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<pb facs="00057479_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.61<lb/>
Wednesday. May 19,1982<lb/>
Greenville, NX<lb/>
8 Page?,<lb/>
Howell Accepts Post<lb/>
By MIKE HUGHES<lb/>
Managing Kdiior<lb/>
On Friday. May 14, Dr. John M.<lb/>
Howell was elected as the eighth<lb/>
chancellor in East Carolina Univer-<lb/>
sity's 75-year history.<lb/>
Howell, who was named interim<lb/>
chancellor in January, was one of<lb/>
three finalists recommended to the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors by the<lb/>
ECU Board of Trustees in April. He<lb/>
was nominated to the board by<lb/>
UNC President William C. Friday.<lb/>
Howell referred to his appoint-<lb/>
ment as a challenge but said that he<lb/>
is confident in his abilities as an ad-<lb/>
ministrator.<lb/>
'The road's always going to be<lb/>
rough he said,  hopefully<lb/>
moreso in the near future than in the<lb/>
distant future<lb/>
Howell assumes the full-time<lb/>
position as of July 1, one day after<lb/>
former chancellor Thomas B.<lb/>
Brewer's resignation takes effect.<lb/>
Brewer, whose tenure at ECU was<lb/>
marked by controversy, is currently<lb/>
vice president for academic affairs<lb/>
at Atlanta's Georgia State Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
Howell's election marked the end<lb/>
of a process which began in<lb/>
September, 1981. Since that time,<lb/>
the 15-member ECU Chancellor<lb/>
Selection Committee reviewed 148<lb/>
applications.<lb/>
The other two finalists recom-<lb/>
mended by the committee were Dr.<lb/>
J. Fred Young, Elon College presi-<lb/>
dent; and Dr. James A. Robinson,<lb/>
president of the University of West<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
After the meeting, Friday said<lb/>
that Howell was elected because he<lb/>
is familiar with all facets of the<lb/>
university. He explained that ECU<lb/>
could not afford the time lag which<lb/>
would result from appointing so-<lb/>
meone unfamiliar with the workings<lb/>
of the school.<lb/>
Howell, who came to ECU in<lb/>
1957, has served as chairman of the<lb/>
political science department, dean<lb/>
of the College of Arts and Sciences,<lb/>
graduate school dean and provost<lb/>
and v ice chancellor for academic af-<lb/>
fairs.<lb/>
Before coming to ECU, Howell<lb/>
taught at the University of Idaho,<lb/>
Randolph-Macon College, Duke<lb/>
University, Sweet Briar College and<lb/>
Memphis State University.<lb/>
When asked what, if any, changes<lb/>
he plans to institute in the near<lb/>
future, Howell indicated that he<lb/>
foresees none in the near future. He<lb/>
did add, however, that any changes<lb/>
or progressions in store will be<lb/>
dependent on the amount of fun-<lb/>
ding the school receives.<lb/>
"We don't have the luxury of<lb/>
assuming that we'll always have<lb/>
enough money like they (other ad-<lb/>
ministrators) had a couple of<lb/>
decades ago he emphasized.<lb/>
He also indicated that he does not<lb/>
plan to rearrange the administra-<lb/>
tion, as his predecessor, Brewer,<lb/>
had done.<lb/>
"People may come and go he<lb/>
said, "but 1 have nothing in mind.<lb/>
I'm going to work with the people<lb/>
already here<lb/>
"This is a good place to be if<lb/>
you're in higher education he con-<lb/>
tinued, "because the government<lb/>
officials of North Carolina have<lb/>
generally been supportive<lb/>
During the selection process,<lb/>
Chairman Ashley Futrell implied<lb/>
that the next ECU chancellor would<lb/>
have to bleed purple and sweat gold.<lb/>
This implication stems from the<lb/>
discontent felt on campus when it<lb/>
was learned that Brewer was looking<lb/>
at new job possibilities.<lb/>
However, Howell indicated that<lb/>
he plans to stay in Greenville for a<lb/>
while. "We've been here for 25<lb/>
years during a period when there<lb/>
were jobs available he said. "So,<lb/>
I'd say we've liked it here<lb/>
When he assumes the full-time<lb/>
position, Howell will earn $69,730<lb/>
annually.<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell<lb/>
?????? By SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
The Inside C1 A<lb/>
By ERNEST CONNER<lb/>
N??s hdilof<lb/>
East Carolina still does not have a<lb/>
clear winner in the SGA presidential<lb/>
election.<lb/>
A decision by Chancellor John<lb/>
M. Howell and Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life, Dr. Elmer Meyer has<lb/>
ruled Eric Henderson's swearing in<lb/>
as SGA president void. This situa-<lb/>
tion has led to Vice President Bob<lb/>
Mills being named acting president.<lb/>
Henderson, who won the April 7<lb/>
SGA presidential runoff election by<lb/>
46 votes, was sworn in amidst con-<lb/>
troversy.<lb/>
Within 48 hours of Henderson's<lb/>
winning the election, his rival,<lb/>
David Cook, a business major,<lb/>
leveled charges of campaign im-<lb/>
propriety against him.<lb/>
The review board met to consider<lb/>
the charges. They deemed the alleg-<lb/>
ed violations as being too insuffi-<lb/>
cient to disqualify Henderson, even<lb/>
though two of the six charges level-<lb/>
ed against Henderson were substan-<lb/>
tiated.<lb/>
Henderson immediately got the<lb/>
then SGA Attorney General, Ken<lb/>
Hopper to swear him in, even<lb/>
though Cook had five days to ap-<lb/>
peal any decision of the review<lb/>
board.<lb/>
This situation led to the ad-<lb/>
minstration's involvement. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Meyer, the review board had<lb/>
done all it could do, and there was<lb/>
nobody higher except the ad-<lb/>
minstration, so they had to come in-<lb/>
to the matter.<lb/>
Once How oil and Meyer got in-<lb/>
volved, they met with both can-<lb/>
didates and tried to decide what to<lb/>
do. This meeting, according to<lb/>
Meyer, was around commencement<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Since they were unable to get a<lb/>
tape of the last review board<lb/>
meeting they could not come to a<lb/>
final decision on who would be the<lb/>
next SGA president. The tape of the<lb/>
meeting had been taken to Hooper's<lb/>
home, and according to Meyer, was<lb/>
returned Tuesday.<lb/>
Meyer said that hopeful!) they<lb/>
will now be able to come to a final<lb/>
decision on who will be president<lb/>
within the next few days since they<lb/>
now have complete records of what<lb/>
has been happening.<lb/>
The charges leveled by Cook con-<lb/>
cerned Henderson's alleged cam-<lb/>
paign violations. The charges in-<lb/>
clude illegal placement of campaign<lb/>
literature in the mailboxes at Green<lb/>
Mill Run apartments, campaigning<lb/>
in the female dormitorities without<lb/>
an escort, tearing down campaign<lb/>
posters, overspending allowable<lb/>
campaign budget, campaigning near<lb/>
polling places and illegal placement<lb/>
of campaign posters.<lb/>
The review board found evidence<lb/>
that Henderson violated the latter<lb/>
two charges; however, they did not<lb/>
feel the violations were serious<lb/>
enough to warrant Henderson's dis-<lb/>
qualification.<lb/>
Group Marches To Washington<lb/>
Actress Ann Reinking here<lb/>
shown in the movie All That<lb/>
Jazz, one of 19 movies sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee this summer. See Features.<lb/>
Inside Index<lb/>
Announcements 2<lb/>
Opinion 4<lb/>
Campus Forum 4<lb/>
Features 5<lb/>
Sports 7<lb/>
Classifieds 8<lb/>
B PATRICK O'NEIL<lb/>
stiff Wnlrr<lb/>
A "Pilgrimage to Washington,<lb/>
D.C. for political and econonim<lb/>
justice" is being sponsored by the<lb/>
Southern Chrisitan Leadership Con-<lb/>
ference (SCLC).<lb/>
The March, which began on April<lb/>
18 in Tuskegee Alabama, reached<lb/>
North Carolina on Tuesday and will<lb/>
continue throughtout the staet until<lb/>
June 9 when it heads into Virginia.<lb/>
The North Carolina - Virginia<lb/>
Field Office of the United Church<lb/>
of Christ Commission for Racial<lb/>
Justice is coordinating the schedul-<lb/>
ing and the intinerary of the march<lb/>
as it travels through North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The march is scheduled to reach<lb/>
Greenville on June 3. Mr. Bennie<lb/>
Roundtree, President of the Pitt<lb/>
County Chapter of SCLC will be<lb/>
heading up local events surrounding<lb/>
the march.<lb/>
The purpose of the march is to<lb/>
call attention to various economic,<lb/>
political, and racial issues which<lb/>
adversly effect the poor, as well as<lb/>
support the extention to the 1965<lb/>
Voting Rights Act.<lb/>
Armenta Eaton, a stage assistant<lb/>
of the Commission for Racial<lb/>
Justice, says the march has several<lb/>
purposes. "We want to speak out<lb/>
against the funds for the military<lb/>
build-up, cut backs of money for<lb/>
social programs and support of the<lb/>
Voting Rights Act (Extention)"<lb/>
A kick off rally was held in<lb/>
Laurinburg N.C. on Tuesday.<lb/>
Leaflets distributed called on people<lb/>
to join the march to "protest the<lb/>
budget cuts, tight student aid cut-<lb/>
backs, (and) stop Reagan's war<lb/>
against the poor<lb/>
Roundtree said the march has<lb/>
already run into some resistance in<lb/>
Fayetteville where local laws pro-<lb/>
hibit marching without a permit.<lb/>
High priced insurance policies are<lb/>
required to obtain a permit. "They<lb/>
plan to march requardless" said<lb/>
Roundtreewith or without a per-<lb/>
mit<lb/>
"We have no intention of paying<lb/>
