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<pb facs="00057805_0001"/>
alb<lb/>
(Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.60 No.4?-(J<lb/>
Thursday, February 27, 1986<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Orcutatioo I2,i<lb/>
Reasons Assessed For<lb/>
Magazine's Moratorium<lb/>
Night Life<lb/>
jim iji n.fss iv hu' i iMiiH<lb/>
Easy access to local nightspots is one of the advantages to living on West Campus. However,<lb/>
students ma find it hard to sleep after a fun-filled night of partying due to noisy traffic on Cotanche<lb/>
Street.<lb/>
Awareness Prevents Assault<lb/>
By DAVID McGlNNFSS<lb/>
According to one survey done<lb/>
at a major university in 1985, 25<lb/>
percent of treshmen males polled<lb/>
said they would commit rape if<lb/>
they knew they would get away<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
It is easy to see that college<lb/>
campuses, with their built-in sup-<lb/>
ply of single females, who are<lb/>
often alone, make attractive<lb/>
target areas for potential rapists<lb/>
Numerous studies indicate that<lb/>
in most cases, preventing rape is<lb/>
only a matter taking precautions<lb/>
that make the rapist's task more<lb/>
difficult. However, most women<lb/>
fail to take these precautions,<lb/>
thinking that rape is something<lb/>
that could never happen to them.<lb/>
But here at ECU, as<lb/>
everywhere else in the country,<lb/>
rape can and does happen. In<lb/>
fact, according to ECU campus<lb/>
security, one to two cases are<lb/>
reported on average each month,<lb/>
and there is probably an equal or<lb/>
greater number of cases that go<lb/>
unreported.<lb/>
According to law-enforcement<lb/>
agencies, the most important fac-<lb/>
tor in avoiding rape and or<lb/>
assault is to limit the number of<lb/>
factors that can threaten one's<lb/>
safety.<lb/>
To acccomplish this, students<lb/>
should: try to avoid traveling<lb/>
alone, especially at night. Use<lb/>
highly-trafficked, well-lit routes.<lb/>
Take advantage of the Pirate<lb/>
Walk, and do not accept rides<lb/>
from people you do not know.<lb/>
According to ECU Campus<lb/>
Security Officer Rhonda Gurley,<lb/>
who is in charge of the rape<lb/>
prevention program, "Students<lb/>
should develop a sense of<lb/>
awareness of their surroundings<lb/>
when traveling on campus. They<lb/>
should take well-populated<lb/>
routes and occasionally vary their<lb/>
route, to avoid someone who<lb/>
may sialk them over a period of<lb/>
days and wait in a pre-determined<lb/>
area<lb/>
Gurley added that students<lb/>
should be aware of the function<lb/>
and location of the blue-light<lb/>
phones. These phones are located<lb/>
around campus and will signal<lb/>
the campus security office that a<lb/>
call is being made and where it is<lb/>
coming from as soon as the<lb/>
receiver is lifted.<lb/>
Students can also do several<lb/>
things to increase security in their<lb/>
residence halls according to ECU<lb/>
Student Health Services Health<lb/>
Educator Mary Elesha-Adams.<lb/>
One thing students can do is not<lb/>
leave entrance doors wedged<lb/>
open, allowing unauthorized per-<lb/>
sons entry into the dormitory.<lb/>
"A lot of times students will<lb/>
leave the hall doors open in order<lb/>
to get some air flow said<lb/>
Elesha-Adams. "But that can let<lb/>
anyone get into the dorm lobby,<lb/>
or even the residence area itself<lb/>
Female residents, suggested<lb/>
Gurley, should report suspicious<lb/>
:?. unescorted males in their dorms<lb/>
to campus security, and<lb/>
remember to give accurate<lb/>
descriptions. In addition, they<lb/>
should keep their dorm-room<lb/>
doors locked, even when they are<lb/>
home, and always require people<lb/>
knocking on the door to identify<lb/>
themselves before opening up.<lb/>
However, assuming preventive<lb/>
measures fail, and a student is<lb/>
faced with an attacker, she (or<lb/>
he) should have a pre-formed<lb/>
plan for dealing with the situa-<lb/>
tion, emphasized Elesha-Adams.<lb/>
As the attack is occuring is not<lb/>
the time to start thinking about<lb/>
possible responses.<lb/>
According to both Gurley and<lb/>
Adams, the best response is to<lb/>
make a lot of noise and run.<lb/>
"It's important to run to<lb/>
somewhere though Adams<lb/>
stressed. "Run to a house with<lb/>
lights on, to a well-lighted area,<lb/>
or any populated area<lb/>
See TACTICS Page 5.<lb/>
By CAROLYN DRISCOLI.<lb/>
NUff Vtritrr<lb/>
Over two weeks ago in closed<lb/>
session, the Media Board decided<lb/>
that due to organizational and<lb/>
budget problems, Expressions<lb/>
(ECU's minority affairs publica-<lb/>
tion) would be placed in a state of<lb/>
moratorium until a subcommittee<lb/>
could review the situation and<lb/>
agree on ways to improve the<lb/>
publication.<lb/>
The Board's action on Feb. 10<lb/>
was prompted by Board member<lb/>
Kirk Shelley's proposal to form a<lb/>
committee to look into the<lb/>
possibility of phasing-out Expres-<lb/>
sions and integrating it with the<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
At the time, Shelley stated, "I<lb/>
am appalled, completely and<lb/>
totally appalled (with the most re-<lb/>
cent issue of Expressions) He<lb/>
went on to say that the magazine<lb/>
did not represent all of the<lb/>
minorities on campus, and that<lb/>
there were mistakes such as<lb/>
misspelled words and sentence<lb/>
fragments.<lb/>
Two week ago Expressions<lb/>
won the Associated Collegiate<lb/>
Press Award for the best in show<lb/>
for layout and graphic design.<lb/>
Shelley's proposal vas amend-<lb/>
ed by the Media Board in closed<lb/>
session freezing all operations<lb/>
and forming a committee whose<lb/>
purpose is to improve Expres-<lb/>
sions as a separate medium said<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Most individuals dose to the<lb/>
situation agree that the problem<lb/>
with the publication is rooted in'<lb/>
its organization. This problem<lb/>
came to the Media Board's atten-<lb/>
tion when Jeffrey Canady,<lb/>
general manager of Expressions<lb/>
fired Jimmie Hackett, the<lb/>
managing editor; however,<lb/>
because Canady did not follow<lb/>
proper procedure, Hackett was<lb/>
immediately reinstated before the<lb/>
Board froze the magazine's<lb/>
operations.<lb/>
Explains Hackett, "One major<lb/>
problem has been the lack of<lb/>
communication between the<lb/>
general manager and myself; that<lb/>
alone has created a large portion<lb/>
of the problem<lb/>
Shelley agrees, "There are two<lb/>
people in top positions who can-<lb/>
not work together. And they need<lb/>
to  The minority publication<lb/>
lias a lot of potential it hasn't liv-<lb/>
ed up to because these two have<lb/>
been fighting<lb/>
Another component of the<lb/>
:ssue stems from the fact that the<lb/>
present managers have been<lb/>
unable to recruit and maintain a<lb/>
full staff. In fact, one of the<lb/>
reasons that Expressions was<lb/>
placed in a state of moratorium,<lb/>
according to Michael Smith,<lb/>
Media Board chairman, was "to<lb/>
get minority students' input and<lb/>
the help that management said it<lb/>
could not kjet<lb/>
Smith and Hackett both state<lb/>
that the purpose behind the<lb/>
Board's action was to reorganize<lb/>
due to management problems.<lb/>
Shelley said, "We can't get rid of<lb/>
either one of them (Canady or<lb/>
Hackett) and they can't work<lb/>
together. We can't see spending<lb/>
the money (student fees) if they<lb/>
won't work together on this<lb/>
However, when asked why the<lb/>
Board has taken these steps,<lb/>
Canady said, "1 have requested a<lb/>
hearing or written explanation of<lb/>
why the Media Board has done<lb/>
this. The only response I have<lb/>
gotten is that it is in the working.<lb/>
I've heard various things from<lb/>
various people, but nothing<lb/>
definite or concrete<lb/>
Another part of the organiza-<lb/>
tional problem is the budget.<lb/>
When it was approved by<lb/>
Media Board, it was to cover four<lb/>
issues of the magazine, with the<lb/>
possibility of a fifth in the sum-<lb/>
mer, according to Smith.<lb/>
Expressions was allowed<lb/>
S.OOO to cover printing and bin-<lb/>
ding for all issues produced dur-<lb/>
ing the year. Smith said. Of that<lb/>
$000, slightly over 59 percent<lb/>
was spent on the publication's<lb/>
See EXPRESSIONS Page 5.<lb/>
Forum Addresses<lb/>
Apartheid Issue<lb/>
Orientation Jobs<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
By PATTI K.EMM1S<lb/>
MnftMH Nf? Aii<lb/>
Applications are being ac-<lb/>
cepted for the 16 positions still<lb/>
available to work as assistants in<lb/>
the summer orientation program.<lb/>
"We are looking for people<lb/>
who will make a positive first im-<lb/>
pression of ECU said Ron<lb/>
Speier, associate Dean of<lb/>
Students.<lb/>
The 1986 summer orientation<lb/>
program will run from June 15 to<lb/>
July 14. There will be a one and a<lb/>
half day session and six two and a<lb/>
half day sessions.<lb/>
Along with room and board<lb/>
during the 31 day period the stu-<lb/>
dent assistants will earn $800.<lb/>
The assistants will be expected<lb/>
to be able to adequately and ob-<lb/>
jectively portray ECU, its<lb/>
policies, services, and personnell<lb/>
to new students and parents.<lb/>
A few of the duties the<lb/>
assistants will perform are con-<lb/>
ducting campus tours, assisting in<lb/>
the pre-registration process and<lb/>
with any social activities offered.<lb/>
"I wish 1 had the opportunity<lb/>
to do it again said senior Bill<lb/>
Dawson, one of last year's<lb/>
assistants. "The pay is good and<lb/>
I learned a lot about the universi-<lb/>
ty. Its rewarding to see people I<lb/>
had in sessions getting involved<lb/>
now<lb/>
Anyone who is planning on<lb/>
returning in the fall of 1986 and<lb/>
interested in being involved in the<lb/>
orientation program may pick up<lb/>
an application in 209 Whichard<lb/>
bv March 7th.<lb/>
By MIKELIDWICK<lb/>
News Ldilot<lb/>
In light of the recent national<lb/>
and international attention apar-<lb/>
theid has received, the African<lb/>
Studies Committee will present a<lb/>
symposium entitled "Apartheid<lb/>
and the United States" March 25<lb/>
at the Willis building.<lb/>
"The purpose of this sym-<lb/>
posium is to provide a forum in<lb/>
which scholars, students, and<lb/>
citizens of North Carolina can ex-<lb/>
change ideas and explore at-<lb/>
titudes about apartheid said<lb/>
Kenneth Wilburn, project direc-<lb/>
tor and coordinator of the<lb/>
African Studies Committee. He<lb/>
added the participants will then<lb/>
be better informed in order "to<lb/>
determine appropriate courses of<lb/>
action<lb/>
Wilburn stated, moreover, the<lb/>
forum is an attempt to gain a<lb/>
more complete understanding of<lb/>
a complex situation instead of cl-<lb/>
inging to and promoting a par-<lb/>
ticular political, social or<lb/>
religious viewpoint.<lb/>
Wilburn divided the sym-<lb/>
posium into three different ses-<lb/>
sions. Session I, Wilburn said,<lb/>
"Will compare the similarities<lb/>
and differences between segrega-<lb/>
tion in the southern U.S. and<lb/>
apartheid in South Africa<lb/>
In Session I John Cell from<lb/>
Duke University and George<lb/>
Frederickson from Stanford will<lb/>
speak moderated by Joel<lb/>
Willaimson from UNC. Wilburn<lb/>
added that both speakers are ac-<lb/>
complished historians in race<lb/>
relations.<lb/>
Session II will featureWilham<lb/>
Robertson and John Chettle.<lb/>
Robertson is the deputy-assistant<lb/>
Secretary of State for African Af-<lb/>
fairs. Chettle is the director of the<lb/>
South African Foundation, a ma-<lb/>
jor private organization that<lb/>
seeks to act as a catalyst for<lb/>
peaceful change in South Africa.<lb/>
"Since Ronald Reagan has<lb/>
been recently criticized for his<lb/>
policy called constructive engage-<lb/>
ment towards South Africa<lb/>
said Wilburn, "Session II will<lb/>
analyze the effectiveness of con-<lb/>
structive engagement and con-<lb/>
sider policy matters<lb/>
According to Wilburn, the<lb/>
Afrikaners(those who speak the<lb/>
Afrikaan language) justify Apar-<lb/>
See APARTHEID Page 3.<lb/>
Selling Yourself On A Resume<lb/>
Bv JENNIFER MYERS<lb/>
Staff Writaf<lb/>
Writing a resume is a task<lb/>
students do not look forward to<lb/>
laboring over. However, your<lb/>
resume could be the most impor-<lb/>
tant document you prepare for it<lb/>
can determine your career<lb/>
outlook, and therefore, your<lb/>
lifestyle, after college.<lb/>
"Most people like to put it<lb/>
off says Jim Westmoreland of<lb/>
the Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment Center, in regards to begin-<lb/>
ning a resume. "I encourage<lb/>
On The inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Classifieds9<lb/>
Editorials 4<lb/>
Features7<lb/>
Sports 10<lb/>
A man's feet should be<lb/>
planted In his country, but his<lb/>
eyes should survey the world.<lb/>
?George Santayana<lb/>
students to prepare one because it<lb/>
