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<pb facs="00057351_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
ol.55o.ftfr-<lb/>
Wednesday July 29, 1981<lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
Med School Progresses <lb/>
Faster Than Dreamed<lb/>
B SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
Surf Hrilrr<lb/>
The seemingly remote dream ol<lb/>
forming an East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine was conceived<lb/>
during the early sixties by Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins, president of the then<lb/>
East Carolina College. In a span of<lb/>
several years an act to create a two-<lb/>
vear school of medicine at East<lb/>
Carolina College was passed in<lb/>
1965.<lb/>
Seventeen years later, the school<lb/>
came of age when Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. declared that, "the dream<lb/>
of Leo Jenkins and so many sup-<lb/>
porters of this university has been<lb/>
realized<lb/>
Hunt was speaking at the gradua-<lb/>
tion ceremony for the charter class<lb/>
of physicians on May 8 of this year,<lb/>
when the ECU school graduated its<lb/>
first four-year pioneering class of 28<lb/>
physicians. The ECU school of<lb/>
medicine has now been awarded full<lb/>
accredition by the Liaison commit-<lb/>
tee on medical education.<lb/>
Dr. William E. Laupus, Dean of<lb/>
the School of Medicine, in his ad-<lb/>
dress to the graduates last May,<lb/>
referred to the graduates as "the<lb/>
'home grown' products of the state<lb/>
who excel educationally and profes-<lb/>
sionally<lb/>
Students enrolled in the school of<lb/>
medicine have so far come from<lb/>
North Carolina. Enrollment will be<lb/>
increased by 52 freshmen in the fall<lb/>
and projected estimates place the<lb/>
figure to 64 freshmen during the fall<lb/>
of 1982.<lb/>
In this attempt to improve<lb/>
primary health care in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, the school coor-<lb/>
dinated the expansion of clinical ser-<lb/>
vice areas at the Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital including addition to<lb/>
radiology and nuclear medicine, the<lb/>
emergency rooms, surgery and the<lb/>
ambulatory medical surgical unit.<lb/>
The Brady Medical Science Building<lb/>
is nearing completion. Its occupan-<lb/>
cy is slated for late December 1981<lb/>
but may be delayed until early 1982.<lb/>
When the school's objectives are<lb/>
fully realized, provisions will have<lb/>
been provided for education of<lb/>
primary-care and family medicine<lb/>
physicians. This is intended to<lb/>
alleviate the high rates of infant<lb/>
mortality in this area. Studies have<lb/>
shown that Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
had one of the highest infant mor-<lb/>
tality rates in the nation.<lb/>
In view of such statistics, it is the<lb/>
school's objective to formulate ways<lb/>
by which the institution could con-<lb/>
tribute to better health care for the<lb/>
citizens of Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and the state.<lb/>
- ttf<lb/>
The ECU Med School<lb/>
is ahead of schedule according to the Dean of The Med School Dr. Laupus.<lb/>
Two ECU Deans Resign Their Posts<lb/>
Both the School of Nursing and<lb/>
he Division of Continuing Educa-<lb/>
tion will lose deans at the end of the<lb/>
year. Dr. David J. Middleton and<lb/>
Evelyn L. Perry have announced<lb/>
that they will resign from their posts<lb/>
at the end of the year.<lb/>
Perry, dean of the School of Nur-<lb/>
sing for the past 12 years, has an-<lb/>
nounced her retirement from the<lb/>
deanship and her professorship ef-<lb/>
fective Dec. 31, 1981.<lb/>
In a letter to Dr. Robert H.<lb/>
Maier, vice chancellor-academic af-<lb/>
fairs. Dean Perry said "My interest<lb/>
in the progress of the School of Nur<lb/>
sing has not, and will not diminish. I<lb/>
look forward to hearing of newer<lb/>
and more advanced developments<lb/>
Maier, in announcing Dean<lb/>
Perry's decision, said "Evelyn Perry<lb/>
has rendered many years of service<lb/>
to our School of Nursing, both as a<lb/>
faculty member and as the dean. We<lb/>
thank her for this service and wish<lb/>
her well upon her retirement from<lb/>
both of these positions at the end of<lb/>
1981<lb/>
Perry joined the nursing faculty<lb/>
at East Carolina in 1962 after four<lb/>
years on the faculty ot the Watts<lb/>
School ol Nursing, Durham, and a<lb/>
tour of active duty as a U.S. Army-<lb/>
nurse during the Korean conflict,<lb/>
serving in both Japan and Korea<lb/>
with the rank of major.<lb/>
She attended Elon College and<lb/>
holds a BSPHN (public health nurs-<lb/>
ng) and MSN degrees from UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. She is a former resident<lb/>
of Raleigh and Smithfield.<lb/>
In 1969 she was named dean of<lb/>
the School of Nursing succeeding<lb/>
the first dean, Eva Warren, upon<lb/>
Mrs. Warren's retirement.<lb/>
Dr. Maier said that a committee<lb/>
will be appointed early this fall to<lb/>
begin a nationwide sear rh for Dean<lb/>
Perry's successor.<lb/>
Middleton, dean of the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education since it<lb/>
was established, has announced that<lb/>
he will resign as dean effective next<lb/>
Jan. 1.<lb/>
Although relinquishing his dean-<lb/>
ship after 19 years as the university's<lb/>
chief administrator of continuing<lb/>
education and extension programs,<lb/>
Middleton will remain on the divi-<lb/>
sion's faculty as a tenured pro-<lb/>
fessor.<lb/>
During Middleton's tenure as<lb/>
dean, the Continuing Education<lb/>
program has expanded into s wide<lb/>
variety of credit and non-credit pro-<lb/>
grams off-campus, reaching as<lb/>
many as 20,000 people annually, in-<lb/>
cluding businessmen, teachers, the<lb/>
military, commercial fishermen and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
This growth "could not have been<lb/>
possible without the support of the<lb/>
ECU administration and most par-<lb/>
ticularly the heavy involvement and<lb/>
interest of the faculty in rendering<lb/>
public service programs Mid-<lb/>
dleton said.<lb/>
He added, "Through Continuing<lb/>
Education, the university has reach-<lb/>
ed many people ;r Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina who otherwise would not<lb/>
have had the opportunity to enroll<lb/>
in the university programs nor the<lb/>
improve themselves educationally<lb/>
An important note is that this ha<lb/>
been done at low cost to the State<lb/>
and to the taxpayers.<lb/>
"However Dr. Middleton con<lb/>
tinued, "in the immediate future<lb/>
some form of outside funding is ol<lb/>
critical importance if ECU is going<lb/>
to continue a role of providing ser<lb/>
vices to a variety of the state's<lb/>
citizens in this region. Otherwise, we<lb/>
See DEANS, Page 2<lb/>
Increased Tuition<lb/>
Will Be Voted On<lb/>
A t Friday Meeting<lb/>
By KIT KIMBERLY<lb/>
SurrUrilrr<lb/>
A fee increase proposal for all 16<lb/>
institutions in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system will go<lb/>
before the board of governors on<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
If passed, the proposal will mean<lb/>
an increase of about $62 for in-state<lb/>
and $130 for out-of-state tuition per<lb/>
year for East Carolina<lb/>
undergraduate students.<lb/>
The proposed increase, which is<lb/>
included in the statements which<lb/>
have been sent out to students this<lb/>
week, raises in-state tuition to $186<lb/>
and out-of-state tuition to $1080 per<lb/>
semester. This brings the total pay-<lb/>
ment due for in-state dorm students<lb/>
to $711 and out-of-state dorm<lb/>
students to $1,605.<lb/>
This proposal follows an increase<lb/>
in student fees and dormitory costs,<lb/>
approved in March by the ECU<lb/>
board of trustees.<lb/>
According to C. G. Moore, vice<lb/>
chancellor of business affairs, the<lb/>
reason that the not-yet-approved in-<lb/>
crease was included in the<lb/>
statements is so that students can<lb/>
meet the deadline for mailing in<lb/>
payments.<lb/>
Moore said that had they waited<lb/>
until the proposal was voted on, the<lb/>
statements could not have been<lb/>
mailed before Monday. This would<lb/>
make it nearly impossible for most<lb/>
students to meet the deadline for<lb/>
mailing in payments and avoid a $10<lb/>
late fee. "We were just trying to<lb/>
save the students some money<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
He added that in case the pro-<lb/>
posal does not pass, the extra money<lb/>
will be applied to student fees for<lb/>
Spring 1982 or refunded to the stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
According to Moore, the propos-<lb/>
ed change was prompted by an at-<lb/>
tempt on the board of governor's<lb/>
part to work towards a uniform tui-<lb/>
Faculty Receive<lb/>
Official Promotions<lb/>
Clifton<lb/>
tion collection for all 16 North<lb/>
Carolina institutions.<lb/>
Part-time students and part-time<lb/>
tuition have been recategorized.<lb/>
Full-time undergraduate status,<lb/>
formerly nine hours or more,is now<lb/>
constituted by 12 or more hours.<lb/>
Tuition for in-state students taking<lb/>
Moore<lb/>
between nine and 11 hours is 2.140.<lb/>
In-state tuition for six to eight<lb/>
hours is $93, and five hours and<lb/>
under will pay $47.<lb/>
Graduate students, who are also<lb/>
included in the proposed increase,<lb/>
have also been reclassified as to<lb/>
part- and full-time.<lb/>
The Office of Academic Affairs<lb/>
has announced the promotions of 24<lb/>
ECU faculty members. Five<lb/>
members received promotions to the<lb/>
rank of professor, eight to the rank<lb/>
of associate professor and 11 to the<lb/>
rank of assistant professor.<lb/>
Raised to full professors were Dr.<lb/>
George Bissinger of the Department<lb/>
of Physics, Dr. Mark Bnnson of the<lb/>
Department of Biology, Dr. Robert<lb/>
Morrison of the Department of<lb/>
Chemistery, Dr. Jerry Hunt of the<lb/>
School of Business and Dr. Y.J.<lb/>
Lao of the Department of En-<lb/>
vironmental Health in the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Bissinger graduated from the<lb/>
University of Chicago in 1962 with a<lb/>
B.S. He then graduated from<lb/>
DePaul in 1964 with an M.S. and<lb/>
from the University of Notre Dame<lb/>
in 1969 with a Ph.d.<lb/>
Brinson received his B.S. from<lb/>
Heidelberg College in 1965. He<lb/>
received his M.S. in Botany from<lb/>
the University of Michigan in 1967<lb/>
and his Ph.d. in Botany from the<lb/>
University of Florida in 1973. Brin-<lb/>
son was the receipient of the Helms<lb/>
Research Award in Biological and<lb/>
Medical Sciences in 1978.<lb/>
Morrison was unavailable for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Hunt received his bachelor's<lb/>
degree from the University of Col-<lb/>
orado in 1964 and his Ph.D. in 1968.<lb/>
Lao received his B.S. from Na-<lb/>
tional Taiwan University in 1958 and<lb/>
his Ph.D. from the University ot<lb/>
Michigan in 1969.<lb/>
Promoted to Associate Professors<lb/>
were Paul Hartley, Art; Richard<lb/>
Kerns, Business; Clinton Downing,<lb/>
Education; Rosalie Haritun, Music;<lb/>
Anthony Papalas, History; Alfred<lb/>
Muller, English; Paul Tschetter,<lb/>
Sociology and Anthropology; and<lb/>
Larry Bolen, Psychology.<lb/>
Promoted to Assistant Professors<lb/>
were Clarence Morgan, Art;<lb/>
Rosemary Fischer, Selma Gokcen,<lb/>
Donna Coleman, David Hawkins,<lb/>
C. Bradford Foley, and Deborah<lb/>
Chodacki, Music; Helen Everett<lb/>
and Roberta Edwards, Nursing;<lb/>
David Downing, Drama and<lb/>
Speech; and Nell Eutsler, English.<lb/>
Two Canadians Arrested<lb/>
Controller Nets Cocaine Bust<lb/>
WILMINGTON, N.C. (UP1) An<lb/>
airport controller's suspicions<lb/>
resulted in the seizure of cocaine<lb/>
with a street value of about $3<lb/>
million early Tuesday and the arrest<lb/>
of two Canadians at the New<lb/>
Hanover County Airport.<lb/>
The cocaine was found inside a<lb/>
briefcase one of the men left inside<lb/>
the airport's private aviation ter:<lb/>
minal, said Gil Payette, an official<lb/>
of the U.S. Customs Service Patrol<lb/>
