Lights for Africa Society<lb/>
better known as Can ia ansv<lb/>
to Band-Aid and USA lor<lb/>
Africa. The concept itself is not<lb/>
new, but the song they provide<lb/>
may be good enough to put even<lb/>
both Band-Aid and USA to<lb/>
shame! It's a simple enough<lb/>
song, but the arrangement is ab<lb/>
solutely dynamic, thanks in part<lb/>
to Grammy-winning producer<lb/>
David Foster and a nice song,<lb/>
written in part by one of today's<lb/>
top Canadian stars, Bryan<lb/>
Adams.<lb/>
Of course, it also helps to have a<lb/>
chorus including Adams, Anne<lb/>
Murray, Joni Mitchell, Gordon<lb/>
Lightfoot, Geddv lee of Rush<lb/>
Neil Young, Corey Hart, Mike<lb/>
Reno of I overboy, and other top<lb/>
Canadian stars of music and even<lb/>
of the silver screens (among them<lb/>
John Candy and Eugene Levy of<lb/>
"SCTV" and, more recently the<lb/>
hit film Splash.)<lb/>
True, the album should have<lb/>
had a chance to feature more ar-<lb/>
tists, but the USA for Africa's<lb/>
We Are The World has enough<lb/>
time and dedication put into it to<lb/>
make it worth listening to.<lb/>
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by garry trudeau Walkta' The Plank<lb/>
SCOTSMAN THAN EXCELLENT<lb/>
OLV MOVEMENT MAN. JIMMY' LOb<lb/>
BOUGHT YOU MIGHT Me IN ON<lb/>
BE ABLE TO USE AN<lb/>
EXPERJ<lb/>
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SCHEDULING<lb/>
I'M 5Y BRADLEY, BY THE<lb/>
WAV. TMBLOCKAPB<lb/>
, MANAGER. HERE'S<lb/>
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CARP7<lb/>
ray'levsmove<lb/>
THENEUKMANPS<lb/>
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TUFTS ANP YALE1<lb/>
AWI HAVE I'M AFRAID ALL<lb/>
vtARSOFFMR OFOURMANAGE<lb/>
tKEtkORMi- tmnsmoNs<lb/>
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MAY 29, 1983 7<lb/>
BY A GUY<lb/>
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HOLD IT, YOU<lb/>
OWN A BLAZER?<lb/>
WE NEED A HOST<lb/>
ATTHEMEPIA<lb/>
CENTER.<lb/>
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EXCUSE ME,<lb/>
?S ThlS SPOT<lb/>
TAKEN?<lb/>
NOT AT ALL.<lb/>
REVEREND PUT<lb/>
YOUR GEAR DOWN<lb/>
YDU JOINING US IN<lb/>
THE FAST7 i?n<lb/>
IT WAS EITHER THAT<lb/>
OR BEING A MEDIA CEN-<lb/>
TER HOST YOUV THINK<lb/>
THAT AFTER PLANNING<lb/>
THE W MORATORIUM<lb/>
WITH SAM BROWN, IP.<lb/>
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STiATlT ANP YOU KNOW<lb/>
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UP ANDCARRYON ABOUT<lb/>
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WHAT DO I THINK OF THEM ALL<lb/>
YOU THINK ASLARGERTHANUFE,<lb/>
1HEYWERE BONDS'ANP DRIVEN BY<lb/>
LIKE, SON7 COMMITMENT, PUTTING<lb/>
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FOR A GREAT CAUSE<lb/>
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HOWABOUTLATERTHE GUYS ARE<lb/>
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2) John Avildseo<lb/>
3 MSUS<lb/>
6) White<lb/>
7) Stripe<lb/>
8) Adriana Caseloui<lb/>
9) Irwin Alien<lb/>
10) The Sugarkmd Express<lb/>
&amp;????m(??????????m?<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
HOME COOKED FOOD<lb/>
it<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
Free desert<lb/>
with purchase of any regular size plate<lb/>
LARGE PLATE with all you can eat vegetables and<lb/>
a big serving of meat for $4.07 plus tax.<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS $2.2Splus tax &amp; beverage.<lb/>
512 E. 14th St. Near Dorms<lb/>
Call for Take Outs ? 752-0476<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 AM - 8 PM<lb/>
Immediate Medical Care<lb/>
I U II MED-CENTER1<lb/>
Ul EASTERN CAROLINA<lb/>
X-M;T,77v <lb/>
v .?.?.?:?.?:?:?:?:?:???.??.?.?.?.?.? r<lb/>
Med Center 1 of Greenville is pleased to announce its opening on Monday,<lb/>
September 24, 1984. Med Center 1 offers extended hours, 8 a.m. to 8 p.m 7<lb/>
days a week, for your convenience.<lb/>
We offer services in family and industrial medicine and workmen's compen-<lb/>
sation with x-ray, EKG, laboratory services, pregnancy testing, and birth con-<lb/>
trol services available. Minimal waiting time and no appointment necessary.<lb/>
For more information, phone 752-0713, or come bv our Greenville location<lb/>
at 507 E. 14th Street.<lb/>
Med Center 1, a new concept in health care.<lb/>
Movie: Eddie And The Cruisers Wed. May 29<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Movie: Eating Raoul Mon. June 3<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
ID's Made Tues. June 4<lb/>
11:00 a.m12 noon Multi Purpose Rm<lb/>
Movie: Shampoo Wed. June 5<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Movie: The Jerk Mon. June 10<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
I.Ds Made Tues. June 11<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 12 noon Multi Purpose Rm<lb/>
C<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057716_0009"/><lb/>
THE fcAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Winfi<lb/>
Marks<lb/>
???$-&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
Winfred Johnson touches home plate after another of his homemns.<lb/>
Holt Leaving ECU<lb/>
Pam Holt, Assistant Athletic<lb/>
Director for Student Life and<lb/>
Special Events for the past four<lb/>
years at ECU, has resigned her<lb/>
position effective June 30, 1985,<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr, director of<lb/>
athletics, announced Friday.<lb/>
Holt, 38, will accept the posi-<lb/>
tion of Director of Promotions<lb/>
and Public Relations for the<lb/>
Women's Athletic Department at<lb/>
the University of Minnesota ef-<lb/>
fective July 1, 1985.<lb/>
"We want to thank all the<lb/>
many Pirate fans for their sup-<lb/>
port over the 11 years that I have<lb/>
been in Greenville said Holt.<lb/>
A native of Bloomfield, IA,<lb/>
Holt is a 1969 graduate of Nor-<lb/>
theast Missouri State Universitv<lb/>
and joined the ECU athletic staff<lb/>
in 1981.<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
AnisUat Spom fr dttnr<lb/>
"Winfred Johnson is one of<lb/>
the best baseball players East<lb/>
Carolina has ever had said Bil-<lb/>
ly Best, upon the conclusion of<lb/>
another outstanding season for<lb/>
the Pirate slugger. "He not only<lb/>
has power, but hits for a con-<lb/>
sistently high average as well<lb/>