insurance for marching" added<lb/>
Eaton. She called the requirement<lb/>
unconstitutional and said the mar-<lb/>
chers will go to jail if thev have to.<lb/>
Roundtree said his members were<lb/>
on "stand by" to go to Fayetteville<lb/>
to support the others if necessary.<lb/>
Resistance to many of President<lb/>
Reagans policies has been surfacing<lb/>
recently as the full impact of many<lb/>
of hie budget cuts are being felt by<lb/>
many Americans.<lb/>
The SCLC, which was founded<lb/>
by Martin Luther King, has had a<lb/>
long h'story of supporting Justice<lb/>
issues. It has always adopted non-<lb/>
violence as its' tactics.<lb/>
Roundtree says a peaceful<lb/>
demonstration" and a "church<lb/>
meeting" is planned when the<lb/>
march reaches Greenville. Round-<lb/>
tree also plans to join the march in<lb/>
Wilson and stay with it until it<lb/>
reachs Washington D.C.<lb/>
The idea for the march grew out<lb/>
of an earlier march in Alabama<lb/>
which was organized as a protest<lb/>
against the conviction of two Black<lb/>
women, Mrs. Maggie Bozeman and<lb/>
Mrs. Julia Wilder. Both were charg-<lb/>
ed with vote fraud because they<lb/>
were instructing elderly and disabled<lb/>
Black citizens in the use of absentee<lb/>
ballots.<lb/>
Graham Awarded Prize<lb/>
For Religious Progress<lb/>
LONDON (UP1) ? Evangelist Billy Graham, receiving a<lb/>
$200,000 prize for spreading religion around the globe, warn-<lb/>
ed Tuesdav of humanitv "plunging madlv toward Armaged-<lb/>
don<lb/>
Prince Philip awarded the Templeton Foundation's 10th<lb/>
annual prize for "progress in religion" to Graham at a private<lb/>
Buckingham Palace ceremony.<lb/>
Previous award winners include Mother Teresa of India.<lb/>
Later Graham was introduced at a public ceremony by Sir<lb/>
Geoffrey Howe, Chancellor of the Exchequer, who spoke of<lb/>
"the time of trouble" Britain faced as Graham visited the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
"The destiny of men and of nations is always being decid-<lb/>
ed Graham said. "We must not fail to meet the challenge of<lb/>
this hour. This decade may be the most decisive years since<lb/>
Christ walked the roads of Galilee<lb/>
"Our world is on fire Graham told some 1,500 Britons at<lb/>
Westminster's Central Hall. "And man without God cannot<lb/>
control the flames. The fires of passion, greed, hate and lust<lb/>
are sweeping the world.<lb/>
"We seem to be plunging madly toward Armageddon he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Graham, who received the Templeton award for his work in<lb/>
evangelism, said his recent tours in the United States and<lb/>
England revealed the greatest interest in spiritualism since he<lb/>
began preaching.<lb/>
"There were no trick questions, no demonstrations said<lb/>
Graham, referring to his sermons before college audiences in<lb/>
New England.<lb/>
The exception was Harvard, Graham said, "where there<lb/>
were just some flags unfurled. I never was sure what it was<lb/>
about. I'm not sure they did<lb/>
Graham was presented the Templeton award as he returned<lb/>
from a controversial visit to the Soviet Union, where he<lb/>
preached for the first time to Soviets and unofficially attended<lb/>
a relgious conference.<lb/>
"I learned a great deal that I will be taking home with me<lb/>
Graham said of the conference.<lb/>
Braxton Pleads 'Nolo Contendere'<lb/>
Taking The Plunge<lb/>
This bathing beauty enjoys her own version of the champagne-and-hot-tub lifestyle.<lb/>
MW? By SCOTT LARSON<lb/>
ByGREGRIDEOlT<lb/>
.itini Nr? Kdilw<lb/>
Former SGA Vice President Mar-<lb/>
vin Braxton pleaded " nolo conten-<lb/>
dre" to nine counts of common law<lb/>
forgery in Pitt County District court<lb/>
on May 13.<lb/>
Braxton, 22, had been arrested on<lb/>
April 6 and charged with one count<lb/>
of forgery. He had falsely signed<lb/>
checks belonging to Mary F.<lb/>
Nelson, a friend in whose house he<lb/>
once resided.<lb/>
According to an employee at the<lb/>
county clerks office, Braxton had<lb/>
agreed to plead no contest to the<lb/>
lesser charge of common law<lb/>
forgery, a misdemeanor.<lb/>
The 1981-82 SGA Vice President<lb/>
had been arrested by Detective M.E.<lb/>
Barnhiil of the Greenville City<lb/>
Police after an alert was placed on<lb/>
Nelson's account at North Carolina<lb/>
National Bank. Braxton was jailed<lb/>
after the arrest. He was released on<lb/>
the same day of his arrest on a $4000<lb/>
surety bond in the name of Charles<lb/>
R. Blake Jr.<lb/>
Judge Robert P. Wheeler sentenc-<lb/>
ed Braxton to six months in jail and<lb/>
six months probation. Both were<lb/>
suspended.<lb/>
In addition he was ordered to pay<lb/>
$2057 restitution to NCNB. Braxton<lb/>
did not have to pay the court costs.<lb/>
<lb/>
??:??-? ?????? ?gg<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 19. 1982<lb/>
Dropouts Losing Their Way<lb/>
RALEIGH. N.C.<lb/>
(UP!) ? A national<lb/>
study of school<lb/>
dropouts indicates<lb/>
young people leave<lb/>
school because "they<lb/>
have lost their way<lb/>
the president of the<lb/>
Carnegie Foundation<lb/>
for the Advancement<lb/>
of Education says.<lb/>
During an address to<lb/>
a North Carolina con-<lb/>
ference on school<lb/>
dropouts. Dr. Ernest<lb/>
Boyer praised the<lb/>
state's school system<lb/>
and encouraged efforts<lb/>
to reduce the dropout<lb/>
rate, which he said is a<lb/>
national problem.<lb/>
An estimated 700<lb/>
people, including<lb/>
school administrators,<lb/>
state officials and<lb/>
government leaders, at-<lb/>
tended the one-day<lb/>
conference at Meredith<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Boyer, who was U.S.<lb/>
education commis-<lb/>
sioner under President<lb/>
Jimmy Carter, said<lb/>
still-unpublished fin-<lb/>
dings of a 1981-82<lb/>
Carnegie Foundation<lb/>
study indicate a need to<lb/>
improve efforts to keep<lb/>
young people in school.<lb/>
"Young people drop<lb/>
out of schools for<lb/>
precisely the reasons<lb/>
people drop out of<lb/>
work and drop out of<lb/>
jobs they have lost<lb/>
their way Boyer said.<lb/>
Education leaders at<lb/>
all levels should show<lb/>
personal concern for<lb/>
students, help them<lb/>
become confident in us-<lb/>
ing language and<lb/>
modify school pro-<lb/>
grams to provide a<lb/>
closer link with the job<lb/>
market or "real<lb/>
world Boyer said.<lb/>
"I am absolutely<lb/>
convinced that we do<lb/>
not have a school pro-<lb/>
blem, a youth problem,<lb/>
we have a culture pro-<lb/>
blem he said. "This<lb/>
nation is not in love<lb/>
with its young people.<lb/>
We somehow wish<lb/>
them out of sight and<lb/>
out of mind<lb/>
Boyer said the foun-<lb/>
dation's study included<lb/>
about 300 hours of in-<lb/>
terviews with teachers,<lb/>
students and other<lb/>
school representatives<lb/>
in high schools across<lb/>
the country. The inter-<lb/>
views took place from<lb/>
fall 1981 through spr-<lb/>
ing 1982.<lb/>
He said after the<lb/>
speech that the results<lb/>
of the study, which has<lb/>
a budget of about SI<lb/>
million, will be publish-<lb/>
ed sometime in 1983.<lb/>
Boyer said the foun-<lb/>
dation hopes its study<lb/>
will serve a purpose<lb/>
similar to a national<lb/>
education report 25<lb/>
years ago. That report<lb/>
provided a basis for the<lb/>
National Defense<lb/>
Education Act of 1958,<lb/>
Boyer said.<lb/>
Nationally, between<lb/>
20 percent and 25 per-<lb/>
cent of an estimated 16<lb/>
million high school<lb/>
students leave schools<lb/>
without receiving<lb/>
diplomas, Boyer said.<lb/>
He said the study in-<lb/>
dicated young people<lb/>
drop out because of<lb/>
personal problems,<lb/>
academic failure or a<lb/>
sense of uselessness<lb/>
while in school.<lb/>
Boyer, former<lb/>
chancellor of the State<lb/>
University of New<lb/>
York and a veteran of<lb/>
several presidential<lb/>
commissions on educa-<lb/>
tion, praised Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr. and<lb/>
state education<lb/>
superintendent A.<lb/>
Craig Phillips.<lb/>
"I wanted to come<lb/>
here because I believe<lb/>
that this state has the<lb/>
most impressive com-<lb/>
bination of education<lb/>
leadership of any state<lb/>
in the nation bar<lb/>
none he said.<lb/>
Earlier in the con-<lb/>
ference, Hunt delivered<lb/>
a 20-minute address<lb/>
calling on local and<lb/>
state educators to con-<lb/>
centrate on reducing<lb/>
the dropout rate<lb/>
without significant ad-<lb/>
ditions to existing state<lb/>
funding.<lb/>
The state's dropout<lb/>
rate is estimated at 33<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
A high priority must<lb/>
be placed on reducing<lb/>
the dropout rate using<lb/>
existing resources and<lb/>
personal commitment<lb/>
by educators, state and<lb/>
local government agen-<lb/>
cies and officials, Hunt<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We must put this<lb/>
strategy into effect<lb/>
without substantial ad-<lb/>
ditional funding<lb/>
Hunt said. "Federal<lb/>
support for education<lb/>
is being cut, and state<lb/>
and local budgets are<lb/>
strained to the limit.<lb/>
The governor said<lb/>
the state has made im-<lb/>
provements in day care,<lb/>
skill-training and<lb/>
reading programs<lb/>
across. But he noted<lb/>
150,000 students drop-<lb/>
ped out of North<lb/>
Carolina schools over<lb/>
the last five years.<lb/>
"Despite all the pro-<lb/>
gress we have made,<lb/>
there still hangs around<lb/>
