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<pb facs="00057569_0001"/>
;?<lb/>
<lb/>
Bht<lb/>
(Earnltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.3<lb/>
Tuesday August 30, 1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
16 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Crowds March In Washingto<lb/>
To Remember King's Speech<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
News Kdilor<lb/>
STANLEY LEARY ? Photo Lab<lb/>
We Still Have A Dream<lb/>
250 000 people, including ECU students and faculty, gathered in Washington D.C. Saturday to celebrate<lb/>
the 20th anniversary of Martin Luther King's famous "I Have A Dream" speech.<lb/>
Divers Find Anchor<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
wiM?n! Sm tdilor<lb/>
At 9:54 a.m. Monday, ECU<lb/>
divers and scientists placed the<lb/>
1,300-pound anchor of the USS<lb/>
Monitor aboard the research<lb/>
vessel Johnson. According to<lb/>
Gloria Thompson, project<lb/>
manager for the Monitor National<lb/>
Marine Sanctuary, the anchor will<lb/>
sta aboard the Johnson until<lb/>
Thursday when it will arrive at<lb/>
ECU, where preservation efforts<lb/>
will begin.<lb/>
According to Thompson, the<lb/>
anchor "i&amp; in g.ocxA condition but<lb/>
heavily incrusted with coral, sand<lb/>
and shells<lb/>
While on the Johnson, the an-<lb/>
chor will be wet-wrapped because<lb/>
it will deteriorate rapidly if expos-<lb/>
ed to air. Thompson said.<lb/>
Once at ECU, the anchor will<lb/>
be placed in a holding tank and<lb/>
undergo electrolysis, a slow pro-<lb/>
cess to remove incrustation.<lb/>
Because of the anchor's size, con-<lb/>
servation efforts are expected to<lb/>
take approximately 18 months,<lb/>
Thompson said. She added that<lb/>
the six-foot chain attached to the<lb/>
anchor will also be preserved.<lb/>
The anchor was in 225 feet of<lb/>
water about 16 miles south of<lb/>
Cape Hatteras, N.C.<lb/>
Researchers originally planned<lb/>
to recover the anchor last week<lb/>
but were delayed due to bad<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
The Monitor sank during a<lb/>
violent storm on Dec. 31, 1862, as<lb/>
it was being towed from Hampton<lb/>
Roads, Va to Beaufort, N.C.<lb/>
"The reason it sank said Gor-<lb/>
don Watts, ECU's underwater ar-<lb/>
chaeologist for the expedition,<lb/>
"was because the vessel was<lb/>
designed not to be seaworthy but<lb/>
rather to fight in shallow coastal<lb/>
rivers and sounds.<lb/>
The Monitor sank quickly and<lb/>
rested upside down on the ocean<lb/>
floor. It remained there until 1973<lb/>
when Watts, leading a discovery<lb/>
expedition, found the remains.<lb/>
Earlier that year, the Monitor<lb/>
and the Confederate Ironclad<lb/>
Virginia, also known as the Mer-<lb/>
rimac, made naval history when<lb/>
they fought to a stand off in the<lb/>
world's first battle of armored<lb/>
ships at Hampton Roads, VA.<lb/>
Before the anchor was<lb/>
recovered, four crewmen made<lb/>
color videotapes of the Monitor<lb/>
site. The videotapes are con-<lb/>
sidered crucial by scientists who<lb/>
plan to raise the ship's gun fuirent<lb/>
tentatively set for 1985.<lb/>
Dina Hill, project coordinator<lb/>
for ECU, said "the anchor was<lb/>
one of the objectives but not the<lb/>
primary objective" of the expedi-<lb/>
tion. Hill said that video<lb/>
documentation and engineering<lb/>
assessment, such as soil testing,<lb/>
were two of the main purposes of<lb/>
the dive.<lb/>
School Seeks Reaccreditation<lb/>
B TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
NUff Writer<lb/>
The ECU School of Education<lb/>
underwent complete reorganiza-<lb/>
tion and is currently functioning<lb/>
according to new guidelines.<lb/>
Reorganization was necessary<lb/>
after the school was denied ac-<lb/>
creditation last March by the Na-<lb/>
tional Council for Accreditation<lb/>
in Teacher Education and placed<lb/>
on probation by the N.C. Board<lb/>
of Education.<lb/>
The new plan gives the dean of<lb/>
the School of Education complete<lb/>
authority over all programs and<lb/>
matters related to teacher educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Council for Teacher<lb/>
Education was created to assist<lb/>
the dean. The council represents<lb/>
each teacher education program<lb/>
and is composed of approximately<lb/>
30 people. In addition, two<lb/>
students will be appointed to serve<lb/>
as voting committee members.<lb/>
Dr. Charles Coble, dean of the<lb/>
School of Education, said new<lb/>
emphasis on multicultural educa-<lb/>
tion will have a great impact on<lb/>
the student. The school's task is to<lb/>
provide experiences that will<lb/>
enhance prospective teacher's<lb/>
understanding of the subject, Co-<lb/>
ble said.<lb/>
Coble defined multicultural<lb/>
education as "a concern for and<lb/>
recognition of the cultural diversi-<lb/>
ty that exists within this coun-<lb/>
try?a recognition of the con-<lb/>
tributions different cultures make<lb/>
to American society To meet<lb/>
the NCATE standards, a series of<lb/>
programs will be held for teacher<lb/>
education students and faculty.<lb/>
To achieve success, Coble said,<lb/>
"student attention and attendance<lb/>
to these events is critical<lb/>
Another important change is a<lb/>
revision in the education cur-<lb/>
riculum. Special education and<lb/>
reading instruction courses will be<lb/>
required for all prospective<lb/>
See ED. SCHOOL, Page 6<lb/>
Under the theme, "We Still<lb/>
Have A Dream: Jobs, Peace and<lb/>
Freedom more than 250,000<lb/>
people converged on the nation's<lb/>
capital Saturday to commemorate<lb/>
the 20th anniversary of the 1963<lb/>
"March on Washington" when<lb/>
the Rev. Martin Luther King Jr.<lb/>
gave his famous "I have a dream"<lb/>
speech.<lb/>
Despite the high temperatures<lb/>
and crowded conditions, par-<lb/>
ticipants in the march patiently<lb/>
and peacefully listened to more<lb/>
than eight hours of speeches from<lb/>
dozens of leaders in the movement<lb/>
for peace and justice. The<lb/>
speakers and the crowd were a<lb/>
well mixed array of blacks and<lb/>
whites from various organizations<lb/>
and backgrounds. However, there<lb/>
was little doubt that the spirit of<lb/>
King, was the omnipresent factor<lb/>
uniting the marchers.<lb/>
Hundreds of banners bearing<lb/>
King's portrait were scattered<lb/>
throughout the crowd. "Working<lb/>
to Fulfill the Dream stated a<lb/>
banner carried by members of the<lb/>
Southern Christian I.eadershin<lb/>
Conference. "We Still Have A<lb/>
Dream read another.<lb/>
As evident as the groups' sup-<lb/>
port of the King ideal, was their<lb/>
disdain for Ronald Reagan.<lb/>
"Dump Reagan In '84" appeared<lb/>
on many placards. Pockets of<lb/>
marchers chanted, "Ronald<lb/>
Reagan, he's no goodsend him<lb/>
back to Hollywood<lb/>
The calendar of speakers and<lb/>
entertainers included many of the,<lb/>
same people who actively partic-<lb/>
pated in the 1963 march. Black<lb/>
leaders Jesse Jackson, Ralph<lb/>
Abernathy and Coretta Scott King<lb/>
spoke before the crowd. Enter-<lb/>
tainers Stevie Wonder and Harry<lb/>
Belafonte, Gil Scott-Heron, Dick<lb/>
Gregory, Graham Nash, the<lb/>
Freedom Singers and Peter, Paul<lb/>
and Mary. Shirley Caesar led the<lb/>
crowd in singing the black na-<lb/>
tional anthem, "Lift Every Voice<lb/>
and Sing<lb/>
March organizers chose not to<lb/>
invite a representative from the<lb/>
Reagan administration to address<lb/>
the crowd.<lb/>
Other speakers included<lb/>
representatives from religious<lb/>
groups, women's groups, labor<lb/>
unions. Congress and many more.<lb/>
Anchor Brings Fame<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
Nwi Cdllor<lb/>
When an air bag floated to<lb/>
the ocean's surface with the<lb/>
1300-pound anchor of the<lb/>
Monitor attached to it Monday<lb/>
morning, history was made; and<lb/>
as a result the words "East<lb/>
Carolinia University" will ap-<lb/>
pear in newspapers and be<lb/>
spoken over the air waves<lb/>
througncut trie vvorfci<lb/>
Last week major television<lb/>
networks, including P.B.S<lb/>
joined the B.B.C. and several<lb/>
major U.S. newspapers hoping<lb/>
to see the anchor successfully<lb/>
raised.<lb/>
"There's really been nothing<lb/>
like this that has arroused so<lb/>
much interest said William<lb/>
Shires, director of the ECU<lb/>
News Bureau.<lb/>
Shires, who has been with the<lb/>
bureau for 12 years, called the<lb/>
raising of the Civil War vessel's<lb/>
anchor a "historic treasure<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell said he was "very pleas-<lb/>
ed" and proud that the ECU<lb/>
Maritime History and Under-<lb/>
water Research Program had<lb/>
succeeded in its efforts.<lb/>
"I certainly am pleased that<lb/>
two of our people, Bill Still and<lb/>
Gordon Watts, did it Howell<lb/>
said. "What they've done<lb/>
demonstrates that we have an<lb/>
excellent program<lb/>
Howell said the anchor rais-<lb/>
ing demonstrates the high quali-<lb/>
ty or ecu's programs. He call-<lb/>
ed it "a very nice package of<lb/>
teaching, research and public<lb/>
service<lb/>
Both Shires and Howell<lb/>
spoke of the historical<lb/>
significance of the event. "This<lb/>
is an artifact people will want to<lb/>
see for years to come Howell<lb/>
said. "It takes the history books<lb/>
a chapter of two further<lb/>
Shires added.<lb/>
Shires called Monday's news<lb/>
"almost anticlimactic" after all<lb/>
the attention generated during<lb/>
last week's unsuccessful bid to<lb/>
raise the anchor.<lb/>
Workshops Conducted<lb/>
In attempts to familiarize<lb/>
teacher education students,<lb/>
faculty, and administrators with<lb/>
Multicultural Education, Dr.<lb/>
Dudley E. Flood, Associate<lb/>
State Superintendent of the<lb/>
State Department of Public In-<lb/>
struction, will present two<lb/>
lecture-workshops Thursday,<lb/>
Sept.l.<lb/>
"Multicultural Education"<lb/>
will be the topic of the two<lb/>
workshops. The faculty<lb/>
workshop, which will be held at<lb/>
4:00 p.m. in the Nursing<lb/>
Auditorium, will be followed by<lb/>
a student workshop and recep-<lb/>
tion for Dr. Flood at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
in Jenkins Auditorium.<lb/>
"This is one of the ways the<lb/>
University is working toward<lb/>
reaccreditation with NCATE<lb/>
wrote Asst. Dean of the School<lb/>
of Arts and Sciences Dr. Marie<lb/>
Farr in a memo to the East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Jackson, a former King lieute-<lb/>
nant and possible 1984 presiden-<lb/>
tial candidate, excited the crowd<lb/>
with his speech. "We must dream<lb/>
a new dream Jackson told<lb/>
them. "We must expand the<lb/>
horizon of our dreams. Let us<lb/>
continue to dream<lb/>
Belofonte said, "we are not a<lb/>
bunch of malcontents" conspiring<lb/>
with communists and denying the<lb/>
progress of the past 20 years . . .<lb/>
"our pain needs no conspiracy. It<lb/>
is real<lb/>
? Atlanta Mayor Andrew Young<lb/>
noted the advancements he said<lb/>
had been made in the 20<lb/>
yearsWe are the people<lb/>
Young told the crowd. "This is a<lb/>
government of the people, for the<lb/>
people and by the people ? you<lb/>
are the people<lb/>
See CROWD, Page 3<lb/>
High Temps<lb/>
Heat Up<lb/>
ECU Dorms<lb/>
When ECU students arrived on<lb/>
campus last week, they were<lb/>
welcomed with a heat wave.<lb/>
Temperatures hovered at or above<lb/>
the 100 degree mark and have not<lb/>
dropped noticeably since. Lying<lb/>
around, loose clothing, fans blow-<lb/>
ing and a cool beverage in hand<lb/>
has become a familiar scene in<lb/>
ECU resident halls.<lb/>
While living on campus has<lb/>
definite advantages, residents of<lb/>
ECU's 14 non-air-conditioned<lb/>
dorms have become all too aware<lb/>
of the drawbacks.<lb/>
There are a limited number of<lb/>
sTfr-crrmffTfcncrJ rcsfdrncc half<lb/>
rooms available to students. Slay-<lb/>
has some air-conditioned rooms<lb/>
which are reserved for handicap-<lb/>
ped students. Jarvs is completely<lb/>
air-conditioned, a luxury for<lb/>
which its residents pay $75 extra<lb/>
per semester. "It is definitely<lb/>
worth the extra money said Jar-<lb/>
vis resident Steve Reed.<lb/>
Tyler resident Susan Robbins<lb/>
and Jones resident Angie Barnes<lb/>
said they would both be willing to<lb/>
pay the extra money for air-<lb/>
conditioning. Many students<lb/>
echoed similar comments.<lb/>
According to Carolyn<lb/>
Fulghum, director of residence<lb/>
life, "plans are to air-condition<lb/>
Couen and Fleming Halls for the<lb/>
1984-85 school year She also<lb/>
emphasized the fact that this<lb/>
year's weather has been unusually<lb/>
hot, a point also made by Charles<lb/>
Home, director of the Greenville<lb/>
Utility Commission in a recent in-<lb/>
terview.<lb/>
Most students are fighting the<lb/>
heat with fans. Ken Walker has<lb/>
two fans running continually in<lb/>
his room at Jones, as does Lisa<lb/>
Whitley, head resident at Slay.<lb/>
Clement resident Claire<lb/>
O'Connor keeps cool by swimm-<lb/>
ing, a method utilized by several<lb/>
other students.<lb/>
Number Of Bicycle Thefts Increase In Fall<lb/>
B GLENN MAUGHAN<lb/>
MiffWrilef<lb/>
If you've ever had your bicycle<lb/>
stolen then it's easy for you to<lb/>
identify with the emotional pain<lb/>
that comes from such an ex-<lb/>
perience. You can't reverse it,<lb/>
your bike's gone, but there are<lb/>
steps you can take to prevent it<lb/>
from happening again. It's even<lb/>
more important now because<lb/>
September marks the month when<lb/>
bicycle thefts increase sharply.<lb/>
Already, two bikes have been<lb/>
stolen this semester. According to<lb/>
campus police, a female student<lb/>
witnessed two males take bikes<lb/>
from the rack at Fletcher dorm<lb/>
Wednesday night. Further in-<lb/>
vestigation showed the the locks<lb/>
on the two bikes had been cut.<lb/>
Statistics from ECU campus<lb/>
police show September as the se-<lb/>
cond highest month for bicycle<lb/>
thefts. Jane Davison, ECU police<lb/>
officer, regards each new school<lb/>
year as a troublesome time for<lb/>
bicycle owners. "We have to<lb/>
educate all the new students to<lb/>
that's gom? on The new crop of<lb/>
students needs to realize that<lb/>
thirves arc very active in<lb/>
September<lb/>
Last fall semester, 47 bikes<lb/>
worth over $6,000 were stolen.<lb/>
During the fall semesters for the<lb/>
past four years police records<lb/>
show that 303 bikes worth in ex-<lb/>
cess of $40,000 were stolen.<lb/>
According to Davison, bicycle<lb/>
larcenies are down one-third since<lb/>
June of 1981, but the costs to<lb/>
owners has risen almost 13 per-<lb/>
cent during the same time. Bikes<lb/>
worth almost $17,000 were<lb/>
reported stolen during the 1982-83<lb/>
school year.<lb/>
Recovery is often a matter of<lb/>
chance. "Luck plays a big part in<lb/>
recovering property but if<lb/>
students are careful (and) keep an<lb/>
eye on their valuables, they can<lb/>
lessen their risks she said. Cam-<lb/>
pus police records show 7 bikes<lb/>
were recovered out of 53 reported<lb/>
stolen during the 1983 spring<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
"Student help is most impor-<lb/>
tant for curbing thefts Davison<lb/>
said Students should report it if<lb/>
they observe someone walking<lb/>
along a bike rack tugging on<lb/>
chains. "Using common sense can<lb/>
deter crime; if someone sees a<lb/>
non-student, someone who looks<lb/>
like they're 14 or 15, messing<lb/>
around a bike rack, an alarm<lb/>
ought to register in their heads<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Campus police encourage<lb/>
reporting thefts since it may help<lb/>
them slow down thieves. "We can<lb/>
use the statistics to step up patrols<lb/>
in that area; students can assist<lb/>
us said Davison. A report of a<lb/>
theft last February, turned in by a<lb/>
student, resulted in an arrest<lb/>
within seven minutes of the crime.<lb/>
Students can also help<lb/>
themselves by having a safe,<lb/>
secure, locking system. They<lb/>
should register the bikes with<lb/>
campus police and the department<lb/>
also has an engraving tool to fur-<lb/>
ther protect property and aid in<lb/>
recovery should it be stolen or<lb/>
lost.<lb/>
Davison thinks students might A<lb/>
picveni losses if they're more locks<lb/>
wary or mindful of their property.<lb/>
to can. To<lb/>
with the campei security office.<lb/>
- ? m ? ?<lb/>
'<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057569_0002"/><lb/>
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M i,IM M<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
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PRE PHYSICAL<lb/>
THERAPY<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
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FIELDHOCKEY<lb/>
Attention anyone tnterested m<lb/>
p'amg Women s intramural<lb/>
field hx kev tnerf Is a meftmg<lb/>
on Wednesday Sept 7 at 4 p m<lb/>
in Room 10? of the Memorial<lb/>
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STUDENTSMAKE<lb/>
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stinipn's ifl JS states c anactn<lb/>
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with Publlt interest Research<lb/>
Gi ours i piRGs'<lb/>
PiRC-s are student run non<lb/>
par tisan resean h ?nd advoi at y<lb/>
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ported hv activity tees trom<lb/>
e'hei s devils PlRGsusethe<lb/>
money to h'ir st?tls Ot lawyers<lb/>
?rsea'thers organaers ?ien<lb/>
I sts ournatlsts and support<lb/>
start ' larork wyith students on<lb/>
, ssi rs ai h the<lb/>
si lents "c?se piirg s areas<lb/>
v i ? n, 'ude consumer<lb/>
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preSeevatiOft pn tlca 'etorrn<lb/>
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Jeta s a Jav Stone at<lb/>
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COMMUTERS<lb/>
Students who commute to<lb/>
ass from ou'S'de 'he Green<lb/>
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???v '???a vmjter Ser<lb/>
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PIRATE WALK<lb/>
Apr atlons for rector ot<lb/>
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BAPTIST<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
The Baptisl student union s<lb/>
rtfl An oper' nocise tonght a'<lb/>
? 30 p m Dmner and cp ? ream<lb/>
a be served ai no osl Some<lb/>
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? . rteo n hungei n Greenville<lb/>
Labcx Da. -vppkeno a s'arve a<lb/>
? ip held "i Greeny.lip<lb/>
?. ? ? rmation all Ma<lb/>
??a a' '5 5511<lb/>
NON CREDIT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
?? - . ipiar Sep'<lb/>
? -ia t- -pn. h Sep'<lb/>
mt -t v a Wpsearc h Sep'<lb/>
a rtrg ? -t voga Sep'<lb/>
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; ? ? . Sep1 K ?: tat Sep<lb/>
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janizing Tmpvppt jft<lb/>
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N Pas?1- i ?' latlng<lb/>
Career Change Oc' <lb/>
Will ?nn Fs'n'p planning Oc? 4.<lb/>
Money v?a"p's c1 6 Basic<lb/>
nat t Rea' fcstate<lb/>
Finance Oct 20 Com<lb/>
' ng fttectiveiy Oct 3'<lb/>
? . ? nt -i ,ng Education<lb/>
arm Ha '57 613<lb/>
SOFTBAL<lb/>
PLAYERS<lb/>
Anyone interested in trying<lb/>
out toe the t t (J Softball Team<lb/>
please contact Coach Munahan<lb/>
immediately at 7S7 6161 1 he<lb/>
first ottic tal meeting wit' be on<lb/>
September the 6th in Mmges 142<lb/>
at 3 p m<lb/>
"TOGA, TOGA<lb/>
The Pi kappa Ph. Fraternity<lb/>
would like to welcome everyone<lb/>
back tor another ell raising<lb/>
semester vVe want to remind<lb/>
everyone ot the annual Toya<lb/>
Patty featuring Gold Rush this<lb/>
Thursday a? the Piappa house<lb/>
Any questions t an 'S6 i-ir<lb/>
TUTORS NEEDED<lb/>
Upper c lassmen and graduate<lb/>
students who are interested in<lb/>
tutoring for F C U Athletics are<lb/>
invited to an organizational<lb/>
meeting Wednesday August 31<lb/>
at 3 00 in the Study entet<lb/>
Icxa'ed in the basemen' ot Jones<lb/>
Dorm Please nAe sex lal se<lb/>
ty number a ' I GO<lb/>
Pip A 11 S'<lb/>
FRISBEE CLUB<lb/>
ECU ' 'Sbee i lob s hold i .<lb/>
tirst mee'mg tonight a' C ?<lb/>
room 247 MendenhaN vVe a<lb/>
planning road tnps fnsbeetour<lb/>
naments and tr sbee par' s ft<lb/>
membership drive is now in pro<lb/>
gress Anyone interested in<lb/>
ultimate iii goit guts I<lb/>
s'y'e. ano hackysacli s en<lb/>
i ouraged to a"end U" n ??<lb/>
'?ps whippi every lues )i ?<lb/>
Trturs at s 00 at the bottom o'<lb/>
college hill Be wa'chmg for the<lb/>
Natural Light Frisbee f ?<lb/>
Ultimate F ?tr avagan;a on 0 '<lb/>
R Anc! 9 at ECU Tpr  ?<lb/>
Vendenhaii c on . j '<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
T he E C U B 3g. : s spo<lb/>
soring a book sale from R 4 on<lb/>
the 1st tioor of the P.<lb/>
building on Wed Aug 31 and<lb/>
T?urs Sep' i Prices 'ange<lb/>
from ?5 rents t; 00 a th the ' a<lb/>
or.ty of 'he book s begin B<lb/>
books<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
Thp Ph kappa T.i r'atpr<lb/>
is having d A- - i<lb/>
ECU Par'v TK rs ??, ?<lb/>
40v Eii:abe I it 9 p n<lb/>
Band j"0 Beverajr' a I t<lb/>
- ded I rfTM ?" ' II<lb/>
Ph. Tau s<lb/>
ARCHERY CLUB<lb/>
Trip E C U A' hei ?<lb/>
ud 'o Ann xjnee Is first meeting<lb/>
of the R3 R4 scno.  ? les<lb/>
day Sept 6 a' R p ?" n -norr 102<lb/>
Memorial Gym Any me Ar s<lb/>
prpsted s well orne ' <lb/>
Po' more intormatiOf - ?? ?<lb/>
' . . ? a' '53 106; ri ?-??:?? ?<lb/>
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STRONG CAMPBELL<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
The Strong Campoei Interesl<lb/>
nventor, s ottet ed every<lb/>
day in 305 Aright nnnn at 4<lb/>
p m when scnoc is in st ?<lb/>
witn rr-?p p? (?itiunv of ?"?nrvima<lb/>
ton per od an I registrsatior<lb/>
da. This I ivatlabie 1 ?<lb/>
s'udents at no cost No '<lb/>
registration is reQuired l t<lb/>
more infofma in a 'he<lb/>
Counseling Centet ai '5' ?'?<lb/>
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You may use tte torm a' right or<lb/>
us a separate srteet of paper if<lb/>
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GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
' ' ? Easl It 'ia Gospel<lb/>
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TRYOUTS<lb/>
 ? Night s - v .? Ro n<lb/>
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OPEN HOUSE<lb/>
Open house a ; , ? . - .(? the<lb/>
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Tuesday August 30<lb/>
 good 11 mi ?<lb/>
?  ' SO 1<lb/>
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BIBLE STUDY<lb/>
? ? ? ? ? The Nat gator:<lb/>
??? ? ? a lei B ?<lb/>
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p m . beg . ? ??<lb/>
INDIAN FESTIVAL<lb/>
Perqu mans Country Parks<lb/>
and Recreation Department and<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce a<lb/>
sponsor its second annual 5K<lb/>
(3 li miles! Run Saturday<lb/>
eptembet 17 ah ages af 1 <lb/>
COuraged to attpm: a " 'A 11<lb/>
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A large festival of mar . ?<lb/>
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athiet board Tuesoa. ?'? .<lb/>
30. 1983 a' 5 30 in ?? . Pirati<lb/>
Club The eei ny a ? ?.<lb/>
Over dinner All current<lb/>