Best's statement is backed up<lb/>
by the impressive statistics and<lb/>
awards the junior righthander<lb/>
has achieved in his first three<lb/>
seasons at ECU. In the season<lb/>
just concluded, Johnson shared<lb/>
with Chris Bradberry the honor<lb/>
of being the first Pirate to bat<lb/>
over .400 with at least 100 at-bats<lb/>
Bradberry hit for a superb .405<lb/>
average with 173 at-bats, but had<lb/>
the misfortune to do it in a year<lb/>
when his feat was overshadowed<lb/>
by Johnson's .432 average with<lb/>
169 at-bats. That new Pirate hit-<lb/>
ting record was only the latest in<lb/>
a large number of career and<lb/>
single-season marks held by<lb/>
Johnson, though.<lb/>
He first began his assault on<lb/>
the ECU record books as a<lb/>
freshmen, when he led the team<lb/>
with 11 roundtrippers ? and has<lb/>
repeated as the homer champ<lb/>
each year since. He first set the<lb/>
single-season homerun record<lb/>
with 18 last year, then topped his<lb/>
own mark with 22 in '85.<lb/>
By the end of the '84 season<lb/>
Johnson had already set the<lb/>
career longball mark with 29, so<lb/>
the 22 he hit this year increased<lb/>
his own record total to 51 ? with<lb/>
a year of eligibility still remain-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
The amazing junior is far from<lb/>
just being a homerun hitter. For<lb/>
two consecutive years he has set<lb/>
new records for rbi's and total<lb/>
bases. In '84 he knocked in 46<lb/>
runs, then topped that with an as-<lb/>
tounding 75 this season.<lb/>
In total bases (a homerun<lb/>
equals four bases, a triple three<lb/>
etc.), Johnson topped his '84<lb/>
record of 115 by hitting for 150<lb/>
this year. Todd Evans' ECU<lb/>
record of 64 hits, set in '82, also<lb/>
fell to Johnson this year, who<lb/>
stroked the ball for a hit 73 times.<lb/>
The timeliness of the Pirate<lb/>
clean-up batter's hits has been a<lb/>
major factor in ECU's success<lb/>
also. In the NCAA playoffs last<lb/>
year he smashed a grand-slam<lb/>
homer to eliminate Florida State<lb/>
in the South regional, and con-<lb/>
tinued to contribute to game-<lb/>
winning rbi's this year with eight.<lb/>
These offensive statistics have<lb/>
been compiled while Johnson<lb/>
performed in three capacities for<lb/>
ECU. He not only has shown his<lb/>
prowess defensively as the star-<lb/>
ting first baseman with a number<lb/>
of fine plays throughout his<lb/>
career, but has been a team leader<lb/>
as a pitcherdesignated hitter<lb/>
also.<lb/>
Johnson hurled a 7-1 record in<lb/>
his freshman year, followed with<lb/>
a 10-3 mark in '84. He slumped<lb/>
somewhat this season, ending<lb/>
with a 7-5 slate after an excellent<lb/>
start. He now stands at 24-8 over<lb/>
his three years at ECU.<lb/>
Along with the impressive<lb/>
statistics compiled bv John:<lb/>
have come a wave of honors I<lb/>
recognition bv his peers and thc<lb/>
media. He was named co-player<lb/>
ot the year for the I c V South<lb/>
in '84 with Steve lannini and is<lb/>
one of the leading candidates,<lb/>
along with George Mason's<lb/>
Kevin Burke to gain that honor<lb/>
again this ear.<lb/>
A comparison of some<lb/>
statistics shows the pair as firsi<lb/>
second in a number of categories<lb/>
among ECAC-South plavers<lb/>
Johnson's top mark of 22 home-<lb/>
is followed by Burke's 19. wi<lb/>
Burke also was second in rl<lb/>
W JOHNSON Paue s?<lb/>
Winfred Johnson shows the swing that currently holds virtualh even hitting record at EC!<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sjxrts Editor<lb/>
In the midst of ever increasing<lb/>
concerns about athletics and<lb/>
academics on the college level,<lb/>
there have been various proposals<lb/>
on what should be done to<lb/>
achieve a balance between the<lb/>
two.<lb/>
On the national level, the<lb/>
NCAA ? the governing body of<lb/>
collegiate athletics of which ECU<lb/>
is a member ? is holding a<lb/>
special session in New Orleans<lb/>
later this summer.<lb/>
Among the items being con-<lb/>
sidered is Proposition 48, a bill<lb/>
that would require incoming<lb/>
freshmen to have a 2.0 grade<lb/>
point average, not only in all of<lb/>
their school work, but in a basic<lb/>
core curriculum as well. In addi-<lb/>
tion, the measure would require a<lb/>
minimum SAT score of 700.<lb/>
The core curriculum would<lb/>
consist of 11 academic courses in-<lb/>
cluding at least three English<lb/>
courses and two each in math,<lb/>
social sciences and natural<lb/>
sciences. Also a laboratory class<lb/>
would be required if it is offered<lb/>
at the student's high school.<lb/>
The only exceptions to those<lb/>
guidelines would be exceptional<lb/>
students who complete high<lb/>
school early.<lb/>
Proposition 48 was revised to<lb/>
its present form in January of<lb/>
this year and is scheduled to go<lb/>
into effect beginning with the fall<lb/>
semester of 1986.<lb/>
The issue is certain to draw<lb/>
heated debate when the NCAA's<lb/>
special convention meets next<lb/>
month to vote on proposals to<lb/>
change existing rules. Most of the<lb/>
rules changes will be aimed at<lb/>
tightening institutional control<lb/>
over sports programs and assess-<lb/>
ing tough penalties for those who<lb/>
violate regulations.<lb/>
Among the other proposals is<lb/>
one that would require all NCAA<lb/>
member schools to conduct self-<lb/>
studies of their sports programs<lb/>
every five years as a condition of<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
Other proposals would:<lb/>
? Require members to report the<lb/>
academic status of their athletes<lb/>
to the NCAA.<lb/>
? Require institutional supervi-<lb/>
sion and outside audits of athletic<lb/>
department budgets.<lb/>
? Provide for stiffer penalties for<lb/>
violations of NCAA rules and<lb/>
tighten the enforcement process.<lb/>
Among all the different pro-<lb/>
posed regulations the two that are<lb/>
receiving most of the publicity<lb/>
are the minimum scores for the<lb/>
SAT's and freshman eligibility.<lb/>
ECU football coach Art Baker<lb/>
is in a position to be greatly af-<lb/>
fected by the impending regula-<lb/>
tions, especially Proposition 48.<lb/>
"If Proposition 48 goes into<lb/>
effect, 80 percent of the black<lb/>
athletes now competing and 40<lb/>