our neck a millstone ' a<lb/>
weight that keeps us<lb/>
from reaching our<lb/>
economic, intellectual<lb/>
and social potential<lb/>
Hunt said. He said<lb/>
three out of every eight<lb/>
high school dropouts<lb/>
nationally are from the<lb/>
South.<lb/>
Hunt said the state<lb/>
must identify potential<lb/>
dropouts earlier, inten-<lb/>
sify guidance and<lb/>
counseling efforts,<lb/>
establish job centers,<lb/>
diversify course offer-<lb/>
ings and keep track of<lb/>
students who do drop<lb/>
out.<lb/>
"Right now there are<lb/>
only eight job centers in<lb/>
the entire state Hunt<lb/>
said. "I want to add<lb/>
100 during the next<lb/>
year, and by the fall of<lb/>
1984, I want to have a<lb/>
job center in every high<lb/>
school in North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Tar Landing Seafood<lb/>
Resuurut<lb/>
Ct"<lb/>
-?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
$C39<lb/>
All you can eat<lb/>
Bob Hearing ?<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
Phone 758-0327<lb/>
Cross Greer Street 6'<lb/>
TakeleH a' 1st Light<lb/>
Locced one block do' '? ??'<lb/>
WED.&amp;<lb/>
THURS. ONLY<lb/>
TYPING: T?rm. Tht?i?,<lb/>
Rnumii, Oi?ser!?tionj, etc. Pro-<lb/>
fessional quality at lowatt ratts.<lb/>
Call Kempie Dunn anytime<lb/>
7J2-47JJ.<lb/>
PART?TIME employee wanted<lb/>
to put up posters on campus now<lb/>
and during I9I2-S3. 2- to<lb/>
hoursmonth, M.SOhour Call Mr.<lb/>
Fenton, (MO) 243-477.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
if yi.u or your crg0ni2dton<lb/>
would like tc ?ave an item primed<lb/>
? n t"e announcement column.<lb/>
Dies wpe it on an announcement<lb/>
form ana &amp;nd it to The East<lb/>
Carohman m care of the produc<lb/>
tion manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
avaiiaoie at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications Building<lb/>
Flyers and handwritten coov on<lb/>
? ?do sited paper cannot be ac<lb/>
cepted<lb/>
T-ere s no Charge for an<lb/>
iiouncenienis. but space is often<lb/>
limited T'ieretore. we cannot<lb/>
guaramc mat your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you want<lb/>
and suggest that you do not rely<lb/>
soleu on this column lor publicity<lb/>
The deadline for announcements<lb/>
? s 5 p m Friday t?r the Tuesday<lb/>
oaoor urap m Tuesday lor the<lb/>
Thursday paper No an<lb/>
niiuncements received after these<lb/>
ONdtinet win be printed<lb/>
T' is space s available to all<lb/>
campus i rrjanijatiorts and depart<lb/>
ments<lb/>
SCIINCI DAY CAMP<lb/>
A Science Day Camp tor<lb/>
primary grade children ages 49<lb/>
will be ottered by trie ECU Depart<lb/>
ment of Science Education in<lb/>
June<lb/>
Sessions are set tor June M II<lb/>
and June 21 25 Or Carolyn and<lb/>
Carol Hampton art co directors<lb/>
and will be involved in teaching<lb/>
participating children.<lb/>
Thii year's activities focus<lb/>
around a series off high interest<lb/>
physical science topics including<lb/>
liquids, properties of water and<lb/>
air. interaction of systems<lb/>
pulleys, magnetic interaction and<lb/>
electrical Infraction.<lb/>
The scheduling ot topic tor the<lb/>
two sessions will not overlap, so<lb/>
that youngsters attending bom<lb/>
sessions . ill not repeat the tame<lb/>
activities<lb/>
Daily camp classes will be held<lb/>
in Flanagan Building from 9 a.m.<lb/>
until noon daily Six vacancies<lb/>
still exist for each camp session.<lb/>
interested parents should apply<lb/>
to Or. Carolyn Hampton, Depart<lb/>
ment of Science Education, ECU.<lb/>
Telephone 757 ?2t?.<lb/>
OFF-CAMPUS<lb/>
HOUSING<lb/>
H ?ou want to live oft campus,<lb/>
nt.w is the best time to look tor<lb/>
summer or fall Or if you rave an<lb/>
apartment to sublet tor the sum<lb/>
rr.er t,r are looking for a roommate<lb/>
i.r the academic year, list your<lb/>
avaiiabMity with us Contact the<lb/>
OH Campus Housing Office. 2)1<lb/>
vV'hcnaro Building. 757 6M1. 80S.<lb/>
Monday through Friday<lb/>
ONCOLOGICAL<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
The Eastern Carolina Oncology<lb/>
Nurses invites an registered<lb/>
nurses, licensed practical nurses,<lb/>
nursing students and others in<lb/>
terested in care of cancer patients<lb/>
to loin the recently formed<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
The group meets monthly In<lb/>
Greenville to share ideas and con<lb/>
cerns and participate in education<lb/>
programs. Dues are S10 tor<lb/>
registered nurse members and i<lb/>
tor LPN's and students<lb/>
Further information is available<lb/>
from Debbie Kennington at<lb/>
757 42M. Diane Meeihiem at<lb/>
757-4629 or Mary Ann Rose at<lb/>
757 M04<lb/>
GUESS WHO'S THE<lb/>
LUCKY LADY<lb/>
The box is shaken, the stubs are<lb/>
tossed and mixed, an authoritative<lb/>
hand reaches in and withdraws a<lb/>
ticket revealing the name of a<lb/>
lucky lady who has just won an all<lb/>
expence paid trip to Mertle Beach,<lb/>
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send two nights at the Holiday inn<lb/>
North, two breakfasts and two din<lb/>
ners and admission to the lounge<lb/>
on May 7 and 8. The trip raffle was<lb/>
sponsored by the Biology Club.<lb/>
The winner was Judy Mitchum.<lb/>
one of the secretaries in the<lb/>
chemistry department<lb/>
Judy, we ail nope you enioved<lb/>
yourself Your tan looks great!<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Vm his ittf ('?n tniunnnii<lb/>
simr v<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
year and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
ing the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the ol<lb/>
f ? c ? a i newspaper ol East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published lor and<lb/>
by me students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: S20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
art located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Seno address<lb/>
changes 'o The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Old South Building. ECU Green<lb/>
vine NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 757 34?, 4347. 4309<lb/>
Application to mail at second<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057479_0003"/><lb/>
Unemployment On The Rise<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 19,19823<lb/>
(UPI) ? Worsening recession and<lb/>
high interest rates have thrown more<lb/>
Americans out of work than at any<lb/>
time since the Great Depression.<lb/>
They are unwilling conscripts in a<lb/>
defeated army the president's critics<lb/>
dub the "Reagan Poor<lb/>
Blue-collar workers, blacks and<lb/>
teenagers top the jobless figures but<lb/>
the scourge of unemployment has<lb/>
spread relentlessly across the land<lb/>
into virtually all segments of an in-<lb/>
creasingly polarized society.<lb/>
President Reagan denies his<lb/>
policies ere to blame, or that they<lb/>
favor the rich over the poor. He has<lb/>
expressed compassion for those in<lb/>
economic distress. The president<lb/>
and his supporters insist that his<lb/>
budget and tax cuts will cure the ail-<lb/>
ing economy, benefitting everyone,<lb/>
including the poor.<lb/>
In a recent news conference,<lb/>
Reagan predicted the unemploy-<lb/>
ment situation "will improve, I<lb/>
think, in the latter half of this year.<lb/>
1 do believe there is every indication<lb/>
that the recession is bottoming<lb/>
out<lb/>
Two leading Democrats, predic-<lb/>
tably, took the opposite view.<lb/>
Said Sen. Ted Kennedy, the man<lb/>
some pollsters say could defeat<lb/>
Reagan in a presidential race held<lb/>
now, "It's obviously a depression in<lb/>
the housing industry and 'he steel<lb/>
industry and the auto industry. It's<lb/>
a real depression and I think it's on-<lb/>
ly a matter of time before it extends<lb/>
into some of the other industries<lb/>
House Speaker Thomas (Tip)<lb/>
O'Neill, personally but not political-<lb/>
ly friendly to Reagan, rapped the<lb/>
President hard. He said, "We're<lb/>
dealing with a fellow that's<lb/>
unbelievable, to be perfectly<lb/>
truthful. He doesn't even know<lb/>
there's a recession. It's just in-<lb/>
conceivable that a man could be that<lb/>
much isolated<lb/>
Reagan has alienated some<lb/>
Americans by wondering aloud why<lb/>
it is news when "someone in South<lb/>
Succotash" loses a job.<lb/>
Nor was Reaganomics well<lb/>
defended with the president's anec-<lb/>
dote about an unnamed man in an<lb/>
unidentified grocery who paid for<lb/>
an orange with food stamps and<lb/>
with the change bought a bottle of<lb/>
vodka.<lb/>
The unemployment rate has<lb/>
reached the highest level since<lb/>
August 1941.<lb/>
There are 10.3 million Americans<lb/>
9.4 percent of the labor force,<lb/>
compared to 7.4 percent when<lb/>
Reagan took office In January 1981<lb/>
actively looking for jobs.<lb/>
The figures do not include 1.2<lb/>
million jobless people government<lb/>
analysts say have given up looking<lb/>
for work or another 5.6 million<lb/>
"underemployed" workers who<lb/>
have part-time jobs and want full-<lb/>
time work.<lb/>
The president points proudly to<lb/>
slowed inflation. But Reagan's<lb/>
?critics charge his budget cuts have<lb/>
reduced social services for the most<lb/>
disadvantaged at a time when they<lb/>
desperately need help, and that his<lb/>
tax cuts have bestowed most of the<lb/>
savings on the privileged.<lb/>
As unemployment spread from<lb/>
