» Honor Council imposes first permanent explusion MyId JEFF IL'L'L' ((. AMMU4I MM \<.i ■ i ■:• A James Madison University junior was per- The convicted student will be allowed to complete Although more than eight infractions have been manently expelled from the university because of a the present semester and will receive a withdrawal reported, the Honor Council has dealt with only eight mid-semester honor code violation, according to the grade for the class in which the violation occurred. cases this semester. Duval said, explaining that the Honor Council president here. informing students later decided not to press This is the first time this year that a student has THE CASE was brought to trial and Concluded charges. been permanently expelled by the Honor Council, within two weeks. DuVal said, adding that the student Of the eight accused students: three were took the witness stand during the trial to speak in his according to Barry DuVal. own defense. acquitted; two were found guilty: one admitted his DuVal would not release the student's name but guilt and accepted a semester suspension as punish- said that the student previously had been suspended "We try to protect the accused student by giving ment: and two cases are still pending. for one semester due to an earlier honor violation. him time to prepare a case." DuVal said, noting that The second student found guilty was also The student returned to JMU this semester when the the Honor Council trial system is "more expedient suspended for one semester. second infraction occurred. than the real world court system." "Cheating is being reported and the honor system Acording to DuVall, the fact that it was the The trial and the deliberations for punishment is dealing with it." DuVal said, adding that the Honor student's second violation led the Honor Council to lasted about three hours, according to DuVal. who Council is the "sacred cow" of the administration. said that this amount of time was average for an The Honor Council was started here in 1910 and was rule for permanent disbarment. He would not com- Honor Council hearing. ment on the nature of the infraction, but noted that a put under control of the Student Government graduate assistant here reported the infraction. Seven of nine council votes are required for con- Association in 1915. In 1946 it was established as a viction. separate commission. Junes Madison University library Harrlsonburg, Va. 22801

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James Madison University Friday. May I. 1981 ;' No. 52 Birth control The Search effort hindered By CINDY ELMORE A "lack of input" from female students is hindering efforts to determine the feasibility and plans for birth control services at the Health Center here, according to Dr. Harold McGee, vice Frat looks president for student affairs. "We have yet to hear any recommendations from students or individuals of the general population here," McGee said, adding for alleged that most calls for the program have been by groups, such as the Student Government Association Senate or Commuter Student Committee. attacker He added that the proposal is still under study. By DONNA SIZEMORE Although April SGA election referendum results over- Kappa Sigma fraternity whelmingly supported birth control services at James Madison is joining in the search for University's Health Center, McGee noted that because the an attacker who has referendum was not tallied according to the respondents' sex, allegedly made several more information by individual female students is needed. assaults on the James "We need to develop some process for expanding the in- Madison University formation by the (Health Center) advisory committee. We also campus in recent weeks. need recommendations by the physicians involved," he added According to Fred Attending gynecologist Dr. Walter Zirkle said although he Hilton, assistant to the vice knows of no present plans being discussed for birth control ser- president of university vices, he "has no objections to putting them there." relations, there are no suspects in the four "I HAD PLANNED on talking to Dr. Carrier about it this assaults that have recently summer." Zirkle said. "But I'm sure one won't be started this occurred involving JMU school year." women. University President Ronald Carrier said last week that the Rumors of recent attacks final decision regarding the service is up to Health Center in Godwin Hall and other physicians. Zirkle said he had not beard of Carrier's apprpval. areas on campus sparked "As far as I'm concerned, I have no problems with birth control the fraternity's interest. in the infirmary. But there is a problem with the personnel we "We got tired of hearing f!! " ill have over there. But I think this could be solved one way or about it." said Kappa another," he added. Sigma member Jim Both Zirkle and McGee noted that another gynecologist Windsor. "We heard probably would have to be hired. rumors of 10 attacks in 10 Currently the Health Center employs four part-time days." About 16 Kappa gynecologists, who work alternate days, generally remaining in Sigma members patrolled the center that day for as long as their services are needed All the campus Wednesday four gynecologists also share private practice offices at 1041 S. night. Main St. in Harrisonburg. Windsor said the McGee sa id he is looking into birth control programs already in fraternity organized the use at other search to provide a service^ universities. For example, he to the students. said, at Virginia Tech's "Everybody is scared. We Student Health Services, three physicians were used last (Continued on Page 15) year for 665 students' birth Inside . . . control examinations and —The JMU men's rugby prescriptions. He added that club la more than content most other universities with to remain at its present the service provide an dab sUtas. See Sports. "educational component" to go with it. P»g« » —From the htkewaras "WE STILL have to develop concert ' scene to the a workable plan," McGee massive number of plays, said. "But the final decision is nod entertainment hasi| medical." been • vailaMe at JMU. Far piMto * v* N*t*ya He added that prospective Folio yearly wrap**, see THE THREE-quarters moon, lined up with the _., costs have not yet been pages 12-W. Wilson Hall tower weathervane, creates a spooky, yet «*•»*** «*»*• , ^Continued on Paje 8) ' IFC and Panhellenic budgets JMU coed injured vetoed by Executive Council in running mishap By CHRIS WARD Cunningham added. "You "Since the UPB didn't Greek funding suffered a might as well open it up to the exactly jump on the project, controversial setback (Black Student Alliance) and the IHC did and did a fine Tuesday as both the In other groups." job." Davison said. By CINDY ELMORE terfraternity and the THE HONOR Council A James Madison University woman was struck by a car Panhellenic Councils' budgets CUNNINGHAM ALSO budget rejection apparently is driven by another JMU female student early Tuesday were vetoed by the Student accused the administration of not much more than a for- • evening. Government Association •Patti Hamburg. 21. of Boonesburo. Md,. was struck from "shoving a lot of the Greek mality. During the March behind about 5:30 p.m. while jogging with her roommate Executive Council. funding onto the SGA." but did budget hearings, the SGA The Executive Council not elaborate on this claim north on Cantrell Avenue near Mountainview Drive. finance committee cut some Hamburg's condition is stable, according to Rockingham rejected both budgets by a 3-2 Administrative Vice- $2,486 from the Honor Council margin Tuesday, but accepted President Steve Snead. a budget that was earmarked Memorial Hospital nurses. She was treated by a Harrison- the budgets of the University member of Theta Chi burg Rescue Squad unit within minutes after the accident, for undergraduate scholar- which threw her across a guard rail alongside Cantrell, said Program Board. The fraternity, became angry with ships Bluestone. The Breeze and the ine council after the IFC vote. Rescue Squad official Vince Hawkins. Until now. the cost of Honor According to Hawkins. Hamburg suffered a broken fibula, Commuter Student Com- When Cunningham asked for Council undergraduate mittee. comments on the Panhellenic scholarships have been split massive skin injuries on her lower left leg and a cut on the The IFC budget request was budget. Snead at first said between the SGA and the head. $665 while Panhellenic s only. "I doubt it would do any Office of Student Affairs. NANCY J. Harmon, 21. of 9803 Ward Court in Fairfax has budget request had been $765 good." However, an administrative Budgets of the Interhall But he added that "the decision changed the policy so been charged by Harrisonburg police with reckless driving. Council. Honor Council and mission of this school is to that all undergraduate _ Harmon was traveling north on Cantrell in a 1981 Toyota, SGA operating and con- which received $150 in damage to its right front side, ac- enlarge the Greek system on scholarships must co~ie from cording to Lt. D.D. Turner of Harrisonburg Police. tingency accounts also were campus T» inwove it you SGA funds. The budget ap- refused. Turner said Harmon apparently noticed a spider on the have to give them the funds" parently was rejected only to inside of her left door jamb, tried to swat the spider out of the SGA President Ckjjck The interhall Council make the transition of funds to"* Cunningham. Treasurer Bill vehicle, lost control and hit Hamburg. budget, which showed more the SGA. Maria Grosz. who was jogging with Hamburg before the Sulik and Secretary Gail than a 600 percent increase Also rejected were the SGA LeRoy voted against the accident said. "We were talking and the next tiling I knew over last year's ap-^ operating and contingency she was flying and went over the guard rail." Greek budgets while both vice propriation. was rejected by accounts. Treasurer Bill Sulik presidents. Steve Snead and Grosz said both women were not running in the road, but the council apparently said the veto of these budgets were at the edge of the gravel adjacent to Cantrell. Mark Davison voted in favor because of the Winter became necessary as a result of them. "I always see the accident still happening." Grosz said. Celebration dance the group of the other budgets being "You gooff in a daze and still think of it." Cunningham, a member of wished to sponsor. rejected. Any changes in those Sigma Phi Epsilon fraternity, "It is not a governing body budgets also would affect the said he was against funding organization's responsibility contingency and operating the Greek organizations to program social events," accounts, he said. would happen with the vetoed This would mean that the because he said they are not Cunningham noted. An Executive Council veto budgets if they are not ap- IFC and Panhellenic would representative groups. But Mark Davison, on any budget should require proved this year. not receive funding since both "Although I am a Greek, I legislative vice-president, another Senate meeting. were not budgeted last year. think it is unfair and unjust for claimed that the dance was a However, some council But there has been some Sulik said that the Special the rest of the students to success and therefore the members noted that a speculation that any group Advisory Committee on subsidize such a small group warranted the funds. meeting may not occur before whose budget was vetoed by Student Fees probably will 'group," he said. About 400 persons attended the academic year ends. the Executive Council would meet sometime next week to "You're giving special the December dance last Executive Council members receive the amount of last decide what to do with the preference to a select few," year. said they are not certain what year's appropriation. rejected budgets. Controversy beget* productivity Cunningham at odds with senate, himself By CHRI8 WARD far behind was the senate in revising its constitution Although his term as president has been shrouded that a senator proposed that the first duty of the SGA in controversy. Chuck Cunningham believes that this each year should be the printing and distribution of year has been one of the most productive for the its own constitution. Student Government Association. "Meetings were wasted in the senate this year," Citing the rescission of the current university Cunningham said. "But there's noway I can control policy requiring physicals every two years, the escort the senate. They won't listen to experience and service, extension of Duke's Grill hours, student knowledge." leader workshops and the notary public as examples of what has been accomplished under his ad- BUT, OF the 100 or so projects that Cunningham set ministration. Cunningham said the SGA has been out to continue or accomplish this year, he estimates more productive this year than last. about 50 have been accomplished.

One project he is especially proud of is the repeal of Commentary the university physicals policy which, until now, required student physicals every two years. Last fall, the registration packets of some 800 students, Cun- But just as much controversy as production has ningham's among them, were held back because the followed this student government administration. students did not get physicals. The new policy will Participation in rallies, unsolicited letters falsely require physicals of only freshmen and transfers. stating representation of the entire student body and "Contrary to what the editorial page of The Breeze charges of tampering with its own constitution have says that the SGA never gets anything done, this was been as much a part of the productivity of the ad- accomplished principally due to our work." Cun- ministration as the above examples. ningham noted recently. A major thorn in Cunningham's efforts to produce The list also includes: the birth control referen- has been the senate. dum, an energy conservation program, the typing The adversary roles played by Cunningham and room, the underprivileged youth program, SGA the senate have served to keep each on their brochures, the Bluestone Publications Board, a respective toes. That relationship may be good- preliminary study into cable TV feasibility, tax much has been accomplished. But it seems both have exempt status for the SGA, a free notary public wasted a good deal of time watching each other. And SGA't Cunningham: "If yon don't stand for service as well as ice skating on the tennis courts that is bad. something, you'll fall for anything." which will be allowed next year and other projects. "Last year being in the executive council was a ACCORDING TO Cunningham, most of the senate confidential affair. You did your own thing and that's committees have been inactive. The majority of the a very bad reputation. it" he commented. proposals considered by the senate have originated in Press coverage this year has centered on the in- the Executive Council, or more specifically by ternal conflicts. BUT THERE has been an atmosphere of Cunningham himself. Time and again during senate But when any organization spends one meeting cooperation and enthusiasm between the Executive meetings Cunningham had to help senators read his after another questioning the conduct of its members Council members this year. This appears to be due to own proposals. while its committees remain almost idle, press Cunningham's administrative and communication Moreover, the senate has been bogged down in its coverage is bound to focus on those conflicts. One skills. own "personalities and politics" as Cunningham especially clear example is the SGA constution which terms them, and it has given the student government was only passed by the Executive Council April 26. So • (Continued on Page 9) ;K «yj*? n r.*iM n> > ,t."y.i. .1 fUlai .-> •' < >■■ '*/ • ^ ... - i - THE BREEZE. Friday. May 1, 1981, Page 3 News Analysis Growth, crime James and violations top headlines University By DONNA SIZEMORE . Several significant news events, decisions and trends marked the 1980-81 academic year at James Madison University Some were one-time oc- NEXT RIGHT currences, but most represented news that will, continue to alter and expand after this year has en- ded. -Enrollment growths at JMU in the face of B, R declining increases in state funds resulted in over- • - . ™ CONTROL was a highly controversial policy. crowding for both students and faculty. Enrollment issue throughout the year, as Student Government limits were placed in Communication Arts and the Association members and editors of The Breeze School of Business and transfers into these majors JKfJilT1?^™ se™ices t0 »* Provided at were denied admittance in January. Uie Health Center. An SGA election referendum in - -Education-the field" upon whTcFthis institution Apn showed that student response to the possible earned its first recognition, experienced its greatest services was favorable. v*^»»e hardship yet when the State Council for Higher -Asbestos was found in 14 campus buildings, and -GREEKS WERE allowed to hold their traditional Education in Virginia voted to cease funding for university officials agreed to have it removed, after Beginnings celebration, after an adminstrative ban Anthony-Seeger Campus School, a laboratory facility they had known of its potential health hazards for on the party the previous year. The groups have been used by students. J more than a year. offered the opportunity to relocate their houses —The first reported assaults on campus were made t^SSi EH? 1°tified in ^P^ber that it was across Interstate 81 in the future. Although the SGA known to students, as violence seeped into the violating federal government standards regarding Senate voted to give front-end budgeting to the In- Harnsonburg community. Four assaults to JMU facilities for the nana'icappea. unveraity~id- terfraternity Council and Panhellenic Council, SGA students have, been reported in the past two weeks ministrators are attempting to meet the Office of Executive Council members defeated these budgets and campus police believe the same man may be Civil Rights' requirements. Some $10 million in 3-2 Tuesday. ~ involved in all incidents. federal aid is at stake. —Black student leaders continued to voice their -Due to an error in the housing system, a —The SGA began being in the news as early as the opposition to what they term discriminatory policies suspended student was allowed to remain in a first week, when President Chuck Cunningham took at JMU. Although black enrollment has increased, university dormitory until she gave birth to a babv part in an illegal university protest against Chip only about two percent of the student body is of girl m Shorts Hall last December. Kimberly Ellison Carters visit to campus. Cunningham, along with minority status. A chapter of the National faces an attempted murder charge in June, the first other members of the Young Americans for Association for the Advancement of Colored People case °* tnis type to occur on campus. Freedom, failed to register their demonstration with was established here this year. Following is an update of the top news-makers of the Student Activities office, thus violating handbook JMU 1980-81:

