Buccaneer 1984


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Buccaneer

THE YEARBOOK OF EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY
RA TR a ER PE TE ES ET RTS TE TS a .

VOLUME SIXTY " LIBRARY OF CONGRESS ISSN # 8756-4394

Copyright © 1984 Gary D. Patterson, Anthony S. Martin
and The East Carolina University Media Board.

ALL RIGHTS RESERVED. No portion of this yearbook may
be reproduced in any form or by any means without

written permission from the editors. Address inquiries

to THE BUCCANEER, Publications Building, East Carolina
University, Greenville, N.C. 27834. Specifications

available on request. ea;

All credited photographs are respectively
Copyright © 1984 Mark S. Barber
Copyright © 1984 Lou Clemmons
Copyright © 1984 G. Neil Johnson
Copyright © 1984 James S. Leary
Copyright © 1984 Gary D. Patterson
Copyright © 1984 Michael Smith

Printed in the USA by
Delmar Printing Co.
9601 Monroe Road
Matthews, N.C. 28105







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PHOTO LAB

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34 /Personnel

ABOVE: Student General Managers; (seated) Brian Hester; THE BUC-
CANEER, Donna Carvana; THE EBONY HERALD, Ellen Moore; THE
REBEL, (standing) Hunter Fisher; THE EAST CAROLINIAN, Mark
Niewald; Media Board Chairman, Greg Watkins; WZMB-FM, Gary
Patterson; ECU PHOTO LAB

RIGHT: ECU MEDIA BOARD; Faculty Members; (seated) Dr. Elmer
Meyer, Mr. Rudolph Alexander, Dr. John Ebbs, Student Members;
(standing) Regina Hardee, Ernest Conner, Denise Gibson, Jimmy
Hackett, Glen Conway, Mark Niewald, Nancy Barnes (secretary),
Lindsey Williams





ECU Media Board/35

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Patrick OTNeil

Jim Kirchman Patterson

Mick LaSalle? Patterson

Jennifer Jendrasiak Patterson

36 /Personnel







Che East Carolinian

Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925

ABOVE (left to right)

Row t: Al Aga es goa ine, owe oe ode as Mick LaSalle?
Kathy Fuerst Production Manager
Jay Stone Staff Writer
Jennifer Jendrasiak News Editor

Row 2 Daryl Brown Managing Editor
Micheal Mayo Spring Technical Supervisor

Row 3 Elizabeth Jennings Style Editor
Hunter Fisher General Manager
Ed Nicklas Spring Sports Editor
John Heslin Layout Artist
Tina Maroschak Features Editor
Gordon Ipock
Randy Mews

OTHER STAFF

Cindy Pleasants Fall Sports Editor
Todd Evans Fall Production Manager
Patrick OTNeil Staff Writer
Tom Norton Spring Credit Manager
J.T. Pietrzak Director of Advertising
Geoff Hudson Circulation Manager
Ali Afrashteh Fall Credit Manager
Clay Thornton Fall Technical Supervisor
Robert Rucks Business Manager
Millie White Assistant News Editor
Mike Hammer Staff Writer
Greg Rideout Editorial Page Editor
Andrea Markello Staff Writer

The East Carolinian /37







38 /Personnel

Photos by Gary Patterson

Donna Carvana

Sparks Fly,

as the Ebony Herald and The East Carolinian
square off on the editorial pages and in a public
forum on the content and purpose of their respec-
tive publications.







The Ebony Herald

STAFF

Donna Carvana....... . Managing Editor
Ruben Ingram ........ Business Manager
David Theroith............ Sports Editor
S.L. Cherry................ Staff Writer
Donridc Waits 4s chaos ke o's Writer
Gail Monroe............. Features Editor

Teta (POO .. .~ ss sans tee nn
Shirley Williams .......... ... Art Editor
Alma Gilmore ............. Staff Writer
Horace McCormick......... Staff Writer
ENOL. sin ns on oss nemenes . Writer
Carol Davis ............ Features Writer

The Ebony Herald/39







ABOVE LEFT: Jim Ensor " Fall General Manager, RIGHT:
Greg Watkins " Spring General Manager

40 /Personnel







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Patterson

WME

STAFF

ROW 1 (left to right)

Naomi Munvyer, Karen Dunlap,
Thomas Cormier, Jill Parker,
Theresa Alston, Ken Hord,
Tommi Arnold, Lee Goldberg,
Susan Duncan

ROW 2

Gary Black, Clair McGough,
David Schehr, Musette Steck,
Sheila Moore, Bill Trenda,

Mary Lou Dingman, Stephanie Luke,
Sue LindeT, Guy Allen

ROW 3

Travis Byrd, Matt Clarke,

Debbie Gembicki, Angela Norvell,
William Tyson, Jim Ensor,

T. J. Nord, Julie Rosemond, Mark Hill
ROW 4

Greg Watkins, John Neubeck,
Lloyd Harward, Mark Barber,
Mark Lindsay, Michael Buscemi,
Steven Alt, Michael Butzgy,

Mary Denkler, Warren Baker,
Unknown Bystander

WZMBFM/41





STAFF

Ellen Moore (center)
Bill Murphy

Jamie Biggers
Dwight Touchberry

42 /Personnel

Poetry Editor
Prose Editor
Art Editor

1984

Associated
Collegiate
Press

All
American
Award

WINNERS

George McKim / Best in Show / Vicissitude?

James Lux / Ceramics / Pit Fired Basket?

Jo Pumphrey / Drawing / The Arrival?

Diane Maisel / Design / Flying Boat Four?

Christopher Palmer / Graphics / Portrait of J.C. Sacks?
John Boone/ Illustration / Optimism?

Leslie Karpinski / Mixed Media / Architectural Scrapyard?
Marty Hardin / Painting / Frog Level (an ode to)?

Joe Champagne / Photography / Untitled

Gregory Shelnutt / Sculpture / Tripid Landscape?

Cam Sloan / Prose / Random Scenes from Going Off on a
Limb One Special Night?
Malynn Linton / Poetry / Passing?





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PHOTO LAB STAFF: Left; Stanley Leary, darkroom manager,
Above; Mark Barber and Mike Smith, staff photographers, Below;
Gary Patterson, head photographer, Right; Neil Johnson, staff pho-

tographer

Patterson

Patterson

ECU Photo Lab/45





The letters and photographs that make up this work, volume sixty of the Buccaneer,
represent the people, events, changes, and landscape of the university from August 1983
thru May 1984. We hope that if you refer to the 1984 Buccaneer in years to come,
remembering this campus and the subjects that made it unique, then this yearbook will
have been a success.

You are already aware that this Buccaneer is unlike any of its past namesakes. We
wanted to make the most of what we had; expressive photography and a few choice
words. We took for granted that you knew Austin had several computers in it, that
nursing students studied chemistry, that artists use their hands, business majors their
heads, and technology students use flow-charts. And lastly, that staged photos look just
that; staged, stiff, and boring.

The format for this Buccaneer wasnTt planned this way in the summer of 1983, but
rather it evolved in the summer and fall of 1984. Given a salaried staff, a budget,
production materials, and an office, one would think that a dozen personnel could
produce a yearbook (or most of one) in a yearTs time. Yet, the 1984 staff did not.

Reasons for this abound, and make good shop talk, but nevertheless when May of
1984 came and the staff (which had drawn a yearTs salary) left for the summer, not one
page had been given to the printer, and the editor was just then designing the endsheets
and division pages. Something was wrong. What was clear, was that ECU students and
their fees had been duped.

As in 1981, the ECU Media Board was reluctant to dismiss the editor. He was given
both sessions of summer school to finish the Buccaneer, but failed to do so. With that, the
board appointed Anthony Martin as editor. Anthony had served as the associate editor
during the year. Credit and applause must be given to Anthony, for it is he who kept the
book alive this summer when some wanted to see its demise. AnthonyTs style is evident in
the pages he produced during August of 1984 (see classes) and we owe him a great debt
for cranking them out.

September came and Anthony kept his commitment to serve The East Carolinian as
business manager. The BuccaneerTs helm was passed to me. Like before, the new editor
had to finish the previous yearbook. At that time, the 1984 Buccaneer was a collection of
photographs along with a few stories (mostly sports) tucked into two boxes. From then
on, the nights were long, the sleep short, and the Buccaneer slowly evolved.

You waited two years for the 1983 Buccaneer, and we couldnTt insult you like that
again. The old format had to die if the Buc was to live on. If your name or face appears
in this book, we are glad, if not, we are sorry the camera didnTt point your way. And if
someday, years from now, you dust off the 1984 Buccaneer and it revives your memories
of ECU, then we truly have done our job. Enjoy.

Gary Patterson " Editor

46 /Personnel





Buccaneer /47







48 /Autographs







Graffiti /49







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Performances

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Huey Lewis

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ECU Symphony Orchestra/53





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04 /Performances





CAST OF CHARACTERS

Judas Iscariot Loren Watkins
Jesus of Nazareth Timothy Parker
Mary Magdalene Jeanne Resua
First Priest Jim Ensor, Jr.
Second Priest... Justin Kennedy
Caiaphas Gregory Smith
Timothy White

Third Priest Kenny Moe
Simon Zealotes ....: Aubrey Brainard Barnes
Pontius Pilate John Kuhn
Todd Ellis

Loren Mott

APOSTLES
Mark Ayres Freddie Heath
Aubrey Barnes Forrest King
John Belote Ricky Narron
Kevin Crowe Robert Ruffin
Todd Ellis Eric Scott
Jeff Hargett Loren Watkins

TORMENTORS
Valarie DiSciullo Leigh Messner
Sonja Hodges Lisa Stover

SOLDIERS
Stephen Harding Deno White
Sidney Horton Jay Zahran

HERODTS DANCERS
Mary Alexander Kay Perry
Kendra Boster Jami Wilkerson

TEMPLE DANCERS
Ann Coatney Jennifer Paulson
Leigh Messner

ENSEMBLE
Mary Alexander Kendra Boster
Ann Coatney Boyce Cutchin
Sonja Hodges Mary Huneycutt
Wanda Lynam Rene Meyer
Jennifer Paulson John Perkins
Kay Perry Laura Quisenberry
Lisa Stover Susan Tolar
Delphine Venable Tammy Visconti
Tremaine Waddell Amy West
Jami Wilkerson

PRODUCTION STAFF

Andrew Lloyd Webber
Tim Rice
Edgar Loessin Director
Mavis Ray Choreographer
Gregory Buch Set Designer
David Downing Lighting Designer
Patrice Alexander Costume Designer
Barry Shank Conductor
Scott Parker General Manager
Leonard Darby Technical Director
Donna Cooper Stage Manager
Ginger Oxendine Asst. Stage Manager
Gary Faircloth House Manager
Christie Lawrence Box Office Manager
Gary Weathersbee Shop Foreman
J AV. AION, OR. cu i ee Electrician
Sound Engineer

Asst. Sound Engineer

Lighting Control

Wardrobe Master

SET CREW
Michelle Crabtree Scott Hunter
Amanda Jones John Rose
Pam Harris Jeff Chester
Cindy Wall
Janice Sitnik Tom Rawis
Bill Trenda Michelle Mauldin
Deanna Campbell Elissa Haskell
Hal Wells Jennifer Yates

PROPS
Timothy White Kathleen Larkin
Daisy Morales Julie Zeisler
Cindy Newland Stephanie Berryman
Kim Davis Jodie Mosher

WARDROBE
Cathy Kennedy Scarlett Cox
Patty Marquis Debbie Neustadt
Lioyd Harwood Brad Beasley
Paul Brink Ingrid Wright
Linda Wollard Jessica Wood

MAKEUP

Mary Lou Dingman
Anita Chapman Doreen Christofaro
Connie Yoder Daisy Morales
Todd Ellis Patty Marquis

Musical Score

Elizabeth Kruget

Patterson

Jesus Christ Superstar/55







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56 /Performances







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Dude Lester ...........: Brian Cottle
Ppa Teter cil oo Mavis Ray
Jeoter Lester... lice es Tom Hull
LCT ale tt) 1) (-| Mary Vars
Ue hs Crisa Warren
Low Piensa i Hal Wells
Henry Peabody........ Boyce Cutchin
Sister Bessie Rice ...... Ingrid Wright
PGRN bia oo Che Jeanne Resua
Capra Pin...) . cs ecees Mike Pitts
George Payne.......:.... Alan McCoy

PRODUCTION STAFF

Edaar EOescmt. .....----.--- Director
~CT -Ye[e) gV = 10 (ee Set Designer
David Diwning. ..... Lighting Designer
Patrice Alexander. . . Costume Designer
Janice Sitnik......... Stage Manager
Julie Zeisler..... Asst. Stage Manager
Gary Weathersbee..... Shop Foreman
Peter Phillips............. Electrician
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Melissa Reed ......... rSTol0 ale Mm @re)a) (ce) i
Gary Faircloth........ lalelU MU E-lal-le(-1g
Christie Lawrence Box Office Manager
SET CREW

Joe Lewis, Jeff Chester, David Payne,
Sherrie Brewer, Barbara Barnes, Julie
Zeisler, Suzanne Menius, Alan McCoy,
Darrell Lawson, Jeff Clark, Pam Harris

PROPS
Stephanie Berryman, Timothy White, Ka-
ren Hoberg

WARDROBE

Taro F-W's"(ele)F-lxe mesh (-le)ar-lal 8 =1-108 Ut PC
ly Craig, Peter Phillips

MAKEUP
Elissa Haskell, Amy Shaffer

Photos by Gary Patterson Tobacco Road/57







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CAST OF CHARACTERS

Rene Meyer

Laura Leigh Quisenberry
Larry McDonald

Eric Tilley

PRODUCTION STAFF

Cedric Winchell

Gregory Buch

J.W. Hilton Lighting Designer
Patrice Alexander Costume Designer
Leonard Darby Technical Director
Scott Parker General Manager
Jeff Hargett Stage Manager
Claire McGough Asst. Stage Manager
Peter Phillips Electrician
Donna Cooper Lighting Asst
Laura Askew Asst. Electrician
Eric Scott Asst. Electrician
Jeff Loy Sound Engineer
Kelvin Parks Asst. Sound Engineer
Gary Faircloth House Manager
Christie Lawrence Box Office Mor

SET CREW
Ron Carrea, Cindy Wall, Jeff Chester, Freddie Heath,
Stephanie Berryman, Kevin Williamson, Keith Clark,
Leigh Messnar, Cathy Yeager, Susie Tolbert, Tammy
Visconti, Pam Harris

PROPS

Cindy Pleasants, Sonja Hodges, Janice Sitnik,
Stephanie Berryman, Timothy White, Karen Hoburg,
Pam Harris

WARDROBE
Laura Askew, Todd Ellis, Dino White, John Perkins,
Linda Woolard

MAKEUP

Fran Jones, Jina Yelton, Rita Turner

Album/61 "







Photos by Gary Patterson :

62/Performances







Et Lux Perpetua Luceat Eis

Pat Downey-Kum, . 2.02.0 .565... Oj aTe) cele] e-le)al 6

DANCERS
Tonja Brooks, Christy Garrison, Rebecca Hoover,
Terry Hudson, Carolyn Latta, Jennifer Paulson, Su-
san Tolbert, Traci Winstead

Why...

Jerome Jenkins .....33..-.-..5. Choreographer

DANCERS
Beth Alexander, Pat Downey-Kuhn, Anna Sistare,
Jami Wilkerson

Reflections
Patricia Weeks................. 1@1 alo) ¢=Yelele-le)al-18

DANCERS
Terry Hudson, Patricia Weeks

Down The River And Up The Creek

Pawwicia'Pertelion ...........:.... © ale} c-telele-le) 41-14

BAN (@i state)
Tracy Fearrington, Laurie Clauson, Bob Wright, Pa-
mela Jo Conrad, Michelle Fountian, Lynette Dorn,
Lisa Freestone, Jeffrey Hargett, Jayne Holden, Fred-
die Heath, John Perkins, Forrest King, Pam Sheffield,
Timothy White

Knots
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DANCERS
Valarie DiSciullo, Sonja Hodges, Connie Yoder, Ann
Craven, Leigh Messner, Lisa Robin Stover, Jennifer
Paulson
Crooked Sky
Patricia Weeks...... AP sf eaten ee (Of alo} g-elele-le)al-18
DANCERS
Terry Hudson, Tommi Overcash, Margaret Ogilive,

Debra Wrenn

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Jami Wilkerson, Aubrey Barnes
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Jerome Jenkins ; SP ee eA ae (©) ale) e-relele-\e)al-16

BY ANN IO} state)
Kendra Boster, Todd Ellis, Lisa Robin Stover, Jerome
Jenkins, Ernest Miller, Tommi Overcash, Kay Perry,
Gregory Smith

Dance Theatre/63





64/Performances

CAST OF CHARACTERS

LOSS apa cae cr eae Bars, FF Larry McDonald
il TOR ee AE ces Jeffery Hargett
NESS SOOONB kn oc Connie Yoder
Sor. Fa Malena bie gearanur dey G0 Ses BA Te John Kuhn
Ves OS a eee ee, Eric Sox
RMR ig eaten sre hake Jim Hindley

PRODUCTION STAFF

Ceartce Winchell... ols, Director
Mark Colvin .......... Lighting Designer
Patrice Alexander..... Costume Designer
Seale POMOre. oo CT -Tal-Te-l WV E-lar-Ve|-14
i To) a}-\co i B)-\ 40) Technical Director
Sherrie Brewer.......... Stage Manager
Manuel Cordero .... Asst. Stage Manager
Jamie Biggers........... im lolt ym \VE-lal-Ve]-14
ki ira ee ae as Electrician
Peter Phillips. .... Asst. Lighting Designer
Melissa Reed ........... Sound Engineer
Gary Weathersbee........ -Shop Foreman
SET CREW ;
Assorted Drama Students (2001 & 2002)
PROPS

Stephanie Berryman, Eddie Blue, Karen
im le)el-1¢e]

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Jennifer Cooper, Gina Baird, Debbie Schultz

MAKEUP
Paul Brink, Sonja Hodges







Patterson (2) Angel City/65





Opera Theatre Patterson (2)

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Jayne Lybrand

Huey Lewis

66 /Performances





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Charlotte Symphony Orchestra

Others /67





Rev. Jesse Jackson





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Events





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Congressman Jim Martin

College Republicans

The Race Begins

U.S. Senator Jesse Helms

Primary Elections/71





Governor Jim Hunt in Hendrix Theatre Patterson

72/Events





*SECTIONALIZING SWITCH NO.%

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PIRG fails in April referendum. Patterson

Elections /73





si | NOT NIH ie
JACKSON i" « mw IS ER FY
PRESIDENT fe gle \ Nl NORY

Patterson

74/Events





Election years always bring the opportunity for students to learn more about the economy, consolidate
their values and make new friends as well as new enemies. This year offered a chance for all of these as
many candidates with diametrically opposed political beliefs began vying for elected offices on the local, ~
state and national level.

Prior to the May 8 primaries, the North Carolina gubernatorial race offered a plethora of candidates,
many of whom attended a forum held at ECU in January.