the automobile and housing in-<lb/>
dustries into steel, textiles, pulp and<lb/>
paper, mining and chemicals and<lb/>
even oil drilling and refining, a re-<lb/>
cent Gallup poll disclosed that<lb/>
joblessness had displaced inflation<lb/>
as the No. 1 concern of Americans.<lb/>
The upper Midwest is the hardest-<lb/>
hit section of the country but almost<lb/>
anywhere in the United States there<lb/>
is evidence of the dehumanizing ef-<lb/>
fects of joblessness.<lb/>
There is fear and frustration in<lb/>
Dixon, 111 Reagan's home town, as<lb/>
there is in Washington, D.C where<lb/>
"street people" wander homeless<lb/>
and hopeless within blocks of the<lb/>
White House.<lb/>
Even Central Florida, for years a<lb/>
veritable Sun Belt paradise where<lb/>
working men could make the<lb/>
American Dream come true, has<lb/>
fallen on hard times.<lb/>
The housing slump has pushed<lb/>
the lumber industry in the Nor-<lb/>
thwest into deep decline.<lb/>
Many unemployed Americans<lb/>
who hit the road in search of jobs<lb/>
have found hard times had preceded<lb/>
them, even in places which only<lb/>
recently had seemed immune to the<lb/>
recession.<lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Summer Students<lb/>
Amendment Proposed<lb/>
Washington(UPl)- President<lb/>
Reagan on Monday sent Congress<lb/>
his proposed constitutions! amend-<lb/>
ment to put prayer back in the<lb/>
classroom - a single paragraph cer-<lb/>
tain to become a legal, moral and<lb/>
political battleground.<lb/>
It says: "Nothing in this Con-<lb/>
stitution shall be construed to pro-<lb/>
hibit individual or group prayer in<lb/>
public schools or other public instu-<lb/>
tions. No person shall be required<lb/>
by the United States or by any State<lb/>
to participate in prayer<lb/>
Reagan announced earlier this<lb/>
month - on National Prayer Day -<lb/>
that he would sponsor such and<lb/>
amendmam, which is counter to<lb/>
several U.S. Court decisions.<lb/>
The White House proposal comes<lb/>
in the form of a joint resolution that<lb/>
would require a vote of two-thirds<lb/>
of both the House and Senate and<lb/>
ratification bv three-fourths of the<lb/>
state legislatures within a seven-year<lb/>
span.<lb/>
In his message to Congress,<lb/>
Reagan, said the measure would<lb/>
"Restore the simple freedom of our<lb/>
citizens to offer prayer in our public<lb/>
schools and institutions<lb/>
"The founders of our nation and<lb/>
the framers of the First Amendment<lb/>
did not intend to forbid public<lb/>
praver, Reagan said, citing the<lb/>
writings of George Washington,<lb/>
Benjamin Franklin and Alexis de<lb/>
Tocqueville.<lb/>
"Just as Benjamin Franklin<lb/>
believed it was beneficial for the<lb/>
Constitional Convention to begin<lb/>
each day's work with a prayer, I<lb/>
believe that it would be beneficial<lb/>
for our children to have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to begin each school day in<lb/>
the same manner Reagan wrote to<lb/>
Congress.<lb/>
"Since the law has been construed<lb/>
to prohibit this, 1 believe that the<lb/>
law should be changed. It is time for<lb/>
the people, through their Congress<lb/>
and the state legislatures, to act, us-<lb/>
ing the means afforded them by the<lb/>
Constitution<lb/>
SPECIALIZES IN:<lb/>
RESUMES<lb/>
and<lb/>
TUESDAY , MAY Z5<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
goo do D?<lb/>
U 5t<lb/>
THESES<lb/>
DUPLICATION<lb/>
Located Across From Campus<lb/>
In The Georgetown Shops<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
COCA COLA ? APPLE feCOfiD?- MARtWOH &amp;ST<lb/>
SMtl?9$ CUU9T9LE- SPACE W0&amp; 3WF<lb/>
? Copies Cost 60 to 30copy<lb/>
? Phototypesetting<lb/>
? Binding Service<lb/>
? One Day Camera Work<lb/>
? Geotype Supplies For Art Students<lb/>
OPEN 9-7 m f 9-2 sat.<lb/>
758-2400<lb/>
"Home of Greenville's Best Meats1<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
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PIRATE COUPON - 5 DISCOUNT ON<lb/>
Any Food Order Regardless of Size<lb/>
Present this coupon and show<lb/>
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-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0004"/><lb/>
Qttr Eaat ?arnliniati<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, o??????<lb/>
Mike Hughes. Mmmutm&amp;?<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT. mmtm ?j i.f??, WILLIAM YELVERTON, v ??,?<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ????? ????? Ernest Conner, v,?, td,?<lb/>
Phillip Maness. mi mmm Steve Bachner, ammmmm m<lb/>
CHRIS LICHOK, Imululion Manuxrr Al ISON BARTEL, Mwwa Vonuxrr<lb/>
May 19, 1982<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
ECU'S New<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
Cooperation Necessary<lb/>
So, after nine months of uncer-<lb/>
tainty, ECU finally has a<lb/>
chancellor.<lb/>
Dr. John M. Howell, who has<lb/>
been with the university since 1957<lb/>
(when ECU was a college), was<lb/>
named to the post on May 14 by the<lb/>
UNC Board of Governors.<lb/>
Naturally, then, all of ECU's<lb/>
uncertainty is over. Right?<lb/>
Wrong. The uncertainty is merely<lb/>
beginning. Of course, this is not to<lb/>
presuppose that the new chancellor<lb/>
will misuse or neglect the position.<lb/>
Not at all. However, the uncertain-<lb/>
ty, the rough roads ahead, lie in the<lb/>
cooperation necessary to insure a<lb/>
smooth-running institution.<lb/>
The uncertainty lies, then, with<lb/>
the students. It goes without saying<lb/>
that a school can't function unless<lb/>
students and faculty live and work<lb/>
in some sort of harmony.<lb/>
Whenever transitions are brought<lb/>
about, certain changes are inherent.<lb/>
Some changes are clearly for the<lb/>
better, yet some may not im-<lb/>
mediately appear so.<lb/>
Former Chancellor Thomas<lb/>
Brewer ? despite his ac-<lb/>
complishments in some areas ?<lb/>
never completely gained the support<lb/>
of the ECU community. His initial<lb/>
scrambling and realigning of the ad-<lb/>
ministration caused anger among<lb/>
and students alike.<lb/>
However, it is difficult to con-<lb/>
demn Brewer for instituting the<lb/>
changes he felt necessary. After all,<lb/>
he had the dubious honor of follow-<lb/>
ing in the footsteps of a virtual<lb/>
legend, Chancellor Emeritus Leo<lb/>
Jenkins. Perhaps rearranging the<lb/>
administration was not a smart<lb/>
move on Brewer's part; perhaps it<lb/>
was. Judging the validity of that ac-<lb/>
tion would be an obvious mistake if<lb/>
not almost impossible.<lb/>
However, the dissention among<lb/>
students and faculty certainly came<lb/>
full thrust when it became apparent<lb/>
that Brewer was dissatisfied with his<lb/>
post at ECU.<lb/>
Naturally, the community felt<lb/>
that Brewer's "job-hunting" in-<lb/>
dicated that he was not wholly in-<lb/>
terested in the school's progress.<lb/>
Now, after a nine-month respite,<lb/>
ECU has, at last, a chancellor who<lb/>
says he's happy where he is.<lb/>
Having worked with the universi-<lb/>
ty in one aspect or another for 25<lb/>
years, Howell was the likely choice<lb/>
for chancellor. But without the sup-<lb/>
port of students, faculty and "staff,<lb/>
making any sort of accomplishment<lb/>
will be a difficult task.<lb/>
Although Howell says he isn't<lb/>
planning any immediate policy or<lb/>
administrative moves, some changes<lb/>
will inevitably become necessary as<lb/>
time elapses.<lb/>
Despite the fact that we, as<lb/>
humans, are naturally opposed to<lb/>
change, the ECU community must<lb/>
give its full support to Dr. Howell<lb/>
and the rest of the administration.<lb/>
Naturally, then, the students<lb/>
should be able to expect that this<lb/>
support and respect will be retroac-<lb/>
tive. After all, running a university<lb/>
without a chancellor is difficult;<lb/>
without students, it's impossible.<lb/>
In conclusion, therefore, the pro-<lb/>
gress which has been characteristic<lb/>
of East Carolina University in the<lb/>
past relies heavily on a cooperative<lb/>
effort between students, faculty and<lb/>
staff. No individual runs the univer-<lb/>
sity single-handedly.<lb/>
Students Not Responding<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Why do so many East Carolina<lb/>
students decide to use their "editorial<lb/>
response" options whenever the letters<lb/>
E?C?G?C are mentioned?<lb/>
The East Carolinian "letters to the<lb/>
editor" section has been full of letters<lb/>
condemning, criticizing and applauding<lb/>
the fact that the SGA has appropriated a<lb/>
lousy $100 to the ECGC, which is a<lb/>
"recognized campus organization<lb/>
The East Carolinia Gay Communtiy is<lb/>
not trying to "convert" anybody, and<lb/>
I'm sure they wish people ? especially<lb/>
Christians ? would stop trying to con-<lb/>
vert them.<lb/>
Why are so many people preoccupied<lb/>
with the "sexual sins" and not respon-<lb/>
ding with similar zeal to many of the<lb/>
other news and feature items which have<lb/>
appeared in The East Carolinian that<lb/>
have reported on matters of life, death<lb/>
and global annihilation.<lb/>
World hunger, violence in El<lb/>
Salvador, the military draft, handicap-<lb/>
ped awareness week, the family life sym-<lb/>
posium on alcholism and Ground Zero<lb/>
Week have recieved little or no editorial<lb/>
response while homosexuality com-<lb/>
mands a seemingly endless flow of<lb/>
discussion. Certainly, these issues have<lb/>