adding that he is personally signing Local schools could also be used as all business change of major forms. key training sights Roberson said, Rose added that in order to detect Overcrowding The policy of allowing only business adding that student teachers could be Ellison's presence, university of- majors and students who need hired as adjunct faculty. ficials would have had to compare a business course for major fulfillment Roberson said that a professional list of registered students with a list of to preregister for 300-400 level courses those residing in housing. HOUSING semester of training may be will remain in effect, he said. established for prospective teachers, This process would be too time James Madison University will "People who want to change their in addition to a semester of student consuming, he noted. Rose called decide this summer whether a major can show me almost inevitably teaching. The professional semester Elluwn's case an "isolated incident. housing lottery system is feasible for that they had intended on doing so but would involve observations and It> just a matter of timing," he said next year. just hadn't gotten around to it," practicums during one block, prior to According to Lin Rose, director of Hanlon said. student teachin,,, he said. residence halls and commuting During the summer, the School of • Roberson stressed that no decisions student services, his office will Business will develop a set of have been made for the new programs Asbestos evaluate the current housing situation procedures for admitting students and added that no decision has been after freshman deposits are received into the school after the first semester • made as to the use of the Anthony- in May. of their sophomore year, he said. Seeger building. "We're hoping to An architect has been hired to Rose said that if a lottery is used take advantage of the change," formulate plans for asbestos removal next year, only about 100 juniors and Roberson concluded, adding that from five of the 14 campus structures seniors will be affected. The. perhaps the program can be im- that contain the carcinogenic sub- university would work with these Campus School proved. stance. students in acquiring housing, Rose According to Fred Hilton, assistant noted. Freshmen and sophomores to the vice president of university would be guaranteed housing in the relations, Basco Associates of York, lottery. Pa., has sent preliminary drawings to Rose said that his office will make a A committee has been established Baby to study alternative programs for the Department of Engineering in report to the Committee on Student teacher education due to the closing of Richmond for state approval. Services next fall and probably will . At present, only five buildings, Anthony-Seeger Campus School. Five months after Kimberly Ellison "recommend some modificaton of the According to Julius Roberson, dean Duke Fine Arts Center, Gibbon's current system." was discovered to be illegally residing Dining Hall and Garber, Harrison, Currently, on-campus housing of the School of Education and Human in university housing, administrators Services, the committee will spend are claiming that the problem was and Godwin Halls will be contracted spaces are assigned to upperclassmen the summer studying tnft feasibility of due to a lack of funds, Hilton said on a first-come first-served basis with unavoidable. adding that these buildings contain other programs and will make Lin Rose, director of residence halls seniors given first priority. Lack of recommendations in October the highest asbestos levels. housing space this year resulted in at James Madison University, said h* freshmen living in Howard Johnson's does not know If Ellison was billed for the three months she lived at the ,% and Belle Meade Motels. The university is planning to house fresh- university. man at Howard Johnson's again next Ellison was discovered only after year. she gave birth to a baby in the Shorts Hall and alledgedly placed the infant in a trash bag. She faces an attempted murder charge in June. The student received an academic . CLASSES suspension in May i960, but because Anthony-Seeger will close at the end she appealed the decision she was Freshman will be allowed to change of the 1981-S2 academic year. Tbe their major to business, in a change of allowed to sign up for campus State Council for Higher Education of housing. The housing contract was policy implemented r earlier this Virginia determined last October to Hilton said it will cost the university semester. cease funding for all state laboratory contingent upon a favorable outcome $200,000^275,000 to remove asbestos According to William Hanlon, dean of her academic hearing. from these five buildings. He stressed schools. Her appeal was denied, Rose said, of the School of Business, juniors and , Roberson said that one possibility , that while JMU eventually will seniors also will be allowed to change adding that officials do not expect remove the substance from all 14 under consideration is the use of video students to return to school after they their major to business, if they tape simulations. With this process buildings, the contract that is have been suspended However, in awarded in May only will be for five demonstrate an interest in the field. students would be taped in the order to give students fair treatment, Evidence of interest would be noted classroom for education majors to buildings. in students coursework, Hanlon noted. observe at a later date. the system must be designed this way, he said. (Continued on Page 5) Page-4.'THt: HKKKZK Friday. May 1. I9«l New fraternity offers different lifestyles V. By TIM PARRISII and appointed officers. "There were an awful lot of Associate members were guys who didn't fit in with initiated April 4 by the other fraternities But by University . of Richmond starting a new one they could chapter. The JMU chapter have some input into the kind must remain a colony for at of fraternity they wanted it to least one year be." Lambda Chi is a member of JMU's Interfraternity This is the opinion of one Council Lambda Chi Alpha member. According to president Winn Chip Cramer, and represents Davis, the fraternity's goal is what James Madison "Primarily to become of mental and physical hazing of national organizations view University's newest fraternity established. Establish who we BILL COREY, also a Greek of pledges. JMU as a desirable place to hopes it offers are. what we stand for. We affairs coordinator, said Koogler added that Lambda colonize " Although at the beginning of don't want to be stereotyped." Lambda ('his growth was due Chi does not use the pledge this semester Lambda Chi to good organization. Moore system that most other Moore speculated that the Alpha did ndt exist at JMU. it praised Davis as "real gung fraternities do. Instead, the administration would con- now is one of the largest Cramer said since he ho. The kind of guy you need group uses an associate sider accepting a new colony fraternities on campus. believed the Harrisonburg early, somebody who'll get member system, giving these next spring. Pointing to the 1 The JMU colony now 51 community had a "negative things done." prospective members plans for expanded Greek brothers, two of whom are impression of fraternities," Davis added that Lambda the same rights as brothers, housing he said JMU was transfers from other colleges. Lambda Chi would try to offer Chi was the first to include in except for voting privileges. committed to developing a "That's a little better than community social services its national laws a prohibition According to Corey. "A lot larger Greek system. average for even established such as fund raisers for fraternities." said David Rockingham Memorial Moore, a Greek Affairs Hospital. Last month Lambda coordinator. Chi participated in the March of Dimes Walkathon and MIDWAY MARKET LAMBDA CHI received raised more money than any about 200 responses to a form other Greek group. letter sent to most JMU male Davis said a house search 157 Warsaw Ave. 434-7948 students at the beginning of committee has been formed, the semester. Duane Cretin, and Charles Koogler, another the director of expansion for member, added that two real th ursday-sun day the national of ice. interviewed estate agents were assisting 100 of them, asked 50 to join, the fraternity. 4 -r 9Ae Jf3l7?X<7

20%Student Discount on all Merchandise OPEN NIGHTLY PHOTOFINISH ING THATVFAST TILL 12 MIDNIGHT 79 E. Market St. 434-5314 t -. T1IK BRKEZE, Friday. Majfl.Htl, Page 5 Movie problems blamed on human error f

By LAURA MOL'NIK seconds at the longest, it just There are three "panic Grafton-Stovall. When any "People just cannot resist Human error is responsible seems longer to a lot of buttons" in the projection button is pushed all the lights pushing these buttons to see for the mechanical problems people." added Weaver room and backstage at come on for emergencies. of movies shown at Grafton- what it does," Weaver said, tovall Theatre, according to erry Weaver assistant rector, of programming re. * News Film breaking.curtains not opening, lights staying on (Continued from Page 23) from other buildings must wheelchair ramp. Bathrooms "The utlimate goal of JMU is 'during the film, and inaudible University administrators come from university sources. in the Health Center have also to make programs safe and sound are common charac- have known about the been made accessible to accesible." Mundy noted, teristics of an on-campus hazardous levels for more handicapped students. Mundy adding that JMU never could movie at James Madison than a year. OCR noted. comply fully with OCR University. Hilton said that tentative' According to Mundy. JMU regulations unless more The mechanical problems plans call for the university to James Madison Univer- must make two reports to money is made available, at the theatre are caused by I advertise for a contractor in sity's compliance is underway OCR. one in September and Mundy said that when JMU the people who are not sup- early May and award the with the Office of Civil Rights another in July. These reports was cited for violations, the posed to be around the contract shortly thereafter. (OCR) regulations regarding are designed to assure that university had only $17,000 of equipment such as a class or Work is expected to begin in facilities for handicapped JMU is keeping the timetable its $217,000 remaining in the theatre group, according to June. Hilton continued, and students. it has established for com- budget designated for this Weaver. university officials hope it will According to Dr. John pliance, Mundy said. purpose. "The equipment is simple to be completed by August. Mundy. director of ad- OCR visited JMU last June JMU will ask the state for run. but if it gets out of sync, The time required to ministrative affairs, several and cited 21 violations of $618,000 in the next biennium, you have to take the time to let complete asbestos removal on projects already have been Section 504 which requires Mundy said. everything go through the campus will depend upon completed. For example. that "every institution of cycle," WeaVer said. All of the funding, he noted. JMU has remedied all higher learning that receives mechanical equipment is on violations in Godwin stadium, federal funding make their Ready to help one electrical system, and if The state will finance he said. The university also programs accesible to the WW1,WW II, Korea, one part breaks down, they all removal from academic has completed all work in handicapped." Vietnam vets. do. he added. buildings. Hilton said. Gibbon's Dining Hall, except Mundy said that other "The cycles only take 30 However, funding for removal the installation of one projects are on schedule. Red Cross: Reads for a new cenlur v : r h£ '#* v$* %?'%?'-*&+:&y/\ yonTlnever

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\ x) v/ \^N^< \^ \y ■ THE BREEZE. Friday, May 1. 1M1. Page 7 Secretary of Army to deliver L>Wo/ie ^Pitoducts 1981 commencement address By KATHY MCLOUGHLIN recommended Marsh, faculty marshall. the SGA 8 Sewices. $nc. This year's graduation William F. Buckley. Jr. and president, one , graduate - speaker was recommended to Carrier. However, she added. student and two un- University President Ronald "It's the president's dergraduate students. Renting the IBM Correcting Carrier by a campus com- perogative to make the Reubush said the committee mittee here. choice." met twice during the year, Selectric II Typewriters, by the week, According to Dr. Fay According to a once in November and once in Reubush. dean of admissions spokesperson for the February, and discussed such month or year. and records and chairperson president, Marsh was the first topics as serving coffee to of the Commencement person Carrier contacted, and parents prior to the ceremony, Committee. Secretary of the he accepted the invitation. . the wording of the com- Call MPS-A&M 434-0609 Army John O. Marsh. Jr. was Student Government mencement announcement one of three speakers Association President Chuck and the actual ceremony's recommended to Carrier to Cunningham said he con- location. She said the com- More Products 8B Services', Inc. consider for the May 9th tacted Buckley's office but mittee recommended no commencement address. said that due to scheduling changes from last year's 744N.MainSt.City The committee, whose conflicts. Buckley was unable format. members are appointed by to attend the ceremony here. Marsh. a former Carrier, invited suggestions Harrisonburg resident, is a for speakers, listed the names THE COMMENCEMENT retired lieutenant colonel who JOHN E ANDERSON and forwarded them to the Committee "makes recom- served in the U.S. House of PRSaiOCNT president. mendations to the president Representatives from 1963 to Reubush said the committee on any matters concerning 1971. The Winchester native commencement," according served as an assistant to to Reubush. The committee is former President Gerald Ford comprised of the four from 1973 to 1977, then set up a WERNER'S PARTY PACKAGE STORE university vice presidents, the private law practice until his dean of the graduate school, appointment as secretary of WESTERN UNION the director of records, the the Army. 915 South High St. 434-6895 Milestone yearbook '- FREE 10LB. BAG ICE ON CASE SPECIALS Michelob Light Super Premium 2.59 distributed to students Busch Premium Brews by Bud 1.89 * 1 By ANN RICHARDSON organizations and students for The 1981 edition of The class pictures, he explained. ■ Budweiser King of Beers Can 2.19 Bluestone "yearbook will be A new addition in this year's distributed to students free of publication includes the in- Wiedemann SpeciaTJBuy 1.49 charge in Grafton-Stovall dividual faculty spotlights, RWB-Red-Wh'ite-Blue Party Pac 12/12 2.99 Theatre until today. focusing on the instructors' The cost for this year's interests and hobbies, rather publication totaled $65,294 for than have faculty group Mickey Malt Liquor 1.89 the 5,500 printed copies, ac- pictures taken. "We decided cording to Editor David to go for something more Moose Head Canadian Imported 3.29 Haycox. Haycox explained personal this year," said that The Bluestone received Haycox. 20LB ICE FRESH CLEAR SOLID CUBES 1.49 financial support from two major areas. Next year, The Bluestone FREE ICE KEG ROOM SPECIALS FREE ICE From student activities will have a 15 member fees. The Bluestone received a Publication Board to assist in $44,039 allocation last year deciding which campus Blue Ribbon Prem Party Keg 7 112 gaJT 12.95 through the Student Govern- organizations will be ment Association. The represented. "Basically, what Old Milwaukee Party keg 7 1/2 gaT 1595 remaining $21,255 in we're trying to decide is what recoveries were contributed the majority of students would Budweiser Party Keg 7 1/2 gal.~ 19.95 by patrons, campus like to see." Haycox said. Busch Premium 15 gals. 28.95 Schiitz Malt Liquor- "The Bull" 28.95 Old Milwaukee Party Keg 15 gals. 25.95 ^ Blue Ribbon Prem 15 gals. 23.95 BQDySMO? Heineken Holland Import 54.95 ft FREE ICE ON KEG SPECIALS CJC0UT>9 Long neck-Bar Bottles

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Hot and Cold Sandwich Lunch Stop * Page K. THE KKEEZE Friday. May I. I9K1 Employment commission ■ works to find summer jobs

K> JEFF I.Ol I)V people to handle the tourists, service lor JMU because of Finding a job off campus she said the volume of students." Hall this summer may not be as Nancy Carrier, assistant explained. She registers about hard as you think, if you know manager of the Howard :t(Mi students each semester where to look Johnson's Restaurant on Port and about 160 students during One good place to look is the Republic Road, said that the summer school. Virginia Employment restaurant does hire college "The more flexible you are. Commission on East Wolfe students for the summer rush the better off you are" in Street in Harrisonburg Because of its proximity to finding a job. according to campus. Howard Johnsons Hall "Some people want jobs Libba Hall. VEC youth really doesn't have much of a in their majors. but employment service coor- problem filling openings, she sometimes that just isn't dinator, said that this summer said However, they do use the possible." could be a good one for em- VEC "when we really need ployment, depending on the someone in a hurry." she said Another source of jobs in- status of Metro Pants Metro Employers list openings formation is JMU's Career Pants recently closed its local with the VEC who in turn tries Planning and Placement plant laying off about 900 to match applicants with the office in Alumnae Hall workers If the plant reopens openings 'We're really just a Thomas Nardi. director, this summer, it could be "a referral agency." Hall said said that his office handles job hot one" for jobs. Hall ex- openings around the state and plained. THE VEC has a special maintains a bulletin board According to Hall, summer service for JMU students and library which posts in- tourism in this area increases Hall operates an office in the formation from employers summer job opportunities Warren University Union and camps looking for sum- Businesses. particularly every Tuesday and Thursday mer help Nardi said that local Skyline Drive and the In- afternoons from l to 3 p.m employment cases are terstate, often hire extra "The VEC has alwavs had this referred to Hall. • Frat (Continued from Page 11 composites of the alleged cadets know several KE Another KE member. Greg something up." want the guy rapist "We went up today and members and have probably Prokopchak. said the brothers Windsor stressed that KE is caught." talked to officers." Craigie discussed the matter with will go all the places the at- not trying to undermine the said, adding that Security was members tacker has been spotted and escort service provided by THE MEMBERS patrolled pleased the group showed try to catch him. the campus in pairs concern. "We're not satisfied with "We're trying to help the Tau Kappa Epsilon and Alpha According to Steve Craigie. Director of Security Alan the job Security is doing." campus." he said "It's really Chi Rho Instead, the group is vice president of KE. six MacNutt said he was unaware said Bryan Bostic. KE sad how this is getting out of attempting to provide a members went to the campus of the fraternity's vigilante. member "They don't have hand We're trying to spark means of protection. security office and examined However, he added that the the manpower. The maniac needs to be caught " + Birth— (Continued from Page 1) She added that she is sure determined, nor how these the services can be started costs would be instituted— sometime during the fall 1981 REMEMBER YOU [Da^as^a rr J either on a pay-for-service semester, but probably not basis or simply added on to right away. "The main thing MOM the total student fees. is going to be to see that the Lynn Tipton. SGA Health Center Advisory MAY 10th president-elect. said the Committee knows exactly implementation of birth what we want and will take control services is "one of my input from students here. • Blaxtn top priorities. I am sticking We've taken the first step." with this until something is she said, referring to the SGA- done " sponsored referendum. • Skirti

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SHONEYS • Belt. • Sweater!