The forum, held in Jenkins Auditorium, was the first major bipartisan gathering of N.C. gubernatorial
candidates and was dominated by the topics of employment and education.

Attending were former Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox, former state Rep. Tom Gilmore, Lt. Gov Jimmy
Green, Insurance Commissioner John Ingram and U.S. Rep. James Martin. Former ECU Chancellor
Leo Jenkins also entered the race but was unable to attend.

A student panel consisting of Dennis Kilcoyne, former president of the College Republicans; Braxton
OTNeal, a member of the North Carolina Student Legislature; Honor Board member Sylvia Bittle; Assis-
tant Student Attorney General Rick Brown; Darryl Brown, managing editor of The East Carolinian and
Herb Grady of Army ROTC, plied the candidates with questions on many issues.

- Among some of the topics were the condition of state roads and future plans for the state tobacco pro-
gram. In addition, the environmental effects of projects such as peat mining and offshore oil drilling were
also discussed. ,

Many ECU students and faculty attended the event, one of the first of its kind in the state.

Following the primary in May, the race for the U.S Senate seat held by Jesse Helms, R-N.C., heated up
as both he and his Democratic challenger Gov. James B. Hunt, Jr., won their primaries easily.

Democrat Walter Mondale and President Ronald Reagan won their partiesT presidential nominations
with Mondale beating out Sen. Gary Hart, D-Col., and Rev. Jesse Jackson.

The state gubernatorial race added a little excitement as Knox and state Attorney General Rufus Ed-
misten were forced into a runoff after the primaries. The time between the primaries and the runoff turn-
ed into a vicious battle between the two candidates.

Edmisten accused Knox of being tied to utility companies and other special interests while Knox
retailiated by buying ads saying Edmisten had failed to pay state income taxes while working in
Washington.

The battle ended June 5 with Edmisten winning the nomination over Knox by a narrow margin. The
race caused much dissention among state Democrats and resulted in Knox supporting the Republican can-
didate for governor.

Throughout the late spring and early summer, candidates began campaigning throughout the eastern
part of the state.

In April, Hunt presented his foreign policy position papers in a speech at ECUTs Hendrix Theater.

Martin visited ECU in July and discussed his plans for higher education, while both Helms and Mon-
dale made stops in Greenville.

The contrasts between the parties and their candidates became apparent through ECU student, many
of whom sported buttons for their favorite candidate or began to work on political campaigns.

Voter registration efforts became popular projects for many groups on campus, especially since Pitt
County registration laws made it difficult for students to register to vote in the county.

All in all, the election season gave students something new to think about and helped to spark many in-

teresting discussions and activities across the campus.
" Jennifer Jendrasiak

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Photos by Gary Patterson

76/Events







Army ROTC joins the Curriculum.
By Horace McCormick

Army ROTC arrived at ECU for the fall semester, giving students the opportuni-
ty to earn a 2nd lieutenant commission while completing their baccalaureate degree
program. However, plans to establish an Army ROTC detachment on campus were
initiated long before the first cadets arrived.

. The University and the Army began the process in the spring of 1982. Later
that fall, the Military Science Dept. was established within the school of Technolgoy,
when the ECU Curriculum Committee approved a set of ROTC courses to form a
minor in military science. Soon afterwards, the Army ROTC headquarters was
placed in Erwin Hall.

Recruiting efforts began to attract students from all parts of the state. The pro-
gram and scholarships offered were very appealing to the incoming cadets. Tuition
scholarships were offered on a four, three, and two year basis, and were given out
according to the quality of the applicant. Once approved, the cadet'Ts tuition, fees,
books, and supplies were paid for. In addition, a $1,000 per year subsistence grant
was given with each scholarship.

Sixty-nine students formed the initial ROTC class that fall. Ventura Cuello, who
competed with other cadets at Fort BraggTs summer ROTC camp was chosen as
the first cadet commander at ECU. Like a dorm director, Cuello was a catalyst for
meeting the cadetTs needs. Students were receptive to the new program, and by
spring the enrollment had grown to 114.

Highlighting the fall program was the annual Recondo? exercises at NCSU. Re-
condo consisted of 12 straight hours of confidence training including an obstacle
course, rope-bridging, rapelling, and the unforgettable slide for life?, ( a 40 ft. rope
drop). The events challenge and strengthen the stamina, intelligence, and confi-
dence of the recruits,

The cadetTs enthusiasm was high that cold and muddy day because the Pirate

Welcome!

football team had defeated the Wolfpack a week earlier. Hoarse chants of ECU!
... ECU!? during the day reminded the NCSU cadets of the PirateTs latest triumph.

Social needs were the basis of forming the ECU Marauders?; ROTCTs first re-
creational organization. The group holds meetings and cookouts, but their primary
activity is a self-guided strength training program. The members conduct Special
Forces and Ranger simulations along with rapelling, road marches and a stamina
building five-mile run in combat boots. Membership is open to all university stu-
dents.

The Leadership Reaction Course (LRC) was held in late February. LRC consists
of 16 simulated crisis or survival situations. The course emphasizes and demands
very quick thinking and inner confidence from the cadets.

Advanced physical training was emphasized after the spring break. Later, the
entire detachment attended the annual TAX (tatical application exercise) at Fort
Bragg. Performance of military tactics, while reacting to combat simulations. Lead-
ership, physical training, along with map reading and land navigation were the main
focus of TAX.

Community service by the department was extra important in light of the torna-
dos that roared through Pitt County that spring. In addition to the annual ROTC
Blood Drive, the cadets donated food and assistance to victims in Ayden and sur-
rounding townships.

Several transfer students who began as seniors, made up the first class of gradu-
ates. Finishing as 2nd lieutenants, the graduates were toasted at the first annual
ECU Military Ball. After a year of classes, physical training, and competitive exer-
cises, the cadets enjoyed the chance to relax, share moments, and look forward to
their military careers.

Army ROTC/77





78 /Events





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During the 56th Annual Miss America pageant former
Miss America Debra Maffet crowned Vanessa Williams
Miss America 1984. The Syracuse University junior also
won the talent competition by singing and has asperations
of becoming a musical actress. In regard to becoming the
first black Miss America titleholder, Miss Williams comment-
ed, They (the pageant judges) chose me because they
thought I could do the job.?

80 /Events

As many relieved Americans disembarked the plane fol-
lowing their evacuation from Grenada by U.S. Troops, one
medical student paused to kiss the ground at the South
Carolina Air Force Base. On October 25, 1983, 6,000 U.S.
Marines invaded the island of Grenada in order to rescue
1,000 American citizens. None of the Americans had been
allowed to leave Grenada since the brutal murders of the







pro-cuban prime minister and some of his cabinet members
by an even more fervently pro-cuban faction. In reaction to
the invasion, one U.S. medical student, Kathleen Bradley of
Los Angeles said, We didnTt know who the shots were
coming from. We didnTt know if we were going to live? The
students took cover in their rooms until help arrived. Out-
come of the fighting produced the deaths of 18 Americans,

19 Grenada civilians and 24 Cubans.

Five thousand South Koreans protested the deaths of
theKAL-Flight 007 passengers whose plane was shot down
by Soviet missles. On the morning of September 2, 1983,
the Korean Air Lines Flight 007 in route to Seoul, South
Korea was struck by two missles fired from a Russian SU-

15.

National-International/81







aircraft. Of the 330 passengers aboard the airliner, 61 were
Americans. In reaction to the incident, President Reagan condemned
the Korean-airliner massacre? in a televised speech and declared a
national day of mourning. In an attempt to explain their actions in the
shooting incident, the SovietTs changed and modified their story for six
days before admitting that they had terminated? Flight 007 because

82 /Events

the plane had strayed into Soviet airspace, and Soviet Chief of Staff
Nikolai Ogarkov insisted that the Soviet aircrafts had issued all proper
warnings before firing the two fatal shots. Ogarkov was also quoted as
saying, The termination of the intruding flight was not an accident or
an error.?

On September 16, 1982, Christian gunmen rampaged







two refugee camps in West Beirut killing hundreds of Palestinian
civilians. During the 38 hour ordeal, some 460 civilians were killed in
the Beirut Massacre. Israelis invaded Muslin West Beirut on the
pretext of preventing bloodshed after the murder of their principal
Lebanese ally. President-elect Bashir Gemayel. The Israelis then put
Christian gunmen in charge of the Subra and Shatila refugee camps,

which housed the families of evacuated Palestinian fighting men.
President Reagan declared, All people must share our outrage and
revulsion [at] the murders, which included women and children.?

Rescuers prepared to lower a U.S. Marine on a stretcher to safety
after being trapped in the wreck-

National-International/83













age of the U.S. Marine Command Post in Beirut, Lebanon. On
October 23, 1983 at 6:20 a.m. a terrorist truck loaded with TNT
rushed the barracade of the U.S. Compound and collided into a Marine
barracks. A second truck also bombed a building housing French
Troops. The terrorist truck bombings at Marine headquarters caused
the deaths of 214 servicemen.

Mishleen Abi Gharem, seventeen-year old
widow of Navy Medic Bryal L. Earle,
mourns the death of her husband who
died in the bombing of Marine
Headquarters in Beirut. The couple had
been married only six days.

In the world of sports, the Winter Olympics were celebrated in
Sarajevo, Yugoslavia this year. Scott Hamilton, the World Figure
Skating titleholder since 1980 and the fifth place competitor at the
1980 Lake Placid Olympics, walked away with the gold medal in
MenTs Figure Skating. Phil Mahre, the defending three-time World
Cup overall champion in snow skiing, went on to win the gold

National-International /85





Four-year-old Lee Woo (yawning) and seven-year-old Ahn Gi Sook from Korea arrived in the U.S.A. with President and Mrs.

Reagan. Both children will undergo corrective heart surgery for their heart ailments.

medal in the slalom downhill race. His brother, Steve Mahre, won the
silver medal in the same event.

For the first time in its 132-year history, the Australians became the
only foreign challenger to win the AmericaTs Cup. On September 26,
1983 at the 25th AmericaTs Cup Yachting Tournament, the Australian
yacht, Australia II, beat out the American boat, Liberty, in a best-of-

86 /Events

seven-series with a score of 3-4. The twelve meter Australia II, aided
by its futuristic delta-winged keel and state-of-the-art racing sails, came
from behind at 3-1 early in the race to tie the Liberty at 3-3 and win
the final day of competition. Ben Lexcen, designer of the Australia II,
said before the race, If we canTt win this time, no one can win the
bloody thing.?

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Baseball said good-bye to two excellent players this year, Boston
Redsox Carl Yastrzemski and Cincinnati Reds Johnny Bench. Boston
Redsox Carl Yastrzemski retired this season after twenty years of
playing in the league. The 44-year-old ballplayer played in two World
Series and broke Henry AaronTs alltime record of 3,298 games of big
league ball. He also was named to eighteen All-Star Games.

Yastrzemski plans to work for KahnTs & Co., marketing meat products,
not promoting them. After more than twenty years of playing, Johnny
Bench said so long to the Cincinnati Reds. The 35-year-old played
sixteen full seasonTs with the Reds and earned a .267 average, 389
homeruns, and 1,374 RBITs. Bench plans to travel, golf, fish, and enjoy
his retirement.

National-International /87







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92 /Events







cleanup.

Students have been most helpful and I really appreciate it,? said Ruth Taylor, a
local Red Cross representative. Students helped with donations of food, clothing,
shelter, and time.

Upon receiving word of the disaster, WZMB, the campus radio station, began
staying on the air 24 hours a day to broadcast public service announcements every
15 minutes to raise money for the victims. Over $1,500 worth of food and clothing
was donated to the station.

Both Sigma Nu and Lambda Chi fraternities offered shelter to the homeless.
Food donations were gathered by Sigma Nu and the Sigma Sigma Sigma sorority.

Army ROTC cadets helped the Red Cross and the community of Ayden with
food and services. In addition, the ECU football team helped unload cargo planes
and trucks bringing disaster relief from across the entire state. The players also
helped in the cleanup of debris. The campus residence halls organized teams of
student cleanup crews to assist others throughout the county.

TTd like to express my thanks to the many students and others from the universi-
ty who have volunteered their time. Everyone has been so wonderful about getting
things done,? Ms. Taylor concluded.

By the end of the spring semester, most of the damaged houses were being
reconstructed. The power was restored and the debris had been hauled away. Yet,
the memories didnTt fade in the minds of many of the victims. Reports to the Red
Cross stated that most had trouble sleeping, and the children cried every time a
thunderstorm approached.

Tornado/93





George Robert Armistead, 32, Greenville

Faye Mari Creegan, 40, Greenville

Michael Lee House, 15, Greenville

Albert Green Paramore, 61, Greenville

Pamela Hendrix Price, 32, Greenville

Nellie Jackson Riggs, 82, Ayden

Donna Lee Suggs, 28, Winterville

Carol Tripp Taylor, 42, Greenville

Jerry Talbert Worthington, 62, Ayden

94/In Memoriam







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Reaves, ROW 2; Bryan Foye, Chris Shore, James Elkins, Chuck King, Scott Perry, Sam Whitehead.
Cheerleaders /109







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110/The Marching Pirates





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WHERE'S THE

BOWL??

By Ed Nicklas

Season opener at seventh ranked Florida
State ... third down and three at the ECU 30-
yard line .. . under four minutes left in the
game ... FSU 47,.ECU 46... Ingram takes
the snap from center . . . he options right and
keeps the ball ... he cuts upfield . . . he is at
the 40, the 50, the FSU 40! . . . Ingram is
down to the FSU 32... it looks like Ingram
might go all the way . . . Ingram is hit from
behind ... Fumble! ... FSU recovers . . . final
score: FSU\47, ECU 46.

October 22 .. . 73, 943 screaming Florida
Gator fans .. . with seven minutes left in the
game, ECU is tied with sixth ranked Florida
17-17 43-yardline .. . Florida quarterback
Wayne Peace drops back to pass, fires a long
one to Ricky Wattiel . . . intercepted by Clint
Harris, his third of the game! . . . Hold
everything ... Calvin Adams is being called
for defensive inference away from the ball . . .

_ First down Florida at the ECU 40... final

Yee) (i wl Co) a (oo a OO

November 5... hot, wet Miami Orange
Bowl ... fifth ranked Miami 12, ECU 7...
last play of the game .. . ECU has the ball at
the Hurricane 40-yard line . . . Ingram is in the
shotgun ... he takes the snap . . . he looks
into the endzone .. . he heaves a hail Mary
pass into a crowd of orange and white jerseys
... Stefon Adams has it! ... Touch . . . no,

wait ... tightend Norwood Vann thought he

had it and knocked it out of AdamsT hands!
... final score: Miami 12, ECU 7.
What if? That seems to be the question

ae surrounding ECUTs 1983 football season. A

season of excitement, then suffering. A season
of high hopes, then frustration. A season that

hardly anyone expected except maybe the

players and the coaches themselves.

A few breaks here and there, in their only
three losses of the season, at the hands of top-
ten ranked Florida, Florida State, and Miami,
and the Pirates could have truly been the
Cinderella Club of 1983. Without a doubt, the
Pirates would have been ranked in the top ten
with an undefeated record, made a major
bowl appearance and perhaps competed for
the national title against Nebraska. And more
importantly, they would have brought
deserving notoriety to a school that for a long
time has been overshadowed by the Atlantic
Coast Conference schools of North Carolina.

Instead, the Pirates finished with a 8-3
mark, their best record since 1978, and were
ranked by the final Associated Press poll.
Futhermore, they recorded their tenth winning
season in twelve years, a feat unsurpassed by
any other school in North Carolina.

Still, though, no bowl invitation. With ECU
students, the athletic department, and excited
alumni pushing for any kind of post-season
appearance, the Pirates were summarily
denied the opportunity. Schools such as
Mississippi (6-5), Tennessee (7-4), Kentucky (7-
4, and whom the Pirates beat in the regular
season), Notre Dame (6-5), Oklahoma State (7-
4-1), and North Carolina (8-3, but lost three of
its last four games of a relatively easy

Footballl/117







Patterson

118 /Sports







schedule) all got bow! invitations, as the
Pirates spent the season wondering, what
if??

The three losses in the state of Florida
were at the core of ECUTs and head coach Ed
EmoryTs disappointment. In each game, ECU
was the valiant underdog, especially in the
season opener against Florida State. At
Florida State, the Pirates came into the game
having lost the previous two years by scores
of 63-7 and 56-17. But, led by quarterback
Ingram, who gave the ECU fans a taste of
beautiful things to come, by throwing for 138
yards and running for 124, the Pirates
stunned the Seminoles with a 30-27 halftime
advantage. And if Ingram was not enough to
arouse excitement in the purple-blodded
bodies of ECU, then junior college transfer
Henry Williams certainly was. Williams, the
little pepperpot, who looks as if he is going to
go crazy with anticipation if the ball does not
touch his hands soon, said take this? to the
highly favored Seminoles, returning a second
quarter punt 56 yards for a touchdown and
then taking the second half kickoff 99 yards
to give the Pirates a 37-27 advantage. I told
Coach Emory I was going to bust one,? he
said, so I busted one?

With his performance, Williams aroused
interest in the national media, as astonished
fans viewed the opening performance of the
Henry Williams Post-touchdown flip.? To
avoid a penalty, Emory asked Williams not to
do it again for the rest of the game. However,
the flip would reoccur many times during the

season.

Nevertheless, the passing of FSUTs Kelly
Lowry was the clincher. The PiratesT offense
was phenomenal in attempting to blow the
game open, but the Seminoles kept inching
closer. And in the end, when the Pirates
seemed on their way to the biggest-upset in
ECU history, a blind-sided tackle, causing
Ingram to fumble late in the game, enabled
FSU to save its skin.

ECU came into Florida game with a 5-1
record, just itching to break the top-twenty
barrier. The Pirates did everything but win.
They picked off four Wayne Peace passes (he
had only four interceptions through six
games), and their offensive ground game

Football /119





STATE

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i

Photos by Gary Patterson

ammsed 199 yards against an eighth-ranked
rushing defense that had given up only 84.3
yards per game.

However, the crowd and the officials were
to be the deciding factors in this game. Two
calls, one that nullified HarrisT fourth
interception in the closing minutes, and an off-
sides penalty against ECU on a field goal
attempt that gave Florida a first down and led
to a touchdown, hurt the upset-minded
Pirates immensely. ItTs a real challenge to
come to Gainsville, play at their homecoming,
with their fans screaming and their band
making noise,? Emory said. The only ones
pulling for the Pirates today were the Pirates
and God; Everyone else was for Florida . . ?

If the Florida and Florida State games
wounded the Pirates, then the Miami contest
killed them. Just as in previous losses, ECU
went into second half play with a small lead
and the momentum. Although Miami was
ranked fifth in the country, the Pirates did not
seem to be phased one bit.

ECU drew first blood against MiamiTs
nationally-ranked defense, as the remarkable
Ingram capped a 47-yard drive by hitting his
favorite receiver, tight-end Vann on a curlout
pattern for a 17-yard touchdown.

ECU was sitting in the catbird seat at
halftime; its defense proved that it could move
the ball against the Hurricanes, its defense
totally shut down an explosive Hurricane
offense, not letting Miami past its 47-yard line,
and it held a 7-0 lead against the number five
team in the nation. All it needed was another
intense half of play, just to maintain the
margin, and the entire nation would be saying,
How "bout that cinderella team, East
Carolina??