received some biblical mention worthy<lb/>
of response.<lb/>
It seems to be a sad state of affairs<lb/>
when a college community such as ours<lb/>
has so few people who opt to express<lb/>
their "outrage" over the issues that real-<lb/>
ly decide the future of the human race.<lb/>
"Ground Zero Week" has clearly<lb/>
shown us the potentional horror of<lb/>
nuclear war and the reality that it can<lb/>
happen in our lifetime.<lb/>
Millions of Americans will be sub-<lb/>
jected to the military draft if it is re-<lb/>
activated. Are you willing to go to war<lb/>
or see your loved ones die for the cause<lb/>
of El Salvador or Middle East oil?<lb/>
Many more millions of Americans<lb/>
also suffer and die as a result of<lb/>
alcoholism. Isn't that worth a letter or<lb/>
two?<lb/>
Human beings perish everyday as a<lb/>
result of "dramitic starvation Didn't<lb/>
Jesus say something about the poor?<lb/>
We have 125 handicapped students on<lb/>
our campus. Did you see any of the<lb/>
"Fantasy" performances this year?<lb/>
How about a letter the the editor con-<lb/>
gratulating the cast? 1 didn't see any.<lb/>
Did you enjoy the events of<lb/>
"Handicapped Awareness Week?" I im-<lb/>
agine many of you did, but still there<lb/>
was no mention.<lb/>
My point is obvious: "to make this<lb/>
campus operate ? and if a student<lb/>
newpaper is to function - - it requires the<lb/>
participation of all of us. While our<lb/>
world is poised pcriliously close to<lb/>
nuclear annihilation, most of us are<lb/>
assuming no responsibility to avert this<lb/>
madness only those questions pertaining<lb/>
to "sexuality" seem to matter. How<lb/>
about the gospel callings to love your<lb/>
enemies, feed the poor, clothe the nak-<lb/>
ed? Don't these words of wisdom call us<lb/>
to response ? editorially or otherwise?<lb/>
CfleMleT<lb/>
TH? EA?T 6AAOLJMIA<lb/>
Auto Racing: 'A Death Trap'<lb/>
By WILLIAM YELVERTON<lb/>
No matter how many times the wall is<lb/>
washed or painted, the mark will always<lb/>
remain.<lb/>
No matter how many times the crash<lb/>
replay is shown, feelings of terror and hor-<lb/>
ror become dominant emotions as we see a<lb/>
once live man sliding down the asphault<lb/>
track like a helpless doll.<lb/>
Oh, athletes die. Of old age. Of sickness.<lb/>
Of unfortunate accidents.<lb/>
But death at 200 miles an hour is another<lb/>
story.<lb/>
And now that we have lost Gordon<lb/>
Smiley at Indianapolis and Giles<lb/>
Villeneuve in Belgium less than three weeks<lb/>
apart, I think it's time to question the<lb/>
validity of this "sport<lb/>
First of all, "sport" as defined by The<lb/>
American Heritage Dictionary is "an ac-<lb/>
tive pastime; diversion; recreation<lb/>
How can we call high-powered, suped-<lb/>
up cars speeding down tracks at incredible<lb/>
speeds "an active pastime"?<lb/>
How can we call people being maimed,<lb/>
burned, crushed when their car crashes in-<lb/>
to a wall for the right to claim a few thou-<lb/>
sand dollars a "diversion"?<lb/>
How can we call drivers with little pro-<lb/>
tection competing with other drivers with<lb/>
that same minute protection a form of<lb/>
"recreation"?<lb/>
Man is no match for Formula I<lb/>
machines.<lb/>
Incident: driver Gordon Smiley, warm-<lb/>
ing up to qualify for the Indianapolis 500<lb/>
April 24, killed instantly when his car<lb/>
slammed head-on into the third-turn con-<lb/>
crete wall, bursting into flames and nearly<lb/>
disintegrating.<lb/>
Incident: driver Gilles Villeneuve, died<lb/>
May 8 when his Formula I race car crashed<lb/>
at Zolder, Belgiun, as he was preparing for<lb/>
the Belgium Grand Prix.<lb/>
Incident: veteran driver Art Pollard,<lb/>
killed during Indy practice and driver<lb/>
Swede Savage and pit crewman Armando<lb/>
Teran, killed, in separate incidents during<lb/>
the race.<lb/>
But what can we do? Nothing. The only<lb/>
glimmer of hope that has been resurrected<lb/>
appeared in a United Press International<lb/>
wire story Tuesday. The story said "if a<lb/>
driver is hurt during this year's In-<lb/>
dianapolis 500the track hospital will be<lb/>
raced to him Emergency personnel will<lb/>
be stationed in the pits.<lb/>
But it won't make that much of a dif-<lb/>
ference, as in the case of Gordon Smile<lb/>
He lost control of his car; it slid 280 feet in-<lb/>
to the wall. And now his wife Barbara<lb/>
longer has a husband.<lb/>
Driver Bill Whittington said Smiie<lb/>
"was doing what he wanted to do. It just<lb/>
happens.<lb/>
"He may not have been one of the best<lb/>
race drivers, but he added a lot of color to<lb/>
racing. We are all obviously going to hae<lb/>
some thoughtswhen we're out there. 1<lb/>
might have not have as much affect on the<lb/>
Foyts, Unsers and Ruth erfords. but it sure<lb/>
will on the lesser drivers.<lb/>
"The whole (third) turn is going to be<lb/>
difference now. Just seeing that black<lb/>
(crash mark) on the wall will remind u<lb/>
what happened. This will all bring u b<lb/>
to reality<lb/>
Why don't racing enthusiasts and par-<lb/>
ticipants come back to reality? We've seen<lb/>
too much death because of driving ?<lb/>
whether on the racetrack or an urban<lb/>
highway.<lb/>
Racing's a death trap. A suicide rap<lb/>
A nd we 'd better get out while we 're yt<lb/>
HKMOOTIRD<lb/>
HWHffOllH<lb/>
TtePreadeNt wa n&amp;M :heres LOTS of Jcte available here.<lb/>
ANY Of VDUSt KWH arty ttimG about NMJOttOLOJ ?<lb/>
r Campus Forum<lb/>
Fan To Restaurant's Rescue<lb/>
Yes, Kim Albin, there is a Crow's<lb/>
Nest nestled amidst bustling Tenth<lb/>
Street traffic (April 15 issue of East<lb/>
Carolinian) - a Crow's nest, a refuge, a<lb/>
"home-away-from-home" for many<lb/>
loyal "Crow's nest crew members No,<lb/>
Kim Albin, it is not the Casablanca nor<lb/>
the Beef Barn but, neither is it the West<lb/>
End. Grill<lb/>
Chris Browning and his wife, Jane,<lb/>
offer more than just a variety of good<lb/>
food and the best iced tea in Greenville.<lb/>
You may enjoy a full dinner or just a<lb/>
sandwich and fries in a secluded section,<lb/>
or "watch the traffic" section, or "view<lb/>
the TV" section. Loyal Crow's Nest<lb/>
diners all have their favorite table and<lb/>
their choice selection from the menu -<lb/>
tempting roast beef, mile - high Cap-<lb/>
tain's sandwich (3 meats and cheese),<lb/>
man - sized Pirate's Plate, and, yes, a<lb/>
wonderful steak-and-cheese Grab a<lb/>
Schooner or jar of beer and some<lb/>
quarters and enjoy your favorite video<lb/>
game.<lb/>
But there is more to the Crow's Nest<lb/>
than just good food and fun. Chris and<lb/>
Jane give many college students a<lb/>
livelihood and dignity to make it<lb/>
through the college years. Those loyal<lb/>
Crow's Nest diners are mostly former<lb/>
employees who recognize Chris'<lb/>
generosity to hard-working employees,<lb/>
almost a fatherly presence.<lb/>
Chris Browning is also one of the big-<lb/>
gest financial and promotional backers<lb/>
of East Carolinia Univeristy, particular-<lb/>
ly ECU athletics. Many "Business lun-<lb/>
cheons" or pirate club activities are con-<lb/>
ducted over a Crow's Nest meal.<lb/>
Numerous visiting athletic shools bring<lb/>
their teams to the Crow's Nest to enjoy<lb/>
the best breakfast in town - served 24<lb/>
hours a day.<lb/>
The Crow's Nest, formerly Lum's if<lb/>
you're an oldie-goldie, will remain<lb/>
amidst Tenth Street, for it is a landmark<lb/>
and an institution to Greenville and<lb/>
ECU. I'm proud to be: a loyal Crow's<lb/>
Nest fan, a grateful former employee,<lb/>
and an admirer of the Brownings<lb/>
Ellen M.Stroop<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
Copied Submission<lb/>
The poem M Drawing by Ronnie C,<lb/>
Grade One " that appears on page<lb/>
thirty-three of the 1982 Rebel was not<lb/>
written by Rebecca Ann Hemby. Ruth<lb/>
Lechlitner is the actual and original<lb/>
author. The submission of the poem by<lb/>
Miss Hemby to the Rebel and the Rebel<lb/>
Poetry contest was an error of judge-<lb/>
ment and memory. We regret that this<lb/>
happened, but we cannot check all<lb/>
published poetry, and therefore, must<lb/>
rely on the personal integrity of our con-<lb/>
tributors. We make this statement<lb/>
because it is important that you, learn<lb/>
this from us first.<lb/>
Bill Rapp<lb/>
Editor '82<lb/>
Rick Gordon<lb/>
Poetry Editor<lb/>
Editor '83<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing alt points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old South<lb/>
Building, across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, alt tetters<lb/>
must include the name major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Utters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced, or neatly printed. Alt let-<lb/>
ters are subject to editing for brevity.<lb/>
m<lb/>
I<lb/>
m<lb/>
fr<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
an<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
Be<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0005"/><lb/>
lev<lb/>
have<lb/>
re. It<lb/>
the<lb/>
hack<lb/>
par-<lb/>
seen<lb/>
12 ?<lb/>
lurban<lb/>
rap<lb/>
?dge-<lb/>
this<lb/>
all<lb/>
must<lb/>
con-<lb/>
tinent<lb/>
learn<lb/>
Rapp<lb/>
r'82<lb/>
rdon<lb/>
?ditor<lb/>
r'83<lb/>
I tetters<lb/>
tail or<lb/>
South<lb/>
rary.<lb/>
letters<lb/>
tr and<lb/>
umber<lb/>
Letters<lb/>
pages,<lb/>
Altlet-<lb/>