FISH FRY • Blouf ei DINNER • Pan t ie$ • Knit Topi W • Pocketbooki ONLY 5f INCLUDES: • Tender Ith tiers tried lo ' perfection with Shoney's own special seasoning. $3 • Golden brown French lies. (or balled potato S-10 pm) III Q.J.IT N«». B...J. 'loaned Grecian bread Al D»K»»a' Wan •Tarlar sauce and lemon wedge. i •SHONEYS ALL YOU-CANEAT BIGGER AND Clo».tU.I Saepaiai Ceater BETTER SOUP Ti SALAD BAR! OM> M» Ikra Fii WO - • T>tANK YCMI FOR KHMi TO Heineken SHONEYS GAMBY DISTRIBUTING, MT CRAWFORD, VA • THE BREEZE. Friday, May 1, 1961. Page 9 • At odds Continued from Page 2> Mur Cunningham also has desk all year as a strong been a thorn in the senators' University were not in favor of Finally came claims by the pering with the constitution. reminder of his political student representation on chairman of the Constitutional side. And for the same reason beliefs. Despite an ot the con- he has been so productive, he university boards of visitors. Revisions Committee that troversy. Cunningham has Next came his letter to the He wrote the letter without the Cunningham and been a capable president. As is also the main reason that Virginia General Assembly in students have little faith in the consent or support of either Parliamentarian Ben Thomas he said himself just recently. which he claimed that the the Executive Council or the iwho is another story in "If you don't stand for SGA'. He has at times students of James Madison misunderstood his role as the senate. himself) conspired in tam- something, you'll fall for head of the student govern- anything." ment It started with Cun- ningham's participation in an anti-Carter rally last Sep- Students learn dancing in course tember. Cunningham maintains that he would By SANDE SNEAD When Scott Chapman found went to the UPB and checked participate in the rally again Tap dancing has invaded that tap dancing courses were and posted them all over if he could. into the possibility of starting the James Madison Univer- nonexistent at JMU. he a mini-course on campus." campus. "The response was He is a person of strong sity campus. decided to start his own. After great." he said. "There political convictions. His Chapman said Twenty five students are seven years of tap dancing he The UPB approved his offer definitely is an interest in tap zealous support for Ronald taking advantage of a mini- did not want to stop. dancing at Madison." to teach the mini-course, but The course began March 17 Reagan is an example, and an course offered for the first "Tap dancing is my life, so from there he was on his own. autographed picture of the time by the University when I came to Madison and and meets for an hour two He designed the posters ad- nights a week in Gifford Hall's former California governor Program Board and taught by found that only folk and vertising the course which has rested on Cunningham's a freshman tap veteran. modern dance are offered. I basement. Cost is $4 per depict Fred Astaire in action person.

■ Page in. THE HKKKXE Friday. May i. itmi

-Announcement? Apartment Locator Yard Sale Physics Seminar Wampler Play Service TAKE THE WORRY OUT OF YOUR APPROVAL. GET A A yard sale to raise money A physics seminar will be Wampler Experimental FINDING AN APARTMENT CONTRACT READY FOR for Area 4 Special Olympics held May I at 4 p.m. in Miller Theatre presents When You FOR NEXT YEAR YOUR DEPOSIT AND will be held May 2 Beginning liw. Clement Moses of the (ninin' Hack Red Ryder, a ELIMINATE THE EX- SIGNATURE at 9 a.m. at Old Broadway Solarex Corp. wil be the play by Mark Medolf. April 30- PENSE OF TRAVEL. TIME FOR THIS SERVICE. School. Route 42. Broadway speaker The topic will be May 2 at H p.m. Tickets are OFF FROM YOUR SUMMER WHICH MAKES APRTMENT "Change in the Minority- SI >(i and available at the JOB AND NUMEROUS FINDING EASY. A ONE Carrier Diffusion Length with door ' PHONE CALLS LET OUR TIME MODEST FEE WILL WMRA Heat Treatment in the Solar LOCATOR SERVICE" FIND BE CHARGED. CALL OR Cell." Reception THE HOUSING YOU MAIL THE FORM BELOW. WMRA. 90.7 FM. presents DESIRE. WE WILL SPEND WE WILL SEND YOl' AN the tenth anniversay special Course Correction A reception in honor of graduating seniors will be THE TIME NECESSARY TO APPLICATION AND IN- edition-of "All Things Con- Religion 201 for fall 1981 is DETERMINE YOUR FORMATION SHEET TO sidered" May 4 at 5 p.m. given by the faculty and entitled "Literature and students of the department of NEEDS. PRESENT TO YOU GET YOU STARTED Religion of the Old elementary and early AVAILABLE AC- Caps, Gowns Testament", not the New childhood education on May 8 COMODATIONS AND. UPON Testament as printed in the 2-3 p.m. in Education 103. SAVE MONEY—GAS—TIME Caps,and gowns are still fall schedule. If the correction ENJOY YOUR VACATION! available in the university causes scheduling difficulties. Alanon bookstore for graduating call the Dept of Philosophy Send To: Apartment Locator Service seniors and Religion. 6394 A campus chapter of E.W. Enterprises Alanon. for concerned friends P.O. Box 1103 or family or persons with drinking problems, meets Harrisonburg. VA 22801 Tuesdays 6-7 p.m. in Wine- FLOWERS Price auditorium. CalJ:_ 1703) 434-6619 FOR THOSE EXTRA ._ . s Ready to teach SPECIAL OCCASIONS home nursing, first aid, f Name. parenting, child care, CORSAGES * BOUTONMERES water safety, CPR. Home Address 10% OFF TO JMU STUDENTS fed Cross: Read) for>r aw*a century Wannidimlwg Qtuvdm Cmtvi Home Phone & iArea Code) (Number) U3*-5i3b ZMSr S. MAiN

• Stop In STOP | PORT REPUBLIC ROAD OPEN 24 HOURS A DAY 7 DAYS A WEEK W Busch $1.99 Country Time Bull $1.99 Lemonade $1.69 Nacho Cheese Stroh's $2.19 Tortilla Chips 79' Dor it os 89* Coke&Tab Bud 12 pah $1.29 $4.39 FREE COFFEE WELL STOCKED 15' OFF FROM 11 PM TO 8 AM WITH NO DOZ ANY BAG OF POTATO CHIPS) AND VIVARIN Limited 2 cups with coupon (6 oz. or over) Offer good May 4 - May 8 Offer good May 4 - May 8

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I» • •-»-•«-• * •-«-•-•«-«-«'»-««-«•• •»•••.*.• t ?? t r* ■.« t r T »» t •••••« *'« •«".•.•*.•.•.■.•.'.•.»-•.• I •.».•.«•.• .1 ... t.« ... . . r r... . t ■.!.- THE BREEZE. Friday, May l, 1981, Page l|-

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AM 30 UUtwKatt $pm- Ftftaf Waq g ♦3.00 «/9D M.00 fiMi UMU BftttMt i G«"rt AimiuU* Kbit Htm A Twite U Gtf 9* 11 Ticket* witt kt >$U al Ik* U*K Page 12. THK BREEZE Friday. May 1. 1981 Folk 1980-1981: Bv DIANE FITZPATRICK and BRYAN joyable, apart frc POWELL interplay betwen It has been a hectic year artistically. From the lukewarm concert scene to the massive SLICKEE BOYS number of plays to the noted personalities who OCT. 25. WUU h appeared here, usually enough entertainment "In a grand pur has been available on or around James Boys left the Madison University to suit just about anyone. psychologically < Instead of offering a retrospective synopsis of the past year, it probably is more accurate JAMES MAPES to select choice quotes from Folio articles in OCT. 29 The Breeze during the past year, presented "Hypnotist Jan now as they were then. Here are some of the nearly three hou major happenings of the 1980-81 school year: been a minute...i past years, yet I FLAM1N' OHS—DEBRIS bored." SEPT. 8. WILSON HALL "The Flamin' Ohs—Debris show was probably HOMECOMING one of the most bold and innovative moves the NOV. 5 UPB has made in the last four years...several- "The Fifth Annu; hundred people whose tastes normally are not that uninhibited catered to by the concert program here were tagious and ente made very happy Monday night." own Gong Show

THE SKIP CASTRO BAND PURE PRA1RII SEPT. 11. WUU BALLROOM NOV. 8. GODWI "A sell-out crowd in the Center Attic was left "Much of the 5 hot. hoarse and satisfied Thursday night by the boring. In fact fully-charged blues flavored rock and roll of League tunes c The Skip Castro Band " pancakes. The fi then that sweet. VINCENT PRICE SEPT. 16 ROBBIN THOM Price: "Real art today is on the college DEC. 4. WILSO campuses. Art is anything and everything... "The Robbin Th you don't do arts on the side " casual atmosph their feet...the OAK proved to be one SEPT. 22, WILSON HALL this year." "Oak succeeded in blundering through what must have been one of the most disasterous DEC. 8 Wilson Hall performances ever." John Lennon is

ROADDUCKS MOON FOR TH SEPT. 25. WUU BALLROOM JAN. 23 "The Roadducks performed a thoroughly "Its purpose is mediocre set in the WUU ballroom Thursday." entertainment b the way people WMRA others." SEPT. 30 "Expanding listenership, of which JMU THE SKIP CAS students constitute a shrinking minority, is the JAN. 28. THE C main reason why WMRA has moved to delete "The Skip C all rock music from their regular program- Harrisonburg to ming schedule." performance at pressive, that e\ INHERIT THE WIND new material, tl OCT. 7 'the last word ii "Wampler's 'Inherit The Wind,' represents an outstanding beginning for the 1980-81 theatre MUMMENSOM season. The show should be required for every JAN. 29, WILSO student attending this university, because the "To the delight message it delivers is vitally important: to be Swiss mime trou free, man must be free to think." their fascinatin munication." It VANITIES OCT. 10 DOUG CLARK . "JMU Theatre has never had a finer hour." FEB. 5. WUU B "Thereisnodoul JOHN PRINE most of the audi< OCT. 10. WILSON HALL 'x-rated Hot Nu Birthday boy "John Prine took a seat center humored profa stage to lead a jubilant audience of fans punch lines." through an impressive acoustic sampling of his humorous compositions Friday night." CHRISTOPHER FEB. 8. GODWI MOLLY HATCHET "Christopher Cn OCT. 17. GODWIN HALL to Godwin Hall .' "As boring as the show often got, the near almost flawless! sellout audience, from beginning to end, ate it up like starved hounds on an Alpo com- STREAMERS mercial." FEB. Mi "To see Strean THE CLEVELAND QUARTET . draining experie OCT. 21. WILSON HALL "A masterful performance., characterized by musical delicacy and unity." STACEY LATTI TWELVE ANGRY JURORS FEB. 14. WILSC "Was this cor in ii : I o OCT. 24 •Much of what-made this Wampler play en- seriously?" '**«Ki2fc*vr.

THE BREEZE. Friday. May l, 1981. Page 13 irts 6& People 3a r in Review ig plot, was the il jurors." BLUE BUCKET GOLDMINE FEB. 24 "A conglomeration of superficial soap operas. The Blue Bucket Goldmine, by Dr. Rex Fuller, za. the Slickee probabhwould have been better off remaining gratified and in the bucket However, it could distinguish Fuller as Hie originator and popularizer of the plotless play -

DR. FAUSTUS MARCH 3 performed for it as well have "Does Faustus do anything that justifies e show given in eternal damnation? The JMU production, with owd was never its exceptional directing, acting, and special effects, left its audience pondering this and other questions long after they had left their seats."