allows them to oganize their<lb/>
background, to discover what<lb/>
they've done and where they're<lb/>
going<lb/>
A resume is "selling yourself<lb/>
on paper according to<lb/>
Westmoreland. "What you are<lb/>
selling depends on how you for-<lb/>
mat your resume<lb/>
When preparing a resume, cer-<lb/>
tain steps should be followed. At<lb/>
workshops at the Bloxton House,<lb/>
Westmoreland advises students<lb/>
to begin by listing all the infor-<lb/>
mation they can think of about<lb/>
themselves, in regards to educa-<lb/>
tion, experience, special skills<lb/>
and interests and hobbies. Then<lb/>
put the information in outline<lb/>
form, with the most recent<lb/>
achievement first. Items can be<lb/>
omitted later if not needed. This<lb/>
method, says Westmorland,<lb/>
helps organize the information.<lb/>
"Any work experience is good.<lb/>
It shows you are willing to<lb/>
work stated Westmoreland.<lb/>
"You can describe the jobs on<lb/>
your resume so that you bring out<lb/>
your Finest qualities. Show the<lb/>
best ot each job like what you<lb/>
accomplished or learned.<lb/>
Always list information instead<lb/>
of forming paragraphs he sug-<lb/>
gests. Use short phrases, not<lb/>
lengthy sentences, and write your<lb/>
career objective last, because it is<lb/>
easier to formulate an objective<lb/>
with your information already<lb/>
organized.<lb/>
Your resume should be con-<lb/>
cise. The words you choose are<lb/>
important in the message they<lb/>
relay to the prospective<lb/>
employer, Westmorland added.<lb/>
It does not have to be typeset to<lb/>
be effective. It depends on your<lb/>
field of interest and the message<lb/>
you wish to convey.<lb/>
"A resume is what differen-<lb/>
tiates you from others said<lb/>
Westmoreland. An employer<lb/>
should be able to read it and use<lb/>
it as a guide for an interview after<lb/>
having enough background infor-<lb/>
mation supplied by your resume.<lb/>
Jay Martin, who conducts in-<lb/>
terviews for Burroughs Wellcome<lb/>
in Raleigh, said what impresses<lb/>
him most, but is sometimes<lb/>
See EFFECTIVE Page 2.<lb/>
Information Night<lb/>
Last night a number of students participated in Senior Information Night, two hours filled with in-<lb/>
formation to prepare seniors for interviews, career strategy, and financial decisions. The event was<lb/>
sponsored by the Senior Class Council.<lb/>
-? r<lb/>
' ?? -?<lb/>
? "? ? mmi.Mmf?'r'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0002"/><lb/>
THEEAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 27<lb/>
!986<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU FRISBEE<lb/>
Congratulations IRATES on vour recent<lb/>
v-ctor.es The ECU Fnsbee Club etends a<lb/>
warm .nvltat,on io all students to come out<lb/>
and ti.ck some disc Practive and play is<lb/>
1 ues T r,Urs ? Sunday 3 30 at the bottom of<lb/>
the hill Meetings are Thursday X in room<lb/>
2 MSC Watcn tor the Natural Light snng<lb/>
ULTIMAX VII in April Be there and get<lb/>
Mori'<lb/>
LAW SOCIETY<lb/>
The ECU La Society will be meeting<lb/>
March 4 at 8 p m in room 221 Mendenhaii<lb/>
Our guest speaker will be Myron Mill, recent<lb/>
law school graduate and practicing local at<lb/>
torney We will also discuss our plans tor a<lb/>
trip to the UNC Law School Please attend<lb/>
Fot more information iaii R.cnara Pond<lb/>
?58 3155<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR SANFORD<lb/>
There will be an organizational meeting of<lb/>
b'uoents tor Santord tor u S Senate on<lb/>
Wednesday Martn 5 3 X pm room 247<lb/>
Menoenhaii Student Center Ail interested<lb/>
pet ions are u'Qeo to attend For more into<lb/>
'i-ut Brytin Averette at 758 4530<lb/>
ECU HONOR BOARD<lb/>
' ' ? ? ?  be a meeting it 'tie ECU Honor<lb/>
. ? Menoenhaii 224 at 6 30 pm<lb/>
nembers are epecteo to attend An,<lb/>
questions 1 an jetf Clon.nger at 830 1140<lb/>
CAMPUS SERVICE<lb/>
1 Set .<lb/>
Boy iai<lb/>
? win be held if<lb/>
jtiday rvarcr 2<lb/>
1 It 18 30 a m<lb/>
be the speaker<lb/>
Jenkins<lb/>
9H6 the<lb/>
Minister<lb/>
FOLCF<lb/>
welcome everyone to attend<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
? ? 1 rfess ina rlealtt Alliance will have<lb/>
? ? ? aav February 28<lb/>
 ' 144 in Mendenhail Studen'<lb/>
 ? ?' ???H! Quests are welcome<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
terei teo n o.r nq p Chi ap<lb/>
ir available in the P?,<lb/>
? me are due back m by Marc1 6<lb/>
HONORSGRADUATES<lb/>
expects<lb/>
semester h<lb/>
'0 graduate tr.<lb/>
sep Df danger<lb/>
Rags<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA EARLY<lb/>
CHILDHOOD CLUB<lb/>
The ECC Club announces its next meeting<lb/>
March 4, 1986 at 5 00pm ,n Speight 308 The<lb/>
program will include a Spring Activities<lb/>
Workshop and elections Get involved be<lb/>
there'<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
AH nursing students interested in becom<lb/>
mg a member of the East Carolina Assooa<lb/>
on oi Nursing Students are invited to a<lb/>
neetmg Thursday 2 27 at 7pm m 101 NB We<lb/>
w.ll be electing i?86 87 oH.cers Th,s is a<lb/>
mandatory meeting tor all members<lb/>
Refreshments will be provided Non<lb/>
members and members are encouraged ?o<lb/>
attend Looking forward to seeing you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
SOCIETY FOR<lb/>
ADVANCEMENT OF<lb/>
MANAGEMENT<lb/>
The Society tor Advancement of Manage<lb/>
ment wishes to invite you to come and io,n<lb/>
us All maiors are welcome Calendar of<lb/>
Events Fee 27 Lecture and Tour (Empire<lb/>
Brushes incat 1 30 p m.Mar 5 Lecture<lb/>
and Tour (Quality Circles Burrough<lb/>
Wellcome) at I 30 p m Apr 2 Guest<lb/>
Speaker Vice Pres John Lennon (Central<lb/>
Carolina Bank Banking Polices and Hiring<lb/>
Practices For more information about SAM<lb/>
and our act.vites Contact John Bland<lb/>
7 52 2628<lb/>
BLACK AWARENESS<lb/>
MONTH<lb/>
Free h,gh blood pressure and sickle cell<lb/>
screenings will be held Friday February 28<lb/>
at Mendenhail Student Center from<lb/>
10 00am 2 00pm as part ot the Black<lb/>
Awareness Month activities Sponsored by<lb/>
kappa Alpha Psi fraternity Assooahon of<lb/>
Nurstno Students and the Student Health<lb/>
Service Can Nokom.s Gregory at 752 973<lb/>
tor more information<lb/>
STUDENTS FOR ECONOMIC<lb/>
DEMOCRACY<lb/>
Students tor Economic Democracy will<lb/>
hold a meet.ng this Sunday at 5 30 P M in<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center room 238 We<lb/>
w.ll discuss world hunger, hunger relief and<lb/>
Lisa Heiber will g.ve a presentation on the<lb/>
up coming CROP walk aga.nst hunger<lb/>
MEDIA BOARD<lb/>
There will be a hearing held march 4. at<lb/>
300pm 400pm, in Mendenhail Student<lb/>
Center, room 221 concerning improvements<lb/>
for Expressions<lb/>
BLACK ALUMNI<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the ECU Black<lb/>
Alumm Association on Monday, March 3<lb/>
1984 The meeting will be held at mendenhail<lb/>
Student Center, room 248 at 6 00 pm<lb/>
LUTHERAN STUDENT<lb/>
ASSOCIATION<lb/>
LSA will meet Sunday at a 00 at Our<lb/>
Redeemer Lutheran Church on Elm Street<lb/>
Dinner will be served and future plans<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
ZCTAPHI BETA<lb/>
SORORITY, INC.<lb/>
The WIZ Club, Zeta Ph, Beta sorority s lit<lb/>
tie sister organization. ,s having an interest<lb/>
meet.ng Thursday, February 27 1986 at 6 00<lb/>
pm m 243 MSC All young who interested in<lb/>
making new friends and learning more about<lb/>
sorority i,te are cordially invited to attend<lb/>
For more information please contact Miss<lb/>
Debra M.dgetteat at 752 8879 Refreshments<lb/>
will be served<lb/>
ECU COUNCILOF<lb/>
HONOR SOCIETIES<lb/>
There will be a meeting tonight at 5 15 ,n<lb/>
BD 204 All members please plan to attend<lb/>
WATER SKI CLUB<lb/>
Pre sk. party Wed March 5, 8 00at the<lb/>
Tree House There will be videos of water<lb/>
sk.mg and a keg of beer for sk.ers Join us<lb/>
and become a skier<lb/>
BLACK AWARENESS MONTH<lb/>
Free high blood pressure and sickle cell<lb/>
screenings will beheld Friday February 28<lb/>
a' Mendenhail Student Center from 10 00am<lb/>
2 00pm as part of the Black Awareness<lb/>
Month act.vfies Sponsored by Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Psi fraternity Association of Nursing<lb/>
Students and the Student Health Service<lb/>
Can Nokomis Gregory at 752 9673 lor mure<lb/>
nfor mation<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA HONORS<lb/>
ORGANIZATION (ECHO)<lb/>
There will be a meeting concerning the<lb/>
beach weekend on Thursday February 27<lb/>
M interested must attend tor ,nformat,on<lb/>
INTERVIEWING<lb/>
Two more interviewong workshops are<lb/>
scheduled at the Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service To improve your presentation<lb/>
skills, to learn about the questions<lb/>
employers ask and to hear from Mr James<lb/>
about opportunities on and off campus, mark<lb/>
your calendar to come to the Bloxton House<lb/>
on February 25 and March 3 at 3 p m<lb/>
GRADUATING?<lb/>
Seniors and Graduate Students are en<lb/>
couraged to pick up a Registration Packet at<lb/>
the Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
Vou are able to leave a resume with us and<lb/>
stabhsh a place to put letter of reference on<lb/>
tile Vou will be able to interview on campus<lb/>
if you meet the qualifications of the<lb/>
employers who come to campus between Oc<lb/>
tober and April<lb/>
FREE TAX HELP<lb/>
The Accounting Society .s sponsoring a<lb/>
free tax preparation and advice service in<lb/>
the Student Booth at Mendenhail on<lb/>
Wednesdays and Thursdays from 46 pm<lb/>
thru tax season Federal instructions and<lb/>
lorms are available upon requests<lb/>
BLACK GRADUATE<lb/>
SUPPORTGROUP<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the Black<lb/>
Graduate Support Group Sunday, March 2 in<lb/>
Mendenhail at 8 15 p m Check the front<lb/>
aesk for room location For those of you who<lb/>
came last week please come back' If m<lb/>
terested call Dwight at 752 9267<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
F.lm Presentation A Better Way ' O'<lb/>
Jeannie Golden, Monday March 3, 7 00<lb/>
P m Speight 129 Behavior modification<lb/>
techniques with mental retardates<lb/>
LSS SOCIETY<lb/>
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7 am to Noon - "EARLY RISER"<lb/>
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For you early risers'have a Bloody Mary and KEEP THE MUG'<lb/>
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FLORIDA DRINKING LAW You must be bom on or before June 30<lb/>
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1966<lb/>
 -????.???? ???wa' O'THU tut I'lTurmanO<lb/>
Effective Resumes A Necessity<lb/>
DOini flvcraoe ic rt .1?  . "<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
overlooked is "a definite direc-<lb/>
tion or field o' interest" that is<lb/>
usual!) stated in the objective.<lb/>
According to Martin and<lb/>
Westmoreland, a good resume<lb/>
should indicate accomplishment<lb/>
not just present<lb/>
and education.<lb/>
a listing o jobs<lb/>
your grade<lb/>
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clude it. "Many high tech com-<lb/>
panies are impressed with a high<lb/>
GPA. They feel if you do well in<lb/>
college, your chances for success<lb/>
will be greater stated Martin.<lb/>
Personal characteristics should<lb/>
be omitted, such as height,<lb/>
weight, and sex. A company can-<lb/>
not legally require this informa<lb/>
tion and most companies ignore<lb/>
it if printed on the resume.<lb/>
Westmoreland and Martin<lb/>
both state that a resume should<lb/>
be neat and concise. Use effective<lb/>
words wisely chosen. The<lb/>
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and merely skims the resume at<lb/>
first, so important facts should<lb/>
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V hat do you plan to do after ou graduate from college?<lb/>
I I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I heresa<lb/>
Ju ?<lb/>
Hemming<lb/>
 u'<lb/>
and gei <lb/>
establish<lb/>
fi<lb/>
tan;<lb/>
v I! 11 iv. ,<lb/>
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: ave a<lb/>
Derrick Williamson<lb/>
 reshman, Business<lb/>
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Britt Pons<lb/>
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a job somevt here "<lb/>
Apartheid<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Continued From Page 1.<lb/>
theid based upon their interpreta-<lb/>
tion of the Bible.<lb/>
Session III, therefore, entitled<lb/>
"Apartheid and the Bible: The<lb/>
Nature of the Relationship" will<lb/>
"discuss the nature of the rela-<lb/>
tionship between apartheid and<lb/>
the Bible and what that means to<lb/>
black ethnic groups in South<lb/>
Africa Wilburn stated.<lb/>
Vernon Rose, a black South<lb/>
African baptist minister, and<lb/>
Motlalepula Chabaku, a South<lb/>