Division.<lb/>
Five packages containing a total<lb/>
of eight to 10 pounds of cocaine<lb/>
were found inside the briefcase,<lb/>
Payette said. Preliminary tests in-<lb/>
dicated the presence of cocaine, but<lb/>
authorities ordered lab tests to<lb/>
determine its purity.<lb/>
The two men were identified as<lb/>
David Mark Greenberg, 44, of<lb/>
Brome, Quebec, the pilot of a twin-<lb/>
may be a popular pastime of ECU sstudents during the engine plane that stopped for refuel-<lb/>
hreaL 'n8i and DiNunno Pasquale, 44, of<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
Montreal, Quebec, a passenger on<lb/>
the plane.<lb/>
They were charged with violation<lb/>
of North Carolina's 1979 drug traf-<lb/>
ficking law, which sets a prison term<lb/>
of 16 to 40 years and a mandatory<lb/>
fine of $200,000 for possession of<lb/>
more than one pound of cocaine.<lb/>
Greenberg was jailed under $3<lb/>
million bond and Pasquale under a<lb/>
$1.5 million bond.<lb/>
Authorities said the airplane land-<lb/>
ed at the airport around 2 a.m. for<lb/>
refueling and a controller in the<lb/>
tower became suspicious about the<lb/>
actions of the men on the plane.<lb/>
Payette said Federal Aviation Ad-<lb/>
ministration personnel at airports<lb/>
have been asked to report such<lb/>
behavior to customs and drug<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
'There were a couple of things.<lb/>
Nothing that anybody could put<lb/>
their fingers on he said. "The<lb/>
FAA, we work with them and<lb/>
they're learning to be observant of<lb/>
flight patterns and procedures<lb/>
The controller notified federal of-<lb/>
ficials who asked the New Hanover<lb/>
County Sheriffs Department to<lb/>
send deputies to the airport and<lb/>
observe the two men until federal<lb/>
officials arrived.<lb/>
A.K. Giacoman, a detective with<lb/>
the county narcotics squad, said one<lb/>
of the deputies sent to the airport<lb/>
saw one of the men take a briefcase<lb/>
from the plane into the private avia-<lb/>
tion terminal and leave it there.<lb/>
Deputies detained the two men<lb/>
until federal agents arrived.<lb/>
Authorities watched the terminal<lb/>
building for a brief period before<lb/>
opening the briefcase and discover-<lb/>
ing the cocaine inside.<lb/>
Greenberg and Pasquale denied<lb/>
any involvement or knowledge<lb/>
about the contents of the briefcase,<lb/>
but Giacoman said, "We had an of-<lb/>
ficer eyewitness as to the briefcase<lb/>
The two men were turned over to<lb/>
state officials for prosecution<lb/>
because of the heavy penalties under<lb/>
the drug trafficking law, Payette<lb/>
said. The law sets a legal presump-<lb/>
tion possession of large quantities of<lb/>
specific drugs, including cocaine.<lb/>
means a person is a drug dealer.<lb/>
The seizure was the second in-<lb/>
volving cocaine in the past two mon-<lb/>
ths at the New Hanover County Air-<lb/>
port. In early June, two New<lb/>
England men were arrested during a<lb/>
refueling sU p and more than 400<lb/>
pounds of cocaine were found in<lb/>
their twin-engine airplane.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
�HHHMHHMMMHMM<lb/>
Editorials5<lb/>
Features4<lb/>
SportsS<lb/>
Classifieds�<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057351_0002"/><lb/>
SJjje lEaHt daroltntan<lb/>
l. 55 No. Wr-<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Wednesday July 29, 1981<lb/>
6 Pages<lb/>
Med School Progresses j<lb/>
mm<lb/>
Faster Than Dreamed<lb/>
By SAFARI MATHENGE<lb/>
Sun W rilrr<lb/>
The seemingly remote dream ol<lb/>
forming an East Carolina Universitv<lb/>
School of Medicine was conceived<lb/>
during the early sixties by Dr. Leo<lb/>
W. Jenkins, president of the then<lb/>
East Carolina College. In a span of<lb/>
several years an act to create a two-<lb/>
year school of medicine at East<lb/>
Carolina College was passed in<lb/>
1965.<lb/>
Seventeen years later, the school<lb/>
came of age when Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. declared that, "the dream<lb/>
ol Leo Jenkins and so many sup-<lb/>
porters of this university has been<lb/>
realized<lb/>
Hunt was speaking at the gradua-<lb/>
tion ceremony for the charter class<lb/>
of physicians on May 8 of this year,<lb/>
when the ECU school graduated its<lb/>
first four-year pioneering class of 28<lb/>
physicians. The ECU school of<lb/>
medicine has now been awarded full<lb/>
accredition by the Liaison commit-<lb/>
tee on medical education.<lb/>
Dr. William E. Laupus, Dean of<lb/>
the School of Medicine, in his ad-<lb/>
dress to the graduates last May,<lb/>
referred to the graduates as "the<lb/>
'home grown' products of the state<lb/>
who excel educationally and profes-<lb/>
sionally<lb/>
Students enrolled in the school of<lb/>
medicine have so far come from<lb/>
North Carolina. Enrollment will be<lb/>
increased by 52 freshmen in the fall<lb/>
and projected estimates place the<lb/>
figure to 64 freshmen during the fall<lb/>
of 1982.<lb/>
In this attempt to improve<lb/>
primary health care in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, the school coor-<lb/>
dinated the expansion of clinical ser-<lb/>
vice areas at the Pitt Memorial<lb/>
Hospital including addition to<lb/>
radiology and nuclear medicine, the<lb/>
emergency rooms, surgery and the<lb/>
ambulatory medical surgical unit.<lb/>
The Brady Medical Science Building<lb/>
is nearing completion. Its occupan-<lb/>
cy is slated for late December 1981<lb/>
but may be delayed until early 1982.<lb/>
Wrhen the school's objectives are<lb/>
fully realized, provisions will have<lb/>
been provided for education of<lb/>
primary-care and family medicine<lb/>
physicians. This is intended to<lb/>
alleviate the high rates of infant<lb/>
mortality in this area. Studies have<lb/>
shown that Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
had one of the highest infant mor-<lb/>
tality rates in the nation.<lb/>
In view of such statistics, it is the<lb/>
school's objective to formulate ways<lb/>
by which the institution could con-<lb/>
tribute to better health care for the<lb/>
citizens of Eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and the state.<lb/>
The ECU Med School<lb/>
,is ahead of schedule according to the Dean of The Med School Dr. I<lb/>
aupus.<lb/>
Two ECU Deans Resign Their Posts<lb/>
Both the School of Nursing and<lb/>
he Division of Continuing Educa-<lb/>
tion will lose deans at the end of the<lb/>
year. Dr. David J. Middleton and<lb/>
Evelyn L. Perry have announced<lb/>
that they will resign from their posts<lb/>
at the end of the year.<lb/>
Perry, dean of the School of Nur-<lb/>
sing for the past 12 years, has an-<lb/>
nounced her retirement from the<lb/>
deanship and her professorship ef-<lb/>
fective Dec. 31, 1981.<lb/>
In a letter to Dr. Robert H.<lb/>
Maier, vice chancellor-academic af-<lb/>
fairs, Dean Perry said "My interest<lb/>
in the progress of ihe School of Nur<lb/>
sing has not, and will not diminish. I<lb/>
look forward to hearing of newer<lb/>
and more advanced developments<lb/>
Maier, in announcing Dean<lb/>
Perry's decision, said "Evelyn Perry<lb/>
has rendered many years of service<lb/>
to our School of Nursing, both as a<lb/>
faculty member and as the dean. We<lb/>
thank her for this service and wish<lb/>
her well upon her retirement from<lb/>
both of these positions at the end of<lb/>
1981<lb/>
Perry joined the nursing faculty<lb/>
at East Carolina in 1962 after four<lb/>
years on the faculty of the Watts<lb/>
School of Nursing, Durham, and a<lb/>
Increased Tuition<lb/>
Will Be Voted On<lb/>
A t Friday Meeting<lb/>
tour of active duty as a U.S. Army<lb/>
nurse during the Korean conflict,<lb/>
serving in both Japan and Korea<lb/>
with the rank of major.<lb/>
She attended Elon College and<lb/>
holds a BSPHN (public health nurs-<lb/>
ng) and MSN degrees from UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. She is a former resident<lb/>
of Raleigh and Smithfield.<lb/>
In 1969 she was named dean of<lb/>
the School of Nursing succeeding<lb/>
the first dean, Eva Warren, upon<lb/>
Mrs. Warren's retirement.<lb/>
Dr. Maier said that a committee<lb/>
will be appointed early this fall to<lb/>
begin a nationwide sear h for Dean<lb/>
i j an<lb/>
Perry's successor.<lb/>
Middleton, dean of the Division<lb/>
of Continuing Education since it<lb/>
was established, has announced that<lb/>
he will resign as dean effective next<lb/>
Jan. 1.<lb/>
Although relinquishing his dean-<lb/>
ship after 19 years as the university's<lb/>
chief administrator of continuing<lb/>
education and extension programs,<lb/>
Middleton will remain on the divi-<lb/>
sion's faculty as a tenured pro-<lb/>
fessor.<lb/>
During Middleton's tenure as<lb/>
dean, the Continuing Education<lb/>
program has expanded into &amp; wide<lb/>
B KITKIMBERI V<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
A fee increase proposal for all 16<lb/>
institutions in the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system will go<lb/>
before the board of governors on<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
If passed, the proposal will mean<lb/>
an increase of about $62 for in-state<lb/>
and $130 for out-of-state tuition per<lb/>
year for East Carolina<lb/>
undergraduate students.<lb/>
The proposed increase, which is<lb/>
included in the statements which<lb/>
have been sent out to students this<lb/>
week, raises in-state tuition to $186<lb/>
and out-of-state tuition to $1080 per<lb/>
semester. This brings the total pay-<lb/>
ment due for in-state dorm students<lb/>
to $711 and out-of-state dorm<lb/>
students to $1,605.<lb/>
This proposal follows an increase<lb/>
in student fees and dormitory costs,<lb/>
approved in March by the ECU<lb/>
board of trustees.<lb/>
According to C. G. Moore, vice<lb/>
chancellor of business affairs, the<lb/>
reason that the not-yet-approved in-<lb/>
crease was included in the<lb/>
statements is so that students can<lb/>
meet the deadline for mailing in<lb/>
payments.<lb/>
Moore said that had they waited<lb/>
until the proposal was voted on, the<lb/>
statements could not have been<lb/>
mailed before Monday. This would<lb/>
make it nearly impossible for most<lb/>
students to meet the deadline for<lb/>
mailing in payments and avoid a $10<lb/>
late fee. "We were just trying to<lb/>
save the students some money<lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
He added that in case the pro-<lb/>
posal does not pass, the extra money<lb/>
will be applied to student fees for<lb/>
Spring 1982 or refunded to the stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
According to Moore, the propos-<lb/>
ed change was prompted by an at-<lb/>
tempt on the board of governor's<lb/>
part to work towards a uniform tui-<lb/>
variety of credit and non-credit pro-<lb/>
grams off-campus, reaching as<lb/>
many as 20,000 people annually, in-<lb/>
cluding businessmen, teachers, the<lb/>
military, commercial fishermen and<lb/>
others.<lb/>
This growth "could not have been<lb/>
possible without the support ol the<lb/>
ECU administration and most par-<lb/>
ticularly the heavy involvement and<lb/>
interest of the faculty in rendering<lb/>
public service programs Mid-<lb/>
dleton said.<lb/>
He added, "Through Continuing<lb/>
Education, the university has reach-<lb/>
ed many peop'? ;r �� North<lb/>
Carolina who otherwise would nut<lb/>
have had the opportunity to enroll<lb/>
in the university programs nor tht<lb/>
improve themselves educationally<lb/>
An important note is that this has<lb/>
been done at low cost to the State<lb/>
and to the taxpayers.<lb/>
"However Dr. Middleton con<lb/>
tinued, "in the immediate futurt<lb/>
some form of outside funding is of<lb/>
critical importance if ECU is going<lb/>
to continue a role of providing ser<lb/>
vices to a variety of the state's<lb/>
citizens in this region. (itherwise, we<lb/>
S�e I)KAV, Page 2<lb/>
Faculty Receive<lb/>
Official Promotions<lb/>
Clifton<lb/>
tion collection for all 16 North<lb/>
Carolina institutions.<lb/>
Part-time students and part-time<lb/>
tuition have been recategorized.<lb/>
Full-time undergraduate status,<lb/>
formerly nine hours or more,is now<lb/>