MODERN DANCE ENSEMBLE ABOVE LEFT: Gallagher entertains Wilson ABOVE: Skip Castro bassist Charlie PastorfleM g Revue proved MARCH 21 i be both con- Hall crowd. BELOW LEFT: Arznova members is central to the success of one of Virgina's best "The Modern Dance Ensemble's annual spring as JMU's very display their power. bar bands. concert, performed and choreographed by faculty, student and guest artists," proved that By DIANE FITZPATRICK "dance is alive and well at the university " The Folio section of The Breeze gave full NEVIS MOUNTAIN DEW page coverage last spring to a group of James ; described as MARCH 29 Madison University students who formed the Pure Prairie "phenomenal" new band Debris i red to eating "Considering less than a handful of the cast Initially containing six members, the previously had appeared on stage, the Black current quartet started performing locally, but aretty good, but Student Alliance production of Nevis Mountain gets to you." Musical has branched out in Charlottesville and Dew was an effective performance." Washington, D.C. Although often referred to as a punk band. Debris, however, plays a variety FOLK ENSEMBLE of cover tunes and originals. MARCH 29 blew away the Analysis These originals were made available to the "Aside from being entertaining, the JMU lie audience to public last winter, when their new EP, simply Dance Theatre Folk Ensemble was an entitled Debris, was released. jintet Arznova educational experience... Diversity was the 'B opening acts key feature of the show." Since then, a number of other bar bands have mushroomed, making Debris more of an in- SPRING FEVER—NRBQ and STILLWATER spiration than a phenonmenon. Debris' success APRIL 11, GODWIN FIELD may have been overemphasized, however, the "Since the whole objective of Spring Fever was group did not necessarily overshadow its to have a good time, the event has to be con- 1980-81 contemporaries. Instead, Debris has appeared ■TEN sidered a smashing (or "smashed") suc- to start a trend. cess...It was quite a party." e light-hearted ARZNOVA HAS been considered by some as Harrisonburg's "hottest new talent." The ive insight into TOM CHAPIN and GALLAGHER hemselves and band is characterized by a substantial quantity APRIL 11. WILSON HALL of original material and technical "Although Chapin's attempts at humor were sophistication. commendable and well-received, they were no Only six months after the band's formation. match for the following performance. By BRYAN POWELL they have been booked regularly in Gallagher, the "Wizard of Odd," kept his This year was not a great one for concerts. Harrisonburg. as well as at other area colleges returned to performance flowing and the audience 1980-81 featured a number of performers or and private parties. Performances for the er scintillating rolling." bands who had been here before: John Prine, University Program Board included a Center ice... It is im- Tom Chapin, Molly Hatchet and Pure Prairie Attic appearance and a warm-up for the Idition of much HUGHIE and KRAPP'S LAST TAPE League all made encore appearances. Only Robbin Thompson Band. anages to offer APRIL 12 two major shows brought "big name" Although popular locally, Arznova has yet to •ires.' " "Once again the Wampler Experimental peformers to' James- Madison University for attain financial success. Lead singer Ron Theatre has presented a great show. Once the first time. Gentry believes this has forced the band to again not too many people showed up. Once Pat Benatar's Nov. 30 show is the official place more emphasis upon crowd-pleasing. again it was their loss." Folio Concert of the Year. With axemaster and Manager Mark Gervasoni has extended the old alike, the boyfriend Neil Gerardo supplying the band's bookings to Richmond and Charlot- hanz presented GEORGE PLIMPTON fireworks. Benatar showed thaf a woman with tesville, and hopes to schedule engagements in Mindless corn- APRIL 13 an operatic voice and a small repertoire of Washington, D.C. and Virginia Beach. golden." "George Plimpton explained in his lecture to a onstage moves can give a fantastic show. JMU audience: 'What I do is enter other HIT AND RUN, another local band, made TNUTS people's occupations, very briefly, in order to THE BATTLE for Worst Concert of the Year their JMU debut opening for Debris in the sit down and write about the experiences. It's a was much more hotly contested. There were WUU ballroom. This high energy rock and roll e third set that practice called participatory journalism, some really bad shows on campus this year. band is noted for their accurate im- ee, the famous which is an ugly phrase, but no one seems to Oak was miserable; Artful Dodger was personations of various stars, particularly rrage of good have found a better way of putting it." ridiculous; and Christopher Cross, while ap- Mick Jagger. Lack of original material is the

Page 14. TIIK BREEZE Friday. May 1. I9M Cornerstone ends JMU career

By LOHI BETH REl'RI'SH Well, they were here for three years and now they are gone. Tough luck Tough luck to most James Madison University students who never saw Cornerstone. The band is one of the best JMU has produced. Too bad they gave their last concert here April 29. The largest, most diverse audience Cornerstone ever had was in the 1979-80 homecoming battle-of-the-bands. They won. Like other college bands. Cornerstone has its ov -\ following. But. their fans almost love them more for what they stand for than their music With their country-style Christian rock. Cor- nerstone is more than music: they are a ministry. The six-piece string band consisted of: Steve Cochran on guitar and banjo: Kevin Marshall on both electric and acoustic guitars and mandolin; David Peters on string bass: Hobby Pitt, guitar, mandolin and harmonica: David Thacker, fiddle: and Drew Trotman on rhythm guitar and most of the vocals. Each member is a good musician on their own right: together they were ex- cellent. COCHRAN, ONE of the group's clowns, was pickin' and grin- nin' most of the night April 29. His well-played banjo added the twang the group needed for their country sound. His voice was country, then mellow, then raunchy An exquisite classical guitarist. Marshall's fingers worked all night-fast. During country pieces, he picked his guitar with the rest. On rhytmically mellower tunes, he showed hie artistry with smooth playing. On the string bass. Peters was the least obvious member of the band: while the rest of the group stood in a straight line almost on the edge of the stage, he stood in the background adding the basic rhythm the band needed. His bass was a fresh substitution for a dmmmer. and he did it well. Pitt. Cochran's side-kick, was one of the most relaxed on stage. Like Cochran with his banjo. Pitt added to the pure country sound with his talented harmonica playing. On mellower tunes, he Photo by Mlk wailed on his harp to perfection. CORNERSTONE'S VIOLINIST. David Thacker. kept the audience on the edge of , (Continued on Page IS) their seats with his talented solos. 9»>3K»te» Texas R&B, L. A. blues

dition to its terrific cover art, the LP contains some excellent rhythm and blues. Included on the disc are versions of Brownie McGhee's Ensemble first "Blues Parcel Post," Bo Diddley's "Roadrunner," and Little Walter Jacobs' "Up The James Madison University Jazz Ensemble, The Line." Only "Roadrunner" is disap- directed by Dr. George West, came away from the pointing. The Ellis McDaniel original was Thirteenth Annual Quinniprac -Collegiate Jazz Festival much more energetic, and some local rockers, with the top jazz band award. The participating bands notably The Skip Castro Band, do a much were selected by taped auditions and the semifinal eight better job. bands performed Saturday. April 25th at Quinniprac Kent "Omar" Dykes, the group's vocalist, College in New Haven. Connecticut. Participating guitarist and sometime harmonica player, has groups were from New England Conservatory. Eastman written the only original compositions on the School of Music. Massachusetts Institute of Technology. LP (a total of four). Of the original material, Kent State University, among others. "St. Louis Bound," with its transition from The Quinniprac festival is the only collegiate com- slow blues to a quicker, jazzier shuffle, and petitive event on the east coast. Previous winning bands "Big Brown Shoes," which features nice horns, in recent years have been New England Conservatory. are the best. Ohio State University and The University of Iowa. The JMU Jazz Ensemble has participated at clinic festivals ..WHAT MAKES the Howlers enjoyable is such as the Glassboro State Festival since 1971, but their rowdy attitude toward their music. While Quinniprac was their first competitrve entry. By BRYAN POWELL the band isn't as sharp technically as some There's a little record label in Texas that's R&B outfits, the no-holds-barred approach to making some mighty good music lately. The their profession results in terrific drinkin' name of the label is Amazing Records ("if it's music, he best example of this is "Hoy, Hoy, hit, it's amazing!"), and they specialize in Hoy", and frantic R&B free-for-all which Jazz festival at JMU regional R&B. features prominent assaults by guitarist Dykes Omar and the Howlers, who have toured and saxman Richard Price. The Ninth JMU Tri-State Jazz Festival will be held locally and appeared at The Other Place last While Omar and the Howlers have released a oh Saturday. May 2nd. in the Latimer-Shaeffer semester, have released an new LP on the good LP, Amazing Records stablemate The Theatre on the campus of James Madison University Amazing label entitled Big Leg Beat. In ad- Juke Jumpers, featuring Jim Colegrove. will beginning at 9:00 a.m. Nineteen high school jazz knock you off your feet. An absolutely beautiful bands and one vocal jazz choir from Virginia and rhythm and blues collection. The Juke Jum-. Maryland will participate in the day-long event pers Border Radio album is also an archivist's* sponsored by the JMU Department of Music. delight. Included on the record are tracks first This year's professional performer-adjudicator is recorded by T—Bone Walker, Robert Johnson, Sal Nistico. former featured jazz tenor sax soloist Rocket Morgan. Betty James and Oklahoma with Woody Herman. Count Basie and Buddy Rich musician Jimmy Liggins. among others The other two judges are Chuck Say re. If a couple of those names are unfamiliar,' former chief arranger for the US Air Force "Air- don't worry; the music is of the highest men of Note" Jazz Ensemble, and Allen Butler, quality. Liggins' "Cadillac Boogie" is a trombonist and director of the jazz ensemble at delightful return to the late 40s: T—Bone" Longwood College. Walker's "You Don't Love Me," originally Sal Nistico will do a demonstration concert with the done in 1945. is about as good as blues can get. JMU Jazz Ensemble at approximately 2:20 p.m., in Dwight Pullen's "Sunglasses After Dark" is Latimer-Shaeffer Theatre and will also be featured in nothing if not fun, and "Me and the Devil" the evening Festival Concert in Latimer-Shaeffer reconfirms that Robert Johnson was indeed a Theatre at 8 p.m.. Saturday night. Both events are master open to the general public free of charge (Continued on Page 15) fc A-—- 5—-^*^ "***' *^fc^«S'"" »^ ■t^^s^T

gotten kind of picky. I mean, blues, but it's still blues. reflect his serious jazz study (Continued from Page 14) it's gotta be good. There's a lot Then I heard this one of the early 70s. Tracks like track—"Uncle Joe." It begins "Lovely Linda" and "Anne But the best tracks on of blues on the market today, and it covers a wide range of with a spoken introduction Marie" showcase this Korder Kadio are originals. delivered over unac- sophistication. Working with •Home Street • Bounce." styles and the entire spectrum of quality. companied fingerpickin'. the incredible Ray Charles for written by guitarist Sumter Good fingerpickin'. John Lee seven years and Little Bruton. is a full-fledged, Hooker all over again. Then Richard for three prior to that party-inspiring jump tune, So I.got this new LP from the song begins with that certainly couldn't have hurt complete with a short bass the good folks at Alligator (the heavy-swinging walking bass his talents. solo and some mean drum best blues label there is). It's line and electric keyboards While Mathews is un- breaks by Mike Bartula. by Tony Mathews. who has bouncing from speaker to doubtably well-schooled "Wiggle Your Hips," written been Ray Charles' guitarist of speaker. Between choruses musically, tracks such as "I by Colegrove. has the perfect the past seven years and it's Mathews rings off lead lines Really Got The Blues Today," comeback for today's punk called Condition: Blue so clearly that you can almost "White Powder" and "Laid rockers: "You don't need no Tony Ma thews Anyway. I was listening to the hear them 'pop.' Beautiful. Off" reflect his everpresent whips, just wiegle your hips." LP and enjoying it quite a lot. commitment to the blues. Overall. Border Badio is but I couldn't think of any WELL, IT sure got my The keyboards on Con- simply a lot of fun. I suspect Condition: Blue particular way to decribe it. attention and I hope, if you're dition: Blue are another you'll be hearing a lot more It's just good blues, influenced a blues fan. that it gets yours reason why it's so good. They provide the disc with a bright, from these guys—and other By BRYAN POWELL by jazz, soul and a little bit of too. Although the rural "Uncle Amazing Records artists—in gospel. The /alburn, is more Joe" is not representative of energetic quality which is I've been listening to a lot of very enjoyable and com- the near future. blues lately, and. well. I've "up" in feeling than most Mathews' blues, it is a great cut. patible with Mathews' style. What Mathews does best is a As I said before, I only listen pretty even blend of blues and to good blues. Tony Mathews jazz. His speed and tonality is a pleasant surprise, and I achieved on guitar are very expect I'll be listening to this "Great imoressive and obviously one all summer long. for Graduation Special! Gifts" ■*s?' * Cornerstone 30«ydMiat (Continued from Page 14) Drioka Whether he was either pickin' on his fiddle or playing his violin toast to tha Major Cnd* holiday saaaon from C«a Honored t both of which are the same instrument until he picked them up). the evtr populaf Thacker added immensely to the band. During a solo, he kept the Jefferson cup. You'll audience enthralled from beginning to end want several for Holiday yourself... and Treat... WHILE STRUMMING his guitar. Trotman's Kenny Loggins- for grftst G James Taylor-type voice perfectly accented the band's music. He Pewtef seemed to be the leader of the group. Together, the band was tight, and their versatility kept the audience's attention throughout the show. They varied between country rock to country to rhythm and blues to rock 'n' roll, from Cup fast, upbeat songs to mellower, slower, songs. It is sad to see this excellent group leave JMU: It is even sadder $11 VALUE to realize how few Madison students ever enjoyed their music. $8.95 They were probably one of the best Madison bands ever, definitely one of the best of the year. 4M42I5 ValltyMall . MINI STORJT Public Storage SPECIAL SUMMER RATES FOR * STUDENTS

STOR-IT HAUC A NICE SUMMEfll /ROIT VOUB OWN • • • * ■'ft*!! U-Store tt ID* Enjoyed tour Patronage U-Lock It U-Keep the Key • • • • LOFT STORAGE 0000 LUCK CAADUATES ALL SIZES AVAILABLE Call Now For Reservations • • • • Office & Resident Manager 433-1234 See Yeu Next Fall! 190 E. Mosby Rd. (Just off S. Main Across From Nichols Shopping Center) Harrisonburg