African religious leader, will<lb/>
discuss apartheid and its relation-<lb/>
ship with the Bible. The<lb/>
moderator is Dan Earnhardt ol<lb/>
the ECl ampus Ministry.<lb/>
The Keynote Speaker for the<lb/>
symposium, added Wilburn, will<lb/>
be Dan Purnell, and Purnell will<lb/>
return from a trip to South<lb/>
Africa the Sunday before the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
Wilburn stressed that the sym-<lb/>
posium is free and open to the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
lona Rhem<lb/>
Cj <lb/>
Carolyn Deliapina<lb/>
Sophomort. I It n man<lb/>
full; " iding a ji b<lb/>
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pi<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
FEBRUARY 27, 1986<lb/>
National<lb/>
MARCH nor<lb/>
women's Lives<lb/>
March 9.1986<lb/>
,DX.<lb/>
10 am on me Man<lb/>
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Instructors needed especially in<lb/>
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glad to help. Inquiries: Morgan<lb/>
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Central Book &amp; News<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057805_0004"/><lb/>
Bit iEaat (Earfllitttan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Lu vender, o?, ?,<lb/>
JAY STONE, Managing editor<lb/>
Miki 11 dwick, w a Greg Winchester, m?,<lb/>
ScOT1 CoopER. v?? Anthony Martin, <lb/>
)aniei Mmrirj John Peterson, en<lb/>
Shannon Short. ????? ????,?<lb/>
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Di Chanii i Johnson, , <lb/>
Debbie Stevens. <lb/>
I ebruarv 2 is86<lb/>
OPINION<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Philppines<lb/>
Should Set Example<lb/>
K-rdinand Marcos has acknowledged that the divestment<lb/>
secreted out of the movement has been responsible for<lb/>
U.S. broadcast persuading South African business<lb/>
its leaders to meet with leaders of the<lb/>
ac<lb/>
Now that<lb/>
been safely<lb/>
Philippines<lb/>
media has<lb/>
ation of "the smiling revolu- South African anti-apa7theid move-<lb/>
1 1 hai is as it should be. mem. Thus economic sanctions<lb/>
What was particularly surprising, would have an even stronger im-<lb/>
howevei. was the candor exercised pact. Yet, Reagan undercut a tough<lb/>
,Trnf VVn thC!r aS?ess- economic sanctions bill against<lb/>
1 resident Reagan s role in South Africa that was authored in<lb/>
? events there. One CBS cor- Congress and offered a vastlv<lb/>
lant, in a special broadcast weaker sanctions bill with little real<lb/>
night, frankly stated that muscle of his own in its place<lb/>
had resisted prompting by In El Salvador Reagan's' ad-<lb/>
ivisors to withdraw his sup- ministration continues to support a<lb/>
Marcos until public protest government that has failed to<lb/>
n dimensions that made the substantially reform itself during<lb/>
v of Marcos imminent, his five years in office. Napolean<lb/>
added that the president had Duarte continues to preside over a<lb/>
to talk with journalists for corrupt military and death squad<lb/>
days because ot his depression killings despite his assurances to<lb/>
n ,nftK fTT PPwer- congress that he will enact reforms<lb/>
Jan Rather agreed with this ver- Moreover, El Salvador continues to<lb/>
events, adding it is dif- be an oligopoly with a handful of<lb/>
to predict what the reaction families owning over 80 percent of<lb/>
Philippine people might be the land and most of the country's<lb/>
thai the Lnited States sup- productive wealth.<lb/>
Marcos over 18 years until In Nicaragua Reagan's ad-<lb/>
days in office Several ministration continues to fund an<lb/>
nalists and government army of cutthroats and thugs ac-<lb/>
s hovvever professed a belief curately characterized bv reputable<lb/>
S relations with the Philip- human rights organizations like<lb/>
not be damaged because Amnesty International and<lb/>
led States had distanced America's Watch as being largely<lb/>
the Marcos regime over comprised of ex-Somoza national<lb/>
VClir  guard. Somoza was the Marcos-<lb/>
comments of interest made style tyrant who the United States<lb/>
hat telecast included supported in Nicaragua before he<lb/>
y Paul Aquino, brother was run out of the country by the<lb/>
Sandinistas and a broad-based<lb/>
coalition of businessmen, peasants<lb/>
and students. His national guard,<lb/>
which was initially formed and<lb/>
trained by the United States, ter-<lb/>
rorized the country's citizens.<lb/>
Regardless of what one thinks<lb/>
about the Sandinistas, supporting a<lb/>
small mafia to overthrow a govern-<lb/>
ment that U.N. observers claim was<lb/>
6VERVB0W G COMES 7D 6RENAW ON A CmSS SHIP<lb/>
.Campus Forum<lb/>
Controversy Over Expressions<lb/>
.<lb/>
pines<lb/>
I<lb/>
he<lb/>
;ei<lb/>
s<lb/>
Mai<lb/>
? quii<lb/>
on Aquino. He said that<lb/>
formed Aquino govern-<lb/>
will take steps to end corrup-<lb/>
ind to rid local governments of<lb/>
:os appointees commonly<lb/>
a as "warlords<lb/>
predictions compelled one<lb/>
ive LBS correspondant repor-<lb/>
om Manila to declare that the<lb/>
ivernment will be a liberal<lb/>
u<lb/>
nmem and thus the worst duly elected' canabelvedIt<lb/>
hat could happen to the com- is simply unconscionable. More to<lb/>
insurgency currently the nninr Amnct, int.??i?.<lb/>
There is a scandal and an uproar on<lb/>
this campus. The minority magazine<lb/>
has been put into a state of<lb/>
moratorium because of apparent<lb/>
mismanagement. Now, many of the<lb/>
minority students on campus feel ihat<lb/>
the Media Board, through this action.<lb/>
has made a grossly racial attack upon<lb/>
them. I have even heard one student<lb/>
insinuate that it is a plot by the largely<lb/>
white Media Board to quell any form<lb/>
ol black student unity or advance-<lb/>
ment. This statement, though I onlv<lb/>
heard it as the opinion of that one<lb/>
student, scares me because it is very<lb/>
likely that several other black<lb/>
students share this biased and highly<lb/>
paranoid view.<lb/>
1 am heartened, on the other hand,<lb/>
though, by the opinions of some<lb/>
other black students whom I have<lb/>
heard to express relief over the Media<lb/>
Board's decision ot place Expressions<lb/>
into moratorium rather than, as may<lb/>
be more appropriate, dissolving it<lb/>
completely. The want to give it a<lb/>
chance; to allow it to rise from its still<lb/>
smoldering ashes. The ashes of gross<lb/>
budget over-runs, unpublished edi<lb/>
tions, and staff wars. Through all of<lb/>
the current battles and controversies<lb/>
the Media Board has operated in a<lb/>
purely professional, and sympathetic<lb/>
manner and they deserve a hand from<lb/>
all of the students on this campus.<lb/>
In a related issue, though. 1 would<lb/>
like to address the question over the<lb/>
appropriation of student funds to a<lb/>
publication that speaks to a singularly<lb/>
black audience yet considers itself a<lb/>
minority magazine. Perhaps the<lb/>
Media Board should rename the<lb/>
Marcos<lb/>
id that<lb/>
he said, "is the best<lb/>
communism could<lb/>
currently the point, Amnesty International's<lb/>
'Somebody 1985 human rights report makes it<lb/>
evident that Nicaragua's human<lb/>
rights record is far superior to that<lb/>
of El Salvador. Yet Reagan sup-<lb/>
ports the government of El<lb/>
Salvador with bombs bullets and<lb/>
dollars while he mines a harbor,<lb/>
stages an economic boycott and<lb/>
sponsors a CIA trained<lb/>
publication Expressions: East<lb/>
( arolina j Black Student Magazine<lb/>
and at the same time appropriate<lb/>
more of out student fees to establish<lb/>
other magazines, each specifically for<lb/>
other minorities on campus:<lb/>
Hispanics, Middle Easterners,<lb/>
American Indians, Jews, the blind (in<lb/>
Braille), the deaf, para- and<lb/>
quadraplegics, and women. Please do<lb/>
not assume that 1 am making light of<lb/>
the Black condition in this country. I<lb/>
fully understand the past and conti-<lb/>
nuing problems of the Afro-<lb/>
American in our country's social<lb/>
system. 1 am only trying to put it into<lb/>
perspective; that Blacks are not the<lb/>
onlv minority, and that by naming<lb/>
mselvcs as such, as the one and on-<lb/>
lv minority in fact, is wrong. They are<lb/>
only hampering their own progress in<lb/>
civil rights.<lb/>
Bv writing this letter I realize that I<lb/>
have set myself up for considerable<lb/>
reprisals, but 1 hope that I have<lb/>
clarified a few points to the more<lb/>
reasonable people out there. I myself<lb/>
am a minority as a member of the<lb/>
Democratic party on this campus, a<lb/>
group which regularly receives heavy<lb/>
and vulgar criticism from the more<lb/>
conservative contingent. (Of course I<lb/>
receive these attacks by choice and<lb/>
have the opportunity to change my<lb/>
position at any time.) Mav I suggest<lb/>
that the socially conscious student at<lb/>
ECU face their oppressors in the<lb/>
same way that I have faced mine. I<lb/>
rose above my apathetic tendencies<lb/>
and am now involved in shaping the<lb/>
North Carolina student's voice to the<lb/>
General Assembly through the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legis ai .<lb/>
Perhaps minority (Black 1<lb/>
who feel that they are not rece<lb/>
appropriate attention on tl<lb/>
should become active on the I . .<lb/>
newspaper or yearbook<lb/>
magazine or radio station - S <lb/>
or Student Union, or whatevci<lb/>
To my knowledge the Expressions<lb/>
magazine is the only pub<lb/>
this campus that, if not in theory,<lb/>
in fact strictly defined <lb/>
boundnes and is funded<lb/>
students at large. I<lb/>
based spending ol tudent I<lb/>
is grossly inappropriate<lb/>
A campus publica<lb/>
specific racial or rei m j$<lb/>
important though as a I<lb/>
group's unity and furthei develop<lb/>
men Mv onlv argucmei<lb/>
development should come ft<lb/>
within the group itself and sh lid<lb/>
be the responsibility ol an impai<lb/>
entity such as the Media Board. N<lb/>
to slight any Blacks on this can<lb/>
but I feel that if Expressions is to c !<lb/>
tinue it should be the responsibili<lb/>
its director and editors; that it indeed<lb/>
be East Carolina's MINOR<lb/>
magazine and not a front I<lb/>
school's most powerful m<lb/>
group. The other minorities<lb/>
defined by race, creed, nation, sex,<lb/>
handicap) are being done a greal<lb/>
disservice. Human unity is e goa<lb/>
but it will not be ace<lb/>
through the present Expressions<lb/>
DA. Swanson.<lb/>
Senior, English<lb/>
Such comments should be in-<lb/>
ructive to anyone cognizant of re-<lb/>
cent events in South Africa or in<lb/>
Central America. In those regions<lb/>
too the Lnited States also has the<lb/>
opportunity to play a constructive<lb/>
e to end tyranny and encourage<lb/>
peace and democracy.<lb/>
Sadly, however, the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration is pursuing policies<lb/>
are having the opposite effect.<lb/>
hist as he did in the case of Marcos,<lb/>
the president is refraining from tak-<lb/>
ing strong action against the Botha<lb/>
regime in South Africa to the bitter<lb/>
end.<lb/>
I en such conservative publica-<lb/>
ns as Business Week and the<lb/>
W all Street Journal have<lb/>
AIDS ? Unmentionable Epidemic<lb/>
By Daniel McCann Duffv<lb/>
During 1979, the AIDS virus infected<lb/>
an average of 7 people each day. Today,<lb/>
the AIDS virus infects more than 1 000<lb/>
people each day. Of the 1,000 people in<lb/>
'1 ,J0HNNQ. EVEN THOUGH VOU<lb/>
0 c TWSSCHOOlSuU<lb/>
a ia trained army in<lb/>
Nicaragua.<lb/>
Is no outrage too great for the<lb/>
American people to tolerate9 tectedeach da- at least 300 will develop<lb/>
Ameacans in the power of people 'X??<lb/>
Z tT!SETS' and I"6 ? having AIDS has'lwXX<lb/>
tact that the United States can play five years. Presently, there is no cure or<lb/>
a constructive role in bringing vaccine.<lb/>
about democracy if it chooses to. According to The Harvard Medical<lb/>
fcvents in South A;nca and School Health Letter, "For every person<lb/>
especially Central America should in the United States who has AIDS or<lb/>
make them wonder what kind of one of the relat?i conditions, there are<lb/>
role the current administration 40 to 50 who are carrymg the virus but<lb/>
wants this nation to play do not know il" PeoPIe with the aids<lb/>
virus can spread AIDS even though they<lb/>
- do not have AIDS themselves.<lb/>
An estimated 1 to 2 million Americans<lb/>
are currently infected with the AIDS<lb/>
virus. The National Cancer Institute in<lb/>
Washington has found that one-third of<lb/>
a group in New York City who showed<lb/>
signs of exposure to the virus in 1982<lb/>
have since developed AIDS. Barring any<lb/>
unforseen medical breakthrough, at<lb/>
least 300,000 Americans will contract<lb/>
AIDS in the coming five years. This is<lb/>
six times the number of Americans killed<lb/>
in combat during the Vietnam War.<lb/>
AIDS relentlessly destroys the human<lb/>