Well, the Pirates almost won " or at least
until five minutes left in the game, when they
had a chance to preserve victory and nullify
all past recollections of how a second half lead
had slipped away and kept them away from
that ever-so-important victory against a top-
ten opponent.

Exemplifying such rusing power-houses as
Michigan, Oklahoma, and Nebraska, the
Pirates took the ball at their own 20, with
about 10 minutes to play, and literally
knocked the much-talked-about Miami defense

Football/121







on its bee-hind. With would be All-American
guard Terry Long pulling and leading the way,
ECU moved quickly to the Miami 42. Then,
tailback Tony Baker hit a hole for 10 yards.
Fullback Earnest Byner streaked for 11. Baker
squirmed for six. It seemed that the Pirates
were going to finally win the big one " and
in a get-out-of-my-way-orlTll -run-over style.

But, with a first down at the Miami five,
the celebration soon faded. The Pirates were
stopped on three straight plays, and still
hoping that a field goal would put the
pressure on the Hurricanes, ECU kicker Jeff
Heath missed a 21 yard chipshot. The end
was near.

With 1:04 to play, the momentum changed
180 degrees. Hurricane quarterback Bernie
KosarTs touchdown put ECU in the hole 12-7,
following a key 52-yard pass play that put
Miami on the ECU 13-yard line.

The Pirates, however, did not want to face
defeat yet, as they took the ensuing kickoff to
the Miami 30-yard line on the gutsy passing of
Ingram and to the final play of the game "
the hail Mary pass. Unfortunately,
unsuccessful game-ending play was just
another element that added to the irrelevent,
what if?? conversations that would flow
through the ECU campus.

Patterson





Smith

Oh, but frustrating defeats in Florida did
not blur the vision or block memories of an
otherwise eventful, successful season. In
Raleigh, the Pirates got the Finest Victory of
All,? as the East Carolinian put it, beating
North Carolina State 22-16. To add to that,
the Pirates went to Columbia, Missouri and
kicked the Tigers around a bit, a Big Eight
school which had the year trounced ECU,
asking Where the Hell is East Carolina?? (or
Eastern Carolina, or East Carolina State, or
East Carolina Teachers College, as the case
might be).

The revelry was all there for the State
game. The mass exodus from Greenville
began Friday and proceeded through
Saturday, as ECU students, adorned in purple
and gold, proudly displayed Pirates beat
Wolfpack? signs upon arriving in the capital
city. WTBS televised the game and ranked
the Pirates in their top twenty poll after the
game " even after the Pirates had lost the
previous week to Florida State. The entire
nation witnessed the Pirates ranked in a top
twenty poll, beat an ACC school, and play
before a crowd of 57,000, the largest ever to
see a football game in the state of North
Carolina.

The composition of the game was much





OPPONENT ECU OPP

Florida State........ .. 46
| CS | ee oe ae
MURRAY STATE ..... Be 7
PHISSOUT I oes oa eee Pets
SOUTHWESTERN LOUISIANA. Bae 2
SPIER sate Va ce ee .. 24
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EAST TENNESSEE STATE .... er |
Miami (Florida).......... eh wae ae
WILLIAM & MARY...... eee eee
Southern Mississippi... . Ma Se

TOTALS 271

FINAL POLLS
Associated Press #20 Sports Illustrated #17

47
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11







different than that of the Florida Games.
What we had was an all-out rivalry, fierce
competition between schools which are
separated only by one hour and 45 minutes in
a car. What we had here were bragging rights
between students, alumni, and administrators.
And what we had here was a comeback
victory for the Pirates " this time the other
team could not maintain its lead.

As a beautiful, orangish-red sunset
descended behind the fluffy pines surrounding
Carter-Findley Stadium, the Wolfpack and
Pirates took the field, ready to show the
nationwide audience who was the meanest
team in North Carolina.

For the first three quarters, State was
presenting a good case. Led by the passing of
Tim Esposito and the running of Joe
McIntosh, the Wolfpack ammassed nerly 300
total yards against the Pirates and held a 16-7
lead. Was the Pirate defense, which gave up
47 points a week earlier, that vulnerable?

Defense or no defense, the ECU offense
decided to take the game into its own hands.
Mainly behind the running of Baker, which
included a clutch 11-yard run on a draw play,
ECU capped a 59-yard drive with Baker going
the final six to cut the State lead to 16-14
with 14:29 left in the game. After State
punted on its next possession, ECU found
itself sitting on its own 17 with time running
out. Baker right, Byner up the middle. Thirty
yards and ECU is at its own 47-yard line. First
down. ECU lines up over the ball. Who will it
be next, Baker or Byner for seven or so
yards? It will be neither. This time the
magnificient Ingram options right. It looks as
if he will pitch the ball to Baker. WhereTs the
ball? Why, Ingram has it. And he is 27 yards
upfield before he is brought down! From the
State 30, it is Byner up the middle. Tight-end
Vann on the reverse. The ball is at the State
five. Byner on the handoff " touchdown!

With 7:10 left in the game, State wasnTt
about to relenquish the bragging rights yet.
Esposito drove the Wolfpack to the ECU 22
with about three minutes left. Then, on a run
that appeared to give State a first down,
running back Mike Miller fumbled and ball-
hawk Harris recovered for ECU with 2:46 to

play.

All ECU had to do was run out the clock
with the same ground game that led to its last
touchdown. ... Byner up the middle . . .!
Fumble! State recovered on ECUTs second
play from scrimmage as Byner dove up the
middle but forgot to hang onto the ball.

With their voices rightfully hoarse, the fans
rose to their feet once again, bleeding
Wolfpack red and Pirate purple.

After the fumble, State moved to the ECU
10 yard-line where it faced a fourth and one
situation. The play seemed obvious. McIntosh,
who gained 160 for the day, was the likely
choice to get the first down. But, State head
coach Tom Reed had other ideas.

With 15 seconds remaining, Esposito
optioned left, hoping to catch the Pirates
bunched in the middle. Defensive back Chuck
Bishop was not one of those bunched up,
however, as he was the first to hit tailback
Vince Evans in the backfield, who had
received the pitch from Esposito. A seven-
yard loss, and the action had ended " at
least in regard to the football game.

A party, one comparable to those back at
ECU, took place out on the field. The players
didnTt seem to want to leave. Helmets
attached to outstretched arms were pushed

upward like pistols. Bunched up in the
endzone by the fieldhouse, raucous Pirate fans
were yelling, Hey, EC you look so good to

?

me.

The goalposts were destined to come
down. Male students clung to the goalposts.
To the ECU fans, the Pirate football team was
unconditionally the best in the state.

Indeed, the success of the State game and
of the entire season could not have been
accomplished without the development of the
heart of the ECU team " the seniors.

The talented group held a monopoly on
the starting positions, owning 13 of the 22.
Undoubtly the success of ECU depended on
the achievements of these team leaders,
barring injuries. These 13 men took the
challenge and almost propelled the Pirates to
that long-awaited dream " an undefeated
season and an invitation to a major bowl.

And that was what everyone heard from
the seniors all year. Long said that the team
would go undefeated. Emory said they would

Football /125





go to a bowl. The confidence was
overwhelming.

The seniors on the offense, which averaged
350 yards per game, were pro-prospects. Of
the bunch, which included first team All-
American Long, Ingram was perhaps the key.
An injury to Ingram, and the season would
perhaps have realistically ended. Quick, fast,
and showing improvement in his passing,
Ingram finished the season with 1,655 total
yards, third best in ECU history. His passing
yard total, 1,191, was fourth on the all-time
list. Passing or rushing, he had a hand in 13
touchdowns.

IngramTs favorite receiver in the endzone
was Vann, who brought in four touchdown
passes on only 19 catches for the season.
Vann, a frightening specimen to defenders
once he catches the ball, finished his college
experience ranked sixth on the all-time list in
career receptions with 52.

The ECU backfield was blessed with depth,
particularly at tailback, as Baker and Jimmy
Walden combined for nearly a 1,000 yards.
However, a senior Byner, was the money

back, as he rushed for 862 yards, scored four
touchdowns, and maintained a 5.0 average
per carry.

Opening the big holes were seniors John
Floyd, center, Long, guard, and John
Robertson, tackle. The offense constantly ran
to the right side over Robertson and pulled
Long from his left guard position. The result
usually was a better-than-average gain.

ECUTs opportunistic defense played
steadily for the entire season, if one excludes
the Florida State game. In certain games, the
defense gave up far too many passing yards,
but timely interceptions and fumble recoveries
bailed them out. Senior defensive back Harris
provided the momentum, leading the team
solo with 70, and many of them were
touchdown-saving tackles. Always around the
ball, Harris off four passes with three in the
Florida game to tie the school record, and
recovered six fumbles. His career interception
yardage of 360 set a new school record, the
old being held by Reggie Pickney.

Six of the eight leading tacklers on defense
were seniors. Mike Grant (111), Harris (102),

Patterson







defensive tackle Hal Stephens (87, five for
losses), defensive end Kenny Phillips (70, 6 for
losses), nose guard Gerry Rogers (64), and Jeff
Pegues (55, five for losses). Pegues led the
team with seven quarterback sacks.

Although it was a season of enlightment for
the rest of the country, the Pirates were
denied a bowl appearance they deserved to
have. But the players made some important
gains. They proved they could compete with
top-ten ranked teams, displayed before a
national audience. They proved they were the
best team in North Carolina. They brought
excitement to the game with the likes of
Kevin Ingram and Williams, who ended up
leading the nation in kickoff returns. But most
of all, they brought fan support, as ECU set
an attendance record for the East Tennessee
State game, nearly filling Ficklen Stadium with
33,767 purple bleeding fans.

Football /127







Patterson

SOCCER

PFEIFFER COLLEGE
George Mason
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN COLLEGE
UNC Charlotte
Rutgers

Monmouth College
OLD DOMINION
Campbell

ELON COLLEGE
UNC-GREENSBORO
UNC-Wilmington
USC-Spartanburg

N.C. Wesleyan
METHODIST COLLEGE
Richmond

Virginia Wesleyan
William & Mary
Christopher Newport
N.C. STATE

SCORE
0-1

128 /Sports

¥







Ds.

Patterson

Soccer /129





wn
ad
ro
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fa¥
op)
=
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[Se
rt







VOLLEYBALL
N.C. STATE
APPALACHIAN STATE
UNC Chapel Hill
N. C. State Invitational
George Mason
Clemson
Duke
Western Carolina
South Carolina Classic
UNC Charlotte
Georgia
Mississippi
VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH
Virginia Quad Tourney
Duke
Virginia
East Tennessee State
WILLIAM & MARY
N.C. State
UNC-Wilmington
Duke
UNC-Charlotte
William & Mary
UNC-CHAPEL HILL
Wake Forest Quad Tourney
West Virginia
South Carolina
Wake Forest

--c=

=~-re=

Leary (2)

Volleyball /131







132







-IWAS

By Jerryl Sears

At times during the season, the East Carolina menTs
basketball team and head coach Charlie Harrison may
have felt like they were riding into the valley of
death? that wrote of in his famous poem. The PiratesT
season came to a merciful end at the hand of William
and Mary in the first round of the ECAC-South
basketball tournament by a score of 47-32. ECU
finished the season at 4-24, the worst basketball
record in schoolTs history.

Ironically, the season started out well for the Pirate
cagers. Following a rather impressive 69-66 exhibition
triumph over the tough Yugoslavia National Team,
ECU opened their regular season campaign with back-
to-back victories against Campbell University and

COMPLETELY
MBARRASSED

Men's Basketball sets a record at 4 & 24

Christopher Newport College.

The victory over Campbell was highlighted by the
18-point performance of ECU freshman Roy Smith.
Even though the Pirates were victorious, they
struggled in the second half, nearly squandering a 13-
point halftime lead. Unfortunately, this would turn out
to become a nightmarish pattern during the course of
the season. Following the win, Coach Harrison praised
the defensive play of his team.

They all played hard, but I expect that,? said the
second year coach. If they keep playing that hard,
theyTre going to get better.?

Defense was also the key to the Bucs win over
Christopher Newport on November 30. A tenacious

Photo by Stanley Leary





Patterson

Pirate defense held the Captains scoreless for more
than 10 minutes during the second half of the
ballgame and ECU cruised to a 59-43 victory in
Minges Coliseum. The win carried the Bucs to a 2-0
record and a promising outlook for the rest of the
season. However, ECU would not win again for nearly
two months.

Not until January 25, against UNC-Wilmington,
would the Pirates chalk up another W? in the win
column. Sandwiched in between the wins against
Christopher Newport and UNC-Wilmington were 12
consecutive losses; a school record and a backbreaker
for the hopes of a successful season.

The losing streak began in Richmond against
Virginia CommonwealthTs 20th-ranked Rams. ECU
shot a dismal 24.2 percent from the floor in the second
half, making only 8 of 33 shots. VCU stretched their
seven-point halftime lead to a 31 point advantage at
the final horn. Coach Harrison called the loss an old-
fashioned butt kicking.?

Next on the schedule was a very tough Duke squad
that would eventually become one of the final 32
teams in the NCAA Tournament. The Blue Devils
streaked to a commanding 52-31 halftime bulge and
held on for a 16 point win over the Pirates. Following
the game, Coach Harrison commented on the Blue

Devils ability to score against ECU.
Duke physically took it to us inside. We did not
shy away, but we got abused in the paint (lane).?
After losing to Duke, the Bucs fell to Drexel,
Bradley, North Texas State and Boston University.
ECU then returned to Minges to face the UNC-

Charlotte 49ers. The Pirates were hoping to rebound
from their six consecutive losses against their intra-
state rival. However, after holding a slim 27-26 lead,
the 49ers pulled away in the second half and earned a
10 point win.

Next, the Pirates headed out on a three game road
trip to face Northeastern University, George Mason
University, and William and Mary. Despite a great deal
of effort, the ECU cagers could not manage a win on
the road trip and returned to Minges Coliseum
sporting a 10 game losing streak.

The Francis Marion College basketball team was in
Greenville to take on the Bucs. ECU battled the 10-4
Patriots tooth and nail, holding a three point lead with
24 seconds remaining in the contest. Disaster struck
though as Frances Marion scored in a final 16 seconds,
the game winner coming with just four seconds
remaining on the clock, handing the Pirates a
heartbreaking 50-49 loss. ECU dropped to 2-11 even
though they lead at halftime by 12 points. Once again,
the second half had become a living hell for coach
Harrison and the Bucs.

The following game, ECAC-South leader,
Richmond, roared into Greenville, expecting an easy
win. The Spiders jumped out to a 14 point advantage





a ent i he eNO ttt mi I~

with less than 14 minutes remaining in the game and
appeared to be on their way to a probable blowout.
But this time, the Pirates did not lay down and die in
the second half. At one point, the Pirates cut the
Spider lead to one point at 50-49, but Richmond held
off a determined ECU squad, settling for a 61-55
victory. After the game, Richmond head coach Dick
Tarrant praised the aggressive style of basketball that
the Pirates played against his team.

They are the most aggressive team I have seen
that has an 11 game losing streak,? Tarrant said.
They played with intensity. I know they werenTt going
to lay over and lie. ItTs not the nature of ECU or
Harrison.?

On the heels of the near upset of Richmond, the
Pirates entered the next game against UNC-
Wilmington with a single mission: put an end to the
losing streak. Freshman Derrick Battle hit both ends of
one-and-one free throw opportunity with less than a
minute to play giving the Pirates a 44-43 lead that
they never relinquished. ECU was led by sophomore
guard Curt Vanderhorst who poured in 17 points, most
of them coming on 20-25 foot jumpers. The 12 game
losing streak was over and the Bucs celebrated the
victory.

ItTs great to be on that side of the scoreboard,?
said an elated Harrison. WeTve been so close on so
many occasions. You would have thought they won the
national championship.?

The victory celebration did not last long, though.
The Pirates lost the next two games to James Madison
and Navy. The Navy game could have been looked at
as a microcosm of the entire ECU basketball season.
Holding a 28-26 halftime lead on the MidshipmenTs
home court, the Bucs stumbled and then fell flat on
their faces in the second half. Navy, led by Vernon
ButlerTs 26 points, shot 88 percent from the floor after
intermission on their way to a 79-61 thrashing of ECU.

Bewildered and beleaguered, ECU returned to the
sometimes friendly confines of Minges Coliseum with
the difficult task of trying to stop a very talented, 15-
3, George Mason squad. The Pirates were up to the
task and pulled off their most important and
impressive win of the season.

Keith Sledge, a freshman from Roanoke Rapids,
nailed a jump shot from inside the foul circle with two
seconds remaining in the game to lift ECU to a
stunning 70-68 win. The Bucs were led in scoring by
another freshman, William Grady. Grady scored 15
points, but in the end, it was SledgeTs jumper that
meant victory.

Keith just took it on himself,? said Coach Harrison
after the game. It was just someone who had the guts
to take it on himself.?

The Pirates looked to add to their win total after
the upset of George Mason. Nine games remained in
the season and new hope had been instilled in the

program.

However, the Pirates were flat against their next
opponent, Eastern Illinois, and were crushed 78-58 by
the Panthers. The ECU cagers never recovered from
the drubbing and suffered through an excrutiatingly
disappointing remainder of the season.

A three point loss to Western Illinois was followed
closely by a conference loss to William and MaryTs
Indians. ECU actually led the Indians at the half, but
fell apart in the second half. Although hotshooting

MenTs Basketball/135







a

Ro.

Patterson








Leary

guard Vanderhorst picked the William and Mary
defense apart for a season high 29 points, Coach
Harrison felt that the deciding factor behind the Bucs
loss was a total breakdown in guard play.?

Howard University invaded Minges next and the
game looked almost like a carbon-copy of the William
and Mary contest. The Pirates led at halftime due
mainly to 60 percent shooting and excellent defensive
play. Unfortunately, the Pirates had to play the second
half greatly diminishing any chance of victory. ECU
shot a paltry 26 percent from the floor after
intermission and the Bisons took advantage of several
Pirate mental lapses to win 71-57.

After losing to Richmond by 10 points, ECU faced
Navy and lost their 20th game of the year. Like a
scratched record, the Bucs led at halftime, only to be
outscored 22-2 at the outset of the second half,
eventually losing by a 66-56 score. A disgruntled
Coach Harrison lashed out at the officials who called
the game, after the loss.

ITve already filled out the rating cards before the
game,? he said. You donTt win a ballgame when they
shot 40 freethrows.? ECU was whistled for 32 fouls
during the contest, while Navy was only called for 19
fouls.

The Pirates suffered their most humiliating loss of
the season in the next game. UNC-Wilmington, a team
that ECU defeated earlier in the season, destroyed the
Pirates 70-47.

I was completely embarrassed,? said Harrison
after the 23 point shellacking. My sincere apologies
to my coaches and my fans as ITve got to shoulder
something like this.?

ECU finished out the regular season at 4-23 after
losing to Campbell in overtime and falling to James
Madison in the finale at Minges. With a 1-9 conference
record, the Bucs entered the ECAC-South Tournament
seeded last and faced William and Mary in the first
round action.