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. . JHSKfY ■ - .-•■■ Page 16. TIIK BREEZE Friday. May l. 1981I- Sports Babcock tae$ fix hurlen ^j Cavaliers batter Dukes in 17-14 slugfest By DAVID TEEL a! ha Is * In pre-season. James Madison Pitching was not JMU's only University baseball coach Brad problem The Dukes committed five Babcock said his pitching staff might errors, continuing their recent not have enough depth Tor the rigors defensive slump '"It's a two-way of a 51-game schedule. His fears have street." Babcock explained "The been well-founded. fielders start wondering if the pitcher "My prediction eventually came is ever going to get the ball over the true." Babcock said after the plate, and the pitcher is wondering if University of Virginia battered the he does his job if the guys in the field Dukes' staff 17-14 Monday "I wish it will mess up. hadn't." In the game. JMU used six pitchers, •THAT KIND of thing has a ten- none of whom were effective. The dancy to snowball once it gets star- Dukes had leads of 7-0 and 14-9 "All of ted." he added. us were embarrased over there." Yancey said. "Errors and mistakes Babcock said. are always in the back of your mind The players were less adamant. "It but you can't dwell on the past. We was just one of those days when there allow hits and make errors as a were a lot of hits. It wasn't a pretty team." day for the pitchers but those things JMU. 33-13-1. has lost four of its last happen." Russ Dickerson com- eight gam^s. but the team is very mented. relaxed despite the recent slump. "I'd Starter Kip Yancey was the victim rather mess up now than in the ECAC of the Cavaliers' initial uprising. The playoffs." Yancey noted. "We went sophomore righthander was enjoying through something like this last year a 7-0 cushion and had retired the first and ended up primed for the playoffs. two hitters in the third inning when That is all that really matters the roof caved in. anyway." Dickerson agreed, commenting. VIRGINIA REACHED Yancey for "All teams do this.AVe play a 1st of seven consecutive hits and five runs. baseball games and a drop off is "It was very frustrating," Yancey almost inevitable." recalled. "We had chances but we just Babcock is more concerned. "I couldn't get them out. I thought if we know these things happen every year Wwlo by YO N.»»Y» had gotten out of the inning. I would but with the NCAA playoffs up ahead m have-been over the hump." we should be getting geared up." AN ALL too familiar job for Coach Brad Ba-bcock is going to the mound to Joe Hall and Pete Wojcicki followed confer with one of JMU's pitchers. Yancey to the mound and neither JMU HAD its offense geared up against Virginia. The Cavaliers threw first highlighted a four-run outburst. struggling." Babcock said. "Russell could retire the side. Four more isn't hitting against good pitchers in Virginia runs scored before John ace Mike Gordon, but in his five in- The freshman Reeves contributed nings of work, the Dukes accumulated four hits and three stolen bases while clutch situations and a lot of others Kwiatkoski got the final out. aren't either." Kwiatkoski had some success, but 10 runs on 13 hits. "I heard he had taking Dickerson's normal clean-up some arm trouble. I've seen him pitch spot in the batting order. Dickerson when the Cavaliers faced him a DICKERSON grudgingly accepted second time, he was also hit hard. better." Dickerson said. was dropped to eighth. . .. Despite the pitching woes, JMU had Leading the JMU attack were Jeff Babcock said Reeves would remain the move. "I guess it worked because a chance in the ninth inning. The Kidd. Mike Reeves and Dennis in the fourth slot against righthanders we scored 14 runs, but I'm not Dukes loaded the bases with two out. Knight. Kidd drove in five runs with a and that Knight would be moved in thinking like a number eight hitter. but Tony Marant filed out after three-run homer and a two-run against southpaws. "I don't want a There you have to bunt, hit and run reaching base in each of his previous double Knight's two-run homer in the guy in the fourth spot who's and give yourself up." Overemphasizing sports will harm universities • 1 pushed for a top-notch athletic program, knowing "If an ideal American education system were that the resulting publicity would benefit JMU in all being launched afresh, few would want to saddle it its endeavors. with the responsibility for public sports en- Hiring athletic director Dean Ehlers was tertainment But since by a quirk of history, it is so probably Carrier's wisest decision1. Not many saddled, the tradition has become so ingrained that programs can boast of the continued expansion and I see not the remotest chance of altering it." — success that JMU has experienced under Ehlers' James Michener from Sports In America. direction. Basketball is not the only sport in which JMU has By DAVID TEEL excelled. The baseball team has also participated in Michener is right. Americans have become NCAA Division I post-season competition and has fascinated with intercollegiate sport to the point the talent to do it again this season. where its popularity rivals professional sport. Challace McMillin has taken a football program Unfortunately, this popularity brings demands that from its infancy to the Division I AA level where the student-athlete perform and respond like a JMU will surely be nationally competitive within professional. four years. Illegal recruiting tactics are widespread as high Dr. Leotus Morrison, director of women's school athletes are offered money and other athletics, has also established a successful benefits to attend Football U. Institutions com- program. For the fourth consectutive season, the promise their academic standards for the sake of as a tonic for the community." Duchesses' lacrosse team will compete in the athletic success. Major college basketball has been This is perhaps the most important contribution national tournament, and this year, it achieved tarnished with allegations of point shaving. athletics can make. The entire JMU community national top 10 ranking. The volleyball team set a Winning and money go hand-in-hand. If a seemed to share in the success of the Dukes' school record for most wins by any team in 1960 and university's athletic teams are successful, the basketball team as it challenged national powers won the state championship. program usually makes a profit. Alumni are happy like Notre Dame in the NCAA tournament. It is sad The JMU athletic program is a fine one and it has when "their" team win* Donations increase. Only that JMU had to rely on its basketball team to almost unlimited potential. However, the ad- the naive think that pressure is not put on the provide it with national exposure, but that's a minstration must not overemphasize the im- student-athlete to oan. It all rings of reality many schools have experienced Michener's portance of sports and of winning. JMU's ultimate professionalism. * ideal educational system will probably never come purpose—educating its students—can not be Intercollegiate sports is not pure. But not many to pass. sacrificed for money and prestige. George Plimp- American institutions are. During his appearance I ton said, "A tragic thing about intercollegiate at James Madison University. George Plimpton JMU PRESIDENT Ronald Carrier is very much sports is to see an athlete who. after four years, still said. "By and by it (Americans' infatuation with a realist During his 10 years here. Carrier has can't read and write." sport) is a very healthy situation. Winning can act TIIK BREEZE. Friday. May l, 1981, Page 17 JMU rugby team enjoysfetub status By JEFF NUCKLES we'd all stand erect together. While most club sports strive to We'd all be alright in the middle of the obtain intercollegiate status, the night James Madison University men's standing erect together rugby team is more than content to remain at its present level. Most of the team's celebrations "Rugby is a sport based strongly on have been enhanced by the best tradition." club president Rob Fisher record in the rugby club's six-year said. "We're really afraid if we history. JMU is 6-1. and Fisher said became intercollegiate, many of the the team has finished below .500 only things that symbolize rugby would be once. done away with." Although the team has never A combination of soccer and foot- finished higher than third in the state. ball, rugby was imported from Fisher commented. "We're only England via the Ivy League schools. graduating two people off the first The sport is said to have been in- team and I anticipate us being the top vented at Rugby Boy's School when a team in the state next year." boy playing soccer picked up the ball The squad's lone blemish this and was tackled while running with it. season came against the University of Rugby is founded on strong traditions Virginia whom Fisher termed, "the that have given rise to expressions weakest party throwers I've played such as. "It's a ruffians' game played against: They just put a keg out on the by gentlemen." field and left." According to Fisher, "That's why I As one might expect in a sport that like it so much. Sure it's a contact has 30 men on the field all kicking, ; sport but there's much more to it than running and tackling, fights are a ! that. In football and soccer you have common occurrence. But Fisher designated kickers. blockers. noted. "In my ten years of playing tacklers. defensemen and scorers. rugby I've never seen a fight break But in rugby everybody has to be able out after a game. It's all simply to do everything." forgotten. One of the players' favorite "Everybody I know has fallen in pastimes is the post-game party. "It love with it." he added. "Practices would be unheard of for the host team are fun and it's not hard to get people not to throw a party for the visitors to come." after the game, fegardless of the The club receives $1,000 from the outcome." Fisher said. university for transportation and food The parties are always open to and each member pays $15 a spectators who like to drink beer and semester, most of which goes for laugh as bruised and sweaty rugby beer. The players also buy their own players form a circle and sing not-so- uniforms. gentlemenly songs such as: The team traveled to the University of Georgia last week and will conclude If I were the marrying kind its season Saturday with a 1 p.m. Thank the Lord I'm not. sir home match against Virginia Military The kind of man that I would be Institute. Pfcoto by Mike Bitvlni would be a rugby goalpost "We're just a bunch of guys who like running around with a pregnant THE JMU men's rugby (earn is more than content to remain at its current football," Fisher noted. "I just hope it club status, according to Rob Fisher. JMU was third in the state in 1981. Then I'd stand erect, you'd stand erect. can stay that way." Dukes defeat Lynchburg Tennis team closes season with 8-1 win

By DANNY FINNEGAN Rick Baker. Jorge Salas and John Witt all won. The James Madison University men's tennis Schick. who was suspended for the first part team completed its season with an 8-1 decision of the season, defeated Kevin Record, 6-4, 6-3 over Lynchburg College Monday. and finished with a singles mark of 8-3. Snead The win, coupled with victories over Virginia had little trouble at the number three seed, Military Institute and George Mason winning 6-4.6-2 over Jim Sargeant to finish 10-7 University, brought the Dukes' final record to on the season. 15-4. Lynchburg dropped to 19-7. Baker, the only freshman in the top six, "It was a situation where we expected to defeated Vic Fiorvante 6-3, 6-2 to raise his win." Coach Jack Arbogast said. "The com- singles record to 10-6. At the number five seed, petition was not as good as we had been Salas finished the season at 13-5 after a tough playing against. Our confidence was up three-set victory over Jeff Ambruster 6-3, fifl because even though we lost to Virginia Tech 6-0 in which Salas took total control in the and William and Mary, we knew we played decisive third set. well and could have won." The man with the best record on the team JMU's number one seed, Mark Michel, was Witt, the number six man, who owned an ended a successful season with a 6-2. 7-5 win impressive 15-3 mark. He defeated Eric Back- over Lynchburg's Buzz Frey. In the first set. mon 64. 6-4 and Coach Arbogast had nothing Michel was content to sit back and make Frey, but praise for his only senior. "John Witt is the a strong but inconsistent baseline player, force ideal number six player. He is consistent: he the action. The strategy payed off as Michel doesn't beat himself. When he plays someone easily won the set while Frey .made 27 errors in of his caliber, he rarely loses because he is so the eight games. steady and is such a smart player. Playing in hot conditions for the first time "I've been coaching athletes for thirty years this year. Michel was forced to change tactics now." continued Arbogast, "and I have never in the second set. "I would have liked to have coached a more reliable, loyal or responsible played the whole match the way I played the athlete. He never missed a practice: he was first set." Michel explained. "But I got tired never even late for a practice: and he never and I had to start hitting winners." scratched himself from the line-up because of an injury. I hope we can replace him next MICHEL Hit enough second-set winners to year." up his singles record to 13-4. Among his victims Witt ended his JMU career a winner, were the University of Richmond's John teaming with Randy Walton for a victory at TIM HALL hit one home run and Paul Butler (1) and Baxter DePew. William and Mary's Paul Daus and number three doubles. Michel and Rob Robinson (2) also went deep as the Bombers defeated The Posse, West Virginia University's highly touted Pete Crocker won at two doubles, as Lynchburg's 13-7 In the Superstars softba II final. The Bombers abo reached the Perotta. !■' only point came at number one doubles, as intramural finals but were defeated by the Wofats In a best of Against the Hornets, the Dukes did not lose a Frey and Record defeated Snead and Salas 7-5. three series, two games to one. Woddy Lawman had the winning singles match as Richard Schick. Mark Snead, 6-3. hit for The Posse as they won the third game, 6-5. V* Page IH. THK BRF.KZF. Friday. May I. I9BI Lacrosse club ends year with 12-2 win over Wasps I By DAVID TKKI. young people and the best part is more input with the fresn- Bud Brady is grateful for his of this is that they do it all man We need toge^ these kids return to lacrosse and he themselves. They work hard for four 'years. It's fun to seems more than content to be and they pay the bills." coach them and watch them far away from the high Comprised of players whose develop " pressure world of in- experience is limited to high The JMU players think tercollegiate competition school, the JMU club has Brady is fun too. "Coach is Brady completed his second progressed to the point where kind of old fashioned." senior year as coach of the James Brady said. "We've come a defenseman Mike Ladd noted. Madison University lacrosse long way The team has a "But in his own way he's pretty good range of plays and dynamite. club Wednesday as the Dukes "We'd be nowhere without him." Ladd added. "He's organized us. For free, he's 'Coach it kind of old fathioned. all we could ask." However. Brady's lacrosse background belies the price he But in hit own way, he't dynamite' charges A former com- petitive lacrosse player himself. Brady also was the crushed Emory and Henry they have learned the basics coach at Dartmouth College in College's club team. 12-2. like clearing the ball and the 1940s. "Back then we had Senior Chubby Grover led running an offense." some pretty good teams." JMU with three goals and Phil Brady recalled. Garland chipped in with two BUT BRADY doesn't kid The Emory and Henry team goals and two assists. himself He knows his team is that JMU defeated was not a The man with the infectious far away from powers like the good one. Like the Dukes' smile and sunburned bald University of Virginia and team two years ago. they head was ecstatic at the end of Johns Hopkins University. lacked sound, fundamental the game. "This is great." he "This team will get better." skills. Poorly thrown passes he said. "What we need to get and ill-advised shots hindered said. "I love working with the Wasps' play. But JMU has not been afraid to challenge more formidable opponents. Top prep player Roanoke College. whose varsity team is a perennial Division II national power, allowed its junior varsity squad to play JMU. The Dukes signs with JMU destroyed the Maroons. 17-1. Compiled from staff reports built this year—winning 21 Other victims in JMU's 6-4 Jimmy Masloff. a 6-foot-5. games and going to the NCAA season included Randolph 190-pound guard from tournament." Masloff said. Macon College's varsity, the Albemarle High School, has Albemarle High School University of Richmond club signed a James Madison coach Rich Lyons called i twice) and the Charlot- University basketball Masloff "one of the most tesville Lacrosse Club. scholarship. fundamentally sound players Brady's team is not a Masloff. who averaged 17 I have ever coached." regimented group " and he points and nine rebounds a Masloff is the third player to openly talks with spectators game for the Western District sign a basketball scholarship and players during the game. champions last season, was on with the Dukes. Earlier. Greg But his old coaches' ten- the Roanokr Times & World Mosten. a 6-foot-7, 210-pound dancies have not totally Newt list of the top 15 forward from Harrisburg. deserted him. "We shouldn't prospects in Virginia. He also Pa., and Darrell Jackson, a 6- have lost more than two averaged four assists a game foot-6. 195-pound forward- games this season." he said. and shot S3 percent from the guard from Richmond signed "When we played Virginia JMU'S Chubby Grover led the attack as the Dukes downed Emory field and 81 percent from the with JMU Tech. we were so bad..." and Henry. 12-2. Grover had three goals. • foul line. Masloff earned All-District and All-Northwest Region honors and was an Honorable Mention All-State AAA selection. He will participate in the Virginia High School Coaches Association All-Star for cooks who km! to took game. •MfflMJAam «.«i.v

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REFRIGERATOR FOR SALE: 2.2 cubic foot Sanyo. 4 years old, excellent condition. $60. Call 433-4857 after 6:00. Start On Campus MGB-GT '69. excellent con- by Paul Cbfaerty Pat Butter* dition, new paint, rebuilt rsm'. Afterfr you xv*a engine, rebuilt trans, new 5 AH( brakes. GIK, must sell, f PAUCPAUL obnenvTMtOOMeny TMfc ftguysV— $1,900.00. Call 434-1005. .CAMPUS?, FOR SALE: GRATEFUL DEAD T-SHIRTS: Limited edition, locally created T-shirt "Once in a while you get shown the light". Call 433- 0458. A FOR SALE: L-shaped Loft, 8' by 10' rug, couch and bar. Total package for $90. Great !A40CE4 Deal!! Call Jack at 4242, ***** Shorts 401. — W«'WA»»Tf FOR SALE: 2.2 cubic foot t^t-ta tXMit YOU- ... ar Sanyo refrigerator. Great for dorm use. Available im- Do Drop bn mediately. Call Bill at 4796. by Mark Legan FOR SALE: Red carpet ap- proximately 10' xl4' plus two E^feVTHE D0-WW \Hrt WOOL© ute TO TfWflC AU 7?/B 6*APUQTES_rgA. &&*A/& 0& /v strips good for hallways. One year old, good condition. J*VJ/flf£SS.' €000 LUC* /A/ 77/E ri/7l/££ ' f _^~~ $15.00. Contact Ken Kaufmon PO Box 2004. JMU. FOR SALE: Honda 450, ecxcellent condition. $800 or \ best offer. Call Mark, 433-5967