body's immune system leaving the vic-<lb/>
tim prey to a number of infectious and<lb/>
eventually fatal dieases. Some symptoms<lb/>
of AIDS are persistent swollen glands,<lb/>
the trauma of anal intercourse. The<lb/>
multiplicity of sexual partners has<lb/>
hastened the spread of AIDS in the Gay<lb/>
community.<lb/>
However, homosexuals do not com-<lb/>
prise the entire high risk group for<lb/>
AIDS. Other high risk groups include<lb/>
bisexuals, intravenous drug users, reci-<lb/>
pients of blood products and body-<lb/>
organs, prostitutes, and sexual partners<lb/>
of all these individuals. The last category-<lb/>
appears to be AIDS "portal of entry"<lb/>
into the heterosexual world.<lb/>
The virus is transmitted from infected<lb/>
male ,o female primarily through ,he ? To ta?SST a"d C<lb/>
semen. The virus ha ,l,? i gress 10 nave Che f.scal wisdom<lb/>
fatigue, weight loss, and a dry cough.<lb/>
AIDS is not a Gay Plague. Available<lb/>
evidence indicates that AIDS is transmit-<lb/>
ted from person to person through<lb/>
blood, plasma, body organs, tissues,<lb/>
and semen<lb/>
semen. The virus has also been<lb/>
documented to be spread from infected<lb/>
woman to man. A possible method of<lb/>
transmission is thought to be the<lb/>
woman's blood that can be in a woman's<lb/>
vagina from either her menstrual period<lb/>
or an abrasion.<lb/>
Infected prostitutes are believed to be<lb/>
rapidly spreading the AIDS virus into<lb/>
the heterosexual population. The<lb/>
Chicago Health Commissioner recently<lb/>
warned the public that "All persons who<lb/>
utilize the services of male or female<lb/>
prostitutes are at risk of contracting<lb/>
AIDS K<lb/>
In Africa, 10 million Africans are in-<lb/>
fected with the virus. The primary<lb/>
means of transmission is believed to be<lb/>
heterosexual contact. The ratio of male<lb/>
to female African AIDS victims is about<lb/>
1 to 1.<lb/>
In the United States, the average<lb/>
AIDS patient spends a total of 167 days<lb/>
in a hospital at a cost of $147,000 This<lb/>
million, $43 million less that the 1986<lb/>
allocation.<lb/>
Many of our nation leaders are<lb/>
afraid to confront the AIDS challenge<lb/>
for fear that their own sexuality and<lb/>
morality might be questioned. The<lb/>
"epidemic of fear" that AIDS<lb/>
engenders includes fear of recognizing<lb/>
AIDS or openly helping AIDS victims.<lb/>
We must courageously ask our elected<lb/>
officials to enact a massive AIDS public<lb/>
education campaign. Presently, educa-<lb/>
tion is the best vaccination. Also we<lb/>
must ask this Administration and Con-<lb/>
gress to have the fiscal wisdom to<lb/>
allocate a multi-billion dollar appropria-<lb/>
tion for AIDS research this vear<lb/>
Research discoveries mav prevent<lb/>
Americans from being saddled with the<lb/>
looming $42 billion AIDS medical bill<lb/>
By acting with courage in the face of<lb/>
the AIDS challenge, we will protect the<lb/>
hves of millions of American citizens<lb/>
and the productive and financial<lb/>
resources of our country. Bv showing<lb/>
compassion to the AIDS victims of to-<lb/>
day, we will prevent ourselves from be-<lb/>
ing personal or economic AIDS victims<lb/>
ot tomorrow.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
2ST22 f P?tntS ?f ?? Mail or<lb/>
toZ ZTtJ ?ffiCe  lHe W<lb/>
tons Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance 0 Joyner Library<lb/>
purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
headaches, recurrent fever, night sweats, cost is usually borne by the InH 2lT' 2?" the name ?Jr and<lb/>
Tncr!? ? "? a dr couh- fc?l government fLSJT 2322 P? number<lb/>
' r<lb/>
-<lb/>
federal government. The tforei?7 mS .T' S" ? ?<lb/>
men, for ,he 300.000 ??Tun Z ZUSSTLl. "? ???"?? tn<lb/>
.ie?,s could cos. us. as American, ? ZJE22 TnlT "??<lb/>
payers. $42 bdlion in 1990. lelunXi a,y Pr?i- All<lb/>
In spite of these facts. Congress ha ? "W,JMWK ?'? for brnt-<lb/>
?n the homosexua, communit, the SAMSS SSE<lb/>
vtrus ts spread through semen and the alarming the President'T M?!l facu'y an"f writing lettenforthl<lb/>
recta, bleeding ,ha, often accompanies AIDS ZZStS, Zttm "<lb/>
1<lb/>
Expres<lb/>
( ontinued Horn fat<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
j<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
Tactics T<lb/>
( ontinued frum P<lb/>
?<lb/>
ble resp<lb/>
recei<lb/>
s<lb/>
?<lb/>
S<lb/>
-<lb/>
- ' I i<lb/>
:<lb/>
the E( I<lb/>
Tak<lb/>
back merelv<lb/>
tacker?<lb/>
?<lb/>
dealing -<lb/>
be least like .<lb/>
greater dangei<lb/>
"If you have a .<lb/>
-risky metl<lb/>
u can still fall baf,<lb/>
dangerous technique<lb/>
b ve all, laid Ada<lb/>
uni should not allow hers<lb/>
taken away to a seluded area.<lb/>
That drastically reduces the<lb/>
tun's chances to- -<lb/>
that point, fighting . ially<lb/>
preferable eve-<lb/>
untrained added Adams<lb/>
However, a w .axj.<lb/>
look at the individual situati<lb/>
If the assailant has a gun pointed<lb/>
at the victim's head,<lb/>
him is out of the<lb/>
continued.<lb/>
What should the<lb/>
course of action be il an a<lb/>
has already tak<lb/>
Fir j<lb/>
victim : gei<lb/>
throuj<lb/>
bie injuries she ma-<lb/>
ed and is ui<lb/>
the possibi<lb/>
venereal disease<lb/>
Next, sa:j i le<lb/>
victim si . .<lb/>
enforcement<lb/>
trdless of whetl i<lb/>
intends to prosecute<lb/>
This can help poli<lb/>
the aaav ?<lb/>
and poss<lb/>
pattern ;ks<lb/>
Discovering su<lb/>
s ? ?? ?<lb/>
p<lb/>
A<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0005"/><lb/>
IH1 fASI AKi;llMAN FEBRUARY<lb/>
m<lb/>
,m .???'<lb/>
A?5<lb/>
demic<lb/>
forum Rules<lb/>
?-<lb/>
wnature of the authorise Letters<lb/>
? - ? irfei panes,<lb/>
neatly printed All<lb/>
to editing for hrevi<lb/>
bet, and no personal<lb/>
ned Students,<lb/>
writing letters for this<lb/>
are s<lb/>
flacks wili<lb/>
and<lb/>
? ruing letters for this<lb/>
reminded that they are limited<lb/>
ft ve<lb/>
Expressions Reviewed<lb/>
( ontinued From Vav l.<lb/>
single issue- I ins leaves $2,858 re<lb/>
maining to pa foi theothei three<lb/>
foui issues oi the yeai thai<lb/>
need to he printed and bound<lb/>
w ho refuse pt the situai<lb/>
are using racism as a smokescreen<lb/>
to evade the real problems<lb/>
countered h xpressions<lb/>
 hen faced with the i<lb/>
? hat should be done u ith v<lb/>
I laims oi racism have become pressions from here, the solui<lb/>
isut According :<lb/>
H.kkett. " I he role ol racism<lb/>
a able, vm: there<lb/>
i<lb/>
tain membei<lb/>
destro Expressions<lb/>
? t used .? aeemeni<lb/>
a scapenoai<lb/>
ed owl<lb/>
Uiv<lb/>
' its role u<lb/>
mi is "a vs<lb/>
'7.1<lb/>
W (th Boai I) an<lb/>
ition as<lb/>
var c anad) says, "1<lb/>
i xpressions<lb/>
I down with the -<lb/>
othei people w ho ha e expt i<lb/>
working with Expressions<lb/>
need to discuss with ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
 xpressions . an be d i<lb/>
tiveh "<lb/>
?  1! <lb/>
Media H.<lb/>
' uuen<lb/>
-<lb/>
contributioi<lb/>
Plls<lb/>
Hackei he andanad)<lb/>
?me in an understanding<lb/>
? a ai theii dunes are. " e<lb/>
: one anothei that we<lb/>
uld live up t ase duties and<lb/>
manpower to<lb/>
he organization,<lb/>
vshu h ?av one ol tl e roots oi the<lb/>
I he Board<lb/>
it the purpose of the<lb/>
stai rium was to<lb/>
at ions, rhe<lb/>
,e been reorganized<lb/>
blems have been<lb/>
d, so there is no reason<lb/>
uld not be<lb/>
?<lb/>
' ? i e v,<lb/>
. be done<lb/>
( anadv<lb/>
?<lb/>
with both<lb/>
Tactics To Discourage Rape<lb/>
Official Ballot<lb/>
II) Number<lb/>
I cast my vote for<lb/>
I (enter number of design)<lb/>
, Must be returned to The Kast Carolinian by Mondav, March 4, 4: JO p.m.<lb/>
I<lb/>
( ontinued Y rom Page 1.<lb/>
 as bet<lb/>
-<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
who<lb/>
i<lb/>
auma<lb/>
. hat<lb/>
.I ?<lb/>
Voting Instructions<lb/>
I he Senioi lass Council is<lb/>
sponsoring this design contest tor<lb/>
a proposed Hell lower. The pur-<lb/>
pose oi the contest sas Kirk<lb/>
Shelley, Seniorlass president, is<lb/>
"to get the students opinion ol<lb/>
what type of bell tower they<lb/>
would like to have on campus<lb/>
Each student can vote on the<lb/>
design the like best, "o do s<lb/>
students should completely fill<lb/>
out the official ballot above in-<lb/>
cluding your E I 11) number<lb/>
and number of the design and<lb/>
return it to the office of the East<lb/>
io lattei than Mon.<lb/>
Mai 4:30 p.m<lb/>
When ca s te be sure<lb/>
to br: . n 1i id with you,<lb/>
students must preset their II)<lb/>
when casting<lb/>
11<lb/>
l<lb/>
Stop hurting<lb/>
the trees<lb/>
you love.<lb/>
v<lb/>
V<lb/>
85<lb/>
a "jS<lb/>
rortios i r<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
Of lRl (, <lb/>
J195 Abon - - ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
. I<lb/>
Fun 8<lb/>
? la<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 West Morgan St.<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
R?tr??d Ttr?<lb/>
,v<lb/>
A <lb/>
Cu<lb/>
SERVlCfSPVt-<lb/>
J??? 0<lb/>
Comply ' ???- '?11 ?g<lb/>
sr  " rrf' ??"???-<lb/>
4Cytindet<lb/>
-pEunat6 $29.95<lb/>
"$14.88 UandScyUnd<lb/>
3 Tor ughtb high<lb/>
Alignmen Ju- ?-<lb/>
OffICIfil NORIH CAKOtlNA SIAU INSPtCIlOH STATiCN<lb/>
W? SeVICE NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
StFQoodrlch<lb/>
SATIRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
I 30 A M oc P M<lb/>
OPENMON f?<lb/>
IMtW t MPM<lb/>
tf<lb/>
' 'Co<lb/>
Ho" e ?<lb/>
<lb/>
Coggins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West ?-?? . e B? i<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
10th Dickinson Ave.<lb/>
WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
. attack<lb/>
-<lb/>
. e<lb/>
11<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
der.<lb/>
help poli e I prevent<lb/>
icker 1 king a<lb/>
issibly aid then; in seeii<lb/>
attacks.<lb/>
A in apprehending the-<lb/>
ATTI<lb/>
 All Week :<lb/>
; $1.00 ECU I<lb/>
X Dorms Free ?<lb/>
Thurs. Joe Saturday:<lb/>
:Fri. Brice Street t<lb/>
;Sat. Diamonds <lb/>
Presents Our Special<lb/>
End Of The<lb/>
WEEK PARTY<lb/>
Fri. Feb. 28,3:30-7:30<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
Every Sunday Is<lb/>
LADIES NITE<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
<lb/>
DRIVE THE 1986 DODGE DAYTONA TURBO Z AND WIN<lb/>
SPONSORED BY<lb/>
III 111.<lb/>
?<lb/>
.S ? "A<lb/>
-l1<lb/>
Sationa u d I B I Aw <lb/>
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ocean pacific xrv?7<lb/>
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Ac3mi(Vis?ratKX1<lb/>
O<lb/>
ECUI.D.&amp;<lb/>
Current Driver's License Required.<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Hosts:<lb/>
Student Union Special Events Committee<lb/>
mmmmu<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN FEBRUARY 27, 1986<lb/>
1<lb/>
3<lb/>
Bell Tower Design Contest<lb/>
i.s feritsftr-<lb/>
? ???"? ' CeS55?5?2i ? ? '<lb/>
C<lb/>
it<lb/>
6,<lb/>
ABU M ??- ? ?;? ?<lb/>
2<lb/>
4<lb/>
 ' <lb/>
THf FAST t fn, INIAI<lb/>
'Critic a<lb/>
Hollywoo<lb/>
(i i<lb/>
the<lb/>
neui<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
lure- ; ?<lb/>
The<lb/>
movieriu<lb/>
will<lb/>
I<lb/>
begun<lb/>
arc:<lb/>
the ?<lb/>
advei<lb/>
weel<lb/>
ed -<lb/>
Pi<lb/>
??<lb/>
M i<lb/>
t<lb/>
.<lb/>
comn ii<lb/>
ai Higl P<lb/>
whicl<lb/>
H<lb/>
'We Ar<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
I<lb/>
mil<lb/>
and<lb/>
G r<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
mys ai the 28<lb/>
Tue lay<lb/>
?<lb/>
V call ? .<lb/>
millions<lb/>
pub<lb/>
hunger, n e ire<lb/>
video.<lb/>
Dance Th<lb/>
" daj ?<lb/>
York (<lb/>
that's the c<lb/>
progi<lb/>
ano<lb/>
The Eas<lb/>
Theatre. I<lb/>
and c<lb/>
4, at g ;<lb/>
The<lb/>
"I ca<lb/>
NYC<lb/>
film HTiite Mghts<lb/>
be the<lb/>
veteran Max is Raj<lb/>
one ol<lb/>
choreog i<lb/>
More<lb/>
olved<lb/>
1l h<lb/>
This year's production of the tast C ar<lb/>
ed for Feb. 28 througb March 4 at 8:<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0007"/><lb/>
s<lb/>
t<lb/>
3 <lb/>
; wfr<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
THFEASTCAROUNIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
OBRl ARY 27, 1986<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
'Critical Condition'<lb/>
Hollywood To Invade Highpoint<lb/>
(I PI) Area residents, from<lb/>
aspiring actor to the<lb/>
sui geon, want a piece of the<lb/>
on when comedian Richard<lb/>
or and the Paramount pic-<lb/>
es people come to town,<lb/>
rhe makers of the $10 million<lb/>
o Critical Condition, which<lb/>
ill be filmed at the old High<lb/>
Memorial Hospital, have<lb/>
:ii soliciting resumes from<lb/>
i residents vying for a spot on<lb/>
silvei screen. Since the casting<lb/>
sement came out last<lb/>
-jck. 3,000 people have respond-<lb/>
40 speaking parts.<lb/>
Producer Bob Larson and his<lb/>
?? sa the) likely will review<lb/>
ations until shooting begins<lb/>
ind March 17.<lb/>
Everyone's jumping on the<lb/>
dwagon said Kathy Renew,<lb/>
community relations coordinator<lb/>