Defensively, the Pirate cagers played excellently,
but the offensive aspect of the ECU game was a total
disaster. A 21 percent second half shooting
performance led to the demise of the Pirates. ECU
could only manage 15 points as a team in the second
half of the game. The result: a season ending 47-32
loss to the Indians. After the final loss, Coach Harrison
reflected back on the effort that his players displayed
throughout the season.

I canTt say enough for our kids. | would have to
say that since October 15, we have had no more than
four practices that were without effort.?

Obviously, the menTs basketball team had a
disastrous season. For the year, ECU set several school
records, including: most losses in a season (24), longest
losing streak (12), and worst won-loss percentage for a
season (.143). However, the Pirates did play a rather
tough schedule. Four teams that the Bucs faced (VCU,

Men's Basketball /137





Duke, Richmond, and Northeastern) received bids to
the NCAA tournament and many of the other teams
on the ECU schedule had excellent records. In fact,
the teams that ECU faced had an overall winning
percentage of 60 percent.

Individually, the Pirates did have some bright spots.
Curt Vanderhorst proved to be a pleasant surprise for
Coach and his staff. Vanderhorst led the Bucs in
scoring at an 11.6 point per game clip. According to
Harrison, Vanderhorst has developed an excellent
game.? Freshman William Grady, Derrick Battle, Roy
Smith, and Keith Sledge all made major contributions
to the ECU basketball season. In his final season,
senior Tony Robinson averaged 6.7 points per contest.
Robinson and Herb Gilchrist were the only seniors on
the 1983-84 squad.

Coach Harrison pointed to the youth of the team as
a possibility for the lack of success. For most of the
season, ECU started three freshmen, a sophomore,
and a senior. The freshmen contributed a lot to the
team, but their lack of experience also may have hurt
the team.

We need to be stronger physically and mentally if
we are going to be competitive at our level of play,?
explained Harrison. We were well-prepared and had
good effort, but we just didnTt adjust to the
adjustments that the other teams made at halftime.? In
14 games, the Pirates led or were tied at the half, only
to falter in the second half.

Harrison also reflected on the lack of student
support after the season. The students need to take
pride in their school,? said the 34-year-old Scotland
Neck, N.C. native. I believe that this school has
grown up so fast that the students havenTt developed a
basic pride in the school.?

The menTs basketball season was a great
disappointment to the players, coaches,and fans alike.
However, the season was also a great learning
experience for the young Pirate players. The freshmen
who were thrown to the lions? during their first
college season should improve greatly with a year of
play under their belts.

138 /Sports







Patterson

MenTs Basketball /139





Patterson

140 /Sports





END OF AN

Coach Cathy Andruzzi
leaves the Lady Pirates
with a 115-66 record
and their first ECAC-
South championship.

By Jerryl Sears

The East Carolina University
womenTs basketball team saved
their best for last, capturing the
ECAC-South womenTs tournament
championship with two convincing
wins. Although the Lady Pirates
entered the tournament at 11-16,
they thrashed conference
opponents George Mason, and
Richmond by 27 and 15 points
respectively, thus clinching the first-
ever ECAC-South womenTs
tournamnent title. Cathy Andruzzi,
head coach of the Lady Bucs, was
elated with her teamTs performance
in the post-season tournament.

ItTs a great honor for East
Carolina to win the first conference
title,? said Andruzzi. In both
games, defense and controlling the
tempo of the game was the key
elements. Andruzzi went on to
comment on the ECU Lady cagers
defensive play.

We have always been
characterized as being a scrappy,
defensive team . . . this yearTs
teams defensive performance was,

without question, excellent.?

The season started off on a
good note, with the Lady Pirates
staving off a late rally to defeat
George Washington University 64-
57. ECU's lone senior, Darlene
Hedges, paced a balanced scoring
attack with 10 points, but the
player of the game had to be the
Lady Colonials Kas Allen. She
poured in 37 points, but received
little offensive help from her
teammates. Following the initial win
of the season, ECU headed out on
a tough three-game road trip.

In Jersey City, New Jersey, the
Lady Pirates lost to St. Peters by a
whopping 25-point margin.
However, ECU rebounded against
their next opponent, Iona, to
record a 51-39 road win. Although
the Lady Bucs trailed by four
midway through the second half,
they registered an 18-2 scoring
explo~~~ ° wn the stretch to hand
Iona its first loss of the young
season.

ECU lost the next two games by

11 points to Fayetteville State and
by six points to UNC-Charlotte.
The Lady Bucs let a 14 point first
half lead slip away during the
contest with the 49ers. Coach
Andruzzi was at no loss for words
after the bitter loss.

Patterson
We played a terrible basketball
game,? said the fiery coach.
Thirty-six turnovers is
U Gare 1 een 6 ie 35S
Halfway through the next game,
it looked as if the Lady Pirates
would suffer their third consecutive

loss. ECU trailed league opponent

James Madison by eight points at
the intermission, but the Pirate
women blew the Dukes away in the
second half on the way to a 57-47
triumph. A happy Andruzzi praised
her team after the win.

We were all pleased with the
win, in that it was our first in the
ECAC-South. But more importantly
was the way we came back.?

Entering the eleventh game of
the season, the Lady Bucs were at
.500 percent, 5-5. However, Notre
Dame pounded the ECU womenTs
squad by a score of 66-50, and the
Pirates slipped below the .500
mark.

With a three game losing streak
on their shoulders, (including losses
to in-state rivals UNC-Chapel Hill
and N.C. State) the ECU Lady
cagers squared off against a tough
Farleigh Dickinson ball team.

Late in the first half the Lady
Bucs trailed by 12 points, but
managed to whittle the lead down
to five by halftime. Darlene Hedges
played extremely well for ECU,

WomenTs Basketball /141

Patterson





pouring in 23 points and pulling
down 14 rebounds, as she helped
her team pull away from the Lady
Knights in the second half. ECU
won 67-58 and Coach Andruzzi
lauded the play of her senior
center.

Darlene played the best game
of her career,? Andruzzi said. She
was the gameTs leading scorer and
rebounder and just did a great job
overall.? The ECU women were
back at .500, sporting a 6-6
record.

George Mason was no contest
for the Lady Bucs in the next
game. Sophomore Sylvia Bragg
poured in a game-high 20 points as
ECU pounded the helpless Patriots
68-50 in Minges Coliseum.

The next contest proved to be a
heart-breaker for Coach Andruzzi
and the Lady cagers. Looking for
their third consecutive win, the
Lady Pirates rallied ferociously
against UNC-Wilmington, only to
come up one point short. A missed
Pirate shot with eight seconds
remaining in the game enabled the
Lady Seahawks to squeeze out a
hard-fought 61-60 win.

A disappointed ECU squad then
headed out on a four game road
trip with the first stop scheduled
for Charlotte. The Lady Pirates
encountered an extremely talented
and fired up UNC-Charlotte club
and lost in a blowout by the score
of 65-39. Sophomore Lisa
Squirewell was the only ECU
player to score in double figures,
tallying 12 points.

Although ECU whipped

142 /Sports

Appalachian State in the next
game, the four game road trip was
less than a success. The Lady
Pirates lost to South Carolina and
William and Mary. The William and
Mary loss was the first blemish on
the Lady BucsT conference record.
ECU was now 8-10 with a 2-1
conference record.

The Lady Pirates returned to
the familiar surroundings of Minges
Coliseum to take on their next
opponent, East Tennessee State.
ETSU, led by 6T5? center Tammy
LarkeyTs 23 points, cruised by a
tired Pirate squad.

Atlantic Coast Conference foe,
Georgia Tech invaded Minges the
next day looking to add to ECU's
three game losing streak. The
game was extremely close and
when the buzzer sounded at the
end of regulation time, both teams
were knotted at 50. The Lady
Bucs drew first blood in the
overtime period when Hedges hit
both ends of a one-and-one free
throw opportunity. (Eventually,
Hedges would establish a new
season free throw record by
connecting on 89.2 percent of her
shots from the charity stripe.) ECU

never relinquished the lead to the
Yellow Jacket squad, hitting 7 of 8
free throws in the overtime period,
pulling out a hard-fought 61-56
home court victory.

The Lady Pirates were pitted
against highly ranked Old
Dominion in their next contest.
Unfortunately, ODU was just too
awesome for ECU to handle. The
Monarchs crushed the Pirates by
25 points.

Displaying a great deal of
charisma, the Lady Pirates shook
off the effects of the drubbing in
the previous game and defeated
American University by 10 points.
The road win showcased the
tenacity with which the ECU
womenTs team approached each
game.

Following a four point loss to
George Mason, ECU began play in
the Converse Lady Pirate Classic.
The four team field consisted of
14th ranked Cheyney State,
Marshall, Fairfield, and ECU.

The Lady Pirates suffered a 10
point loss to Marshall in the first
round of play. Although sophomore
Delphine Mabry scored 22 points
for ECU, it simply wasnTt enough.

ECU looked to bounce back the
following night against Fairfield in
the consolation game. In overtime,
the Lady Bucs gave up a three
point lead with less than two
minutes remaining in the contest
and a disheartened ECU squad lost
58-56, finishing last in the
tournament. Cheyney State
eventually won the tournament,
but even so, Coach Andruzzi





Patterson

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Patterson
praised the play of her team.

T was very pleased with our
performance. The girls played with
heart and intensity and never gave
up,? she said.

Only two games remained in the
regular season and ECAC-South
play was just around the corner.
Once again, ECU had lost three -
consecutive games and the much-
needed momentum that all teams
desire going into tournament play
appeared to be missing.

The Lady Pirates took out their
frustrations on their next opponent,
Richmond. Bragg and Mabry
combined for 34 points to lead
ECU past the Lady Spiders.

In the final regular season game,
the University of South Carolina
traveled to Minges to face the
Lady Pirates. The Gamecocks
dominated the game, with five of

144/Sports

10

11

12

13

14

15

Patterson

17

18

21

22

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23

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their players scoring in double
figures. At times, ECU trailed by as
many as 23 points, but managed to
narrow the lead to nine at the final
buzzer.

At 11-16, the Lady Bucs,
hungry for more victories, eyed the
first-ever ECAC-South tournament
anxiously. Greenville was the site
for the tournament, so ECU would
have the advantage of playing on
their home court.

The Lady Pirates faced George
Mason in the semi-finals of the
tournament after receiving a first
round bye. During the regular
season, ECU split two games with
the Patriots, winning in Minges and
losing at George MasonTs home
court. This time, however, the
George Mason squad could not
hold a candle to the Lady Pirates.
| AGLO NS coy ta Xe Molel an come Moroynvent-varel tere,
36-21 halftime margin and never
looked back. The second half was
more of the same as the Lady Bucs
crushed the Patriots 68-41 and
advanced to the tournament finals.

Richmond, a 11 point winner
over James Madison, opposed ECU
in the championship game. Both
teams played well during the first
half and at the intermission the
Lady Bucs led Richmond by only
one point. However, in the second
half, ECU pulled away from the
Lady Spiders. Freshman Jody
Rodriguez came off of the bench
and scored 17 points to pace
ECUTs scoring attack. The Lady
cagers crusied to a 54-39 triumph
and the tournament championship.

With only one senior graduating
from the squad, the Lady Pirates
look to be tough during the 1984-
85 season. The top three scorers
Co) am = OL OMS -1 «BE | Xe) 9) Xe) 0010) 9
Sylvia Bragg led the Pirates in
scoring at a 13.4 points per game
clip. Delphine Mabry also averaged
in double figures, finishing out the
season with a 10.4 scoring
average. Lisa Squirewell, although
slowed by injuries at the end of the
season, was third leading scorer for
the Lady Bucs. She averaged 9.1
points per game and a team-high
6.6 rebounds per contest.

Smith

WomenTs Basketball /145













SWIMMING SCORE SCORE
(men) (women)

N.C. STATE 35-78 36-75
Old Dominion 82-31 57-56
Georgia Southern 74-34 52-61
South Florida 73-40 60-53
Johns Hopkins N/A. N/A
NAVY 35-78 95-47
UNC-WILMINGTON 65-48 72-41
UNC-CHAPEL HILL 32-81 23-88
Richmond 60-50 65-46
James Madison N/A 61-51
UNC-CHARLOTTE 71-14 66-25
Duke 65-48 70-43
South Carolina 32-56 N/A
WILLIAM & MARY N/A 66-74

Patterson (4)

Swimming /147





148 /Sports





Patterson (2)

Swimming & Diving/149







150/Sports







Patterson (4)

Golf/151





152 /Sports







GOLF
FALL
Methodist College Invit.
N.C. State Invitational
James Madison Invit.
Duke Invitational
Campbell Invitational
SPRING
Hilton Head Invitational
Palmetto Classic
lron Duke Invitational
Furman University Invit.
UNC-Chapel Hill Invit.
Old Dominion Invit.

SCORE

601
923
625
923
N/A

923

PLACE

2nd of 21
8th of 11
10th of 11
16th of 24
7th of 12

10th of 18
14th of 18
19th of 24
15th of 21
10th of 12

3rd of 8

Patterson (2)







154/Sports







Smith (3)

Track/155







sina
Patterson (3)

156 /Sports







Track /157







WOMENTS TENNIS

FALL
UNC-Greensboro
Atlantic Christian
Davidson
UNC-Charlotte
Peace College

SPRING
N.C. State
Atlantic Christian
UNC-Wilmington
Peace
Univ. of Mass " Amherst
UNC-Greensboro
Old Dominion
Harvard B Team
Davidson
Guilford
Duke Club Team
UNC-Charlotte

158 /Sports







Patterson (3)

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MENTS TENNIS

FALL
UNC-Wilmington
Campbell
Coastal Carolina
Campbell
East Tennessee
Radford
James Madison
Atlantic Christian
High Point
Campbell
Citadel
Frances Marion

SPRING

Mount Olive

George Washington

Old Dominion

Pfeiffer

N.C. State

Campbell

Virginia Commonwealth

Harvard B. Team

UNC-Wilmington

Guilford

Atlantic Christian

Pfeiffer

Pembroke

UNC-Wilmington Tourney
Guilford
UNC-Wilmington
South Carolina State

Campbell

Towson

Patterson (3)

160/Sports





MenTs Tennis/161







sa ae

os ee, ie: sad Pinnb ony

162/Sports





HOW SWEET IT IS...

The Pirate Baseball Team turns up the
heat by beating UNC and finishing in the
top twenty.

By Ed Nicklas

Coming off a disappointing 21-17 record
in 1983, the baseball team did not beam
extreme optimism. It concluded the season
with its worst team ERA in Head Coach Hal
BairdTs tenure. Two out of the previous three
years the Pirates had sealed an NCAA
playoff bid, and now, in 1984, they were
approaching spring training without the same
notoriety as before. And to top it off, the
infield and pitching staff would be very
young and the outfield unsettled. What could
one expect from this team?

Baird expressed caution at the beginning
of the season. I think really it is just going to
depend upon how quickly these kids are
going to adjust,? he said. TheyTre going to
be good, there is no doubt in my mind. But
whether it is going to be this year or not
remains to be seen.?

Three months later, BairdTs question was
answered: The Priates had just been ousted
by South Alabama 18-2 in the NCAA South
Regions finals, but it was the farthest an
ECU baseball team had ever gone. Baird was
right: The team was superb. It was just
perhaps sooner than expected.

Early in the season, the Pirates wasted
little time in proving to Baird what they could
do. Behind the right-handed pitching of walk-
on Jim Peterson, all-world Winfred Johnson,
and senior lefty Robby McClanahan, ECU
raced to a 15-5 record before it met its first
legimate challenge " the fourth-ranked
North Carolina Tar Heels.

The loss in T83 to the Tar Heels, 9-1,
exemplified ECUTs frustrating season. This
year, however, the PiratesT 6-4 victory stood
for something else. It showed Baird that, hey,
maybe these men are progressing faster than
he thought.

Against the Tar Heels, gusty hurler
Peterson, using pinpoint accuracy and a
sharp-breaking curve ball, went the distance
to win his fifth game without a loss, as the
Pirates overcame a 2-0 fifth-inning deficit on
three-two run homers by centerfielder Mark
Shank first baseman Johnson, and shortstop
Greg Hardison. ITd be lying if I said it (the

Photos by Gary Patterson

victory) wasnTt nice,? Baird rejoiced after the
game.

The Pirates kept streaking. Peterson and
McClanahan continued winning, and Johnson
habitually sent long blasts over the fence.
Freshman second baseman Steve Sides,
displaying wide range on defense, came up
with some brilliant plays. Sophomore
Hardison showed he could fill the shoes of
graduated Kelly Robinette in the field plus
more, as he led the team in hits, doubles,
triples, and runs scored while hitting over
.300. Senior Shank alternated with hard-
nosed walk-on Chris Bradberry in center to
emulate BaltimoreTs successful tandem of
Roenicke /Lowenstein. Co-captain and third
baseman David Wells had a below par year,
but sidekick leftfielder/first baseman Todd
Evans returned to his record hitting
performance of 1982. Finally, with senior
rightfielder Mike Williams hitting way above
his 1983 clip and catcher Jim Riley providing
timely hits, the Pirates were well on their
way to an NCAA bid.

As it turned out, however, a bid was never
offered despite a magnificent 28-10 regular
season and victories over Goliaths UNC,
Northwestern, James Madison, and a near

victory over N. C. State.

So the BucTs future was still uncertain.
They would compete in the double-
elimination ECAC South tournament, with
the winner getting an automatic bid to the
NCAA playoffs. Their chances were good but
it would not be a cake walk " the Pirates
had to face defending champion James
Madison on its home field. Having beaten the
Dukes twice during the regular season, the
odds were in favor of sweet revenge on the
part of the Dukes.

After losing the first game to Georgetown
in the tournament, the Pirates had their
backs to the wall. Next up was fiery James
Madison. The Bucs clobbered Tem. Then
came Georgetown again. And the Hoyas fell,
which set up the game of the century "
ECU versus JMU in the championship.

It wasnTt even close. Williams knocked in
four runs and Johnson pitched a complete
game, as ECU won 9-5. The Bucs were high-
fiving their way to Tallahassee.

Reality finally set in, Tallahassee, Florida.
The NCAA playoffs! My God, four games
away from the college World Series! With
two All-Americans, a walk-on leading the
pitching, and first-year starters at catcher,

Baseball/163







Patterson





shortstop, second base, and centerfield, the
strength up the middle,? the Pirates were
inching even closer to the national spotlight
and Johnson to coast-to-coast fame.

Seeded last in the region, ECU soon
earned the nickname Cinderella. The Pirates
opened the tournament on Thursday with a
heart-stopping 5-4 win over top-seeded
South Alabama. They did it in Cinderalla
style, too, as Johnson drove in Hardison from
second in the ninth inning. Hardison ran right
by third base coach Gary OvertonTs signal to
stop " the Bucs had nothing to loose.

Friday, the Winfred Johnson show

continued, and this time it was against
established power Florida State. Johnson did
everything for the Pirates, pitching his third
consecutive and complete game in post-
season play and knocking a grandslam
homer to power ECU to a 7-4 victory.