?? en rrs arp en oc-aged to a'<lb/>
?? is the first meet<lb/>
Studer- ?'?'? eti Board a' thi<lb/>
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PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
? orc'ners<lb/>
?? s first meel .a<lb/>
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WRESTLING<lb/>
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MODELS NEEDED<lb/>
Office Services Unlimited<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
Miller and Lamda Chi Alpha present<lb/>
the 1st Annual Lamda Chi Kick-Of f<lb/>
Party Thurs. Sept. 1st 4:00.<lb/>
Music provided by the South's Finest<lb/>
WRQR's Don Vickers and Kirk Williams.<lb/>
Lowest TV Renfc<lb/>
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AUDITIONS<lb/>
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Be prepared to sing a song of your choice.<lb/>
Hrini! Music. Accompanist furnished.<lb/>
Ma earn 1 hour credit!<lb/>
I<lb/>
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Tuesday and Wednesday, Aug. 30and31,<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Center. Room 206.<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
EVERYONE WELCOME<lb/>
Take it off<lb/>
Semester rate<lb/>
$145 from now until December 20<lb/>
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Regular Student rate $45month<lb/>
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Group rates Available for 3 or more<lb/>
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Co-ed exercise classes, Nautilus, freeweights.raquetball.<lb/>
indoor track, outdoor pool, steam room, sauna, hot tub<lb/>
Bring this Ad in for 1 Free visit during Student Hours. Expires 9-6-83<lb/>
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I i ECU Am<lb/>
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Ae ill have our first<lb/>
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<lb/>
Crowd Honors King<lb/>
In Washington D.C.<lb/>
 out. from Pane I ? <lb/>
Iili55ICAOUNIAN. ALGUSTJO, j J<lb/>
Coot, from Pace 1<lb/>
NAArP o 4 unmp'oyment; an<lb/>
IV n President escalating arms race;<lb/>
Benjamin Hooks and the denial of basic<lb/>
ignited the crowd with<lb/>
his strong attack on<lb/>
President Reagan's<lb/>
Policies; policies<lb/>
which Hooks said<lb/>
rights and programs<lb/>
which ensure<lb/>
freedom More than<lb/>
400 organizations<lb/>
?re listed on the of-<lb/>
  "v ? '?ivu nil uic LM -<lb/>
reu ri ilhe.poo,r, and RcmJ program of the<lb/>
reward the rich<lb/>
"Policies that talk<lb/>
about the trickle<lb/>
down theory but<lb/>
somehow the trickle<lb/>
never gets down<lb/>
Hooks told the en-<lb/>
thusiastic crowd.<lb/>
"Policies that provide<lb/>
a safety net for the<lb/>
truly greedy, but<lb/>
nothing for the trulv<lb/>
needy. We send notice<lb/>
on you Mr. Reagan<lb/>
that we are not here to<lb/>
live in the past and to<lb/>
leave here simplv sing-<lb/>
ing, 'We Shall "Over-<lb/>
come We are here<lb/>
because we are com-<lb/>
mitted to the elimina-<lb/>
tion of Reaganism<lb/>
from the face of the<lb/>
earthWe've had<lb/>
enough of it Hooks<lb/>
then led the crowd in<lb/>
a chant of "Reagan<lb/>
no more in 1984<lb/>
Organizers of the<lb/>
march noted that<lb/>
"three critical condi-<lb/>
tions" exist in our<lb/>
society - "insufferable<lb/>
march as endorsers of<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
The morning rally,<lb/>
which began shortly<lb/>
after 9:00 a.m was<lb/>
held on the mall bet-<lb/>
pool.<lb/>
The only sour note<lb/>
of the day's festivities<lb/>
was the littering pro-<lb/>
blem. Thousands' of<lb/>
leaflets and placards<lb/>
were strewn<lb/>
throughout the rally<lb/>
area.<lb/>
These people are<lb/>
really doing a fine job<lb/>
conveying their point<lb/>
by messing up the<lb/>
whole area, com-<lb/>
mented one young<lb/>
ween the Capital and man not participating<lb/>
Washington in the rally. Marchers,<lb/>
on the other hand<lb/>
claimed there weren't<lb/>
enough litter recep-<lb/>
ticles provided to han-<lb/>
dle the needs of the<lb/>
large crowd.<lb/>
One bus traveled to<lb/>
the march from<lb/>
Greenville. The trip<lb/>
was co-coordinated<lb/>
by the Pitt County<lb/>
chapters of the SCLC<lb/>
and the NAACP.<lb/>
NAACP President<lb/>
D.D. Garrett, with<lb/>
help from Greenville<lb/>
residents Fran Parrott<lb/>
and Melvin<lb/>
McLawhorn took care<lb/>
of the various needs<lb/>
of the people riding<lb/>
the bus. Thanks to an<lb/>
SCLC grant the cost<lb/>
of the bus ticket was<lb/>
only $10 roundtrip.<lb/>
Monument. The<lb/>
crowd then walked to<lb/>
the Lincoln Memorial<lb/>
for the afternoon rallj<lb/>
which continued until<lb/>
after 6:00 p.m.<lb/>
Police, working at the<lb/>
rally sites, termed the<lb/>
days events peaceful.<lb/>
About 100 people re-<lb/>
quired medical atten-<lb/>
tion and had to be<lb/>
taken from the scene<lb/>
 ambulances<lb/>
because of the heat<lb/>
which reached highs<lb/>
in the rmd-90's.<lb/>
To beat the heat<lb/>
marchers spent up to<lb/>
an hour standing in<lb/>
line at water fountains<lb/>
and refreshment<lb/>
stands. Others took a<lb/>
dip in the Lincoln<lb/>
Memorial's reflecting<lb/>
Japan's Fast For Lifer<lb/>
Celebrates'The Dream9<lb/>
Bv GLENN<lb/>
MAI CHAN<lb/>
and<lb/>
PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEILL<lb/>
Despite the fact he<lb/>
had not eaten in 22<lb/>
days, Japanese "Fast<lb/>
for Lifer" Mirsuyoshi<lb/>
Kohjima travelled<lb/>
 ttUfSfcuntry to<lb/>
address the crowd<lb/>
during Saturday's<lb/>
Martin Luther King<lb/>
march in Washington<lb/>
D.C.<lb/>
In a related story<lb/>
the Fast for Life sup-<lb/>
port committee an-<lb/>
nounced that two<lb/>
more people from<lb/>
Canada had decided<lb/>
to join the fast. The<lb/>
two, Brian Burch and<lb/>
Karen Harrison, from<lb/>
Toronto, will be join-<lb/>
ing 11 others who<lb/>
have been fasting<lb/>
since Aug. 6. All of<lb/>
the fasters say they<lb/>
will fast until there is<lb/>
a "break in the<lb/>
momentum of the<lb/>
nuclear arms race<lb/>
Kohjima, 34, is a<lb/>
resident of Tokyo,<lb/>
Japan. He has been<lb/>
fasting with three<lb/>
others in Oakland,<lb/>
California. Because<lb/>
of his weakened<lb/>
physical condition<lb/>
Kohjima remained in<lb/>
a wheelchair<lb/>
throughout the day.<lb/>
He was accompanied<lb/>
by his<lb/>
interpreter Michiko<lb/>
Ishikawa and fast<lb/>
supporter Mike Af-<lb/>
fleck.<lb/>
Affleck believes the<lb/>
fasters are not<lb/>
suicidal. "They are<lb/>
just like people as far<lb/>
back as Jesus, who<lb/>
know they are putting<lb/>
their life on the line-<lb/>
firefighters,<lb/>
policemen, lifeguards,<lb/>
rescue personnel<lb/>
people like that, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Canadian duo<lb/>
have been active in the<lb/>
peace movement for<lb/>
several years. Burch<lb/>
was arrested Mar. 6 in<lb/>
Toronto for pouring<lb/>
blood on property<lb/>
belonging to the<lb/>
American, French,<lb/>
and British Con-<lb/>
sulates. "I did this<lb/>
because these coun-<lb/>
tries are more con-<lb/>
cerned with spending<lb/>
money on war than on<lb/>
feeding their hungry<lb/>
People he said.<lb/>
Harrison, who is<lb/>
now in seclusion in<lb/>
Ann Arbor, Mich<lb/>
fasted for 23 days this<lb/>
spring. Her actions<lb/>
brought about a first-<lb/>
over cruise missile<lb/>
testing in Canada.<lb/>
Both said the issue<lb/>
of upcoming deploy-<lb/>
ment of NATO<lb/>
missiles prompted<lb/>
them to fast. "I'm<lb/>
fasting to show people<lb/>
the urgency of life,<lb/>
death and the arms<lb/>
race Burch said.<lb/>
"Spending money on<lb/>
weapons and not<lb/>
hungry people goes<lb/>
against my Christian<lb/>
values he added.<lb/>
A teacher of men-<lb/>
tally and physically<lb/>
hanidcapped people,<lb/>
Burch does not<lb/>
believe his act of<lb/>
fasting is suicidal. He<lb/>
believes it is time for<lb/>
urgency-time to end<lb/>
the arms race even if<lb/>
such action may cost<lb/>
him his life.<lb/>
The fasters will<lb/>
cease their actions<lb/>
when their demands<lb/>
of ending the arms<lb/>
race are met. Burch<lb/>
specifically said,<lb/>
'The Canadian<lb/>
government must end<lb/>
all cruise missile<lb/>
According to<lb/>
reports from the Fast<lb/>
for Life office in<lb/>
Oakland, the physical<lb/>
condition of<lb/>
American faster<lb/>
Dorothy Granada has<lb/>
deteriorated con-<lb/>
siderably in the last<lb/>
few days. She ex-<lb/>
perienced the "worst<lb/>
day" of her fast on<lb/>
Friday, said fast sup-<lb/>
porter Cathy Daniels.<lb/>
All of the fasters<lb/>
are beginning to ex-<lb/>
perience more<lb/>
physical discomfort as<lb/>
the fast continues.<lb/>
Particpants in the<lb/>
Fast for Life are from<lb/>
six different nations.<lb/>
They include four<lb/>
people from France,<lb/>
two Americans, three<lb/>
Canadians and one<lb/>
person each from<lb/>
Spain, West Germany<lb/>
and Japan.<lb/>
Charles Gray, 58,<lb/>
from Oakland is the<lb/>
oldest person par-<lb/>
ticipating in the fast.<lb/>
He and Granada were<lb/>
married less than one<lb/>
year ago.<lb/>
In November of<lb/>
1982 Gray, retired,<lb/>
testing as well as pre- participated in an in-<lb/>
deployment of ternational fast to br-<lb/>
the Pershing II in<lb/>
Europe for me to end<lb/>
my fast<lb/>
Affleck told The<lb/>
ing attention to the<lb/>
construction of a<lb/>
cruise missile base at<lb/>
Comiso, Italy.<lb/>
Participants Discuss March<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
20th aniversary<lb/>
Darlene Keene is a pre-med<lb/>
student hoping to attend the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine; Dr.<lb/>
Susan McCammon is an assis-<lb/>
tant professor in ECU's<lb/>
psychology department. Last<lb/>
spring she helped organize a<lb/>
post-tramatic stress seminar to<lb/>
help ECU students experiencing<lb/>
emotional pain as a result of the<lb/>
Village Green Apartment explo-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
Susan Moran is a member of<lb/>
ECU's Kappa Delta sorority.<lb/>
She's an aspiring teacher who<lb/>
said she is just beginning to<lb/>
understand and explore the<lb/>
direction her life is taking.<lb/>
All these women do different<lb/>
things on a day-to-day basis,<lb/>
but on Saturday morning at 3<lb/>
a.m. they boarded a bus to<lb/>
Washington D.C. to com-<lb/>
memorate the<lb/>
of a dream.<lb/>
On Aug. 28, 1963 the Rev.<lb/>
Martin Luther King Jr.<lb/>
delivered his famous "I have a<lb/>
dream" speech. Fifteen years<lb/>
following King's death, these<lb/>
four women are still moved to<lb/>
action by his words and joined<lb/>
thousands of others in a march<lb/>
for "jobs, peace and freedom<lb/>
"1 felt like there were things I<lb/>
had to stand up for Keene<lb/>
told The East Carolinian, ad-<lb/>
ding that her decision to make<lb/>
the trip had been inspired by the<lb/>
appearance last January of Cor-<lb/>
etta Scott King in Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
"It just sparked something<lb/>
inside Keene said.<lb/>
McCammon said her main<lb/>
reason for attending the Satur-<lb/>
day march was to "help honor<lb/>
Martin Luther King Jr and to<lb/>
affirm her agreement with the<lb/>
0<lb/>
i&amp; KAPP4 T4(<lb/>
ideas he worked for.<lb/>
"There's a lot of 'the dream<lb/>
that was not fulfilled Mc-<lb/>
Cammon said, "and I think<lb/>
that was the whole idea of the<lb/>
march  to celebrate the parts<lb/>
of the dream that were realized<lb/>
and to show a commitment for<lb/>
making more of the dream<lb/>
come true<lb/>
"I'm a very big believer in<lb/>
equality said Moran. "I think<lb/>
that if you believe in something<lb/>
you have to stand up for it.<lb/>
it was history in the mak-<lb/>
ing continued Moran, "and I<lb/>
wanted to be part of that. As a<lb/>
future school teacher I want to<lb/>
be able to tell my children about<lb/>
it from a first hand ex-<lb/>
perience<lb/>
"People in this country still<lb/>
face a lot of descrimination<lb/>
because of their race, gender<lb/>
and sexual preference Mc-<lb/>
Cammon said, adding it was<lb/>
"not acceptable" for anyone to<lb/>
violate another's civil rights.<lb/>
Keene said she was inspired<lb/>
by her trip to the nation's<lb/>
capital. "All those people work-<lb/>
ing together for a common<lb/>
cause was great Keene said.<lb/>
On the theme of peace<lb/>
brought out by the marchers,<lb/>
Moran said, "we may not be at<lb/>
war, but there are many sorts of<lb/>
personal conflicts between<lb/>
groups of people that can be<lb/>
resolved more peacefully<lb/>
Many of the marchers also<lb/>
reflected on the progress that<lb/>
had been made since the<lb/>
original march. McCammon<lb/>
noted the observation of Pitt<lb/>
County NAACP President D.<lb/>
D. Garrett-on the large number<lb/>
of whites who traveled on the<lb/>
Greenville bus to Washington.<lb/>
"1 think there's been a lot of<lb/>
progress since the first march "<lb/>
IT<lb/>
e<lb/>
&amp;-?&amp;Z.<lb/>
IP<lb/>
"Welcome Back ECU Party"<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
?Cr -V -?-s?sjfr yy. ss Cr ST S-<lb/>
Your Favorite Beverage Will Be Provided<lb/>
, Please Hje Proper Identification<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPT 1<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
409 ELIZABETH STREET<lb/>
.a<lb/>
:xMo?xy<lb/>
S.I<lb/>
First Canterbury<lb/>
Episcopal Fellowship<lb/>
Welcome Student<lb/>
Specials<lb/>
ala   (one month free)<lb/>
 Months Charter Membership $52 00<lb/>
One Month Reg.$23.00 Now $18.75<lb/>
Two Month Reg.40.00 Now $30.00<lb/>
15 Sunton Visits Reg.$30.00 Now $22.50<lb/>
Pre Register Before Sept. For Aerobic Dance<lb/>
$16.00 per mo. (non-members) only $9.00 for members<lb/>
 United Figure Salon <lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
S<lb/>
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h<lb/>
"Red Oak Plaza 75-2e.c<lb/>
'?"?W "d f,t?.? c.n?r ,or Womtn) '<lb/>
-  ?. . . ? j ? ? s? r.<lb/>
<lb/>
S <lb/>
annoiuues the first Fall<lb/>
Student Holy Communion<lb/>
at St. Paul's Episcopal Church<lb/>
401E. 4th St.<lb/>
celebrant: Bishop Sidney Sanders of the<lb/>
Diocese of East Carolina<lb/>
Supper will be served following the service.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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<lb/>
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bair salon<lb/>
Conveniently Located<lb/>
in Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Latest Style Cuts<lb/>
perms, hennas,<lb/>
highlights,<lb/>
waxing, manicures<lb/>
758-8553<lb/>
THE E.C.U.<lb/>
CIRCLE K CLUB<lb/>
Welcomes you<lb/>
back to school<lb/>
and invites you to our<lb/>
first meeting this fall.<lb/>
Date: Tuesday, Aug. 30,1983<lb/>
Time: 7:00 - 8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Place: Mendenhall Rm. 221<lb/>
What is Circle K<lb/>
It is the largest coed college<lb/>
organization sponsored by a<lb/>
Kwanis Club like Key Club.<lb/>
It is a service organization that<lb/>
is involved in helping others<lb/>
while learning things ourselves<lb/>
Also involved in having fun and<lb/>
socializing. So come out and find<lb/>
out more about us. Hope to see you<lb/>
there.<lb/>
752-7303<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
ANGirUDanm. I?Ftit ah Yor<lb/>
WED. STUDENTS TO<lb/>
CONTROL GROUP<lb/>
THURS.<lb/>
LADIES NIGHT<lb/>
STILLWATER<lb/>
with Jimmy Van Zandt<lb/>
FRI.ANDSAT<lb/>
1 I NO VACANCY 1<lb/>
SUN.<lb/>
FABULOUS KNOBS<lb/>
318 S. Evans St. Mall, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
lECU I.Ds recieve 107o offl<lb/>
<lb/>
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I nun i<lb/>
'tAST C?l?<lb/>
c?f ? m<lb/>
In Towa<lb/>
AM ?yr9?rS Am ttft<lb/>
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Doily Fro Ov?rto?u.<lb/>
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W.A M ??? Nit J? MM AM MM, hm Aa. ?M ICO N TW Olf. MM. S0 cw WIIM7KMHNIMI tfi. M m Mm Mmb ?? 7?? ft tm Oaac MmM tar Mm ptm S UM ?k.i? m ban.<lb/>
, 9r00TIL200<lb/>
E C.I CrtMvtllf C<lb/>
LABOR DAY<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
'OUR LABOR,<lb/>
YOUR PARTY'<lb/>
SKOALS ALL NIGHT<lb/>
open 7 days a week<lb/>
? MMV?T? CUM NOT OMN<lb/>
ro rue at ni?u ru.iic<lb/>
Across from U.S.E.<lb/>
SDCetenckeSt.<lb/>
7 SSeeaa<lb/>
HAPf Y HOUfttVIR rOAT<lb/>
4:00-70<lb/>
SOPftMAPTV MOUftS<lb/>
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IS GOING<lb/>
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WILL BE<lb/>
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TIL OCT. i, 1983<lb/>
tin<lb/>
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AUG. 30<lb/>
KNEEWALKERS<lb/>
WED. SALAD 1AR<lb/>
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tt.15 5-0<lb/>
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WITHIN<lb/>
WALKING MSTANCf<lb/>
SftVD HOMi-STTLI FOOD<lb/>
HAS FftlSH SAKIO MiAD<lb/>
FtATVfttS OAUT SKOALS <lb/>
HASTAKtOUTS<lb/>
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ii?Hi i H?.?? ? <lb/>
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Tf?-rtf??thaM ii" f<lb/>
T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0004"/><lb/>
&amp;t East (Earolintan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller. ?,?, Wu?afrr<lb/>
Darrvi Brown, waningtd,wr<lb/>
WAVERLY MERRITT, owrtarowi.<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, m. ??<lb/>
ALl AERASHTEH. MMmr<lb/>
Geoff Hudson, onMm wanr<lb/>
Ci ay Thornton, r??( &amp;????<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants. spor.sEd.tor<lb/>
Patrick Oneill. Nemsmm,<lb/>
UARLYN fcBERT, Enlrr.ainmrnt Editor<lb/>
Lizanne Jennings, styitEd,tor<lb/>
TODD EVANS, Production Manager<lb/>
August 30, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Press Coverage<lb/>
Why No 'Black Astronaut' Story?<lb/>
Today, at 12:15 a.m mission<lb/>
eight of NASA's Space Transporta-<lb/>
tion System, the space shuttle<lb/>
Challanger, carried into orbit the<lb/>
United States' first black astronaut.<lb/>
There are probably those who did<lb/>
not realize the history being made<lb/>
today, for the event did not get the<lb/>
(over-) abundant press coverage<lb/>
that the first U.S. female astronaut,<lb/>
Sally Ride, received two months ago<lb/>
on the previous shuttle flight.<lb/>
Sure, the occasion of Air Force<lb/>
Lieut. Colonel Guion "Guy"<lb/>
Bluford Jr 40, did not afford the<lb/>
opportunity for such irresistible<lb/>
headlines as "Sally Takes A Ride"<lb/>
and "Ride Sallies Forth Into Space"<lb/>
("First Black 'Guy' In Space" just<lb/>
doesn't have the same delicious<lb/>
pun), but it seems it should have<lb/>
been portrayed as no less a momen-<lb/>
tous event.<lb/>
Bluford is at somewhat of a<lb/>
disadvantage in that 'he Ride hype<lb/>
is only two months old, and<lb/>
magazines aren't quite ready for<lb/>
another NASA astronaut on their<lb/>
covers, no matter who it is or what<lb/>
the occasion. Ride, remember, grac-<lb/>
ed the front covers of Time,<lb/>
Newsweek and myriad other<lb/>
magazines and newspapers.<lb/>
Still, why not Bluford? Is the<lb/>
black struggle for equal acceptance<lb/>
at an end? Are we now a country<lb/>
virtually colorblind? The answer is<lb/>
certainly no. But does this mean we<lb/>
are at least more colorblind than<lb/>
"sexblind? technically, blacks did<lb/>
receive their freedom and the right<lb/>
to vote years before women, but<lb/>
rarely did those 19th century laws<lb/>
become enoforced or practiced until<lb/>
the last 20 years, and undoubtably<lb/>
many violations still exist. Also, the<lb/>
Civil Rights Act, the equivilant of<lb/>
the Equal Rights Amendment for<lb/>
blacks, was passed 20 years before<lb/>
the ERA, which focused on<lb/>
discrimination against women, was<lb/>
defeated. Is it, then, that women<lb/>
have replaced blacks as America's<lb/>
No. 1 oppressed group, and did Sal-<lb/>
ly Ride have a bigger hurdle to over-<lb/>
come than Guy Bluford?<lb/>
Bluford is not the first black in<lb/>
space; he had one predecessor,<lb/>
Cuban Arnaldo Tamayo Mendez,<lb/>
flying with the Soviets. But neither<lb/>
was Ride the first woman ? the<lb/>
Russians sent two women into space<lb/>
before the U.S. did. So, why did<lb/>
Ride make the cover of Time and<lb/>
Bluford make, in the same<lb/>
magazine, only the fifth paragraph<lb/>
of a one-page article that was just as<lb/>
interested in the shuttle's night-time<lb/>
take-off?<lb/>
Perhaps because Bluford is a<lb/>
man, while Ride broke that long-<lb/>
standing fraternal order of the<lb/>
Right Stuff. A man, we assume, is<lb/>
tough enough to handle the job. We<lb/>
don't have to ask Bluford, as we did<lb/>
Ride innumerable times, Will you<lb/>
cry when the going gets tough?<lb/>
Perhaps we, deep down, know that<lb/>
black people can do the job if they<lb/>
can get past society's color barrier,<lb/>
while we still wonder whether<lb/>
women really can stand equal with<lb/>
men, and therefore it is a major ac-<lb/>
complishment and news story when<lb/>
they do. After all, only South<lb/>
Africa, the Klu Klux Klan and a<lb/>
state or two in the Deep South<lb/>
search for scientific proof that<lb/>
blacks are inferior to whites, but it<lb/>
is undeniable that women are at<lb/>
least physically weaker then men.<lb/>
Perhaps, then, the press celebra-<lb/>
tion and hype over Ride was almost<lb/>
an unconscious insult, for some<lb/>
could hardly believe a woman could<lb/>
do such a thing, and do it well. By<lb/>
the same token, the lack of atten-<lb/>
tion over Bluford's flight could be<lb/>
taken as a compliment, for there is<lb/>
little question anymore of the<lb/>
equality of races, only of their ac-<lb/>
ceptance by prejudiced individuals,<lb/>
and of course a black handle the<lb/>
job.<lb/>
If such is the case, Ride's com-<lb/>
petence surely put those un-<lb/>
conscious doubts, that had lingered<lb/>
all too long, to rest. And no doubt<lb/>
Bluford will do the same. The<lb/>
astronauts themselves, filled with<lb/>
that Right Stuff found in both sexes<lb/>
and any skin color, take the best at-<lb/>
titude. Bluford and Ride both em-<lb/>
phasize that they are astronauts<lb/>
first, and it just happens that their<lb/>
haven't been any blacks or women<lb/>
before them. Perhaps one day the<lb/>
press coverage over issues concern-<lb/>
ing sex and skin color will hardly ex-<lb/>
ist and not even be worth mention-<lb/>
ing. That day, unfortunately, is a<lb/>
long way off.<lb/>
SHUTS ANOTHER INPEPENPENT APPWING FOR A PHONE FRANCHISE,<lb/>
An Activist's Guide To Action:<lb/>
To Bring Change, Start At Home<lb/>
By PATRICK ONEILL<lb/>
Very often I am approached by people<lb/>
who are searching for a way to "get in-<lb/>
volved" in the effort to make our world<lb/>
a more just place to live. It's always<lb/>
refreshing to know people are struggling<lb/>
with that question because most people 1<lb/>
encounter feel helpless or overwhelmed<lb/>
by the problems facing the world today.<lb/>
There is hope.<lb/>
There are countless ways for us to<lb/>
work for change, and with a little sear-<lb/>
ching I'm sure you will see a way you<lb/>
can begin to make a difference.<lb/>
Perhaps the issue that must be dealt<lb/>
with immediately is the nuclear arms<lb/>
question. The world stockpiles more<lb/>
than 60,000 nuclear weapons. Common<lb/>
sense tells us that we can not go on in-<lb/>
definitely building these things and still<lb/>
survive.<lb/>