FOR SALE: Soft shell, dreadnaught-size guitar case. I'l Inexpensive. Call 5255. YARD "SALE: Saturday May 2, from 9:00 am until 5:00 pm on Mason Street across from the Hospital in University Towers. Will sell furniture, For Rent FEMALES NEEDING OFF HOUSE MATE WANTED: clothes, TU, bike, and more. CAMPUS HOUSING. 3 May-August. Beautiful far- Courses bedroom apartment on N. mhouse 8 miles from school. For Rent TWO BEDROOM Hampton Ct. 1 mile from $50 per month. Call 234-8317, SCUBA DIVING course of- TOWNHOUSE. 1'2 baths, 10 JMU. Need a 3rd person - rent 434-5450, or 433-6584 or write fered by Land-Sea Passages «UB1ILET: House - June- minutes from campug. Stop $105 per month and utilities P.O. box 2215. begins in May providing August. 4 bedrooms, partially by 162 Homeplace Apartments split 3 ways. Call Shirley at YMCA and PADI in- furnished, $75.00 per month anytime after 5 p.m. 434-0790 before May 8, call WANTED: Commuters for ternational certifications. per person plus utilities. One Available May 10th. Shirley 948-4938 (703) after May or summer school from Summer dives arranged to block from JMU. Call Penny May 8. Luray. New Market, Front Florida Keys, offshore or Liz at 433-5550 FOR RENT: Large room in Royal. Will take riders or will wrecks, and Bimini. 433-2177 by May 1 to register. THREE BEDROOM townhouse for May through Wanted ride. Write Donna P.O. 2631 or "APARTMENT: Sublet May- next semester. Pool, washer- call 743-4653. dryer, furnished, clean. Could WEEKEND HIKE August with option to rent in WANTED: One female to THROUGH DOLLY SODS fall. Squire Hill. 1-4 people, be shared. Call 433-2963. either sublet May or June thru NICE AND CHEAP. 2 rooms Servici Wilderness Area arranged by .washer-dryer, air con- August or to take a years lease Land-Sea Passages May 23-24. in semi-furnished 4 bedroom beginning May or June! ditioning. Call Lynn or Sherri Tour one of the East Coast's at 484-6277. house during May and sum- Apartment is in very good mer sessions. 3 blocks from NEED A PLACE TO STORE unique lanscapes. 433-2177 by condition. Its an end May 11 to register. TO SUBLET: Private room in campus. $70.00 a month plus apartment, 14 baths, own YOUR LOFT? For a $30. house. Available May 10 thru utilities. Call Karen at 433-4358 bedroom. JMU shuttle charge Sigma Pi will pick up, 'August. Fully-furnished in- or Dave at 433-5371. available. Rent is ap- store, and return your loft. Lost cluding color tv on cable. Full proximately $120.00 per month For more information call house privileges. All house including utilities. No utility 7274 or 7177. LOST: .Keys on a cookie and yard upkeep provided. APARTMENT FOR SUBLET deposit required. If in- keychain. If anyone finds Excellent location - directly MAY-AUGUST: 1 bedroom, terested, please call 434-4982. them please call 433-4452. across from 7-11 and laun- air conditioned, option to lease TYPING SERVICE: Dissertations, theses, reports, dromat on S. Main. 10 minute next fall. '/4 mile from CREMSHIED: Personal WANTED: FEMALES FOR etc. 17 years experience. $.80 walk from campus: Rent - $95 campus. May's rent paid for! MAY TO AUGUST. OR JUNE Protection 6-8 foot range key . per month or negotiable. Unfurnished. Call 434-5753, per page. Call Mrs. Price, 879- TO AUGUST. Excellent 9935 change holder. Call 433-0039 Utilities included. Check It ask for Mark. location. 2 blocks from after 5:00 pm. out! Call Susie at 434-9721. campus. Partially fuftiished, ONE BLOCK FROM JMU. 2 washer-dryer, 3 bedrooms. TYffJfe 8ERVICES Personals HOUSE WITH POOL. 2 blocks bedroom-furnished apartment Call 433-9490. AVAaVWLE. Call 434-6851 - from campus, only 3 spaces or «h)# by 1161 Shenandoah suitable for 3, private en- TO THE PLEDGES OF left. June-August. Call Now, trance, covered patio, color Street. $.76 per page. 433-0784. THREE PEOPLE NEEDED SIGMA NU: Good luck with cable tv. Call after 6 pm, 434- initiation. We love you guys. 2362. - ^ . TO SUBLET PARTIALLY SUBLET JUNE-AUGUST. 50 FURNISHED HOUSE for MOVING? Do it in an antique Love, Sigma Nu Little. yards from ctmpus, 2 APARTMENT TO RENT: summer (option for fall). 1 Ford! Reasonable rates on JUDY AND CAROL: You are bedrooms, kitch sn, living May-August. Holly Court, 2 mile from campus. Price local moving and hauling. both too much for me to room. 1 bath, ri,jht behind bedrooms, living room fur- negotiable. Call for more Student owned and operated. handle! Good luck in the Stop-In. Rent negotiable. Call nished. $225 per month. Call information! 281 W. Market Old Faithful Trucking Co. 896- future. THE NEW YORK ,Ron at 5049. Randy at 433-1912. St. 433-0689. 2761. | KID!! Page 2i). THE BHKKZE Friday. May l. l»8l Maditonman -.ttWorner TO THK KKOTHKKS OK STILL UNCERTAIN ABOUT SIGMA M. Happy Birthday EOT GRADUATIONS THE FUTURE. DON'T to all brothers who have a WORRY, I WAS UNSURE birthday in April. Also, SURE ARE.., ABOUT MY FUTURE, apologies to all birthday brothers who were neglected UNTIL ONE DAY during the second semester. Good luck on exams and we'll do better next year We love you guys! Have a great summer Sigma Nu Little Sisters YOU SENIORS ARE: ' LENZ1, LORI "TOMORROW'S LEADERS RECHIN. TERRI MAC. - KAREN HUTCHERSON. MANY OF YOU ARE .... LESLIE ROBINSON. TINA PIKE. SUSAN \ \ ^ WHITEHURST. You guys are the best. Words can't express Personals how much we will miss you next year. Congratulations TO ALL THE GIRLS WHO BALU, I sure am gonna miss JULIE: I hope you have a DEAR BLUESTONE STAFF: and good luck. Remember the HAVE JUMPED ON THEIR youl! -1 love you. Cow Eyes! great summer and good luck I Jiked the sigma nu rush happy sign! Love. Sigma Nu BACK FOR ME IN THE next year. LINDA. booklet. When does the Little Sisters. PAST FOUR YEARS: You JAMES: To my favorite guy!! yearbook come out? I don't are all bags and I never want Congratulations sweetie! I BREEZERS Bet you didn't MARGARET: Have fun in W. mind sugma nu buying their to see you again. You've been know whatever happens in the V;i ' LINDA friends as long as they don't expect anything from Dusty, lied to and abused. Have a future, you'll be successful. I but here it is. This has been use my money! With deepest nice day. BATMAN. miss you already. All my love, ANGEL OF THE MORNING. penetration, lori sorority. one of the best experiences of H.E.R. my life. Spazbo you are a Well, "looks like the bottle's TO THOSE RAMBLIN TKE: Congratulations on empty. BUT once you're gone, gifted and talented person. ALPHA GAMS. Boppin R.J. winning intramural sports for J.V. CHEERLEADER. You were generous with the you CAN come back!". Good and grits, thanx for the ex- the third year in a row. Keep luck after graduation. WAMS. looking forward to seeing you editing. Fish I know you don't cellent weekend. P.S.U. was a up the tradition. Love, The at graduation. Be sure and like that. Remember me when real kick! We'll always TKE little sisters. bring the fashion nut with you. you are top dog at Newsweek.- Ill GOERS!!! To all of you remember Phi who?, the, Love. Big Sis. p.s. are you Dave Stud. You can put the ANNE. CHERYL. COOTER. who gave your time . . . your Crow Bar, Clifford York, smiles... I give my thanks ... behaving yourself??? gold down with the best of Grandma Mikula and Daddy JENNI. AND MEL: We're going to miss you next year! Sue C. them and still maintain the Frey. the valedations. and-the TO ALL BREEZE SENIORS: cool. You. my friend, have a Good luck against Liberty It's been a great year and I future in journalism. Donna pics atop the cattle. Come Baptist. We Love You! The DEAR FAMILY ... This is to next year. We're there! As for say... " I love you" ... for all wish you the very best. Cindy. What can I say? Without you J.M.U., well F.T.S.!! Softball Team. Dave. Tricia. and Donna. To there would be no job. Don't those times. SUE SPED. Fraternally yours. Dee Dee STUMP, it has really been a all my faithful practicum forget to abuse those who great spring semester. people, well. I love you guys deserve it. Kouba You're and . ME. YOU AND YOU: En- Seriously! Luv Ya! Midget. joyed the times. Keep up the for always bailing me out welcome for the look-alike GREEK ROW BABE: I've when I need it the most: joke at the SCJ banquet. Good Jess: Happy Birthday. singing - you're great! Good lived in "his" shadow for too special thanks to Jeff and luck next year. Martha If you Love, your suitemates. luck on exams, from one of the long now. Now that "he" is off yous (alias rock thrower). Frank for Wednesday night- ever need a hug... Jeffl hope SWEETNESS: Next Thur- many suds to remember this you find someone to watch the to be a JR excutive you must be mine. My love is over- sday my favorite number is 5, KATHY. Love ya. James. night by. RICHARD, well SGA Flip everyone else said but my lucky number will what can I say kid. I'm going something You gave me my flowing but my patience is wearing thin. Desperately always be 7. My favorite word TO ALL THE BREEZERS: to miss you lots this summer. start in this field. Thanks for is forever. Love Happy. This is it guys! And to those of Thanks for a wonderful year— the push and encouragement yours, IVAN. MARY: It's not yellow roses, you who stuck it out with us to you taught me a lot about in 281 and 381. I will the end. Thanks! To those of people and myself. R.W. remember you as the best SPLORF: My final words of but it's a little message that wisdom: don't feel, don't I'm thinking of you. I hope to you who didn't Blahhhhhhhh! you're a one of a kind and I'm teacher I have ever had.Dawn Chrisspaz: I've got a lot of glad I've got you. Love, We just met today but I would think, just experience! Thank see you soon. The "Southern confidence yi you even if you Martha have liked to get to know you you for thawing out my Boy". emotions (and for sometimes are "beyond reproach." so better. You are one attractive don't disappoint me. Don't Breeze folks...Thanks for a lady...Dusty. heating them up). I will BREEZERS Can't leave always be your friend, so you without doing this. C 52 ago I forget my complimentary great semester. I'm looking WELL KIDS, the time has better get used to it. I love had my doubts...WE MADE subscription either. Jeff G.. forward to next year. Annie. come (and oh boy has my time you, Mr. Bill. IT AND Chicago, the Italian, Rich. Martha. Yo Yo: You Happy Birthday!! I LOVE come) Time to give you a hard suicide punch...and those off- mean you guys will be doing YOU!!!!! LUV Y'ALL!! C.C. time. Lets see. the person I DEEDEE AND KATIE: What the-wall pro. nights made it this again next year? You'd SPAZZERS—How can I say like the most, this goes to...: can I say. It's been a great ??????.Worthwhile. You can better! Mike. Bryan: Good YO you're a g,4.?.|.!.+.reat good-bye to a crew like ya'll? year. especially this have Howie...God Bless you. T luck with all the extra time It's hard: I love you guys to Oriental. BUT, I will say this semester. Thanks for the Glad we're friends....now..It you'll have on your hands next about Size, she's one heck of. a death. Donna—Wendelken positive outlook and the has been an . ? Experience. year. Matt: The Breeze was right. Of all my memories well I just can't say that about laughs, grand royale ball Good luck with the magazine' graphics will never be the a good friend. CAT SPAZ you with this paper, you'll cer- "celebration," take a picture career. K- You are a spaz- same. Good luck in Philly. I tainly be a...er. unique one. guys are great (just kiddin') it'll last, the family portrait, face, super good friend who expect to see your art seriously folks hope you Have a blast in D.C. Rich—I catch him glancing your way. kept me here all semester nationally soon. Dusty: Stop must owe you a ton of popcorn become pro softball players etc. Hope there's a Brian in because you listened and putting journalism degree and good luck. DAAAVIDDD i as well as margaritas). Florida. USA. cared, those across the desk down on cover letters. Donna: Chris—you're by far the TEEEEL!. thought I might be convos were life saving. Teel You're right, normal is easy on you. huh? I hope you Susan: Hope to tuck you in biggest Molson spaz of all. There is only one word for you boring: and you're sure never Martha—well, we've certainly have somebody like R. again soon. See you at and the language has yet to boring. We did it! Teebki: Murray as your boss! Riverbend Park. Love, Dusty. shared some weird ones, with discover it. Rich and Martha Your usual flair for making MATTSKY. you're a sorry the pair that we've acquired. sucker for leawing Jimmy LEAN MACHINE. Welcome . You make great popcorn R me smile has helped a lot Mike. Yo Yo. Tom—again, a you give superior backrubs. when things have looked bad. Mad V.. TO THE HAWKS. back and party hearty. We group of nutty photographers. Thanks for com in KEVIN C. rage in O.C. Teel and Shorts M- Kouba isn't that bad. I'll Tear 'em up in O.C. I'll miss I'll miss you! Bryansk!—"to think of you when you're ya lots. G.L.. K.S., J.D.. B.T.. AND THE DRUGEEs YOU 2nd floor. the one who pulled us through LIVE WITH- Keep sending RICH MURRAY. The stumbling around WP. B.H.: I love you all. Fast in a pinch—thanks! Jeff— assistant sports editor of The Blevins Any photo that fits or Kath: You've been the bestest you're right. I have immense those cards and letters. Love doesn't fit....you are a PREP. and funnest and sweetest 'em. Last, but obviously not Breeze. Thanks! No Socks confidence in you. Besides, last EMBY. you'll always be a Tony. You're the best. Imre Yo NO Comment. Learn to. roomie and friend. Saying you're one of the most sin- pain in the rear end-Love ya is a ... drive in Washington. MATT goodbye on May 9 will be cerely nicest guys I know. Make it funny. By ran I know sooooo hard. We will get all. rich. BREEZERS, I leave as I The-Dark-Party-Five (is that arrived (?) The best to you you want to review my together this summer. C anything like the Gang of J. DUBIANSKY. HAPPY all. Tricia. Be sweet as singing. Dusty You will be late Weed: As Dorothy said to the Four?) Ya'll honestly mean to MOM'S DAY!!!!!! !!!!!!!!!!• always. You're weird (so am for your wedding. But you are . "I think I'm gonna me what genuine friendship Is JMU: Beta Alpha Gamma is I) but I luv ya. Rich. Will we incredibly cute. Jeff Have miss you most of all." How all about. Koubaface—If the ONLY fraternity. ever forget the NCAA's? fun... remember normal is can I begin to touch on all the anyone has put up with my However, we will gladly drink Boston! Martha. So you boring. James Stay away hours we've shared both in abuse, it's you—but only your beer and fondle your thought I was a creep.. from me on those plane rides. and out of the office. The fact because you take it with nubile women. You're just Kouba. You'll make it if I let Flip You really don't know that we've become even better such... ? T-bag—I've probably jealous because you don't you. James. Country Bum- everything. Dave I know you friends through it all means a never had so much in common have a secret, invisible pkin! C. I want to be mean but think I am great deal to me. We will go to with a friend in my life. Lucky fraternity. Everybody knows I don't think I can. The Q's. strange...well...Alan I am the DC. conference...we will you—hyuk. hyuk. Thanks for who you are ROCK AND South River, the formal. You changing my hairstyle...to go to Va. Beach... we will get so much this year: I can't ROLL. THE MASTER made this insane job wor- look like you...HA HA. To my fantastic jobs. Love you lots even begin. D—I'm at a loss BAGGER AND HIS FELLOW thwhile Remember, stay special friends. We really did and lots. and I've said it better: but it 'Mjftr.mm.fi ntm, ,„.,, mlimifitir it... MUCH LOVE, Sunshia*. T.F. ,nDUUtO« •iimriij Htltft eMtetWt --It>WM»'t. " '' • • TiiRmeii ' 1981. Page 21 omL- 20/20 hindsight: semester review • We wish the best of luck to Lynn Tipton. 1981-82 Student Government Association president, and hope she can inspire more student involvement in decision making here. We strongly advise her against writing letters to the General Assembly representing the SGA without first consulting the senate. , This semester has seen a lot of growth for Greeks. We're sorry. We oppose the front-end budgeting status given to the Inter- Fraternity Council and Panhelleiyc Council and applaud the Executive Council's veto of those budgets. If new Greek housing is built across Interstate 81, Greek Row should be opened to independents or clubs, not used to colonize new fraternities or sororities. We cringe at Dean of Students Lacy Daniels' endorsement of Greeks: "I would like to see more Greek groups be instituted here." The administration should not endorse -ami particular lifestyles. • We recently blasted the proposed Bluestone publication board for a policy that might control editors' decisions about Preview was not too violent photographs and articles printed. We still believe in students' By SYLVIA MALL that they seem a bit strong for someone so right to free press, but upon seeing this year's book we admit that A recent letter to the editor expressed something has to be done. ' opposed to violence. concern over the preview of the R-rated movie Also, it is ironic to find someone so con- Dressed to Kill shown before Walt Disney's G- cerned about showing children realistic scenes •Again, we commend the groups offering escort services and rated 101 Dalmations. The letter (The Breeze, encourage women to use them. Again, we contend that JMU and of violence, yet who has no opposition to April 28) consisted of cutting, blatant con- showing children animated versions of the Harrisonburg are not as isolated from city problems as they are demnations of the University Publications from large cities. same type of violence. The latter could prove Board for its "incredible stupidity" in showing to be much more harmful. At least in a the piece. realistic version a child would bo faced with • Virginia National Bank will be in the Warren University Union the true results of a violent act, whereas in an (soon to be the Warren Campus Center) basement next year, To begin with, the decision to run the animated verson the victims are shown to be despite high minimum balances for free checking and a $1 charge preview was made by one member of the UPB, invincible to anything. for non-customers to cash checks. Movie Committee Chairman Bob Gillis. Gillis If the author of the letter feels the necessity Our first solution to the problem was for non-customers to start admits that it was an oversight on his part, and to scrutinize the material viewed by children, a $10 VNB savings account and keep their checking at home. Ten if he had to do it over again, he probably perhaps he should begin with the plot of 101 dollar checks can be cashed against this account at no charge. wouldn't run the preview. But, the author of Dalmations. The story centers around a witch- the letter was quick to criticize the per- like character attempting to capture 15 pup- • Continental Telephone Co. is charging students $26 to hook up formance of the entire UPB on the basis of pies to skin them for a fur coat I'm sure if the an outside telephone line, which will not have much impact until what was, for the most part, an insignificant writer would stop for a moment of recall, he fall semester. We do not need to encourage an organized boycott mistake. would remember numerous scenes of violence of the company—student's money supply will demand that fewer Since all previews the UPB airs are clips in the G-rated film. sign on as customers. that have been approved for general audience Furthermore, I would like to remind the viewing, it is the writer of the letter and not the author that the purpose of the UPB is to • Plans for sorely needed campus birth control services are UPB who is in the wrong. provide entertainment for the students of the underway, and we thank all those who have helped toward this: The clip that was shown contained a dialogue JMU campus. Providing movies to the general the SGA, those who voted in the referendum and administrators. with sexual implications and a scene in which a audience at a reduced or non-existent cost is an (Ourselves, too.) killer is preparing to cut up a victim. No ob-' additional.courtesy. It is understandable that scene language was used, and Gillis says no an organization accustomed to catering to an • NOTES. Congratulations to the Dukes on their NCAA debut— blood was shown. The way the clip was older audience would overlook such a minor and the $90,000 isn't so bad. either...We don't like the likelihood of described in the letter made it sound ex- detail. a housing lottery next year but have no alternate solution...The tremely gory. The person responsible for the airing of the Counseling and Student Development Center needs to cut The description of the preview wasn't the preview had admitted a little more discretion programs like SuperPerson week, not counseling ser- only part of the letter that was exaggerated might have been used, but making an issue of vices...Spring Fling was great (so was 101 Dalmations) ..happy The writer was surprisingly vicious in his the showing only served to exaggerate its summer and good luck, graduates... statements against the UPB—surprising in content and bring it to public attention.