Then came SaturdayTs game against
Miami, which was the turning point in the
tournament. Having already thrown his top
two pitchers, Peterson and Johnson, Baird
went to 1983 star Bob Davidson, who pitched
very little during the season after coming off
orthoscopic surgery in December. Davidson
started out well, and ECU held a 3-1

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Leary
lead going into the fourth inning, but the
Hurricanes errupted and took a 4-3 lead.
The final score: 6-4.

The loss let all the smoke out of the
Pirates or so it seemed, as they were
trounched 18-2 by the South Alabama team
that the Pirates beat in the first round.
McClanahan started for ECU but he did not
duplicate his highly successful regular season
performance. He pitched only one complete
inning and it was all uphill after that for the
Bucs.

The lone bright spot was Johnson, who hit
his third homer and raised his average to

Baseball /165





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166/Sports







.444 to earn himself a spot on the all-
tournament team.

Well, with the record-setting season over,
the Pirates had some things to consider for
the next season:

They were ranked 20th in the final
Collegiate Baseball Poll;

Their 34 wins tied the school record;

The NCAA semi-finals was the farthest

ECU had ever gone;

The strength up the middle? will be
back;

Johnson, the ECU record-holder for career
homeruns, will wear a Pirate uniform for two
more years.

So what does this make the Pirates ripe
for in 1985? Why, the effect of a revolution
of rising expectations,? of course.

Baseball /167













SOFTBALL

Penn State

Penn State

Penn State

Ithaca College

Francis Marion

Francis Marion

George Mason

George Mason

Averette College 8-0
Averette College 2-0
Newberry College 10-1
Newbrry College 5-2
UNC-Chapel Hill 0-6
UNC-Chapel Hill 2-1
Francis Marion 2-1
Francis Marion 0-2
Florida State 0-2
Florida State 0-3
UNC-Chapel Hill 3-5
UNC-Chapel Hill 0-4

Temple

LaSalle
Townsend State
George Mason
VCU
UNC-Chapel Hill
LaSalle

Temple
Charleston

Ohio State
Winthrop
Virginia

Virginia

Virginia

VCU

VCU

Penn State
Virginia

Liberty Baptist
UNC-Chapel Hill

Softball /169





Patterson

170/Sports







Patterson (3)

Softball /171







EE AR RE ya TOTS a ON

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4

TEAM CHAMPIONS

ACTIVITY TEAM

Almost Anything Goes Little Rascals
Basketball (5 players) Enforcers

keg aaTs Wesley Wombats

Third Regiment

Wayne Barrow, Nancy Mize

Roller Hockey Night Cruisers
aes Anes sok nck sun scackepgaete cele Mixed Sticks
Tennis Doubles Mark Brunetz, Pam Stevens
Volleyball Enforcers





Other Sports/173





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Almost Anything Goes





&~
Patterson

1984 INTRAMURAL CHAMPIONS

EVENT

ARM WRESTLING

Reggie McDonald
Chuck Northcutt
Chris Kelly

BASKETBALL

Pre Season Heartbreakers

Enforcers
1 on 1 (6'1T) Greg Richardson
1 on 1 (6'1T) Ed Clark

FIFTY MILE BIKE RACE Kappa Sigma A?
Power House
Trent Rackley
Power House
Trent Rackley

BOWLING
High Game
High Series
High Average

CROSS CAMPUS RUN
2.5 miles Jeffrey McLean
5.0 mile Bill White

Third Regiment
Greg Richardson

FLAG FOOTBALL
FREE THROW CONTEST

GOLF
Team (tie) Garrett A / Kappa Sigma
Medalist Stephen LaRoque
HOME RUN DERBY Anthony Willis
PUNT, PASS & KICK Floyd Oakley
PUTT-PUTT
PeopleTs Choice
David Strickland

RACQUETBALL

Doubles Wayne Barrow / James Hunt

Singles A
Singles B David Bronson

Sensation

SOFTBALL
Pre Season
Regular Season

SWIMMING Delta Sigma Phi

TEAM HANDBALL Kappa Sigma

TENNIS
Jeff Fecho / Kevin Burke

Singles A Kevin Burke
Singles B Thomas Rogerson
VIDEO GAME TOURNAMENT Paul Chambers

VOLLEYBALL Third Regiment

Patterson

WOMEN

Laura Quisenberry
Lori Green

Enforcers

Jones

Always Ready

J.M. Livingston
Phi Tau Lil Sisters
Lucky Strikers
Jackie Hall

Lucky Strikers
Jackie Hall

Donna Robertson
Ellen Bond
Heartbreakers
Kim Halsauer

Tyler Pros

Lisa Rohletter

Donna Creech

Umstead Jockettes
Leslie Bunn

Umstead Jockettes
Tyler Enforcers
Eliminators

Jarvis

Heartbreakers

Rose Saurenman

SPE Lil Sisters

Intramural /175







be oo V//F ' -
ween "" i. "_
"" - ? " « OGTR = ==" "_
fo. 3 ". "s " _

176







OTT a5







Graduates

WHEELS OF THE future keep on turning for those who contin-
ue to travel the path of success. But students will always remem-
ber the classes, studying, the parties, and the friends that were a
part of ECU.

178 Graduates





Victor Russell Barnes, Jacksonville
Biology

Jane Gibbs Baskerville, New Bern
Health and Physical Education

Beth C. Cummings Bowman, Greenville
Painting

Ginger L. Cummings, Macclesfield
Elementary Education

dune Ann Fulcher, Marshallberg
Early Childhood

Van Martin Henderson, Washington
Community Health

Thomas A. Jones, Summit
Rehabilitation

Laurie Jean Lamm, Nashville
Education Administration

Paige Suzanne Levey, Greenville

Math

Robert Edward Martin, Greenville

Public Administration

Anna Maria Matthews, Grimesland
Sociology

Catherine Lynn Murenslay, Springfield, Va.
Psychology

Clifton Wade Parrish, Deep Run
I/O Psychology

Pamela Jeanne Prevette, Greenville
Biology

Thomas Richard Rabon, Chadbourn
Psychology

dill Britton Scercy, Greenville

P. Ronald Scery, Greenville
Education Administration

Cynthis Janelle Sims, Castle Hayne
SLAP

Stuart Conrad Sloan, Jacksonville
English

Julia Naomi Sumner, Greenville

Norman Barry Tart, Kinston
Industrial Technology

Joel Cannon Waters, Plymouth
Political Science

William Henry Yarborough, Louisburg
Business

Graduates/Barnes-Yarborough 179





Jonathan Abbott, Mount Airy
Faisal Abdul-Rahman, Kuwait
Sherie Adams, Benson
Jennifer Agge, Greenville
James Albright, Winston-Salem

James Aldridge, Pink Hill
Cheryl Allen, Newport
Ginger Allen, Chesapeake, VA
Randy Allen, Greenville

Russ Allen, Winston-Salem

Marvin Alligood, Washington
Theresa Alston, Warrenton
Jeffrey Amick, Julian

Alan Andrade, Rosell Park, NJ
Sharon Armstrong, Middlesex

Kellie Ashley, Fairmont
Eleanor Avery, Greenville
Julianne Babson, Greenville
Phyllis Bailey, Henderson
Malda Baines, Rocky Mount

Brant Baker, Raleigh

Lisa Baldi, Hazlet, NJ

Edith Barefoot, Benson

Allison Barkley, Southern Pines
Natalie Barnes, Rocky Mount

Ronald Barnes, Lucama
Lois Barrett, Greenville
Vickie Bartlett, Stantonsburg
Julie Bassett, McLean, VA
Belinda Battle, Rocky Mount

Irvin Belamy, Rocky Mount
Teresa Bennett, Rocky Mount
Mildred Benton, Garland
Jack Beverly, Red Springs
Sylvia Bittle, Charlotte

180 Seniors /Abbott-Bittle





Karen Blalock, Greenville
Lynette Blalock, Durham
Robin Bland, Durham
Brenda Bogart, Danville, VA
Jo Ann Bogue, Freemont

Gail Boothe, Elizabeth City
Ginger Boswell, Burlington
Nancy Bowman, Raleigh
Charlene Boyd, Greenville
Patricia Boyd, Walnut Cove

Kelly Bradshaw, South Boston, VA
Tracy Branham, Halifax

Sheila Brickhouse, Columbia
Michael Bright, Donners Grove, IL
E. Denise Briggs, Graham

Sherry Brock, Kinston
Katherine Brooks, Polkton
Erskin Brothers, Elizabeth City
Christopher Brown, Clinton
Monica Brown, Greenville

Phillip Brown, Rockingham
Rhonda Brown, Stanley
Tynetta Brown, Rocky Mount
Karen Bryant, Tarboro
Wayne Bryant, Robbins

Seniors

A NEW course offered in the library was advanced sleeping.
The need for this course arose after students were observed
taking those study breaks to catch a few winks.

Seniors/Blalock-Bryant 181







Behind bars

WHENEVER ANYTHING is happening outside the dorms,
people are going to be watching. These students stand behind

the balcony bars of Jarvis Dorm with camera in hand to catch
and capture any memorable moment.

IVF IES

Fiver

182 Seniors







Sheila Bullock, Raleigh
Dona Bunch, Greenville
Roberta Burgess, Washington

Sharon Burke, Virginia Beach, VA
Mary Butt, Charleston, SC
Michael Butzgy, Greenville

Dierdre Bynem, Batesburg, SC
Elizabeth Byrd, Ocean Island
Molly Byrd, Trenton

Suzanne Byrd, Hildebran
Patricia Calfee, Macclesfield
Deanna Campbell, Falls Church, VA

Merton Canady, Greenville
Anthony Carmichael, Roxboro
Marie Carter, Goldsboro

Robin Cartrette, Chadbourn
Anthony Carvana, Greenville
Donna Carvana, Burlington

Susan Castro, Harkers Island
Bryan Cates, Greenville
Lynn Cecconi, Lumberton

Patterson

Seniors /Bullock-Cecconi 183





Stevie Cherry, Greenville
Joseph Clark, Coldsboro
Debbie Clay, Wilson

Anne Clayton, Rocky Mount
Kinberly Coats, Winston-Salem
David Cobb, Denver

Deborah Coldren, Pennsville, NJ
Lisa Coleman, Kenly
Rhonda Conley, Greenville

Ernest Conner, Greenville
Taffy Conner, Alliance
Edgar Corbett, Four Oaks

Teresa Cox, Pinetown
Mary Creech, Kenly
Sherri Crigger, Belhaven

Mona Crisp, Pinetops
Ventura Cuello, San Juan, DR
Teresa Daniel, Butner

Anita Daniels, Goldsboro
Clara Darden, Walstonburg
Margo Davis, Harkers Island

184 Seniors/Cherry-Davis







Side by side

A FRIEND helping with studies is a friend indeed. Students
were often seen sitting all over campus with books in one hand
and helpful friends by their side.

Patterson

Seniors 185







Shark!

WHEN NOT STUDYING students could often be seen shar-
pening their pool skills in the Student Center. Ken Berry, a senior
accounting major from Edenton takes careful aim to become a
pool shark.

Susan Dewhirst, Greenville
Gwyn Dicus, Tabor City

Lisa Diorio, Surf City, NJ
Janet Dixon, Roanoke Rapids
Maureen Dolan, Valhalla, NY

Sylvia Donski, Ayolette
Charles Drake, Burlington
Rita Drake, Pinetops
Theresa Dulski, Charlotte
Lori Earls, Goldsboro

186 Seniors /Dewhirst-Earls







Kimberly Edwards, Fairfax, VA
Verna Edwards, Wilson

Jackie Ehrmann, Greenville
Lisa Eller, Summerfield

Robert Eller, Tarboro

Larna Ely, Castle Hayne
Theresa Ennis, Charlotte
Mary Evans, Kinston
Patricia Everton, Kinston
Michael Felder, Fayetteville

Seniors/Edwards-Felder 187





dune Ferguson, Reidville

Ella Fields, Laurenburg

John Fields, Raleigh

C. Hunter Fisher, Chapel Hill
Joan Ford, Washington

Eddyce Foskey, Merritt

Jonathan Frank, Myrtle Beach, SC
Jeanne Franke, Winterville

Nancy Franzoni, Lawrence, Nd
Michael Freeman, Fayetteville

Sara Freshwater, Morehead City
Catherine Gallimore, Ellerbe
Lloyd Gardner, Williamston

A. Lynn Garrell, Whiteville
Rebecca Garrison, Raleigh

Kim Gatlin, Bayboro

Lori Geiger, Greenville
Mike Gibson, Raleigh
David Gilliam, Graham
A. Spence Gobel, Raleigh

Armied Godwin III, Goldsboro
Terry Grant, Elizabeth City
Pamela Gravely, Springfield, VA
Elaine Gray, Creedmore

Lisa Gray, Whitsett

Sherrie Grimsley, Ayden
Charles Gunther, Greenville
Dewey Hales, Greenville
Catherine Hall, Fayetteville
Douglas Hamilton, Fairfax, VA

Edwina Hamlin, Edenton
Robert Hampton, Pilot Mountain
Sammy Hancock, Winston-Salem

Michael Hapgood, Jacksonville
Susan Harbers, Albemarle

188 Seniors /Ferguson-Harbers







£
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a

Munch, munch

BESIDES STUDYING, a favorite daily event was eating. Eat-
ing was not always as enjoyable as it should be, though. While at
the Affair on the Mall, some were forced to munch as fast as pizza
was forced in their mouths.

Seniors 189







a Set... ee

$e gM RE Fa

Be bold

AFTER LAUNDRY piles became incredibly high, students had
to take the Bold and other laundry necessities out of the closet.
Because of the high demand for the washers and dryers, stu-
dents would often be seen standing in the window of the laundry
room after dark.

David Hare, Greenville
Norma Hargrove, Calypso
Julie Harris, Statesville
Sharon Harris, Greenville
Elizabeth Hart, Greenville

190 Seniors /Hare-Hart





Penny Hartlaub, Woodbridge, VA
Karen Hartly, Princeton
Cheryl Hartman, Arlington, VA

Raymond Haukins, Raeford

Evie Henderson, Greenville

Maritza Henderson, Greenville
Michael Highsmith, Fayetteville
Deborah Hodges, Washington
Jean Hodges, Reidsville
Elizabeth Hodgson, Surf City, NJ

Gregory Holland, Greenville
Mary Hook, Kinston
Norma Hooper, Newport
Betsy Hoots, Greenville
Margaret Hoover, Snow Hill

Billie Humkie, Lillington
David Hunter, Goldsboro
Linda Ingram, Clarkton
Ruben Ingram, Laurenburg

Kenneth Inman, Greenville

Gordon Ipock, Greenville
Pamela James, Aberdeen
Pamela Jenkins, Raleigh
Wilma Jenkins, Winston-Salem

Donna Jessup, Greensboro

Alvin Jolly, Goldsboro
William Jolly Esq., Albemarle
George Jones, Mount Olive
Jennifer Jones, Plymouth
Charles Jordan, Fayetteville

Janet Joyner, Rocky Mount
Mark Joyner, Woodland
Venus Joyner, Elm City
Adel Kadamami, Greenville
Carmel Kerley, Charlotte

Seniors /Hartlaub-Kerley 191





Thomas Kies, Endicott, NY
Brian Kilcoyne, Greenville
Mary Kilpatrick, Winterville
Loria King, Washington
Ann Kinsland, Knightdale

William Kirby, Cocoa Beach, FL
Lisa Kittner, Webbn

Debra Knight, Eden

Karen Koonce, Wilmington

Cheryl Krakower, Virginia Beach, VA

Shawn Laney, Greenville

Ralph Langley, Wilkesboro

Lori Langston, Newport News, VA
Steven Lassiter, Sunbury

Candace Lawrence, Rocky Mount

Therese Leamy, Vanceboro

dames Leary, Greenville

Theresa Lee, Mayton

Tommy Lee, Reidsville

Amanda Leon-Guerrero, Springfield, VA

Lisa Letsch, Raleigh

Karen Lewis, Beaufort
Kimberly Lewis, Greenville
Dorothy Liles, Greenville
Bobby Lowery, Lumber Bridge

Ardieth Lupton, New Bern
Celia Lynch, Whiteville

Peter McConnell, Greenville
Tonda Maggard, Petersburg, VA
David Maier, Greenville

Andrea Markello, Greenville
John Masotti, New Bern
Lawrence Masotti, Greenville

Michelle Masotti, New Bern
Bryan Massey, Princeton

192 Seniors/Kies-Massey





Juanita Matthews, Grimesland
Glenn Maughan, Greenville

Robben McAdam, Essex Tells, Nd
Catherine McGriff, Charleston, W.VA
Elizabeth McKee, Clarkton

Sresry!

Gaeatedetetets|
Radatags

Patterson

Single file

WHILE MOST people pre-registered for courses, some had to
wait in line outside the Spilman Building while the clerks pulled
their file to add the amount paid for the next term.

Gordon McKellar, Southern Pines
Elinor McPherson, Elizabeth City
Jeffrey Meadows, Clemmons
Emily Meares, Newport

Lisa Measamer, Fayetteville

Seniors /Matthews-Measamer 193





Lethia Mebane, Greenville
Ellen Meekins, Elizabeth City
Carol Meeks, Jacksonville
Mary Menius, Greenville
Denise Miller, Clerain

Barbara Mires, Roanoke Rapids
Michael Miskel, Wilmington
Dwight Mitchell, Jacksonville
Williette Mizelle, Williamston
Rhonda Moore, Godwin

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194 Seniors/Mebane-Moore





Nancy Morris, Greenville
William Morrissey, Roxboro
Lesia Moss, Greensboro
Mary Moss, Williamston
Eileen Mowers, Salem, NJ

Shem Mukasa, Greenville
Virginia Neff, West Chester, PA
Jodi Nelson, Greenville

Tracy Nelson, Alexandria, VA

Jennifer Nicholas, Fayetteville

Togetherness

THE BEST place in the house for view of the entertainment
during Mall events was on the balcony of Jarvis Dorm. These
coeds enjoy the familiness of sharing the building as well as the
balcony.

Patterson

Seniors/Morris-Nicholas 195







StretchinT

STUDENTS AND aerobics seemed to go hand in hand in most
of the dorm lobbies and Memorial Gym dance room. Through the
Intraral Department, students, faculty, and staff were able to
keep in shape and stretch away those unwanted pounds.