If you want to work for disarmament<lb/>
you can: study, educate others, write<lb/>
your legislators, demonstrate or par-<lb/>
ticipate in non-violent direct action. All<lb/>
of the above will have an impact. Form a<lb/>
group for the purpose of exchanging<lb/>
ideas ? or join one that's already<lb/>
established. (This rule applies with<lb/>
almost any problem.)<lb/>
If the problem of hunger in our world<lb/>
bothers you, don't just shake your<lb/>
helpless head. Again, you must begin the<lb/>
process of trying to understand why<lb/>
50,000 people ? human beings like us<lb/>
? perish each day from starvation.<lb/>
Don't buy all that talk about how<lb/>
"We'll always have hunger because the<lb/>
Bible says so Just because the Bible<lb/>
makes a "statement of fact" doesn't<lb/>
mean we shouldn't be working to<lb/>
minimize the suffering. First of all, there<lb/>
is enough food to go around. In the U.S.<lb/>
our domestic pets and farm animals are<lb/>
much better fed than most people in the<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Make an analysis of your own pat-<lb/>
terns of consumption and begin to "live<lb/>
more simply so that others may simply<lb/>
live Consume less and share what you<lb/>
have with the poor. This may seem<lb/>
futile, but it's not. We must begin<lb/>
rCampus Forum<lb/>
somewhere and starting at home is a<lb/>
good place.<lb/>
I avoid buying products made by Nes-<lb/>
tle's, Campbells and Libby's. i also<lb/>
don't buy Red Coach lettuce. To me, all<lb/>
of these companies have shown a blatant<lb/>
disregard for the rights of the poor and<lb/>
downtrodden.<lb/>
Nestle's markets an infant formula<lb/>
product in undeveloped countries even<lb/>
though most mothers there cannot af-<lb/>
ford, or properly use, this product. As a<lb/>
result they are discouraged from<lb/>
breastfeeding and many of their babies<lb/>
"Injustice any-<lb/>
where is a threat to<lb/>
justice everywhere<lb/>
?Martin Luther King Jr.<lb/>
die from malnutrition or from disease<lb/>
because they fed them formula mixed<lb/>
with contaminated water. Nestle has<lb/>
made little effort to change its marketing<lb/>
practices and they should be boycotted.<lb/>
The other two companies (Libby's is<lb/>
owned by Nestle) are guilty of<lb/>
mistreating the people who work in their<lb/>
fields. Write to these companies telling<lb/>
of you plans to boycott. They will write<lb/>
back ? they're willing to spend millions<lb/>
to "clear their names but they don't<lb/>
seem willing stop the injustices, keep the<lb/>
pressure on.<lb/>
If abortion is an issue that outrages<lb/>
you, then I suggest you work to change<lb/>
people's hearts and minds ? not laws.<lb/>
Women (and men) must be convinced<lb/>
that there is another way. Those who<lb/>
claim to be "pro-life" and still support<lb/>
the nuclear arms race are blind to the<lb/>
truth. Yes, abortion is morally unaccep-<lb/>
tible ? but so is war, poverty and oppre-<lb/>
sion. They must all be eradicated.<lb/>
Women, blacks and other minorities<lb/>
are still treated as second class citizens in<lb/>
our world. Don't passively accept the<lb/>
status quo on this issue. These oppreed<lb/>
groups are not only suffering as persons.<lb/>
but by keeping them in this state, we<lb/>
don't allow them to develop to their<lb/>
potential. We deprive them ? and<lb/>
ourselves ? of the gifts they might share<lb/>
with the world if they were free from<lb/>
their bonds. Martin Luther King, Jr.<lb/>
said it all : "Injustice anywhere is a<lb/>
threat to justice everywhere Work for<lb/>
this change; again, do it from within<lb/>
first.<lb/>
Our prisons and jails are literally bulg-<lb/>
ing with people who are "misfits" and<lb/>
"outcasts They are lonely, helpless<lb/>
and receiving little or no rehabilitation.<lb/>
When they get out they will find no jobs<lb/>
and usually return to a life of crime. It's<lb/>
a vicious cycle. Most people in prision<lb/>
are not mass murderers. Most are poor,<lb/>
uneducated and willing to work. These<lb/>
people should be treated as we treat<lb/>
others who are sick or suffer from han-<lb/>
dicaps. They need help. Support prison<lb/>
reform, visit prisoners and write them<lb/>
letters. They live absolutely miserable<lb/>
lives and anyone working for justice<lb/>
must not forget them.<lb/>
A good way to begin a plan of action<lb/>
for justice is to begin to see our world as<lb/>
a single unit. Nationalism is a good<lb/>
thing. We should all be proud of our<lb/>
heritages, but if the actions of our<lb/>
leaders are not in the best interests of<lb/>
our sisters and brothers in other lands,<lb/>
then we must resist those actions.<lb/>
These are just a few suggestions to<lb/>
begin a life of direct involvement. As<lb/>
you work for justice and peace you<lb/>
begin to see this world in a much more<lb/>
beautiful and unselfish way. The<lb/>
rewards are countless; the solution ex-<lb/>
ists. Peace.<lb/>
Ever Wonder<lb/>
why political co narratives rarely sup-<lb/>
port the same issues or viewpoints as en-<lb/>
vironmental conservationists?<lb/>
Health Center Offers Best Deal In State<lb/>
l am a third-year science education<lb/>
major working in the ECU Student<lb/>
Health Service's laboratory. As an<lb/>
assistant under the supervision of Mrs.<lb/>
Barbara Winn, registered medical<lb/>
technologist, I have been witness to<lb/>
countless student complaints about the<lb/>
SHS. The ECU student body's ap-<lb/>
parent lack of appreciation for the ser-<lb/>
vices they receive at the SHS has pro-<lb/>
mpted this essay, written from an in-<lb/>
. 'der's point of view; an insider who is<lb/>
also a student, sharing the same in-<lb/>
terests and expectations of any other<lb/>
ECU student.<lb/>
ECU students pay a health fee of<lb/>
$34.50 per semester during the fall and<lb/>
spring semesters, and $11.50 each sum-<lb/>
mer session. Some students complain<lb/>
that this is too much money to be re-<lb/>
quired from a student's meager<lb/>
budget. This essay concerns itself with<lb/>
exactly what students are getting for<lb/>
that $34.50.<lb/>
The benefits covered by the health<lb/>
fees are outlines in a brochure<lb/>
distributed by the SHS. They include<lb/>
all professional services rendered by<lb/>
the medical staff, unlimited visits to<lb/>
the SHS, most drugs in the pharmacy<lb/>
(excluding those specially ordered),<lb/>
routine allergy, insulin, and other in-<lb/>
jections, most routine laboratory pro-<lb/>
cedures, confidential diagnosis and<lb/>
treatment of venereal diseases, routine<lb/>
breast and pelvic examinations and<lb/>
prescription for oral contraceptives.<lb/>
There is also a psychiatrist on staff.<lb/>
When comparing the ECU students'<lb/>
medical expenses with a Greenville resi-<lb/>
dent's expenses for the same<lb/>
treatments, it is easy to see how much<lb/>
money we save. Birth control pills, for<lb/>
example, are $4 per cycle at the SHS.<lb/>
At the Kroger pharmacy, they are $10<lb/>
per cycle, and that does not include the<lb/>
doctor's office visit fee to obtain the<lb/>
prescirption.<lb/>
A routine physical, which includes<lb/>
an examination, urinalysis, blood cell<lb/>
count, cell differential and EKG, is<lb/>
covered by the student's health fee. At<lb/>
the medical school's family practice<lb/>
center, it costs about $100. A pap<lb/>
smear and routine pelvic examination<lb/>
which includes a urinalysis is $5 at the<lb/>
SHS. At the family practice center, it is<lb/>
a minimum of $48. Suture of minor<lb/>
cuts and a tetanus shot is covered by<lb/>
the health fees here at ECU. In the Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital's emergen-<lb/>
cy room, the minimum fee would be<lb/>
$42, and that does not include the<lb/>
emergency room physican's fee or the<lb/>
return visit to have the stiches remov-<lb/>
ed. If you contract a bad case of flu<lb/>
and become dehydrated, two hours in<lb/>
the hospital's emergency room for<lb/>
observation and the administering of<lb/>
I.V. fluids would cost you a minimum<lb/>
of $58. For a student at ECU, it would<lb/>
all be covered in the health fees.<lb/>
Also, a visit with the psychiatrist at<lb/>
the SHS would cost you, as a student,<lb/>
nothing, for as long as you need to<lb/>
stay. At a local psychiatrist's office in<lb/>
Greenville, it would be approximately<lb/>
$45 for a thirty-minute visit.<lb/>
According to the SHS annual report<lb/>
for 1982-1983, filed by Dr. James H.<lb/>
McCallum Jr the director of the<lb/>
ECU's Student Health Services, there<lb/>
are four criteria utilized for the evalua-<lb/>
tion of the SHS's performance: ser-<lb/>
vices offered, patient satisfaction, pa-<lb/>
tient utilization and cosi effectiveness.<lb/>
Using the above criteria, the annual<lb/>
report surmises that "we may be very<lb/>
near our original goal of becoming the<lb/>
'best SHS in the North Carolina<lb/>
university system Indeed, ECU's<lb/>
SHS does approach this mark. In a<lb/>
comparative analysis included with the<lb/>
annual report, the following informa-<lb/>
tion was revealed. With ECU's health<lb/>
fees at $69 per year, the only N.C.<lb/>
university to better that cost is North<lb/>
Carolina State, with health fees at $64<lb/>
per year. However, N.C. State's SHS<lb/>
budget is now in deficit and the ad-<lb/>
ministration there plans to raise the<lb/>
fees this fall. Also, ECU has a higher<lb/>
utilization ratio (patient visits divided<lb/>
by enrollment). The cost per visit for a<lb/>
N.C. State student is $22 For an<lb/>
ECU student, the cost is $18.65 per<lb/>
visit.<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill has the highest<lb/>
fees at $154 per year. They also charge<lb/>
for all pharmaceuticals, and charge $40<lb/>
for pre-entrance and other physicals.<lb/>
They have no connection between their<lb/>
campus counseling center and the SHS<lb/>
mental health section.<lb/>
In regards to other N.C. universities<lb/>
that were questioned, none offer more<lb/>
services than does ECU. ECU also pro-<lb/>
vides a group insurance and accident<lb/>
insurance plan for all students through<lb/>
a company selected by the Student<lb/>
Health Advisory Committee. A group<lb/>
plan provides students with a less ex-<lb/>
pensive program than an independent<lb/>
policy plan.<lb/>
According to Kay Van Nortwick, the<lb/>
administrative manager for the SHS at<lb/>
ECU, the payroll there exceeds the<lb/>
amount of money received from the<lb/>
student health fees, which is the only<lb/>
source of money for the health ser-<lb/>
vice's budget. Since last year, patient<lb/>
visits have increased 7 percent, and<lb/>
laboratory work has increased 19 per-<lb/>
cent. The pharmacy also began dispen-<lb/>
sing oral contraceptive agents this past<lb/>
year. All of this has occurred with no<lb/>
increase in student health fees. Present-<lb/>
ly, the health center is falling back on<lb/>
reserve money to meet its expenses.<lb/>
The annual report also outlines the<lb/>
three major goals and objectives of the<lb/>
SHS for the year of 1983-1984 and<lb/>
beyond:<lb/>
? work toward the cooperative<lb/>
unification of all the diverse health and<lb/>
related programs into one beneficial<lb/>
manageable effort.<lb/>
? continue to strive toward ex-<lb/>
cellence in athletic medicine (service,<lb/>
education, research).<lb/>
? continue to serve the student<lb/>
population with greater medical exper-<lb/>
tise, more and varied services and<lb/>
modernized equipment within the<lb/>
budgetary confines.<lb/>
It is obvious that the ECU Student<lb/>
Health Service is service-oriented and<lb/>
aspires to serve the student body as ef-<lb/>
ficiently and effectively as possible.<lb/>
Student cooperation and appreciation<lb/>
would make that objective more readi-<lb/>
ly attainable.<lb/>
Mauree Donnellan<lb/>
Junior, Science Education<lb/>
!<lb/>
 <lb/>
i <lb/>
?<lb/>
SGA A a<lb/>
Students<lb/>
M;<lb/>
<lb/>
BO!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Des<lb/>
B CjREG RIDEOl L<lb/>
tatntcmtormpomrm i<lb/>
ECL Student At<lb/>
tornev General Harrv<lb/>
Dest said Fndav he<lb/>
stror.glv urges ail<lb/>
students to read the<lb/>
SGA Documents<lb/>
handbook so the -<lb/>
be acquainted with all<lb/>
university rules Dest,<lb/>
in a message primal<lb/>
aimed towu<lb/>
freshmen, said m<lb/>
students are "totally<lb/>
oblivious to<lb/>
regulatior<lb/>
Dest, a- <lb/>
general, is respon<lb/>
for rev<lb/>
student m<lb/>
He and V<lb/>
Dean q: Ju<lb/>
Jame- B Ma<lb/>
decide which<lb/>
are aJlowec to t<lb/>
before the<lb/>
Boaru De-<lb/>
main ;re- i<lb/>
mg case- I<lb/>
?s the seri .<lb/>
the infra.<lb/>
Afton<lb/>
Bv T1V<lb/>
MROs( HAK<lb/>
?i?f - ?<lb/>
At ton. asma<lb/>
in the northeaster!<lb/>
part of N<lb/>
Carolina, rect<lb/>
nonal attention la- i<lb/>
ear when it was<lb/>
chosen to be the site I<lb/>
for a hazardous - a I<lb/>
landfill. After oppos-<lb/>
ing the landfill tor<lb/>
five years, loca tl<lb/>
residents and cotmi Ft<lb/>
officials final. ? :<lb/>
to civil disobedience i<lb/>
protests in hope- -1<lb/>
stopping construc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
PCB, a chenv.cai<lb/>
suspected of ca i<lb/>
cancer, was dumped CM<lb/>
illegally in 19S along<lb/>
240 miles of N.C. ui<lb/>
roads. The con- are<lb/>
taminated soil was imi<lb/>
moved from the roaj<lb/>
side to Warren Coun- rai<lb/>
ty ? the sue chosen the<lb/>
by the Hunt ad- cessi<lb/>
ministration for the the I<lb/>
landfill.<lb/>
Last year more thai<lb/>
500 protestor we<lb/>
arrested<lb/>
demonstration in-<lb/>
cluding an ECL stu- b<lb/>
dent. The protests ga<lb/>
ended after 6 - <lb/>
Iuckloads of con-<lb/>
<lb/>
Weicoi<lb/>
Guarantees ces' P<lb/>
Over 25<lb/>
 Complete Waterbe<lb/>
 <lb/>
.?' ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1983<lb/>
?<lb/>
I FRANCHISE,<lb/>
ion:<lb/>
Home<lb/>
'ppreed<lb/>
- is persons.<lb/>
? -tate. we<lb/>
. e p to their<lb/>
em ? and<lb/>
e night hare<lb/>
free worn<lb/>
. ither king. Jr.<lb/>
. ' ce anvvhere 1 a<lb/>
everywhere Work for<lb/>
t from uithin<lb/>
' trail) bulg-<lb/>
I e misfits" and<lb/>
. lonely, helpless<lb/>
"enabihtation.<lb/>
it the will find no jobs<lb/>
urn to a life of crime. It's<lb/>
Most people in pnsion<lb/>
urdereri Most are poor.<lb/>
 ing to work These<lb/>
e treat<lb/>
er from han-<lb/>
p Supp pi -on<lb/>
and write them<lb/>
 miserable<lb/>
2 for justice<lb/>
m.<lb/>
a plan ot action<lb/>
- n to see our world as<lb/>
alism is a good<lb/>
fuld all be proud of our<lb/>
? 'he actions of our<lb/>
x in the nterests of<lb/>
her- in other lands,<lb/>
roe actions.<lb/>
li. i few .gestions to<lb/>
? oKement As<lb/>
e and peace you<lb/>
? rid in a much more<lb/>
?n way The<lb/>
. the volution ex-<lb/>
Wonder<lb/>
natives rarely sup-<lb/>
? viewpoints as en-<lb/>
nists?<lb/>
late<lb/>
has increased 19 per-<lb/>
ic also began dispen-<lb/>
Jceptive agents this past<lb/>
has occurred with no<lb/>
MI health fees. Present-<lb/>
inter is tailing back on<lb/>
o meet its expenses.<lb/>
eport also outlines the<lb/>
Is and objectives of the<lb/>
ear of 1983-1984 and<lb/>
t.ard the cooperative<lb/>
11 the diverse health and<lb/>
into one beneficial<lb/>
rt.<lb/>
to strive toward ex-<lb/>
ilic medicine (service,<lb/>
;arch)<lb/>
Ito serve the student<lb/>
greater medical exper-<lb/>
varied services and<lb/>
juipment within the<lb/>
Ines<lb/>
that the ECU Student<lb/>
I is service-oriented and<lb/>
It he student body as ef-<lb/>
fectively as possible,<lb/>
ttion and appreciation<lb/>
it objective more readi-<lb/>
Mauree Donnellan<lb/>
Inior, Science Education<lb/>
SGA Attorney Wants !<lb/>
Students To Read Rules<lb/>
B (,REG RIDEOUT<lb/>
ECl Student At-<lb/>
torney General Harry<lb/>
Dest aid Friday he<lb/>
ngly urges all<lb/>
students to read the<lb/>
vv A Documents<lb/>
handbook so they will<lb/>
be acquainted with all<lb/>
:? kersit) rules. Dest,<lb/>
in a message primarily<lb/>
aimed toward<lb/>
'reshmen, said most<lb/>
students are "totally<lb/>
obi ious to certain<lb/>
regulations<lb/>
De as attorney<lb/>
general, is responsible<lb/>
for reviewing cases of<lb/>
lent misconduct.<lb/>
He and Associate<lb/>
Dean of Judiciary<lb/>
ames B. Mallory<lb/>
decide which students<lb/>
arc allowed to go<lb/>
before the Honor<lb/>
Board Dent said the<lb/>
main criteria for pass-<lb/>
ing cases to the Board<lb/>
s the seriousness of<lb/>
the infraction.<lb/>
Mallory disciplines<lb/>
students involved in<lb/>
less serious cases.<lb/>
Students who are<lb/>
required to go before<lb/>
the Honor Board are<lb/>
given a student public<lb/>
defender to argue<lb/>
their case. Steve Sher-<lb/>
bin is public defender<lb/>
for the upcoming<lb/>
academic year. The<lb/>
Board is empowered<lb/>
to suspend or fine "the<lb/>
student, or it can<lb/>
decide the student<lb/>
deserves no punish-<lb/>
ment. .<lb/>
Students who are<lb/>
disatisfied with the<lb/>
Board's decision can<lb/>
appeal to the Review<lb/>
Board, ECU's court<lb/>
of last resort.<lb/>
Dest said his main<lb/>
goal for 1983-84 is to<lb/>
achieve parity in<lb/>
sentencing. Lst year,<lb/>
Dest said, punishment<lb/>
for the same crime<lb/>
varied greatly in a<lb/>
number of cases. As<lb/>
attorney general, L?est<lb/>
has no official<lb/>
authority to demand<lb/>
parity, but he feels<lb/>
cooperation between<lb/>
the two boards, the<lb/>
public defender's of-<lb/>
fice and his office will<lb/>
achieve his goals.<lb/>
Dest said freshmen<lb/>
account for a majori-<lb/>
ty of the infractions<lb/>
against the university.<lb/>
Two of the most com-<lb/>
mon offenses are set-<lb/>
ting off fire alarms<lb/>
and book stealing. He<lb/>
said the newly-created<lb/>
Academic Integrity<lb/>
Board would handle<lb/>
all cases of cheating<lb/>
this year. There are<lb/>
usually three or four<lb/>
cases per semester.<lb/>
The Honor Board<lb/>
meets once each week<lb/>
and hears an average<lb/>
of six cases per night.<lb/>
Dest has two<lb/>
assistants to help him<lb/>
in prosecuting cases,<lb/>
students Rick Brown<lb/>
and Blake Eudaley.<lb/>
Faculty Discuss<lb/>
New Building<lb/>
School Days, School Days<lb/>
It's a return to the grind and by no most EC I students should be getting back into the swing<lb/>
of things. These students pictured here look like the studious types.<lb/>
Afton Still Fighting PCB Dump<lb/>
By TINA<lb/>
VHROSCHAk<lb/>
M?ff ?nlrf<lb/>
Afton. a small town<lb/>
in the northeastern<lb/>
part of North<lb/>
Carolina, received na-<lb/>
tional attention last<lb/>
year when it was<lb/>
chosen to be the site<lb/>
for a hazardous waste<lb/>
landfill. After oppos-<lb/>
ing the landfill for<lb/>
five years, local<lb/>
residents and county<lb/>
officials finally turned<lb/>
to civil disobedience<lb/>
protests in hopes of<lb/>
stopping construc-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
PCB, a chemical<lb/>
suspected of causing<lb/>
cancer, vas dumped<lb/>
illegally in 1978 along<lb/>
240 miles of N.C.<lb/>
roads. The con-<lb/>
taminated soil was<lb/>
moved from the road-<lb/>
side to Warren Coun-<lb/>
ty ? the site chosen<lb/>
by the Hunt ad-<lb/>
ministration for the<lb/>
landfill.<lb/>
Last year more than<lb/>
500 protestors were<lb/>
arrested in<lb/>
demonstrations, in-<lb/>
cluding an ECU stu-<lb/>
dent. The protests<lb/>
ended after 6,440<lb/>
vuckloads of con-<lb/>
taminated soil were<lb/>
dumped.<lb/>
Ken Ferruccio,<lb/>
president of Warren<lb/>
County Citizens Con-<lb/>
cerned About PCB's,<lb/>
led others, including<lb/>
numerous civil rights<lb/>
leaders, in protests<lb/>
against the landfill.<lb/>
State officials claim<lb/>
the location was<lb/>
chosen for geological<lb/>
reasons; however,<lb/>
Ferruccio believes<lb/>
that the rural area was<lb/>
picked because of the<lb/>
high percentage of<lb/>
minorities in the<lb/>
county.<lb/>
To work safely, the<lb/>
landfill must remain<lb/>
completely water-<lb/>
free. During the<lb/>
unloading period the<lb/>
area received approx-<lb/>
imately three-quarters<lb/>
of a million gallons of<lb/>
rain. Ferruccio claims<lb/>
the water was not suc-<lb/>
cessfully pumped out,<lb/>
therefore endangering<lb/>
the environment by the<lb/>
release of toxic<lb/>
chemicals into the<lb/>
soil.<lb/>
Ferruccio also<lb/>
believes dangerous<lb/>
gases may be seeping<lb/>
into the atmosphere<lb/>
because of holes in the<lb/>
landfill's plastic<lb/>
cover. "It's just a<lb/>
matter of time before<lb/>
the liners fail and en-<lb/>
danger the environ-<lb/>
ment Ferruccio<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"All of this infor-<lb/>
mation combined<lb/>
leads us to believe that<lb/>
the landfill is in trou<lb/>
ble Ferruccio said.<lb/>
"We intend to go in<lb/>
there, and by this<lb/>
winter we'll have the<lb/>
information we<lb/>
need After that,<lb/>
Ferruccio intends to<lb/>
publish the data<lb/>
substantiating his<lb/>
case.<lb/>
"The suspen-<lb/>
sion of human rights<lb/>
and the use of<lb/>
political force to store<lb/>
dangerous wastes in<lb/>
poor and minority<lb/>
communities unable<lb/>
to defend themselves<lb/>
is a problem that is<lb/>
very serious, claims<lb/>
Ferruccio. "Along<lb/>
with the economy and<lb/>
jobs, it is the most<lb/>
serious issue<lb/>
Although the coun-<lb/>
ty received a SI00,000<lb/>
compensatory state<lb/>
grant, residents re-<lb/>
main angry. "I'm<lb/>
psychologically in<lb/>
prison because ot me<lb/>
landfill Ferruccio<lb/>
said during a recent<lb/>
interview. "Until we<lb/>
find a solution, I will<lb/>
either be in prison or<lb/>
on the way to<lb/>
prison<lb/>
"Our goal for War-<lb/>
ren County is to<lb/>
detoxify the site ? to<lb/>
work to a detoxifation<lb/>
solution Ferruccio<lb/>
adjjed<lb/>
Last March Ferruc-<lb/>
cio was arrested for<lb/>
the ninth times, an<lb/>
average of more than<lb/>
one arrest per-month<lb/>
during the time the<lb/>
PCB protests were<lb/>
taking place.<lb/>
His ninth arrest was<lb/>
for felonious larceny<lb/>
when Ferruccio and<lb/>
"another Afton resi-<lb/>
dent tried to move a<lb/>
water pump that they<lb/>
claim was being used<lb/>
to pump toxic water<lb/>
into a nearby creek.<lb/>
Ferruccio spent<lb/>
more than two weeks<lb/>
in jail after refusing to<lb/>
post bail. During this<lb/>
time in jail, Ferruccio<lb/>
refused food and only<lb/>
drank water. He also<lb/>
spent part of his time<lb/>
studying the life of In-<lb/>
dian pacifist leader<lb/>
Mohandas Gandhi.<lb/>
Last September<lb/>
when the protests<lb/>
against the dump were<lb/>
at their peak, several<lb/>
civil rights leaders<lb/>
participated iii the<lb/>
civil disobedijnee ac-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Among those<lb/>
arrested were U.S.<lb/>
Congressional<lb/>
delegate Wal :r E.<lb/>
Fauntroy from<lb/>
Washington D.C. u"J<lb/>
the Rev. Joseph<lb/>
Lowery, national<lb/>
president of the<lb/>
Southern Christian<lb/>
Leadership Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
At this point, wnn<lb/>
the landfill already in<lb/>
place, Ferruccio has<lb/>
now decided to lead<lb/>
the effort to detoxify<lb/>
the PCB.<lb/>
By KIM RICE<lb/>
sI?ff A nirr<lb/>
Although the N.C.<lb/>
General Assembly did<lb/>
not appropriate fun-<lb/>
ding for a new arts<lb/>
and science building<lb/>
at ECU this year,<lb/>
ECU officials are still<lb/>