Quoteg of note EDITOR MANAGING EDITOR Cindy Elmore Tricia Fischetti This year has shown increased crowding at JMU. and initial BUSINESS MANAGER reactions to it indicate that the school's academic character is going to change James Saunders Kounded Ml • William Hanlon. dean of business, describes business classes as having students "in the aisles and elbow to elbow." NEWS EDITOR EDITORIAL EDITOR FEATURE EDITOR PRODUCTION MANAGER Donna Sizemore Chris Kouba Bryan Powell Mar Jia Stevens •JMU president Ronald Carrier responding to the withdrawal of Gina Graff, a sophomore who could not get any major or general PHOTOGRAPHY EDITOR GRAPHICS EDITOR SPORTS EDITORS REPORTERS studies classes fall semester: "we have a few more (students) MikeBlevins ■ Matt Wagner David Teel Chris Ward than we probably should have." Rich Amacher JeffGammage FEATURE WRITERS SPORTS REPORTERS Anne Richardson Diane Fitzpatrick Dave Facinoli GRAPHICS •Dr. Rex Fuller, head of the communication arts department SandeSnead reacted to communication arts major Graffs withdrawal by David Lets on Danny Finnegan Pat Butters Chris Harris Mark Legan Margo Coble saying. "Students who do not know how to exist in the system , PHOTOGRAPHERS Scott Worner Jennifer Young don't belong here at college." - CarlCostenbader George Marcoccia Tom Lighten JeffNuckles • Dr. Thomas Stanton. vice president of academic affairs, said YoNagaya Reed Sou thmayd after a study on alleviating academic crowding, "One possible We thank all practkmm outcome < of the study) is that if you are not a serious student JMU CIRCULATION AD DESIGN students and volunteers for may not be the place for you." Sandy Brown, Manager Grade Armstrong their counties* hoar*. Best of Since the state is preventing academic expansion at JMU. we Greg Johnson Sandra Hughes lock to graduating season feel the university-college system is the best solution to over- ADSALES Candy Peterson Cindy Elmore. Tricia crowding. Crowded programs would accept the best qualified Diane Hancher Dawn Pridmore FischettL Doaaa Sliemore, sophomores into a major and would close upper level courses to Hank Johnson David Teel, Chris Ward and others. Greg Lee ADVISERS Dave Kacinoii, aid to Matt All students would have a chance to earn entrance into a major. FlipDeLuca Wagner who is transferring. Blindly rejecting students by their desired major, as JMU did in AD DESIGN MANAGER Alan Neckowitz Special thanks to ear ad- December to transfer applicants wanting business or com- Diane Dunn David Wendelken visers. munication arts majors, is an unfair solution. —- —■ «--***SB«k ■^Lri' '

Pago 22. TIIK KKEEZE Friday. May I. 1981 Readers' Forum Some security loiter on job, another acts harshly 'This happens all the time' 'We heard him yelling' ,

To the editor: irresponsible, maintaining a what they were getting paid To the editor: The following is a copy of a 3.8 cumulative average in As we all unfortunately fori. I'm sure that many of letter sent to Alan MacNutt. graduate school know, our campus has been vou have seen the same thing director of safety and Miss B was visibly shaken hit by some maniac or I observed one team enter security. Names have been by this treatment and was maniacs who are chasing and the Health Center on Sunday left out at the request of the nervously ill for the better assulting the women of JMU. evening at 7:34 p.m. One of writer. part of the weekend. She has A lot has been said about them had some coffee, and been reluctant to proceed with preventive measures. in- they both watched the I am very concerned about a many of her normal activities cluding the use of the escort television until 7:56, The sad recent incident that took place because of an unfair guilt trip services and walking with thing is that this happens all between a security officer and laid on her. friends at night the time. (You see. 1 work a student. I realize that you I was truly embarrassed I encourage all women who there as an orderly). turns you on. Insist that the are a busy man. especially in having my mother witness live off campus to walk with I will admit that I have seen cadets be outside on patrol light of recent serious rape such a brazen outburst on the someone at all times I hope a little more walking and less and visible. I especially beg attempts, but I hope you will part of an empowered that women who walk the sitting since the attacks, but you women. After all, as find time to give it attention. university agent. She was tracks or use obscure I'm sure you can still see the horrible as it may seem, you Let me first state that I have shocked to the point of facilities such as the tennis cadets reading the paper at could be the next victim. the greatest respect for the questioning the validity of our courts across 81 and "Z" lot the Union, munching at Dukes David Sharland JMU security force and ap- security force as a protective for parking will do the same. or relaxing in front of the Editor's note: Alan Mac- preciate the awesome entity However, this is not why I nearest television. Null, director of safety and responsibility of maintaining It has been in the past (and have written this. I would like I've done my part—I've security, responds that cadets order on a campus of this size will remain in the future) my to let all you readers know made a public gripe. I've also have been disciplined for such But there has been a opinion that it is of paramount that on too many occasions. I called security to express my actions in the past: no reports questionable action by a importance that we adhere to see those cadets of our wat- concerns. Now it is your turn have reached him recently. security officer toward a and respect the law as well as ching television, snacking. or I encourage all of you to call He adds that cadets have a 15- student that has had some those empowered to enforce just plain sitting on their tails. the security office and gripe, minute break in every four- rather disturbing side effects. it. Yet I am also convinced (I did not realize that was ask questions or whatever else hour block. The action involves a ticket that authority is a result of issued on April 24 to a Miss B dictated power, whereas My involvement in this respect is something that situation is as a witness and as must be earned I have a very Fund raisers receive little UPB help Miss B's fiancee. real concern that the officer Miss B was on Patterson has not acted with discern- To the editor: helpful. We were not asking system we desperately Street attempting to make a ment and question the value of Last weekend we had a for their donations or their needed Who does this system left turn into O-lot behind any respect that comes from benefit for the American time. We merely wanted belong to anyway? We ended Shenandoah Apartments. As such blatant abuse of power. Cancer Society in front of the permission up pulling from our proceeds she was making the turn, she I am reminded of another Warren University Union. Our We were shuffled back and to rent a system from Ace saw the officer's vehicle incident I bore witness to on goals were twofold: one, to forth from the UPB office to Electronics, who did approaching. Both vehicles March 26 in which a campus raise money for this more the Student Activities office. It recognize our cause and gave came to a complete stop. The police officer struck and in- than worthy organization and had seemed to us that one as a cut rate. officer then motioned for Miss jured a cyclist as he was two. to fulfill the requirments office was pawning us off to B to continue her turn and making a left turn from Main for a communication class by Despite the bureaucracy we the other, until finally, we encountered along the way, shouted for her to stop once off Street onto Duke's Drive. Did promoting a social action were able to secure some kind the road. the officer in question write campaign. our benefit did come off and of results. Twice we were we were able to raise some At this time, my roommate, himself a ticket, or did he misled about the time and money for the American my mother and myself were make a silent vow to drive In order to pull off such an place we could hold our event, Cancer Society. However in seated in my dorm room, with more caution in the activity it was necessary for and. twice we were told not to retrospect, upon reviewing which overlooks O-lot. We saw future? In a more reasonable us to come in contact with and involve the outside com- the attitudes of the officials we Miss B stop on the access perspective, how valid are the receive permission from munity. encountered, it is our con- street behind the dorm with damaging accusations which various James Madison The last straw came when tention that we were the security car behind her. were so freely espoused to University officials. For the the UPB refused to grant us discriminated against. Had Miss B? most part they were less than permission to use the speaker we been a sorority or With the windows of our I hope you will receive this fraternity, rather than three room shut and the officer information in the light in independents, we feel we facing the opposite direction, which it is intended. At the would not have received the we heard him yelling at Miss very least, I would hope that less-than-enthusiastic attitude B. Although his words were the officer would be made Remember we did. unclear to us. it was evident aware of the consequences his Mary Grace Whalen that he was being harsh. actions have in the com- Kathryn Kotapish I later learned he shouted munity he serves. when? Jeff Frazier the following to Miss B: John Sherman l)"You can kill innocent Change, expansion, and progress are what we all have Editor's note: John Underhill, people driving like that. What Editor's note: Alan MacNutt experienced here at JMU and yet all three have replaced chairman of the UPB cof- do you think you were doing?" responds that the incident of memories. feehouse committee, responds 2)"You are very irrespon- the letter is being in- Do you remember... that UPB personnel are sible." 3)"Your driving is a vestigated. He says the state when your acceptance letter read Madison College? required to run the speaker public menace." police investigated the March the freshman orientation barbecue under the trees and system for any group. He says Miss B is 23 years old and 26 accident and found the awnings which is now a construction site? scheduling was tight that- has driven since age 16 cyclist to be at fault. No when you used to give a number at your designated weekend and no one was without a single traffic charges were brought in that entrance to get into D-Hall? available. violation. She is anything but incident. when Madison washed your towels and sheets for you? when JMU played Division III football? when Greek row was off-campus or in Eagle dorm? 4 movies at Wilson Hall? Mr. Walter Lance, we will miss you* playing frisbee on the lawn where the education building stands.? To the editor: that which he believed in. I I will miss his friendly wondering if you would make it to the top of the rickety One of the persons I have knew him as a supervisor, but chats, his counsel and his green steps from Godwin? learned to hold in high esteem I found in him much more. He guidance—I will miss his wit, laying out in the sun across 1-81? and respect is going to retire. has a warm heart and in our his smile, and his down-to- when Hoffman dorm was all girls? He was one of the first persons conversations from time to earth way of doing things. I when J-lot was a field? I met when I came to James time he would express a see him as a real friend who when the pedestrian walkway was a thoroughfare? Madison University five years concern for me and an interest knows what life is all about, when Dukes Grill was packed on Thursday nights? ago. in how things were going with and took time out of a busy life traying down Rockingham's Hill without dodging a We often talked about many me. to be my friend mobile dorm? things. I saw something of his He loved his work because When we return to JMU in the future, what else will we devotion and love for his he loved people He had the Mr: Waiter ivance. we will need to remember? family. I discovered courage to tell it like it was miss you. v 'PAMBJbA-AVILSattL . -i 41.ra liiw • b»«ik«lllilitW»M ...... "GRfiMMWa aboHtl liMlHf /..-and! Id -the.chips *nll wbtrfe «n MM '-rusiiiK'aAd cr«** VV* 1 L I'l'l I 'I'M ijl|i *mf ,., ., dedication, .to his.-work^jwr. to. c Wleymaayi v hnonagi •<(.• ■ nMbMrnafMb " iu«V' -n ; . .■■'■ ■ THE BREEZE, Friday, May l, 1981. Page 23 Don't ask about jobs - worries are on hold By TR1CIA FISCHETTI I want to thank for all their time anu I've gotten to the point where if one So many things left to do advice and good humor. more person asks me "So, have you • There's that last movie I want to got a job yet?" I'll scream. Scream requires luil-time hours and full-time • There's that band at the Elbow see in Grafton-Stovall. outwardly. I mean, because I've been attention Room I want to hear play one more • There's that editorial I promised screaming inside for several weeks As my college career wanes, time my editorial editor I would write. now. though. I'm finding it more and more • There's that last trip to Spanky's I don't know why the question up- difficult to give my "job" job the full for bagels and cream cheese I want to But now I'm in Wine-Price sets me so much. It's a logical con- attention it requires. Just last week. I make basement in The Breeze office, where versation starter and usually is asked was still dashing to my typewriter to • There's the hill outside the WUU I've spent most of my senior year. innocently enough. Maybe I'm respond to any promising want ad for that I want to stretch out on one more This place has become more familiar resentful. Or maybe I'm just envious a magazine editorial assistant. time to me than my dorm room, and the of other seniors who have more feature writer, reporter or whatever, •There's that swim at Blue Hole I faces and friendships here will always "practical" majors than mine. They undaunted by the non replies or the want to take. be with me. You really get to know land impressive-sounding computer rejection letters I've received. • There's that "night out with just people when you work with them at all and accounting jobs, while I keep But tnis week, the last week of the girls' that five friends and I ..hours under the most stressful cir- plugging out cover letters and mailing classes, things seem different. I'm not have planned and can't put off cumstances. my resumes and magazine and less ambitious, maybe I'm more so, much longer A few birds are waking outside and newspaper clippngs all over the but I would like to put all my worries • There s all those photographs of are beginning their morning song, but country. I've been at it since January. about the future on hold for a while. JMU faces and ces I still want to the campus is still shrouded in Somehow I feel as if I should be shoot darkness. Anyone with any sense is in Not that I'd change places with cramming all those little things I've • There's tha; atree on the quad I bed. but we have this last issue of the them. It's just that I'm worried; meant for four years—or things I just want to sit und year to put out. graduation is looming ahead and so is want to do again, maybe for the last • There's t st 3 a.m. fried egg When all the pages are neatly unemployment. For the first time time—into less than two lousy weeks breakfast atC I want to eat. stacked and ready for the printer, since I was 16. I don't have a job set here. • There's th favorite spot behind we'll walk home, marveling, as usual, for the summer. Not the regular put- Hoffman wheral want to lay out in the at all the lights left on in the library on-a-uniform-punch-the-time-clock •There's that last play I want to and Wilson Hall. Then I'll get some job I've had before, anyway. see. When else will I be able to see • There's that dinner out that my sleep Maybe tomorrow I'll get to that Instead. I find myself faced with the such fine drama for such a low ticket roommate and 1 have been promising studying I've been neglecting, or biggest job I've ever had—the task of price? each other all semester. maybe I'll get to those Sunday want finding myself a job. a real job. the • There's that planetarium show I • There's that game of racquetball ads and send out a few more resumes. one I've been aiming for all these don't want to miss In four years, I've f promised myself I'd win. And maybe I won't. years. And this job-finding job only been to one. •There's those newspaper advisors No, I haven't gotten a job yet.