percent of the white ones would<lb/>
not be eligible to participate<lb/>
Baker said. "You want the best<lb/>
students in all of the other fields<lb/>
like art and music why not<lb/>
have the best athletes. I'm sure<lb/>
exceptions are made in other<lb/>
areas<lb/>
Baker feels that there are two<lb/>
sides to the possibility of having<lb/>
freshmen ineligible to participate<lb/>
at the varsity level.<lb/>
"Freshmen would not have the<lb/>
pressure of having to make the<lb/>
varsity and would have more time<lb/>
to hit the books and get off on<lb/>
the right foot academicallyhe<lb/>
said. "But, the rule would hurt us<lb/>
this year because we have a few<lb/>
freshmen coming in who will be<lb/>
able to help our football team<lb/>
Baker, who has coached when<lb/>
freshmen were ineligible to par-<lb/>
ticipate, was not so sure as to<lb/>
how he liked the minimum SAT<lb/>
proposal of 700.<lb/>
&amp;, ?ii<lb/>
?m<lb/>
Art Baker<lb/>
"I coached at Furman, where<lb/>
the average SAT score was 1150.<lb/>
I once recruited a player who<lb/>
scored 500 on the SAT and he<lb/>
went on to graduate in four<lb/>
years. I also had players who<lb/>
scored over 1100 who flunked<lb/>
out Baker said. "I'm just not<lb/>
sure that the SAT is the best yard-<lb/>
stick for determining how a per-<lb/>
son will do in the classroom<lb/>
Baker feels that the state<lb/>
school systems were beginning to<lb/>
do a better job of preparing<lb/>
athletes for college. Some states<lb/>
have already passed minimum re-<lb/>
quirements for athletes to be<lb/>
eligible to compete in athletic<lb/>
competition. In Texas, for in-<lb/>
stance, a student is declared in-<lb/>
eligible if he fails even one sub-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
The minimum SAT score of<lb/>
700 would not affect Baker's first<lb/>
recruiting class very much since<lb/>
only four of the 20 players he<lb/>
recruited this year scored below<lb/>
700.<lb/>
"I hope I would never recruit<lb/>
anybody who I thought<lb/>
realistically didn't have a chance<lb/>
to graduate Baker said. "In<lb/>
four years I know that my cons-<lb/>
cience will be clear and that all<lb/>
my athletes will have had every<lb/>
chance to graduate<lb/>
Baker and his staff monitors<lb/>
the class attendance of every<lb/>
player. Study halls with tutors are<lb/>
Campuses<lb/>
made available as well, during the<lb/>
day and at night.<lb/>
Baker feels that the biggest<lb/>
problem in dealing with a situa-<lb/>
tion like the one that has arisen<lb/>
today in college athletics, is that<lb/>
"you are dealing with so manv<lb/>
different people and universities<lb/>
with their own ideas "<lb/>
"When I was at Florida State.<lb/>
of the thirty plaver- we recruited<lb/>
a year, we were allowed seven ex-<lb/>
ceptions to our admissions<lb/>
policy he said. "All those kids<lb/>
had to have was a 2.0 in high<lb/>
school and we would admit them,<lb/>
knowing that thev would need<lb/>
special attention to graduate.<lb/>
"The only problem was that<lb/>
there really weren't any majors<lb/>
that were offered that thev had a<lb/>
realistic chance to make it in.<lb/>
Here we have over 100 majors<lb/>
and have adopted a realistic ap-<lb/>
proach in helping our athletes to<lb/>
graduate<lb/>
"Individual motivation piavv <lb/>
big part in whether or not so-<lb/>
meone obtains a degree he con-<lb/>
tinued. "But. if a young man<lb/>
wants to graduate from here he is<lb/>
going to have everv opportunity<lb/>
to do so<lb/>
LCU Scuba Program One Of Region's Best<lb/>
By DAVID McGINNESS year. It is the largest such associa- credit r;?. ?  O M0 K, &amp; I<lb/>
By DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Imagine a world totally unlike<lb/>
the one you live in. It is a world<lb/>
without gravity, without air and<lb/>
only limited amounts of light and<lb/>
sound.<lb/>
As in our world, the environ-<lb/>
ment can vary greatly. It can be<lb/>
dark, cold and lifeless ? or a<lb/>
tropical paradise filled with<lb/>
beautiful and exotic creatures.<lb/>
This is the world the scuba<lb/>
diver experiences.<lb/>
ECU is blessed with one of the<lb/>
largest and most qualified scuba<lb/>
programs in the Sou'heast. It is<lb/>
also fortunate to be located only<lb/>
two hours from the Atlantic<lb/>
Ocean.<lb/>
The ECU diving program will<lb/>
begin its ninth year of instruction<lb/>
this fall. While only seven<lb/>
students participated in the fall of<lb/>
'77, the program has grown<lb/>
steadily. Today it is the most<lb/>
popular elective at ECU.<lb/>
year. It is the largest such associa<lb/>
tion in the country and provides a<lb/>
national standard for scuba in-<lb/>
struction.<lb/>
Ray Scharf heads the ECU<lb/>
scuba program and is Director of<lb/>
Aquatics at the university. He has<lb/>
been diving since the late '50's<lb/>
and received his NAUI instruc-<lb/>
tor's certification in 1972. Scharf<lb/>
teaches diving in other Down<lb/>
East communities as well as<lb/>
teaching day and evening classes<lb/>
at ECU year round. What does<lb/>
he do in his spare time? He goes<lb/>
diving, naturally.<lb/>
Scharf can be rightfully proud<lb/>
of his record as a diving instruc-<lb/>
tor. Since 1972 he has trained and<lb/>
certified ? with a perfect record<lb/>
? over 1,100 divers from the<lb/>
basic to instructor levels.<lb/>
Scharf feels that the divers he<lb/>
trains at ECU are even better<lb/>
prepared than the average NAUI<lb/>
diver. This is due in part to the<lb/>
fact that ECU divers go through<lb/>
The program certifies 240-250 approximately two and a half<lb/>
students as basic National times as many classroom hours as<lb/>
Association of Underwater In- most NAUI divers. In addition,<lb/>
structors (NAUI) divers each ECU students take the course for<lb/>
credit and receive a letter grade,<lb/>
providing extra incentive.<lb/>
This quality and amount of in-<lb/>
struction is vitally important.<lb/>
Scuba diving is far more com-<lb/>
plicated than just swimming<lb/>
around underwater and<lb/>
breathing. Students learn about<lb/>
maintain all of the equipment us-<lb/>
ed by scuba divers. "I like the<lb/>
freedom I feel being able to<lb/>
breath underwater said senior<lb/>
history major and ECU diver<lb/>
Tom Allen.<lb/>