High Point Regional Hospital.<lb/>
ch replaced the old Memorial<lb/>
Hospital. "I'm looking forward<lb/>
,i glimpse oi Mr.<lb/>
and I'm looking forward<lb/>
to watching the movie and seeing<lb/>
a lot oi familiar faces<lb/>
Many on the hospital stafl are<lb/>
joining aspiring actors and ac<lb/>
tresses, because the casting direc-<lb/>
tors have stressed that medical<lb/>
experience is a plus.<lb/>
"We're hoping to get a piece ot<lb/>
the action over here Rettew<lb/>
said. "I think a lot oi hospital<lb/>
personnel are si - back waiting<lb/>
to be discovered (h bov. ! tell<lb/>
you - somebody here got a hold<lb/>
o a (casting) application, and<lb/>
1 at thing was xeroxed so main<lb/>
times and went all ovei the<lb/>
hospital. We even had a<lb/>
neurosurgeon g and audi<lb/>
tion <lb/>
But while main Higl Poinl<lb/>
residents are stai struck, ano<lb/>
sector of the community is wor-<lb/>
ried that the movie crowds and<lb/>
glitter will infringe upon another<lb/>
industry in town at the same<lb/>
time: the Spring Southern Fur-<lb/>
niture Market.<lb/>
Film officials secured about<lb/>
115 rooms at area hotels only by<lb/>
asking furniture manufacturers,<lb/>
for whom the rooms had long<lb/>
been reserved, to forfeit their ac-<lb/>
comodations<lb/>
"When you've got a customer<lb/>
as big as the Southern Furniture<lb/>
Market sou want to do<lb/>
everything you can to please<lb/>
them said John robin, senior<lb/>
editor at Forum Publications, a<lb/>
High Point furniture trade<lb/>
magazine.<lb/>
"(1 he cityis going to get S2.5<lb/>
million to $5 million from this<lb/>
movie crowd compared to S50<lb/>
million a year from the furniture<lb/>
market. 1 just beliese they ought<lb/>
lo keep this in perspective he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Mad Max: Beyond Thun derdome<lb/>
Mel Gibson and Tina Turner star, respectivel , as Mad Max and Auntv Fntitv, the deadly ruler ot Barter-<lb/>
town, in the action-adv?nture film, 'Mad Max: Beond Thunderdome piavinv; in Hendrix Theatre on<lb/>
Feb. 27 through March 1 at 7 and 9 p.m.<lb/>
'We Are The World' Leads Grammy Winners<lb/>
,1 PI) - We Are the World,<lb/>
all stai record thai raised<lb/>
millions foi starving Africans,<lb/>
capped 13 months ol emotional<lb/>
I commercial success with four<lb/>
nys ? including<lb/>
?rs as i ecord ol the yeai<lb/>
1 t record wa defeated<lb/>
? e best album category bv<lb/>
.eteran rocker Phil Collins, wl<lb/>
ted two other Gram-<lb/>
ms at the 28th annual show<lb/>
ruesday night. The British rock<lb/>
group Dire s' ? ked up two<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
 call to compassion that sold<lb/>
llions of records and raised<lb/>
public consciousness ol world<lb/>
hunger. He ire the It rtd also<lb/>
won Grammys tor best song, pop<lb/>
l d short<lb/>
 ideo.<lb/>
"h really doesn't suprise me<lb/>
Ken Kragen, w ho heads the I SA<lb/>
for Africa organization behind<lb/>
We Are the World and other<lb/>
id raising projects, sa<lb/>
the show "I always I it<lb/>
was the record<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
song oi the yeai and<lb/>
the group of the y?<lb/>
I ionel Richie and M<lb/>
Jackson accepted tl e We tre the<lb/>
H orld songwriting awa<lb/>
Richie told the audience,<lb/>
standii i m from the<lb/>
i rig crowd at the ri ne<lb/>
auditorium, "The most impor-<lb/>
tani thing was that when we call-<lb/>
ed. -ou responded<lb/>
Collins, who also won Gram-<lb/>
mys as best pop male vocalist and<lb/>
shared producer of the year with<lb/>
Hugh Radgham for his o Jacket<lb/>
Required album, told the au-<lb/>
dience, "1 think m mom would<lb/>
have been proud of me tonight<lb/>
Dire Straits won Grammys for<lb/>
best rock group performance for<lb/>
single "Money for Nothing"<lb/>
. best engineered recording for<lb/>
album Brothers in Arms<lb/>
Mark knottier, the group's lead<lb/>
singer and guitarist, shared<lb/>
another award with Chet Atkins<lb/>
"Cosmic Square Dance" as<lb/>
besl country instrumental.<lb/>
rhe Grammys, voted on bv<lb/>
members of the National<lb/>
Dance Theatre Opens Feb. 28<lb/>
"A day in the life oi a New<lb/>
i ork City dance studio" ?<lb/>
that's the concept behind a varied<lb/>
program of modern, tap. ballet<lb/>
and jazz dance to be presented bv<lb/>
1 he I as: Carolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre. Feb. 28 and March 1.<lb/>
and continuing on March 3 and<lb/>
4, at 8:15 p.m in McGinnis<lb/>
1 heatre.<lb/>
"I came upon the idea of a<lb/>
NYC studio set long before the<lb/>
film White Vights, but that will<lb/>
be the look said the Broadway<lb/>
veteran Mavis Ray who serves as<lb/>
one of the Dance Theatre<lb/>
choreographers.<lb/>
More than 50 dancers are in-<lb/>
volved in the production which<lb/>
opens with a morning dance class<lb/>
and continues<lb/>
for a new dance company 1 he<lb/>
dancers are put througl<lb/>
bag" o stles featuring<lb/>
porarv jazz, ballet, African, East<lb/>
Indian and a punk rock number<lb/>
performed b a trio ot tap<lb/>
dancers.<lb/>
Mavis Rav said, "We've 'tied<lb/>
to create a realistic picture ot<lb/>
what actuallv happens in the New<lb/>
York dance world and to thai<lb/>
end, decided to put the<lb/>
choreographers on stage too, ac<lb/>
tually playing themselves<lb/>
As the day progresses in the<lb/>
studio, the dancers begin rehears<lb/>
ing several numbers from the<lb/>
This year's production of the East Carolina DanceTheatre is schedul-<lb/>
ed for Feb. 2 through March 4 at 8:15 p.m . in McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
alar Broadway muscial 42nd<lb/>
Street which include precision<lb/>
tap. a soft shoe trio and a strut<lb/>
complete with hats and canes to<lb/>
"A 1 ullabv of Broadway<lb/>
Rehearsals continue with the<lb/>
cast performing a variety of<lb/>
dance styles featuring ballet,<lb/>
modern and an ensemble jazz<lb/>
piece with 12 dancers working in<lb/>
front of mirrors to a montage of<lb/>
Marvin Hamlish compositions.<lb/>
Act III in the studio finds the<lb/>
dancers in full costume perform-<lb/>
ing: an elaborate ballet to Pro-<lb/>
kofiev's -core of Romeo and<lb/>
Juliet; a humorous modern piece<lb/>
in which " dancers frolic with<lb/>
huge silver mylar pillows; and an<lb/>
energetic up-beat celebration of<lb/>
"Forties swing the era of the<lb/>
jitterbug, jive, "hep cats" and<lb/>
ZOOt suits.<lb/>
The entire Dance Theatre pro-<lb/>
duction has been in rehearsal for<lb/>
four months. Said Ray, "The<lb/>
idea came about to involve<lb/>
students with a story line to tie<lb/>
the production all together. We<lb/>
hope to involve the audience with<lb/>
all the dancers who actually ap-<lb/>
pear as themselves throughout<lb/>
the evening; called by their own<lb/>
names Dialogue, an unusual<lb/>
element in most dance concerts,<lb/>
was written by Ray and gives in-<lb/>
sight into the private thoughts of<lb/>
a professional dancer in the big<lb/>
city.<lb/>
Most of the students in the<lb/>
East Carolina Dance Theatre are<lb/>
dance majors in the Department<lb/>
of Theatre Arts. Some of the<lb/>
dancers have professional careers<lb/>
in mind after graduation; to<lb/>
follow in the footsteps of recent<lb/>
ECU graduates who are now ap-<lb/>
pearing on Broadway in Cats, La<lb/>
Cage aux Folles, 42nd Street, and<lb/>
with the famed Rockettes who<lb/>
perform daily in New York's<lb/>
Radio City Music Hall.<lb/>
Reserved seat tickets are on<lb/>
sale at the McGinnis Theatre Box<lb/>
Office. The Box Office is open<lb/>
each weekday from 10 a.m. until<lb/>
4 p.m. Reservaitons can be made<lb/>
by calling 757-6390.<lb/>
cademy of Recording Arts &amp;<lb/>
Sciences, are the music world's<lb/>
equivalent of the movies' Oscars<lb/>
and television's Emmys.<lb/>
( me of the evening's emotional<lb/>
highlights came in the pretelecast<lb/>
ceremonies when big band leader<lb/>
Nelson Riddle, who died in Oc-<lb/>
tober, was announced as a winner<lb/>
tor his arrangement of I inda<lb/>
Ronstadt's Lush life album.<lb/>
"I'm sure he'd like to be<lb/>
here Christopher Riddle said in<lb/>
accepting the award tor his<lb/>
lather. "This would mean a lot to<lb/>
him. It's a wonderful thing, but<lb/>
there's something missing He<lb/>
then walked off stage in tears.<lb/>
Tina turner, a major winner<lb/>
last year, was named best rock<lb/>
female vocalist for her "One of<lb/>
the Living" single. Don Henley,<lb/>
a previous winner as a drummer<lb/>
and singer with the Eagles, won<lb/>
on his own as best rock male<lb/>
vocalist tor "The Boys of Sum-<lb/>
mer<lb/>
Whitney Houston was named<lb/>
best pop female vocalist for her<lb/>
hit single, "Saving All My Love<lb/>
for You The award was<lb/>
presented by her cousin, singer<lb/>
Dionne Warwick.<lb/>
Rosanne Cash, Johnny's<lb/>
daughter, was named best coun-<lb/>
try female vocalist for "I Don't<lb/>
Know Why You Don't Want<lb/>
Me a song she wrote two years<lb/>
ago after she was nominated tor a<lb/>
Grammy but did not win. "I<lb/>
started writing it as a little exei<lb/>
cise in self pit v. and now I've won<lb/>
a Grammy tor it she said.<lb/>
Silkv voiced Sade was named<lb/>
best new artist over a field in-<lb/>
Phi! Collins received the best pro-<lb/>
ducer Grammy for 'No Jacket<lb/>
Required<lb/>
eluding John Lennon's son.<lb/>
Julian.<lb/>
Aretha Franklin was named<lb/>
best rhythm and blues female<lb/>
vocalist for "Ireewav ot Love<lb/>
the Commodores won the R&amp;B<lb/>
group Grammy tor ightshift<lb/>
and Ronnie MiKap was named<lb/>
best country male vocalist for<lb/>
"Lost in the fifties tonight<lb/>
"Highwayman and<lb/>
"Freewav of Love" wer. named<lb/>
country and R&amp;B soi-<lb/>
Huev Lewis and the News won<lb/>
tor bes: long music video<lb/>
"The Heart ot Rock and Roll "<lb/>
In classical competition, the<lb/>
tlanta Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
?von four awards, and Sir George<lb/>
Solti, conductor of the Chicago<lb/>
Symphony, won one more to m-<lb/>
crease his all time Grammy<lb/>
record to 24.<lb/>
It est Side Story beat out R<lb/>
Miller's lonv Award winning Big<lb/>
River tor best Broadway cast<lb/>
show album. I he best movie<lb/>
soundtrack honor went to Bever-<lb/>
ly Hills Cop.<lb/>
Composer Jan Hammer was a<lb/>
double winner for his "Miami<lb/>
Vice Iheme tor best pop in-<lb/>
strumental performanct and in<lb/>
st rumen t a 1 composition.<lb/>
I: umpeter Wynton Marsalis won<lb/>
two jaz2 instrumentalist Gram<lb/>
mvs.<lb/>
Whoopi Goldberg, nominated<lb/>
tor the best actress oscar for her<lb/>
role in The Color Purple, won the<lb/>
Grammy tor best comedy recor<lb/>
ding.<lb/>
The Rolling Stones were voted<lb/>
one of the Academy's three<lb/>
Lifetime Achievement awards,<lb/>
along with swing clarinetist Ben-<lb/>
in Goodman and Spanish<lb/>
classical guitarist Andres<lb/>
Segovia.<lb/>
It's My Move<lb/>
Dorm Life: A Living Hell<lb/>
Bv ROBERT MAZZOI I<lb/>
S??ff W filer<lb/>
TO WHOM IT MAY CONCERN:<lb/>
Help me.<lb/>
For the past two years, turmoil has filled m y im-<lb/>
prisoned life within the cold and forbodng walls<lb/>
of a dormitory. Cold toilets seats, urinal windows,<lb/>
obnoxious and insane roommates, freshrren my<lb/>
God, the list goes on forever.<lb/>
Please, help me.<lb/>
As each day fades into the<lb/>
evil which is called night, new<lb/>
and frightening experiences<lb/>
taunt my soul. A simple call of<lb/>
nature becomes dangerous as I<lb/>
venture into the cold, beer-can-<lb/>
littered hallways of the dorm.<lb/>
From behind each door, I hear<lb/>
cries of anguish and frustration<lb/>
from the inmates.<lb/>
Strains of Tom Petty, Prince<lb/>
and the Talking Heads<lb/>
permeate the immovable pock-<lb/>
faced cinder blocks, and the<lb/>
cacophonous sounds blend together into an ear-<lb/>
wrenching symphony of insanity, made worse by<lb/>
the fact that it's 2:30 in the morning.<lb/>
1 The call of nature keeps me moving throu g h the<lb/>
ill-lit halls as I search for the room of rest. My<lb/>
senses tell me relief is a few steps away, while a<lb/>
stench slowly makes itself known to my dfa ctory<lb/>
passage, a smell lodging deep within my nose. My<lb/>
feet hesitate as my eyes find the passage.<lb/>
I am barefoot, and that worries me. Who k nows<lb/>
what slime has accumulated on the virus-happy<lb/>
tile? Shall I go on? I ponder the journey hack , but<lb/>
a drunken freshmen in a vegetable stained<lb/>
SfUOEN.<lb/>
SUD?NS CHtCH.<lb/>
1 U s"1 "<lb/>
Wolfpack shirt hustles me through the door, my<lb/>
feet cringing at the touch of cool porcelain.<lb/>
My feet remain firm to the ground, and I w atch<lb/>
the freshman dart haphazardly into "TheStal! of<lb/>
Communicable Diseases Prayers are offered in<lb/>
the early hours of morning, moans and groans<lb/>
begging for mercy and deliverance from the<lb/>
demons inside. I convince myself<lb/>
This is Hell.<lb/>
The sound of running water<lb/>
from each sink accompanies the<lb/>
slapping noises of my feet. Each<lb/>