)revity.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MAY 19, 19822<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
'less' Tonight:<lb/>
Free Summer<lb/>
Films Abound<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee has come up with the best<lb/>
solution for any seasonal blues you<lb/>
may be experiencing: a full slate of<lb/>
tree movies set to be screened every<lb/>
Monday and Wednesday night<lb/>
throughout what promises to be a<lb/>
long, hot summer.<lb/>
Each of the nineteen films in the<lb/>
line-up will be shown in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Hendrix Theatre at<lb/>
9 p.m. on Mondays and 8 p.m. on<lb/>
 cdnesdays. Consequently, the stu-<lb/>
dent center will operate with extend-<lb/>
ed hours on these evenings.<lb/>
Admission to the films is, as<lb/>
always, by student ID and activity<lb/>
card or MSC Membership.<lb/>
The list includes some more re-<lb/>
cent titles than has been typical in<lb/>
summers past. Roman Polanski's<lb/>
dazzling love story Tess will be<lb/>
shown this evening at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The following Monday, May 24,<lb/>
at 9 p.m the classic Humphrey<lb/>
Bogart Katherine Hepburn vehicle<lb/>
African Queen will be back on the<lb/>
big screen.<lb/>
The rest of the schedule is as<lb/>
follows: Wednesday, May 26,<lb/>
Breaking Away (8 p.m.); Monday,<lb/>
May 31, Bedazzled (9 p.m.);<lb/>
Wednesday, June 2, Divine<lb/>
Madness (8 p.m.); Monday, June 7,<lb/>
Murder By Death (9 p.m.); Wednes-<lb/>
day, June 9, All That Jazz (8 p.m.);<lb/>
Monday, June 14, Animal House (9<lb/>
p.m.); Wednesday, June 16, Time<lb/>
After Time (8 p.m.); Monday, June<lb/>
21, Richard Pryor Live in Concert<lb/>
(9 p.m.); Wednesday, June 23,<lb/>
Dracula (1979 version, 8 p.m.);<lb/>
Monday, June 28, Came From<lb/>
Outer Space (3-D version, 9 p.m.);<lb/>
Wednesday, June 30,<lb/>
Slaughterhouse Five (8 p.m.);<lb/>
Wednesday, July 7, Taxi Driver (8<lb/>
p m. ? the student center will be<lb/>
closed Monday, July 5); Monday,<lb/>
July 12, Blazing Saddles (9 p.m.);<lb/>
Wednesday, July 14, Young<lb/>
Frankenstein (8 p.m.); Monday, Ju-<lb/>
ly 19, Andy Warhol's Frankenstein<lb/>
(9 p.m.); Wednesday, July 21, The<lb/>
Blues Brothers (8 p.m.); Monday,<lb/>
July 26, The French Connection (9<lb/>
p.m.).<lb/>
i<lb/>
?v<lb/>
Cliff Gorman visits Roy Sdiekkr In tMs seeue<lb/>
from Bob Fosse's All That Jazz. The film returns to campus later this summer.<lb/>
McCartney Rolling Again With 'Tug-Of-War<lb/>
By ROBERT PALMER<lb/>
Nr? ori Time New. Nt.irc<lb/>
Paul McCartney was "the cute Beatle He was also<lb/>
the Beatle who wrote "Yesterday" and "Eleanor<lb/>
Rigby ballads that transcended the popularity of this<lb/>
most'popular of all rock groups and became standards,<lb/>
recorded by artists of ever stylistic persuasion. And<lb/>
although it's been more than 10 years since the breakup<lb/>
of the Beatles, McCartney's image hasn't changed much<lb/>
- to the public at large, he's still the cute, consummate<lb/>
pop tunesmith.<lb/>
He is also the surviving member of the Lennon-<lb/>
McCarney songwriting partnership that made the<lb/>
Beatles what they were, and as such he has been sub-<lb/>
letted to intense media scrutiny since John Lennon's<lb/>
death almost a year and a half ago.<lb/>
When he began working on a new album a few mon-<lb/>
ths after Lennon was shot, and working on it with<lb/>
George Martin, who produced the Beatles from the<lb/>
beginning, rumors began to fly. Teams of reporters<lb/>
scoured the Caribbean island of Montserrat, where<lb/>
Martin owns a studio. When Ringo Starr showed up to<lb/>
play drums on a song or two, rumors of a reunion of the<lb/>
surviving Beatles flared once again. There were even<lb/>
reports that Yoko Ono, Lennon's widow, was about to<lb/>
participate in the sessions. She didn't; neither did the<lb/>
Beatles' lead guitarist, George Harrison.<lb/>
Now McCartney's album is here, and so, briefly, was<lb/>
McCartney last month. Sequestered in the office of the<lb/>
CBS Records President Walter Yetnikoff and provided<lb/>
with tight security, he talked about the record, Tug-of-<lb/>
Hr, and about some of the things that interest and<lb/>
Music<lb/>
worry the most commercially successful ex-Beatle. He<lb/>
was dressed in a 7-neck sweater, checkered shirt and<lb/>
jeans, and although he is about 40, he has retained his<lb/>
"cute Beatle" looks. He has also retained the acute self-<lb/>
awareness that seems to have come with being a member<lb/>
of the world's most famous pop group.<lb/>
Tug-of-Har, McCartney's exquisitely crafted though<lb/>
lyrically flawed new album, is his most ambitious piece<lb/>
of work in a number of vs. Even the title sounds<lb/>
substantial.<lb/>
"The theme we were messing with was conflict, he<lb/>
said, "and it also has something to do with the idea of<lb/>
opposites. 1 don't think 1 would have used that theme<lb/>
before; I would have been afraid of bringing people<lb/>
down. But I've been growing up, and after all, it isn't<lb/>
news that there's a tough side to life<lb/>
The album sounds like a surefire hit and a vundtall<lb/>
for Columbia Records, which has several million dollars<lb/>
invested in McCartney. His two earlier albums for the<lb/>
label were neither spectacularly huge sellers nor critical<lb/>
successes. Since the early 1970's, McCartney has work-<lb/>
ed mostly within the confines of Wings, the rock group<lb/>
See MCCARTNEY, Page 6<lb/>
Amazing Metcalf<lb/>
SOC Director An Inspired Man<lb/>
By WILLIAM A. SHIRES<lb/>
ECU Nmlwu<lb/>
Dr.<lb/>
Zubie W. Metes Jr successful Erector of ECU's Studeat Opportunities Ctattr.<lb/>
When he was four years old Zubie W. Metcalf<lb/>
scraped his face when his tricycle overturned on a<lb/>
sidewalk at Tuskegee Institute in Alabama. A slender,<lb/>
soft-spoken man comforted the frightened child, cleans-<lb/>
ed his face and applied some salve.<lb/>
Metcalf learned later that his benefactor that day had<lb/>
been the great Dr. George Washington Carver.<lb/>
The wound healed without leaving a scar. But the<lb/>
gentle, soothing touch and kind word of the famous<lb/>
scientist-educator of Tuskegee left a deep, lasting and<lb/>
symbolic impression upon the young Zubie Metcalf.<lb/>
More than 40 years later, Metcalf himself is a<lb/>
scientist-educator lending a helping hand in the form of<lb/>
student opportunity programs at ECU. In a dozen years<lb/>
of this work, Metcalf has written grant proposals for<lb/>
programs funded for more than $3 million primarily to<lb/>
help blacks and the disadvantaged.<lb/>
"It's a part of me. It's the only life 1 know and I am<lb/>
totally committed to it says Metcalf, director of<lb/>
ECU's Center for Student Opportunities.<lb/>
Within a year after coming to ECU in in 1976, Met-<lb/>
calf obtained a renewable three-year Health, Education<lb/>
and Welfare grant totaling $142,514 to support recruit-<lb/>
ment and retention of disadvantaged and minority<lb/>
students in ECU's schools of Medicine, Nursing and<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Professions.<lb/>
Under this program, an academic monitoring system<lb/>
was established to determine strengths and weaknesses<lb/>
of 107 pre-hcalth professional students and remedial<lb/>
steps were taken.<lb/>
He received recently a 123,670 grant form the na-<lb/>
tional Fund for Medical Edudation for a summer<lb/>
tutorial program to identify, recruit and prepare high<lb/>
potential minority and disadvantaged students for the<lb/>
"challenging expectations of medical school The pro-<lb/>
gram is designed for 24 students this summer.<lb/>
In recruiting, "we go the whole spectrum, reaching a<lb/>
wide range Metcalf says.<lb/>
He has prepared proposals for National Science<lb/>
Foundation support of a program of research appren-<lb/>
. ticeships for minority high school students.<lb/>
Ten percent of students enrolled in ECU's relatively<lb/>
young School of Medicine are blacks. Two blacks were<lb/>
among the first class of MD's graduated in 1981.<lb/>
"We are very proud of our programs and the national<lb/>
attention they are getting as far away as California<lb/>
Metcalf said. <lb/>
California education authorities have listed ECU s<lb/>
summer enrichment program with those of such<lb/>
prestigious medical schools as Georgia, Baylor, Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas, New York, the University of Tennessee,<lb/>
and Tulane as offering exceptional opportunities for<lb/>
Californians. .<lb/>
Piecing together educational opportunities as they<lb/>
arose is part of Zubie Metcalfs personal education<lb/>
story, from public schools in Sheffield, Ala to a<lb/>
chemistry assistantship at the University of Dayton,<lb/>
Ohio, where he majored in biology. He drove at night to<lb/>
further his studies at Antioch College and picked up<lb/>
courses at Purdue, then received a National Science<lb/>
Foundation graduate fellowship for a masters in<lb/>
teaching from Miami University Of Ohio.<lb/>
He returned to Dayton as a biology instructor. Then<lb/>
for five years he was an assistant professor on the facul-<lb/>
ty of Florida A&amp;M University, picking up further study<lb/>
at Florida State University. In 1970, he received a Ford<lb/>
Foundation fellowship for advanced s'udy which led to<lb/>
a doctorate at the State University of New York-<lb/>
Buffalo.<lb/>
It was at Dayton that he "really got started and in-<lb/>