"When you finish the basic<lb/>
course you are really just beginn-<lb/>
Tjje scuba class is one of the most popular electlves offered at ECU.<lb/>
ine program certifies about 250 NAUI divers each year.<lb/>
SfctlillSfllH and ecol0?y ? 8 said Ray Scharf. In order<lb/>
ThevtL? u8' to accommodate students who<lb/>
y 9ao lcarn now to use and wanted to learn more about div-<lb/>
ing, ECU began offering an ad-<lb/>
vanced class in 1982.<lb/>
The class was originally re-<lb/>
quested by the Marine Maritime<lb/>
History (MMH) Program here at<lb/>
ECU. MMH students utilize<lb/>
scuba a great deal in their<lb/>
research and need certain advanc-<lb/>
ed skills.<lb/>
In the advanced class they are<lb/>
taught :<lb/>
? Underwater navigation skills<lb/>
? Search and recovery skills<lb/>
? Night diving<lb/>
? Deep diving<lb/>
? Diving in strong currents<lb/>
? Offshore boat diving techni-<lb/>
ques<lb/>
 "In addition Scharf said,<lb/>
"the course is designed to help<lb/>
the diver cope with various condi-<lb/>
tions and stresses in the under-<lb/>
water environment<lb/>
In the fall of '84, ECU in-<lb/>
troduced the Diving Leadership<lb/>
Program (DLP). Students who<lb/>
complete this course are certified<lb/>
as NAUI Divemasters and Assis-<lb/>
tant Instructors. DLP students<lb/>
gain practical experience through<lb/>
helping to teach a basic scuba<lb/>
course. DLP's give classroom lec-<lb/>
tures, teach diving and equip-<lb/>
ment skills in the pool, and act as<lb/>
"buddy or "coach" to<lb/>
students on their checkout dives<lb/>
Twelve students at ECU have<lb/>
completed the Diving Leadership<lb/>
Program.<lb/>
By-the spring of "86, Scharf<lb/>
hopes to expand the ECL divine<lb/>
program to include an instructor<lb/>
trammg course. "It would give us<lb/>
a total diving program from the<lb/>
standpoint of instuction "<lb/>
Local divers who are interested<lb/>
XLTT duiUg throu8h?ut the<lb/>
state and the world may want to<lb/>
?v?n?K ?Cean ?<lb/>
m 1982 to ThKC dUb Was formed<lb/>
till eX'hai,8e ,deas and in-<lb/>
SZ uT and t0 Prom?te safe,<lb/>
enjoyable conditions for d.ver<lb/>
from Greenville and the surroun-<lb/>
ding communities.<lb/>
This year the club sponsored<lb/>
mps to: Key Largo, Australia<lb/>
o?ConeTaIS,andSandThe<lb/>
month at ST ?5, ?f "??<lb/>
Greenville ??. aJ?'<lb/>
Joh<lb/>
Continued Imm i<lb/>
'during the regular<lb/>
Johnson. Burke tj<lb/>
eluding the play<lb/>
first, however<lb/>
Burke led the le<lb/>
and triples a- ?<lb/>
the addmona.<lb/>
but Burke's all-a:<lb/>
been rec <lb/>
league also Both<lb/>
named to the I<lb/>
all-tournament<lb/>
recentlv conclu I<lb/>
Harnngto: ?<lb/>
No matter how t<lb/>
the year voting .<lb/>
Johnson has a<lb/>
media attenti<lb/>
ECL Last -e;<lb/>
Dan<lb/>
INDIANA<lb/>
Lakes Dan:<lb/>
to drive fi -<lb/>
Louisville to I:<lb/>
took him<lb/>
three hour<lb/>
of LS. auto -<lb/>
Sullivan drove<lb/>
trouble twice Sui<lb/>
world's riche<lb/>
dianapous 3?<lb/>
start here<lb/>
At the ?<lb/>
lapofthe200-la<lb/>
two and c ?<lb/>
Sullivan went<lb/>
managed to<lb/>
mario Andrett<lb/>
trol of his car in <lb/>
Suddenly his <lb/>
smoky coasters a<lb/>
powered March<lb/>
seeminglv headed I<lb/>
Sea<lb/>
CHICAGO (UP1<lb/>
Seaver can smile a<lb/>
It was  I<lb/>
ago the poter. j<lb/>
held a tearv-eec<lb/>
ference in New<lb/>
would think it over<lb/>
agreed to come<lb/>
White Sox.<lb/>
Seaver, along -<lb/>
tion of the baseball<lb/>
was stunned to <lb/>
the unprotected<lb/>
to be picked as<lb/>
the Sox for losing<lb/>
cher Dennis Lan<lb/>
At 39, Seaver wa<lb/>
with the prospe.<lb/>
New York Metv m d<lb/>
ty. The idea of <lb/>
at that stage oi<lb/>
popular one. either<lb/>
But Seaver go: a<lb/>
job by genera,<lb/>
Hemond and he sigrj<lb/>
with the White Sox.<lb/>
"I don't knew if<lb/>
totally accurate to<lb/>
selling job He I<lb/>
"We just believed <lb/>
use a solid starter <lb/>
experience. It turn, j<lb/>
good move<lb/>
One of those se.<lb/>
the fact the So were<lb/>
League Western Dr. - l<lb/>
the year before and Sej<lb/>
have a chance to <lb/>
World Series.<lb/>
"The first time I<lb/>
was back in 19 and<lb/>
the Cincinnati Reds<lb/>
just won two World S<lb/>
I came aboard on Jui<lb/>
they were six game-<lb/>
later, they were 12 g <lb/>
Seaver recalled. "Thev<lb/>
i? i? Q Q Q v <lb/>
ToP<lb/>
all a a?<lb/>
IN TH<lb/>
ToHiJ o?v<lb/>
AS L0N6AS<lb/>
ALL y<lb/>
OPEtf MoJ.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 29. 1985<lb/>
sault<lb/>
nance<lb/>
? .tnu<lb/>
md the<lb/>
i .<lb/>
v South<lb/>
and is<lb/>
lidates,<lb/>
Mason's<lb/>
v o r v<lb/>
NmN Pave Y<lb/>
K I<lb/>
uses<lb/>
<lb/>
Best<lb/>
lents r E(<lb/>
t o<lb/>
lives.<lb/>
hae<lb/>
rship<lb/>
?<lb/>
 Scharf<lb/>
:I Jiving<lb/>
iCtor<lb/>
ild give us<lb/>
mi from the<lb/>
ituctiort<lb/>
s who are interested<lb/>
'ng throughout the<lb/>
'rid may want to<lb/>
 Ocean Atlantic<lb/>
ie club was formed<lb/>
change ideas and in-<lb/>
?d to promote safe,<lb/>
editions for divers'<lb/>
ille and the surroun-<lb/>
Hties.<lb/>
the club sponsored<lb/>
 Largo. Australia,<lb/>
Elands and The Sea<lb/>
Leungs are held on<lb/>
I'ednesday of every<lb/>
lhe Ramada Inn,<lb/>
Nm at 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
( ontinued From Page 8<lb/>
during the regular season to<lb/>
Johnson. Burke's total rbi's in-<lb/>
cluding the playoffs puts him in<lb/>
first, however.<lb/>
Burke led the league in doubles<lb/>
and triples as well. Johnson has<lb/>
the additional factor of pitching,<lb/>
but Burke's all-around ability has<lb/>
been recognized around the<lb/>
league also. Both players were<lb/>
named to the ECAC Southern<lb/>
all-tournament team of the<lb/>
recently concluded playoffs at<lb/>
Harrington Field.<lb/>
No matter how the player of<lb/>
the year voting goes for '85,<lb/>
ohnson has already gained much<lb/>
media attention in his career at<lb/>
ECU. Last season he was named<lb/>
Improves On Career Homer Mark<lb/>
to the All-NCAA South I<lb/>
Regional team as a result of a<lb/>
444 batting. He also pitched a<lb/>
complete game in the win against<lb/>
Florida State ? the same one he<lb/>
won offensively with a grand-<lb/>
slam.<lb/>
His nine complete games and<lb/>
3.30 ERA in '84 resulted in his<lb/>
being named the winner of the<lb/>