step is a voyage into something<lb/>
unknown and probably<lb/>
dangerous. From the corner of<lb/>
my eye, I spot the urinal. By<lb/>
now, the safety of my bare feet<lb/>
matters little, and hurriedly, I<lb/>
make my way to the destina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
An open window stands<lb/>
beside me, and a cod b reeze<lb/>
from the outside rips at my<lb/>
skin. Without provocation,<lb/>
people from below call loudly<lb/>
and fanatically for a show.<lb/>
From across the parking lot, I see the reflection<lb/>
of a telescope lens zooming in on my privacy . My<lb/>
hands try to close the window, but I slip and fall<lb/>
onto the tile, my brain reeling from the grotes-<lb/>
queness of the situation.<lb/>
As 1 turn my head, I freeze when 1 see<lb/>
something green traveling along the grooves of the<lb/>
tile from the leaky trash can to a nearby drain.<lb/>
I scramble to my feet.<lb/>
More prayers echo from a nearby stall. S houts<lb/>
See ADVENTURE, Page 9<lb/>
' MOTEL<lb/>
IN<lb/>
doij i check, orr<lb/>
<lb/>
  " <lb/>
- ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0008"/><lb/>
BLOOM COUNTY<lb/>
.<lb/>
v<lb/>
?fe.<lb/>
by Berke Breathed<lb/>
' ' ' Du'<lb/>
$.<lb/>
?" Hi<lb/>
?-????<lb/>
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Sneed<lb/>
By BRYANT<lb/>
rV ttr 7<lb/>
.?jE Ltfl. LAUNCH <lb/>
"?o<lb/>
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s<lb/>
ftwspc HiftltiVJ<lb/>
Triorttnu5 Civil di<lb/>
L<lb/>
I ndercoMT fats<lb/>
J.C.WHCft 7x T<lb/>
Hi TO fVT TmR? STKVfS<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
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Overkill<lb/>
IS CASLTOOH<lb/>
aim<lb/>
FRlLDRICH<lb/>
?b ?<lb/>
?? Y  ,<lb/>
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Tooth<lb/>
KecoRom srupio<lb/>
VOUT'M USTth 7bA<lb/>
lOUR FIRST TRACK (<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
O<lb/>
g?<lb/>
ii<lb/>
By BROOKS<lb/>
, I<lb/>
fof<lb/>
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LJiiAi ?-)<lb/>
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&amp;k<lb/>
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By PARKER<lb/>
"<lb/>
?M<lb/>
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' ? S'<lb/>
musi frit, f 'o&amp;Jt,m<lb/>
to )<lb/>
MAKE THE<lb/>
GRADE IN<lb/>
SPRING FASHION<lb/>
Woven Shirts- O OFF<lb/>
Camp Shirts 9.99<lb/>
Camp Shorts 12.99<lb/>
Swimwear 20 OFF<lb/>
Denim Jeans 20 OFF<lb/>
MAURICES<lb/>
Where Fashion Doesn't Cost A Fortune For Men &amp; Women!<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST MALL<lb/>
Black<lb/>
Classifiec<lb/>
AAMKI)<lb/>
??<lb/>
ROC<lb/>
.<lb/>
EAST<lb/>
-<lb/>
I oward an Ecom<lb/>
For Blae<lb/>
: (<lb/>
12-1<lb/>
"Music From an<lb/>
M<lb/>
Greenvi<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0009"/><lb/>
I HI 1 ASIAkOl IMAN<lb/>
1 t HKl AkN 27, 1V86<lb/>
iWNMS?w .VfcKK W 5vm$<lb/>
Black History Lecture Offered<lb/>
Sydney Nathans, a pro-<lb/>
; oi histor) at Duke Univer-<lb/>
will give a presentation en-<lb/>
1 and of Sorrow, Land of<lb/>
iving: Black Carolinians in the<lb/>
issippi Delta" on March 3 at<lb/>
al Mendenhall Student<lb/>
uditoiium 244.<lb/>
resentation traces the<lb/>
oi black Carolinians<lb/>
850's to the present.<lb/>
earned his PhD from<lb/>
s Hopkins I Iniversit) with a<lb/>
ition in United States<lb/>
History, and has a five<lb/>
sentitled, The Hay He<lb/>
 nrrh c arolina.<lb/>
Quest tor Progress, one of<lb/>
ks fi om his -cries, focuses<lb/>
i sites such as the<lb/>
: social history in<lb/>
?<lb/>
i oi tracing the<lb/>
blacks from North<lb/>
e Mississippi Delta<lb/>
is "to understand the experience<lb/>
of black communities formed by<lb/>
the plantation system<lb/>
Nathans will explain how the<lb/>
Cameron plantation empire of<lb/>
North Carolina expanded to<lb/>
Alabama in the 1840's and to<lb/>
Mississippi in the 1850's, and the<lb/>
effect this migration held for<lb/>
blacks who were a part of the<lb/>
Cameron plantation system.<lb/>
This lecture is co-sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Student Union Minority<lb/>
Arts Committee and Phi Alpha<lb/>
Theta History Honor Fraternity,<lb/>
in coordination with The ECU<lb/>
Medical Humanities Program.<lb/>
The Student Union Minority<lb/>
Arts Committee is geared to in-<lb/>
troduce the ECU student body to<lb/>
multi-cultural arts such as Inter-<lb/>
n-tional Week and Jewish and<lb/>
Black Arts Festivals.<lb/>
Adventures In The Room Of Rest<lb/>
FROM BEGINNING 10 END<lb/>
A BRILLIANT ACHIEVEMENT<lb/>
- JANET MASUN. THE NEW YORK TIMES<lb/>
WILLIAM Mill SONIA<lb/>
UUOTJULABftAGA<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
of glee and madness filter<lb/>
through the open window, and<lb/>
the green slime moves along, car-<lb/>
rying with it age-old bubble gum<lb/>
and toilet paper. I feel the sand-<lb/>
paper quality of its fabric tear in-<lb/>
to the sole of my foot. My voice<lb/>
vsants to scream, but 1 am hushed<lb/>
by the prayers and shouting and<lb/>
running water.<lb/>
Finally, the door is in sight,<lb/>
and as 1 move through the exit.<lb/>
people in the hallway arc scream<lb/>
ing and carousing, celebrating the<lb/>
glow of the moon Beer cans and<lb/>
bags of Doritos cling to the walls<lb/>
while happy, trashed freshmen<lb/>
sing praises of freedom.<lb/>
But they are trapped, just like I<lb/>
am.<lb/>
I finally find rm room, my legs<lb/>
straddling the broken bodies and<lb/>
overturned waste baskets As my<lb/>
hand turns the latch. 1 sec the<lb/>
signal. There is a woman msidc,<lb/>
and my roommate desires<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
? ER<lb/>
MERCAMP COUNSELORS<lb/>
?ANTEDi n d omen<lb/>
?alists Two<lb/>
.??? ? - ampus in New<lb/>
?  - ns "ave<lb/>
s waterfront<lb/>
? ng small<lb/>
? r nasties,<lb/>
.<lb/>
and<lb/>
dren<lb/>
" S Gersten.<lb/>
ii . i4 Leamington<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
"??,<lb/>
??<lb/>
t1r -iik<lb/>
<lb/>
OOMmate NEr-DED 4th female<lb/>
i c e 2<lb/>
i ?ror campus<lb/>
? i dace<lb/>
seek S93 '<lb/>
LP A ANTED Hai )( tl  Court<lb/>
? V<lb/>
person<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED Ho-e .<lb/>
 " ECU Bus<lb/>
Rent J ? S?5 Con<lb/>
' ' jrs<lb/>
.?? Beecti<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
IMMEDIATELY: Rent $88<lb/>
utilit.es Kings Row Apts Call<lb/>
758 0655<lb/>
LOST: Gold nugget with diamond m<lb/>
set on 24" chain Lost in or around<lb/>
Memorial Gym girls locker room<lb/>
Extreme sentimental value<lb/>
Reward offered. Call Tracy at<lb/>
758 0191<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
$125 month i electricity. 226<lb/>
Green Mill Run Apts Call 758 2626<lb/>
ana ask about Apt 226 Leave name<lb/>
and number<lb/>
LOST: 1939 Graham High man's<lb/>
class rmg. Gold and onyx with the m<lb/>
ti a Is TPW engraved inside If found<lb/>
please call 752 2687 Reward offered<lb/>
RIDE NEEDED: Looking tor a lift<lb/>
to New Jersey for Spring Break Will<lb/>
pay part of the gas Call 752 0796, ask<lb/>
tor Dan<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED: To<lb/>
j stnbute "Student Rate" subscr.p<lb/>
tion cards at this campus Gooc in<lb/>
come. For information and applica<lb/>
tion write to COLLEGIATE<lb/>
MARKETING SE R V ICES, 251 Glen<lb/>
wooo Dr Mooresv.i'e NC 28115<lb/>
NATIONAL COLLEGE<lb/>
MARKETING COMPANY<lb/>
individual or campus group to :<lb/>
part time assisting students in ap<lb/>
plying tor credit cards f; ? ? I ?<lb/>
hours, excellent pay tuU frsr<lb/>
Meet students ana havi<lb/>
Sharon at 1 800 592 2121<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To Sha<lb/>
two bedroom nous  tl<lb/>
Rent is $82 and I ible.<lb/>
808 Mumforo Rd 2 miles from ECU<lb/>
Must like cats Car 757 1160 as I<lb/>
Melanie or Reagan<lb/>
ARE YOU A FUTURE BUSINESS<lb/>
LEADER?: Estat student<lb/>
managed compan o over 3.000<lb/>
students is looking for ECU <lb/>
for fun time sumn Prof<lb/>
Sional tran pr .<lb/>
$4,500 average summer profit<lb/>
more information s<lb/>
phone address etc '<lb/>
Suite 141 95 Sou E<lb/>
Hill 27514<lb/>
LOST: A gold ai<lb/>
iinkng bracelet havii<lb/>
timenta! value If fi<lb/>
758 8542 Rewara given!<lb/>
privacy. I try the door anyway,<lb/>
bul the lock is steadfast and im-<lb/>
movable. I recall that my keys are<lb/>
King beside my bed.<lb/>
From the other end of the hall,<lb/>
tour freshmen are competing in a<lb/>
100-yard dash, and from looking<lb/>
at my location, I'm in the center<lb/>
of their track, lists pound on the<lb/>
door. 1 scream, but 1 learn they<lb/>
arc making more noise than 1 am.<lb/>
I he freshmen are getting<lb/>
closer. I look for an escape but<lb/>
notice something green traveling<lb/>
across the hall. Everything's get-<lb/>
ting closer. The broken bodies<lb/>
below are rising. The green slime<lb/>
from the room of rest smiles at<lb/>
me. Harder and harder my fists<lb/>
pound on the door.<lb/>
Help me. Please, help me.<lb/>
fhey're getting closer, and I<lb/>
KISS Of THE SPIDER WOMAN<lb/>
 WILLIAM UUff ? BCST ACTOD ? 1055 CAMMES HIM ttSTIVAl<lb/>
USit 0" ' 0?i )?<lb/>
MANUEL LEONADD (0 DAVID UQCTOD<lb/>
i xmrn nJKTw merman babenco<lb/>
Starts TOMORROW!<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
:?ROLIN?EAST CENtfR<lb/>
?56 1449<lb/>
"he i ist Carolina Playhouse pre<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
See page 12<lb/>
THEATRE<lb/>
I<lb/>
e<lb/>
? 2<lb/>
w<lb/>
mm &amp;??<lb/>
2.99<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
MINORITY AWARENESS DAY<lb/>
-?-<lb/>
<lb/>
O OFF<lb/>
O OFF<lb/>
ES<lb/>
Men &amp; Women!<lb/>
Saturday, March 1, 1986<lb/>
in the<lb/>
LEDONIA WRIGHT CULTURAL CENTER<lb/>
Behind the ECU Student Health Center<lb/>
Seminar Sessions ? 10 a.m4 p.m.<lb/>
 <lb/>
10:00 a.m.<lb/>
"The Crisis in the Negro Family<lb/>
Dr. Donald Ensley<lb/>
ECU School of Allied Health<lb/>
11:00 a.m.<lb/>
'Toward an Economic Understanding of the Basis<lb/>
For Black Historical Struggle"<lb/>
Dr. Donald Yates<lb/>
ECU Dept. of Sociology<lb/>
12-1 LUNCH RECESS<lb/>
1:00 p.m.<lb/>
"Music From an Afro-American Perspective<lb/>
Mr. Johnny Wooten<lb/>
Greenville School of Music<lb/>
2:00 p.m.<lb/>
"The Book The Color Purple<lb/>
vs. the Film The Color Purple"<lb/>
Dr. Gay Wilentz<lb/>
ECU English Dept.<lb/>
3:00 p.m.<lb/>
44 Afro-Americans and the Arts<lb/>
Mrs. Milton Pollock<lb/>
Black Artists' Guild<lb/>
7:00 PM<lb/>
Keynote Address<lb/>
at the<lb/>
ECU Jenkins Auditorium<lb/>
faces 5th StreetCampus entrance<lb/>
by<lb/>
Dr. John Fleming<lb/>
of<lb/>
Shaw University<lb/>
Minority Student Organization<lb/>
NAACP-ECU Chapter<lb/>
Pre-professional Health Alliance<lb/>
Fountain Of Life Fellowhip<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Other ECU Minority Student Groups<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
m.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0010"/><lb/>
v s I h i ' ?;<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Women Win Season Opener<lb/>
liv I) II! Vlif.lNM ss M.<lb/>
kick pa<lb/>
The Ik<lb/>
Jeann<lb/>
Fhou<lb/>
Wainsi l ,mi.<lb/>
t !l<lb/>
Madison Tops Bucs<lb/>
Tourney Upcoming<lb/>
Pr R<lb/>
Drwg Testing: A<lb/>
Controversial Issue<lb/>
An Inside Scoop<lb/>
vith<lb/>
'Mr. Coop1<lb/>
m <lb/>
?"C6; y<lb/>
<lb/>
horsl ill.uses Ihe Klass here in K I s second loss to the<lb/>
?d Ihe Bucs ?iU need a big game  defeat<lb/>
? m W in the tirst round it the tourney<lb/>
Senior Plaer Profiled<lb/>
Vanderhorst: ECU Student Athlete<lb/>
Bv j Nh ! M1Ps)<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
i I I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
tat : Vanderl<lb/>
ire friendly<lb/>
. i 's fin! Ii)<lb/>
? - ?<lb/>
gel to k<lb/>
f i<lb/>
.<lb/>
Iarg( tl<lb/>
pec.<lb/>
Vanderhorst feels the team has<lb/>
improved over the course ol the<lb/>
!<lb/>
Vai<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
See ONE-THOI SAND, page 11<lb/>
w ?<lb/>
Coin Toss Costs Lady<lb/>
Pirates Tourney Bye<lb/>
of tb alters Open 86 Season Friday<lb/>
Bv I N( h s R y<lb/>
?<lb/>
Hea<lb/>
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D ims<lb/>
?,<lb/>
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Ma<lb/>
to ewi<lb/>
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be successful "<lb/>
Having five returning sta<lb/>
n las' ? 24 1" i<lb/>
Manahan's team musi<lb/>
with a tough Division I schedu<lb/>
;<lb/>
I ?iane<lb/>
' ' 1 O!<lb/>
ase,<lb/>
M u i<lb/>
K<lb/>
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?mII play leftfield,<lb/>
K Vdams will stai<lb/>
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, in rightfield<lb/>
Mona lacl . who is<lb/>
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nik; batten foi the<lb/>
an! will probabl) see<lb/>
freshman Mickey Ford starting,<lb/>
I ynda Bui<lb/>
vhen<lb/>
u r <lb/>
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H yette are expei ???<lb/>
i hing duties<lb/>
ire going<lb/>
? ?? ess<lb/>
Manaha "We are going<lb/>