optimistic about the<lb/>
proposed building.<lb/>
Opponents of the<lb/>
building claim the<lb/>
new building will<lb/>
destroy one of the last<lb/>
natural areas on cam-<lb/>
pus that is part of the<lb/>
Sally Joyner<lb/>
Memorial Ar-<lb/>
boretum.<lb/>
Concerning the new<lb/>
addition,biology in-<lb/>
structor Vincent Bellis<lb/>
said two possibilities<lb/>
need to be addressed.<lb/>
The first question is<lb/>
whether ECU should<lb/>
be a highly centraliz-<lb/>
ed university.<lb/>
The proposed new<lb/>
building would create<lb/>
an overabundance of<lb/>
traffic in the area. If<lb/>
constructed in a dif-<lb/>
ferent location, the<lb/>
university would be<lb/>
less centralized, Bellis<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He said a second<lb/>
possibility is to build<lb/>
several small<lb/>
tion was given to the<lb/>
matter. Many deci-<lb/>
sions were made hasti-<lb/>
lyBellis said.<lb/>
Due to the size of<lb/>
the proposed<lb/>
building, the Davis-<lb/>
Joyner Arboretum is<lb/>
one of the few loca-<lb/>
tions on campus<lb/>
which would provide<lb/>
adequate space.<lb/>
Bellis said the site is<lb/>
not valuable as an ar-<lb/>
boretum because it<lb/>
hasn't been maintain-<lb/>
ed. "However, many<lb/>
of the largest and<lb/>
more valuable trees<lb/>
on campus are located<lb/>
in that area. It would<lb/>
be a shame to see<lb/>
them destroyedhe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Bellis said the<lb/>
university should look<lb/>
into other possible<lb/>
locations before the<lb/>
next legislative session<lb/>
as well as other alter-<lb/>
natives.<lb/>
Martha Elmore.<lb/>
with the library<lb/>
science department,<lb/>
said in a letter to The<lb/>
East Caroli-<lb/>
nianThere is so lit-<lb/>
tle natural beauty left<lb/>
on our campus. Can<lb/>
we afford to destrov<lb/>
it?"<lb/>
buildings which Contacted this<lb/>
would alleviate the week, Elmore said her<lb/>
problem of centraiiza- feelings have not<lb/>
tion and provide changed. "It would<lb/>
easier financing. be a shame to see a<lb/>
"One wonders if building built there on<lb/>
adequate considera- that particular site.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057569_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN1AN<lb/>
AUGUST JO, 9<lb/>
ECU Has Leading Handicapped Services<lb/>
B THERESA<lb/>
DlI SKI<lb/>
and<lb/>
SOPHIA<lb/>
?OWERS<lb/>
All of the 16 univer<lb/>
sities within the<lb/>
University of North<lb/>
Carolina system are<lb/>
mandated to provide<lb/>
services for 'heir han<lb/>
dicapped students, in<lb/>
accordance with Sec-<lb/>
tion 504 of the<lb/>
Rehabilitation Act of<lb/>
1973<lb/>
"Because ECU got<lb/>
an ear! start in this<lb/>
program, we have<lb/>
been credited with<lb/>
having the leading<lb/>
program of the<lb/>
University System<lb/>
said C.C. Rowe,<lb/>
director of handicap<lb/>
ped scivices for ECU.<lb/>
" 1 he first thing to<lb/>
reahe when you are<lb/>
considering the han-<lb/>
dicapped is that all<lb/>
handicaps are not im-<lb/>
mediately apparent<lb/>
said RoweOur oi-<lb/>
fice is working with<lb/>
the wheelchair<lb/>
students and those<lb/>
with heart problems,<lb/>
diabetes, or even so-<lb/>
meone iniured in an<lb/>
auto accident who<lb/>
may temporarily need<lb/>
special help <lb/>
Many handicapped<lb/>
students need special<lb/>
care and require the<lb/>
use of an aide, or per-<lb/>
sonal care attendant.<lb/>
Rowe continuously<lb/>
interviews applicants<lb/>
and keeps a current<lb/>
list of qualified care<lb/>
attendants. The actual<lb/>
hiring is done in-<lb/>
dividually by the<lb/>
disabled student. If<lb/>
special training is<lb/>
needed, staff<lb/>
members from the<lb/>
Student Health<lb/>
Center work with the<lb/>
aide.<lb/>
Gene Atkinson, a<lb/>
transfer student ma-<lb/>
joring in computer<lb/>
science, credits ECU<lb/>
for having an<lb/>
"accessible campus<lb/>
Accessibility is the key<lb/>
word to a handicap-<lb/>
ped person, especially<lb/>
those, such as Atkin-<lb/>
son, who must use<lb/>
To Class On Wheels<lb/>
ECU students Brian Rangeley and Michael Dixon are pictured here sit-<lb/>
ting near the entrance to Raw! Building. Rangeley and Dixon must use<lb/>
wheelchairs as their means of transportation to get around campus.<lb/>
Their travel became easier when ECU installed several automatic door<lb/>
openers at various camDus locations.<lb/>
wheelchairs as their<lb/>
main means of<lb/>
transportation. "I'm<lb/>
having a problem get<lb/>
ting aides. I'm still<lb/>
looking for two<lb/>
more Atkinson<lb/>
said. "I'm also having<lb/>
problems answering<lb/>
my phone, but Mr.<lb/>
C.C. Rowe is working<lb/>
on the problem<lb/>
Special academic<lb/>
services such as<lb/>
Braille writers, inter-<lb/>
preters for the hearing<lb/>
impaired, and career<lb/>
counseling for the<lb/>
disabled student are<lb/>
offered here at the<lb/>
university. Captioned<lb/>
films and special<lb/>
driver's training pro<lb/>
grams are also<lb/>
Ed. School<lb/>
Doing Job<lb/>
Cont. from Page I<lb/>
teachers,<lb/>
regardless of their ma-<lb/>
jor.<lb/>
At NCATE's<lb/>
recommendation, a<lb/>
new evaluation system<lb/>
was initiated. The<lb/>
bylaws state that the<lb/>
committee "insures<lb/>
that systematic<lb/>
evaluation of teacher<lb/>
education programs<lb/>
and its graduates is<lb/>
conducted on a<lb/>
regular basis and that<lb/>
feedback is provided<lb/>
to the appropriate<lb/>
persons, departments,<lb/>
or schools<lb/>
New procedures<lb/>
and guidelines have<lb/>
been set for "entry in-<lb/>
to, passage through,<lb/>
and exiting from"<lb/>
teacher education<lb/>
programs. The details<lb/>
are contained in a new<lb/>
handbook, and will he<lb/>
available to all ECU<lb/>
education students<lb/>
from Sept. 12-16.<lb/>
Effective im-<lb/>
mediately, Core Bat-<lb/>
tery I. and II. of the<lb/>
National Teachers Ex-<lb/>
amination must be<lb/>
taken before prospec-<lb/>
tive teachers can enter<lb/>
upper levels. The<lb/>
registration deadline<lb/>
is Sept. 26.<lb/>
NCATE is schedul-<lb/>
ed to revisit ECU on<lb/>
March 19 - 21 to<lb/>
determine if the<lb/>
School of Education<lb/>
has met accreditation<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
available for ECU's<lb/>
deaf students. Adap-<lb/>
tive intramurals and<lb/>
recreational activities<lb/>
are available through<lb/>
ECU's Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services.<lb/>
George Chester, a<lb/>
junior psychology<lb/>
major who is visually<lb/>
impaired, said the<lb/>
handicap services are<lb/>
adequate. "I use it for<lb/>
reader services, tutor<lb/>
services, and equip-<lb/>
ment they have pur-<lb/>
chased in the library. I<lb/>
mostly use the visual<lb/>
tech, typewriter and<lb/>
brailwriter Chester<lb/>
said.<lb/>
One recent addition<lb/>
to campus has been<lb/>
the automatic door<lb/>
openers on many<lb/>
buildings to facilitate<lb/>
easier access for<lb/>
wheelchairs. Brian<lb/>
Rangeley, an ECU<lb/>
English student, uses<lb/>
a wheelchair to get<lb/>
around. "For the<lb/>
most part, the han<lb/>
dicap services are ef-<lb/>
fective Rangeley<lb/>
said. " The major<lb/>
thing I've seen that<lb/>
has helped me most is<lb/>
the power door<lb/>
openers.<lb/>
Atkinson was pleas-<lb/>
ed with Garrett dorm,<lb/>
because it has an<lb/>
automatic wheelchair<lb/>
lift in the lobby and a<lb/>
handicap accessible<lb/>
bathroom.<lb/>
Jessie McGowan, a<lb/>
wheelchair student<lb/>
studying early<lb/>
childhood education,<lb/>
likes the electric door<lb/>
openers, but she<lb/>
wishes there were<lb/>
more. "They should<lb/>
have electric door<lb/>
openers in<lb/>
Mendenhall she<lb/>
said. 'Those doors<lb/>
are the hardest to<lb/>
open "<lb/>
Rowe claims h i <lb/>
primary goal is to<lb/>
assist each individual<lb/>
so he or she can be<lb/>
constantly striving<lb/>
toward independence<lb/>
"ECl' is proud of her<lb/>
handicapped<lb/>
students Rowe said<lb/>
, Now<lb/>
thenes a new<lb/>
Teller H<lb/>
on campus<lb/>
The Gender Gap<lb/>
Women Are Voting Differently<lb/>
B ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
Staff WriMi<lb/>
The term gender<lb/>
gap, pertaining to the<lb/>
change in women's<lb/>
voting patterns and<lb/>
attitudes, was for-<lb/>
mulated in the 1980<lb/>
Reagan election<lb/>
when, for the first<lb/>
time, women voted<lb/>
differently than men.<lb/>
"We are making pro-<lb/>
gress on the gender<lb/>
gap said Fran Par-<lb/>
rott, vice president of<lb/>
The Pitt County-<lb/>
Greenville chapter of<lb/>
the National<lb/>
Organization of<lb/>
Women. "Men and<lb/>
women are becoming<lb/>
more open-minded<lb/>
about womens' rights.<lb/>
The concepts included<lb/>
in the Equal Rights<lb/>
Amendment have a<lb/>
more widespread ap-<lb/>
preciation, and<lb/>
women are now being<lb/>
seen in a different<lb/>
light, with more ac-<lb/>
ceptance of their role<lb/>
changes<lb/>
"In terms of the<lb/>
ERA Parrott con-<lb/>
tinues, "Reagan<lb/>
believes in the' E ' and<lb/>
the' R ' but not the' A<lb/>
 He doesn't follow<lb/>
through with his pro-<lb/>
posals, and he will<lb/>
eventually find out<lb/>
how valuable the<lb/>
women's vote is to an<lb/>
election's out-<lb/>
come.It's just a mat-<lb/>
ter of time before<lb/>
women will gain pro-<lb/>
per support in<lb/>
political office<lb/>
Several national<lb/>
leaders in the<lb/>
women's movement<lb/>
claim that Reagan is<lb/>
having difficulty<lb/>
understaanding the<lb/>
gender gap<lb/>
One instance,<lb/>
recently reported in<lb/>
Newsweek, involves<lb/>
an apology, by<lb/>
Reagan, to Polly<lb/>
Madenwald, national<lb/>
federation president<lb/>
for The International<lb/>
Federation of<lb/>
Business and Profes-<lb/>
sional Women.<lb/>
Reagan had failed to<lb/>
keep an appointment<lb/>
to meet with the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
In apologizing,<lb/>
Reagan admitted,<lb/>
"It's not enough to<lb/>
say I'm sorry, so I in-<lb/>
tend to do penance.<lb/>
And we have been do-<lb/>
ing a number of<lb/>
things here with<lb/>
regard to . . recogni-<lb/>
tion of women's<lb/>
place. I want you to<lb/>
know I've always<lb/>
recognized it, because<lb/>
I happen to be one<lb/>
who believes that if it<lb/>
wasn't for women, us<lb/>
men would .still be<lb/>
walking around in<lb/>
skin suits and carrying<lb/>
clubs Many of the<lb/>
women were outraged<lb/>
by the President's<lb/>
statement.<lb/>
A more recent inci-<lb/>
dent pertains to the<lb/>
August 22 resignation<lb/>
of Barbara Honneger<lb/>
from her Justice<lb/>
Department job after<lb/>
declaring that Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan's pro-<lb/>
gram to end sex<lb/>
discrimination in<lb/>
federal laws and<lb/>
regulations was a<lb/>
"sham<lb/>
A barrage from<lb/>
White House<lb/>
spokesman Lawrence<lb/>
M. Speakes helped ig-<lb/>
nite the resignation<lb/>
when Speakes<lb/>
acknowledged that<lb/>
Honneger had once<lb/>
played an "important<lb/>
role" as a bunny at<lb/>
the White House<lb/>
Easter egg roll.<lb/>
ERA Honneger's<lb/>
negative attitude is ex-<lb/>
pressed in her August<lb/>
21 Washington Post<lb/>
editorial which con-<lb/>
cludes, "There are<lb/>
other aspects, mostly<lb/>
economic, of any ef-<lb/>
fort to undo wrongs<lb/>
against women in this<lb/>
country. But frankly,<lb/>
my dear, I don't think<lb/>
Ronald Reagan gives<lb/>
a damn<lb/>
A statement from<lb/>
the national LWV of-<lb/>
fice assumes Reagan<lb/>
knows exactly what<lb/>
the gender gap is and<lb/>
takes advantage of it;<lb/>
he realizes he gets<lb/>
more votes from men<lb/>
than women.<lb/>
Newsweek, August<lb/>
15, confirms this.<lb/>
"The White House<lb/>
recognizes that<lb/>
Reagan will not win a<lb/>
majority of women,<lb/>
but he needs to hold<lb/>
his 1980 supporters. A<lb/>
June New York<lb/>
TimesCBS News poll<lb/>
shows the gender gap<lb/>
turning into Death<lb/>
Valley; the president<lb/>
has 57 percent ap-<lb/>
proval among men<lb/>
but wins the approval<lb/>
of only 39 percent of<lb/>
women<lb/>
The editorial in the<lb/>
Washington Post,<lb/>
August 21, by<lb/>
Richard Lugar, chair-<lb/>
man of the National<lb/>
Republican Commit-<lb/>
tee, proposes "A Plan<lb/>
to Elect More GOP<lb/>
Women In doing<lb/>
so, Lugar offers, "the<lb/>
Republican Party<lb/>
must affirm, formally<lb/>
and forcefully, that<lb/>
we believe totally in<lb/>
the appropriateness<lb/>
and the desirability of<lb/>
women seeking<lb/>
political and<lb/>
economic power in<lb/>
our society  As<lb/>
chairman, I am en-<lb/>
couraging the can-<lb/>
didacies of women in<lb/>
every state and am<lb/>
prepared to commit<lb/>
the maximum legal<lb/>
funding and support<lb/>
for any Republican<lb/>
woman. If successful,<lb/>
this campaign would<lb/>
furnish a new genera-<lb/>
tion of voices and role<lb/>
models for<lb/>
mainstream American<lb/>
women. If we begin to<lb/>
hold up our end of<lb/>
society's obligation to<lb/>
women, we will be<lb/>
rewarded both at the<lb/>
polls and in wiser<lb/>
public decisions<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Now there's a Teller II at East Carolina<lb/>
I Iniversity. With a machine i n campus and<lb/>
two others nearby, banking at Wachovia<lb/>
is more convenient than ever.<lb/>
.Y u Ea  ?<lb/>
Mendenhall Student y enter C ampus<lb/>
Othfj ? " ?' ?  i ? <lb/>
Pitt Plaza Highway 26-1 Bypass<lb/>
University 802 E. loth Street<lb/>
With Teller II you can do your banking<lb/>
any time of the day or night, 365 days a<lb/>
year. You can make deposits, transfer<lb/>
funds, make loan payments, chock your<lb/>
account balances, and of course, get cash.<lb/>
Teller II ?? banking the easy way<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
v<lb/>
Membei RDlIjC<lb/>
BECOME A 4-LETTER MAN<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
BE SURE TO<lb/>
REGISTER FOR<lb/>
MLSC1001<lb/>
INTRO TO ROTC<lb/>
ANDTHE ARMY<lb/>
AS AN ELECTIVE<lb/>
THIS FALL. THERE<lb/>
IS NO OBLIGATION<lb/>
i. -<lb/>
"iv are i<lb/>
otol college men and women<lb/>
lies mArmv ROTC?<lb/>
hiM'ininy hiui<lb/>
Probably because Armv ROTC is full of<lb/>
the kind 01 people other people go out of their<lb/>
way to meet<lb/>
ROTC students tend to be high achievers<lb/>
who ,rv interested in more than their studies<lb/>
They're popular students with a serious side,<lb/>
hut who like to have a good time. loo.<lb/>
In other words, when people join Armv<lb/>
ROTC" thev often meet people a lot lik 'hem-<lb/>
selves<lb/>
For more information, contact Major Mike<lb/>
Bishop or Captain Heldur Liivak at 757-6967<lb/>
or come by Room 324 Erwin Hall.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC.<lb/>
BEAU YOU CAN<lb/>
Universi<lb/>
H (.1 FSS<lb/>
MAI (,HA<lb/>
I A <lb/>
m the P<lb/>
i<lb/>
I M ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
m e n ?<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
Students<lb/>
HMI<lb/>
r M KOVMI ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ted<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Band Mi<lb/>
Prepare<lb/>
Bn ei ibhh pa<lb/>
S I U ?<lb/>
think<lb/>
ing hack to scho<lb/>
the fall Neme-<lb/>
select<lb/>
students kn i<lb/>
ECU Ma<lb/>
Pirate is ah<lb/>
here. In the he n<lb/>
the da<lb/>
ha-<lb/>
prepare this<lb/>
five<lb/>
e Marcl<lb/>
The y?<lb/>
n u<lb/>
"Pici<lb/>
section<lb/>
? um so<lb/>
Si<lb/>
uii: ?<lb/>
"There<lb/>
HA<lb/>
.???????????<lb/>
We're taking v<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
All ABC Permit<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0007"/><lb/>
I HF I ASTAROl INIAN M GUST 30, 198?<lb/>
S<lb/>
in<lb/>
she<lb/>
hose doors<lb/>
si to<lb/>
n s his<lb/>
s to<lb/>
? ridual<lb/>
. in be<lb/>
 striving<lb/>
?ndence<lb/>
d oi her<lb/>
p p c d<lb/>
e said<lb/>
W<lb/>
?<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank &amp; Trust<lb/>
rl<lb/>
N.<lb/>
SURE TO<lb/>
.ISTER FOR<lb/>
LSC 1001<lb/>
OTOROTC<lb/>
THE ARMY<lb/>
N ELECTIVE<lb/>
FALL. THERE<lb/>
OBLIGATION<lb/>
Major Mike<lb/>
i iiak at 757-6<lb/>
Kruin Hall.<lb/>
University Receives Grant<lb/>
B (,1 ENN<lb/>
MAUGHAIN<lb/>
S4?rf ?rlln<lb/>
rwo ECU scientists<lb/>
recently return e d<lb/>
from the Pacific after<lb/>
studying a solar<lb/>
eclipse that took place<lb/>
on June 11. Dr. Floyd<lb/>
I Mattheis, chair-<lb/>
man of the science<lb/>
education d e part<lb/>
meat . said I C I<lb/>
received one oi onl<lb/>
ten grants given b the<lb/>
National Science<lb/>
Foundation to par<lb/>
ticipate in the stud of<lb/>
the solar phenomena<lb/>
which took place ovei<lb/>
lava, Indonesia.<lb/>
Mattheis, accom<lb/>
pa mod h I<lb/>
Physics Professoi l)i<lb/>
Edward l Seykora,<lb/>
investigated a sound<lb/>
wave d i s t vi r b a n c e<lb/>
created b y solar<lb/>
eclipses. Seykora,<lb/>
who developed two<lb/>
new detectoi systems<lb/>
involved in the stud,<lb/>
said the "disturbance<lb/>
is related to waves<lb/>
associated with explo-<lb/>
sions oi meteorite<lb/>
travel but not on the<lb/>
same scale. I he waves<lb/>
are of a ver low tre<lb/>
quency with hardly<lb/>
anv force<lb/>
Seykora made two<lb/>
mps, one in Januray<lb/>
to India, to set up<lb/>
monitoring stations<lb/>
and another to Java<lb/>
lust prior to the<lb/>
eclipse. He noted that<lb/>
the sound wave was a<lb/>
theory in 1970 and<lb/>
this is the tirst lime<lb/>
scientists have been<lb/>
able to confirm the<lb/>
wake disturbance ex<lb/>
ists. "We were able to<lb/>
nick it up 4,(XX) miles<lb/>
a w a v,<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Sevkora add-<lb/>
Seykora said the<lb/>
results could be<lb/>
published within six<lb/>
months. Joining the<lb/>
ECU duo were teams<lb/>
oi investigators from<lb/>
the Kitt Peak Obser-<lb/>
vatory, the U.S.<lb/>
Naval Observatory<lb/>
and the Sacramento<lb/>
National Obser-<lb/>
vatory. Funding for<lb/>
the research was ob-<lb/>
tained through grants<lb/>
from the NSF Solar<lb/>
Eclipse Expedtion.<lb/>
mjlSS THROUGH!<lb/>
Students Wait For Financial Aid<lb/>
B STAC 1<lb/>
rl KOWITZ<lb/>
I?M filer<lb/>
1 aiiv last week, the<lb/>
at ECU'S finan-<lb/>
cial aid office grew<lb/>
long as students<lb/>
waited for hours to<lb/>
get information on<lb/>
ible grants and<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
Some students were<lb/>
angry, while others<lb/>
were satisfied with the<lb/>
service they received.<lb/>
Others complained<lb/>
about the long lines<lb/>
One unidentified<lb/>
student said.<lb/>
'There's nisi too<lb/>
much disorganiza-<lb/>
tion. Waiting is the<lb/>
?orst part of it<lb/>
Emma Green, an<lb/>
ECU freshman, said<lb/>
new government cuts<lb/>
and regulations are a<lb/>
definite factor in the<lb/>
problem. Both<lb/>
students and a d -<lb/>
ministration are hav-<lb/>
ing to adapt to man)<lb/>
changesshe added<lb/>
Another freshmai<lb/>
James Clinkscle said<lb/>
students need to be<lb/>
better informed. "If<lb/>
the students received<lb/>
the information thev<lb/>
needed, things would<lb/>
go more smoothly<lb/>
Clinkscle said<lb/>
 T h e p e o p 1 e<lb/>
working in financial<lb/>
aid are doing the best<lb/>
the) can said slu<lb/>
dent Francine<lb/>
i ,ii mer. I hey can't<lb/>
process the informa-<lb/>
tion anv faster. The<lb/>
o n 1 v thing for<lb/>
students to do is<lb/>
wait Farmer said<lb/>
-he saw no other solu-<lb/>
tion to the problem.<lb/>
1 CU Director oi<lb/>
Financial Aid Robert<lb/>
Bourdeaux. disagreed<lb/>
with some of the<lb/>
students remarks, "I<lb/>
don't feel the lines are<lb/>
anv longer than<lb/>
they've been in past<lb/>
years he said. "We<lb/>
divide the students in-<lb/>
to two lines, and their<lb/>
wait should not be<lb/>
any longer than 45<lb/>
minutes<lb/>
By weeks end, the<lb/>
long lines were gone<lb/>
and the new semester<lb/>
underway, so students<lb/>
with complaints will<lb/>
probably remain quiet<lb/>
untill the spring.<lb/>
Band Members<lb/>
Prepare Shows<lb/>
Bv El IZABETH PACK<lb/>
staff nirr<lb/>
When other ECU<lb/>
students are still<lb/>
thinking aboui com-<lb/>
ing back to school for<lb/>
the fall semester, a<lb/>
select group of<lb/>
students known as the<lb/>
ECU Marching<lb/>
Pirates is already<lb/>
here. In the heat of<lb/>
the day they practice<lb/>
hard. trying to<lb/>
prepare this year's<lb/>
-how for the football<lb/>
games.<lb/>
"The band consists<lb/>
approximately 230<lb/>
people, and is the best<lb/>
sounding band in the<lb/>
five vears I've been<lb/>
here said Tom<lb/>
Goobby, director of<lb/>
the Marching Pirates.<lb/>
The year's opening<lb/>
number will be<lb/>
"Pictures of Spain<lb/>
then the precussion<lb/>
section will play a<lb/>
drum solo, followed<lb/>
by Chicago's "Free<lb/>
A Doc Severson tune,<lb/>
"Spanish Dreams<lb/>
will foilow "Free"<lb/>
"There will be a<lb/>
, lassical ending that<lb/>
everyone will love,<lb/>
but I'm keeping that a<lb/>
secret Goolsbx said<lb/>
" The color guard is<lb/>
smaller this year, but<lb/>
it's terrific Goolsby<lb/>
said. "1 think that<lb/>
we'll reallv blow N.C.<lb/>
State's band off their<lb/>
field<lb/>
With the help ot<lb/>
sophmor e music<lb/>
students Jodv Stiles<lb/>
and John Pruiti for-<lb/>
mally with the Spirit<lb/>
of Atlanta drum<lb/>
corps, the horn sec-<lb/>
tion will have a verv<lb/>
P o w er f uI s o u n d .<lb/>
claims Goolsb). Both<lb/>
o them played a solo<lb/>
while they were with<lb/>
"The Spirit<lb/>
Asked about the<lb/>
Marching Pirates'<lb/>
chances of going with<lb/>
the football team to a<lb/>
post bowl game,<lb/>
Goolsby said: "If the<lb/>
bowl is important<lb/>
enough to bring in a<lb/>
lot of monev, we will<lb/>
probably go, but if<lb/>
it's a small one. 1<lb/>
doubt the band will<lb/>
go, due to lack of<lb/>
funds<lb/>
HARD DAYS NIGHT<lb/>
,????<lb/>
??????????????????????????<lb/>
VolaR<lb/>
HAS sTUST<lb/>
JbE&amp;uNl<lb/>
T<lb/>
<lb/>
 <lb/>
Every<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
at the<lb/>
CAROLINA<lb/>
OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
FREE Draught<lb/>
(8:30-10:00)<lb/>
FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
ALL NIGHT<lb/>
?,????????<lb/>
Midnight Drawing for a FREE KEG<lb/>
Every Thurday Night!<lb/>
We're takina you Back in Time For the Time of Your Life!<lb/>
 The 6?y House is Now a Privote Club!<lb/>
All ABC Permits Members owd Invited Guests Only<lb/>
Mike Cross<lb/>
Sept.<lb/>
ECU'S ftTV CENTfip<lb/>
roe 15 vEAes<lb/>
WRCOMtS BACK<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
WTJ<lb/>
FUND-RAISGR UGT- DlFFSBfcNT<lb/>
EVENTTS EACM UTOC , ReoM&amp;KW<lb/>
aJTKT to am? amrKR coigrcr<lb/>
UPCOMING EVCMTS<lb/>
HAPPY HOOP, l.OOAOM.<lb/>
cAwsm i:?Dj -isicaws<lb/>
Til cu&amp;k - coming Soon<lb/>
wzmb'uvc<lb/>
END OF TMC WEE PARTY<lb/>
3:3o-Too TRfiF ADM. 5o4.C4N3T?l5i5<lb/>
70CANS TIL T3o -TWC OftCTY oowniswts<lb/>
Pl&amp;A :ODlL iHOO UilTW CAK5 SPLL TO<lb/>
TU? 8?ST<lb/>
MUStC<lb/>
u<lb/>
OtFAM0tS LACHES kUGMT<lb/>
 <lb/>
15 VCACS, SUN0AYWWS 8BE OUR SPECIAL MWT<lb/>
Fa? ladies - 5oraft for motes wuiLErr last<lb/>
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W0URS X00-1 .OOIOT. &amp;.ZO-WOO ??T.<lb/>
TUE STAFF OP TUE ELBO REMINDS YOU TO<lb/>
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WITUIM WALKING DISTANCE OP E.C.U. OAMPtS<lb/>
WITM UPCOMING ECO. BUS SCRstCEf FOR TWE<lb/>
CAMPUS 4 CoMMUNIT V. DokJT WS? Vooe UFE 4<lb/>
YouR FRGJOS LWES. USE RKPowStBiu'rV<lb/>