Gaylord Perry Award for last<lb/>
season. This award goes to the<lb/>
best amateur pitcher in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Johnson was the subject of a<lb/>
feature article in Baseball<lb/>
America and was selected as The<lb/>
Daily Reflector male player of<lb/>
the year recently as well.<lb/>
Not the least of those impress-<lb/>
ed by Winfred Johnson's stats<lb/>
are the Pirate coaches. Just the<lb/>
mention of Johnson's name is<lb/>
enough to bring out a smile from<lb/>
them, even after the recent losses<lb/>
in the ECAC-Southern playoffs.<lb/>
Head coach Gary Overton and<lb/>
assistant coach Billy Best have<lb/>
nothing but good things to say<lb/>
about their star player. "The<lb/>
statistics speak for themselves<lb/>
said Overton. "Winfred's simply<lb/>
a very good hitter. He played ex-<lb/>
cellently last year and even better<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
"One day the young man's go-<lb/>
ing to make his mark in the<lb/>
pros Overton stated. "It may<lb/>
not be right away, but it will hap-<lb/>
pen. He pitched a fine game in<lb/>
the ECAC tournament, but just<lb/>
lost one of those one-run<lb/>
games<lb/>
Best, who works with the hit-<lb/>
ters as part of his duties, feels<lb/>
Johnson's .432 bating average is<lb/>
symbolic of the experience the<lb/>
first basemanpitcher has gained<lb/>
since arriving at ECU.<lb/>
"The unique thing about Win-<lb/>
fred is the combination of power<lb/>
and a high average Best said.<lb/>
"He seemed to lay off a lot more<lb/>
pitches this year, which is<lb/>
demonstrated by the fewer<lb/>
number of times he struck out.<lb/>
He got more walks by being more<lb/>
selective<lb/>
This relationship between ex-<lb/>
perience and strike-outswalks is<lb/>
vividly shown by the stats.<lb/>
Johnson went from striking out<lb/>
32 times and walking only eight<lb/>
Danny Sullivan Takes Indv With<lb/>
times in 39 games his freshman<lb/>
year to 21 strike-outs and 25<lb/>
walks in 46 games his sophomore<lb/>
year.<lb/>
He topped all those figures in<lb/>
'85 with only 14 strike-outs in 46<lb/>
games, with 33 walks. The<lb/>
"Cat as he has been nicknam-<lb/>
ed, has never had a triple in col-<lb/>
lege play, but has increased the<lb/>
number of doubles each year, go-<lb/>
ing from seven his first season to<lb/>
nine in '84, then hitting 11 this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"Winfred has the ability to hit<lb/>
all kinds of pitches Best said.<lb/>
"He's one of the best breaking-<lb/>
ball hitters I've seen, but he can<lb/>
hit fastballs just as well<lb/>
Johnson has improved in his<lb/>
defensive play at first base, also,<lb/>
according to Best. "He was play-<lb/>
ing as just the designated hitter<lb/>
sometimes in previous seasons<lb/>
the Pirate assistant coach said,<lb/>
"but since he became the starting<lb/>
first baseman, he's done a fine<lb/>
job<lb/>
Johnson ended the '85 season<lb/>
with a .975 fielding mark, with<lb/>
only six errors, while being<lb/>
credited with 216 put-outs.<lb/>
Pirate fans are already looking<lb/>
for even more excitement from<lb/>
Johnson in 1986, but one of the<lb/>
problems with playing so well is<lb/>
the difficulty of topping previous<lb/>
performances.<lb/>
If the continued improvement<lb/>
over three seasons is any indica-<lb/>
tion ? Winfred Johnson is one<lb/>
man that can do it.<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) ? It<lb/>
akes Danny Sullivan two hours<lb/>
to drive from his hometown of<lb/>
Louisville to Indianapolis. It<lb/>
took him just a little more than<lb/>
:hree hours to reach the pinnacle<lb/>
of U.S. auto racing.<lb/>
Sullivan drove in and cat of<lb/>
trouble twice Sunday to win the<lb/>
world's richest car race, the In-<lb/>
dianapolis 500, in only his third<lb/>
start here.<lb/>
At the first turn in the 120th<lb/>
lap of the 200-lap race around the<lb/>
two and one-half mile oval,<lb/>
Sullivan went for the lead. He<lb/>
managed to pass front-runner<lb/>
mano Andretti, but he lost con-<lb/>
trol of his car in the process.<lb/>
Suddenly his tires became<lb/>
moky coasters as his Cosworth-<lb/>
powered March whirled around,<lb/>
seemingly headed for the wall<lb/>
and catastrophe. But the car<lb/>
merely completed a perfect<lb/>
360-degree spin, came out of it<lb/>
facing the same way it had gone<lb/>
into it. "I was just holding on<lb/>
Sullivan said. But with his<lb/>
pirouette, he relinquished the<lb/>
lead to Andretti.<lb/>
Four laps later, rookie Rich<lb/>
Vogler spun out in the same first<lb/>
turn. He ran out of room and out<lb/>
of luck. His car hit the wall,<lb/>
splashing wreckage acrossthe<lb/>
track as Tom Sneva, Andretti<lb/>
and Sullivan approached.<lb/>
Sneva spun out and hit the<lb/>
wall, too. Andretti and Sullivan<lb/>
survived again. Int he 140th lap,<lb/>
on his third try at passing Andret-<lb/>
ti, Sulivan did it. He was in front<lb/>
to stay, finishing the race in 3<lb/>
hours, 16 minutes, 6.069 seconds<lb/>
? 2,477 seconds ahead of An-<lb/>
dretti.<lb/>
Andretti had been shooting for<lb/>
his second victory. He ound up,<lb/>
instead, with his second second.<lb/>
And Sullivan, who only a decade<lb/>
or so ago was careening around<lb/>
the streets of New York city<lb/>
behind the wheel of a taxicab,<lb/>
wound up giving the Roger Pen-<lb/>
ske Racing Team its second<lb/>
straight Indy 500 victory.<lb/>
"The taxi driver business is<lb/>
really blown out of proportion<lb/>
because I didn't drive for very<lb/>
long Sullivan said, while still<lb/>
enjoying the spotlight his victory<lb/>
produced. "I worked as a waiter<lb/>
there more of the time than<lb/>
anything else<lb/>
Sullivan is a new breed of racer<lb/>
? one with a jet-set reputation.<lb/>
Unlike A.J. Foyt, Al Unser and<lb/>
other veterans of the Indy-car cir-<lb/>
cuit who began their careers rac-<lb/>
ing on dirt tracks and sleeping in<lb/>
the back seats of their cars to save<lb/>
money, Sullivan spent his ap-<lb/>
prenticeship on the glamorous<lb/>
European racing circuit.<lb/>
"I enjoy making a good im-<lb/>
pression both on the track, when<lb/>
I'm relaxing and in all my ac-<lb/>
tivities Sullivan said. "That's<lb/>
important to me That ? and<lb/>
his driving skills ? were too<lb/>