By DONNA SI/EMORE Remember the first day of college on graduation cards reads. "The It is almost all over but the Pomp and when you didn't know anyone, couldn't moment may be temporary, but the Circumstance. ;B find the dining hall and had never heard memory lasts forever." That may not Years ahead loom like mirrors that of backgammon? seem important now. but in the years to have no reflection. Remember the feeling of loneliness come its value is immeasurable. I look back'and wonder where it all when your P.O. box was empty and of went: the quiet talks on the hill, beer in the excitement of awaiting the Valley's Dukes, Shenandoah Valley sunsets, first snowfall? Graduation is a mixture AT TIMES I have wondered if sounds of it Feels So Good" from the of the two—adulthood's leap and journalism is worthwhile. Putting Magic Royal Marching Dukes, food fights in childhood's fading. together a newspaper is not only a job; the dining hall, pressed corsages from It was only four years ago. yesterday it is a demanding, frustrating and fraternity formats. all-nighters, and a lifetime. Too soon our tomorrows rewarding challenge. When I leave splashes in Blue Hole and the magic of become our yesterdays. here, it is easy to believe that all that of memoriesS will remain is my by-line in filed issues. College was supposed to teach me to Yet I know this is false. The most tangle with life's webs that are so LOOKING BACK makes me wonder important things that we do can't be discreetly and surprisingly fashioned. There is a great deal of beauty, held in our hands. The sense of If I could do it all again I'd...probably knowledge and happiness at our satisfaction that I and my co-workers memories do it the same (at least I'm honest). disposal. But too often we dispose of it can meet deadlines twice a week and instead of savoring it- -time passes so still remain good friends has a lasting TIME PASSES so quickly, and it quickly. impact. For every person whom I have takes milestones like graduation to Now I wish I had taken the time to made smile—that sense of achievement make us realize its fleeting. attend the concerts that I always was never fades. Could it be only four years ago that it too busy to enjoy, taken the the Sunday Every college student should be all began? Arriving at JMU scared me afternoon drive into the Valley, and required to write a repertoire of their to death I was filled with anticipation gone out Thursday and socialized in college experierence; "How to cope and dreams—that's what it was all stead of cramming for some Biology with life in 1.160 painless lessons." about four years ago. And today it's test. ■ Goodbyes are a social function really no different?*1 Don't we seniors wish wehad chased sanctioned by a society that has little What used to be the hassle of finding our dreams, instead of merely insight. a good class schedule now is the anxiety dreaming them. It's almost all over but the Pomp and of finding a good job and a reasonably- These memories are magic, tragic Circumstance. Now it's time to move \ priced apartment. and permanent. A phrase often found on. j Eight days till graduation: i can't say I'm ready' By CINDY ELMORE One of the biggest psychological anyone outside of my family. We May 9 will be so anticlimactic. It's I'm scared. advantages of school is the security i< shared absolutely everything; I could like asking. "What's next?" and It is eight days before my offers. That's why I think many talk to her about anything in the hearing no answer. graduation from college, and in so people go to graduate school: it defers world. I think I took advantage of a lot of many ways I can't say I'm ready. going out and looking for a job. The Although Mary is still my friend, opportunities here, but not nearly as I was sitting in a political science only real things to decide here are and I see her whenever I'm home, we many as I could have. I never went to class one day last week when I how much time to spend have little in common. Our entire a soccer game, swam at Blue Hole or overheard a conversation that told academically, what to do with your concepts of ambition and of what is sat in on a Thursday night cof- one reason I'm not anxious to leave time socially, and how to use four important to each of us have changed. feehouse. I never joined a service club JMU. months each summer. The rest is I'm graduating from college; Mary or saw the modern dance ensemble. One guy said to another. "Well, easy. is not. I've been in the Sawhill Gallery what are you doing this summer? Actually, I probably shouldn't even For four years she has talked about maybe twice in four years and have You're out in May, aren't you?" be here, much less complain. I didn't her jobs, about living at home and yet to see any part of the new The other answered, "I could be; "I get into JMU the first time I applied about a social life with the friends she Education Building besides the first have enough credits. But I'll be back In 1977, I knew of males with lower ^_e never held a floor main corridor. I hear the next year at least until December. I'm high school grades and SAT imer months, building is pretty nice. having too much fun here. Besides, who were accepted while some not been home^or more than a my parents pay my tuition." seemingly better-qualified females two-week period in the last two years I don't mean to sound bitter about He was right. It is fun, and although were denied admittance. I was bitter. and can walk down the hall of my my college experience. I know I'll get it's a pessimistic thing to say, I just All my friends were being accepted dorm any weeknight to see my a job—I just don't know where or don't know if day-in-and-day-out the into colleges, and then-Madison friends. when. And once employed and out of rest of life can be as much fun. It College put me on its waiting list. I Perhaps college or the lack thereof JMU I realize I will change even more certainly can't be as easy. cried, and my dad wrote a letter to Dr. changed us. Perhaps time did. than the years in Harrisonburg have And after 14 consecutive years of Carrier. A week later, I was in. Recent studies have shown that changed me. I know, too, that in time I paying tuition bills, my parents would Whenever I wonder whether or not most students go to college not to get won't regret the things I did not do as not be pleased if I asked for'another college has changed me, I think about an education, but to give them access, a student here. I'll be grateful for the year of school because "it is fun." Mary. Mary was my best friend from to jobs they otherwise could not get. I things that I did, and probably brag to I couldn't see myself returning, ages 12 to about 17.1 probably learned don't have a job yet, nor do most of my grandchildren about them. But I anyway.. Leaving may scare me, but > »nd experienced more about life in my friends, and we're starting to get a will miss it and forithe fnomeat, I'm the thought of >penaaining bores me. general with this girl than I have with ' little disillusioned •Simply going-home • • etill •scared'.'- ■»—«■«* Page 24. THE BREEZE Friday. May l, 19K1 ■«*S|^i». • ance Duo America Two students plan tour to perform, teach dance

By BARBARA TO TO Rudj Petke and Diane Firesheets have planned an eight month tour of Europe beginning in August Hut theirs will not be a usual sightseeing trip The two .lames Madison University students are touring Europe as a dance team called Dance Duo America as part of a cultural ex- change program Petke. a senior here. got the original idea for the dance company Hungary The pan plans to travel when he was doing research in through these countries by rail and to England last summer for his honors lodge with families, in cooperation project. which combines an- with SERVAS. an international thropology and dance He researched organization that finds foreign traditional English dance as well and visitors a place to stay with native taught workshops and performed families. demonstrations of American dance "I kept getting invitatioas to come ON APRIL 24. Petke and membm back and bring other people with me. of the JMU dance theatre presented 'to show them the types of dance we "A concert of English and American do." Petke said Back at JMU in the dance" at Godwin Hall, and Dance fall, bediscussed the idea of returning Duo America performed one segment to Europe with Diane Firesheets. a of the program, a contemporary JMl' junior with whom he had been version of mountain dancing called dancing for three years With Dance "Exhibition Clogging". Duo America, they decided to commit Dance Duo America is seeking themselves to the European cultural spoasorship through businesses, organizations and individuals and is exchange program which will con- RUDY PETKE and Diane of American dance as part of a tinue through late March 1982 spoasored in part by the Shenandoah X. Firesheets rehearse (above and left Dance Duo America will perform Valley Folklore Society, a non-profit cultural exchange program. The pair top and bottom) for their eight month will travel through England, Ger- traditional. popular and con- organization. temporary styles of American dance Petke and Firesheets will perform tour of Europe which begins in many. France, th Netherlands. in the Shenandoah Valley's Poultry August. Billed as Dance Duo Sweden. Switzerland. Austria and in countries such as England. Ger- America, the two JMl' students will Hungary,. many. France, the Netherlands. Parade held May 16 and will also Sweden. Switzerland Austria and appear at Valley Mall on July 4 demonstrate and teach various forms Minority program group cited as biggest change

By SANDE SNEAD concert of the year, which Looking back on a year she said was unfortunate, as University Program adding. "We saw Oak at Board Chairman. Debbie the National Convention Erwin said the biggest and they were great They UPB change this year was played music that was like the addition of the Minority the music by Styx so we booked them and ended up Photot by Vo N»g»y» Programming committee. This committee was not being able to give the started on a trial basis last tickets away." fall. The only concerts that "It was hard to evaluate seem to sell at JMU are the the board because we big name bands, Erwin really didn't know what to noted. "I think Oak was a expect of the committee. talented group but nobody But overall it has been very wanted to give them a successful and I'm sure it chance." she said. will remain a permanent Erwin said that when she part of the board." Erwin entered her present said. position her biggest goal Photo by Mlko Slovlnt She added that the was to continue the DEBBIE ERWIN group's most successful relatively smooth event sponsored this year not another major concert operation of events while in the spring. was. without a doubt, the keeping open com- Pat Benatar concert. "OAK RIDGE Boys was munication between fun but more oriented "The Benatar concert members of the executive was the best by far and that towards the town than the council. students." she continued includes Godwin shows," "I think communication Erwin noted. "Although Erwin's successor, Steve is essential for any Doyle, has been acting as Jimmy Buffet was our first organization and we highly successful concert president for about a definitely had good com- month of the year, it wasn't sold munication within our Erwin will graduate with out. whereas the Benatar group," she said. a political science major in concert obviously was sold "Everybody had a good May and plans to attend out." time but that was because graduate school at the Erwin added that she they knew when to work University of South still wishes that the concert and when to play and Carolina. She hopes to get a could have been held at everyone fulfilled their graduate assistantship in Godwin Hall. responsibilities." the programming office ON THE other hand, Erwin said her only there and later pursue a Erwin cited the Oak Ridge regret about her year in career in university Boys as the least popular office was that there was programming