196 Seniors





Nickie Nichols, Bethel
Stephanie Nixon, Smithfield
Tammy Nord, Shallotte
Deborah Nunn, Apex
James Oldham, Kenly

David Padilla, Fayetteville
Barbara Paquette, Fayetteville
Annie Parker, Greenville
Jama Parker, Raleigh

Sandra Parker, Fayetteville

Michael Parnell, Lumberton
Sherry Parish, Fuquay-Varina
Anna Parrott, Franklinton
dayne Pate, Pikeville

P. Steven Patterson, Greenville

Suzanne Pavco, Greensboro
Keith Pearee, Raleigh
Allyson Perkins, Charlotte
Teri Peters, Newport
Brenda Phillips, New Bern

Cathy Pierce, Clerain

Willie Pleasant, Angier
Lynnette Pollard, Garner
Cynthia Popatak, Pittsburg, PA
Rachael Pope, Raleigh

Paula Poppe, Greenville
James Porter, Plymouth
Mark Powell, Norline

Renee Powell, Rockville, MD
Sandra Powell, Goldsboro

Terri Pulley, Knightdale

Barry Pulstard, Greenville

Sherry Qualls, Cary

Laura Quisenberry, Mechanicsville, VA
Robert Raines, Atlantic Beach

Seniors/Nichols-Raines 197





Einer Rasmussen, Fayetteville

Toyka Reese, Greenville

Elizabeth Reynolds, Durham
Katharine Rhett, Waccamaw

Sylvia Rhodes, Arapahoe
Jesse Riggs, Winterville

Terri Riggs, Swansboro
Angela Roberson, Robersonville

John Robertson, Eden
Jeffrey Rose, Roper

Robert Ross, Greenville
Angela Rouse, Kinston

Dana Salmons, Virginia Beach, VA
William Sanders, Greenville

198 Seniors /Rasmussen-Sanders

Stormy weather

DURING BAD weather, it is not often hard to find a friend who
will lend a helping hand. Dwayne Blackmond, a junior PRC
major is shielded from the elements with the aid of an umbrella
owned by Denise Davis, a junior Child Development major.





Fe eP ee eeeee erste eeerseeeets

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Seniors 199





Charles Thorne, Jr., Rocky Mount
Gail Thornbury, Cary

Dwayne Tomlinson, Greenville
Edison Towe, III, Plymouth

Lori Tripp, Greenville

Sara Tripp, New Bern

David Vangellou, Pittsford, NY
David Via, Waynesboro, VA
Marshall Walls, Isle of Palms, SC
Keva Walton, Raleigh

Patterson

Tree talk

IF ATREE could talk, what kind of secrets would it tell. After
years of standing in the same place, a tree would hear and see a
lot, especially if it stands in a secluded area on campus.

200 Seniors/Thorne-Walton





John Washalefsky, Fountain
Nathan Weeks, Scotland Neck
Susan Wellspeak, Lee, MA
Susan Whealton, Washington
Bryan Wheeler, Roanoke Rapids

Timothy Whisenant, Greenville
Cassandra White, Goldsboro
Jamie White, Williamston

Laura White, Greenville
Yolanda White, Chesapeake, VA

Catherine Williams, Danville, VA
J. Lindsey Williams, Jacksonville
Maribeth Williams, Chapel Hill
Martha Williams, Rocky Mount
Shirley Williams, Clinton

Stephen Williams, Virginia Beach, VA
Tonyetta Williams, Henderson
Kathryn Willis, Rocky Mount
Cynthia Wilson, Elizabeth City
Sandra Wilson, Durham

William Wilson, Jr., Raleigh
William Winborn, Jr. Ahoskie
Sharon Winfield, Mechanicsville, PA
Richard Witherspoon, Wilmington
Twila Wolfe, Annapolis, MD

Wendi Wood, Swansboro
Alan Woodard, Fuquay-Varina
Angela Woodard, Youngsville
Paula Woodard, Arapahoe
Lillian Woolard, Goldsboro

Lisa Wooster, Alliance
Cheryl Wright, Dudley
Gloria Wynne, Everetts
Douglas Young, Raleigh
Patricia Yow, Seagrove

Seniors/Washalefsky-Yow 201





Therese Aaseth, Greenville
Rebecca Ace, Durham

Joseph Admire, Springfield, VA
Rashid Al-Khater, Greenville
Yousef Al-Nasser, Greenville

Abdulla Al-Sahlaui, Otar Doha
Deborah Albritton, Snow Hill
Pamela Aldridge, Colerain
Stephanie Allen, Fayetteville
Kendra Allgood, Tarboro

Mickey Askew, Mauldin, SC
Terry Autry, Hope Mills
Barbara Barnes, Bridgeton

J. David Barnhardt, Charlotte
Rhonda Barwick, Kinston

Patterson

Juniors

ALTHOUGH THE attention was on the playing field, the action
was often in the student section of the stadium. Without the
support of all the fans, the football games would not have been
the same.

202 Juniors /Aaseth-Barwick





Mark Beck, Lexington
Carolyn Bennett, Fairfax, VA
Charles Blalock, Greenville
Roseann Blum, Medford, NJ
Veronica Borders, Shelby

David Boyett, Greenville
Sherry Brewer, Fagle Springs
Rhonda Britton, Robersonville
Pamela Brock, Magnolia
William Brown, Raleigh

Carol Buchanan, Timberlake
Melanie Bunch, Greenville
Pamela Bunch, Richmond, VA
Patricia Bunch, Tyner

Amy Bunting, Holiston, MA

Theresa Burd, Rocky Mount
Elaine Byrd, Ahoskie
Kimberly Cain, Clarkton
Wesley Cannon, Kinston
Wilma Case, Goldsboro

Tammy Caudill, King

Stephen Cauley, Clayton

Ann Cavanaugh, Garrett Park, MD
Charles Chance, New Bern

Anita Chapman, Asheville

Susan Chappell, Fayetteville

Derrick Cherry, Harrellsville
Christopher Clark, Red Springs
Denise Clark, Zebulon

Jackie Clark, Hookerton

Doris Clemons, Stokes
Pamela Coleman, Kenly
Rebecca Combs, Mount Airy
Kathy Coone, Goldsboro
Jeanna Corbett, Kinston

Juniors /Beck-Corbett 203





Carolyn Coughenour, West End
Melisa Cox, Laurenburg

Brad Crawford, Kernersville
Boyce Cutchins, Whitakers
Deborah Davis, Jacksonville

Becky Davidson, Merry Hill

Kelly Davis, Charlotte

Michael Davis, Fayetteville

Tracy Delius, Durham

Carla De Mendonca, Baldwin, MD

Patricia Devenny, Sparta, NJ
Kathy Dillon, Jacksonville
Chauncentte Dixon, Greenville
Daphne Dunston, Washington, DC
Patricia Eaton, Morehead City

204 Juniors/Coughenour-Eaton





William Edwards, Fayetteville
Susan Ellis, Goldsboro

Susie Estep, Plymouth
William Evans, Greenville
Lisa Ezzell, Whiteville

Woodrow Falcher, Washington
Vickie Floyd, Fayetteville
Sharon Flynn, Burlington
James Foster, Richlands

Gloria Freeman, Gatesville

Angela Fussell, Ayden
Susan Gabel, Snow Hill
Joan Gillette, Wilson
Brenda Goss, Asheboro

Terri Grady, Cove City

ee RARE OS Se

Solitude

PEACE AND quiet was hard to come by for some of the dorm
dwellers. In order to do serious studying before an exam, stu-
dents were forced to go outside to find their solitude.

Patterson

Juniors/Edwards-Grady 205





William Grady, Deep Run
Shelby Graham, Maple Hill
William Green, New Bern
Karen Griffen, Graharn
David Hall, Greensboro

Terrace Hall, Clinton
Deborah Hamer, Durham
Anita Harris, Goldsboro
duile Harris, Durham
Bonnie Hartly, Kenly

Robin Hicks, Hillsborough

David Hodges, Ayden

Barbara Hoffman, Greenville

Lori Hollowell, Newport News, VA
Walter Holtzclaw, Charlotte

Candace Horton, Zebulon
Ralph Hungerpiller, Hickory
Charles Ingle, Greenville
Frances Jackson, Greenville

Barnett Jarman, Trenton

Johanna Johnson, Greenville
Tammy Johnson, Plymouth
Wilma Johnson, Southern Pines
Paula Jones, Fayetteville
Marla Jordan, Edenton

Sharon Keaton, Fayetteville
Cassandra Keever, Statesville
Joel Kendrick, High Point
Leah Kendrick, Charlotte
Teresa Kennedy, Wilmington

Martha Kornegay, Jacksonville
Joyce Kunert, Fayetteville
Daniel Kunkleman, Greenville
Charlotte Lamm, Rocky Mount
Holly Lane, Tyner

206 Juniors/Grady-Lane

¥







Under print

SERVING DUAL purposes, The East Carolinian provided
students with shelter from rain as well as information announcing
campus events and providing local and national news.

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Juniors 207







WheelinT and dealinT

STUDENTS OFTEN took a break from their wheeling around
campus to try to make some type of dating deal with other coeds.

Joyce Lanquel, Tarboro
Carlene Lewis, Thomasville
Joseph Lewis, Jacksonville

Catherine Lilley, Hubert

Macthadeus Lindsey, Raleigh

defferey Lockhart, Raleigh
Marilee Loughran, Lumberton
Asonya Lumsden, Kannapolis
William Mann, Sanford

David Manning, Williamston

208 Juniors/Languel-Manning





Kathryn Marshburn, Jacksonville
Keith Marsil, Raleigh

Paul McArthur, Fayetteville
Andre McCutcheon, Hampstead
Leslie McDaniel, Buies Creek

Liegh McDonald, Charlotte
Charles McDowell, Midway Park
Ginger McFarland, Durham
Roy McKeithan, Lumbertson
Felecia McKeithan, Dunn

Lisa McMullen, Fayetteville
Cindy Medley, Tarboro
David Miller, Winterville
Randall, Mizell, Hertford
Gilda Moore, Rocky Mount

Melissa Moore, Roanoke
Michael Moore, New Bern
Phillip Moore, Wilson
Georgia Moore, Rocky Mount

Donna Morris, Bayboro

Louise Morris, Charlotte
Kimberly Morrison, Statesville
Karen Muir, Big Flats, NY
Dallas Newsome, Ahoskie
Mark Niewald, Westend

William Norman, Sanford

J. Oscar Orozco, Greenville
Henry Outlaw, New Bern
LuAnne Outlaw, Morehead City
Mary Page, Wilmington

Sherrie Parnell, Lumberton
Patrick Pearce, Murfeesboro
Trenita Phifer, Kannapolis
Melanie Phillips, Greenville
Ruth Pierce, Kill Devil Hills

Juniors/Marshburn-Pierce 209





Shirley Pitchford, Enfield

Mary Pittman, Selma

Connie Plumley, Lincolnton
Fletcher Porter, Virginia Beach, VA
Melinda Powell, Elizabeth City

Mark Rabon, Chadbourn
Patricia Ralston, Salisbury
Susan Roupe, Durham
Keith Reddeck, High Point
Stacey Rhodes, Charlotte

Beverley Riley, Tarboro

Angela Roach, Ayden

Wendell Roberson, Beaufort, SC
Timothy Roney, Burlington
Pamela Rose, Margarettsville

Lycia Ross, Portsmouth, VA
Melanie Russ, Shelby
Elizabeth Sanders, Fayetteville
John Savage, Richmond, VA
Cindy Sawyer, Hertford

Susan Shatz, Selma

Michael Schronce, Iron Station
Kennedy Shelly, Greenville
Patricia Shepard, Hampstead
Maryann Shields, New Bern

Walter Shore, Yadkonville

Ralph Shoup, Greenville

Jeffrey Simmons, Greenville

Amy Simpkins, Virginia Beach, VA
Lolita Simpson, Rocky Point

Timothy Smart, Durham

Barbara Smith, Greenville

H. Blair Smith, Mechanicsville, VA
Doretha Smith, Knightsdale

Robin Smith, Mount Pleasant

210 Juniors /Pitchford-Smith





Susan Smith, Winston-Salem
Sheila Smitherman, East Bend
Karen Spratley, Hampton, VA
Deborah Spruill, Roxbel
Susan Stalls, Snow Hill

Jeans the thing

JEANS DRYING outside Cotten Dorm are just not the same
without their owners wearing them. The desire to have air fresh
clothes forced some jean owners to hang their pieces over the
balcony railing.

Juniors/Smith-Stalls 211





Susan Steinman, Rougemont
Jeffrey Stevens, Wallace
Rhonda Stokes, Ayden

H. Todd Stone, Ashland, VA
Guy Strawder, Lillington

High
Voltage

Exterior decorating

TO GIVE THE room a homely look, students would decorate

their walls with posters or other hanging paraphernalia. Some
_ students were creative enough to do a bit of exterior decorating
on their doors to add a little spice to the hall.

Welcome to the
Funny faim __ -

Patterson

Steven Strickland, Selma
Weltha Strickland, Goldsboro
Jeffrey Stump, Newark, DE
Scott Sutker, Charlotte
Cheryl Swanson, Charlotte

Carol Tait, Raleigh

Gregory Taylor, Winston-Salem
Bregetta Tedder, Hallsboro
Catherine Tedder, Waccamaw
Lisa Tetterton, Bath

212 Juniors/Steinman-Tetterton





Susan Thomas, Broadway
Becky Thompson, Wilmington
Cynthia Thompson, Wendell
Susan Tolar, Fayetteville

Tia Tyler, Cheyenne, WY

Amie Umphlett, Washington

Juan Velasquez, Charlotte

Corinne Vrooman, Stony Brook, NY
Kayla Walters, Orrum

Glend Walton, Gates

Gregory Walton, Wake Forest
Patricia Walton, Havelock
Donna Watson, Hildebran
Benjamin Watts, Tabor City
Larry Webb, Wilson

Jeff Weiss, Potomac, MD
Donna Wells, Greenville
Pamela Wells, Goldsboro
Sherrie Weston, Washington
Dawn Whedbee, Hertford

N. Elizabeth Whicker, Elkin
Janie White, Whiteville
Timothy Wiggins, Elm City
~ William Wilkins, Greenville
Cherrie Willetts, Wilmington

Bonita Williams, Elizabeth City
Donna Williams, Roseboro
James Williams, Troutman
Kevin Winstead, Grifton
Rachael Winstead, Raleigh

Wendy Wise, Clinton

Patsy Woodard, Murfeesboro
Milton Worthington III, Grifton
Lisa Yow, Seagrove

Richard Zollinger, Greenville

Juniors /Thomas-Zollinger 213





Joseph Aloia, Clinton, Nd

Jennifer Akton, Whitaker

Victor Andrews, Robersonville

Tonya Arrington, High Point

Donna Arthurs, Raleigh

Suzette Artis, Wilson

Michelle Baily, Wilmington

214 Sophomores/Aloia-Baily

a

Sophomores

TWO COEDS watch the people go by as they walk through
campus after class. People watching was a popular pastime for
many students, especially while sitting on the wall in front of the
Student Supply Store.

Patterson





Dawn Baldi, Hazlet, NJ
Jon Barbee, Richlands
Richard Barnes, APO, NY
Tamara Bass, Charlotte
Thomas Bayliss, New Bern

Kim Beaver, Quarry

Shelia Benton, Pikeville

Lisa Bernard, Hillsborough

Holly Birdsong, Virginia Beach, VA
Darrell Blackwell, Salisbury

Vickie Blowe, Newport News, VA
Janet Boylan, Clayton

Kenneth Braak, Wendell
Theodosia Brickhouse, Columbia
Kim Brinkley, Spring Hope

Shawn Brown, Raleigh
Alaina Bryant, Selma
Benjamin Buie, Broadway
Deborah Cannon, Grifton
Aimuel Casey, Greenville

Tamara Caulder, Charlotte
Ron Chappell, Rocky Mount
Richard Clark, Goldsboro
Patti Clay, Washington
Tracy Colletto, Westend

Teresa Connolly, Madison
Mildred Cooper, Elm City
Laura Copper, Asheville
Lee Ann Costin, Narsaw
Cristy Cox, Washington

Kim Craig, Fayetteville

Jo Crawford, Swansboro
Kelly Crayton, Locust
Michael Daniel, Rocky Mount
Lisa Davis, New Bern

Sophomores/Baldi-Davis 215





Marion Deloatch, Murfreesboro
Cathy Dixon, Cary
Stephen Dudley III, Beaufort

Charlie Edwards, Kenly
Karen Edwards, Newport
Donna Elliott, Hertford

David Epting, Salisbury
Yetta Felder, Fayetteville
Charles Felton III, Kinston

Virginia Ferguson, Fayetteville
Patricia Flanagan, Edenton
Rose Flythe, Conway

Angela Faust, Cary
Chrystal Fray, Raleigh

Lisa Freestone, Dallas

Etta Fulcher, Madison
Georgia Fuller, Frisco
Debbie Gembicki, Phoenix, AZ

Joyce Gilchrist, Cameron
Alma Gilmore, Asheville
Adele Goodman, Mooresville

216 Sophomores /Deloatch-Goodman







Patterson

Tabled Notion

THE NEED TO STUDY FOR AN EXAM is overcome by this studentTs need for
some sleep as she naps on one of the library's reference room tables. The sight was a
common one during the course of finals week as students spent many hours reading
and completing papers or other projects.

Sophomores 217





Lori Greene, Richmond, VA

Mary Greene, Mount Airy
Johnathan Greif, Baltimore, MD
Jimmie Hackett, Charlotte
Kathleen Hague, Mechanicsville, VA

Woodland trek

FALLEN LEAVES COVER THE lawn of the central campus
mall as one East Carolina coed makes the trip back to her
residence hall with her Mendenhall take-out dinner.

Mollie Hall, Hertford

Rhonda Hall, Ayden

Billie Hamilton, Chapel Hill
Carol Hargrove, Rocky Mount
Molly Harrell, Rocky Mount

Pamela Harrington, Lumberton
David Harrington, Burlington
Teresa Hart, Washington

Ann Hawkinson, Chapel Hill
Maria Hayes, Roanoke, VA

218 Sophomores/Greene-Hayes





James Hayward, Sanford
Anthony Hensley, Burlington
Katrina Herring, Rose Hill
Freda Hinson, Whiteville

Rebecca Hoover, Denver

Carmel Horton, Washington, DC
Lynn Jackson, Westend

Pamela Jackson, Wake Forest
Norma Jacobs, Pembroke
Teresa Jeter, Philadelphia, PA

Jackie Johns, Swansboro
Thomas Johnson, Raleigh
Paula Jones, Plymouth

Lynn Jourden, Fayetteville
Susan Kelly, Elon College

Elizabeth Kost, Plymouth
Cynthia LaFleur, Charlotte
Julia Lancaster, Fayetteville
Molly Lanier, Beulaville
Donald Lawrence, Moncure

Jeffrey Leary, Ahoskie
Christopher Leonard, Nashville
Natalie Lewis, Burgaw

Markl Liles, Locust

Kari Linzel, Raleigh

Heward Manley, Enfield
Elizabeth Manning, South Hills
Myrial Manning, Smithfield
Anthony Martin, Mayodan
Reggie McCarn, Lexington

Saysha McCray, Elizabeth City
Joanne McCulley, Adelphi, MD
Julie Melvin, Clinton

Randy Mews, Chapel Hill
Betsy Middleton, Mocksville

Sophomores/Hayward-Middleton 219







eRe nc EAR SS

Lucky 13

DURING A FLAG FOOTBALL GAME an
Alpha Delta Pi sorority sister carries the ball
past a Tri-Sig defender for a touchdown in the
intramural contest.