constituted by 12 or more hours.<lb/>
Tuition for in-state students taking<lb/>
Moore<lb/>
between nine and 11 hours is 3140.<lb/>
In-state tuition for six to eight<lb/>
hours is $93, and five hours and<lb/>
under will pay $47.<lb/>
Graduate students, who are also<lb/>
included in the proposed increase,<lb/>
have also been reclassified as to<lb/>
part- and full-time.<lb/>
The Office of Academic Affairs<lb/>
has announced the promotions of 24<lb/>
ECU faculty members. Five<lb/>
members received promotions to the<lb/>
rank of professor, eight to the rank<lb/>
of associate professor and 11 to the<lb/>
rank of assistant professor.<lb/>
Raised "to full professors were Dr.<lb/>
George Bissinger of the Department<lb/>
of Physics, Dr. Mark Brinson of the<lb/>
Department of Biology, Dr. Robert<lb/>
Morrison of the Department of<lb/>
Chemistery, Dr. Jerry Hunt of the<lb/>
School of Business and Dr. Y.J.<lb/>
Lao of the Department of En-<lb/>
vironmental Health in the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Profes-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
Bissinger graduated from the<lb/>
University of Chicago in 1962 with a<lb/>
B.S. He then graduated from<lb/>
DePaul in 1964 with an M.S. and<lb/>
from the University of Notre Dame<lb/>
in 1969 with a Ph.d.<lb/>
Brinson received his B.S. from<lb/>
Heidelberg College in 1965. He<lb/>
received his M.S. in Botany from<lb/>
the University of Michigan in 1967<lb/>
and his Ph.d. in Botanv from the<lb/>
University of Florida in 1973. Brin-<lb/>
son was the receipient of the Helms<lb/>
Research Award in Biological and<lb/>
Medical Sciences in 1978.<lb/>
Morrison was unavailable for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
Hunt received his bachelor's<lb/>
degree from the University of Col-<lb/>
orado in 1964 and his Ph.D. in 1968.<lb/>
Lao received his B.S. from Na-<lb/>
tional Taiwan University in 1958 and<lb/>
his Ph.D. from the University ol<lb/>
Michigan in 1969.<lb/>
Promoted to Associate Professors<lb/>
were Paul Hartley, Art; Richard<lb/>
Kerns, Business; Clinton Downing,<lb/>
Education; Rosalie Haritun, Music;<lb/>
Anthony Papalas, History; Alfred<lb/>
Muller, English; Paul Tschctter.<lb/>
Sociology and Anthropology: and<lb/>
Larry Bolen, Psychology.<lb/>
Promoted to Assistant Professors<lb/>
were Clarence Morgan, Art.<lb/>
Rosemary Fischer, Selma Gokcen,<lb/>
Donna Coleman, David Hawkins,<lb/>
C. Bradford Foley, and Deborah<lb/>
Chodacki, Music; Helen Everett<lb/>
and Roberta Edwards, Nursing;<lb/>
David Downing, Drama and<lb/>
Speech; and Nell Eutsler, English.<lb/>
Two Canadians Arrested<lb/>
Controller Nets Cocaine Bust<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
may be a popular pastime of ECU sstudents during the<lb/>
break.<lb/>
WILMINGTON, N.C. (UPI) An<lb/>
airport controller's suspicions<lb/>
resulted in the seizure of cocaine<lb/>
with a street value of about $3<lb/>
million early Tuesday and the arrest<lb/>
of two Canadians at the New<lb/>
Hanover County Airport.<lb/>
The cocaine was found inside a<lb/>
briefcase one of the men left inside<lb/>
the airport's private aviation ter:<lb/>
minal, said Gil Payette, an official<lb/>
of the U.S. Customs Service Patrol<lb/>
Division.<lb/>
Five nacka�e� containinc a total<lb/>
of eight to 10 pounds of cocaine<lb/>
were found inside the briefcase,<lb/>
Payette said. Preliminary tests in-<lb/>
dicated the presence of cocaine, but<lb/>
authorities ordered lab tests to<lb/>
determine its purity.<lb/>
The two men were identified as<lb/>
David Mark Green berg, 44, of<lb/>
Brome, Quebec, the pilot of a twin-<lb/>
engine plane that stopped for refuel-<lb/>
ing, and DiNunno Pasquale, 44, of<lb/>
Montreal, Quebec, a passenger on<lb/>
the plane.<lb/>
They were charged with violation<lb/>
of North Carolina's 1979 drug traf-<lb/>
ficking law, which sets a prison term<lb/>
of 16 to 40 years and a mandatory<lb/>
fine of $200,000 for possession of<lb/>
more than one pound of cocaine.<lb/>
Greenberg was jailed under $3<lb/>
million bond and Pasquale under a<lb/>
$1.5 million bond.<lb/>
Authorities said the airplane land-<lb/>
ed at the airport around 2 a.m. for<lb/>
rff'ieling and a controller in the<lb/>
iuWcf became suspicious about the<lb/>
actions of the men on the plane.<lb/>
Payette said Federal Aviation Ad-<lb/>
ministration personnel at airports<lb/>
have been asked to report such<lb/>
behavior to customs and drug<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
"There were a couple of things.<lb/>
Nothing that anybody could put<lb/>
their fingers on he said. "The<lb/>
FAA, we work with them and<lb/>
they're learning to be observant of<lb/>
flight patterns and procedures<lb/>
The controller notified federal of-<lb/>
ficials who asked the New Hanover<lb/>
County Sheriffs Department to<lb/>
send deputies to the airport and<lb/>
observe the two men until federal<lb/>
officials arrived.<lb/>
A.K. Giacoman, a detective with<lb/>
the county narcotics squad, said one<lb/>
of the deputies sent to the airport<lb/>
saw one of the men take a briefcase<lb/>
from the plane into the private avia-<lb/>
tion terminal and leave it there.<lb/>
Deputies detained the two men<lb/>
Ulltii federal tigcuis affivcu.<lb/>
Authorities watched the terminal<lb/>
building for a brief period before<lb/>
opening the briefcase and discover-<lb/>
ing the cocaine inside.<lb/>
Greenberg and Pasquale denied<lb/>
any involvement or knowledge<lb/>
about the contents of the briefcase,<lb/>
but Giacoman said, "We had an of-<lb/>
ficer eyewitness as to the briefcase<lb/>
The two men were turned over to<lb/>
state officials for prosecution<lb/>
because of the heavy penalties under<lb/>
the drug trafficking law, Payette<lb/>
said. The law sets a legal presump-<lb/>
tion possession of large quantities of<lb/>
specific drugs, including cocaine,<lb/>
means a person is a drug dealer.<lb/>
The seizure was the second in-<lb/>
volving cocaine in the past two mon-<lb/>
ths at the New Hanover County Air-<lb/>
port. In early June, two New<lb/>
England men were arrested during a<lb/>
refueling stop and more than 400<lb/>
pounds of cocaine were found in<lb/>
their twin-engine airplane.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
��nMHHMHMMMMI<lb/>
Editorials1<lb/>
Features4<lb/>
SportsS<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
<pb facs="00057351_0003"/><lb/>
THfcFAiT CAROLINIAN H I 2 11 �-<lb/>
Deans Resign<lb/>
From Posts<lb/>
I<lb/>
Wright Auditorium<lb/>
is the latest building to undergo renovations.<lb/>
continued from page 2<lb/>
shall see a drastic cur-<lb/>
tailment of continuing<lb/>
education services<lb/>
A native of Warsaw,<lb/>
N. C, Middleton<lb/>
received his<lb/>
undergraduate degree<lb/>
at Duke University and<lb/>
earned his master's and<lb/>
PhD degrees at the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
From 1958 until 1962<lb/>
he was on the faculty<lb/>
and assistant director<lb/>
of extension at Ap-<lb/>
palachian State Univer-<lb/>
sity in Boone.<lb/>
He was named direc-<lb/>
tor of extension at East<lb/>
Carolina in 1962, suc-<lb/>
ceeding Dr. Ralph<lb/>
Brimley. In 1967, when<lb/>
the Division of Conti-<lb/>
nuing Education was<lb/>
established, Middleton<lb/>
was appointed its first<lb/>
dean.<lb/>
Middleton has held<lb/>
numerous state,<lb/>
regional and national<lb/>
offices in professional<lb/>
organizations. Included<lb/>
are chairman of the<lb/>
Southern Region of the<lb/>
National University<lb/>
Continuing Education<lb/>
Association (NUCEA),<lb/>
a member of the board<lb/>
of directors of NUCEA<lb/>
for three years and<lb/>
president and director<lb/>
of the Association of<lb/>
Continuing Profes-<lb/>
sional Education.<lb/>
He also served on the<lb/>
board of directors of<lb/>
the United Cerebral<lb/>
Palsy of N.C from<lb/>
1970 to 1980, and for<lb/>
the last 11 years has<lb/>
been on the board of<lb/>
directors of the North<lb/>
Carolina Rural Fund<lb/>
for Development, a<lb/>
special project for low<lb/>
income rural families.<lb/>
"Dr. Middleton has<lb/>
served the university<lb/>
long and well said<lb/>
Dr. Robert H. Maier,<lb/>
vice chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs.<lb/>
"Under Dr. Mid-<lb/>
dleton's leadership, for<lb/>
almost two decades the<lb/>
Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education has<lb/>
delivered the univcrsi<lb/>
ty's academic program<lb/>
throughout the region<lb/>
and even beyond la<lb/>
doing, tens ot<lb/>
thousands of students<lb/>
have been given an op<lb/>
portunity for higher<lb/>
education<lb/>
President's Plan Criticized By Some<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(UP1) Conservative<lb/>
Southern Democrats a<lb/>
key bloc of votes in the<lb/>
House tax cut fight said<lb/>
today they are about<lb/>
evenly split between<lb/>
competing bills and<lb/>
President Reagan must<lb/>
look elsewhere for sup-<lb/>
port.<lb/>
Reagan and leading<lb/>
Democrats went on na-<lb/>
tional television Mon-<lb/>
day night to argue the<lb/>
merits of their com-<lb/>
peting tax cut plans.<lb/>
The spotlight now<lb/>
moves to votes on the<lb/>
Senate and House<lb/>
floors.<lb/>
Today, the<lb/>
Republican-dominated<lb/>
Senate hoped to com-<lb/>
plete action on<lb/>
Reagan's proposal. Its<lb/>
centerpiece is a<lb/>
33-month, 25 percent<lb/>
across-the-board cut in<lb/>
individual tax rates.<lb/>
Passage seemed cer-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
But in the House,<lb/>
Speaker Thomas<lb/>
O'Neill, who lost the<lb/>
battle of the budget to<lb/>
the president, predicted<lb/>
a narrow victory over<lb/>
Reagan on taxes and<lb/>
approval of a<lb/>
21-month, 15 percent<lb/>
cut backed by<lb/>
Democrats. A vote is<lb/>
expected Wednesday.<lb/>
Rep. G.V. "Sonny"<lb/>
Montgomery, D-Miss<lb/>
said 26 members of the<lb/>
Conservative<lb/>
Democratic Forum met<lb/>
this morning to discuss<lb/>
the two tax plans. Mon-<lb/>
tgomery said his own<lb/>
head count showed 10<lb/>
of the so-called "boll<lb/>
weevils" firmly support<lb/>
the president's plan, 10<lb/>
back the Democratic-<lb/>
inspired committee bill<lb/>
and six remain undecid-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
As of today, with the<lb/>
swearing-in of a new<lb/>
Republican, the presi-<lb/>
dent would have to<lb/>
hold all 192 House<lb/>
Republicans in line plus<lb/>
win over 26 Democrats<lb/>
to win the tax cut bat-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
Rep. James Jeffords,<lb/>
R-Vt has announced<lb/>
he may vote against the<lb/>
president's tax bill<lb/>
unless its supporters<lb/>
drop more than $13<lb/>
billion worth tax breaks<lb/>
for oil interests added<lb/>
to attract oil-state<lb/>
votes.<lb/>
Montgomery, who<lb/>
said he will support the<lb/>
president's tax cut, said<lb/>
Reagan "would have to<lb/>
go outside the forum"<lb/>
to pick up enough votes<lb/>
to win.<lb/>
The president, in a<lb/>
nationally televised<lb/>
speech Monday night,<lb/>
accused Democrats of<lb/>
playing "political fun<lb/>
and games" with the<lb/>
economy and urged<lb/>
citizens to lobby their<lb/>
legislators to approve<lb/>
his plan.<lb/>
Democratic leaders,<lb/>
in front of TV cameras<lb/>
seconds after Reagan<lb/>
signed off, charged the<lb/>
president's<lb/>
'experimental" plan<lb/>
was geared for the rich<lb/>
and urged public sup-<lb/>
port for their "fairer,<lb/>
safer" proposal.<lb/>
The Senate, in its<lb/>
11th day of tax debate<lb/>
today, agreed 94-1 to<lb/>
increase tax tax credits<lb/>
for child care costs.<lb/>
similar to a provision<lb/>
approved by the House<lb/>
Ways and Means Com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
O'Neill predicted the<lb/>
Democrats would win<lb/>
the tax cut vote<lb/>
Wednesday by a slim<lb/>
Margin.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Di and Charles Interviewed<lb/>
LONDON (UPI)<lb/>
Prince Charles said<lb/>
tuesday on the eve of<lb/>
his wedding to Lady<lb/>
Diana Spencer that he<lb/>
expects to "spend half<lb/>
the time in tears" dur-<lb/>
ing the ceremony in St.<lb/>
Paul's Cathedral.<lb/>
In a British television<lb/>