wucn Consuming Aicomou c Q&amp;vegAGfeq<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0008"/><lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1983 Page 8<lb/>
Top Violinist<lb/>
To Perform Here<lb/>
A performance by the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
and guest soloist Charles Treger,<lb/>
violinist, opens the ECU Unions<lb/>
Artists Series' 1983-1984 season.<lb/>
The concert will be held in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium on Wednesday, Sept.<lb/>
14 at S p.m.<lb/>
Tickets are available beginning<lb/>
Aug. 31 at $2.50 for ECU students<lb/>
and S50 for ECU faculty and<lb/>
staff and for the public from the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office. All tickets<lb/>
sold at the door will be $7.50.<lb/>
Founded by Pulitzer Prize-<lb/>
winning composer Lamar Str-<lb/>
mgfield, the North Carolina Sym-<lb/>
phony, comprised of 48 volunteer<lb/>
musicians from 16 communities,<lb/>
performed its first concert in<lb/>
Chapel Hill in 1932. From those<lb/>
early days, the symphony has<lb/>
developed in size and scope, back-<lb/>
ed by supporters organized in 3"<lb/>
chapters statewide. Last year, the<lb/>
symphony's 73 full-time musi-<lb/>
cians traveled 22,000 miles within<lb/>
the state, appeared in more than<lb/>
120 communities and performed<lb/>
more than 370 adult and educa-<lb/>
tional concerts.<lb/>
Gerhardt Zimmerman was<lb/>
named Artistic Director Conduc-<lb/>
tor o the North Carolina Sym-<lb/>
phony in 1982. Formerly<lb/>
Associate Conductor of the St.<lb/>
Louis Symphony. Zimmerman<lb/>
also served as musical director of<lb/>
the Canton Symphony for three<lb/>
years. He has guest conducted<lb/>
many different symphony or-<lb/>
chestras across the nation and has<lb/>
performed several times with the<lb/>
National Symphony in<lb/>
Washington, D.C including a<lb/>
special concert on the lawn of the<lb/>
Capitol with composer Aaron<lb/>
Copeland narrating his own<lb/>
Lincoln Portrait<lb/>
As euet soloist, violinist<lb/>
Charles Treger brings to the stage<lb/>
an extraordinary new vision of the<lb/>
violin. Treger has performed<lb/>
regularly from his repertoire of 50<lb/>
concertos with such conductors as<lb/>
Abbado, Bernstein, Boulez, Or-<lb/>
mandy and Ozawa. He is also one<lb/>
of the founding members of the<lb/>
Chamber Music Society of Lin-<lb/>
coln Center. He performs on a<lb/>
beautiful Hartmann Stradivarius<lb/>
made in 1723.<lb/>
Season tickets are still available<lb/>
for the 1983-1984 Artists Series<lb/>
which includes, in addition to the<lb/>
North Carolina Symphony, Lynn<lb/>
Harrell. The Romeros, Anton<lb/>
Kuerti, and the Chamber Music<lb/>
Society of Lincoln Center. The<lb/>
Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall is open Monday<lb/>
through Friday. 10 a.m. to 4 p.m.<lb/>
For more information call<lb/>
5-6611. ext. 266.<lb/>
TV's Preacher Boys:<lb/>
Dealing Holy Oil<lb/>
From Pitt County<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
xiiff Wntrr<lb/>
For all you Saturday night par-<lb/>
ty hounds who can't make church<lb/>
Sunday morning, television<lb/>
preaching can provide that last<lb/>
chance for moral edification<lb/>
before another Monday rolls<lb/>
around.<lb/>
But why bother with big-name<lb/>
evangelists like Jerry Falwell or<lb/>
PTL's Jim and Tammy Bakker<lb/>
when you can watch two Pitt<lb/>
County preacher boy v. Green-<lb/>
ville's Reverend Jim Whittmgton<lb/>
and Winterv llle's Reverend<lb/>
Charles Young.<lb/>
Whittmgton telecasts at 11:45<lb/>
Sunday evening on WITN Chan-<lb/>
nel Seven, and Young follows at<lb/>
12:15. Their styles are remarkably<lb/>
similar. Both play up the down-<lb/>
home, good-ole-boy angle, and<lb/>
both rely on charisma. Both sing<lb/>
as much as they preach. The<lb/>
telecasts are recorded before live<lb/>
audiences.<lb/>
Whittmgton, however, is the<lb/>
more refined of the two. He wears<lb/>
well-tailored three-piece suits ac-<lb/>
cented with gold rings, watches<lb/>
and bracelets. After brother Larry<lb/>
Whittington warms up the con-<lb/>
gregation with some up-tempo<lb/>
gospel singing, Jim comes onstage<lb/>
singing another positive gospel<lb/>
tune like "There's A Land Where<lb/>
We'll Never Grow Old Jim<lb/>
knows how to get the audience in-<lb/>
to a friendly mood. He often com-<lb/>
mands folks to join hands or to<lb/>
"give somebody a hug Nobody<lb/>
ever falls asleep at Jim Whit-<lb/>
tington's services; he keeps 'em<lb/>
alert and peppy by constantly urg-<lb/>
ing the congregation to give him<lb/>
? or themselves ? "a hand<lb/>
Light the applause sign, please.<lb/>
An organ playing in the<lb/>
background vanes the mood and<lb/>
follows the tempo of Jim's<lb/>
preaching which mostly con-<lb/>
sists of folksy wisdom and<lb/>
homespun homilies but very little<lb/>
direct scripture.<lb/>
"Now everybody wants to be<lb/>
like everybody else he says, pac-<lb/>
ing the stage, gesturing with one<lb/>
hand and holding a microphone in<lb/>
the other. "White people go down<lb/>
and lay on the beach for hours<lb/>
trying to get black, and black peo-<lb/>
ple buy bleaching cream and<lb/>
powders trying to get white<lb/>
Whittington smiles at this bit of<lb/>
cleverness, and the racially-mixed<lb/>
audience applauds and amenv<lb/>
Finally Whittington gets<lb/>
around to the gospel. Imminent<lb/>
catastrophes predicted by the<lb/>
Book of Revelation are a favorite<lb/>
topic. As the organ trills, he cites<lb/>
the mark of the beast, the great<lb/>
tribulation and the anti-Christ ?<lb/>
an apocalyptic horror story.<lb/>
In the final portion of the<lb/>
telecast. WhittingTON. as he<lb/>
calls himself, makes a personal<lb/>
pitch to the viewer. Jim urges<lb/>
those with a "special need" to<lb/>
place their hand on a piece oi<lb/>
paper, trace their hand's outline<lb/>
and write their special need in the<lb/>
palm area of the tracing. Then the<lb/>
viewer sends the tracing to Whit-<lb/>
tington, who promises to lay his<lb/>
hand on it and pray for the<lb/>
viewer's written need. Personally.<lb/>
1 prefer the TV preachers who<lb/>
simply ask you to place your hand<lb/>
on the TV screen. It's easier, and<lb/>
you don't have to send in a cash<lb/>
donation with your tracing.<lb/>
The Reverend Charles Young<lb/>
doesn't have W'hittington's refine-<lb/>
ment. His rent-a-tux get-up with<lb/>
frilled shirt and velour bow tie is a<lb/>
See PITT. Page 10<lb/>
Violinist Charles Treger, the only American to win the International Wieniawski Competition in Warsaw<lb/>
solos with the N.C. Smphon Sept. 14.<lb/>
'Cujo: 'Man Flees Dog<lb/>
B EDDIE COC KRELL<lb/>
sp?i?l iii I h t ?:ariifiaiin<lb/>
'That sucked said the kid in the Hobie t-shirt<lb/>
at the next urinal.<lb/>
"But that dog was bad said his compatriot at<lb/>
the sink as he applied the finishing touches to his<lb/>
hair. "1 mean, bad. Can you imagine owning a dog<lb/>
like that? That would be bad. I mean, bad. Yeah.<lb/>
the movie sucked<lb/>
Only minutes earlier, these same two horror film<lb/>
fans could be seen scraping each other off the bot-<lb/>
tom of their seats as the lights went up on the latest<lb/>
big-screen adaptation of a Stephen King novel, Cu-<lb/>
io. Similar reactions could be heard floating<lb/>
around the theater, as people pried each other's<lb/>
arms from around necks, shoulders and waists.<lb/>
The guy one row back who had been cracking wise<lb/>
to a couple of girls throughout the film, shutting<lb/>
up only long enough to have the bejesus scared out<lb/>
of him, was up and out of the theater like a shot the<lb/>
moment the first end credit appeared. This is<lb/>
human nature: by leaving so quickly, he was deny-<lb/>
ing the intensity and impact of what he'd seen.<lb/>
Man flees dog<lb/>
He wasn't alone: the theater emptied rapidly.<lb/>
Consider, then, the strange fate of the effective<lb/>
horror film. It is either embraced b a large au-<lb/>
dience as a "family" shocker, a- was Alien, or it is<lb/>
sxich a brutal moviegoing experience that no matter<lb/>
how well-made it is. it's going to get bad press bv<lb/>
the nature of its viciousness. The Texas (hainsa<lb/>
Massacre is such a film. So isujo.<lb/>
Director Lewis Teague (who did the hugelv en-<lb/>
joyable John Sayles-scnpted Alligator in 1980) has<lb/>
been given a script that cuts away all of King's<lb/>
subplots and concentrates on the conflict of a<lb/>
woman and her young son trapped in a Pinto bv a<lb/>
rabid dog. King's gleefully malicious sense of<lb/>
See KUDOS, Page 10<lb/>
Fall MSC Films Shine With Oscar Winners<lb/>
David Bowk stars as a man with a bizarre secret in 'The Hunger one of the many free films offered at Mendenhall this term.<lb/>
By CARLYN EBERT<lb/>
tnlrrK.nmcnl tditor<lb/>
The Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee offers free films every<lb/>
weekend in Mendenhall's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Wednesday night special films,<lb/>
weekend late shows and special<lb/>
double and triple features supple-<lb/>
ment the weekend Popular Films<lb/>
Series with other, less frequently-<lb/>
aired movies and golden oldies.<lb/>
Last week we listed the Com-<lb/>
mittee's choices for August<lb/>
through October, but Hendrix's<lb/>
silver screen won't go blank as<lb/>
soon as Halloween and Dawn of<lb/>
the Dead fade away.<lb/>
November promises Dustin<lb/>
Hoffman in mascara and pan-<lb/>
tyhose in Tootsie (Nov. 3-5), Best<lb/>
Actor Ben Kingslev in last year's<lb/>
Best Picture Gandhi (Nov. 10-12),<lb/>
Francis Ford Coppola's One<lb/>
From the Heart (Nov. 18 and 19<lb/>
? no Thursday show) and a pre-<lb/>
Thanksgiving smorgasbord of fun<lb/>
on Sunday, Nov. 20: a Film adap-<lb/>
tation of Broadway's A Funny-<lb/>
Thing Happened on the Way to<lb/>
the Forum, the rock opera Tom-<lb/>
my and the ever-popular Blues<lb/>
Brothers. The theme is "Musical<lb/>
Decades with Forum the entry<lb/>
from the '60s, Tommy from the<lb/>
'70s and Jake and Elwood from<lb/>
the '80s.<lb/>
Octopussy, one of this year's<lb/>
new James Bond films, and The<lb/>
Lords of Discipline round out the<lb/>
weekend series on Dec. 1-3 and<lb/>
8-10, respectively.<lb/>
Wednesday double features pay<lb/>
tribute to Shakespeare on Film<lb/>
(Olivier in Othello paired with<lb/>
Richard III at 6 and 9 p.m. on<lb/>
Sept. 7). vintage Hitchcock (9<lb/>
Steps and Spellbound at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. on Sept. 28) and director<lb/>
Werner Herzog with Heart of<lb/>
Glass and Aguirre, The Wrath of<lb/>
God (Oct. 26).<lb/>
The rest of the Wednesday-<lb/>
series shapes up with John Ford's<lb/>
The Quiet Man at 8 p.m. Aug. 31<lb/>
and the offbeat Eating Raoul<lb/>
(Sept. 14). Ingmar Bergman goes<lb/>
Mozart in The Magic Flute (Oct.<lb/>
5), Cannes Festival Award Win-<lb/>
ner Breaker Morant plays Oct. 19<lb/>
and Japanese master director<lb/>
Akira Kurosawa's much-imitated<lb/>
1954 Seven Samurai comes to<lb/>
campus on Nov. 2. Lindsay<lb/>
Anderson's Britannia Hospital<lb/>
(Nov. 16) and the late Rainer<lb/>
Werner Fassbinder's Veronika<lb/>
Voss (the last film he completed<lb/>
through post-production) con-<lb/>
clude the fall's W ednesday special<lb/>
Films on Dec. 7.<lb/>
All films ? weekend, Wednes-<lb/>
day, late-night and Sunday<lb/>
matinee ? will be shown in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre. Admission is by<lb/>
student ID and current activity<lb/>
card (yes, you've already paid for<lb/>
these flicks) or by MSC member-<lb/>
ship. For weekly accurate time<lb/>
listings or last-minute changes,<lb/>
check the information desk at<lb/>
Mendenhall. Or look for last Fri-<lb/>
day's East Carolinian, which ran<lb/>
a clip-and-save table listing all the<lb/>
Films. The Entertainer, available<lb/>
at Mendenhall, runs synopses and<lb/>
film times, and information<lb/>
boards located near the Student<lb/>
Supply Store and the Croatan also<lb/>
list the week's Films.<lb/>
Singer<lb/>
B ROBIN AUK<lb/>
East Carolina is bu<lb/>
all the activity that ace<lb/>
the beginning of fall term<lb/>
School of Music has f<lb/>
rhythm, and that me I<lb/>
recitals and concerts are n<lb/>
ing scheduled for the upd<lb/>
months.<lb/>
The first recital will b<lb/>
Sunday. Sep- 11 P<lb/>
member Dr Clyde Hiss<lb/>
aill perform in Flet<lb/>
Hall at 8 p.m with Dr 1<lb/>
Hoekman accompar<lb/>
piano.<lb/>
Hiss has chosf<lb/>
composers Robe'<lb/>
Antonin Dvorak<lb/>
his recital.<lb/>
He will sing Bit<lb/>
Dvorak in<lb/>
Czechoslovakia the<lb/>
native language The<lb/>
inspired by the Psalm;<lb/>
Hiss says these -<lb/>
ed in the 189<lb/>
in Dvoraf 's life rh -<lb/>
Natalie's L<lb/>
Surfaces A<lb/>
RALEIGH (I<lb/>
? The Oci<lb/>
p r e rr. i e r e<lb/>
Brainstorm, the ate<lb/>
Natalie Woe . " -<lb/>
mov.t. ill be a<lb/>
tie aa:r to ra -<lb/>
money for the N rth<lb/>
Carolina Museum<lb/>
History Ass )C ates,<lb/>
officials a d asi -<lb/>
week. i<lb/>
Ticket- ? - the evi<lb/>
premiere, wh<lb/>
stars Chi I ph e r<lb/>
Walker, and Louise<lb/>
Fletcher, will cc<lb/>
SI 00. The museum<lb/>
associates hope to<lb/>
raise $100,000.<lb/>
?????????????????????<lb/>
(2 Bio,<lb/>
Come talk<lb/>
to Sammy<lb/>
about a meal plan.<lb/>
H e Specialize<lb/>
All You<lb/>
on Large<lb/>
(1 meat.<lb/>
 (1 met<lb/>
Open<lb/>
ll:00to8:00<lb/>
7 days<lb/>
a neek<lb/>
?????????<lb/>
 I PRESENT TH1 <lb/>
<lb/>
ST<lb/>
DISI<lb/>
HAIRCJ<lb/>
Reg<lb/>
$8J<lb/>
NO<lb/>
$6.<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
N<lb/>
Pitt<lb/>
?????????fclM.ig<lb/>
- ?? V <lb/>
-w<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
ii Competition in Warsaw<lb/>
Dog<lb/>
ppeared. This is<lb/>
i hewasdcny-<lb/>
I C w tic'd een.<lb/>
tier emptied rapidly.<lb/>
e effective<lb/>
raced b a large au-<lb/>
av was Alien, or it is<lb/>
;? no matter<lb/>
bad press by<lb/>
The Texas C hainsa<lb/>
5<lb/>
 ? did the hugely en-<lb/>
ptcd Alligator in 1980) has<lb/>
- awa ail of King's<lb/>
J ttes ehi the conflicl of a<lb/>
?son rapped in a Pinto by a<lb/>
sefullv malicious sense of<lb/>
Page 10<lb/>
nners<lb/>
ntage Hitchcock (39<lb/>
Spellbound at 7 and 9<lb/>
on Sept 28) and director<lb/>
r Herzog with Heart of<lb/>
and Aauirre. The Wrath of<lb/>
(Oct 26)<lb/>
ler<lb/>
le rest of the Wednesday<lb/>
r shapes up with John Ford's<lb/>
Quiet Man at 8 p.m. Aug. 31<lb/>
he offbeat Eating Raoul<lb/>
14). Ingmar Bergman goes<lb/>
art in The Magic Flute (Oct.<lb/>
Tannes Festival Award Win-<lb/>
ireaker Morant plays Oct. 19<lb/>
Japanese master director<lb/>
ra Kurosawa's much-imitated<lb/>
Seven Samurai comes to<lb/>
(pus on Nov. 2. Lindsay<lb/>
ier son's Britannia Hospital<lb/>
i. 16) and the late Rainer<lb/>
ner Fassbinder's Yeronika<lb/>
s (the last film he completed<lb/>
ugh post-production) con-<lb/>
le the fall's Wednesday special<lb/>
is on Dec. 7.<lb/>
dl films ? weekend, Wednes-<lb/>
late-night and Sunday<lb/>
Umee ? will be shown in<lb/>
ndenhall Student Center's<lb/>
tadrix Theatre. Admission is by<lb/>
Idem ID and current activity<lb/>
rd (yes, you ve already paid for<lb/>
;se flicks) or by MSC member-<lb/>
ip. For weekly accurate time<lb/>
kings or last-minute changes,<lb/>
leek the information desk at<lb/>
mdenhall. Or look for last Fri-<lb/>
g's East Carolinian, which ran<lb/>
lip-and-save table listing ail the<lb/>
is. The Entertainer, available<lb/>
Mendenhall, runs synopses and<lb/>
Im times, and information<lb/>
ards located near the Student<lb/>
ipply Store and the Croatan also<lb/>
n the week's Films.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1983<lb/>
<lb/>
Singer To Perform Schumann, Dvorak<lb/>
There are still some things<lb/>
we have yet to imagine.<lb/>
Bv ROBIN AYERS<lb/>
Suit W rii?<lb/>
East Carolina is buzzing with<lb/>
all the activity that accompanies<lb/>
the beginning of fall term. The<lb/>
School of Music has its own<lb/>
rhythm, and that means that<lb/>
recitals and concerts are now be-<lb/>
ing scheduled for the upcoming<lb/>
months.<lb/>
The first recital will be held<lb/>
Sunday. Sept. 11. Faculty<lb/>
member Dr. Clyde Hiss, vocalist,<lb/>
will perform in Fletcher Recital<lb/>
Hall at 8 p.m. with Dr. Timothy<lb/>
Hoekman accompanying him on<lb/>
piano.<lb/>
Hiss has chosen 19th century<lb/>
composers Robert Schumann and<lb/>
ntonin Dvorak as the focus of<lb/>
his recital.<lb/>
He will sing Biblical songs from<lb/>
Dvorak in the original<lb/>
Czechoslovakian, the composer's<lb/>
native language. The songs were<lb/>
inspired by the Psalms.<lb/>
Hiss says these songs, compos-<lb/>
ed in the 1890s. were written late<lb/>
in Dvorak's life. "Thev represent<lb/>
his most mature style says the<lb/>
vocalist.<lb/>
Four chabrier songs, composed<lb/>
about 1840, make up the selected<lb/>
Schumann works. A chabrier<lb/>
song is satirical, and its subjects<lb/>
are animals. Translated from the<lb/>
French, the chabriers are part of a<lb/>
larger group of songs titled<lb/>
"Poet's Love When he had the<lb/>
work published, Schumann omit-<lb/>
ted four songs, and Hiss will per-<lb/>
form the missing chabriers at the<lb/>
recital.<lb/>
Songs by Offenbach and by<lb/>
Gilbert and Sullivan will conclude<lb/>
the program.<lb/>
Hiss, who joined the School of<lb/>
Music faculty in 1965, received his<lb/>
doctorate and master's degrees<lb/>
from the University of Illinois and<lb/>
his bachelor's degree from the<lb/>
Baldwin-Wallace Conservatory.<lb/>
He has studied under Pierre Ber-<lb/>
nac, Bruce Foote and Burton<lb/>
Garlinghouse. At ECU, he also<lb/>
serves as director of the School's<lb/>
Opera Theater.<lb/>
Natalie 's Last 'Brainstorm'<lb/>
Surfaces As Big Charity Gala<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI)<lb/>
 The Oct. 6<lb/>
premiere of<lb/>
Brainstorm, the late<lb/>
Natalie Wood's last<lb/>
movie, will be a black-<lb/>
tie affair to raise<lb/>
money for the North<lb/>
Carolina Museum of<lb/>
History Associates,<lb/>
officials said last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Tickets to the<lb/>
premiere, which also<lb/>
stars Christopher<lb/>
Walken and Louise<lb/>
Fletcher, will cost<lb/>
$100. The museum<lb/>
associates hope to<lb/>
raise $100,000<lb/>
"We kicked the<lb/>
price around for a<lb/>
long time said<lb/>
William Arnold,<lb/>
director of the North<lb/>
Carolina Film Office.<lb/>
Gov. James B.<lb/>
Hunt Jr. selected the<lb/>
museum associates<lb/>
for the benefit after<lb/>
deciding to make the<lb/>
opening a charitable<lb/>
event, Arnold said.<lb/>
He said the museum<lb/>
associates were work-<lb/>
ing to raise $2.5<lb/>
million to renovate<lb/>
the former state art<lb/>
museum.<lb/>
Brainstorm will be<lb/>
shown at the 500-seat<lb/>
Mission Valley<lb/>
Theater in Mission<lb/>
Valley Shopping<lb/>
Center in Raleigh.<lb/>
There will be two<lb/>
showings on opening<lb/>
day. Between show-<lb/>
ings, the charity will<lb/>
host a preview party<lb/>
at the Capitol City<lb/>
Club.<lb/>
Susan Pittman,<lb/>
assistant executive<lb/>
director of the<lb/>
museum associates,<lb/>
said invitations to the<lb/>
premiere already had<lb/>
gone out to the 5,000<lb/>
associates.<lb/>
J<lb/>
NM-<lb/>
???THICTtfl g j<lb/>
A magnificent and powerful film, 'Sophie's Choice starring<lb/>
Meryl Streep and Kevin Kline, airs at Mendenhall's Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre this Thursday through Saturday at 5 and 8 p.m.<lb/>
S,SSSSSSS'SSSSSSSS'S'SS<lb/>
?' SSSffS,<lb/>
Dr. Clyde Hiss, vocalist, will be featured in the School of Music's first<lb/>
public recital this fall.<lb/>
phone<lb/>
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ram HUNGER<lb/>
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. . ?<lb/>
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? S iJfSi ?Sj-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
I HI I S! ?. AROl INI AN<lb/>
?l t,l M H). 1983<lb/>
Kudos For'CujoFilm Treatment<lb/>
Makes An Effective Horror Flick<lb/>
Com. from Page 8<lb/>
humor has created a<lb/>
chain of events that<lb/>
lcue them stranded<lb/>
over three sweltering<lb/>
days without relict.<lb/>
Although the ending<lb/>
of the film has been<lb/>
drastically altered.<lb/>
Cujo exists at the mo-<lb/>
ment as the most<lb/>
faithful adaptation of<lb/>
a King novel et. (The<lb/>
Dead one is to be<lb/>
released later this<lb/>
month, and John<lb/>
Carpenter has just<lb/>
completed principal<lb/>
photography on<lb/>
Christine, after hav-<lb/>
ing the rug pulled out<lb/>
from under his<lb/>
Hrestarter project.)<lb/>
Teague has wisely<lb/>
opened up the action<lb/>
b employing a<lb/>
downright Germanic<lb/>
stv le; the camera dips,<lb/>
swoops, glides, tracks<lb/>
and pans with an ex-<lb/>
hilarating freedom we<lb/>
haven't seen in an<lb/>
American film since<lb/>
John Badham's<lb/>
Whose Life Is It<lb/>
Any nay?<lb/>
Although the film<lb/>
doesn't look cheap, it<lb/>
does look economical.<lb/>
With that in mind,<lb/>
you'll marvel at the<lb/>
meticulous set design<lb/>
and terrific make-up<lb/>
jobs, particularly on<lb/>
Dee Wallace and the<lb/>
dog. In fact, the dog's<lb/>
performance is such a<lb/>
per fectlv-realized<lb/>
J e k v 11 Hvde<lb/>
metamorphosis that<lb/>
it's hard to believe<lb/>
one dog did the whole<lb/>
film. Maybe there was<lb/>
more than one dog, a<lb/>
good dog and a bad<lb/>
dog. At any rate, the<lb/>
animal action (it says<lb/>
in the credits) of Karl<lb/>
Lewis Miller and the<lb/>
animal handling of<lb/>
Glen Garner and<lb/>
Jackie Martin is first-<lb/>
rate.<lb/>
King's books have<lb/>
always had a way of<lb/>
lulling you to sleep<lb/>
with a good story and<lb/>
then knifing you in<lb/>
the back while you<lb/>
snore. Cujo has the<lb/>
same power; there<lb/>
isn't a cheap shock in<lb/>
the entire film. Never-<lb/>
theless, as at least one<lb/>
audience proved, the<lb/>
movie has a way of<lb/>
sneaking up on you<lb/>
and doing its job<lb/>
before you know it.<lb/>
Kudos, then, for Cu-<lb/>
jo. And that dog was<lb/>
bad.<lb/>
Pitt County's TV Preacher Boys<lb/>
Deal Holy Oil Miracle Packages<lb/>
Coat, from Page 8<lb/>
tack compared to<lb/>
W hittington's svelte<lb/>
 and his style is<lb/>
much more<lb/>
rismatic much<lb/>
more dramatic, too.<lb/>
His singing is reminis-<lb/>
cent of 1 it tie<lb/>
Richard's wailing.<lb/>
i his woolly hair<lb/>
and mutton chops<lb/>
ke Wolf man<lb/>
Jack's<lb/>
N oung also appeals<lb/>
to a racially-mixed au-<lb/>
dience. His rhetoric is<lb/>
even more down-<lb/>
home than W h i t -<lb/>
tington's: "Bible days<lb/>
are here again he<lb/>
shouts. After a heavy<lb/>
dose of soul-rock-<lb/>
gospel music. Young<lb/>
bypasses preaching<lb/>
the gospel and tears<lb/>
straight into miracle<lb/>
healing. On Sunday's<lb/>
telecast, a five-year-<lb/>
old boy who had<lb/>
undergone surgerv for<lb/>
an open spine regain-<lb/>
ed his sense of touch<lb/>
The part of<lb/>
Young's telecast that<lb/>
really got my atten-<lb/>
tion, though, was his<lb/>
free "Miracle<lb/>
Package It con-<lb/>
tains a bumper sticker<lb/>
that reads. "I Am<lb/>
Protected By The<lb/>
Blood Young<lb/>
assured viewers that<lb/>
the sticker would keep<lb/>
witches at bay. The<lb/>
Miracle Package also<lb/>
contains a prayer<lb/>
cloth and a cellaphane<lb/>
packet of annointing<lb/>
oil. A golden praying-<lb/>
hands decal is llo in-<lb/>
cluded. Each packet is<lb/>
heavily prayed over,<lb/>