terested in college opportunities work Metcalf says.<lb/>
"I really liked it. It was a very good feeling<lb/>
He became director of Academic Opportunity Pro-<lb/>
grams at Ball State University where, in 1973, he asked<lb/>
himself, "Why not go back home?"<lb/>
"I felt I had made very good use of my educational<lb/>
opportunities as they arose. It was hard to do, but I had<lb/>
learned how. I asked, 'why not do the same thing for my<lb/>
people?' I had the feeling that 1 could go there (to<lb/>
Alabama) and make a contribution to the people of my<lb/>
home state<lb/>
He returned then to Tuskegee where 35 years before,<lb/>
George Washington Carver "worked on my face and<lb/>
gave my parents a little can of salve. I will never forget<lb/>
it<lb/>
As assistant vice president for academic affrirs and<lb/>
dean of graduate programs, Metcalfs office at<lb/>
Tuskegee was next door to the archives housing the let-<lb/>
ters, papers and writings of George Washington Carver.<lb/>
"It made me feel good. 1 worked hard and it inspired<lb/>
me to work-up some of the best educational opportunity<lb/>
programs Tuskegee ever had One of these was a<lb/>
$2,150,000 advanced institutional development pro-<lb/>
gram, funded by the U.S. Office of Education.<lb/>
In the mid-70s, Metcalf was a finalist for and narrow-<lb/>
ly missed being chosen chancellor of the University of<lb/>
Maryland-Eastern Shore. Then he became interested in<lb/>
the programs and philosophy of the newly established<lb/>
medical school, health and science at East Carolina.<lb/>
He had heard of ECU's growing reputation and also<lb/>
knew that the late Dr. Carver had corresponded with a<lb/>
famous eastern North Caroina personage, the late Lucy<lb/>
Crisp Cherry. The Cherry-Carver correspondence was<lb/>
in the Tuskegee archives and Metcalf had been in-<lb/>
terested in her telling about East Carolina's founding<lb/>
and years of growth and development.<lb/>
He was especially attracted to ECU because of its<lb/>
vigorous program to recruit, retain and strengthen op-<lb/>
portunities for minorities and disadvantaged students in<lb/>
medicine and the health professions.<lb/>
?<lb/>
, . ?MNM MM M ? MM <lb/>
II<lb/>
K<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 19, 1982<lb/>
McCartney Wins<lb/>
1Tug- Of- War'<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
he started with his wife, Linda. He has made<lb/>
some delightful pop singles, and his second Col-<lb/>
umbia album, McCartney II, was a one-man-<lb/>
band studio project that had plenty of inventive<lb/>
moments.<lb/>
But critics and fans alike have been waiting for<lb/>
a really first-rate album from McCartney for<lb/>
some time. Since the breakup of the Beatles, he<lb/>
has tended to exaggerate the light, frothy side of<lb/>
his music. His work retained virtually none of the<lb/>
emotional toughness that characterized may of<lb/>
the early Beatles songs he co-wrote with Lennon,<lb/>
and many listeners concluded that the emotional<lb/>
toughness was Lennon's contribution.<lb/>
McCartney hinself has bolstered his image as a<lb/>
clever but essentially lightweight pop craftsman<lb/>
by announcing in one of his biggest hits that he<lb/>
simply wants to "fill the world with silly love<lb/>
songs" and asking "what's wrong with that, I'd<lb/>
like to know?"<lb/>
What was wrong was that McCartney lacked a<lb/>
strong collaborator like Lennon, someone who<lb/>
would leaven his sugarcoated esthetic with a bit<lb/>
of grit and irony.<lb/>
On Tug-oj-ar he had several strong col-<lb/>
laborators, most notably producer George Mar-<lb/>
tin and Stevie Wonder, who performs on two<lb/>
memorable tracks and co-wrote one with Mc-<lb/>
Cartney. Wings guitarist Denny Laine and<lb/>
ocalist Linda McCartney appear on most of the<lb/>
ongs but, Tug-of-H'ar is a Paul McCartney<lb/>
album, and its release signals the breakup, at<lb/>
least for the foreseeable future, of Wings as a<lb/>
group.<lb/>
When 1 commented to McCartney that the<lb/>
challenge of working with Martin and Wonder<lb/>
seems to have been good for him, he nodded<lb/>
vigorously.<lb/>
"I don't want to take away from Wings, but<lb/>
it's true 1 needed that he said. "1 had been feel-<lb/>
ing there was something missing, and making this<lb/>
album, 1 found out what it was. When George<lb/>
and 1 were working on the orchestral arrange-<lb/>
ment for the song Tug-of-W'ar for example, we<lb/>
recorded the orchestra and it sounded pretty<lb/>
good. But we had some bass parts we hadn't<lb/>
recorded quite right, and George said, 'Look,<lb/>
this is my reputation and yours going right on the<lb/>
line, would you mind if we brought the orchestra<lb/>
back and recorded it again?' So we did it, at huge<lb/>
cost to somebody, probably us in the end, but it<lb/>
was worth it<lb/>
' Tug-of-War isn't a rock 'n' roll album. But it<lb/>
can stand as McCartney's vision of pop, a vision<lb/>
that encompasses the 1950s rockabilly of Carl<lb/>
Perkins (a big Beatles influence and a guest on<lb/>
one song on the album) and the contemporary<lb/>
pop-funk of Wonder as well as ballads and<lb/>
uptempo tunes that are typically McCartney.<lb/>
????<lb/>
HAVE A PROBLEM?<lb/>
NEED INFORMATION?<lb/>
<lb/>
REAL Crisis Intervention<lb/>
24 HOUR SERVICE<lb/>
758-HELP<lb/>
ta&amp;Sbvrn<lb/>
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ewi<lb/>
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iiwa?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 19, 1982 Page 7<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pirates Capture<lb/>
ECAC Crown<lb/>
Pirate ace Bill H ilder<lb/>
HARRISONBURG, Va. -<lb/>
Fran Fitzgerald's two-run<lb/>
homer over the leftfield wall<lb/>
in the East Carolina fifth<lb/>
spurred the Pirates to an 8-4<lb/>
win over Catholic University<lb/>
and the ECAC-South cham-<lb/>
pionship, thus a berth in the<lb/>
NCAA tournament beginning<lb/>
next week.<lb/>
Earlier, Catholic defeated<lb/>
top-seeded Old Dominion,<lb/>
7-6, to reach the champion-<lb/>
ship game.<lb/>
The Pirates swept through<lb/>
the tournament by winning<lb/>
three straight games and pro-<lb/>
pelling their seasonal mark to<lb/>
33-12 ? the most wins in the<lb/>
school's history.<lb/>
A first-round win over host<lb/>
school James Madison mark-<lb/>
ed the Pirates' first post-<lb/>
season win since 1968. The<lb/>
Dukes were 24-1 in their home<lb/>
park this season and finished<lb/>
the year at 40-14.<lb/>
In the finals, the Pirates<lb/>
pushed across two runs in the<lb/>
first inning ? one on a double<lb/>
by Todd Evans and another<lb/>
on a groundou t ? then added<lb/>
another run in the third frame<lb/>
on a sacrifice fly by John<lb/>
Hallow.<lb/>
East Carolina held a slim<lb/>
3-2 lead in the fifth, but<lb/>
Hallow doubled and Fit-<lb/>
zgerald belted his seventh<lb/>
home run of the season.<lb/>
The Pirates added an in-<lb/>
surance run in the sixth and<lb/>
two more in the eighth. Geoff<lb/>
Mack hit a two-run shot for<lb/>
Catholic in the sixth.<lb/>
Catholic finished the season<lb/>
at 21-14.<lb/>
ECU Placed East<lb/>
The Pirates of East<lb/>
Carolina, coming off the<lb/>
ECAC-South champion-<lb/>
ship and a 33-win cam-<lb/>
paign, hae been selected<lb/>
to participate in the<lb/>
NCAA's East Regional<lb/>
beginning next weekend<lb/>
in Columbia. S.C.<lb/>
Other teams in the<lb/>
regional include host<lb/>
South Carolina, an in-<lb/>
dependent, The Citadel<lb/>
and West Virginia. The<lb/>
final team will be an-<lb/>
nounced May 24.<lb/>
Joining East Carolina<lb/>
in the East will be arch-<lb/>
rival and ACC champion<lb/>
North Carolina, 29-25.<lb/>
The Citadel,36-6, won<lb/>
the Southern Conference<lb/>
championship, and West<lb/>
Virginia, 22-21, was vic-<lb/>
torious in the Eastern 8,<lb/>
Joining the University<lb/>
of South Carolina as<lb/>
hosts in the NCAA tour-<lb/>
nament are Miami,<lb/>
Texas, New Orleans,<lb/>
Maine, Arizona State<lb/>
(defending champion),<lb/>
Oklahoma State and<lb/>
Fresno State.<lb/>
SS Kelly Robineite<lb/>
Bucs Take<lb/>
4th Place<lb/>
Manahan: first-year winner<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
,uM?ni Sports r.dn?r<lb/>
GRAHAM ? The East Carolina<lb/>
Lady Pirates were eliminated in the<lb/>
AIAW National Slow-Pitch Softball<lb/>
tournament this past Saturday, los-<lb/>
ing 1-0 to the University of Florida.<lb/>
Florida captured the win by slam-<lb/>
ming a homer in the fourth inning to<lb/>
knock ECU out of the invite.<lb/>
Florida was beaten in the finals,<lb/>
however, by Florida State, 9-4. The<lb/>
Lady Seminoles were undefeated in<lb/>
the tournament.<lb/>
After tournament play had end-<lb/>
ed, rightfield Cynthia Shepard and<lb/>
centerfielder Mitzi Davis were nam-<lb/>
ed as all-Americans. Davis and<lb/>
Shepard have both been ECU's<lb/>
powerhitters this year, batting over<lb/>
.400 this season. Shepard and<lb/>
Yvonne Williams were also named<lb/>
to the all-tournament team.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates finished fourth<lb/>
in the nation and had an overall<lb/>
record of 42-13.<lb/>
ECU started out strong in the<lb/>
beginning of the tournament, down-<lb/>
ing the University of Florida, 13-2,<lb/>
in the second round of play. The<lb/>
Lady Pirates, who were seeded third<lb/>
in the tournament, had a bye the<lb/>
first round.<lb/>
ECU scored twice in the first and<lb/>
third innings to take the lead.<lb/>