need unity a s ness ai<lb/>
combina<lb/>
suci ess<lb/>
I .td Pirates play<lb/>
Boston c ollege next Monday in a<lb/>
doubleheadei scheduled ai 2 pm<lb/>
Sports Fact<lb/>
Ihurs. Feb. 2 1482<lb/>
Earl Anthony becomes the<lb/>
i ii si pi ofessional bow lei to e<lb/>
ceed the million dollar mark in<lb/>
?-?i eat m ngs Am hony<lb/>
reached the milestone alter<lb/>
recovering from a heart attack<lb/>
thai nearly ended his careei<lb/>
Bv lll( HM) rK<lb/>
u he 1 ady P<lb/>
mds Mot day<lb/>
? made the besi<lb/>
Madison,<lb/>
?<lb/>
on ruesday morning w<lb/>
the resul<lb/>
i' rates came up oi<lb/>
Because onjj seven<lb/>
women's teams in th <lb/>
first place team gets a bye in<lb/>
uind ol<lb/>
tournament Since the two teams<lb/>
finished with identical 111,<lb/>
ference marks, a coin toss <lb/>
necessary to decide which team<lb/>
would gel th ? ound bye<lb/>
1 he coin toss was held ruesday<lb/>
morning in the conference<lb/>
commissioner's office in Ri.h<lb/>
mond, irginia<lb/>
Ihe Pirates' opponent m the<lb/>
tirsi round will be the Indians oi<lb/>
William &amp; Marv fhe Pirates<lb/>
have won both contests that ihe<lb/>
have played agamsi William &amp;<lb/>
 M.<lb/>
a h?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
FCl <lb/>
.1 .1 s<lb/>
l c w<lb/>
<lb/>
Mad<lb/>
p.m<lb/>
Lad Pirau<lb/>
? B<lb/>
acnon wtU ,n broadt<lb/>
rwaves 0j WZMB-FM -<lb/>
v' yMcye) and Spike Han,<lb/>
 bringing the ri<lb/>
acnon from H<lb/>
u<lb/>
MEL GIBSON<lb/>
MADMAX<lb/>
?rrOHD THUMOIRDOMI<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Hendrix Ihtatre<lb/>
r asiarolina I niversit<lb/>
<pb facs="00057805_0011"/><lb/>
I HI EAS1AKOl INIAN<lb/>
1 I BKl AfO 2" I9H6<lb/>
11<lb/>
Opener<lb/>
ing: A<lb/>
rsial Issue<lb/>
Costs Lady<lb/>
ourney Bye<lb/>
'<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
-ded<lb/>
j tme<lb/>
?<lb/>
ceded<lb/>
tgainsi<lb/>
fhe<lb/>
vill play<lb/>
?-? at 8<lb/>
ne will<lb/>
JCkJ Sunday n a! 4<lb/>
Lady Pirate fans should take<lb/>
nonce that ECV's tournament<lb/>
action will be broadcast on the<lb/>
airwaves oj WZMB-FM, 91.3.<lb/>
Mike McVey and Spike Harvard<lb/>
will be brining the live plav-bv-<lb/>
play action from Wilmington<lb/>
<lb/>
ackpack In Uwharrie Forest<lb/>
1 he Depart men I of<lb/>
ural Recreational Services<lb/>
 ou to accompany<lb/>
Sam on the annual<lb/>
kpacking trip to the Uwharrie<lb/>
tai Foresl px' 4ft.<lb/>
The IRS Word<lb/>
by<lb/>
Jeannette Roth<lb/>
aie interested, . oom 204<lb/>
Ol 1alGym is the place to<lb/>
,u information packet<lb/>
?nt lifull description ol needed foi the trip, eive information tie type ain you and a full descrip<lb/>
e I 'whai i ie 1 orests' intramural Out-<lb/>
Rionation Centei offers .1 ol equipment to be i foi the trip<lb/>
The results are in for the in-<lb/>
tramural co-rec bowling tourna-<lb/>
ment. In semi-final plav. top<lb/>
ranked Soul Rollers out hooked<lb/>
the Urn stead lermmatois<lb/>
(1290-1133) to advance to the<lb/>
finals. On the other lane, both<lb/>
squads from Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
were forced to face each other,<lb/>
enroute to the championship.<lb/>
The final showdown was held<lb/>
in the Mendenhall Bowling<lb/>
tenter Mon. Feb. 24. 1 he Soul<lb/>
Rollers, led by Marcus<lb/>
McDonald and 1 oletta 1 ee. out<lb/>
toppled Delta Sigma Phi V in a<lb/>
sizzling final match up<lb/>
1173-1137.<lb/>
Overall, the co-rec bowling<lb/>
league was surrounded with shin-<lb/>
ing stars and here ai a few: I he<lb/>
highest games foi the season went<lb/>
to Brian Childs ol the Umstead<lb/>
rerminators and Jeri Hingle of<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi 'A' who scored<lb/>
193 and 149 totals respectively.<lb/>
High series were captured by<lb/>
Marcus Mat Donald ol Soul<lb/>
Rollers (357) and Jen Hingle<lb/>
(347), who once again bowled her<lb/>
way into this year's record books<lb/>
Brian Childs ol the lei<lb/>
minators walked away with the<lb/>
highest average of 161.65 while<lb/>
I oleta 1 ee captured the ladies<lb/>
highest average with a 149.6<lb/>
mark. Iop-ranked champions,<lb/>
the Soul Rollers, took the team<lb/>
high score with a one lime 164.8.<lb/>
On Sat. Feb 22, the Schick<lb/>
Supei Hoops i on regional<lb/>
basketball tournament was held<lb/>
at Georgia lech, last Carolina<lb/>
'Manned' the courts with three<lb/>
excellent hoopsters: lames<lb/>
Mann. Robert Williams and<lb/>
William Battle, rhese gentlemen<lb/>
captured the J-on-3 intramural<lb/>
basketball title, making them<lb/>
eligible foi regional play.<lb/>
I aking then tn si win b<lb/>
forfeit. East Carolina weni ahead<lb/>
to meet Jacksonville State Col<lb/>
lege<lb/>
s the final seconds ticked<lb/>
wav, Mann. Williams and Battle<lb/>
not only took the win, but walked<lb/>
away with the highest scoring<lb/>
game ol the tournament. 72<lb/>
points is indeed an accomplish<lb/>
men! for three men playing half-<lb/>
court regulations.<lb/>
After the win, they moved into<lb/>
the afternoon single-elimination<lb/>
play to meet Waveross Junior<lb/>
College who they de'eated<lb/>
58 2fS I hey continued their surge<lb/>
against Auburn University with a<lb/>
55 J8 victory<lb/>
I heir final match up against<lb/>
last lennessee State would<lb/>
determine one ot the final squads<lb/>
to play in I he (mini dining an<lb/>
upcoming Atlanta Hawks-Boston<lb/>
(. eltics pro basketball game<lb/>
ttei a grueling first halt ol plav,<lb/>
and two overtime periods, ECU<lb/>
fell 50 48.<lb/>
c ongratulations are certainly<lb/>
in oidei to these fine gentlemen<lb/>
who not only displayed athletic<lb/>
prowess but sportsmanship<lb/>
?hues essential to athletic com-<lb/>
petition'<lb/>
Thousand-Point Career Hoopster<lb/>
l ontinued from pajje 10<lb/>
? ? as iomething I wanted to<lb/>
tinued. "People can<lb/>
nembei me by saying<lb/>
Vanderhorsi scored loon<lb/>
1 hey can look it up in the<lb/>
ook and it will be there<lb/>
derhorsl is currently in<lb/>
place on ECls all-time<lb/>
eeds only three<lb/>
move into the No. 5<lb/>
while si points would give<lb/>
e No. 4 slot.<lb/>
derhorsl is modest of his<lb/>
plishments as he recalls all<lb/>
se gruelling practices. In<lb/>
ie feels they may be the<lb/>
' memorable aspect ot his<lb/>
. ?ing<lb/>
nost i s c<lb/>
worked and how<lb/>
acticed stated<lb/>
S ? the first tw<lb/>
 all y gel<lb/>
?. because we<lb/>
appointing seasons.<lb/>
"I'll ai- . mbei tl<lb/>
days when we really worked fund<lb/>
to prepare for a game he add<lb/>
ed, "and the final results didn't<lb/>
show that we worked that hard<lb/>
Vanderhorsi considers his<lb/>
fathei to be the most influential<lb/>
person m his career.<lb/>
"My fathei has had the most<lb/>
inspiration on my career, because<lb/>
he was always the one that en-<lb/>
couraged me to do more said<lb/>
Vanderhorst. "He always told<lb/>
me that 1 could do this or 1 could<lb/>
do that. He would always ask me<lb/>
to shoot more, and how could I<lb/>
expect to be successful if I didn't<lb/>
(shoot)?<lb/>
"I always wanted to show him<lb/>
1 could do n without<lb/>
shooting that 1 could be suc-<lb/>
cessful as fai as playing collegiate<lb/>
basketball continued<lb/>
Vanderhorst. "When 1 was in<lb/>
school, lie would always tell<lb/>
I wouldn't get a scholarship<lb/>
because I didn't ever shoot<lb/>
1 think I've proved him<lb/>
wronc<lb/>
?t c? ?! ding to andei ho; si.<lb/>
playing basketball is no- in the<lb/>
immediate future "Basketball is<lb/>
m my future plans said<lb/>
 anderhorst "It's been good to<lb/>
me, but there comes a time when<lb/>
all good tilings musl come to an<lb/>
end, and this is my end (play<lb/>
basketball ere<lb/>
 andei I plans are<lb/>
centered around a in elec<lb/>
nies "Right now I' king<lb/>
on my degree in electronics,<lb/>
w inch I'm al i semester aw ay<lb/>
fron ig s.(i andei hoi st<lb/>
"1 would lik( eel a job<lb/>
somewhere around Noi<lb/>
Carolina, but il ? ? ? i .vould<lb/>
to go whe: ney is. fl e<lb/>
east has be  but I<lb/>
would like to trave<lb/>
Reading, listei usic,<lb/>
and traveling are Vanderhorst"s<lb/>
"hies "Basically, I lik I<lb/>
by my self stated V a d rl<lb/>
" 1 would call myself a<lb/>
guv's and I have tun, but w<lb/>
I 'm alone. I .<lb/>
miisu. or pel haps reading a<lb/>
book. 1 also like traveling<lb/>
 ai dei h?st feels coming to<lb/>
1 c 1 was a good choice foi him.<lb/>
"It's been nice going to ECl <lb/>
said "I've enjoyed meeting<lb/>
new people and I have memories<lb/>
I 'II never tor get.<lb/>
"I'll nevei regret coming to<lb/>
1(1 and it I had to do il all over<lb/>
again he added. "I'd still come<lb/>
here<lb/>
"I'll never regret cominj<lb/>
ECU, and if 1 had to do it all over<lb/>
again I'd still come here<lb/>
RECORDS<lb/>
Blank Tapes<lb/>
TDKUD90 $2.98<lb/>
Maxell X LI 190 $2.98<lb/>
112 E. 5th St. 758-4298<lb/>
ECU Tennis Results<lb/>
( ontinued from page 10<lb/>
1 le- e results from 1 ues-<lb/>
lay's men's and women's<lb/>
Men vs. ACC<lb/>
i da (ACC i d. D. I a-<lb/>
Malpass (ACC) d. J.<lb/>
6-2<lb/>
( 1 itzpatrick (A c d J.<lb/>
6 2. 2-6, 6<lb/>
? M I pple (ACC) d.G 1 oyd<lb/>
O'Bnan (ACC) d. K.<lb/>
( 4,6-3.<lb/>
( ampanero (E( U) d. G.<lb/>
6-1, 5-7, 6-1.<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
Malpass Fitzpatrick (A'( i d<lb/>
n lavior 6-2, 6-0<lb/>
Gowda-Epple (ACC) d.<lb/>
panero-Anthony 6-1. 7-5.<lb/>
I am on- Loyd (ECU) d.<lb/>
I ranks 6-0, 6-4.<lb/>
V omen vs. Campbell<lb/>
N. Register (CU) d. B.<lb/>
6 2, 6-7, 6-4,<lb/>
2. Manderfield (ECU) ret. K.<lb/>
Poole.<lb/>
V S. Mattox (C'l Id. L. Eichholz<lb/>
6-2, 3-6, 6 :<lb/>
4. . Ziemei (ECld. L. N-<lb/>
Meter ? 6-2, 6 I.<lb/>
5. K Riley (Cl Id. H. Murray<lb/>
3 6. 6-0, 6-1.<lb/>
6. 1 Myers tic I d. I May<lb/>
6-3, 6-1.<lb/>
Doubles<lb/>
1. Swain-Myers (ECU) d.<lb/>
Register-Van Meter 3-6. 7-6, 6-4.<lb/>
2. Murray -Ziemer (I C I i d.<lb/>
Poole-Riley 6-4. 6-0.<lb/>
3. Montjoy-Clements (ECU) d.<lb/>
Mattox-Ma 6-4. 6.<lb/>
This Style Frame<lb/>
With Single Vision Rx<lb/>
Lenses for only<lb/>
$27<lb/>
95<lb/>
All Other Frames<lb/>
30 to 60 OFF<lb/>
with purchase of RX Lenses<lb/>
RAY BAN Sunglasses30 OFF<lb/>
Offer Good Through 33186<lb/>
"? ?- . ? . ? Commons<lb/>
ss From Docrors ParV<lb/>
752 '446<lb/>
Open MonFri. 9 a.m. til 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
HOLD OUT FOR MAD MAX<lb/>
THIS IS HIS GREATEST<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
MEL GIBSON<lb/>
MAD MAX<lb/>
MTVOND THUDfRDOI<lb/>
TINA TUPNEP<lb/>
i?c; o<lb/>
  q<lb/>
Thurs. Fri. &amp; Sat.<lb/>
7 &amp;9 p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Hast Carolina University<lb/>
ATTENTION RETURNING<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
If you plan to live off campus in the fall, will you need<lb/>
lights, water or heat?<lb/>
If so, eliminate one long line by arranging your utility<lb/>
service in advance.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
At your parents' request, utility service can be put in their name. Just pick up an<lb/>
application in Room 211 in the off-campus housing office, Whichard Building<lb/>
or at Greenville Utilities mam office, 200 W. Fifth Street.<lb/>
Hae your parents complete the applicaton (which must be notarized) and mail<lb/>
it to Greenville Utilities, P.O. Box 1847, Greenville, N.C. 27835-1847, Ann:<lb/>
Customer Services.<lb/>
 Remind them to attach a letter of credit from their utility company.<lb/>
? <lb/>
It you wish to have the utility service put in your name, a deposit will be re-<lb/>
quired.<lb/>
Electric Only<lb/>
Electric &amp; Water<lb/>
Electric, Water &amp; Gas<lb/>
Elecrric &amp; Gas<lb/>
with electric or<lb/>
gos ?poce heat<lb/>
$110<lb/>
$110<lb/>
$100<lb/>
without electric or<lb/>
gos space heat<lb/>
$75<lb/>
$35<lb/>
$85<lb/>
$75<lb/>
You can save time by mailing the deposit in advance. You must include your<lb/>
name, where service will be required, when service should be cut on and a phone<lb/>
number where we may reach you.<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
A cut on service charge will be included in your first billing. Service charges are<lb/>
as follows:<lb/>
Electric andor water ? $10<lb/>
Electric, gas andor water ? $30<lb/>
For further information, contact Customer Assistant<lb/>
(919) 752-7166<lb/>
52S2<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
?sco<lb/>
Utilities<lb/>
Soccer Coaches (Indoor Soccer)<lb/>
Part-time coaches, work 10-20 hours weekly.<lb/>
Hours Monday-Friday, 3-5:30 and a couple of<lb/>
evenings, 7-9:00. Indoor soccer games at Elm<lb/>
Street Gym.<lb/>
Must posses skills and be able to coach,<lb/>
officiate youth ages 5-18, in soccer fundamentals.<lb/>
Contact the Greenville Recreation and Parks<lb/>
Department, 752-4137, ext. 262, 259, for<lb/>
application information. Application deadline is<lb/>
Friday, March 7. $3.46 hr<lb/>
t if, ST.GEORGE'S UNIVERSITY<lb/>
f) SCHOOL OF MEDICINE<lb/>
-y<lb/>
I Med ? ??<lb/>
,l )esU ???? ' ? ' ' '? ' ? "? ?????? ?<lb/>
e-semester . ?? ??? ?<lb/>