according to Young,<lb/>
before he sends it to a<lb/>
viewer.<lb/>
"Charles Young<lb/>
has never prayed a<lb/>
prayer that God<lb/>
didn't hear says the<lb/>
youthful Young. It all<lb/>
works, he says.<lb/>
because the Holy<lb/>
Ghost is in each<lb/>
Miracle Package.<lb/>
Whether any of it<lb/>
works or not, I don't<lb/>
know. But getting all<lb/>
those free deeals.<lb/>
stickers, cloths and oil<lb/>
is a lot neater than<lb/>
tracing your stupid<lb/>
hand on a piece of<lb/>
paper and sending it<lb/>
to Jim Whittington.<lb/>
You can always use<lb/>
the annointing oil to<lb/>
make a holv salad.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
stereo<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
SUPPLIES<lb/>
Reg.60<lb/>
00<lb/>
ALPINE<lb/>
car audio systems<lb/>
Less is truly more The Koss HV X is a<lb/>
remarkable engineering achievement in<lb/>
lightweight comfort and sound reproduc-<lb/>
tion The HV X s brilliance and clarity will<lb/>
astound you And its deep bass response is<lb/>
unmatched by other lightweight phones.<lb/>
U t.<lb/>
$149.95<lb/>
??.<lb/>
fflfflt C-901<lb/>
Guifinieta to out perform hj'<lb/>
you ut using if i ? it ? real<lb/>
;nro?<lb/>
"i he Alp.i "10 FMAM Cassette Auto<lb/>
Reverse ? . .<lb/>
rc.it ure. nclud<lb/>
f a f CCTTCC Cassette (ilidi ' Metal-Stereo Dual Fui ction<lb/>
vAmC I i Cd Switch, and Auto Reverse with Tape Direc-<lb/>
ion Indicators.<lb/>
3 for $10.00<lb/>
KD-VII<lb/>
DLBY<lb/>
CASSETTE<lb/>
$119.95<lb/>
SL-Q200<lb/>
Semi-automatic<lb/>
quartz direct<lb/>
Drive Turntable<lb/>
DISCWASHER SC-2<lb/>
Stylus Cleaning System<lb/>
C ompletelv rpmovei grit and<lb/>
rUp from your stylus to SJve<lb/>
vour records<lb/>
$6.50<lb/>
.i<lb/>
DISCWASHER D4<lb/>
Record Care System<lb/>
The tirst and best complete rec-<lb/>
ord fj-i system updated (or<lb/>
1983<lb/>
$12.97<lb/>
$124.00<lb/>
AIWA<lb/>
SIMPLY ADVANCED<lb/>
lcS-200<lb/>
Iamfm stereo<lb/>
cassette portabli<lb/>
Technics<lb/>
AT-AIT<lb/>
102<lb/>
P-MOUNTC4RT<lb/>
?cmaS W? WALKMAN TYPE ALSO AVAILABLI<lb/>
$99.96<lb/>
WELCOME BACK ECU<lb/>
105 Trade Street<lb/>
a<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available I<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store except as<lb/>
specifically noted 11 this ad<lb/>
or<lb/>
)<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU SAT, SEPT 3 AT A&amp;P IN GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEN0, WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
3 MANUFACTURERS COUPONS, EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE <lb/>
$20 PURCHASE 10 COUPONS, $100 PURCHASE 50 COUPONS<lb/>
ADDITIONAL COUPONS REDEEMED AT FACE VALUE!<lb/>
5 COUPONS<lb/>
Between now and Sept 3. we will redeem rational<lb/>
manufacturer a centa-ort coupons up to W tor<lb/>
double their value Otter good on national manu-<lb/>
facturer centa-off coupons only (Food retailer<lb/>
coupons not accepted Customer muat purchaae<lb/>
coupon product in specified sue Expired coupons<lb/>
will not be honored One coupon per customer per<lb/>
item No coupons accepted for tree merchandise<lb/>
Offer doe not apply to AAP or other store coupons<lb/>
whether manufacturer is mentioned or not When<lb/>
the value of the coupon exceeda 50 or the retail<lb/>
of the item this offer is limited to the retail price<lb/>
Savings are Great with A&amp;P's<lb/>
DOUBLE SJWMGS COUPOMS!<lb/>
rOUPOW<lb/>
COUPON A<lb/>
COUPON B<lb/>
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CtNTSO??<lb/>
25-<lb/>
18-<lb/>
SO<lb/>
75<lb/>
?4P fclJOtt<lb/>
f 'S 0??<lb/>
25<lb/>
18<lb/>
50<lb/>
25<lb/>
SO<lb/>
36'<lb/>
$1 00<lb/>
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si<lb/>
SAVE 20 LB.<lb/>
SAVE 30 LB.<lb/>
RED OR WHITE<lb/>
Seedless Grapes ! Delicious Apples<lb/>
! WHITE I rrrN EASTERN GOLDEN<lb/>
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eat Groce7<lb/>
U<lb/>
SAVE 22<lb/>
HOT DOG OR<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
Savings j<lb/>
SAVE UP TO 50<lb/>
Upton Tea Bags<lb/>
.?-l-i'<lb/>
r8ct.<lb/>
pkg-<lb/>
I<lb/>
Lipton<lb/>
FAMILY SIZE<lb/>
24 I !l"till M SI6<lb/>
III<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
24 ct.<lb/>
pfcg.<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
SAVE 71<lb/>
SAVE 20<lb/>
Charcoal Briquets AAnn Page Cola<lb/>
A&amp;P BRAND<lb/>
REGULAR &amp; DIET<lb/>
101b.<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
NowSave A&amp;P Gold Register Tapes for<lb/>
great savings on quality<lb/>
Stainless Steel Cook ware<lb/>
1Qt.<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Saucepan<lb/>
With $200 Worth<lb/>
A&amp;P Gold<lb/>
register tapes<lb/>
18 8 Stainless Steel<lb/>
with 3 layer tn-ply<lb/>
bottom for better cooking<lb/>
HERE'S HOW IT WORKS . . .<lb/>
? Save your valuable A&amp;P gold register tapes starting Sunday August 28th<lb/>
" n you have the amount of A&amp;p 9?,d register tapes needed, redeem them at th?<lb/>
A&amp;P check stand. dl ine<lb/>
? Naturally you can start saving more A&amp;P gold register tapes for the next rnokxAr?<lb/>
item you plan to select. cuuKware<lb/>
? And remember, all items are on sale for the duration of this proaram Thm nf?r ,e<lb/>
scheduled to end Sat Dec 17,1983. ? er ,s<lb/>
C<lb/>
Gr ????! ii ?- nitArc b lODpn Center<lb/>
703 creenville Blvd. Groenville, N.C<lb/>
JobsLooli<lb/>
For Barttl<lb/>
With Fin<lb/>
ByPHKRRIM,<lb/>
Suft nirr<lb/>
If you've ever pur-<lb/>
chased a mixed drinl<lb/>
chances are vou didn't<lb/>
give much though to<lb/>
what is involved in<lb/>
becoming a<lb/>
bartender, or a<lb/>
mixologist" as tl<lb/>
are sometimes .ailed<lb/>
For the pa three<lb/>
years, the i<lb/>
Carolina School<lb/>
Bartending ha-<lb/>
cd many<lb/>
bartender ii<lb/>
North arolma<lb/>
well as the S<lb/>
Owned and ma- ?<lb/>
b Stuart Ha<lb/>
the school rel<lb/>
to 510 Cotanche<lb/>
from it original<lb/>
tion on Arl ngti<lb/>
Boulevard<lb/>
June.<lb/>
"Busu.v<lb/>
ing ex<lb/>
Haithcock. I<lb/>
relocating d<lb/>
the school ha<lb/>
ed a stea<lb/>
studer-<lb/>
the art of n<lb/>
Studer:<lb/>
ing to sacrifice $25<lb/>
for the ?<lb/>
struction need-<lb/>
complete the<lb/>
Haithcock,<lb/>
penenced bartend<lb/>
himself, i n s 11<lb/>
most of the three-<lb/>
hour long wecf -<lb/>
classes. During<lb/>
first week of via<lb/>
student- are required<lb/>
to learn rrr- ?n i<lb/>
1 y 15 0 d : ? ?<lb/>
recipes rant <lb/>
pink ladies to<lb/>
tinis. 'Each st<lb/>
works out r. g<lb/>
behind the tra<lb/>
bar. mixing one<lb/>
after another while<lb/>
trying to increase<lb/>
speed and improve the<lb/>
quality of his<lb/>
Students bee<lb/>
familiar with<lb/>
area's more popular<lb/>
drinks, such as<lb/>
white Russian, ma<lb/>
and the triple s?<lb/>
tea. and the) a<lb/>
learn the proper ser-<lb/>
vice of beer, wine and<lb/>
other bar staples<lb/>
But how var<lb/>
school afford to lei<lb/>
couple hundred<lb/>
drinks go to<lb/>
after each<lb/>
Haithcock solves<lb/>
prol<lb/>
simui<lb/>
lookj<lb/>
real<lb/>
tunal<lb/>
I<lb/>
bai<lb/>
ma<lb/>
V 1<lb/>
ass<lb/>
'TheQuiel<lb/>
Runs To<lb/>
Tomorrow ' s<lb/>
Special Movie<lb/>
Mendenhail is The<lb/>
Quiet Man, starring<lb/>
John Wayne. In his<lb/>
only corned)<lb/>
Wayne piav- a boxei<lb/>
who, after winning<lb/>
fame in -merica.<lb/>
returns to his na<lb/>
Ireland sworn<lb/>
fighting, he is con-<lb/>
sidered a coward bv<lb/>
the Irish town<lb/>
until he must I .<lb/>
win the beau<lb/>
woman he loves<lb/>
(Maureen O'Ha<lb/>
The winner<lb/>
Academy wards<lb/>
Best Director (John<lb/>
Ford) and Besl<lb/>
Qui<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN<lb/>
DEPEND ON von<lb/>
??"v women o lha t terrxng C eH<lb/>
&amp;oobtm Oov arvs -ci?"? c <lb/>
Jtona you Your lote'V<lb/>
OMur?d bv th? conng ikjff at I<lb/>
SHMCB. ? Tu-Mdov ScmJ<lb/>
parHmtit m 1i ? 2nd Tn<lb/>
18 Weeks ? ttee Pregrmo.<lb/>
Pregnancy Te?s ? All lncu<lb/>
Accepted ? CAli W-S550 <lb/>
??0th cow, cxxiretrairig<lb/>
X3 xKicotor vwo-<lb/>
. i<lb/>
(?'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0011"/><lb/>
)e readily available f<lb/>
l&amp;P Store except as<lb/>
D<lb/>
WHOLESALERS<lb/>
ONS<lb/>
HJMi<lb/>
LSE - 5 COUPONS.<lb/>
I 0 COUPONS<lb/>
ICE VALUE'<lb/>
Great with AiP s<lb/>
hgs coupons<lb/>
50<lb/>
36-<lb/>
$1 00<lb/>
$1 00<lb/>
1<lb/>
68<lb/>
58<lb/>
ft<lb/>
SAVE $1.50<lb/>
III<lb/>
30 LB.<lb/>
is Apples<lb/>
N GOLDEN<lb/>
99?<lb/>
E UP TO 50<lb/>
Tea Bags<lb/>
ILY SIZE<lb/>
I<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
E $1.10<lb/>
ItPQt lce<lb/>
iiuoi Cream<lb/>
IAVORS<lb/>
!59<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
One<lb/>
VE20<lb/>
age Cola<lb/>
JLAR &amp; DIET<lb/>
I<lb/>
Limit<lb/>
Two<lb/>
ipes for<lb/>
kware<lb/>
With $200 Worth<lb/>
A&amp;PGold<lb/>
register tapes<lb/>
8 8 Stainless Steel<lb/>
with 3 layer tn-piy<lb/>
lorn for better cooking<lb/>
. August 28th<lb/>
fed. redeem them at the<lb/>
for the next cookware<lb/>
rogram This offer is<lb/>
nter<lb/>
I N.C.<lb/>
<lb/>
JobsLookGood<lb/>
Fcr Bartenders<lb/>
With Finesse<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 30, 1983 11<lb/>
Bv PHER RING<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
If you've ever pur-<lb/>
chased a mixed drink,<lb/>
chances are you didn't<lb/>
give much though to<lb/>
what is involved in<lb/>
becoming a<lb/>
bartender, or a<lb/>
"mixologist" as they<lb/>
are sometimes called.<lb/>
For the past three<lb/>
years, the East<lb/>
Carolina School of<lb/>
Bartending has train-<lb/>
ed many of the<lb/>
bartenders in Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina as<lb/>
well as the Southeast.<lb/>
Owned and managed<lb/>
by Stuart Haithcock,<lb/>
the school relocated<lb/>
to 510 Cotanche St.<lb/>
from its original loca-<lb/>
tion on Arlington<lb/>
Boulevard this past<lb/>
June.<lb/>
"Business is boom-<lb/>
ing exclaimed<lb/>
Haithcock. Ever since<lb/>
relocating downtown,<lb/>
the school has enroll-<lb/>
ed a steady supply of<lb/>
students eager to learn<lb/>
the art of mixology.<lb/>
Students are also will-<lb/>
ing to sacrifice $250<lb/>
for the 30 hours of in-<lb/>
struction needed to<lb/>
complete the course.<lb/>
Haithcock, an ex-<lb/>
perienced bartender<lb/>
himself, instructs<lb/>
most of the three-<lb/>
hour long weeknight<lb/>
classes. During the<lb/>
first week of class,<lb/>
students are reguired<lb/>
to learn approximate-<lb/>
ly 150 different<lb/>
recipes ranging from<lb/>
pink ladies to mar-<lb/>
tinis. Each student<lb/>
works out nightly<lb/>
behind the training<lb/>
bar, mixing one drink<lb/>
after another while<lb/>
trying to increase his<lb/>
speed and improve the<lb/>
quality of his service.<lb/>
Students become<lb/>
familiar with the<lb/>
area's more popular<lb/>
drinks, such as the<lb/>
white Russian, mai tai<lb/>
and the triple sec iced<lb/>
tea, and they also<lb/>
learn the proper ser-<lb/>
vice of beer, wine and<lb/>
other bar staples.<lb/>
But how can the<lb/>
school afford to let a<lb/>
couple hundred mixed<lb/>
drinks go to waste<lb/>
after each class?<lb/>
Haithcock solves the<lb/>
problem by using<lb/>
simulated liquors that<lb/>
look exactly like the<lb/>
real ones. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, tuition does<lb/>
not include happy<lb/>
hour.<lb/>
There is more to<lb/>
bartending than just<lb/>
making drinks. Part<lb/>
of the training in-<lb/>
volves skills to im-<lb/>
prove rapport with<lb/>
customers. Being able<lb/>
to remember names of<lb/>
regular clients is one<lb/>
skill that Haithcock<lb/>
stresses in his pro-<lb/>
gram, along with be-<lb/>
ing a good listener.<lb/>
Personal ap-<lb/>
pearance is another<lb/>
key point. A sharp-<lb/>
looking, fast<lb/>
bartender can always<lb/>
expect a better yield in<lb/>
tips.<lb/>
Although you pro-<lb/>
bably won't make<lb/>
your first million serv-<lb/>
ing drinks, there is a<lb/>
good possibility you'll<lb/>
be able to find work<lb/>
in any town that has<lb/>
liquor by the drink.<lb/>
"There are plenty of<lb/>
bartending jobs<lb/>
said Haithcock.<lb/>
"They open up every<lb/>
day In these times<lb/>
of high unemploy-<lb/>
ment, this is an<lb/>
unusual thing to hear,<lb/>
considering the<lb/>
average bartender<lb/>
makes about four<lb/>
dollars an hour and<lb/>
$25 in tips per night.<lb/>
College students find<lb/>
bartending an ex-<lb/>
cellent way to bring in<lb/>
extra cash.<lb/>
In the past three<lb/>
years, over 600<lb/>
students ranging in<lb/>
age from 18 to 50<lb/>
have graduated from<lb/>
the school. According<lb/>
to Haithcock, 85 per-<lb/>
cent have found<lb/>
employment in the<lb/>
Southeast with many<lb/>
remaining in the<lb/>
Grcenville area.<lb/>
"People will always<lb/>
drink said<lb/>
Haithcock, "whether<lb/>
times are good or<lb/>
times are bad<lb/>
And they'll always<lb/>
need that friendly, ef-<lb/>
ficient neighborhood<lb/>
barkeep. Stuart<lb/>
Haithcock feels confi-<lb/>
dent his program and<lb/>
his students will be<lb/>
able to fill that need.<lb/>
'TheQuiet Mart<lb/>
RunsTomorrow<lb/>
Tomorrow's<lb/>
Special Movie at<lb/>
Mendenhall is The<lb/>
Quiet Man, starring<lb/>
John Wayne. In his<lb/>
only comedy role,<lb/>
Wayne plays a boxer<lb/>
who, after winning<lb/>
fame in America,<lb/>
returns to his native<lb/>
Ireland. Sworn off<lb/>
fighting, he is con-<lb/>
sidered a coward by<lb/>
the Irish town folks<lb/>
until he must fight to<lb/>
win the beautiful<lb/>
woman he loves<lb/>
(Maureen O'Hara).<lb/>
The winner of<lb/>
Academy Awards for<lb/>
Best Director (John<lb/>
Ford) and Best<lb/>
Cinematography, The<lb/>
Quiet Man boasts<lb/>
authentic Irish actors,<lb/>
exquisite settings and<lb/>
the trademark<lb/>
WayneFord bare-<lb/>
fisted climactic fight<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
The free flick airs at<lb/>
8 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre. Admission is<lb/>
by student ID and ac-<lb/>
tivity card or MSC<lb/>
membership.<lb/>
KKSKAKC'H PAPERS<lb/>
 89 to rhoos ?? an suOict?'<lb/>
Bulh$?lo'rr?cu"?ni 30 rv- ?'?<lb/>
I 'Ofl Cu??0?r. rCMa.c &amp; ??.? aSSS<lb/>
I? t V ?. ir ?<lb/>
Rr?mrrk. I I 32? IO?hc A.e ?206W<lb/>
. ?. no??C90025i?'31477 8226<lb/>
cT-e,<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
sits.oo rViftucy T?tt. ttri<lb/>
CMtl ? ??11 "?????W. <lb/>
rVt-fKltCV CtvxMll! F<lb/>
htrmm tmHrmtttmt c?i:<lb/>
013-SS1S (Toil ft? NiMRfcvr<lb/>
?M-tll-lMf) ttw? AAS<lb/>
n4 S P.M. WNkilVI.<lb/>
? ALKIOHS WOMiNI<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
OttOAMIZATIOM<lb/>
?irwMfMaraw<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN Ascxmo a difficult oeo-<lb/>
DEPEND ON. sion that's mode easier by<lb/>
' e women of the Fleming Center. Counselors ore<lb/>
ovoiiobie day and night to support and under-<lb/>
stand you Your safety, comfort ond privacy ore<lb/>
assured by the coring staff of the Rermng Center<lb/>
WMCtt ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
POtntmenfsB 1st A 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
18 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Eorty<lb/>
Pregnancy Teats ? AJJ Inclusive Fees 0 Insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? CAU 7ti46e0 DAY Ot NiGMT ?<lb/>
?oithcoJi counseling TUC B CAJIMA<lb/>
education for wo- mt ruwwm<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Fr?th Daily - S Lb. Pack Or More<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, September 3,1983<lb/>
$758<lb/>
" 4 Lbs.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Swift - Sliced FREE<lb/>
Hostess<lb/>
Hams<lb/>
Fresh Daily<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Chuck<lb/>
Strnt Juicy<lb/>
Icebox<lb/>
Watermelons<lb/>
95<lb/>
49<lb/>
Pk?. ?' 12 - 12 Oz. Cam<lb/>
Schlitz<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Pk?. of 12 ? 12 Oz. Coot<lb/>
Old<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
$229<lb/>
Pk?. of 6 12 Or Cans<lb/>
Miller<lb/>
Lite<lb/>
89<lb/>
2<lb/>
8 Coaat - HiMtirfor ft Hot D09<lb/>
Food Lion<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057569_0012"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1983 page 12<lb/>
Hop<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sportitdlior<lb/>
In five days, the ECU football<lb/>
team will once again head for<lb/>
Florida State to try and gain a lit-<lb/>
tle respect.<lb/>
This will be the third meeting<lb/>
between the Seminoles and the<lb/>
Pirates. In 1980, FSU devastated<lb/>
the Bucs, 63-7. Last season, the<lb/>
Seminoles offense exploded in the<lb/>
first half, and the Division-1<lb/>
powerhouse walked away with a<lb/>
56-17 victory.<lb/>
If the Pirates aren't playing for<lb/>
respect, they certainly could have<lb/>
another motive. Revenge. Emory,<lb/>
however, is going with the first<lb/>
one.<lb/>
"We're fighting for respect<lb/>
said Head Coach Ed Emory.<lb/>
"Our goal this season is for cons-<lb/>
tant improvement, and we'll be<lb/>
tested very' quickly with an opener<lb/>
against a team like Florida State.<lb/>
We need to be more competitive<lb/>
against a great team and to make<lb/>
the football game a close one<lb/>
How can the Bucs make the<lb/>
game a close one? After last vear's<lb/>
From<lb/>
showing, the answer is easy. Ex-<lb/>
ecution will be the difficult part.<lb/>
The Seminoles scored on plays<lb/>
after ECU fumbled, threw a pass<lb/>
interception and another fumble<lb/>
before halftime. The Pirates also<lb/>
gave up a 67-yard pass that set up<lb/>
another Seminole touchdown,<lb/>
giving FSU a 35-3 lead at the half.<lb/>
In the second half, FSU scored<lb/>
three times while the Pirates<lb/>
scored twice.<lb/>
"First, we have to eliminate the<lb/>
big play Emory said. "Florida<lb/>
State is going to get at least one<lb/>
big play on every team they face.<lb/>
We have to keep that number at a<lb/>
minimum.<lb/>
"Secondly, we must make them<lb/>
spend time moving the football<lb/>
and, at the same time, we've got<lb/>
to move the ball<lb/>
Offensive Coordinator Art<lb/>
Baker agreed after looking at last<lb/>
season's film. "Last year they<lb/>
threw bombs he said. "Then<lb/>
two men would both go up and<lb/>
come down empty-handed. We<lb/>
can't make mistakes like that<lb/>
The quarterback on the other<lb/>
end of those passes was FSU stan-<lb/>
dout Kelly Lowrey. The 6-1,<lb/>
225-pound senior was nine for 15<lb/>
for 237 yards against the Bucs.<lb/>
"As for Kelly Lowrey, we're get-<lb/>
ting ready to play against him.<lb/>
But should he not play (Lowrey's<lb/>
presently out with sprained<lb/>
shoulder), Coach Bowden has fine<lb/>
talent with his number two and<lb/>
three people<lb/>
This Saturday's game will be<lb/>
the season opener for both teams,<lb/>
and both Baker and Emory stress-<lb/>
ed the importance ?of that crucial<lb/>
first game. "How we play against<lb/>
Florida State is how we'll play<lb/>
against other teams Baker said.<lb/>
"Every team has their own per-<lb/>
sonality, and we should see a<lb/>
some of ours at Florida State.<lb/>
They're (FSU) on a roll right now,<lb/>
but in a sensewe're on a roll too<lb/>
Emory named two reasons why<lb/>
the opening bout is so detrimen-<lb/>
tal. "The first game is important<lb/>
for confidence. Secondly, playing<lb/>
FSU improves our credibility<lb/>
Although Emory has con-<lb/>
sistently praised the Pirate offense<lb/>
as being possibly the quickest ever<lb/>
at ECU, he quickly pointed out<lb/>
that the Bucs will meet their<lb/>
match at FSU. "Florida State just<lb/>
has so many skill people with so<lb/>
much speed he said. "It scares<lb/>
me for our secondary. Heck, their<lb/>
defense couldn't stop the skill<lb/>
people in their spring game, and<lb/>
they have a very fine defense<lb/>
The Seminoles, however, won't<lb/>
be the only sharp-looking team on<lb/>
the field Saturday, according to<lb/>
Emory. "I'll tell you what, you'll<lb/>
see two good teams out there.<lb/>
We're not playing to prove we<lb/>
belong in Division-I. We're play-<lb/>
ing to show we've closed the gap<lb/>
even more.<lb/>
"If we lose, it's not the end of<lb/>
the world he continued, "no<lb/>
matter what the score is. The em-<lb/>
phasis shouldn't be put into winn-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Then the head coach ended with<lb/>
the most well-known but fitting<lb/>
cliche: "It's how we play that<lb/>
counts<lb/>
ROB POOLE ECU Ffcoto i?b<lb/>
ECU offensive coordinator Art Baker, shown here, hopes the Bucs will<lb/>
show some of their personality in Saturday night's opening game.<lb/>
ECU Schedule Features Many Long Trips<lb/>
By KEN BOLTON<lb/>
Assimar Sports Editor<lb/>
(Note: This is the first in a two-<lb/>
part series on ECU's 1983 op-<lb/>
penents. The second part will ap-<lb/>
pear in Thursday's edition.j<lb/>
ECU's 1983 football schedule<lb/>
might look like it belongs in a<lb/>
travel brochure, but the Pirates<lb/>
are hoping to take advantage of<lb/>
their opportunistic journeys.<lb/>
Of ECU's 11 games this year,<lb/>
seven are away from home, in-<lb/>
cluding three trips to the state of<lb/>
Florida and treks through<lb/>
Missouri, Pennsylvania and<lb/>
Mississippi.<lb/>
The Pirates' schedule, the<lb/>
toughest in school history, in-<lb/>
cludes battles with six in-<lb/>
dependents as well as teams from<lb/>
the Big Eight conference<lb/>
(Missouri), the Southeastern con-<lb/>
ference (Florida), and the ACC<lb/>
(N.C. State).<lb/>
Following is a round-up of<lb/>
ECU's 1983 opponents:<lb/>
Florida State University<lb/>
Sept. 3 ? 7:00 p.m. '<lb/>
DOAK CAMPBELL STADIUM<lb/>
Many experts have picked the<lb/>
Seminoles as the best team in the<lb/>
country ? and for good reason.<lb/>
FSU has no less than 16 starters<lb/>
returning from last year's team<lb/>
that averaged almost 35 points per<lb/>
game while posting a 9-3 record ?<lb/>
including a 31-12 defeat of West<lb/>
Virginia in the Gator Bowl.<lb/>
In the wire service polls released<lb/>
Manahan Shines On Squad<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
When other softball teams<lb/>
are putting away their ball and<lb/>
bats, Head Softball Coach Sue<lb/>
Manahan is just gearing up for<lb/>
her team's championship<lb/>
playoffs this weekend.<lb/>
Manahan's team, The<lb/>
Stompers, will defend their title<lb/>
at the American Softball<lb/>
Association (ASA) Major Open<lb/>
Slow-Pitch Tournament in<lb/>
Montgomery, Ala. The<lb/>
Stompers are now 55-5.<lb/>
"We've won every tourna-<lb/>
ment we played in except one<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
One reason the Richmond,<lb/>
Va team has been so successful<lb/>
is because of Manahan. She's<lb/>
averaged over .400 in batting<lb/>
and has been thrice-named to an<lb/>
all-tournament team. In one<lb/>
tournament, Manahan hit a<lb/>
steady .700. "I don't think I got<lb/>
an out all day she said.<lb/>
"Nothing just went wrong<lb/>
The head coach isn't the only<lb/>
East Carolina connection on the<lb/>
nationally-recognized team.<lb/>
Fast-pitch pitcher Stacy<lb/>
Boyette, a 4.0 student, also<lb/>
spent her summer in Richmond<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
According to Manahan, the<lb/>
softball team won't begin prac-<lb/>
tice for their new fast-pitch<lb/>
season until after Labor Day<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
But then it's all business as<lb/>
usual. "We lost everybody in<lb/>
outfield except Melody Ham<lb/>