interview, Charles said<lb/>
he always longed for a<lb/>
musical wedding and<lb/>
had deliberately chosen<lb/>
stirring music Elgar's<lb/>
"Pomp and Cir-<lb/>
cumstance" march and<lb/>
the hymn "Christ Has<lb/>
Made The Sure Foun-<lb/>
dation<lb/>
"1 find it very mov-<lb/>
ing Charles said. "I<lb/>
shall, 1 think, spend<lb/>
half the time in tears<lb/>
He said it was impor-<lb/>
tant to fill up the<lb/>
cathedral with music at<lb/>
the start of the service<lb/>
when it will take 34<lb/>
minutes to walk up the<lb/>
aisle.<lb/>
"You want<lb/>
something very stirring<lb/>
and dramatic and noisy<lb/>
to carry you up,<lb/>
because if you have<lb/>
something rather quiet,<lb/>
you start hearing your<lb/>
ankles cricking, you<lb/>
know what I mean8"<lb/>
Charles asked with a<lb/>
smile.<lb/>
In only the second<lb/>
television interview the<lb/>
royal couple has given,<lb/>
Lady Diana, 20,<lb/>
described herself an an<lb/>
"average" cook, then<lb/>
turned to Charles, 12<lb/>
years her senior, and<lb/>
said, "but you haven't<lb/>
tasted anything because<lb/>
I won't let you<lb/>
She said she would<lb/>
miss the huge eve-of-<lb/>
wedding fireworks<lb/>
display in Hyde Park.<lb/>
"I'm going to be<lb/>
tucked up in bed, I<lb/>
TVA Plans Suspension Of Reactor<lb/>
Construction In Mississippi And<lb/>
Tennessee; Will Idle Workers<lb/>
KNOXVILLE,<lb/>
Tenn. (UPI) TVA's<lb/>
plans to suspend con-<lb/>
struction on one reac-<lb/>
tor and slow building<lb/>
on three other units will<lb/>
create economic havoc<lb/>
and unemployment in<lb/>
parts of Tennessee and<lb/>
Mississippi, officials<lb/>
say.<lb/>
Tennessee and<lb/>
Mississippi officials<lb/>
said Tuesday although<lb/>
it was hard to gauge the<lb/>
impact of the TVA ac-<lb/>
tion at present, one<lb/>
leader said it "can't be<lb/>
anything but bad<lb/>
TVA's planned ac-<lb/>
tion will idle 6,300<lb/>
workers. The agency<lb/>
had planned to pay the<lb/>
workers $228.7 million<lb/>
in wages for 1982.<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
highpaying jobs, of-<lb/>
ficials indicate the<lb/>
layoffs will create a rip-<lb/>
pling effect throughout<lb/>
the economic sector,<lb/>
especially in areas close<lb/>
to the plants.<lb/>
TVA announced last<lb/>
week it was considering<lb/>
deferring a reactor at<lb/>
the Phipps Bend<lb/>
Nuclear plant near<lb/>
Surgoinsville, Tenn<lb/>
and slowing down work<lb/>
on two reactor units at<lb/>
the Hartsville Plant<lb/>
near Nashville.<lb/>
The agency also said<lb/>
it would likely slow<lb/>
work on a reactor at the<lb/>
Yellow Creek plant<lb/>
near luka, Miss.<lb/>
TVA's three-member<lb/>
board of directors are<lb/>
due to act on the<lb/>
nuclear program ad-<lb/>
justments in an Aug. 6<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
"There is no doubt<lb/>
we are going to be<lb/>
hurt said luka Mayor<lb/>
Johnny Biggs. "But<lb/>
not only us, but other<lb/>
small towns around the<lb/>
plant such as Savan-<lb/>
nah, Tenn Corinth,<lb/>
Booneville, Belmont,<lb/>
Tishomingo, Fulton<lb/>
and in Alabama<lb/>
Cherokee, Florence<lb/>
and Sheffield<lb/>
The utility plans to<lb/>
lay off about 1,346<lb/>
workers at Yellow<lb/>
Creek, another 3,012 at<lb/>
Phipps Bend and 1,962<lb/>
at Hartsville.<lb/>
TVA officials said<lb/>
the action is needed<lb/>
because the power<lb/>
generated from the<lb/>
reactor units will not be<lb/>
needed when the plants<lb/>
are scheduled to come<lb/>
on line.<lb/>
TVA says by deferr-<lb/>
ing Phipps Bend and<lb/>
stretching out work at<lb/>
Yellow Creek and<lb/>
Hartsville, the agency<lb/>
can save $27 million<lb/>
this year and about<lb/>
$250 million annually<lb/>
by 1985.<lb/>
The nuclear con-<lb/>
struction program has<lb/>
shot rates up in the<lb/>
Tennessee Valley and<lb/>
caused strong grumbl-<lb/>
ing among TVA's 2.7<lb/>
million customers in<lb/>
seven states. TVA of-<lb/>
ficials said the savings<lb/>
will help ease the rate<lb/>
load and not impact<lb/>
TVA's ability to supply<lb/>
power in the region.<lb/>
Biggs and other of-<lb/>
ficials said the<lb/>
economic impact will<lb/>
run the gamut from<lb/>
fast-food restaurants to<lb/>
housing units. He said<lb/>
any population shift in<lb/>
a little town like luka<lb/>
would have an adverse<lb/>
impact.<lb/>
"We're going to<lb/>
have some empty<lb/>
houses around here and<lb/>
some restaurants might<lb/>
close he said.<lb/>
TVA's plan would<lb/>
place the entire Phipps<lb/>
Bend plant on hold. In<lb/>
1979, TVA had defer-<lb/>
red one atomic unit at<lb/>
Phipps Bend. But TVA<lb/>
said although the plant<lb/>
will be in a deferred<lb/>
status, it will still take<lb/>
about 400 workers to<lb/>
maintain the facility.<lb/>
TVA also will spend<lb/>
millions on the facility<lb/>
even though it is defer-<lb/>
red. The agency plans<lb/>
to spend $122 million in<lb/>
1982, $69 million in<lb/>
1983, $86 million in<lb/>
1984 and $125 million<lb/>
in 1985.<lb/>
At Yellow Creek,<lb/>
TVA must spend $96<lb/>
million in 1982, $118<lb/>
million in 1983, $150<lb/>
million in 1984 and $53<lb/>
million in 1985.<lb/>
On the two units at<lb/>
Hartsville, TVA plans<lb/>
to spent $125 million in<lb/>
fiscal 1982, $148<lb/>
million in 1983, $232<lb/>
million in 1984 and<lb/>
$206 million in 1985.<lb/>
In Tennessee, the<lb/>
layoffs will have a<lb/>
strong impact on<lb/>
several counties sur-<lb/>
rounding the Phipps<lb/>
Bend and Hartsville<lb/>
Plants.<lb/>
Jim Eley of the state<lb/>
Employment Security<lb/>
Commission said<lb/>
unemployment in a<lb/>
17-county area sur-<lb/>
rounding the Hartsville<lb/>
plant will increase<lb/>
about four-tenths of a<lb/>
percent due to the<lb/>
layoffs.<lb/>
think, early night she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"Not allowed to see<lb/>
me anyway the night<lb/>
before added<lb/>
Charles.<lb/>
"We might quarrel<lb/>
Diana said with a<lb/>
laugh.<lb/>
"Even by the light of<lb/>
an exploding<lb/>
firework quipped her<lb/>
husband-to-be.<lb/>
They both said they<lb/>
had been overwhelmed<lb/>
by the more than<lb/>
100,000 letters of good<lb/>
wishes that have arriv-<lb/>
ed at Buckingham<lb/>
Palace since the<lb/>
engagement was an-<lb/>
nounced in February.<lb/>
"I looked this morn-<lb/>
ing and there's a cor-<lb/>
ridor stacked with, I<lb/>
don't know, 40 stacks<lb/>
of presents and mail<lb/>
which we can't get<lb/>
through. And I mean,<lb/>
it is incredible<lb/>
Charles said.<lb/>
Lady Diana disclosed<lb/>
she had problems with<lb/>
her list of wedding<lb/>
guests.<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
Remember to pick<lb/>
up your cap and<lb/>
gown from the Stu-<lb/>
dent Supply Store,<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
University before<lb/>
leaving school.<lb/>
These Keepsake<lb/>
gowns are yours to<lb/>
keep provided the<lb/>
$10.00 graduation<lb/>
fee has been paid.<lb/>
For those receiving<lb/>
the Masters Degree<lb/>
the $10.00 fee pays<lb/>
for your cap and<lb/>
gown, but there is an<lb/>
extra fee of $11.25<lb/>
for your hood.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
?<lb/>
Papers typed: Ac-<lb/>
curate, professional<lb/>
typing. Good rates.<lb/>
Call 752-9665.<lb/>
Papers typed for<lb/>
students. 1019 E.<lb/>
Wright Rd. 752-6733.<lb/>
For Sale - Single bed. 1<lb/>
year old mattress. Ex-<lb/>
cellent condition. Call:<lb/>
758-7773.<lb/>
Need third female to<lb/>
share two bedroom<lb/>
trailer. $50.00 a month<lb/>
plus one third utilities.<lb/>
$50.00 deposit.<lb/>
Available for fall. Call<lb/>
Diane Saturday and<lb/>
Sunday until 4:00 and<lb/>
Monday-Wednesday<lb/>
after 5:00 at 756-2076.<lb/>
3 piece living room set.<lb/>
75.00. Excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. 758-7773.<lb/>
Female roommate<lb/>
needed to share<lb/>
spacious 2-BedRm<lb/>
Trailer<lb/>
(semi-furnished). 65.00<lb/>
per month plus <lb/>
utilities. Call 757-1193<lb/>
(keep trying).<lb/>
Single Bed.<lb/>
mattress.<lb/>
758-7773.<lb/>
year old<lb/>
45.00.<lb/>
TYPING WANTED.<lb/>
Professional typist with<lb/>
fifteen years experience<lb/>
as Administrative<lb/>
Secretary to top ex-<lb/>
ecutiv-e.<lb/>
REASONABLE<lb/>
RATES. Call after 5:00<lb/>
p.m. - 756-3660.<lb/>
Three bedroom<lb/>
house for rent. Four<lb/>
blocks from campus.<lb/>
Call 758-6206.<lb/>
JUST YOUR TYPE.<lb/>
Fast, accurate, profes-<lb/>
sional typing. Research<lb/>
papers, resumes, let-<lb/>
ters, etc. WRITE<lb/>
RIGHT. 756-9946.<lb/>
Parakeet for sale. Very<lb/>
friendly bird. Call<lb/>
William at 757-6366.<lb/>
WANTED: Writers for<lb/>
fall semester. Apply at<lb/>
The East Carolinian.<lb/>
The East CaroHnian<lb/>
Semite it campus commumuy<lb/>
stiKt 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during me academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing trie summer<lb/>
The East CaroHnian is me of-<lb/>
ficial newspaper ot Bast<lb/>
Carolina university, owned,<lb/>
operated, and published for and<lb/>
by me students of East Carolina<lb/>
Uni versify.<lb/>
Subscription Bates<lb/>
BusinessM yearly<lb/>
AM othersOS yearly<lb/>
Second class postage paid at<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
TiUahewe: WHWt Us7.43-<lb/>
S A AD'S SHOE<lb/>
REPAIR<lb/>
113 Grand Avt<lb/>
70-1220<lb/>
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ARMY NAVY STORE<lb/>
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GOLD<lb/>
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PEGASUS<lb/>
PLUS<lb/>
??<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
���?�'<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
WltiWEEK OF<lb/>
PREGNANCY<lb/>
$176.00<lb/>
pregnancy les' txrth con<lb/>
trol. and problem<lb/>
pregnancy counst<lb/>
For farther mtormji.tp<lb/>
call 837 0S3S 0<lb/>
number tOO 211 JS8 !�'<lb/>
ween � A M 5 P M<lb/>
weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Paul Collins. �.w��<lb/>
Jimmy Dupree. ��,�,to,<lb/>
Chuck Foster, ,�,�, a,�,���, Karen Wendt. � ���<lb/>
Chris Lichok. ���� M�� William Yelverton. � "�<lb/>
Alison Bartel. ���, �, Steve Bachner. f�� i��.<lb/>
July 29. 1981<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 3<lb/>
Tuition<lb/>
Notices Mailed Before Vote<lb/>
Bills for tuition and fees for fall<lb/>
1981 semester have recently been<lb/>
sent out bearing increases in student<lb/>
fees and tuition.<lb/>
There's only one catch: the tui-<lb/>
tion increase for East Carolina<lb/>
University is on the agenda this<lb/>
coming Friday for the Board of<lb/>
Governors of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system to consider.<lb/>
Is this some bureaucratic over-<lb/>
sight? Hardly!<lb/>
The increase should be approved<lb/>
without controversy. But the ques-<lb/>
tion remains: why were notices<lb/>
mailed before the nod of approval?<lb/>
The natural first reaction is anger,<lb/>
but a calm examination of the facts<lb/>
reveals the logic behind this deci-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
As Vice Chancellor Cliff Moore<lb/>
explains, many students would not<lb/>
have been able to meet the August 7<lb/>
deadline for mailing in tuition and<lb/>
fees if their notices were not receiv-<lb/>
ed until after the Friday vote.<lb/>
Students have until August 14 to<lb/>
submit their funds in person, but<lb/>
after 4 p.m. of that date schedules<lb/>
are nullified and a ten dollar late<lb/>
registration fee assessed.<lb/>
Moore further explained that in<lb/>
the case the governors deny the in-<lb/>
crease, the balance will either be<lb/>
refunded or applied to the student's<lb/>
Spring 1982 expenses. So either<lb/>
way, there's really no way to lose.<lb/>
What is disappointing, though, is<lb/>
that the students have been essen-<lb/>
tially kept in the dark concerning<lb/>
the tuition rise.<lb/>
Once again the cost of higher<lb/>
education continues to soar, while<lb/>
students and their (financial) sup-<lb/>
porters continue to suffer.<lb/>
Senate Vote Denies Women Privacy<lb/>
Star Follows Disturbing Trend<lb/>
The death of a close friend is one<lb/>
of life's saddest moments, and a<lb/>
great many people must be feeling<lb/>
something akin to such a loss with<lb/>
the announcement of the demise of<lb/>