The Journal ot the American Medical Association j epof<lb/>
? h rai ?'??? I Georgt imbei ? ' ? ' ? . ? ' ?<lb/>
ite ??.???<lb/>
edicai set ' ? ' ' ' ?' ' ' '<lb/>
Mith advanced standing<lb/>
? i ???? ?? ' <lb/>
? ey<lb/>
im Entering i is be ' ? tuahtn<lb/>
hi li '<lb/>
St Georges University School ol Medicine<lb/>
The Foreign Medical School Services Corporator<lb/>
One East Mam Street Bay Shore NY 11706 Dept C 1<lb/>
1516) 665 8500<lb/>
Attention ECU<lb/>
Students<lb/>
ss Budget ss<lb/>
car and<lb/>
truck rental<lb/>
wants to take you to<lb/>
FLORIDA<lb/>
call<lb/>
758-5220<lb/>
ask about our<lb/>
SPKIM, BREAK SPECIALS<lb/>
ONSOl IDAHO<lb/>
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ADULTS $100 TIL 530 ?CS )<lb/>
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1-4-7-9:15<lb/>
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PI RPI r<lb/>
(MN?iitlln Suww Hitf??i (??!?<lb/>
1:15-3:15-5:15<lb/>
7:15-9:15<lb/>
M(.HI1Rr ON<lb/>
kKIM M- UVi.i.X.<lb/>
1-3-5-7-9<lb/>
IAMBI K(,KR I "<lb/>
1 nil- I !?<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow!<lb/>
HIIARIOIS:<lb/>
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HANNAH AND<lb/>
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VK)IA VLLKN Ml llKL(AINK<lb/>
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FriSatSun 1-4-7-9:45<lb/>
MonTuesWedThursM:30-8:(M)<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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!HI 1 AM (. AkCi INI AS<lb/>
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RIDE NEEDED: To Virginia<lb/>
Beach Will help with gas Call Pat<lb/>
at 758 3431<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
TYPING: All your typing needs<lb/>
done by a professional secretary<lb/>
Call Dons at 355 2510 after 6pm<lb/>
TAXES: Will do your taxes foi<lb/>
reasonable rates Ten years ox<lb/>
perience Call Doris at 355 2510 after<lb/>
6 p.m.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Elec<lb/>
tronic typewriter Reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call Janice at 355 7233 after 5 30<lb/>
20 PERCENT SPECIAL DISCOUNT<lb/>
SALE: On Vintage clothing,<lb/>
lewelry, art and collecfables at Urn<lb/>
quely Yours 903 Dickinson Ave By<lb/>
the yellow awning. Open Tues Sat<lb/>
11 5<lb/>
JUNIORS, SENIORS. AND GRAD<lb/>
STUDENTS: Internships available<lb/>
with Fortune 500 Company Earn<lb/>
S9 $12 per hour Call 355 7700<lb/>
FOR SALE: Recliner chair aood<lb/>
shape ($50). 1 set of<lb/>
HART SPOILER snow Sk S '?<lb/>
shape, with Salomon bindings ana<lb/>
trezeta boots, size 10 . poles in<lb/>
(SlOO) Emerald engagement ring<lb/>
for sale (2,200 or 2.000 cash! V I<lb/>
sell all items<lb/>
MATH TUTOR : Courses a? an levels<lb/>
tutored by math major Reasonable<lb/>
rates Call Kevin at 756 1811 al<lb/>
noon<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL NAIL SERVICE<lb/>
Offering manicures and na<lb/>
Half off of the reguiar saior pi ?<lb/>
Please call 758 5065 Ment<lb/>
East Carolinian ana recevo a<lb/>
special surprise during oui .<lb/>
House cans available.<lb/>
BODY MOOVERS Hav<lb/>
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past0 Latest in funk ana rap too<lb/>
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TRASHMAN at 752 3587<lb/>
WORD PROCESSING: We offer ex<lb/>
perience in typing resumes, theses,<lb/>
technical documents, and term<lb/>
papers We manage and merge your<lb/>
names and addresses into merged<lb/>
letters, labels, envelopes or rolodex<lb/>
cards Our prices are extremely<lb/>
reasonable and we always offer a 15<lb/>
percent discount to ECU students. S<lb/>
8. F Professional Computer Co.<lb/>
(back of Franklin's) 115 E. 5th St<lb/>
757 0472<lb/>
SENIORS! SENIORS! SENIORS<lb/>
Enjoy the last phase of your college<lb/>
career employment S&amp;F Com<lb/>
outers is offering a package price to<lb/>
help you send out your resumes in<lb/>
eluding all of the following. Letter<lb/>
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Just bring us your handwritten<lb/>
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we il do the rest. Per resume for<lb/>
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Stamp) SI 90 (2 page resume prices<lb/>
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TYPING SERVICES: Resumes,<lb/>
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Spelling and grammatical correc<lb/>
tions included. Cindy 757 0398 after<lb/>
CHEAP TYPING: Reports, etc Call<lb/>
j 'eave a message<lb/>
FOR SALE: 81 Honda Prelude con<lb/>
.? rs .? able. White over<lb/>
stereo and air. 51,000<lb/>
t ? ?? :?: i0 negotiable or assume<lb/>
ym ' it S175 per month Call<lb/>
? ' '<lb/>
CAR WASH c Student National<lb/>
Env ? Health Association<lb/>
?? wash care mission<lb/>
 irch 1st at Arby's i264<lb/>
:? a m 2pm Come<lb/>
? ? u p ? '<lb/>
GRATEFUL DEAD TICKETS'?v : v ?? assette AC PS<lb/>
now available at Appie R?-?? - ? S4.000 Call<lb/>
their Fri March 21st show Pric?<lb/>
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ly Dor ? n ? this opportir iel ? i '? rac.et Tod of<lb/>
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Morgan at 758 7967 betweei 5iemin D J Service<lb/>
7 30pm R easonable<lb/>
References on reoues'<lb/>
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TUXEDOS A guv ?"<lb/>
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this 24 unit complex border ng the<lb/>
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BEFORE YOU RENT, KN A<lb/>
WHAT YOU'RE BUYING! Beverly<lb/>
Manor Apartments, 1108 E. lOtl<lb/>
Call Judy at 756 5156<lb/>
ALTERATIONS: Thrift Shop 42<lb/>
al of this week will<lb/>
 omens iackets 50c,<lb/>
ses 3 pes tor Si, men's<lb/>
: for $1 Skirts SI or $2<lb/>
idies pants Si beau fvi<lb/>
ts $5 $1 ? lies coats S5<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
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Data - specializes in studen'<lb/>
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? ?  against 50.000<lb/>
?????- c did onar, Rates<lb/>
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I tor spe '<lb/>
 irk at 757 3440 after 7<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI ANNOUNCES:<lb/>
r WESTER RUSH AT THE<lb/>
? ' IC MONDAY MARCH 3 FROM<lb/>
9 l LIVE TA SHOW<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
RENT<lb/>
Going Home For The Summer<lb/>
But Need A Ploce For The Fall?<lb/>
Tar River Estates has a summer special for<lb/>
ECU students ? Rent an apt by May 1st &amp;<lb/>
keep your appartment RENT FREE for June &amp;<lb/>
July! For details call or come by Tar River<lb/>
Estates Info Center 1400 Willow St. No. 1.<lb/>
752-4225<lb/>
Tired of waiting in line for the phone or shower3 Leave the<lb/>
dorm doldrums behind - there is on alternative Your own<lb/>
place at Tar River Estates Select a one bedroom garden apart-<lb/>
ment or a two- or three bedroom townhouse Enoy fully equip-<lb/>
ped kitchen, washerdryer connections in some apartments,<lb/>
spacious clubhouse, swimming pool, and picnic area by the<lb/>
river. Conveniently located near East Carolina University ?<lb/>
with SGA Transit service Come by today or Call<lb/>
.<lb/>
lar Rivei-J<lb/>
ESTATE-<lb/>
752-4225<lb/>
1400 Willow St<lb/>
OHice Hour<lb/>
MF9CKD-5 30<lb/>
Sat &amp; Sun 1 00 5 00<lb/>
Monogedby u S Svelte Corporation<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI: The pledge class is<lb/>
sponsoring a car wash at the Trade<lb/>
Station on 14th St and 264 by pass. 9<lb/>
a.m 4 p.m. on March 1st. $2.<lb/>
C.G The "Beach" was great and so<lb/>
was the surf I hope for many more<lb/>
weekends at Myrtle Beach with you.<lb/>
Love, T.C<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR: The Tri Sigs invite<lb/>
you to chase away the Monday<lb/>
blues. So come down to Pantana's<lb/>
and drink a few brews. Every Mon<lb/>
day 9 til at Pantana Bob's! $2 pit<lb/>
chers<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR DIDN'T DIE It<lb/>
iust moved to the Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
house Party on the porch this Fri<lb/>
day 4 until B YOB<lb/>
SIG EP GOLDEN HEARTS: Our<lb/>
next meeting will be THIS SUNDAY<lb/>
AT 6 P.M  Note the time change<lb/>
and everyone please attend! Get<lb/>
psyched for the lock in this<lb/>
weekend, the party starts at 8 p.m<lb/>
so bring a shot glass with you and<lb/>
everyone BE PREPARED TO PAR<lb/>
TY YOUR FACE OFF Live<lb/>
entertainment is being provided!<lb/>
SIG EPS: Way to go "A" team<lb/>
CHI-O'S: Congratulations to all you<lb/>
new sisters We love U! The Spring"DIG Youarem y<lb/>
Pledge Class.everything, and so Love, "the P.Dmuchmore!<lb/>
HEY GUYS: Let a PIKA little sis<lb/>
tuck you in, complete with bedtime<lb/>
story, teddy bear hug and goodnight<lb/>
kiss. Just SI all week in front to the<lb/>
student store Sign up now!<lb/>
JESSICA HESTER AND<lb/>
STEPHANIE PAUL: We are very<lb/>
excited to have you as our<lb/>
SISTERS Congrats! Love, Your<lb/>
Alpha Xi Delta Sisters<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA'S "ALL SING"<lb/>
IS COMING Be watching for<lb/>
details and get psyched<lb/>
BILLY NEIL: The game may be<lb/>
over but I'm still playing when you<lb/>
least expect it Tara<lb/>
CAMPUS ORGANIZATIONS: If you<lb/>
have not been notified by the Buc<lb/>
caneer yearbook about being in the<lb/>
1986 Buccaneer contact Alice<lb/>
Harden at 758 8425<lb/>
ATTENTION: SCUBA EN<lb/>
THUSIASTS: The newly formec<lb/>
Coral Reef Dive Club is holding a<lb/>
meeting March 3 from 5 7 in the<lb/>
multipurpose room m Mendenhall<lb/>
Spring Break trip will be discussed<lb/>
All those interested, non clivers in<lb/>
eluded are welcome. Join the clue<lb/>
that's going somewhere the Coral<lb/>
Reef Dive Club<lb/>
ASSASSINATION GAME: Kill<lb/>
cards need to be at the AOTT house<lb/>
by 7 p.m. tonight!<lb/>
AOTT: Congratulations to our new<lb/>
Spring Pledges. Claudia Wiles, Amy<lb/>
Campbell, Kim King, Diane Felton,<lb/>
and Laura Wood. We hope our Beta<lb/>
Eta's have a iarr nin' semester!<lb/>
Love, your sisters.<lb/>
AMANDA: Congratulations on<lb/>
becoming a Phi Tau Little Sister! I<lb/>
know it's something you really<lb/>
wanted. You've done a great job as<lb/>
an AOTT and I know you'll do a<lb/>
great job as a Phi Tau Lil Sis! Alpha<lb/>
Love, Amy.<lb/>
CHI OMEGA: Congratulations to<lb/>
our new sisters! Dawn Hill, Susie<lb/>
Wilson, Ashley Dalton, Julie Moser,<lb/>
Doreen Marriner, Kelly McCurdy,<lb/>
Cam Ward, Margo Fuller, Amber<lb/>
Wilson, Krissy Muth, Jeanie Wheby,<lb/>
Gayle Pugh, Shari Clemens,<lb/>
Melanie Maynor, Sarah Rodwick,<lb/>
Angela Scenna, Plyllis Floyd and<lb/>
Lisa Murray We love you! !<lb/>
NEW SORORITY: Our meeting will<lb/>
be Sunday at 7 in room 221 This<lb/>
meeting is formal, please dress ap<lb/>
propriately.<lb/>
Continued from page 9<lb/>
MORE ADVENTURE THAN<lb/>
A BUND<lb/>
P<lb/>
4<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
!t vou'U like- '<lb/>
out more, make .i .<lb/>
10 see aptain <lb/>
MiUhell or Master<lb/>
Sergeant rerry Boyles<lb/>
in Room 24 En<lb/>
.all 757 6967 or (SV4<lb/>
ARMY ROTO<lb/>
BEAUYOUCANBE.<lb/>
SHOE OUTLET<lb/>
NAME BRAND SHOES At Discount Prices<lb/>
Quality Casual Shoes $15<lb/>
Ladies Dress and Casual Shoes<lb/>
at Discount Prices<lb/>
Large Selection of Name Brand<lb/>
Tennis Shoes S12.88 to $29.88<lb/>
752-2332<lb/>
One Block Off Evans Street<lb/>
fcOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOOPa<lb/>
Go Krogering For A Study In<lb/>
Total Value!<lb/>
BAKERS DOZEN SPECIAL'<lb/>
FRESH RING<lb/>
Glazed<lb/>
Donuts .<lb/>
DELI-FRESH<lb/>
SINGLE TOPPING<lb/>
Thin Crust<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
$<lb/>
CHILLED '00 PURE KROGER<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice . .<lb/>
REGULAR OR DIET<lb/>
BIG K COLA OR<lb/>
Cherry<lb/>
Cola . . .<lb/>
CAMPBELL S<lb/>
Pork &amp;<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
OIL OR WATER<lb/>
Kroger<lb/>
Tuna<lb/>
0<lb/>
LIMIT 2 CANS<lb/>
IN OUR RESTAURANT<lb/>
INCLUDES TWO VEGETABLES<lb/>
AND FRESH ROLL<lb/>
All-You<lb/>
Can-Eat<lb/>
WISHBONE<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
P TUNA<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE GOLD OR<lb/>
Red Delicious y<lb/>
Apples4<lb/>
INDIAN RIVER<lb/>
l OR WHITE<lb/>
? Florida<lb/>
 j Grapefruit . . ??<lb/>
?? , FRESH CUT<lb/>
?-J Bunch<lb/>
. ? Tulips<lb/>
10<lb/>
Stem<lb/>
Bunc<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Lite<lb/>
Ice Milk<lb/>
$<lb/>
4 TIL 7 PM ONLY<lb/>
MONDAY THRU<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
CARRYOUT NOT<lb/>
AVAILABLE ON ALL<lb/>
YOU-CAN-EAT<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
-<lb/>
Copyrlgnt i986<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
)0 Greenville Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
mmmmmmmm ? intjJUULnrJJuu<lb/>
ooooocor<lb/>
b<lb/>
"<lb/>
1<lb/>
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