Florida, who was seeded sixth,<lb/>
scored its only runs in the bottom of<lb/>
the third.<lb/>
After two single runs in the fourth<lb/>
and fifth, ECU rallied for six runs in<lb/>
the sixth.<lb/>
Shepard, Davis and Jo Landa<lb/>
Clayton led ECU's hitting with<lb/>
three apiece. Davis popped a dou-<lb/>
ble and a triple while Clayton drove<lb/>
in a five runs and Shepard drove in<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Williams, Shirley Brown and<lb/>
Fran Hooks each had two hits, with<lb/>
one of Hook's a double.<lb/>
Florida's Mary Guzzardo and<lb/>
Carlyce Cononie had two hits each.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates then faced<lb/>
tenth-seeded UNC-Charlotte but<lb/>
lost 10-6 after committing five er-<lb/>
rors in the first inning. UNC-C took<lb/>
advantage, scoring four runs in the<lb/>
first, then three more in the third.<lb/>
ECU scored two in the first and<lb/>
rallied to within 7-6 in the fifth but<lb/>
the Forty-Niners scored twice in the<lb/>
sixth and once in the seventh to keep<lb/>
the lead.<lb/>
ECU's Shepard was three-for-<lb/>
four; Williams was two-for-four<lb/>
and Davis had a homerun.<lb/>
hi the second game, ECU barely<lb/>
edged out Western Carolina, 6-4, by<lb/>
scoring two runs in the bottom of<lb/>
the sixth.<lb/>
At one point during the game, the<lb/>
score was tied 2-2 but ECU gained a<lb/>
4-2 lead with runs in the fourth and<lb/>
fifth. Western fought back with a<lb/>
run in the sixth but the Lady Pirates<lb/>
then scored twice in the bottom of<lb/>
the inning to win.<lb/>
Maureen Buck singled and then<lb/>
went to third whenShepard reached<lb/>
on an error. Both runners came in<lb/>
on William's double.<lb/>
ECU was led by Williams who<lb/>
went three-for-four with four RBI.<lb/>
Fran Hooks, Buck and Jeannette<lb/>
Roth all were two-for-three. Davis<lb/>
was two-for-four with a double and<lb/>
triple.<lb/>
4 lady Pirate runner is safe<lb/>
Tolson Wins<lb/>
Bushbeck Honored<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
Defense a Pirate key<lb/>
Graduated placekicker Chuck<lb/>
Bushbeck, who transferred to East<lb/>
Carolina last fall from Villanova<lb/>
and became stricken with Hodgkin's<lb/>
Disease has been awarded the 1982<lb/>
Christianburg Award.<lb/>
During the year, Bushbeck kicked<lb/>
six of 13 field goals, including a<lb/>
48-yarder while battling the effects<lb/>
of cancer treatment. He also kicked<lb/>
32 of 32 extra points.<lb/>
The award, which is presented to<lb/>
the Pirate athlete who is a member<lb/>
of the varsity squad, shows ex-<lb/>
cellence in the classroom and high<lb/>
standards of charcter as a person<lb/>
and service to the university. The<lb/>
award is in honor of former Eas<lb/>
Carolina football and baseball<lb/>
coach John Christianburg.<lb/>
Bushbeck, who is back home in<lb/>
Philadelphia, is now awaiting a<lb/>
tryout with a professional team.<lb/>
While playing at East Carolina,<lb/>
Bushbeck would receive radiation<lb/>
treatments throughout the week and<lb/>
then participate in Pirate contests.<lb/>
. Though he would often become ill<lb/>
at these games, he would still kick,<lb/>
after shedding an umbrella he used<lb/>
to protect himself from the heat of<lb/>
the sun.<lb/>
Katherine Tolson, a freshman<lb/>
from New Bern and the first ECU<lb/>
women's tennis player to ever attend<lb/>
the regionals, won the consolation<lb/>
bracket at the regional event this<lb/>
past weekend at the University of<lb/>
Tennessee-Martin.<lb/>
Tolson, playing the No. 2 singles<lb/>
spot, drew the No.2-secded Mary<lb/>
Gengler of William &amp; Mary and lost<lb/>
in two straight sets, 6-2, 6-2.<lb/>
Tolson rallied in her next two<lb/>
matches, downing UNC-Charlotte's<lb/>
Dorothy Brown 6-1, 6-0 to win the<lb/>
consolations.<lb/>
Buc On Squad<lb/>
Eastern Basketball magazine has<lb/>
announced its list of the top 10<lb/>
Junior College transfers, and East<lb/>
Carolina is represented on this<lb/>
year's squad by Tony Robinson.<lb/>
The 6-1 guard from Jamestown<lb/>
Community College in New York<lb/>
was picked as the top guard pro-<lb/>
spect in the 1982 National JC Tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
He averaged 13.8 points per game<lb/>
and 6.2 assists.<lb/>
 ?"<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057479_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 19, 1982<lb/>
Their Cup(s) Runneth Over<lb/>
NEW YORK (AP) ? A year ago, Denis Pot-<lb/>
vin, captain of the National Hockey League New<lb/>
York Islanders, was talking with baseball slugger<lb/>
Reggie Jackson about dynasties.<lb/>
"Reggie said no one's a dynasty until they've<lb/>
won three in a row Potvin recalled. "Well, 1<lb/>
guess by Reggie's standards then, that makes us<lb/>
one<lb/>
The Islanders laid claim to that designation, br-<lb/>
inging home the Stanley Cup, symbol of NHL<lb/>
supremacy, fo the third straight year. The team<lb/>
and its prize arrived early Monday to a small, but<lb/>
loud crowd of fans at LaGuardia Airport.<lb/>
The Cup was secured in a four-game sweep of<lb/>
the Vancouver Canucks, completed Sunday night<lb/>
in a 3-1 victory. That made the Islanders the first<lb/>
United States-based franchise to capture three<lb/>
straight NHL championships.<lb/>
The only other teams to capture the Cup with<lb/>
that kind of consistency were the Montreal Cana-<lb/>
diens, who won four straight from 1975-76<lb/>
through 1978-79; the Toronto Maple Leafs with<lb/>
three in a row, 1961-62 through 1963-64; Mon-<lb/>
treal with five straight, 1955-56 through 1959-60;<lb/>
and Toronto with three in a row, 1946-47 through<lb/>
1948-49.<lb/>
Does this Cup triumph, climaxed with a string<lb/>
of nine straight victories, put the Islanders in the<lb/>
ranks of the game's all-time great teams?<lb/>
"That's up to the people across the United<lb/>
States and Canada to decide said Clark Gillies.<lb/>
"I think we deserve to be called a great team<lb/>
because of what we've done<lb/>
General Manager Bill Torrey was impressed<lb/>
not only with his team's triumph, but the manner<lb/>
in which it was accomplished. In the first round<lb/>
of the playoffs, three division champions ? Min-<lb/>
nesota, Montreal and Edmonton ? were upset.<lb/>
The Islanders were trailing by two goals with 5<lb/>
and a half minutes left in the decisive fifth game<lb/>
against Pittsburgh, but rallied to tie the score and<lb/>
then win the game in overtime.<lb/>
"We never stopped working in that last period<lb/>
against Pittsburgh, and when you don't stop,<lb/>
good things happen said the general manager.<lb/>
That dramatic victory allowed the Islanders to<lb/>
continue on in the playoffs, meeting the New<lb/>
York Rangers in the quarterfinals. The Isles<lb/>
droped the opener of that series, but then won 12<lb/>
of the next 13 games and the final nine in a row.<lb/>
The Rangers were eliminated in six and Quebec in<lb/>
the semifinals and Vancouver in the finals went in<lb/>
four each.<lb/>
"Pittsburgh was tough, and the Rangers are<lb/>
always tough for us Torrey said. "But that just<lb/>
made us harder to beat as we went on<lb/>
Torrey was asked to compare cups.<lb/>
"This is the most exciting win for us he said.<lb/>
"This year in many respects was the most dif-<lb/>
ficult. Every one gets tougher and better and br-<lb/>
ings more satisfication<lb/>
Can the Islanders keep us this string of cups,<lb/>
challenging perhaps Montreal's run of five in a<lb/>
row?<lb/>
"First said Torrey, "we have to go after No.<lb/>
4 or we'll never get to six. In fact, right now, I<lb/>
just want to enjoy No. 3<lb/>
The Islanders will share that joy with the tradi-<lb/>
tional Stanley Cup parade today, carrying the<lb/>
Cup through the streets of suburban Long Island<lb/>
near their home rink, the Nassau County Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Then, on Thursday, Mike Bossy will claim his<lb/>
Most Valuable Player Award, the Conn Smythe<lb/>
Trophy, and the car that goes with it from Sport<lb/>
Magazine. Bossy scored two goals in Sunday's<lb/>
clincher and finished the playoffs with 17 goals.<lb/>
Bossy said the thing that helped the Islanders<lb/>
capture the cup was the team's character.<lb/>
"We have a lot of guys here with the talent to<lb/>
win, but that's no good if you don't have the<lb/>
drive the right wing said. "We showed a lot of<lb/>
character right through the playoffs, winning the<lb/>
tight games, winning at home and winning on the<lb/>
road<lb/>
Bryan Trottier, Bossy's linemate who has<lb/>
scored 29 points in each of the three years the<lb/>
Islanders have won the Cup, said: "We don't<lb/>
compare them; we just win them. I sincerely hope<lb/>
people don't take us for granted and get tired of<lb/>
seeing us win it<lb/>
Vancouver coach Roger Neilson certainly<lb/>
doesn't take them for granted.<lb/>
"At the beginning of the year, people figured<lb/>
the Islanders would win it he said. "In the mid-<lb/>
dle of the season, people figured they'd win it.<lb/>
And heading into the playoffs, people figured<lb/>
they'd win it.<lb/>
"Trottier is the best player in the game today.<lb/>
Bossy is the best scorer. Potvin is the best<lb/>
defenseman and (Al) Arbour is the best coach<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP TO<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057479_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>