The Washington Star. On August 7<lb/>
the Star, which first appeared in the<lb/>
nations capital in 1852, will cease<lb/>
128 years of pubication.<lb/>
The news is not only sad but alar-<lb/>
ming, and it has sent shock waves<lb/>
through the newspaper industry.<lb/>
The loss of the Star means that the<lb/>
capital of Western democracy is left<lb/>
with only one daily newspaper and<lb/>
that America has lost one of its<lb/>
great journalistic institutions.<lb/>
The Star was considered one of<lb/>
the five best daily papers in the<lb/>
country and the best published in<lb/>
the afternoon. It has become<lb/>
another in a long line of afternoon<lb/>
papers to fold in recent years<lb/>
because of financial difficulty.<lb/>
The Star's circulation has fallen<lb/>
off continually during the past<lb/>
decade, and an inevitable decline in<lb/>
advertising lineage has followed.<lb/>
The saddest part of the Star's<lb/>
decline, however, is that the people<lb/>
of Washington seem unwilling to<lb/>
support competing newspapers,<lb/>
long considered an essential part of<lb/>
democracy. Such an occurrence<lb/>
does not bode well for the future of<lb/>
newspapers and the role of the<lb/>
press.<lb/>
By KATHARINE KIMBERLY<lb/>
On July 9, a U.S. Senate sub-committee<lb/>
voted three to two that human life begins<lb/>
at conception. This is the first in a series of<lb/>
steps initiated by North Carolina Senators<lb/>
Jesse Helms and John East to repeal the<lb/>
1973 Supreme Court decision which<lb/>
legalized abortion. This movement, if suc-<lb/>
cessful, will deprive American women of<lb/>
their right to choose whether or not they<lb/>
wish to have a child, and will do ir-<lb/>
reparable damage to the already tenuous<lb/>
status of women in this country.<lb/>
Whether human life does or does not<lb/>
begin at conception is, it seems to me, a<lb/>
minor point which is being utilized to the<lb/>
advantage of the anti-abortionists. The<lb/>
real matter at hand is a woman's right to<lb/>
decide whether or not she wants to be a<lb/>
mother. This decision can be made only by<lb/>
the individual woman. Only she knows if<lb/>
she will have the constitution, the time, the<lb/>
financial ability, and the patience to carry<lb/>
a fetus for nine months. Only she can<lb/>
decide whether or not she has the ability to<lb/>
love and care for that child after its birth<lb/>
and raise it in an atmosphere condusive to<lb/>
its happiness and well-being. Or, if the<lb/>
situation warrents, the strength to give it<lb/>
up for adoption.<lb/>
Even now, when abortion is legal, how<lb/>
many unwanted children exist in this coun-<lb/>
try alone? Why take away a woman's right<lb/>
to terminate the pregnancy and prevent<lb/>
another from being born? Is it not a<lb/>
greater sin to bring an unwanted child into<lb/>
existence who will be a drain on society<lb/>
and its institutions for 18 years, and<lb/>
possibly for its entire life, because of the<lb/>
psychological trauma of its origins and up-<lb/>
bringing? If a woman is forced to carry,<lb/>
bear and keep a child that she does not<lb/>
want, how can she help but resent that<lb/>
child? Or, if she gives it up for adoption,<lb/>
how can she resist the temptation to, at<lb/>
some later date, contact and reveal herself<lb/>
to that child?<lb/>
Each of these questions plays on the<lb/>
emotions, as does each of those posed by<lb/>
the anti-abortionists. But the entire issue is<lb/>
one that plays on the emotions of every<lb/>
person who has ever been or had the op-<lb/>
portunity to be a parent, men included.<lb/>
The fact is, however, that men do have a<lb/>
choice as to whether or not they want to be<lb/>
a father. True, the physical aspect is not<lb/>
one that can be denied. But after the child<lb/>
is born, the male can choose to or not to<lb/>
take the responsibility of a father. The<lb/>
woman has no such choice. Her only<lb/>
choice must be made before the child is<lb/>
born.<lb/>
And that choice in itself has got to be<lb/>
one of the most difficult ones any woman<lb/>
could ever make. Any decision a woman<lb/>
makes when she finds herself pregnant will<lb/>
entail hours of agonized thought and<lb/>
almost certainly recriminations later. The<lb/>
decision to have an abortion is stress and<lb/>
punishment enough�why add to the pain<lb/>
by making it illegal as well?<lb/>
One idea that was pointed out in a letter<lb/>
to the editor published in The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian last year was that abortion is not a<lb/>
means of destroying an already existing<lb/>
human life�it is a means of protecting the<lb/>
personal privacy of an individual, as<lb/>
guaranteed in the First Amendment. If the<lb/>
anti-abortionists manage to get this<lb/>
Supreme Court decision, which guarantees<lb/>
a woman the right to privacy in at least one<lb/>
area of her life, repealed, they may as well<lb/>
rewrite the entire Constitution.<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our ojjice in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across Jrom Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes oj verification, all letters<lb/>
must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature oj the author(s). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. All let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity,<lb/>
obscenity and libel, and no personal at-<lb/>
tacks will be permitted. Letters by the<lb/>
same author are limited to one each 30<lb/>
da vs.<lb/>
Helms' Tactics Backfire As Senator Builds Power<lb/>
By KAREN WENDT<lb/>
In the past month the senior senator,<lb/>
Jesse Helms, from North Carolina has<lb/>
rccieved a lot of publicity. He should be<lb/>
getting used to it by now. Heaven knows<lb/>
he fights hard enough to get it.<lb/>
But the fact that he is in the limelight is<lb/>
not as important as why he is there. Our<lb/>
senior senator has come under a lot of<lb/>
criticism lately, in both the state and na-<lb/>
tional press. This month's Playboy men-<lb/>
tions him extensively in an article this<lb/>
month and he si the lead article in last<lb/>
weeks People magazine. And in the Sun-<lb/>
day News and Observer he was refered to<lb/>
by a fellow congressman as "the worst<lb/>
liability you have in the state of North<lb/>
Carolina and recently by another con-<lb/>
gressman called a "kind of time bomb for<lb/>
Reagan Why has he suddenley become<lb/>
the subject of such wrath?<lb/>
Because Jesse Helms is fighting for you<lb/>
in Washington. He is fighting for a new<lb/>
morality for you to live by. He is fighting<lb/>
for fewer freedoms for you and your<lb/>
children to live by. He is fighting to change<lb/>
all of those evil laws that have been thrust<lb/>
upon you. And who decided they were<lb/>
evil? Why, Mr. Helms, of course.<lb/>
Helms, along with his friends in the<lb/>
Moral Majority, have decided to take it<lb/>
upon themselves to change your civil<lb/>
rights, to fight for a government in which,<lb/>
to use Helms' own words "Principles are<lb/>
what count And Helms uses his own<lb/>
principles as a guideline to what a state and<lb/>
now a nation should, and if he has his way,<lb/>
will be forced to do.<lb/>
Helms has been called "maybe the most<lb/>
powerful politician in America outside the<lb/>
White House<lb/>
Yet this man has also voted no on a total<lb/>
of eleven so-called pro-freedom issues. The<lb/>
issues in question were those that were<lb/>
determined by a columnist to be wavering<lb/>
on citizen personal freedoms and Helms<lb/>
voting went as follows.<lb/>
Helms voted yes on the controversial<lb/>
draft registration issue.<lb/>
He voted against a bill which would<lb/>
allow battered spouses temporary shelter.<lb/>
Conservative Christians said that the bill<lb/>
was "federal intrusion into sensitive family<lb/>
disputes that would facilitate, rather than<lb/>
hinder, the breakup of families<lb/>
Helms moved to table an amendment<lb/>
which would allow the use of Medicaid<lb/>
funds for abortions in cases of rape or in-<lb/>
cest which are promptly reported to<lb/>
authorities.<lb/>
Helms voted against the use of Defense<lb/>
Department funds for abortions by GI's<lb/>
and their dependents.<lb/>
He voted against extending the time for<lb/>
the Equal Rights Amendment.<lb/>
Helms began and voted for an amend-<lb/>
ment which would bring prayers back to<lb/>
public schools.<lb/>
Helms began and voted for an amend-<lb/>
ment which would require schools getting<lb/>
federal funds to obtain parental aproval<lb/>
for sex education.<lb/>
He voted against a bill which would<lb/>
allow the Justice Department to sue states<lb/>
on behalf of institutionalized persons,<lb/>
whether they be prisoners or mentally or<lb/>
physically disabled.<lb/>
Helms began and voted for an amend-<lb/>
ment which would reinstitute the death<lb/>
penalty in crimes concerning Fedral of-<lb/>
fences.<lb/>
Helms has expressed a view that he is<lb/>
against the voting rights act of 1965.<lb/>
ITY FOR UNWANTED<lb/>
CHILDREN STOPS AT THE END OF THE BIRTH CANAL<lb/>
The Senator voted against a bill which<lb/>
would allow the Department of Housing<lb/>
and Urban Development to sue those who<lb/>
discriminate in housing both in sale and<lb/>
rental.<lb/>
The man is no longer a curiosity; he is a<lb/>
menace to our civil rights. And he has gone<lb/>
so far that he is damaging a chief industry<lb/>
in the state; the one he is most vocal about<lb/>
protecting: tobacco.<lb/>
Representative Ferderick W. Richmond,<lb/>
D-N.Y. said of Helms, "Helms has been<lb/>
so vicious and unbending toward social<lb/>
programs, and he has so antagonized<lb/>
members of Congress that they want to get<lb/>
back at Helms through the tobacco pro-<lb/>
gram. Helms is the worst liability you have<lb/>
in the state of North Carolina<lb/>
The inference is obvious. Helms has<lb/>
been so violently opposed to social legisla-<lb/>
tion that his fellows senators are turning<lb/>
against him. He can no longer work with<lb/>
the men that he was elected to work with to<lb/>
govern our country. He is rapidly turning<lb/>
ineffective.<lb/>
And not even his position on the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Committee will change that.<lb/>
The controversial Helms-Hyde<lb/>
"Human Life Bill" would, in effect, make<lb/>
doctors performing and women receiving<lb/>
abortions subject to murder charges, ac-<lb/>
cording to People.<lb/>
What must be done is obvious. He must<lb/>
be stopped, before he decides that it is in<lb/>
our best interest to not be allowed any per-<lb/>
sonal freedoms. Legislators should not<lb/>
govtrn by their own morality, but by that<lb/>
of their constituents' overall beliefs. And<lb/>
contrary to many beliefs, "Moral Majori-<lb/>
ty" is a misnomer. They represent minori-<lb/>
ty and they will stay that way.<lb/>
The people who put Helms in office are<lb/>
the ones he is to help and protect. He can<lb/>
no longer do that. If the people let him<lb/>
know that they are unhappy, there is a<lb/>
chance that he can be stopped. A stamp<lb/>
only costs 18 cents and a letter only takes a<lb/>
few minutes to write. It may help in the<lb/>
meantime.<lb/>
But denying him re-election is the best<lb/>
deterrent.<lb/>
h<lb/>
<pb facs="00057351_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JULY 29, 1981 Page 4<lb/>
TWNl<lb/>
" Dereks' Ape Adventure:<lb/>
A Bungle In The Jungle<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Stan Writer<lb/>
The Medved brothers, authors of the The Fifty Worst<lb/>
Films of All Time, had better revise their book. The new<lb/>
Bo Derek vehicle, Tarzan, The Ape Man, now playing<lb/>
at the Buccaneer Theatres in Greenville, is bad enough<lb/>
to be the fifty worst films of all time by itself.<lb/>
Some of the film is quite cute: the first 15 seconds, for<lb/>
example. The picture begins with the standard framing<lb/>
of the MGM lion. But when old Leo opens his mouth to<lb/>
roar, we hear instead Tarzan's famous jungle yell. The<lb/>
movie goes downhill from there.<lb/>
How could anyone take a premise as exciting as a Tar-<lb/>