much for Penske to resist.<lb/>
"This time last year I wouldn't<lb/>
have considered hiring him. I<lb/>
knew Danny, but he hadn't<lb/>
shown me his credentials. At<lb/>
Pocono I saw him get behind and<lb/>
work his way up again, then hold<lb/>
off and beat Rick Mears. That<lb/>
showed his progress Penske<lb/>
said. It was Mears who gave Pen-<lb/>
Comes Back With<lb/>
CHICAGO (UPI) ? Tom<lb/>
Seaver can smile about it now.<lb/>
It was just a little over one year<lb/>
ago the potential hall of famer<lb/>
held a teary-eyed news con-<lb/>
ference in New York to say he<lb/>
would think it over before he<lb/>
agreed to come to the Chicago<lb/>
White Sox<lb/>
Seaver, along with a large por-<lb/>
tion of the baseball community,<lb/>
was stunned to find his name on<lb/>
the unprotected list and eligible<lb/>
to be picked as compensation to<lb/>
the Sox for losing free agent pit-<lb/>
cher Dennis Lamp.<lb/>
At 39, Seaver wasn't thrilled<lb/>
with the prospect of leaving the<lb/>
New York Mets or New York ci-<lb/>
ty. The idea of switching leagues<lb/>
at that stage of his career wasn't a<lb/>
popular one, either.<lb/>
But Seaver got a good selling<lb/>
'ob by general manager Roland<lb/>
Hemond and he signed aboard<lb/>
with the White Sox.<lb/>
"I don't know if it would be<lb/>
totally accurate to say it was a<lb/>
selling job Hemmond recals.<lb/>
"We just believed that we could<lb/>
use a solid starter with his kind of<lb/>
experience. It turned out to be a<lb/>
good move<lb/>
One of those selling points was<lb/>
the fact the Sox were American<lb/>
League Western Division champs<lb/>
the year before and Seaver could<lb/>
have a chance to pitch in the<lb/>
World Series.<lb/>
"The first time I left New York<lb/>
was back in 1977 and I went to<lb/>
the Cincinnati Reds. They had<lb/>
just won two World Series titles.<lb/>
I came aboard on June 16 and<lb/>
they were six games out. A week<lb/>
later, they were 12 games back<lb/>
Seaver recalled. "They didn't win<lb/>
the World Series that year,<lb/>
either<lb/>
You don't have to remind<lb/>
Seaver twice what happened to<lb/>
the Sox last year.<lb/>
"I come aboard a division win-<lb/>
ning team and they wind up in<lb/>
fifth place Seaver said. "I<lb/>
warned you, Roland<lb/>
Things are different this year,<lb/>
if the first part of the 1985 season<lb/>
can be a barometer. Seaver has<lb/>
become part of a revitalized Sox<lb/>
p;tching staff that includes<lb/>
Richard Dotson, Britt Burns and<lb/>
Floyd Bannister and the Sox are<lb/>
back contending in the American<lb/>
League Western division.<lb/>
Seaver won four of his first six<lb/>
decisions and climbed to the 292<lb/>
career victory plateau on May 20,<lb/>
giving him an excellent shot at<lb/>
reaching the career 300-win mark<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Truth is, had it not been for<lb/>
Seaver, the Sox probably would<lb/>
have finished last in the AL West<lb/>
last year. Seaver, who won 15<lb/>
games, was the club's most<lb/>
dependable starting pitcher and<lb/>
could have won 20 games had he<lb/>
gotten any support.<lb/>
"In seven games he started, we<lb/>
scored two or less runs says<lb/>
Manager Tony LaRussa. "In six<lb/>
games he left with a lead and we<lb/>
didn't hold it for him<lb/>
"You just know that if you can<lb/>
keep the other guys down, then<lb/>
we are going to score some runs<lb/>
and win the games Seaver says.<lb/>
"You can feel it on this club<lb/>
Last year, Seaver compiled a<lb/>
3.95 earned run average, high for<lb/>
him compared to his lifetime<lb/>
statistics, but among the best on<lb/>
the Sox staff. This year, his ERA<lb/>
is down about a half a run.<lb/>
Last year, he was 9-4 at Com-<lb/>
iskey Park with a 3.64 earned run<lb/>
average. Seaver won't say so, but<lb/>
pitching in unfamiliar parks for<lb/>
the first time in his career may<lb/>
have affected his performance on<lb/>
the road.<lb/>
"It was a thrill pitching in a<lb/>
place like Fenway Park. All the<lb/>
history and I hope they never<lb/>
take that away from the fans<lb/>
says Seaver with an obvious<lb/>
finger toward anv efforts to get<lb/>
rid of crosstown rival Chicago<lb/>
Cubs' home, Wrigley Field.<lb/>
With the departure of former<lb/>
Cy Young Award winner LaMarr<lb/>
Hoyt to San Diego, Seaver was a<lb/>
strong candidate to be the ace<lb/>
and stopper of a staff that at one<lb/>
time was considered to have the<lb/>
best young arms in baseball. But<lb/>
with the pitching of Dotson,<lb/>
Burns and Bannister, the club has<lb/>
not had to rely as heavily on<lb/>
Seaver as it did one year ago.<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Ave<lb/>
We Buv Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
S All Transactions Confidential cX<lb/>
Houn:<lb/>
752-0322 'cNe<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
'Adults S2<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
 ANYT'ME<lb/>
iTOP 100 5ALEH<lb/>
 ALL 82 LIST LPk ni TAPES J<lb/>
 jn the top too Af?? J<lb/>
1 <lb/>
TIPPLE<lb/>
Lftecoftft<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
1-3-5-7-9<lb/>
RICHARD<lb/>
PRYOR<lb/>
W<lb/>
l&amp;U&amp;Cgl- Big<lb/>
Ends Thur. Starts Friday!<lb/>
"School Spirit"<lb/>
1:15-3:15<lb/>
5:15-7:15-9:15<lb/>
HELLHOLE<lb/>
? BILLY FINE i LOUIS S ARK0FF<lb/>
cowghi immn Wq, mtnoK ?ctj?s 1 ?3<lb/>
JL<lb/>
Ends Thur.<lb/>
"Party Beach<lb/>
High"<lb/>
5 1-3-5-7-9 <lb/>
?-?"??-???-?  ?   <lb/>
20 ?. SVi ST 758-127 <lb/>
JTRIrfCtTSKX ?tE?W me WHAM<lb/>
j Tout) fosenTf paa Fo??t?E?6 Tit Tu?er<lb/>
 M L0H6AS THE AK? tf THE TOP loo C<lb/>
OP?tf ModSAT. lOAtA TIL- 9 prA<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
Amoco<lb/>
AMOCO<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
756-3023 24 hrs.<lb/>
310 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
ske the checkered flag at Indy a<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
In public, Sullivan's hair is<lb/>
neatly combed, his face well-<lb/>
tanned, his physique well-<lb/>
muscled. Away from the speed-<lb/>
way, he still travels in the fast<lb/>
lane.<lb/>
He also thinks his reputation as<lb/>
a jet-set playboy isn't justified.<lb/>
"That's overplayed. A lot of peo-<lb/>
ple talk about it, but it's mainly<lb/>
something they speculate about.<lb/>