Manahan said. "We've got a lot<lb/>
of work to do<lb/>
Because of the switch to fast-<lb/>
pitch play, Manahan's main<lb/>
concern will be offense. "It's<lb/>
gonna take some time to<lb/>
develop reaction she said.<lb/>
"Offensively, we'll have to put<lb/>
in a lot of time<lb/>
Although the schedule has<lb/>
not been completed, Manahan<lb/>
said an emphasis has been put<lb/>
on lining up very strong com-<lb/>
petitors. "We'll be playing<lb/>
against teams who are in our<lb/>
position she said.<lb/>
Florida State and UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill, two of ECU's op-<lb/>
ponents, will also make the<lb/>
transition to fast-pitch. George<lb/>
Mason, ranked fifth in the na-<lb/>
tion last year, will be another<lb/>
team on the Pirates' schedule.<lb/>
Competition, however, is<lb/>
nothing new to the Pirates. In<lb/>
fact, last season the Lady Bucs<lb/>
beat FSU here to mark one of<lb/>
the biggest upsets of the year.<lb/>
The Seminoles have a budget<lb/>
$83,000 larger than ECU.<lb/>
"There's no way we should<lb/>
have won that game if you look<lb/>
at the odds, but then again we<lb/>
had such a strong team<lb/>
Manahan said.<lb/>
What about this year's team?<lb/>
"We're gonna be young, but<lb/>
we've got players with a lot of<lb/>
heart, players that will put<lb/>
out<lb/>
When asked if several of the<lb/>
players opposed the transition<lb/>
to fast-pitch, Manahan quickly<lb/>
said yes. "In the beginning,<lb/>
several said they just weren't<lb/>
going to play, but the girls with<lb/>
fast-pitch experience persuaded<lb/>
them to give it a try. They con-<lb/>
vinced them that it just might be<lb/>
a challenge. 1 think they'll be<lb/>
happy to be back<lb/>
As for Manahan, she hasn't<lb/>
quite made up her mind yet<lb/>
about the team's new style of<lb/>
play. "I'm not sure if I'm hap-<lb/>
py or not. We were so successful<lb/>
in slow pitch.<lb/>
"We'll just have to wait and<lb/>
see<lb/>
last weekend, the Seminoles were<lb/>
ranked No. 7 in both the AP and<lb/>
UPI listings.<lb/>
In last year's meeting of the two<lb/>
schools, Florida State rolled up<lb/>
706 yards in total offense to<lb/>
tomahawk the Pirates, 56-17.<lb/>
Seminole head coach Bobby<lb/>
Bowden, in his eighth season at<lb/>
the FSU helm, is quick to point<lb/>
out that his squad will not be<lb/>
looking past ECU.<lb/>
"It would be nice to start think-<lb/>
ing about LSU or Auburn or<lb/>
somebody else right now but we<lb/>
can't do that Bowden stated.<lb/>
"You ask anybody whose studied<lb/>
their (East Carolina's) program<lb/>
and who knows what they've got<lb/>
coming back and they'll tell you<lb/>
to watch out<lb/>
Bowden will have more than<lb/>
enough ammunition to throw at<lb/>
the Pirates in next Saturday<lb/>
night's game, which is the season-<lb/>
opener for both teams.<lb/>
Returning for the Sejninoles is<lb/>
tailback Greg Allen, who led the<lb/>
nation in scoring last year with 21<lb/>
touchdowns ? four against ECU.<lb/>
He was also seventh in kickoff<lb/>
returns (25.7) and 11th in all-<lb/>
purpose yardage (138.5).<lb/>
Defensive tackle Alphonso Car-<lb/>
reker, who has made many pre-<lb/>
season All-America teams, will<lb/>
anchor an FSU defense which he<lb/>
feels will be better than last year's.<lb/>
"Everyone's improved over last<lb/>
season and we've got a lot of<lb/>
depth at all positions Carreker<lb/>
said. "But I expect East Carolina<lb/>
to be really hyped up this year,<lb/>
especially since we've beaten them<lb/>
the last-two years<lb/>
And if the Pirates can play up<lb/>
to their potential, they may return<lb/>
home with a few Seminole scalps<lb/>
in their hands.<lb/>
North Carolina State Universitv<lb/>
Sept. 10? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
CARTER-FINLEY STADIUM<lb/>
Anytime ECU and N.C. State<lb/>
play football, it's a big game.<lb/>
With the two schools located only<lb/>
85 miles apart, this annual contest<lb/>
is a chance for both schools to<lb/>
gain some bragging rights.<lb/>
The biggest question mark for<lb/>
N.C. State in pre-season practice<lb/>
has been the quarterback posi-<lb/>
tion. With Tol Avery gone from<lb/>
last year's 6-5 team, there is not a<lb/>
QB on the team that has ever<lb/>
taken a snap in a game for the<lb/>
Wolfpack.<lb/>
The battle for the signal-caller<lb/>
job is shaping up between a pair<lb/>
of JUCO transfers ? Tim<lb/>
Esposito and Bob Guidice. At<lb/>
tailback, Joe Mclntosh. who was<lb/>
the ACC Rookie of the Year in<lb/>
1981, only managed 780 yards<lb/>
during an injury-fraught '82.<lb/>
The new Wolfpack coach is<lb/>
Tom Reed, who replaced Monte<lb/>
Kiffin after last season. After the<lb/>
fall practices started mounting.<lb/>
Reed was optimistic about his new<lb/>
club's outlook.<lb/>
"1 think we have the ability to<lb/>
be a competitive football team<lb/>
Reed stated.<lb/>
See ECU, Page 13<lb/>
ECU Opener To Be Televised<lb/>
FSU-ECU Game Televised:<lb/>
WITN-TV, Channel 7, will carry<lb/>
a live telecast of the game from<lb/>
Tallahassee, Fla. The NBC net-<lb/>
work station will have Dick Jones<lb/>
relaying play-by-play, and Paul<lb/>
Baker giving color commentary.<lb/>
Head Football Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory was elated that fans would<lb/>
ing from school. Herndon, who<lb/>
had been running number two<lb/>
since Williams' absence, has been<lb/>
having problems with his joints.<lb/>
"He said it had become very pain-<lb/>
ful for him to play Emory said.<lb/>
At linebacker, Ron Reid is hav-<lb/>
ing arthroscopic knee surgery and<lb/>
may be out for four or five weeks.<lb/>
be able to watch the Pirates play Also on the injured list are Offen-<lb/>
this Saturday. "We represent this sive Guard Ricky Hilburn with a<lb/>
school, and I'm just happy our bad knee and Greg Thomas with a<lb/>
fans will have a chance to watch fractured shoulder.<lb/>
"With our injuries and lack of<lb/>
depth, we are not the football<lb/>
team right now we expected to<lb/>
be Emory said.<lb/>
he said. "I think our kids are<lb/>
ready to play on television. We'll<lb/>
do our best to represent this<lb/>
school well<lb/>
Cindy Pleasants<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Academic Losses: Laurinburg<lb/>
Sophomore Greg Quick, a starter<lb/>
at right tackle, and Laurinburg<lb/>
senior Tony Smith, an alternating<lb/>
starter at noseguard, were both<lb/>
declared academically ineligible<lb/>
last week. Goldsboro sophomore<lb/>
Bubba Bunn, a tailback, has also<lb/>
been found ineligible to attend<lb/>
ECU. While both are eligible by<lb/>
NCAA rules, the three athletes<lb/>
don't meet ECU standards.<lb/>
"Both players are great losses to<lb/>
us said Emory. "It's hard to<lb/>
Good Scrimmage: After a<lb/>
disappointing scrimmage last<lb/>
week in the hot weather, this<lb/>
Saturday's game proved to be<lb/>
more positive, according to<lb/>
Emory. "It was very good he<lb/>
said. "We probably scored two or find good big men, and both Greg<lb/>
three times and Tony were big and good. Our<lb/>
The Bucs practiced third-and- depth is really hurt by their loss<lb/>
short, third-and-long and goaHine<lb/>
situations.<lb/>
Having gone through 47 prac- academic losses are are something<lb/>
tices, Emory added that the Bucs he doesn't count on. "That just<lb/>
are tired of hitting each other and kills you he said. "If you lose<lb/>
are ready to take on someone else, four to injuries, that ups your<lb/>
moved Rich Autry to offensive<lb/>
guard from tight end. Likewise,<lb/>
we have moved Darrell Speed<lb/>
from quarterback to running<lb/>
back<lb/>
Top Rushers Back: Five of last<lb/>
year's top rushers are back for the<lb/>
'83 season. Tony Baker is the<lb/>
leading returner with 827 yards<lb/>
last year in 10 games. He has a 6.6<lb/>
average. He returns as the 16th<lb/>
top rusher in the country. Just<lb/>
behind is fullback Earnest Byner<lb/>
with 768 yards and a 5.5 average<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
Top Scorers Return Record-<lb/>
setting placekicker Jeff Heath<lb/>
leads the way with 75 points.<lb/>
Should he continue in that pace.<lb/>
Heath could become the Pirates'<lb/>
all-time leading scorer in four<lb/>
years. Quarterback Kevin Ingram<lb/>
was second last season with 48<lb/>
points, while Earnest Byner had<lb/>
36 points.<lb/>
State Tickets Still On Sale: A<lb/>
few tickets for the N.C. State-<lb/>
ECU game are still available, but<lb/>
only a few are left. The remaining<lb/>
Emory added that he expects to tickets can be purchased at hi<lb/>
lose a few players to mjuries, but Ticket office in Minge?a,lkeUm<lb/>
This type of offensive-line surge should help the Pirates when they battle No. 7 Florida State Saturday night<lb/>
in Tallahassee.<lb/>
Injuries: Steve Hamilton is<lb/>
back in action, although Emory<lb/>
said the defensive tackle is about<lb/>
70 percent right now. Quarter-<lb/>
back John Williams, who has<lb/>
been badly needed to back up<lb/>
Kevin Ingram, is working at about<lb/>
75 percent after recovering from a<lb/>
hurt ankle.<lb/>
The biggest loss came this week<lb/>
when quarterback Brian Herndon<lb/>
announced that he was withdraw-<lb/>
total to seven. That's when you<lb/>
start getting worried<lb/>
Position Changes: Because of<lb/>
injuries, the coaching staff has<lb/>
Going For The Big 10 ECU has<lb/>
had nine winning seasons in the<lb/>
last 11 years and would like verv<lb/>
much to make that 10 in 12 years<lb/>
No other Division I-A team irTthe<lb/>
7 HtUe r3?S wfnnina Car?Hna ?<lb/>
now, we have got tl Lc X 5KeT!E5 tnfp?Ugh C<lb/>
healing in a hurry Emory said Z iV?i lJC Plratcs ?<lb/>
"Our depth has just been accumnlirJ' 2?Piratcs e<lb/>
depleted, especially on the oFfen Tat mk hff E?'1 record<lb/>
line with injuries and an i?" TJ11 ?blished<lb/>
our<lb/>
Three former<lb/>
athletes and one<lb/>
former coach arc be-<lb/>
ing inducted this fail<lb/>
into the East Carolina<lb/>
University Sports Hall<lb/>
of Fame. The four<lb/>
will bring the total<lb/>
number to 42 in the<lb/>
Sports Hall of Fame<lb/>
Howard Gerald<lb/>
Porter, former<lb/>
basketball coach.<lb/>
Lieutenant Colonel<lb/>
James Carl Thomas,<lb/>
former basketball<lb/>
player; William Mor-<lb/>
ris Hill, former<lb/>
wrestler; and Richard<lb/>
Foley Cherry. Jr<lb/>
former football<lb/>
player, are the in<lb/>
ductees for 1983.<lb/>
The induction<lb/>
ceremonies will occur<lb/>
during halftime of the<lb/>
first home football<lb/>
game on September<lb/>
17 at 7 p.m. vs Mur-<lb/>
ray State Universitv.<lb/>
Originated in 1974<lb/>
the ECU Sports HaJl<lb/>
of Fame honors those<lb/>
individuals who have.<lb/>
by their direct par-<lb/>
ticipation in East<lb/>
Carolina Universitv<lb/>
intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics, brought<lb/>
outstanding recogni-<lb/>
tion to themselves and<lb/>
to the universitv. Ten<lb/>
were inducted in 19"4.<lb/>
but no more than four<lb/>
may be inducted per<lb/>
year at present.<lb/>
Howard Porter<lb/>
served as ECU head<lb/>
basketl<lb/>
194- l<lb/>
the<lb/>
coach<lb/>
wins<lb/>
basketl<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Sp;<lb/>
s e a s o<lb/>
team<lb/>
183-K<lb/>
cent),<lb/>
school<lb/>
historj<lb/>
Over<lb/>
Po-<lb/>
losing!<lb/>
Thcl<lb/>
ended<lb/>
inciudl<lb/>
Natioi<lb/>
of<lb/>
A t h 1 I<lb/>
Chai<lb/>
Kansj<lb/>
23 <lb/>
and<lb/>
are i<lb/>
that<lb/>
Carol<lb/>
Thel<lb/>
with<lb/>
recor,<lb/>
to th<lb/>
namei<lb/>
Poi<lb/>
five<lb/>
besi<lb/>
I<lb/>
do.<lb/>
thai <lb/>
I<lb/>
s t r u<lb/>
( ai<lb/>
ECU Sch<lb/>
Loaded H<lb/>
Top Pow<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 12<lb/>
As in the past, this<lb/>
year's game plans to<lb/>
be a wild affair ?<lb/>
both on the field and<lb/>
in the stands.<lb/>
Murray State<lb/>
University<lb/>
Sept. 17? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM<lb/>
This vear's contest<lb/>
will be the first<lb/>
meeting between ECU<lb/>
and Murray State.<lb/>
The Racers, located in<lb/>
Murray. KY. are<lb/>
members of the Ohio<lb/>
Valley Conference.<lb/>
On paper, the<lb/>
Racers can't match up<lb/>
to the Pirates as far as<lb/>
depth of qualitv<lb/>
athletes. MSU lost 17<lb/>
starters from a team<lb/>
that went 4 last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Racers are led<lb/>
by head coach Frank<lb/>
Beamer, who is 12-10<lb/>
after two years at<lb/>
Murray State.<lb/>
Players to watch on<lb/>
the Murray State team<lb/>
include wide receiver<lb/>
Stan Trice, tight end<lb/>
Bart Robinson,<lb/>
fullback Neal Cumm-<lb/>
ings and defensive<lb/>
back Ralph Robin-<lb/>
Son.<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Oct. 1 ? 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
FAUROT FIELD<lb/>
With a couple of<lb/>
j-eaks, ECU could<lb/>
Have beaten the Tigers<lb/>
P last year's contest.<lb/>
Already into the<lb/>
gurth quarter, ECU<lb/>
trailing 14-9 after<lb/>
ee Jeff Heath field<lb/>
Is (45, 38 and 42<lb/>
ds).<lb/>
But the Tigers used<lb/>
59-yard TD run by<lb/>
c Drain late in the<lb/>
e to seal the vie-<lb/>
over the stubborn<lb/>
ates.<lb/>
Mizzou lost seven<lb/>
ers on defense,<lb/>
v m ? .<lb/>
t m w ? - -<lb/>
but mi<lb/>
tackl<lb/>
Jav<lb/>
returi<lb/>
sen <lb/>
Th:<lb/>
ing r<lb/>
behn<lb/>
Oklalv<lb/>
Eu<lb/>
schedi<lb/>
Soom<lb/>
at hot<lb/>
UM<lb/>
the : i<lb/>
Mi?<lb/>
SO: <lb/>
line.<lb/>
GoouJ<lb/>
La<lb/>
punc<lb/>
posmo<lb/>
that<lb/>
n arrei<lb/>
cued<lb/>
group,<lb/>
the<lb/>
j<lb/>
we've<lb/>
he<lb/>
more<lb/>
w e' v e<lb/>
d<lb/>
Oc:<lb/>
FICKL<lb/>
Out<lb/>
termeni<lb/>
Cajum<lb/>
year' s<lb/>
started<lb/>
depth<lb/>
letterr<lb/>
The<lb/>
Lafavi<lb/>
c o a c hi<lb/>
RoberJ<lb/>
nesseef<lb/>
is 15-<lb/>
his foi<lb/>
The'<lb/>
betwel<lb/>
school<lb/>
The<lb/>
won tt<lb/>
in l1<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
the ne<lb/>
38-9.<lb/>
In<lb/>
South!<lb/>
siansa<lb/>
lost a <lb/>
in 198<lb/>
sive<lb/>
academic casualty " iff. ??? moved fron,<lb/>
?To he,p ou, ??.???. we ?,ve SrtSSlSSft ??-<lb/>
<lb/>
?  .<lb/>
?- n <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0013"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30, 1983<lb/>
13<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
!B ?OOi.E ECU PHoto L?b<lb/>
n ht-rt hopes the Bucs will<lb/>
 nitjht s opening game.<lb/>
'ips<lb/>
chools to<lb/>
n mark tor<lb/>
season practice<lb/>
uai terback posi-<lb/>
 - g one from<lb/>
tm, there is not a<lb/>
.at has eer<lb/>
game for the<lb/>
<lb/>
i nal-caller<lb/>
etv.een a pair<lb/>
L CO transfers ? Tim<lb/>
bsno and Bob Guidice. At<lb/>
lack. Joe Mclmosh. who was<lb/>
ACC Rookie of the Year in<lb/>
aged 780 yards<lb/>
-fraught '82.<lb/>
a Wolfpack coach is<lb/>
replaced Monte<lb/>
After the<lb/>
nounting.<lb/>
it his new<lb/>
ability to<lb/>
?ball team<lb/>
Nft ECU, Pane 13<lb/>
elevised<lb/>
'?. -? to offensive<lb/>
Likewise,<lb/>
h moved Darrell Speed<lb/>
quart running<lb/>
fp Rushers Back Five of last<lb/>
- rushers are back for the<lb/>
n Tony Baker is the<lb/>
2 yards<lb/>
He has a 6.6<lb/>
He returns as the 16th<lb/>
n the country. Just<lb/>
back Earnest Byner<lb/>
is and a 5.5 average<lb/>
I<lb/>
p Scorers Retu Record-<lb/>
g placekicker Jeff Heath<lb/>
? ' with 75 pomts.<lb/>
id he continue in that pace,<lb/>
could become the Pirates'<lb/>
ie leading scorer in four<lb/>
Quarterback Kevin Ingram<lb/>
econd last season with 48<lb/>
Is. while Earnest Bvner had<lb/>
mts.<lb/>
ite Tickets Still On Sale: A<lb/>
tickets for the N C State-<lb/>
game are still available but<lb/>
la tew are left. The remaining<lb/>
can be purchased at the<lb/>
office in Mmges Coliseum<lb/>
"g For The Big 10 ECL has<lb/>
r ne winning seasons in the<lb/>
years and would like vm<lb/>
ltrmnake thatl0ln 12 year's<lb/>
ther Division 1-A team m the<lb/>
I of North Carolina has mor<lb/>
?g seasons, although Nf<lb/>
does) match the P,rates wlth<lb/>
Jn 11 years, the Plates have<lb/>
nulated an 82-39-1 record<lb/>
mark has been estabhshed<lb/>
the Pirates moved fror?<lb/>
hi.Co nference Pl ay JJj<lb/>
outhern Independent status<lb/>
our Former Pirates To Enter Sports Hall<lb/>
Three former<lb/>
ithletes and one<lb/>
former coach are be-<lb/>
ing inducted this fall<lb/>
Into the East Carolina<lb/>
Jniversity Sports Hall<lb/>
f Fame. The four<lb/>
rill bring the total<lb/>
number to 42 in the<lb/>
Sports Hall of Fame.<lb/>
Howard Gerald<lb/>
iPorter, former<lb/>
basketball coach;<lb/>
Lieutenant Colonel<lb/>
(James Carl Thomas,<lb/>
former basketball<lb/>
player; William Mor-<lb/>
ris Hill, former<lb/>
wrestler; and Richard<lb/>
Foley Cherry, Jr<lb/>
former football<lb/>
player, are the in-<lb/>
ductees for 1983.<lb/>
The induction<lb/>
ceremonies will occur<lb/>
during halftime of the<lb/>
first home football<lb/>
game on September<lb/>
17 at 7 p.m. vs Mur-<lb/>
ray State University.<lb/>
Originated in 1974,<lb/>
the ECU Sports Hall<lb/>
of Fame honors those<lb/>
individuals who have,<lb/>
by their direct par-<lb/>
ticipation in East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics, brought<lb/>
outstanding recogni-<lb/>
tion to themselves and<lb/>
to the university. Ten<lb/>
were inducted in 1974,<lb/>
but no more than four<lb/>
may be inducted per<lb/>
year at present.<lb/>
Howard Porter<lb/>
served as ECU's head<lb/>
basketball coach from<lb/>
1947-1959, recording<lb/>
the most games<lb/>
coached and the most<lb/>
wins coached of any<lb/>
basketball coach in<lb/>
ECU history.<lb/>
Spanning 12<lb/>
seasons. Porter's<lb/>
teams compiled a<lb/>
183-101 mark (64 per-<lb/>
cent), including the<lb/>
school's best season in<lb/>
history in 1953-54.<lb/>
Over the 12 seasons,<lb/>
Porter never had a<lb/>
losing season.<lb/>
The 1953-54 team<lb/>
ended the season 23-2,<lb/>
including a trip to the<lb/>
National Association<lb/>
of Intercollegiate<lb/>
Athletics National<lb/>
Championship in<lb/>
Kansas City, Md. The<lb/>
23 wins, two losses<lb/>
and 20-plus victories<lb/>
are all school records<lb/>
that still stand at East<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The 1952-53 team,<lb/>
with a final 18-5<lb/>
record, also advanced<lb/>
to the national tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
Porter holds the<lb/>
distinction of having<lb/>
five of the school's 10<lb/>
best seasons and can<lb/>
still look to the record<lb/>
books for more than a<lb/>
dozen school records<lb/>
that still stand from<lb/>
his coaching days.<lb/>
A long-time in-<lb/>
structor at East<lb/>
Carolina in the<lb/>
physical education<lb/>
ECU Schedule<lb/>
Loaded With<lb/>
Top Powers<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 12<lb/>
As in the past, this<lb/>
year's game plans to<lb/>
be a wild affair ?<lb/>
both on the field and<lb/>
in the stands.<lb/>
Murray State<lb/>
University<lb/>
Sept. 17? 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM<lb/>
This year's contest<lb/>
will be the first<lb/>
meeting between ECU<lb/>
and Murray State.<lb/>
The Racers, located in<lb/>
Murray, KY, are<lb/>
members of the Ohio<lb/>
Valley Conference.<lb/>
On paper, the<lb/>
Racers can't match up<lb/>
to the Pirates as far as<lb/>
depth of quality<lb/>
athletes. MSU lost 17<lb/>
starters from a team<lb/>
that went 4-7 last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
The Racers are led<lb/>
by head coach Frank<lb/>
Beamer, who is 12-10<lb/>
I after two years at<lb/>
Murray State.<lb/>
Players to watch on<lb/>
the Murray State team<lb/>
include wide receiver<lb/>
Stan Trice, tight end<lb/>
Bart Robinson,<lb/>
ifullback Neal Cumm-<lb/>
ings and defensive<lb/>
ack Ralph Robin-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Oct. 1 ? 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
FAUROT FIELD<lb/>
With a couple of<lb/>
reaks, ECU could<lb/>
lave beaten the Tigers<lb/>
last year's contest.<lb/>
Iready into the<lb/>
fourth quarter, ECU<lb/>
'as trailing 14-9 after<lb/>
iree Jeff Heath field<lb/>
oals (45, 38 and 42<lb/>
fards).<lb/>
But the Tigers used<lb/>
59-yard TD run by<lb/>
Sric Drain late in the<lb/>
ime to seal the vic-<lb/>
ry over the stubborn<lb/>
grates.<lb/>
Mizzou lost seven<lb/>
ters on defense,<lb/>
department, Porter is<lb/>
now retired in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
Lieutenant Colonel<lb/>
J.C. Thomas was call-<lb/>
ed by his basketball<lb/>
coach Howard Porter<lb/>
as the Finest overall<lb/>
basketball player ever<lb/>
at ECU. And it was<lb/>
during the Thomas-<lb/>
playing days that the<lb/>
Pirate teams recorded<lb/>
four of the finest<lb/>
years in school history<lb/>
with records of 18-15,<lb/>
23-2, 16-8 and 18-3<lb/>
from 1952-1956.<lb/>
A four-year starter,<lb/>
Thomas played in<lb/>
more games than any<lb/>
player in ECU<lb/>
history, serving as<lb/>
captain of the team<lb/>
and earning all-<lb/>
conference honors.<lb/>
Over his four years,<lb/>
but the teams leading<lb/>
tackier, linebacker<lb/>
Jay Wilson, will be<lb/>
returning for his<lb/>
senior year.<lb/>
The Tigers are be-<lb/>
ing picked to Finish<lb/>
behind Nebraska and<lb/>
Oklahoma in the Big<lb/>
Eight, but a favorable<lb/>
schedule (both the<lb/>
Sooners and 'Huskers<lb/>
at home) could help<lb/>
UM to challenge for<lb/>
the conference crown.<lb/>
Missouri will be<lb/>
solid on the offensive<lb/>
line, as Conrad<lb/>
Goode and Bernard<lb/>
Laster supply the<lb/>
punch at the guard<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
But it is defense<lb/>
that Missouri coach<lb/>
Warren Powers is ex-<lb/>
cited about. "As a<lb/>
group, I think this is<lb/>
the best class of<lb/>
defensive players that<lb/>
we've ever recruited<lb/>
he stated. "There's<lb/>
more talent than<lb/>
we've ever had<lb/>
Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana<lb/>
Oct. 8? 1:30p.m.<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM<lb/>
Out of the 17 let-<lb/>
termen that the Ragin<lb/>
Cajuns lost from last<lb/>
year's team, 12 were<lb/>
starters. So the overall<lb/>
depth is good with 41<lb/>
lettermen returning.<lb/>
The visitors from<lb/>
Lafayette, LA are<lb/>
coached by Sam<lb/>
Robertson, a Ten-<lb/>
nessee graduate who<lb/>
is 15-16-2 going into<lb/>
his fourth year.<lb/>
The series record<lb/>
between the two<lb/>
schools is tied 2-2-0.<lb/>
The Ragin Cajuns<lb/>
won the First game 9-7<lb/>
in 1977, but the<lb/>
Pirates bounced back<lb/>
the next year to win<lb/>
38-9.<lb/>
In 1980,<lb/>
Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siansa won 27-21 but<lb/>
lost a 35-31 decision<lb/>
in 1981.<lb/>
the team's combined<lb/>
record was 75-18.<lb/>
Not a flashy player<lb/>
nor a big scorer,<lb/>
Thomas was noted as<lb/>
the type of player that<lb/>
just made it happen.<lb/>
Defense was his<lb/>
specialty.<lb/>
During the Thomas<lb/>
era, the Pirates won<lb/>
48 consecutive home<lb/>
games in old<lb/>
Memorial Gym, a<lb/>
streak that ended at<lb/>
50 the year after<lb/>
Thomas graduated.<lb/>
After three con-<lb/>
ference champion-<lb/>
ships and two na-<lb/>
tional tournaments to<lb/>
his playing credit,<lb/>
Thomas was commis-<lb/>
sioned into the Air<lb/>
Force and served in<lb/>
Korea. He later earn-<lb/>
ed his master's degree<lb/>
? I<lb/>
rHtM<lb/>
Pirate Special<lb/>
good with coupon or E.C.U. I.D.<lb/>
Ribeye plus<lb/>
All You Can Eat Salad Bar<lb/>
Bev. and Free Dessert<lb/>