zan jungle adventure and make a totally soporific film<lb/>
out of it? This is exactly what "director" John Derek<lb/>
has done . . . probably while popping enough valium to<lb/>
mollify even the most ferocious of lions.<lb/>
What could have been (should have been) an action-<lb/>
packed jungle adventure with epic scope is instead an<lb/>
agonizingly tedious fiasco. A large portion of the pic-<lb/>
ture consists of people sitting around talking. The so-<lb/>
called "action" scenes are only slightly more interesting<lb/>
and, believe it or not, shot in slow motion (mostly to<lb/>
disguise the poor stunt work).<lb/>
Tarzan has a only a couple of accidental strong<lb/>
points. The Sri Lanka (phony African location) scenery<lb/>
is beautiful and even more pleasing than Bo herself.<lb/>
Miles O'Keeffe makes a Greek God of a Tarzan � this<lb/>
is apparently all the ever-body-conscious Dereks were<lb/>
looking for in him. Also, some of John Derek's<lb/>
photography is excellent and inspiring.<lb/>
However, Mr. Derek should stick to stills. He doesn't<lb/>
know the first thing about how to tell a story. The film<lb/>
is, for the most part, full of unoriginal camera<lb/>
movements and inept editing � one wonders just how<lb/>
many beginners were called upon to keep this film<lb/>
underbudget. The script, if it is possible, is even worse.<lb/>
Cheeta could have written a better screenplay. All<lb/>
he'd have to do is watch some old Tarzan flicks and<lb/>
copy or parody them. But this Tarzan doesn't even<lb/>
aspire to that, becoming instead an unintentional satire<lb/>
of itself. Tom Rowe (phony screenwriter) deserves the<lb/>
Golden Elephant Dung Award for his wonderful script.<lb/>
Let's be frank: The only reason this film exists, and<lb/>
the sole reason most people are paying to see it, is so<lb/>
that Little Bo Derek can strut that beautiful body (that's<lb/>
three bucks for a lousy peep-show).<lb/>
Since 1 see part of a film critics job as being a cinema-<lb/>
based consumer advocate, I'll tell you exactly what<lb/>
you'll be getting if you go to see Tarzan: a few shots of<lb/>
Bo's bare breasts and buttocks, nothing any more<lb/>
"erotic" than that.<lb/>
All the really juicy stuff (about 3 minutes worth), is<lb/>
on the cutting room floor because Edgar Rice Bur-<lb/>
roughs, Incorporated, the legal owners of the Tarzan<lb/>
character, sued MGM for desecrating their hero.<lb/>
Hey, John Derek, you big ape you, go back to<lb/>
Playboy magazine, shoot some more pictorials and quit<lb/>
playing Joe Director, okay?! Burroughs Inc I hope<lb/>
you win your lawsuit, awright?! Bo baby, our date's off<lb/>
� now getatahere!<lb/>
LOS ANGELES, UPI � Composer Perry Botkin has<lb/>
completed the music score for Tarzan, The Ape Man<lb/>
starring Bo Derek. Negotiations are ongoing on a possi-<lb/>
ble soundtrack release from the picture.<lb/>
Bo Derek swings and misses in her latest film, a sloppily rendered rehash of the Tarzan tale<lb/>
Cronyn- Tandy Magic Working In 'Gin Game'<lb/>
Tickets for ECU'S Summer Theatre production of "The<lb/>
Gin Game '(August 3-8) are now available at $7 each.<lb/>
Season tickets for both "The Last of the Red Hot<lb/>
Lovers" (running until August 1) and "Gin Game" are<lb/>
available at $10 each. Reservations may be made by<lb/>
telephoning the Summer Theatre box office. 757-6390.<lb/>
By KENNETH R. CLARK<lb/>
I'M TV Reporter<lb/>
NEW YORK, UPI � An interview with Hume<lb/>
Cronyn and Jessica Tandy, his actress wife of 39 years,<lb/>
is first and foremost a study of eyes. Hers somehow<lb/>
never grew older than 18; his are like twin fifties<lb/>
mounted in a gun turret.<lb/>
Those eyes glow with special fire whenever they meet<lb/>
each other.<lb/>
Perhaps that's what made D.L. Coburn's Pulitzer<lb/>
Prize winning play "The Gin Game" so phenomenal a<lb/>
hit both on Broadway and in the Soviet Union. Their<lb/>
eyes meet a lot as they play out the waning years of two<lb/>
lonely old people on welfare in a shabby rest home with<lb/>
only an all engrossing game of gin rummy between<lb/>
them.<lb/>
None of the Cronyn Tandy magic is lost by grafting<lb/>
the vehicle to television and Cronyn has no fear that the<lb/>
tube ever will do violence to the legitimate theatre he<lb/>
and his wife love best.<lb/>
"I'm just praying that 'Gin Game' and others like, it<lb/>
will give a shot in the arm to theatre he said. "If 'Gin<lb/>
Game' really works and finds a public � out of millions<lb/>
of viewers it will be an enormous support to theatre.<lb/>
Maybe there'll be a resurgence of interest in the classics<lb/>
for a tiny portion of the television audience, but on a<lb/>
nationwide scale large enough to make it economically<lb/>
viable.<lb/>
"We gave two and a half years of our lives to that<lb/>
play and were handsomely rewarded for doing it, but<lb/>
now in one night, the play will be seen by more people<lb/>
than would fit into the theatre if we played it every night<lb/>
for ten years<lb/>
The millions who view the RKO Nederlander televi-<lb/>
sion version of "The Gin Game" when it airs Tuesday<lb/>
will be subscribers to Showtime cable TV and at least<lb/>
they are likely to laugh in the right places. That didn't<lb/>
happen when Cronyn and Miss Tandy took the play to<lb/>
Moscow last year. "They had instant translation � car<lb/>
phones � and that is a bit of a hazard because a line<lb/>
that's about this long in English is about this long in<lb/>
Russian said Miss Tandy, thumb and forefinger held<lb/>
about an inch apart to hands in an 18 inch spread.<lb/>
"The instant translator had to go hell for leather to<lb/>
keep up with it and, of course, all the laughs came a lit-<lb/>
tle bit late<lb/>
She said the Russians had been rehearsing their own<lb/>
version of the play for 10 months before the American<lb/>
staging and that they constantly asked about the script's<lb/>
symbolic meanings.<lb/>
"That rather stopped us cold because there was no<lb/>
symbolism " she said. "I supposed they're used to that<lb/>
� that it all has to demonstrate a moral point or a<lb/>
political point . . . but it was tremendously ex-<lb/>
hilerating<lb/>
How many dramatic productions have they done<lb/>
together in a lifetime on the stage and before the<lb/>
cameras?<lb/>
"Oh  I don't think we have any idea said<lb/>
Cronyn.<lb/>
"There were a lot of television productions in the ear-<lb/>
ly days said Miss Tandy.<lb/>
"Some very good ones mused Cronyn. "I had my<lb/>
first professional job exactly 50 years ago in 1931. And<lb/>
Jess has racked up 54. We have been around a long<lb/>
time. We'd like to be around a little longer too<lb/>
What is the special chemistry that makes them the<lb/>
greatest husband and wife acting team since the Lunts?<lb/>
With that Miss Tandy's laughter � never more than a<lb/>
degree below the boiling point � erupted.<lb/>
"I can't stand him she teased.<lb/>
"Special chemistry? I don't know. If we knew we'd<lb/>
bottle it<lb/>
'Red Hot Lovers' Opens<lb/>
Summer Theatre Production A Success<lb/>
'A Itered States' Coming For Fall<lb/>
Ken Russell's Altered States is just one of 38 big free-flicks coming<lb/>
to campus this fall. The series, sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Films Committee, is the largest ever and includes Tess, Airplane,<lb/>
Ordinary People, Raging Bull, Fame, The Elephant Man, Nine to<lb/>
Five, and many others. Abo scheduled are Sunday Film Festivals<lb/>
that will feature the films of Alfred Hitchcock, Fred Astair and<lb/>
more. In addition to the regular Wednesday Special Film Series, the<lb/>
committee is expanding its weekend popular-films to Thursday<lb/>
nights for a single 7 p.m. "Commuter Special" showing of the<lb/>
usual feature film. Wednesday night offerings include the Japanese<lb/>
epic Kagamusha and Germany's The Tin Drum.<lb/>
By JOHN WEYLER<lb/>
Stan Writer<lb/>
She: Aren't you appalled by all the promiscuity<lb/>
you find everywhere?<lb/>
He: I don't find it everywhere. I hear a lot about<lb/>
it but I never find it.<lb/>
The above quote sums up Neil Simon's play<lb/>
The Last of the Red Hot Lovers, an excellent<lb/>
production which premiered Monday night as<lb/>
the opener of the 1981 East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
The show will be running through August 1 in<lb/>
cool, comfortable A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
The air-conditioning alone is almost worth the<lb/>
price of admission, but theatre goers will get<lb/>
much more for their money- a pleasing, profes-<lb/>
sional performance of a play from the popular<lb/>
pen of Neil Simon, the current king of stage com-<lb/>
edy.<lb/>
The red hot lover of the title is Barney<lb/>
Cashman (played by Arthur Hammer), an over-<lb/>
fortyish, seafood restaurateur with smelly<lb/>
fingers, who feels that life is rapidly passing him<lb/>
by. After 20-odd years of a happy, mundane<lb/>
marriage, he wants to have one wild, final fling<lb/>
before old age overtakes him. Alas, his choice of<lb/>
extra-marital partners (or maybe his sense of<lb/>
decency) prevent him from consummating his<lb/>
desire.<lb/>
Barney's would-be lovers range from bad to<lb/>
worse: Elaine (Catherine Rhea), a wise, witty but<lb/>
very lonely woman whose life consists of a series<lb/>
of illicit sexual encounters; Bobbie (Sally Nell<lb/>
Clodfelter), a pot-smoking, brainless singer with<lb/>
a habit of waking up in strange places with<lb/>
stranger people and no idea where she was or<lb/>
what they were; and Jeanette (Minne Gordon<lb/>
Gaster), the desperately depressed wife of a<lb/>
friend of Barney's, each of the above has an act<lb/>
of the three act play devoted to her and Barney's<lb/>
amusing attempts at seduction.<lb/>
All of the actors give expert, almost flawless<lb/>
performances, with Catherine Rhea being<lb/>
especially notable. The only real criticisms to be<lb/>
found are more concerned with Simon's play<lb/>
itself, rather than this particular production.<lb/>
The show starts out quite promisingly, with<lb/>
the writer's usual combination of humorously-<lb/>
contrived plot, comedic character development,<lb/>
lots of witty lines and a smattering of slapstick.<lb/>
Simon seems to try too hard in the second act<lb/>
however, overloading the scene with references<lb/>
to drugs, sexual perversion, kinky Nazi vocal<lb/>
coaches, and the like. It is as if Simon was unsure<lb/>
of his talent for human comedy so he stuck to the<lb/>
sure-fire audience-pleasing material. Before the<lb/>
beginning of the third act, we are wondering<lb/>
what he could possibly top the second act with.<lb/>
We expect even wilder escapades but instead<lb/>
we get a sermon. The play abruptly takes a semi-<lb/>
tragic turn, talking at length about the lack of<lb/>
love and caring in modern relationships. Nothing<lb/>
is wrong with injecting a little meaning into to-<lb/>
day's entertainment (in fact, our usual<lb/>
amusements could use much more meaning), but<lb/>
the effect of the sudden seriousness is somewhat<lb/>
unsettling after the mostly unrelieved hilarity of<lb/>
the first two thirds of the show.<lb/>
Other than these critcisms of Mr. Simon's<lb/>
script, Lovers makes an enjoyable evening of<lb/>
entertainment, aided and abetted as it is in this<lb/>
instance by a fine cast and crew, including direc-<lb/>
See 'RED Page 6, Col. 5<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057351_0006"/><lb/>
II11 I s . K�M INI N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
II I V 2lt, IVhl I'agt<lb/>
Stressing Sport Can Cause Difficulties<lb/>
VX<lb/>
overemphasize sport in so<lb/>
iny ways in our society. Some<lb/>
j men and women see college<lb/>
.1 tree ticket to the glamorous<lb/>
M professional athletics In<lb/>
I an education, they dream<lb/>
i e contracts and fast i ars<lb/>
nake it. but tor one reason ot<lb/>
other most do not<lb/>
 : "<lb/>
bile<lb/>
un<lb/>
signatet<lb/>
ion<lb/>
�5 art<lb/>
first<lb/>
unit at orth Carolina Memorial<lb/>
Hospital in Chapel Hill. He was a<lb/>
pro prospect.<lb/>
In reaction to an athlete's death<lb/>
oi tragic fall, we often say, "I'm so<lb/>