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220 Sophomores







Gina Milana, Millington, NJ
Jacqueline Miller, Rose Hill
Tracey Miller, Wilson

Ellen Moore, Richmond, VA

LaShell Mooring, Greenville

Gail Muncey, Hanover, MA
Angela Murray, Beaufort
Angela Norman, Rose Hill

Fredrick OTConnor, Raleigh
Vernita Ore, Williamston
Cathi Owen, Raleigh
Wendy Ozment, Kinston

Rena Packard, Hendersonville
Michelle Parkin, Goldsboro
Larry Perkins, Harkers Island
Letitia Perry, Creedmore

Pale VS

Almeta Phelps, Scotland Neck
Cheryl Pierce, Katonah, NY
Ruth Piner, New Bern

Ginger Pittman, Pine Level

o 2 =
_ =
a =

Sarah Poindexter, Raleigh
Kimberly Ponder, Black Mountain
Alan Powell, Matthews

Steven Rash, Durham

Sechiquita Ratliff, Wadesboro
Crystal Register, Ayden
Ye A a . Courtney Reynolds, Charlotte
Patterson ~ : dae . , " ae ;

~ il ce. gon oO Virginia Riddick, Virginia Beach, VA

Sophomores/Millington-Riddick 221





Carla Roberson, Greenville
Leslie Robertson, Greenville
Christi Robinson, Greenville

Gail Robinson, Dallas
Janice Robinson, Mobile, AL

Ervin Rogerson Jr., Kinston
Andrea Russell, Greensboro
Trish Satterfield, Charlotte
Phyllis Savage, Corapeake
Andrea Schnitzler, Salem, NY

Kristin Schwedler, Potomac, MD
Laren Seher, Raleigh

Stephen Sherbin, Greenville
Amy Skills, Plymouth

Sheri Small, Elizabeth City

Lois Smith, Conway

Olivia Smith, Cary

Sherry Smith, Chapel Hill
Jacquine Saptse, Manteo

F. Elaine Spencer, Ocracoke

Shelly Stanfield, Plymouth
Robert Stroud, Tarboro
Robert Sugg, Raleigh
Shirlene Swain, Goldsboro
Linda Swift, Meda, PA

Anne Tankard, Washington

Valerie Tew, Albertson

dulie Thompson, Greenville

Joy Thornton, Clinton

Heather Tilson, Chester Springs, PA

Angela Tucker, Fayetteville
Carolyn Twisdale, Enfield
Pamela Vernon, Chapel Hill
Donna Walden, Greenville
Carolyn Ward, Hubert

222 Sophomores/Roberson-Ward







Joyce Wardrick, Jacksonville

Lisa Watson, Hillsborough

Bradley Wheeler, Durham

Julie Wiechman, Wilmington

Patterson

Close encounter

THIS COUPLE TAKES TIME OUT for a little romance near , aes 3ia Cassietta Williams, Rocky Point
the dorms on the hill during a warm spring afternoon.

Jayne Wilson, Tabor City

Krista Wilson, Bear Creek
Bryan Woolard, Washington
Linda Yarbrough, Raleigh
Angela Yelverton, LaGrange
Leah Zeichner, Califon, NJ

Sophomores/Wardrick-Zeichner 223





Dwight Adams, Kinston
Michael Adrion, Cary

Joy Anderson, Williamsport, MD
Tina Anderson, Bath

Yolanda Andrews, Robersonville

Bonnie Aronson, Miami, FL
JoAnne Atstupenas, Edenton
Phillip Averette, Greenville
Stefanie Barber, Raleigh
Deirdre Barefoot, Morehead City

James Barnard, Chesapeake, VA
Ellen Batts, Raleigh

Donna Beane, Asheboro

LeAnn Benton, Bladenboro
Antoinette Berry, Clinton

Darryl Bess, Pinetops

dill Betts, Wilton, CT

Charles Blackwell, Fayetteville
Debbie Booher, Winston-Salem
Rebecca Boner, Salem, VA

Lydia Bowman, Virginia Beach, VA
Tonja Brooks, Wilson

Fannie Brown, Robersonville
Kathy Bryan, Leland

Linda Burgess, Garner

Cynthia Burney, Kinston

Karen Carrow, Washington
Laura Cash, Durham

Harvey Clayton, Greenville
Marty Cherry, Williamsburg, VA

Brian Childs, Colonial Heights, VA
Martha Clark, Greenville

David Clay, Rocky Mount
Barbara Clayborne, Stantonsburg
Dwayne Conyers, Wilmington

224 Freshmen/Adams-Conyers







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Patterson

Freshmen

TAKING ADVANTAGE OF THE GOOD weather, Julie Sher-
ill and Jeff Chavers, both Charlotte natives relax and talk while

listening to some music on the lawn in front of the tennis courts on
the hill.

Freshmen 225





William Cook, Nashville

Sally Copeland, Portsmouth, VA
Virgil Corne, Richfield

Rachel Coston, Teachey

Marcia Crone, Washington

Nancy Davenport, Creswell
Cynthia Dixon, Kinston
Maryanne Draper, Suffolk, VA
Paulette Duggins, Williamston
Lynn Elliott, Greenville

226 Freshmen/Cook-Elliott







High stepping

TWO STUDENTS walk along the brick wall in order to avoid
the deep puddle of water that always forms when it rains outside
the Library Science building of Joyner Library.

Haven Evans, Southern Pines
Elizabeth George, Virginia Beach, VA
Crystal Gilbert, Vale

J. Warren Gordon, Greenville

Stacy Gordon, Cherry Hill, Nd

Christopher Grey, Plymouth
John Grice, Grifton

Mark Griffin, Butner
Donald Hale, Tarboro
Janet Hall, Wake Forest

Freshmen/Evans-Hall 227







Carry alls

THESE FLEMING RESIDENTS carry a chest of
drawers up the front porch stairs on moving day. Par-
ents, friends and relatives helped each other move ev-
erything from couches to lofts as everyone settled in for
another year of school.

Stephen Harding, Asheboro
Ruth Harrell, Suffolk, VA
Melanie Harris, Autryville
Cecilia Hart, Kinston
Tonya Hart, Sanford

Debbie Hayes, Swansboro

Shanda Hedrick, Thomasville
Beth Harrington, Chesapeake, VA
Diana Hiller, Greenville

Cindy Hinton, Winterville

228 Freshmen /Harding-Hinton





Martha Hostler, Kinston

Amy Howard, Sanford

Tonja Howell, Ft. Washington, MD
Krista Hudspeth, Winston-Salem
Deana Ingram, Clarkton

Tracey Jenkins, Monroe
Dechanile Johnson, Greenville
Denise Johnson, Newport
Julie Johnson, Nags Head
Sonya Johnson, Whitaker

Vanessa Johnson, Plymouth
Paris Jones, Enfield

Brenda Judge, Beulaville
Tara Karriker, Huntersville

Karen Klinedinst, Lancaster, PA

Roberta Leppert, Matthews

Kelly Linder, Charlotte

Ann Manderfield, Woodbridge, VA
Emmanuel Manigault, Georgetown, SC
Sonya McClain, Chapel Hill

Tracey Mcllwean, New Bern
Julie Mclver, Castle Hayne
Linda McMillan, Greenville
Donald Mentzer, Greensboro

Teresa Mills, Greenville

Mary Mitchell, Winterville

Maribeth Moore, Virginia Beach, VA
Patricia Mostella, Fayetteville
Margaret Needham, Virginia Beach, VA
Bill Norwood, Williamston

Kimberly Oates, Virginia Beach, VA
Ginger Ober, Edenton

Mary Parkin, Goldsboro

Manoj Patel, Edenton

Elizabeth Pearce, Wake Forest

Freshmen/Hostler-Pearce 229





Lydia Peed, Kenly

Mary Plyer, Stateville

Mary Printz, Frisco

Brian Rangeley, Danville, VA

Delores Reed, Durham

Jennifer Roper, Elizabeth City
Lori Rose, Roper

Scott Ruedger

Kelly Safrit, Sunset Beach
Gina Sandy, Staunton, VA

Claudia Sawyer, Camden
Karla Scarborough, Hateras
Susan Shott, Raleigh
Andrea Simmons, Ahoskie
Janet Sitton, Henderson

Richard Skinner, Hertford
David Smith, Pineville
Jacgeline Smith, Goldsboro
George Speight, Nashville
Lynn Stallings, Belvidere

Dewanda Starling, Raleigh
Shannon Strong, Smithfield
Lisa Sullivan, Washington
Matilda Sutton, Camp Lejeune
Barbara Thompson, Winton

Reina Truitt, Lexington

Delia Vinson, Smithfield

Amy Walker, Tacoma Park, MD
Jennifer Walker, Kinston
Stephanie Waugh, Statesville

Michael White, Fairfax, VA
Debra Williams, Halifax

Deeda Williamson, Wake Forest
Robin Wilson, Hickory

Ann Winbauer, Virginia Beach, VA

230 Freshmen /Peed-Winbauer





Michelle Wood, Garner
Phillip Wood Jr., Fayetteville
Larry Wooten, Grifton

Nina Wooten, Kinston

Melinda Workman, Liberty

é ial Jon Wray, Cary

Cristy Wright, Tabor City

Gregory Wright, Roanoke Rapids

Patterson

CarolAnne Wurst, Wilmington, DE

Two tall

EACH ELEVATED on a pair of stilts, David Hicks and Bill

Curry travel down the hall on their way to a party in Garrett
Dorm.

Kim Wyles, Virginia Beach, VA

Amy Yow, Seagrove

Freshmen /Wood-Yow





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Lisa Robin Stover, Pembroke, N.C. Barry Earl Speller, Windsor, N.C.
Political Science Social Work

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The Missing Seniors





William Sawyer, Morehead
Alexander Schatz, Selma

Lori Schwimer, Morganville, N.J.
Valerie Segraves, Greenville
William Shackelford, Woodland

Mark Shank, Greenville
Charles Shanks, Pfafftown
Robert Shaut, Raleigh

Mark Shearon, Louisburg
Guy Sheets, Pleasant Garden

Diana Shull, Stratford, CT

Marion Slaughter, Va. Bech, VA
Sandra Slusser, Greenville
Dennis Smith, China Grove
Joyce Smith, Raleigh

Kimberly Smith, High Point
Margeri Smith, Fayetteville
Michael Smith, Winterville
Nicoll Smith, Greenville
Ricky Smith, Oak City

Scott Smith, Raleigh

Sharon Smith, Brooklyn, NY
Kathryn Spruill, Creswell
Margaret Spruill, Castalia

Martha Staley, Newport News, Va

234/Pardon Our Blunder ;





Patti Stallings, Rural Hill
Elizabeth Starling, Raleigh
Musette Steck, Greensboro
Douglas Steele, New Bern
Micheel Steiner, Wilmington

Joanne Stock, Hickory
Martin Strickland, Raleigh
Ronnie Strong, Ayden
Melanie Stroud, Maysville
Paul Sumrell, New Bern

Patricia Sutton, Mebane

dulie Swanson, Winchester, KY
Donald Sweeting, Carrboro
Lisa Tagert, Greensboro
Rebecca Talley, Raleigh

Lisa Tapp, Chapel Hill
Nancy Taylor, Hillsborough
Thomas Taylor, Rocky Mount
Andrea Teaque, Raleigh
Patricia Temple, Brodnax, VA

David Terry, Pennsville, NJ
Carlton Thompson, Morehead ;
Jennifer Thompson, Newport News, Va

Michael Thompson, Garner
Donna Thorn, Goldsboro

ee

The Missing Seniors /235

"












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Frisbee Club





Occupational Therapy

Sitting (L-R); Beth Robinson
Cathy Pierce, Glenda Salter,
Lisa Clifton, Laurel Wolford,
Beth Proctor.

Kneeling; Beth Parker, Linda
Higby, Marian McSpadden,
Lisa Mckenzie, Joanna Allen,
Ginnie Neff.

Standing; Deborah Glosson,
Suzanne Pavco, Ursela Hrusorsky,
Brenda Giles, Donna Smith,
Patricia McCallum, Theresa
Furrey, Karen Redding.

Fountain of Life

Sitting (L-R); Rosie Standifer,
Venetia Pruitt, Lorna Wesley,
Bernice Gorham.

Standing; Wesley Cannon, Landon
Corbin, Steve Cherry, Robert
Greene, Esau Waters.

Environmental Health

Sitting (L-R); Lisa Kittner,

Beth Vail, So Chun Wong,
Maureen Dolan.

Standing; David Johnson, Drew
Walker, Fran Nemanich, Greg
Bright, Ken Smith, Mark
Shearon.

238 /Buccaneer







Law Society

Sitting (L-R); Pamela James,
Wesley Jones, Mike Gardner,
Georgia Mooring, Howard Lipman,
Standing; Unknown Paralegal,
Blake Eudailey.

Phi Beta Sigma

Laying; Richard Dawkins.
Sitting (L-R); Keith Horton,
William Rogers, Dennis
Covington.

Standing; Andre McCutheon,
Lacy Faison, Thomas Sims,
Steve Cherry, Mark Johnson.

Phi Sigma Pi

Row 1

(L-R); Ricky Creech,
Kerry Rodebangh, Carla
DeMendoca, Rusty Foster,
D. Gerard, Stacy Long.
Row 2

Jim Stephenson, Sherri
Westen, David Whitley,
Becky Talley, Sherry
Conran, Andy Johnson,
Dr. Jack Thornton.

Row 3

Barbara Chadwell, Sylvia
Bittle, Cathy McGriff,
Jane Jeffrey, David
Allen, Guy Sheets, Louise
Smith, Susan Kelly.

Row 4

Jill Cargile, Jodi Sager,
Penny Boyette, Jill
Clodfelter, Georgia
Mooring, Veronica Borders,
Ken Scruggs, Lloyd
Gardner.

Some Groups/239

)





AFROTC Drill Team

Row 1; Timothy Teachey
Debbie Winston

Sheila Price

Kathleen Lewis

Tracy Thomas

Sandra Henson

Sonya McClain

Jim Warren

Darryl Smith

Row 2; Steven Franklin
Ricky Hemingway
Warren Slate

Steve Blizzard

Ronald Weaver
Thomas Taft

Bernie Payne

Lacrosse Club

He This building is for use of Front; Ray McLawhorn
nts, Faculty
sti

Row 2; Chris Tomasic
John Ruslc

Mike Morley

Row 3; Randy Kirkland
Rusty Harrington
Steve Harris

Back; Tim Grebus

eta ae ee
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College Republicans

Row 1; (L-R) Kelly Joyce
Lisa Biro

Jodi Bower

Ronda Sutton

Row 2; James Caldwell
Rose Marie Flythe

Tim Whisnant

Sandy Hardy

Dennis Kilcoyne

Row 3; Terry Martin
Brian Kilcoyne

Lee Pascassio

Carl Smith

Cynthia Mills

Al Bailey

Row 4; Joe Admire
Joe Olinick

Ralph Gardner

Tim Martin

John Houston

Beta Kappa Alpha

Row 1; (L-R) Connie Plumley,
Terry Webb, Kathy Parker, Eva
Whitaker, Cindy Williams

Row 2; Michael Davis, Kim Allen,
Jennifer Thompson, Sherry Grim-
sley, ?, Ellen Meekins, Pamela
Klingel, Gwen Bottoms, Terry
Leamy.

Row 3; Gary Danford, William
Green, Will Jolly, Marc Black,
Tony Bridges, Mike Smith, Paul
Bottom; Lisa Letsch, Dr. Jerry
Hunt.

Sign Language Club

Row 1; (L-R) Melody Martin,
Rachel Gelbin, Linda Higby, .
Sandy Paris, Molly OTHara.
Row 2; Ann Marie Giallo,
Deanna Myers, Cynthia Farmer,
Jacqueline Danner, Carol Russ,
Diane Grand.

Row 3; Pam King, Nancy Fran-
zoni, Robie Roberson, Steve
Rash, David Feinbaum, John
Welch, Amy Robinson, Kathy
Beetham, Lisa McKenzie.





242 /Buccaneer

ECU Ambassadors

Laying; (L-R) Blake Eudailey,
Duncan Arp.

Row 1; Trina Harrison, Pat
Kingston, Shelby King, Anita
Owenby, Rhonda Gentry, Lisa
Tetterton, Jatana Watson.

Row 2; Courtney Reynolds,
Kathy Marshburn, Andy White,
Cindy Williams, Howard Lip-
man, Julie Everett, Suzanne
Starling.

Row 3; Sophie Skrobialowski,
Karen Edwards, Sherrie Gregory,
Kim Jones, Bill Kirby, Billie
Jean Humke, Lori Deans, Glenda
Salter.

Row 4; Cindy Damm, Suzanne
Boggs, Dana Schacht, Kathee
Staton, Laura White, Dwayne
Blackmon, Rose Ann Blum, Lisa
Letsch, Jodi Praskac, Joy
Thornton, Martha Rand.

Row 5; Carol Tait, Lisa OTHara,
Jonathon Withington, Barnett
Jarman, David Moore, Marion
Slaughter, Karen Koonce.

Arnold Air Society

Standing; (L-R) Chan Keith,
Kevin Samuel, William Bishop,
Wendell Roberson, Steven Peak,
Brad Smith, Ashutosh Dayal,
Douglas C. Moose.

Row 2; Sienna Apis, Tracy
Thomas, Debbie Winston, Ma-
thilda Rose Sutton, Jay Led-
ford.

Row 3; Allan OTBriant, Neil
Torrey, William Rogers, Thomas
Taylor, Darryl Smith.

Biology Club

(L-R) Row 1; Roxanne Taylor,
Dr. Gerhard.

Row 2; Wilma Case, Andrew
Johnson.

Row 3; Mark Beamer, Jennifer
Coats, Susan Lynch, James
Ebert.





Student Athletic Board

Sitting; (L-R) Paula Hayes,
Twyla Jones, Glenda Walton,
Shirley Williams, Renea
Stewart.

Row 2; Tuyet Goins, Gloria
Freeman, Tonya Arrington,
Cassandra Bannerman.

Row 3; Deborah Hester,
Anthony Martin, Suzette Artis,
Rachel Coston, Loraine Foster,
Crystal Williams.

Physical Therapy Club

Sitting; (L-R) Sarah Haigwood,
Sherry Weston, Leslie Ipock,
Kalynn Abernathy, Sharon
Percival.

Row 2; Sharon Best, Connie
Starnes, Phyllis Johnson,

Karen Tydall, Pat Phillips,
Vivien Lo, Donna Morris, Anne
Fisher.

Row 3; Wilkie Thomas, Barbara
Adcock, Marybeth Kozar, Doug
Dannehower, Denise Teachy,
Laura Tracey.

Row 4; Anna Luton, Vicki OTNeal,
Danny Angle, Jill Monger,
Donna Watson, Richard Walters,
Dave Thomas, Erik Elving, Doug
Miller, Shawn Soper, Grif

Reese, Pam Mandt, Charlie
Hypes.

|

Some Groups/243







Alpha Delta Mu

244 /Buccaneer





AP %
MOG.
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a Lae

a tee

i
Per
os

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Ae
.