I'd be lying if I said I don't enjoy<lb/>
life, but I don't think that is<lb/>
something to speculate on.<lb/>
"Besides, I don't spend much<lb/>
time away from the track. I like<lb/>
to ski, get away from it and I<lb/>
have a girlfriend. But my private<lb/>
life is just that<lb/>
He spent a lot of time Sunda<lb/>
night viewing tapes of Sundays<lb/>
race, paying special attention to<lb/>
the spectacular spin. "There's no<lb/>
book on how to handle<lb/>
something like that, especiallv<lb/>
when your eyes are closed he<lb/>
said. "I was just luckj then ?<lb/>
and also I just missed riding into<lb/>
Sneva's crash minutes later. I<lb/>
missed it by about this much he<lb/>
added, holding his fingers about<lb/>
three inches apart.<lb/>
He didn't have that margin for<lb/>
error in his two previous starts<lb/>
here.<lb/>
SLEEPING BAGS<lb/>
ackpaocs rtNTs -  .<lb/>
 -? ?  ZAHT&amp;K FAT  . ?<lb/>
- AEii rSH)RT5 ??- AR?<lb/>
? ow : -?-? . . .  <lb/>
Browser Welcome<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
 1501 S Evans<lb/>
jXr'HTrA'na ?y.w ??? w?' wwww?.? .??,? ?wv.w-mw<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
Make Your Next Meal<lb/>
PORTABLE<lb/>
PICNIC<lb/>
from<lb/>
208 E. Fifth St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
Delivery available thru "The Jokes On Us"<lb/>
757-1973<lb/>
VSSS 'SsSSsSSWSSSSfJSJI.<lb/>
 ?' ? ????? i i ????<lb/>
t;<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
IS NOW A CCEPTING<lb/>
APPLICA TIONS FOR<lb/>
SALES<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVE<lb/>
Must Have<lb/>
Selling Experience<lb/>
Apply in Person<lb/>
2nd Floor<lb/>
Old South Building<lb/>
l-SPM<lb/>
t<lb/>
"l '??" ???!<lb/>
m.m??<lb/>
1 ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
JHE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
MAY 29, 198S<lb/>
IRS Sponsors Trip To Uwharries<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Are you looking for something<lb/>
refreshing, exciting and exercis-<lb/>
ing for your weekend enjoyment?<lb/>
Well, the outdoor recreation<lb/>
center can satisfy your summer<lb/>
needs.<lb/>
On the weekend of June 7-9,<lb/>
the intramural outdoor recrea-<lb/>
tion center will sponsor a<lb/>
backpacking trip to the Uwharrie<lb/>
National Forest. The Uwharrie<lb/>
Forest is nestled among the oldest<lb/>
mountain ranges in the Western<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M-F 4 p.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th 9 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m. -5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M-F 3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
T-Th 10a.m12 noon<lb/>
T-Th 1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th 11 p.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 11 p.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. 1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
CHECK-OUT CENTER<lb/>
(Memorial Gym 115)<lb/>
M-Th 11 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 11 a.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m4p.m.<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
MF 1:30 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
T-Th 2 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED. Room<lb/>
mate wanted as soon as possible to<lb/>
share a two bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Oakmont Square. Private Room,<lb/>
pool, tennis courts, laundry<lb/>
facilities Call 756 8503 after 6:30.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share<lb/>
2 bedroom townhouse with 1 other<lb/>
person 34 mile from ECU on 5th St.<lb/>
$145 per month plus utilities. Heat in<lb/>
eluded in rent. 830 1306<lb/>
NEEDED: Art student with silk<lb/>
screen-print background Call<lb/>
756 8801.<lb/>
ROOMMATED WANTED: Need<lb/>
female roommate. Private room,<lb/>
AC, near campus, $107, one third<lb/>
phone, utilities, cable. Must be neat.<lb/>
Nonsmoker. No pets. Call Lori or<lb/>
Diana: 752 1001<lb/>
NEEDED: Seeking responsible<lb/>
roommate to share B unit at Ring<lb/>
gold Towers for the summer. Com<lb/>
pletely furnished, AC, accessories<lb/>
included. Call weekdays before 3 PM<lb/>
757 6366. Ask for Dan.<lb/>
NEEDED: Apartment cleaned on<lb/>
regular basis. For information, call<lb/>
757 3509 after 5 PM.<lb/>
NEEDED: Part-time instrument<lb/>
man party chief and drafstperson<lb/>
for local surveying company. Ex-<lb/>
perience required Call 752 5998 for<lb/>
appointement.<lb/>
NEEDED: America's largest inven-<lb/>
tory co needs H.S. graduates to take<lb/>
inventory in the Greenville area.<lb/>
Work 10 20 hours per week.<lb/>
Weeknights and weekends. Start at<lb/>
$4.50 and hour. We will train. Call<lb/>
collect on May 30th between 10 AM<lb/>
and 3 PM, 787 0591.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: House for<lb/>
rent: 6 bedroom house near univer<lb/>
sity, 305 E. 14th St. Summer or long<lb/>
term rental To be renovated. $350.<lb/>
758 5299<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
BICYCLES PAINTED: CALL JIM<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION.<lb/>
757 3861<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Men's 23 " Univega<lb/>
10-Speed. 9 Months old excellent con-<lb/>
dition, $120. Call 757 3517 after 3.<lb/>
FOR SALE: RCA VHS VCR for $200.<lb/>
Pioneer sx 780 receiver 55 wch<lb/>
$125. Hitachi HT 405 turntable, DD<lb/>
with new ADC cartridge $110. I<lb/>
negotiate. 752 8483.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Commodore VIC20<lb/>
computer with all hookups and some<lb/>
extras including: 6 game tapes,<lb/>
cassette storage recorderplayer,<lb/>
joystick, modem with terminal pro<lb/>
gram cassette, Programer's Aid,<lb/>
memory expansion cartridge and<lb/>
reference manuals. $200. Call An-<lb/>
thony at 757 6366 or 752 0291<lb/>
Hemisphere near Asheboro,<lb/>
N.C. The entire trail passes<lb/>
through both public and private<lb/>
lands extending through six of<lb/>
North Carolina's most scenic<lb/>
counties.<lb/>
The expedition will leave from<lb/>
Memorial Gym at 3:00 on Friday<lb/>
June 7 and arrive at their destina-<lb/>
tion early in the evening to<lb/>
prepare for the overnight stay.<lb/>
Saturday will feature a full day of<lb/>