sorry, he was a great player What<lb/>
we must learn is that they are<lb/>
humans first dnd athletes second.<lb/>
Lane ' Turner, a center-forward<lb/>
on the University oj Indiana's na<lb/>
tional championship basketball<lb/>
team, sujjered some paralysis in<lb/>
both U . and hands Saturday as a<lb/>
� an automobile accident.<lb/>
In examining neurosurgeon was<lb/>
rtain m hi ther Turner will suffer<lb/>
parah sis The 6-10 junior<lb/>
was the team s leading rebounder.<lb/>
lie is listed in serious but stable con-<lb/>
dition. He surely would have gone<lb/>
round oj the professional<lb/>
next vei<lb/>
�n increasing number ol col-<lb/>
lates are passing up<lb/>
: . -a:ion to turn pro<lb/>
early, an injury causes their<lb/>
William<lb/>
Yelverton<lb/>
value to go down some scouts say.<lb/>
What will these athletes do if an in-<lb/>
jury cuts their career short, and they<lb/>
don't hae a degree to fall back on.<lb/>
They're just washed-up athletes<lb/>
with no job and no money<lb/>
Steve Streater, an All-Atlantic<lb/>
("oast Coast Conference punter and<lb/>
defensive back, was travelling down<lb/>
a winding road one night when his<lb/>
car crashed. He is considered per-<lb/>
manently paralyzed and is undergo-<lb/>
ing intensive renabilitation at<lb/>
Charlotte Rehabilitation Center<lb/>
He had just signed a contract with<lb/>
the Washington Redskins.<lb/>
However, he might return lo school<lb/>
m the Jail.<lb/>
lsiah Thomas turned pro follow-<lb/>
ing Indiana's championship season<lb/>
as did Earvin Johnson, now the $25<lb/>
million dollar man of the I os<lb/>
Angeles Lakers. Johnson is coming<lb/>
off a knee operation that sidelined<lb/>
him for much of last season, and<lb/>
time will tell whether he has full)<lb/>
recovered.<lb/>
Thoma should have staved in<lb/>
school. Suppose he is injured and<lb/>
unable to play basketball any<lb/>
longer. Chances are he won't return<lb/>
to school. No diploma, no job.<lb/>
Not all athletes are like this. Allan<lb/>
Page, a defensive star first with the<lb/>
Minnesota Vikings and now with<lb/>
the Chicago Bears went to law<lb/>
school during the off-season. Now<lb/>
he's a lawyer and a successful one<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Others have not been as for-<lb/>
tunate. Skip Wise was the first<lb/>
freshman ever to be selected first-<lb/>
team AII-ACHe turned pro afei<lb/>
that inaugural season only to have<lb/>
his team, the Baltimore Claws, told<lb/>
before stepping into a basketball<lb/>
area. He wound up in prison on a<lb/>
drug charge but is beginning a com<lb/>
eback<lb/>
One young man, however, didn't<lb/>
let himself be deluded by athletics.<lb/>
You can sav that cheerfully about<lb/>
Kenny Wright, even though he is<lb/>
dead.<lb/>
Kenny H right, 6'l and 225<lb/>
pounds, was a football star a!<lb/>
Ledyard Hinh in Connecticutt. He<lb/>
loved sports, and his father en<lb/>
couraged him to go to college to<lb/>
buy a diploma with four mon years<lb/>
on the football field. Kenny didn <lb/>
want to no; he was tired ! sitting in<lb/>
a classroom�- it was time to net a<lb/>
job.<lb/>
Kenny was a playful sort, alwi<lb/>
tustling with his friends. Bui once<lb/>
this playing went too far. and Kenny<lb/>
suffered a cervical cord contusion<lb/>
He was confined to a wheelchair.<lb/>
On a beautiful Jail day oj IMO,<lb/>
Kenn was picked up by two oj his<lb/>
friends Kennv told his mother they<lb/>
were going for a ride They drove in<lb/>
to the woods for the last time<lb/>
together.<lb/>
kennv, unable to stand the pain<lb/>
oj being a quadraplegic. killed<lb/>
himselj with a sawed off 12-guage<lb/>
shotgun, after he told his Jnends to<lb/>
run and net some more beer<lb/>
Kenny loved sports, but he did<lb/>
not let them control his life, Even<lb/>
though he committed suicide, it<lb/>
wasn't because his dream of being a<lb/>
professional athlete was destroyed,<lb/>
it was because he couldn't accept<lb/>
life in a wheelchair.<lb/>
He made the decision not to at-<lb/>
tend college, not wanting to use<lb/>
school as a ticket to athletic star<lb/>
dom� unlike some athletes of to-<lb/>
day who think of college as only<lb/>
tour chances to excel in their sport<lb/>
so they can impress professional<lb/>
scouts.<lb/>
ECU Students<lb/>
Lead South Team<lb/>
Bv W IhMHIMKlON<lb/>
re u N.Y<lb/>
think the<lb/>
ready begun<lb/>
the<lb/>
ingle university in<lb/>
gent as<lb/>
��<lb/>
nd P Set<lb/>
�nding the Festival<lb/>
?or the<lb/>
tyed the West Tues-<lb/>
he bronze medal.<lb/>
has two<lb/>
. ives on the South squad:<lb/>
Haskins from Raleigh, who has<lb/>
. oals in three games and<lb/>
(ireei<lb/>
kn Barrow, who<lb/>
as much but has<lb/>
been "�quit<lb/>
membei<lb/>
( arolina<lb/>
that's the<lb/>
tirst game,<lb/>
Federation<lb/>
1<lb/>
ganw � s �<lb/>
.need back to de<lb/>
aker to<lb/>
.a shot<lb/>
11 the South<lb/>
e sj a<lb/>
Km -<lb/>
have<lb/>
round.<lb/>
aiKcci<lb/>
5 said,<lb/>
to the<lb/>
ith women's team has<lb/>
t a story up here Ed-<lb/>
arked Seven ol the 15<lb/>
m the squad are last<lb/>
students. "Incredible.<lb/>
only way to describe<lb/>
A<lb/>
lost to the last m their<lb/>
21-17, but deteated the<lb/>
in the next contest. In a<lb/>
on the men's squad<lb/>
a omen dropped an 18-17<lb/>
tl i Midwest. I hey<lb/>
foi the Bronze<lb/>
Maureen Bv<lb/>
wing posil<lb/>
Edv<lb/>
he t<lb/>
three mote in<lb/>
tests<lb/>
Gail O'Brien is a startei at circle-<lb/>
also performed superbly,<lb/>
1 dwards said She has no' scored as<lb/>
as Buck has because her posi-<lb/>
tion is primarily tor setting picks<lb/>
k a starter at the<lb/>
has done "super<lb/>
j. She scored two<lb/>
rst game and added<lb/>
the next three con-<lb/>
and screens.<lb/>
Edwards said the other players,<lb/>
Donna Eason, Shirley Brown,<lb/>
Jolanda Clayton, Elaine Davis and<lb/>
Ginger Rothermel, have had some<lb/>
playing time.<lb/>
"I'm so proud oi our kids.<lb/>
Ihey've worked awfully hard, and<lb/>
this has been a tremendous ex-<lb/>
perience for them<lb/>
Several prominent amateur<lb/>
athletes are taking part in the<lb/>
festival. Included are tour-time<lb/>
Olympic shotput champion Al<lb/>
Oerter, 110-meter hurdles world<lb/>
record-holder Skeets Nehemiah and<lb/>
skater Scott Hamilton. Highly-<lb/>
touted center Fat 1 wing is playing<lb/>
basketball at the Festival.<lb/>
There are a lot of younger peo-<lb/>
ple here Fdwards said "They are<lb/>
basically unknown, but we'll be<lb/>
reading about these kids in the<lb/>
newspaper in two or three years<lb/>
Syracuse Univesity has become i<lb/>
sort ol mini-Olympic Village, Ed-<lb/>
wards said. There are 36W athletes<lb/>
participating in the Sports Festival.<lb/>
Television and attendance have<lb/>
boosted morale at the festival. ABC<lb/>
will tape the last 10 minutes of the<lb/>
men's team handball gold-medal<lb/>
game. A crowd o 10(H) is expected ecu's John Hallow on the move. His homer against State proved to he the winning run in the tournament<lb/>
to attend.<lb/>
Showdown<lb/>
UNC- W Nips Pirates, 3-2, For Title<lb/>
Fco Bv �OCM�L BOCAMO<lb/>
M<lb/>
. ftgitcy � 'nwiim' ���<lb/>
I � �OCM�L COCANO<lb/>
Robert Wells rounds third in North state Summer League action<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
Kelly O'Donnell scored on Rick<lb/>
Ramey's wild pitch in the bottom of<lb/>
the seventh Saturday night to the<lb/>
SeaHawks of Wilmington a hard-<lb/>
fought 3-2 victory over East<lb/>
Carolina in the championship game<lb/>
of the North State Summer League<lb/>
tourney at Buies Creek.<lb/>
The Pirates clinched a berth in the<lb/>
title game by defeating N.C. State in<lb/>
a 10-7 slugfest, highlighted by John<lb/>
Hallow's eventual game-winning<lb/>
home run in the fourth inning.<lb/>
With one out in the championship<lb/>
game, O'Donnell reached first on a<lb/>
single and advanced when shortstop<lb/>
Tim Whitehead was hit by a pitch.<lb/>
Paul Murr's infield out advanced<lb/>
both runners.<lb/>
Ramey then fired a high inside<lb/>
pitch to Roger Hudson, and Pirate<lb/>
catcher Jack Curlings was unabled<lb/>
to retrieve the ball before it rolled to<lb/>
the backstop.<lb/>
"The ball just ran away from<lb/>
him Pirate coach Gary Overton<lb/>
said. "But we still played extremely<lb/>
well during the tournament<lb/>
Wilmington took an early lead in<lb/>
the third when O'Donnell singled<lb/>
and Murr doubled. Another run was<lb/>
added in the fourth when pitcher<lb/>
Mike Antle homered.<lb/>
Controversy developed in the<lb/>
seventh. With East Carolina runners<lb/>
at first and second, the umpire ruled<lb/>
that Murr was interfered with dur-<lb/>
ing a double-play attempt. Both<lb/>
runners were called out.<lb/>
"There were some very close calls<lb/>
during the game Overton remark-<lb/>
ed. "We didn't get any breaks, but<lb/>
by no means did that cause us to<lb/>
lose the ball game<lb/>
Antle didn't allow any hits for<lb/>
five and a third innings, but the<lb/>
Pirates rallied in the sixth.<lb/>
However, reliever Jamie McGuire<lb/>
worked his way out of two jams to<lb/>
give Wilmington the championship.<lb/>
The Pirates held off a furious<lb/>
Wolfpack rally to advance to the<lb/>
championship round.<lb/>
The Pirates scored five runs in the<lb/>
second inning when Todd Evans<lb/>
walked, advancing on a Charlie<lb/>
Smith single. With two outs, Robert<lb/>
Wells doubled home Evans. Mike<lb/>
Sorrell then singled, scoring Smith<lb/>
and Wells. Todd Hendley's home<lb/>
run put the Pirates up, 5-0.<lb/>
East Carolina built a 7-0 lead in<lb/>
the third when Evans, Pete Persico<lb/>
and Smith singled. Wells' single<lb/>
drove in Persico.<lb/>
State erupted for five runs in the<lb/>
fifth, highlighted bv Tim Barbour<lb/>
two-run homer, cutting the lead to<lb/>
 ne Pirates added their final runs<lb/>
in the sixth inning when Sorrell<lb/>
singled, and Hallow reached first<lb/>
bast on an error. Curlings was in<lb/>
tent oiiallv walked, and Ivans<lb/>
belted a double, scoring Hallow and<lb/>
Sorrell.<lb/>
Robbie Harper was the winning<lb/>
pitcher, going four innings and giv<lb/>
ing up two earned runs<lb/>
"We got off to a slow start<lb/>
Overton said of the past season.<lb/>
"At the end, we were a god club. It<lb/>
we had had a hit here or there, we<lb/>
could have won this thing. Our<lb/>
players had a good attitude at the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
"We accomplished several goals.<lb/>
Curlings came a long way. he did a<lb/>
fine job. Evans gained a lot oi ex<lb/>
penence at first. We were a much<lb/>
better team at the end than at the<lb/>
beginning<lb/>
Overton added that all the teams<lb/>
were happy with the inaugural tour<lb/>
nament, and the attendance was<lb/>
very good.<lb/>
� � �<lb/>
Ramev was the only unanimous<lb/>
selection to the league all-star team.<lb/>
He was 7-2 during the regular<lb/>
season. Pirate second baseman<lb/>
Mike Sorrell joins his teammate on<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Campbell shortstop Terry<lb/>
Stnctland, the league batting cham-<lb/>
pion with a .465 mark, was voted<lb/>
most valuable player He also<lb/>
finished tied for the league lead in<lb/>
home runs with five, was fifth in<lb/>
stolen bases with sixth, and col-<lb/>
lected a league-leading 41 hits.<lb/>
Five other Campbell players made<lb/>
the all-star team. Campbell was the<lb/>
regular season champion.<lb/>
Campbell, the regular-season<lb/>
champion was ousted by the Pirates,<lb/>
3-2, Friday night. The Camels had<lb/>
lost an opening-round game to the<lb/>
SeaHawks of Wilmington, 6-2,<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
In Thursday action, the Pirates<lb/>
were whipped by the Wolfpack of<lb/>
N.C. State, 7-4. this is the first year<lb/>
State was in the summer league.<lb/>
The final regular-season stan-<lb/>
dings were: Campbell, East<lb/>
Carolina, N.C. State and Wilm-<lb/>
ington. North Carolina due to its<lb/>
last place finish did not qualify for<lb/>
the post season tournament.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057351_0007"/><lb/>
rHfc LAS I CAROLINIAN JULY 29, 1981<lb/>
,Pgc6.<lb/>
Bucs Determined To Improve;<lb/>
Indians Depend On Seniors<lb/>
By CHRIS HOLLOMAN<lb/>