Student Welfare Committee

Gamma Beta Phi

Some Groups /245





C.O.R.S.0.

iversity

Unknown Group #1





&

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Unknown Group #2













$ ig Aiaee A

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249





250/Sigma Sigma Sigma

Karen Adcock
Vita Anthony
Melissa Baker
Karen Brian
Dallas Brown
Madeline Brown
Lisa Burgwyn
Kimla Byerly
Kathleen Cartland
Pam Childress
Tracy Clark
Tracy Cole
Dawn Dickerson
Wanda Dotson
Maryvonne Draper
Holli Duvall
Susan Edwards
Gussie Eggert
Cathy English
Susan Evans
Cindy Fairbanks
Kathy Flowers
Kim Hendershott
Katrina Hobby
Janet Holloway
Nancy Homa
Martha Hudson
Kyle Humbert
Melanie Huth
Jennifer Jayes
Maureen Jicka

Anne Johnson
Kim Johnson
Fran Jones
Amanda Kartchner
Amy Kopas
Tracy Lawson
Denise Lomax
Lynda Lore
Kelly Mannix
Sharon Mau

Stephanie McCuiston

Kelly McLaurin
Denise Milligan
Lottie Mozingo
Karen Paricio
Mary Parrish
Stephanie Ricker
Gloria Roberts
Sarah Rodwick
Sue Sellers
Beverly Shannon
Noel Shaughnessy
Lynne Siewers
Haley Stephens
Sue Sutton

Tia Tyler

Lynn Wallace
Wendy Wallace
Karen Warren
Carolyn White
dill White







William Bagliani
Scott Bailey
Towne Baker

Howard Berger
Peter Broudy
Bryan Cantrell
Glenn Conway
John Cooper
Steve Cunanan
Michael Doane
James Durham
Alan Emerson
Scott Evans
Donald Fail
Paul Flores
John Flynn
Glenn Gorham
Thomas Green
James Griffin
Edward Gurganus
Robert Hale
Michael Hoard

William Holbert

Dave Hunter

Randall James
Montgomery Johnson
Calvin Lane

Michael Leo
Joseph Leonard
Michael Liddy
Michael Morley
Billy Neal

Mark Page
Steven Patterson
James Phillips
Andrew Robbins
Hank Sendel
Scott Short
Ralph Shoup
Lyndon Sidelinger
Mark Simon
Elswick Smith
Gregory Smith
Russell Smith
William Smothers
Johnny Staley
Richard Steffens
David Sweat
Brad Van Zee
David Webb
Gregory Wester
James White
Robert Williams
Doug Young

Patterson

Sigma Phi Epsilon/251







Michael Biggerstaff
Thomas Carney
Dave Dickinson
David Driver
Edward Gallagher
James Gould "
Andrew Grossman
Scott Hall

Brian Hatley
Michael Jones
Arthur Mangano
James Spirek
Brooks Thomas
David Ward

Doug Wynne

KING OF BEERS

252/Delta Sigma Phi
=f :

, }







Bob Baker
Todd Brawley
Al Bryant
Quince Cashwell
Danny Cinnton
Jay Clifton
Wayne Driver
Rich Forero
Matt Galvin
Mike Galvin
Scott Gibbs
Kevin Greaney
Keith Johnson
Chris Lagrand
John Naoghton
Mike McNeal
Dave Miller
Jay Morris
John Myers
David Pence
Kenin Perez
Jeff Ramey
Bryant Robbins
Kevin Simpson
Mike Suitt

Rich Textor
Dean Townsend

Alpha Sigma Phi/253







James Banks
Kirk Copeland
Tim Dillon

Bill Ellis
Michael Evry
Harvey Hagler
William Jenkins
Jeff Jerema
Will Johnson
Perry King
Kerry Naylor
John Pell
Freddy Preston
Jamie Rubel
Robert Speight
William Steel
Lane Stern
Jim Ussary
Craig Williams
David Zucker

254/Beta Theta Pi

t

[AR







John Agnew

Rod Aldridge
George Anderson
Harold Barber
J.W. Byrd

Barry Carter
Stephen Chappell
Reginald Clark
Charles Coggins
David Dupree
James Emmanuel
Doug English
Joseph Ennis
Robert Enochs
Richard Guy

Lee Hardee
Donald Hicks
Deal Holland
Ben Honaker
Chuck Hudspeth
David Jordan
Cole King

Wallace King
Chris Knott
Tommie Little
John Lomax
David Meggs
Tucker McDonald
William Mercer
William Overman
Jeff Parks

Wayne Rouse
Brent Schultz
Luis Soto
William Talbert
Greg Taylor
Robert Thompson
Bailey Tucker
Anthony Vinson
Stephen Wheeler
Leon Whitehurst
Haywood Wichard
Carl Woodworth
Stewart Wooten

Patterson (2)

Kappa Alpha Order /255

c

A







Tau Kappa Epsilon

Mark Baker

Joe Beairsto
David Bjorkman
Stewart Brooker
Cameron Bush
Jack Cohen
Scott DaGrosa
Michael Dinga
Rick Fiore

Scott Forbes
William Foy
Mark Frederick
Nathan Gminder
Brier Grieves
Patrick Gurza
Edmund Haggerty
James Heivilin
Bobby McCaskill
William Morton
Scott Mosher
James Nash
Michael Pender
Ken Piche
Stephan Poplin
Rick Ratley
John Sellars
James Shields
Steve Templeton

pe Ge

Rith

Be She ee

a

*
¥
XN _"

i

Lambda Chi Alpha

Dell Averette
Stephen Bath
Robert Brugh
Eric Busby
Mathew Congleton
Dean Driver
Thomas Feast
Michael Friend
Roy Greene
Andrew Gross
Jack Heely

Jay Jurgens
Steve Kalin
John Katsias
Gregory Kaufman
Kevin Kaufman
Sam Madison
William Miller
Hudson Moore
James Moriarty
Julian Myers
Michael O'Neil
Barry Peele
Christian Riddle
Thomas Roupas
Victor Sablan
David Smith
Ken Teachey
Randolph Tyler
Ken Waters
Benjamin Wilbanks

Patterson (2)







"

Omega Psi Phi/257





Bill Austin
Player Barefoot
Glenn Barnes
David Bass

Jeff Bell

David Berry
Scott Berry
David Brannan
Clay Brewer
Jamie Briley
Billy Brown
William Bullock
William Canupp
Charles Carter
Hank Core

John Damron
Barry Deans
Edward Dennis
Steve Dickens
Kenny Elliott
Joseph Francis
Pete Glynn
Royal Gurganas
Chip Hachmeister
Steve Hall
Jimmy Hardee
Malcomb Hinton
Norwood Holland
Thomas Hopper
Charles Huffman
Craig King
Randy Koonce
Carl Kratz
Chris Lambert
Stephen LaRouke
Jeffery Leudeke
J.P. Lyons
William Mann
Kevin Manning
Bryan McGann
Jeff Newsome
Jeff OTGeary
Matt Perry
Gregory Pollard
Jim Rackley
Randolph Raines
John Rainey
David Schmitz
Bob Schultz
Ricky Seabolt
William Simmons
Jerry Smith
Robert Smith
Scott Smith
Charles Thorne
Richard Torres
Greg Umstead
Edward Waida
Donald Whitaker
Lee Whitaker

Al Whitehurst

Patterson

258 /Pi Kappa Phi







Patterson

Row 1 (L-R)
Laura Tansik
Kelly Griffin

Row 2

Michelle Wilson
Beth Krueger
Susan Freeman
Renee Riggsbee
Millicent Aldridge
Stacey Rowe

Row 3

Debbie Simonse
Leigh Ann Doub
Jackie Dellinger
Chris Storey
Sherri Sherman
Robin Reading
Brenda Bowen
Kristy Richardson

Row 4

Shanda Hendrick
Leslie Moran
Sherri Pope
Leslie Boyd
Trina Sumrell
Beth Clark
Rosemary McLamb
Emily Flynt

Amy Bonesteel
Sonya Pruden
Gina Burroughs
Michelle Werhan
Toni Bishop
Ginger Mann
Beth Richardson

Delta Zeta/259







ae

260/Chi Omega

Row 1 (L-R)
Sandra Faulkner
Margaret Sydnor

Julie Mohan

Ginney Smith
Kim McCoy
Kari Linzel

Kelly Fulbright
Donna Frey

Row 2

Delores Beck
Carolyn Hughes
Seroba Aiken
Amy Carson
Lisa Faulkner
Lou Maynard
Kim Shelton
Susan Tollefson
Betta Pignani
Laura White
Julie Long

Michelle Pridgen

Row 3

Tina Maroschak
Sarah Patte
Ashley Graves
Shelly Newell
Tiffany Davis
Analise Craig
Eleanor Sprague
Lee Carson
Cindy Sleeper
Robin Hamerick
Stephaine Shifflett
Vivian Means
dill Taylor
Lizanne Jennings
Patti Pesarchick
Amiz Vmphlett
Lisa Briggs

Patterson







PRODUCTS,
Phone 752-4066

Sam Barwick
Robert Bell
Dwayne Blackmon
Jeff Clarke
Richard Cronland
Thomas Egan
David Evans
Michael Gasper
Bryant Jourden
Willie Keith

Bill Masius
David Newcombe
Daniel OTConnell
John Quinn
Ricky Ruffin
Jack Seymour
Joseph Stroud
Gene Taylor

Jeff Thomson
Jeff Torres
Linwood Weeks
Eric Weniger
Randy Whaley

Patterson

Sigma Nu/261







Row 1 (L-R)
John Rusk
Steve Ardis
Mike Swaim
Jeff Cloninger
Steve Folmar
Todd Patton
Tom Norton
Cavid Garwood
Bill Dawson
Dan Cavallo
Chip Bunn
Paul Glenn
Robbie Lee
Mario Rizzetti

Row 2

Danny Redick
James Russo
Brian Morris
Bill Mitchell
Mark Heizer
Breenan Collins
John Peterson
David Brooks
Ed Knight
Mark Bogue
Ken Hardee
Brian Wessler
Chip Bullock
David Howell
Jacky Ward
John Altizer

Row 3

Phil Fredrick
Bob Rucks

Matt McDonald
Mike Davenport
McKenny Hartman
John Joseph
John Robbins
Eric Davis

Bart Walsh
Gene Stevens
David Doyle
Mike McPartland
Shayne Parrish

262/Phi Kappa Tau

Chris Crabtree
John Frank
Charles McCord
Jon Abbott
Lingesh Sriraman
Theo Margas
Dave Goldman
Jim Herring







Ken Adams
David Albert
Steve Aman
Roger Baker
Mark Barker
Tony Carrea
Johnny Chestnutt
George Cholakis
Walter Dickson
Banks Drewry
Randy Evans
Todd Evans
David Fain
David Feinbaum
Michael Geiger
Alexander Gordon
Rich Hall

John Hamrick
Mark Hanna
David Havens
Geoff Hudson
Tim Irwin
Richard Jackson

Gregory Johnson
Jim Johnson
Brett Kassir

Bill Kilby
Richard Kradel
Walter Ladue
Richard Lanham
Robert Lanham
Kennith Laughlin
John Martin
Paul McArthur
Dean McCrickland
Kyle McKaig
Reic Meymendi
Tony Mills

John Mitchell
John Nix

Mike Norris
Floyd Oakley
Kevin Orr

Jamie Pantelakos
Scott Peroyea
Steve Reavis

Matthew Rizzolo
David Sadlowski
Michael Sanoba
Robby Simpson
Martin Smith
Michael Smith
Scott Smith
Michael Sosa
Robert Strauss
Gregory Taylor
Stuart Tester
Raymond Tripp
Marshall Walls
Chris Ward

Ivan Washburn
John West
Michael Wiggins
Rusty Wiley
Raymond Wilkins
Lanny Wilson
Dwayne Wiseman
Daniel Wolfe
Johnny Woods

Kappa Sigma /263







Gina Albani
Susan Austin
Beverly Barrett
Pam Bedsole
Laura Bermant
Mary Best
Suzanne Boggs
Francie Bonney

Suzanne Britt
Sarah Butler
Mary Louise Butt
Eileen Carreras
Amy Chapman
Carolyn Clark
Kim Clodfelter
Susan Cooper

Angela Daniels
Kelly Davis
Connie Drake
Kim Dudley
Lisa Dwyer
Jennifer Evans
Tara Faircloth
Sherrie Gregory

Cheryl Gresham
Angela Griffin
Stephanie Groon
Elissa Haskell
Ann Hawkinson
Robin Hess
Kathryn House
Nancy Jahn
Sarah Jenkins
Katherine Johnson
Cheryl Jones
Ellen Jones
Rebecca Lanier
Sharon Lewis
Laura Ketner
Kelly Kiernan
Susan Kirkwood
Judy Koch
Karen Koonce
Tracy McGrady
Darlene Miles
Jennifer Myres
Susan Petty
Karen Pridgen
Jill Reynolds
Hope Root

Ann Scarborough
Miki Scheer
Theresa Scronce
Beth Shaw

Lou Simmons
Rhonda Smith
Lisa Sparks
Barbie Stirrup
Gayle Strum
Lisa Veasey
Sharon Walton
Roberta Watts
Karen Wells

Joy Wilkins
Maribeth Williams
Nora Williams

Lisa Willoughby
Jennie Wollard
Delores Worthington
Sandy York





Paul Aliyetti
John Allen
Britton Byrd
James Coakley
Michael Darrow
Mark Davidson
Martian Faulkner
Steve Garney
Mark Gore
Mitchell Hamlett
Sam Huddleston
Robert Husketh
Cory Jameson
Kevin King
Mark Klumpp
John Modigh
Willie Pope
Bobby Reardon
James Scott
Haywood Stroupe
William Trenda
Michael Whitley

~ A OS
ow

Patterson (4)

Sigma Tau Gamma/265







Sherilyn Acock
Donna Akin
Beverly Brenner
Amy Breza
Anne Brooks
Lisa Brown

Jane Bryant
Nena Burchfield
Cathy Davenport
Margret Davis
Kathleen Dewey
Dana Draughn
Ginger Edwards
Shelia Edwards
Joy Ellis
Elizabeth Elam
Leslie Ennis
Donna Enroughty
Sally Glaner
Tammy Goswick
Lisa Gove
Allison Grimes
June Gunter
Cynthia Hamilton
Tracy Hamilton
Melanie Harris
Maria Hayes
Rochi Heath
Elizabeth Henley
Joy Holland
Karen Howard
Rosanne Howard

266 /Alpha Phi

Patterson

Harriet Jordan
Ginga Knight
Roberta Leppert
Beth Loeb

Erin Malone
Tracey McGlwean
Theresa Moore
Sue Morris~

Sally Noakes
Jennifer Odenwaldt
Carol Page
Amanda Parnell
Donna Pratt
Donna Presnell
Lisa Priestly
Andera Pugh

Jill Pugh

Diane Rankin
Terri Reeves
Elizabeth Reynolds
Amanda Robinson
Mary Rouse

Kim Sandlin

Lisa Sauls

Lori Schwimer
Lisa Selby

Beth Smith

Mary Ann Smith
Melanie Spivey
Wilkie Thomas
Cynthia Thompson
Carol Wurst







Patterson

Mary Alexander
Susan Baker
Bridget Balint
Blair Barkley
Sandy Braswell
Donna Breedlove
Traci Burnett
Jeanne Campbell
Kelly Coleman
Amy Cox

Cindi Crystal
Jimi Dawson
Susan Dollar
Marion Dudley
Debbie Edwards
Sherri Everhart
Sara Freshwater
Carol Gilbert
DeeDee Glick
Kelly Goetze
Louise Harris
Lana Helms
Cathy Henderson
Cindy Herring
Jennifer Johnson
Kathy Kittrick
Coleen Lemnah
Ardieth Lupton
Paige Luther
Martha Maus
Susie McClawhorn
Cynthia McLawhorn
Cari Miller

Tonia Miller
Lynne Mitchell
Lisa Morris
Stephanie Moss
Kathleen Mylelt
Christy Neltles
Loren Neuhoff
Cindi Nielsen
Shannon Peak
Catharine Roberson
Tonina Roboz
Shelia Rouse
Mary Sandell
Terri Satterfield
Cynthia Schumacker
Kim Setzer
Marshelle Sickles
Ginger Sugg
Leigh Summerfield
Carla Tadlock
Ruth Tankard
Wendi Terrell
Beth Watson
Sarah Watson
Mary Wilson
Susan Winstead
Ruth Wright
Catharine Yeager
Cathy Ziegenfuss

Alpha Delta Pi/267







268/Alpha Omicron Pi

Sharon Allen
Teri Baranowski
Lynn Batts
Stacey Briley
Amy Cooper
Suzanne Croix
Michelle DeBone
Carole Deupree
Molie Evans
Tracy Fearrington
Luanne Gaddy

Megan Gillespie
Annette Henderson
Cheri Howard
Tammy Jenkins
Sheri Jourden
Robin Langley
Pamela Mace
Isabella Malby
Mary McGuinness
Lydia Morgan
Nancy Nicol

Dawn Ogles
Rhonda Perry
Dawn Platt
Anne Raamot
Beth Robison
Dana Schacht
Lisa Sharrard
Wendy Skellie
Lisa Stinnett
Cheryl Swanson
Jean Walsh







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Commencement







286 /Commencement





May 5, 1984/287

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Johnson (2)

288 /Commencement







May 5, 1984/289







Photos by Gary Patterson

290 /Commencement












292 /Commencement







Patterson (4)

May 5,1984/293







Acknowledgments . Patterson

CREDIT WHERE CREDIT IS DUE: The Ghostwriters " Jennifer Jendrasiak, Horace McCormick, Ed Nicklas, Jerryl Sears, and Beth Davis.
Special thanks to the helping hands and minds of Kay Smith, Dr. Meyer, Mary Wells, Becky Alexander, Greg Whalen, Glenn Conway. Hunter
Fisher, Joel Siegel, Stan Young, Stanley Leary, and The ECU Media Board. ;

INSPIRATION: Mark Dearmon, George Bacso, Tom Barnes, Peter Krogh, Will & Deni McIntyre, Ralph Morse, David Burnett, Harry Benson. Tony
Spina, David Williams, John & Nancy Patterson, Steve & Patti Klein.

Student Portraits by Varden Studios of Rochester, New York. "

294 /Buccaneer















cm

10

11

12

13

14

15

16

17

18

19

20

21

22

23





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Title
Buccaneer 1984
Description
1984 edition of The Buccaneer, the yearbook of East Carolina University. The first yearbook published by the students of East Carolina Teachers College, The Tecoan, debuted in 1923. The name of the yearbook changed to the Buccaneer in 1953. The Buccaneer suspended publication from 1976-1978 and 1991-2005, finally ceasing in 2018. It was superseded by Anchors Away in 2019. Publication resumed in 2007.
Date
1984
Original Format
school yearbooks
Extent
23cm x 30cm
Local Identifier
UA50.01.02.31
Subject(s)
Spatial
Location of Original
University Archives
Rights
This item has been made available for use in research, teaching, and private study. Researchers are responsible for using these materials in accordance with Title 17 of the United States Code and any other applicable statutes. If you are the creator or copyright holder of this item and would like it removed, please contact us at als_digitalcollections@ecu.edu.
http://rightsstatements.org/vocab/InC-EDU/1.0/
Permalink
https://digital.lib.ecu.edu/49854
Preferred Citation
Cite this item
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