trailblazing until camp is<lb/>
established at approximately 5:00<lb/>
that evening. During Sunday, the<lb/>
group will once again hit the<lb/>
trails until departing for home at<lb/>
3 p.m. They should arrive in<lb/>
Greenville around 8 p.m.<lb/>
To partake in this session's<lb/>
adventure trip, a payment of<lb/>
either $12.00 or $20.00 is<lb/>
necessary. The $12.00 fee is for<lb/>
transportation only. The $20.00<lb/>
covers transportation, tent, sleep-<lb/>
ing bag, cook sets and water bot-<lb/>
tles. A $10.00 cash payment<lb/>
should be made for food provi-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
The trip is geared toward<lb/>
novice or beginning trail blazers.<lb/>
However, six miles of moderate<lb/>
to heavy hiking can take its toll<lb/>
on anyone. The IRS suggests that<lb/>
you begin conditioning now by<lb/>
jogging, running or walking.<lb/>
A Uwharrie packet containing<lb/>
all the information concerning<lb/>
this year's trip can be obtained by<lb/>
going to the outdoor recreation<lb/>
center in room 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym or call 757-6387 for more<lb/>
information.<lb/>
A pre-trip meeting will be held<lb/>
June 4 at 4 p.m. in room 105-B<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Ihis meeting is<lb/>
mandatory for all who plan to<lb/>
hike with the IRS.<lb/>
Be sure to tune in every Thurs-<lb/>
day at 2:30 and 5:30 for in-<lb/>
tramural sport highlights and in-<lb/>
terviews on WZMB and the IRS<lb/>
Tennis Shoe Talkshow 91.3 FM<lb/>
is your channel for sport- ol sorts<lb/>
with intramurals.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 7a.m8a<lb/>
M-f 12 noon-1:30 p.m.<lb/>
T '  ? n<lb/>
f<lb/>
'<lb/>
y<lb/>
f!<lb/>
SEEOEWV<lb/>
SMGIEHV.UE STORE<lb/>
jfiEW SSg- vri I WITH<lb/>
tnfflHBI<lb/>
FltlO<lb/>
?msyovjwantjaosti<lb/>
xmmlTQWALL<lb/>
yai'j:hoiisi:<lb/>
prh:i:s<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
HAMBURGER OR<lb/>
Hot Dog Buns<lb/>
3100<lb/>
,50' V<lb/>
8 ct. ?<lb/>
pkgs. ?<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00<lb/>
OR MORE PURCHASE.<lb/>
DIET PEPSI ? MTN. DEW<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
OPEN SUNDAYS 8'<lb/>
m<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Blue Bonnet<lb/>
2100<lb/>
SAME 4<lb/>
UP TO <lb/>
38c C<lb/>
I t J.? ? ni-Wit 1<lb/>
FRESH CUT GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
Whole Rib Eye<lb/>
1 lb. B<lb/>
pkgs. m<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00<lb/>
OR MORE PURCHASE.<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
up to <lb/>
50c r<lb/>
2ltr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
"<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
HELLMANNS<lb/>
V2 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
2oo<lb/>
9 12 lb.<lb/>
avg.<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
LIMIT ONE<lb/>
CUT FREE<lb/>
FRESH CUT GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
MORE THAN 81 LEAN<lb/>
Ground Chuck<lb/>
tb<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Mayonnaise Fox Pizza<lb/>
SAM j<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
T032o2<lb/>
jar<lb/>
25- OFF LABEL<lb/>
azola Corn Oil<lb/>
;bler<lb/>
eady Crust Pie Shells<lb/>
Honeycomb Cereal<lb/>
Ikraft<lb/>
BBQ Sauce<lb/>
ITEXAS PETE<lb/>
J SAVE <lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH<lb/>
AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
10.00 OR MORE<lb/>
PURCHASE.<lb/>
tEEBLER<lb/>
OST<lb/>
32 oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
6 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
14 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
18 oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
1 SAVE<lb/>
74 up ro<lb/>
20<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
99 V<lb/>
1<lb/>
79 up to<lb/>
20<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
99??<lb/>
JIFFY CORN<lb/>
Muffin Mix<lb/>
PRIDE OF THE FARM<lb/>
Canned Tomatoes 3<lb/>
FRENCHS<lb/>
Worcestershire Sauce<lb/>
10 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
4 8'joz<lb/>
pkgs<lb/>
nn SAVE<lb/>
1???<lb/>
14oz<lb/>
cans<lb/>
10 oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
WHITE-YELLOW<lb/>
Charmin Tissue<lb/>
REGULAR ? LIGHT<lb/>
TO <lb/>
Budweiser l<lb/>
v SAVE t p"9<lb/>
v up-<lb/>
<lb/>
87 $?<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
- SAME <lb/>
' UP TO "<lb/>
20? 10 oz.<lb/>
 pkg.<lb/>
FLORIDAGOLD FROZEN<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
SUPER DELUXE<lb/>
Saluto Pizza<lb/>
BANQUET<lb/>
Chicken Platter<lb/>
PACKER S LABEL<lb/>
French Fried Potatoes<lb/>
BUTTER-ME-NOT<lb/>
a&amp;p fh<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
American Singles<lb/>
CROCK<lb/>
Sunnyland Spread<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
Grated Parmesan<lb/>
MEDIUM ? MILD<lb/>
Kraft Cheddar <lb/>
WINE fT<lb/>
Paul <lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
FRESH CUT GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
Cubed Steak<lb/>
Family<lb/>
Pack<lb/>
 b5 ' lb.<lb/>
4p v? C U S D A FRESH<lb/>
Fryer Leg Qtrs.<lb/>
? i ?<lb/>
48'<lb/>
32' jOZ<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
1?q up to<lb/>
4 SAVE<lb/>
59 UP TO<lb/>
40<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
99? V<lb/>
29 up to<lb/>
70<lb/>
PRODUCE SPECIALS<lb/>
RED RIPE<lb/>
California<lb/>
Strawberries<lb/>
qt<lb/>
basket<lb/>
RED<lb/>
9' 2 oz.<lb/>
10 ct.<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
IRQ up to<lb/>
w2t<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
140 up to<lb/>
m 20<lb/>
save<lb/>
239 up to<lb/>
46<lb/>
JM1 SAVE<lb/>
139 up to<lb/>
I 2t<lb/>
Ripe f?)<lb/>
Watermelon<lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE SPECIALS<lb/>
each<lb/>
half<lb/>
25- OFF LABEL<lb/>
Crest Toothpaste<lb/>
STYLE BONUS 4 OZ FREE'<lb/>
Hairspray<lb/>
SAVE 50-<lb/>
6 4 oz<lb/>
tube<lb/>
r -29<lb/>
can<lb/>
DELI SPECIALS<lb/>
Masson<lb/>
1.5 Itr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
BUY ONE POUND OF GLAZED<lb/>
Turkey Breast<lb/>
GET ONE PKG OF<lb/>
Pita Bread FREE!<lb/>
m<lb/>
f'J<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057716_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>