AaridaM Sp�c RRfti<lb/>
These are the last two parts in a series of stories<lb/>
on East Carolina's 1980 football opponents. This<lb/>
week will cover East Tennessee State and William<lb/>
and Mary.<lb/>
With East Tennessee State coming off of a not-<lb/>
so-good 2-9 season, optimism abounds that this<lb/>
year will bring much better results.<lb/>
But, head coach Jake Carlisle is facing a very<lb/>
unsure situation at quarterback.<lb/>
Dinnis Ruis and Scott Nault will b battling for<lb/>
that quarterback spot, but some of the<lb/>
newcomers could play a big role.<lb/>
As far as the offensive line is concerned, coach<lb/>
Carlisle feels that this will be his team's strength.<lb/>
Jeff Brides and Jay Patterson bolster that line<lb/>
while some depth will come from Joe Clement,<lb/>
Chuck Gibson, Rob Younger and Scott.<lb/>
At the wide receiver spot, Shelby Cornelius and<lb/>
Ronnie Horton are set to start, though they may<lb/>
be pushed by a good group of freshmen.<lb/>
The running backs appear adequate though not<lb/>
quite what the Buccaneers need to improve their<lb/>
running game. They are Earl Parrell and Richard<lb/>
Dill. Back-up help will come from Ricky Reeves.<lb/>
Two younger players who could get the starting<lb/>
nod are Todd Bloomer and Rodney Yeatts.<lb/>
On the defensive side, a lack of depth hurt the<lb/>
Bucs last year, and this could continue to be a<lb/>
problem. Two big problems on defense could be<lb/>
solved with the healthy return of Jack Lee and<lb/>
Donnie Cook. Both defensive backs were lost last<lb/>
season because of injuries.<lb/>
If Lee and Cook do return they will be flanked<lb/>
by two other starters, Eddie Lawton and Curtis<lb/>
Middleton. Most of the depth in the secondary<lb/>
will be provided by freshmen.<lb/>
The defensive line returns all of its players from<lb/>
last season though back-up depth is once again a<lb/>
real problem. Tripp Hope, Doug Gubbard, Ber-<lb/>
nie Cook, Mike Hensley and David Carmichatl<lb/>
all return to the interior, while Kelly Vanover,<lb/>
Tommy Thompson and Mike Smith are back at<lb/>
the defensive end positions.<lb/>
the punting situation should be in good hands<lb/>
with Phil Wilson. Last year Wilson averaged<lb/>
more than 39 yards per punt and should get some<lb/>
all-Southern Conference mention this fall. The<lb/>
placements will be handled by Phil Hunt.<lb/>
The schedule for the Southern Conference's<lb/>
newest member isn't very tough outside of the<lb/>
league except for games with Lousiana Tech and<lb/>
East Carolina. Because of this, the Bucs could<lb/>
well improve on last season's mark.<lb/>
Overall, it appears that East Tennessee State<lb/>
should be a better team than last year but, that<lb/>
nagging depth problem will have to be solved. If<lb/>
the Bucs run into the kind of injuries they had last<lb/>
season, it could be a long fall in Johnson City.<lb/>
When new William and Mary head football<lb/>
coach Jimmy Laycock took over at the<lb/>
Williamsburg school he knew a lot of rebuilding<lb/>
had to be done. Still no one really expected last<lb/>
year's 2-9 record that included a demoralizing<lb/>
42-7 loss to a rebuilding N.C. State team.<lb/>
Things were not all bad though, as the Indians<lb/>
lost four games by a total of eight points and beat<lb/>
Rutgers, 21-18, only a week after the Scarlet<lb/>
Knights had lost to Alabama in the last minute.<lb/>
This year Laycock feels confident that the In-<lb/>
dians will be a much improved football team.<lb/>
"We fully expect to have a successful 1981<lb/>
season Laycock said. "The upperclassmen<lb/>
have a year's experience with the new system, and<lb/>
that should serve as a positive factor. We feel<lb/>
good about the upcoming year. With the help of a<lb/>
couple of freshmen we should have a pretty solid<lb/>
two-deep squad<lb/>
In all the Indians return 37 lettermen and 12<lb/>
starters, seven of them on the offensive line.<lb/>
At the quarterback spot Chris Garrity returns<lb/>
for his senior campaign where he established<lb/>
three records last year. This will be Garrity's third<lb/>
season as starting quarterback. His back-up help<lb/>
will come from highly-recruited sophomore Dave<lb/>
Murphy.<lb/>
The running game has some big holes to fill<lb/>
with the graduation of tailbacks Tom Franco and<lb/>
Keith Best, who alternated at that spot.<lb/>
The only returning starter at tailback is Dave<lb/>
Scalon, a 5-9,160 pounder. Scalon carried the ball<lb/>
12 times for 59 yards in a reserve role last season.<lb/>
At fullback, the graduation of Cornell Cary,<lb/>
the starter, plus backup Joel Mitik, has left the<lb/>
position wide open. Ken Martin was expected to<lb/>
take over the spot but an injury to his knee has<lb/>
raised some doubt about his future status.<lb/>
That leaves Doug Granger, who played in just<lb/>
two games and gained 17 yards on six carries last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The offensive line, however, is in much better<lb/>
shape since four of five starters return. They are<lb/>
Paul Sobus and Scott Tofano alternating at<lb/>
center, two-year starter Doug Martini at one<lb/>
guard slot and John Stewart at the other. Bill<lb/>
Wilsey will return to his tackle position.<lb/>
The other tackle spot will be filled by either<lb/>
Ray Bisczat or Barry Kilkowski.<lb/>
Backup help will come from Mario Shaffer,<lb/>
Jim Connors, Timm Meel, Dave Rosdol and<lb/>
Mark Sielski.<lb/>
At tight end, starter John Lisella<lb/>
returns.Lisella is also the punter on the team.<lb/>
Depth at this position will be provided by<lb/>
sophomores Bill Prosser and Mark Krautheim.<lb/>
The flanker position will be in good shape with<lb/>
the return of ECAC Rookie of the Year Kurt<lb/>
Wrigley. Last year Wrigley had 33 receptions for<lb/>
369 yards.<lb/>
The defense, which lost four men off the line<lb/>
and six overall, will have to be rebuilt. Ends Paul<lb/>
Tyner and David Martin are gone, along with<lb/>
Neil O'Mara, leaving Drew Sharp and Brian<lb/>
Black as the most experienced players on the line.<lb/>
Dan Nass, who used play tackle, has been mov-<lb/>
ed to the end position.<lb/>
The nose guard position will be manned by<lb/>
John Matheson. John Cannon will be at the<lb/>
tackle along with starter Wayne MacMaster.<lb/>
Mike Kneidinger, a three-year starter, will be<lb/>
back after missing last year with an injury.<lb/>
The linebacker position will be the strength of<lb/>
the defense with starters Owen Costello and John<lb/>
Mitrovic back for another season.<lb/>
Jerome Watters is the only returnee in the<lb/>
secondary, but help is available from Andre<lb/>
Hopkins and Guy Crittendon.<lb/>
The Indians' schedule include Temple, Miami,<lb/>
Virginia Tech, Navy and East Carolina.<lb/>
Jeffrey Warren prepares to lower the boom in 1980 against Richmond.<lb/>
MacMillian Heads Signees<lb/>
Scharf Announces Swimming Recruits<lb/>
Jon Rose, former<lb/>
coach of the East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
gymnastics team which<lb/>
is no longer an ECU<lb/>
varsity sport, has been<lb/>
appointed the new<lb/>
men's and women's<lb/>
diving coach for the<lb/>
1981-82 season.<lb/>
Rose, a physical<lb/>
education faculty<lb/>
member and gym-<lb/>
nastics coach for two<lb/>
years, will be the team's<lb/>
first full-time diving<lb/>
coach since 1975.<lb/>
"I'm very elated at<lb/>
the idea of having a<lb/>
separate diving coach<lb/>
explained Ray Scharf,<lb/>
head coach of both<lb/>
men's and women's<lb/>
swimming. "Before,<lb/>
we were giving away 14<lb/>
to 16 points every meet<lb/>
because we had no div-<lb/>
ing. That is like going<lb/>
into a football game<lb/>
without a quarter-<lb/>
back<lb/>
Rose, a West Chester<lb/>
(Pa.) State College<lb/>
graduate, coached<lb/>
gymnastics on the col-<lb/>
legiate level at<lb/>
Southeast Missouri<lb/>
State University and at<lb/>
Slippery Rock (Pa.)<lb/>
State College. He also<lb/>
coached and taught<lb/>
physical education at<lb/>
Marple Newton High<lb/>
School in Newtown<lb/>
Square, Pa.<lb/>
Four of Rose's<lb/>
former Pirate gym-<lb/>
nasts, Joanie Ford, a<lb/>
sophomore from<lb/>
Washington, N.C,<lb/>
Ginny Neff, a<lb/>
sophmore from West<lb/>
Chester, Pa Jennifer<lb/>
Bcli, also a sophomore<lb/>
from Charlotte and<lb/>
Nan George of<lb/>
Manassas, Va will<lb/>
join the diving squad.<lb/>
Scharf has also an-<lb/>
nounced the signing of<lb/>
25 swimming recruits<lb/>
for the 1981-82 season.<lb/>
"1 was real pleased<lb/>
said Scharf. "I feel it<lb/>
was on of our better<lb/>
recruiting years. We're<lb/>
very fortunate<lb/>
Doug MacMillian, a<lb/>
butter f ly-medldy<lb/>
specialist from Raleigh,<lb/>
NC heads the list of<lb/>
male recruits. Mac-<lb/>
Millian is describeds as<lb/>
"the best high schooler<lb/>
in the state" by Scharf<lb/>
and is a former student<lb/>
of Rich Kobe, an ECU<lb/>
assistant coach. Gregor<lb/>
Wray, a freestyler from<lb/>
Hickory, NC is another<lb/>
recruit who coach<lb/>
Scharf is "excited<lb/>
about" as are<lb/>
freestylers Wesley<lb/>
Bryant, also of<lb/>
Hickory, NC, Joseph<lb/>
Nelson of Quantico,<lb/>
VA, and Stan Williams<lb/>
of Houston, TX.<lb/>
Scharf also added<lb/>
John Rathbun, a<lb/>
breaststroker from<lb/>
West Orange, NJ,<lb/>
North Carolina State<lb/>
diving champion Scott<lb/>
Eagle, and backstroker<lb/>
Jokim Svensson of<lb/>
Floda, Sweden.<lb/>
Svensson's high school<lb/>
times are better than<lb/>
several current Pirate<lb/>
varisty records.<lb/>
Highlighting<lb/>
Scharf's women<lb/>
recruits is Nancy<lb/>
James, a freestyler<lb/>
from Winston-Salem,<lb/>
NC. James is "one of<lb/>
the best" according to<lb/>
Scharf. Other<lb/>
freestylers include<lb/>
Marie Grube of East<lb/>
Petersburg, Pa Sally<lb/>
Reinhard of<lb/>
Bridgewater, N.J<lb/>
Paula and Pam Beery<lb/>
of Connelly Springs,<lb/>
N.C, Nancy Rogers of<lb/>
Bristol, Tenn, and<lb/>
Joanne Chastonay of<lb/>
Temple Hills, Md.<lb/>
Scharf also added<lb/>
breaststrokers Han-<lb/>
nelore Koehlcr of<lb/>
Fisher, N.Y Sharron<lb/>
Holt of Rockvillc, Md,<lb/>
and Amy Dilwcg of<lb/>
Bethesda, Md.<lb/>
Also signed were<lb/>
divers Audrey Moore<lb/>
of Falcon, N.C, Julie<lb/>
Levie of Charlotte,<lb/>
N.C, and Tozanne<lb/>
Wannstedt of Glenn-<lb/>
wood, N.Y<lb/>
backstroker Luanne<lb/>
Peura of Ashabula,<lb/>
Ohio<lb/>
Play 'Red Hot'<lb/>
Continued From Page 4<lb/>
tor Edgar Loessin and scenery designer Gregory<lb/>
Buch.<lb/>
One bit of advice: due to the mirror that serves<lb/>
as part of the set decoration, certain members of<lb/>
the audience sitting in the far-right front section<lb/>
are subject to intense reflection of the stage<lb/>
lights. This situation should be corrected or the<lb/>
Summer Theatre may be liable for several cases<lb/>
of retina burnout.<lb/>
Tickets for The Last of the Red Hot Lovers<lb/>
may be acquired from the Summer Theatre Box<lb/>
Office, 701 S. Evans Street in Greenville, open<lb/>
Monday through Saturday from 10 a.m. to 4<lb/>
p.m. � telephone 757-6390. From August 3-8,<lb/>
the Summer Theatre will present D.L. Coburn's<lb/>
Pulitzer Prize-winning comedy The Gin Game.<lb/>
Curtain time for both shows is 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
�lje last Carolinian<lb/>
SUBSCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
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ddress<lb/>
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Telephone i<lb/>
)<lb/>
RATE: $20P ��'�<lb/>
Brown Hired<lb/>
Caroline Brown, a 1971 graduate of Fur-<lb/>
man University in physical education and<lb/>
former Paladin field hockey coach and ten-<lb/>
nis star, has been appointed head coach of<lb/>
men's and women's tennis at East Carolina.<lb/>
"I am definiteh excited about coaching<lb/>
both teams commented Brown. "1 will be<lb/>
able to administer both programs and make<lb/>
both meaningful<lb/>
Brown is a former field hockey coach at<lb/>
Wake Forest University and a former<lb/>
player on the Avon Future's Curcuit.<lb/>
Brown announced the recent signing of<lb/>
New Bern High School tennis star Catherine<lb/>
Tolson.<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>