756-70n<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
Banquet Room<lb/>
Pick up your Student<lb/>
Discount Card from Manager<lb/>
Our Customer Ml us w? fcov? th? bott<lb/>
Salad Bar in town<lb/>
Com on by and you bo th? judge.<lb/>
Check Out Our<lb/>
$15-(5 meals)<lb/>
Meal Plan<lb/>
Serving Home Style Food at<lb/>
Reasonable Prices<lb/>
Lunch and dinner<lb/>
Specials Daily<lb/>
ll:00am-9:00pm Daily<lb/>
Take Out Order<lb/>
752-3997<lb/>
118 E. 5th St.<lb/>
1 Block From Campus<lb/>
With All ABC Permits<lb/>
ro<lb/>
and his Ph.D.<lb/>
For 14 years,<lb/>
Thomas was an in-<lb/>
structor and coach at<lb/>
the U.S. Air Force<lb/>
Academy. In 1980, he<lb/>
returned to Greenville<lb/>
and ECU to serve as<lb/>
head of the ROTC<lb/>
unit on campus, a<lb/>
position he holds to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Bill Hill was the<lb/>
finest wrestler in East<lb/>
Carolina's very suc-<lb/>
cessful and colorful<lb/>
wrestling program.<lb/>
Wrestling in the<lb/>
177-pound class, Hill<lb/>
finished fifth in the<lb/>
NCAA national<lb/>
championships in<lb/>
1974 and was named<lb/>
all-America, the only<lb/>
time an ECU wrestler<lb/>
ever earned the all-<lb/>
America title.<lb/>
During his four<lb/>
years on the team<lb/>
from 1970-74, Hill<lb/>
never missed a day of<lb/>
practice and wrestled<lb/>
in every scheduled<lb/>
match and tourna-<lb/>
ment match. Accor-<lb/>
ding to his head coach<lb/>
John Welborn, his<lb/>
perfect attendance<lb/>
record was as outstan-<lb/>
ding as his many ac-<lb/>
complishments.<lb/>
Named the outstan-<lb/>
ding freshman<lb/>
wrestler in 1971, Hill<lb/>
then was named most<lb/>
valuable on the ECU<lb/>
team in 1972, 1973<lb/>
and 1974. He was also<lb/>
named the best<lb/>
wrestler in the state of<lb/>
North Carolina in<lb/>
1973 and 1974 while<lb/>
serving as team cap-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
With an overall<lb/>
record of 122-15-1,<lb/>
Hill captured four<lb/>
Southern Conference<lb/>
titles, four North<lb/>
Carolina Collegiate<lb/>
championships. Dur-<lb/>
ing his senior season,<lb/>
he won seven tourna-<lb/>
ment titles.<lb/>
Hill is currently liv-<lb/>
ing in Winterville and<lb/>
teaching at Kinston<lb/>
High School.<lb/>
Dick Cherry rates<lb/>
as one of the best<lb/>
quarterbacks ever to<lb/>
play at ECU, guiding<lb/>
his freshman and<lb/>
sophomore teams to<lb/>
the first two bowl<lb/>
games in Pirate<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Playing for Jack<lb/>
Boone, Cherry was<lb/>
named all-conference<lb/>
three times, all-state<lb/>
in 1953 and honorable<lb/>
mention Little All-<lb/>
America in 1953. It<lb/>
was during the 1952<lb/>
and 1953 season that<lb/>
the Pirates were 6-3-2<lb/>
and 8-2-0.<lb/>
In 1953, Cherry<lb/>
threw four<lb/>
touchdown passes in<lb/>
one game while com-<lb/>
pleting the season<lb/>
with 16 total<lb/>
touchdown passes.<lb/>
Both set school<lb/>
records that stand to-<lb/>
day at East Carolina.<lb/>
With a broken<lb/>
ankle keeping him out<lb/>
of play in 1954,<lb/>
Cherry returned in<lb/>
1955 and 1956 to serve<lb/>
as the team's co-<lb/>
captain.<lb/>
The highlight of<lb/>
Cherry's career came<lb/>
in 1953 when East<lb/>
Carolina ripped<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne, the big<lb/>
rival at the time, 34-0.<lb/>
The Bears were coach-<lb/>
ed by Clarence<lb/>
Stasavich, who was to<lb/>
succeed Jack Boone<lb/>
as the Pirates' head<lb/>
coach in 1962. That<lb/>
marked only the se-<lb/>
cond time in history<lb/>
that ECU had beaten<lb/>
Lenoir-Rhyne and<lb/>
was one of only six<lb/>
wins over the Bears in<lb/>
21 tries in the early era<lb/>
of ECU football.<lb/>
Sherry resides in<lb/>
Washington and<lb/>
teaches at PS. Jones<lb/>
Junior High School.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR "SUPER HAPPY HOUR-<lb/>
DAILY 400-5:00 WED. and FRI 4:00-5:00<lb/>
Daily Specials:<lb/>
Monday- Gregs $2.99<lb/>
Tuesday - Any Vi Hero .50 off<lb/>
Wednesday - Cockney $2.49<lb/>
Thursday- Sprout Special $1.75<lb/>
Friday - Tossed Salad .59<lb/>
Saturday - Pastrami PU?up $2.59<lb/>
NEW DEU RESTAURANT<lb/>
U<lb/>
?LIVE.<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT WEEKLY<lb/>
Pizza Ixui<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas Are<lb/>
Now Being Delivered!<lb/>
Most delivery pizzas lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
PIZZA INN has changed<lb/>
all that!<lb/>
We sell our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices'<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
CALL 758-6266 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
$1 off any Large or<lb/>
Giant 3 topping Pizza<lb/>
?<lb/>
Shrimp lovers<lb/>
Why travel 100 miles<lb/>
to the beach and pay<lb/>
high prices for<lb/>
fresh shrimp?<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
$xxva Shrimp<lb/>
o? ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
:amily Restaurants<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
-n<lb/>
AWHALEOFAMEAl<lb/>
Tarlanding seafood<lb/>
is offering a special<lb/>
popcorn shrimp dinner<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
TUES WED THURS.<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
758-0327 <lb/>
m Y'<lb/>
vhs 4fe <lb/>
iiilmP it mi?<lb/>
BWmtln ? ?<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLON1AN<lb/>
AUGUST 30, 1983<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Pepsi Club<lb/>
Want to work out,<lb/>
but need some incen-<lb/>
tive? Then the ECU<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
Department would<lb/>
like to invite you to<lb/>
get involved in its<lb/>
Pepsi Physical Fitness<lb/>
Club. The Club is an<lb/>
independent exercise<lb/>
program where its<lb/>
participants can take<lb/>
part in any one pro-<lb/>
gram or combinations<lb/>
of programs.<lb/>
The requirements<lb/>
are based on mileage<lb/>
completed in five dif-<lb/>
ferent areas: Runn-<lb/>
ing Jogging, Swimm-<lb/>
ing, Bicycling,<lb/>
Pushing<lb/>
(Wheelchairs) and<lb/>
Walking. There are<lb/>
three levels of com-<lb/>
petition with prizes<lb/>
for eligible sportspeo-<lb/>
ple.<lb/>
When you complete<lb/>
the mileage for Level I<lb/>
in an activitiy you will<lb/>
be eligible for that<lb/>
level's award.<lb/>
Sucessful accomplish-<lb/>
ment of a higher level<lb/>
will enable you to<lb/>
choose an award for<lb/>
the attained level or<lb/>
for a lower level.<lb/>
If you complete the<lb/>
established mileage in<lb/>
more than one activity<lb/>
you will receive the<lb/>
designated award for<lb/>
the attained level<lb/>
within each activity.<lb/>
Duplicate awards will<lb/>
not be given to a par-<lb/>
ticipant in any one<lb/>
year. Awards will in-<lb/>
clude T-shirts, jogg-<lb/>
ing shorts and nylon<lb/>
jackets.<lb/>
You maintain your<lb/>
own progress and turn<lb/>
it in weekly to the IRS<lb/>
office. They will keep<lb/>
your totals and a pro-<lb/>
gress chart. This par-<lb/>
ticipation is limited to<lb/>
Fall and Spring<lb/>
semesters (a separate<lb/>
program will be con-<lb/>
ducted for summer<lb/>
school).<lb/>
Frisbee I rates<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
"Irates" Frisbee Club<lb/>
was one Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Sports<lb/>
Club that remained<lb/>
active during the sum-<lb/>
mer. The "Irates"<lb/>
made appearences in<lb/>
the Fifth Annual Pen-<lb/>
tathon in Bull Run<lb/>
Park, VA. and in the<lb/>
WBCY Frisbee Fly In<lb/>
in Charlotte, N.C.<lb/>
The team also practic-<lb/>
ed their disc golf on<lb/>
campus and took off<lb/>
to Winston-Salem,<lb/>
Greensboro and<lb/>
Virginia Beach to bat-<lb/>
tle recognized D.G.A.<lb/>
Pole Hole Courses.<lb/>
The Ultimate<lb/>
players continued<lb/>
their Ultimate prac-<lb/>
tices despite the sum-<lb/>
mers 100-plus degree<lb/>
temperatures. The<lb/>
Frisbee Club was<lb/>
represented on the<lb/>
Carolina Beaches by<lb/>
some of ECU's finest<lb/>
freestylers.<lb/>
The Ultimate Irates<lb/>
will continue holding<lb/>
open practices on<lb/>
Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays at the bot-<lb/>
tom of College Hill<lb/>
Drive and anyone and<lb/>
everyone is encourag-<lb/>
ed to come and<lb/>
"Whip It<lb/>
The ECU Frisbee<lb/>
Club also meets Mon-<lb/>
day nights at<lb/>
Mendenhall. If you're<lb/>
interested in Ultimate<lb/>
Golf throwing skills<lb/>
or just in freestyling,<lb/>
give it a try.<lb/>
Hatha Yoga<lb/>
Hatha physical<lb/>
yoga is concerned<lb/>
with the health and<lb/>
well being of one's<lb/>
whole self ? not just<lb/>
the body but the emo-<lb/>
tional and mental<lb/>
states as well. And<lb/>
Hatha Yoga is a new<lb/>
exercise program be-<lb/>
ing offered by the<lb/>
Department of<lb/>
Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
this semester.<lb/>
The practice of<lb/>
Hatha Yoga offers<lb/>
men and women a<lb/>
series of controlled<lb/>
postures, movements<lb/>
and breathing exer-<lb/>
cises that can help<lb/>
relieve tension and<lb/>
anxiety, tone muscles,<lb/>
increase flexibility<lb/>
and stimulate circula-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
In conjunction with<lb/>
proper diet Yoga can<lb/>
also aid in keeping<lb/>
body weight under<lb/>
control.<lb/>
Grand Opening at<lb/>
SAM'S LOCK KEY SHOPPE<lb/>
1804 Dickinson Ava.<lb/>
( Across from Pepsi Plant)<lb/>
GssmsmMsi 757-0075<lb/>
All keys 25 off with student I.D.<lb/>
i<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
?-?ssbs?- -assssv<lb/>
Tues. - Beef Tips $2.99<lb/>
Served with<lb/>
King Idaho Potatoe<lb/>
or French Fries<lb/>
and Texas Toast<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Try our New Fruit Bar<lb/>
and Improved Veg. Bar<lb/>
I<lb/>
2 Locations to Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Now Nikon makes fine<lb/>
photography easier and<lb/>
more convenient than ever<lb/>
THE<lb/>
AUTOMATIC<lb/>
NIKON FE<lb/>
Backpacking<lb/>
Backpacking is also<lb/>
P??kli1l1HILfcXHlisisinT111,L1mn<lb/>
WtTH NIKON<lb/>
SOmm fl .8<lb/>
SERIES 1 I INs<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
$299.95<lb/>
Sim . ensatonal a tghl i impact auto-exposure<lb/>
35mm sir w,ith the pre ision and versatility that only<lb/>
Nikon can offer Thr Niki .n FE gives vou automatic<lb/>
exposure accuracy ith anV of nearly 60 famous Mikkor<lb/>
lenses plus eas-to use features for creative-<lb/>
photography Theres also a special Nikon automatic<lb/>
electronic flash that actually programs the FE shutter,<lb/>
and a compact motor drive for up to 3.5 sho- per<lb/>
secon Try it yourseit come in today'<lb/>
ort '? cotjcra hop<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
on the agenda with<lb/>
ECU people exploring<lb/>
the Uwharrie Na-<lb/>
tional Forest for two<lb/>
days and nights begin-<lb/>
ning October 7. The<lb/>
trail is of moderate<lb/>
difficulty and hikers<lb/>
will be expected to<lb/>
cover six miles per day<lb/>
? so be prepared.<lb/>
The trip should cost<lb/>
between 20 and 33<lb/>
dollars depending on<lb/>
how much of your<lb/>
own equipment you<lb/>
use. Reservations<lb/>
must be made through<lb/>
the Outdoor Recrea-<lb/>
tion Center in room<lb/>
113 Memorial by 5<lb/>
p.m. September 30<lb/>
because there is<lb/>
limited space<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Final details on the<lb/>
Canoe trip have not<lb/>
been released yet, but<lb/>
if you are interested in<lb/>
any of these trips just<lb/>
come by the center<lb/>
and check it out. It'll<lb/>
be worth your time.<lb/>
Faculty Intramural v.<lb/>
1983-84 brings with<lb/>
it a new opportunity<lb/>
for East Carolina<lb/>
faculty and staff<lb/>
members to par-<lb/>
ticipate in Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
A separate division<lb/>
will allow equal com-<lb/>
petition and participa-<lb/>
tion to permanent<lb/>
(half-time or more)<lb/>
faculty and staff<lb/>
members. Team<lb/>
sports to be included<lb/>
are Flag Football,<lb/>
Volleyball, Basketball<lb/>
and Softball. In-<lb/>
dividual and dual<lb/>
sports activities such<lb/>
as Raquetball, Tennis<lb/>
and Golf will also be<lb/>
provided for a<lb/>
minimum of four<lb/>
facultystaff par-<lb/>
ticipants.<lb/>
Officials will be<lb/>
drawn from the<lb/>
regular corps of stu-<lb/>
dent sports officials.<lb/>
Game times and days<lb/>
will be determined at<lb/>
the pre-season<lb/>
meeting. Graduate<lb/>
assistants will not be<lb/>
eligible to participate<lb/>
in this division.<lb/>
FacultyStaff<lb/>
members remain elibi-<lb/>
ble for the entire<lb/>
Department of In-<lb/>
tramural Recreational<lb/>
Services.<lb/>
LAUNDROMAT<lb/>
33 Washers - 15 Dryers<lb/>
Present this Coupon<lb/>
1-FREE WASH<lb/>
We honor any advertised<lb/>
coupon when presented<lb/>
Located at the Intersection<lb/>
of E. 10th St. at 5th St.<lb/>
Harbin Highlander Center<lb/>
2804 E. 10th St. Greenville<lb/>
Phone 752 3737<lb/>
1<lb/>
aaaoaaoaaaaagggqc<lb/>
J<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
08<lb/>
-The E.C.U. Photo Lab is seeking quality<lb/>
minded people for our photojournalism staff.<lb/>
-Experience helpful in Studio, News or Sports<lb/>
Photography, Push Processing, Color Processing,<lb/>
Use of Nikon System.<lb/>
-Must be able to Develop ? Print B?W photos.<lb/>
-Must have phone ? access to a car.<lb/>
-Must be enrolled E.C.U. student.<lb/>
-Must have examples of work to show.<lb/>
Apply with the Media Board Secretary on<lb/>
the 2nd floor of Publications Buildings<lb/>
before September 2nd<lb/>
f(<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
7S2-0688<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Mexican Restaurant<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
'FIESTA TIME'<lb/>
Weeknites 10 til 1<lb/>
Weekends 10 til 2<lb/>
757 -1666<lb/>
Introducing the<lb/>
HUNGRY PIRATE<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
mmmmmamamammammmsmmmmm<lb/>
El Grande Bur it o $2.50<lb/>
Draught 50-<lb/>
2 - 5p.m. everyday<lb/>
Every Nite<lb/>
Georgetown Shops<lb/>
521 Contanche St.<lb/>
ARMY ROTC CAN HELP<lb/>
PUT YOU AHEAD OF<lb/>
THE CROWD.<lb/>
$?<lb/>
ife J, ?<lb/>
' "I<lb/>
Get down to business faster.<lb/>
With the BA-35.<lb/>
If theres one thing business<lb/>
students have always needed,<lb/>
this is it: an affordable, busi-<lb/>
ness-oriented calculator.<lb/>
The Texas Instruments<lb/>
BA-35, the Student Business<lb/>
Analyst.<lb/>
Its butlr-in business<lb/>
formulas let you perform<lb/>
complicated finance,<lb/>
accounting and statistical<lb/>
functions - the ones that<lb/>
usually require a lot of time<lb/>
and a stack of reference hooks,<lb/>
like present and future value<lb/>
C 1963 Texas instruments<lb/>
calculations, amortizations<lb/>
and balloon payments.<lb/>
The BA-35 means you<lb/>
spend less time calculating,<lb/>
and more time learning. One<lb/>
keystroke takes the place<lb/>
of many.<lb/>
The calculator is just part<lb/>
of the package. You also get<lb/>
a book that follows most<lb/>
business courses: the Business<lb/>
Analyst Guidebook. Business<lb/>
professors helped us write it,<lb/>
to help you get the most out<lb/>
of calculator and classroom.<lb/>
A powerful combination.<lb/>
Think business. With<lb/>
the BA-35 Student<lb/>
Business Analyst.<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Instruments<lb/>
Creating useful products<lb/>
and services for you.<lb/>
Adding Army ROTC" to<lb/>
your college education can give<lb/>
you a competitive edge.<lb/>
Regardless ot your chosen<lb/>
major, Army ROTC training ff Ml ?'SP <lb/>
magnifies your total learning<lb/>
experience. HI rlMFTlSi IB<lb/>
? Training that helps you<lb/>
develop into a leader, as well<lb/>
as a manager of money and<lb/>
materials. That builds your self-<lb/>
confidence and decision-making<lb/>
abilities. And gives you skills<lb/>
and knowledge you can use<lb/>
anywhere. In college. In the<lb/>
military. And in civilian lite.<lb/>
Army ROTC provides<lb/>
scholarship opportunities and i8Li<lb/>
financial assistance too. But, most importantly, Amu ROTC lets<lb/>
you graduate with both a college degree and a commission in<lb/>
today's Army, which includes the Army Reserve and National<lb/>
Guard.<lb/>
So come out ahead by enrolling in Army ROTO Foi more<lb/>
information contact Captain Heldur LUvak or Sergeant First Class<lb/>
Xatfl Boylcs in Room 324 Erwin Hall or call 75x367<lb/>
?k<lb/>
4' ? ?.<lb/>
A jl! HISTOLOGY U fhj<lb/>
? ?!<lb/>
ARMY ROTC BEAU YOU CAN BE.<lb/>
ardy:<lb/>
iCU's<lb/>
RANDY MFV j<lb/>
Soccer sensani<lb/>
rk Hardy is sc<lb/>
his way to becoj<lb/>
ECU's all-tii<lb/>
ling scorer<lb/>
n just two seaso<lb/>
5-10. 150-pou<lb/>
i i o r has ai<lb/>
tulated 17 goi<lb/>
has led the Piraj<lb/>
last two years<lb/>
scoring and is onlv<lb/>
goals shy of surpa<lb/>
ing the school recor<lb/>
"Mark is w<lb/>
would describe as<lb/>
constant scorer s<lb/>
Head Soccer Coal<lb/>
Robbie Church<lb/>
can put the ba<lb/>
net at anytime ai<lb/>
from anywhere or.<lb/>
field. Mark is<lb/>
son we always<lb/>
for when r.e?<lb/>
goal<lb/>
Hardv is au-are<lb/>
he's considered<lb/>
ECU's greasiest<lb/>
cer player ever<lb/>
credits that :c<lb/>
he has beer<lb/>
soccer sir.ee<lb/>
four ears<lb/>
"I was ra<lb/>
Brazil, and ;<lb/>
there soccer is the I<lb/>
tional sport<lb/>
played defefr<lb/>
c<lb/>
We're Th<lb/>
Open 7<lb/>
YOUR M<lb/>
THAT V<lb/>
co;<lb/>
One Do!<lb/>
5p?ci<lb/>
'?????????????I<lb/>
? .<lb/>
911<lb/>
1700<lb/>
31S<lb/>
<lb/>
?:?'?<lb/>
W?<lb/>
M<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL 1MAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1983<lb/>
15<lb/>
Lmdual and dual<lb/>
v Krts activities Nuch<lb/>
s Raqucthall, rcnnis<lb/>
id Golf will also he<lb/>
I ided tor a<lb/>
I umum of four<lb/>
I par-<lb/>
fficials Hill he<lb/>
from the<lb/>
stu-<lb/>
ff rials<lb/>
mes dnxi da s<lb/>
ermined a:<lb/>
! vv a 5<lb/>
aduate<lb/>
- will not he<lb/>
pa ' ? .<lb/>
? .<lb/>
entire<lb/>
of In-<lb/>
eational<lb/>
S 30rts<lb/>
,rocessing,<lb/>
photos<lb/>
f<lb/>
ATE<lb/>
7.50<lb/>
ardy: Constant Scorer May Become<lb/>
;CU's Next All-Time Leading Scorer<lb/>
b RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Soccer sensation<lb/>
lark Hardy is soon<lb/>
Kis wav to becom-<lb/>
ig ECU's all-time<lb/>
fading scorer.<lb/>
In just two seasons,<lb/>
he 5-10. 150-pound<lb/>
mior has ac-<lb/>
jmulated 17 goals.<lb/>
U has led the Pirates<lb/>
ie last two years in<lb/>
coring and is only 11<lb/>
oals shy of surpass-<lb/>
ig the school record.<lb/>
"Mark is what I<lb/>
kould describe as a<lb/>
Constant scorer said<lb/>
lead Soccer Coach<lb/>
tobbie Church. "He<lb/>
an put the ball in the<lb/>
let at anytime and<lb/>
from anywhere on the<lb/>
field. Mark is the per-<lb/>
son we always look<lb/>
w when we need a<lb/>
foal<lb/>
Hardy is aware that<lb/>
ies considered one of<lb/>
iCU's greastest soc-<lb/>
cer players ever, and<lb/>
credits that to the fact<lb/>
ie has been playing<lb/>
soccer since he was<lb/>
four years old.<lb/>
"I was raised in<lb/>
Irazil. and down<lb/>
there soccer is the na-<lb/>
tional sport. I always<lb/>
clayed defefnse when<lb/>
I was young, and it<lb/>
wasn't until high<lb/>
school when I came to<lb/>
the United States that<lb/>
I was switched to for-<lb/>
ward and began scor-<lb/>
ing a lot he said.<lb/>
I think the switch<lb/>
made me a better<lb/>
player Hardy said.<lb/>
"Although I've only<lb/>
been a forward for<lb/>
five years, all the time<lb/>
I spent playing in<lb/>
Brazil gave me an ad-<lb/>
vantage over other<lb/>
people<lb/>
Hardy enjoys play-<lb/>
ing an offensive posi-<lb/>
tion, and realizes that<lb/>
it will enable him to<lb/>
become ECU's all-<lb/>
time scorer. But his<lb/>
main concern for the<lb/>
upcoming season is<lb/>
the welfare of the<lb/>
team.<lb/>
"This is the first<lb/>
year the ECAC has<lb/>
ever had a conference<lb/>
for soccer, and I think<lb/>
we have a good shot<lb/>
at winning the tourna-<lb/>
ment he said.<lb/>
Coach Church<lb/>
thinks ECU could<lb/>
have the best team in<lb/>
its history. "We have<lb/>
13 freshmen this year,<lb/>
and they're all loaded<lb/>
with<lb/>
lent he said<lb/>
"We have more good<lb/>
players then we've<lb/>
ever had before, and<lb/>
the only thing we're<lb/>
missing is ex-<lb/>
perience<lb/>
The freshmen will<lb/>
get experienced in a<lb/>
hurry with four top 20<lb/>
teams and Division III<lb/>
National Champion<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro on<lb/>
their schedule, but<lb/>
Church is optimistic<lb/>
about the season<lb/>
ahead.<lb/>
"We have the talent<lb/>
to compete with<lb/>
anyone, and once the<lb/>
younger players get<lb/>
some game time we'll<lb/>
be solid all the way-<lb/>
through the line-up.<lb/>
The new people will<lb/>
compliment Jeff's<lb/>
game and make his<lb/>
job a lot easier on the<lb/>
field<lb/>
"I'm also looking<lb/>
at Jeff to be a team<lb/>
leader Church said.<lb/>
"We only have one<lb/>
senior on the team, so<lb/>
most people will be<lb/>
looking towards<lb/>
Jeff<lb/>
Hardy feels com-<lb/>
fortable with the role<lb/>
as a team leader, but<lb/>
believes all the team<lb/>
members should work<lb/>
together in order to<lb/>
have a good com-<lb/>
municative relation-<lb/>
ship. "1 think<lb/>
everybody should<lb/>
share everything they<lb/>
know, and sometimes<lb/>
you learn a lot by just<lb/>
listening he said.<lb/>
The Pirates have<lb/>
already begun prac-<lb/>
tice and participated<lb/>
in two scrimmage<lb/>
games over the<lb/>
weekend. Both were<lb/>
victories over<lb/>
Belmont-Abbey, and<lb/>
Hardy had a goal in<lb/>
each game.<lb/>
Hardy played well<lb/>
in both contests, but<lb/>
felt he needed to work<lb/>
on his communica-<lb/>
tion. "Sometimes I<lb/>
get so involved in a<lb/>
game I forget to talk<lb/>
with my teammates,<lb/>
and that takes away<lb/>
from an attack when<lb/>
we have one in pro-<lb/>
gress he said.<lb/>
If he and his<lb/>
freshmen counter-<lb/>
parts can perform as<lb/>
they're expected, the<lb/>
word upset will no<lb/>
longer be used to<lb/>
describe an ECU vic-<lb/>
tor v.<lb/>
COUSIN'S PIZZERIA<lb/>
FREE QUICK DELIVERIES<lb/>
75i-5982 ? 758-5616<lb/>
We're The Best 2 free drinks<lb/>
4 FREE DRINKS<lb/>
Open 7 Days with small pizza vith large pizza ?<lb/>
YOUR MOTHER WOULD BE HAPPY TO KNOW<lb/>
THAT YOU'RE EATING AT YOUR COUSINS i<lb/>
COME MEET YOUR COUSIN'S I<lb/>
y<lb/>
HERE'S SOME COIPOSS FOR YOU<lb/>
$1 OC OFF ANY SPA3hE't:<lb/>
4 ja ? c t ???<lb/>
Si OC OFF A .ASAGNA<lb/>
D s.e? sc?.e:  5<lb/>
Soccer star Mark Hardy shows his scoring ability during a match last season. Hardy mav e well be the greatest soccer<lb/>
player ever to pla at ECL.<lb/>
? ???ii?iimmmm???.immm<lb/>
1 SF.MIVR:STinY-MARTsTATEGIESFORGFTTING 1<lb/>
GRADES<lb/>
SEVERSWEAl ANOTHER EX AMSTOP CRAMMINGRELAX IN CLASSCON TROl oi RC REER OPTIONS<lb/>
S- 3C 0" C-EESE RAVIOLI<lb/>
0ssfo ses.e: Si.a:<lb/>
 ?" :o ct  3-tn -j<lb/>
ft -0' j' c ??? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
S-  CFP A CHEESE MANICOTTI<lb/>
 ' c:i o' '?t? fl<lb/>
1 "C BmIH B-t?e<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
NOW toadoa'l Rate to he just an permit studeni an mrf: A I I s .? practical. leM-proven apprua.h thai tho?) s,)u HOW i? ie the 'saadB'stoa<lb/>
-am. plus ?HA1 ?OB need la Lnov. and do. and ?H1 Voa don't hase to be a grmuo either and sou II still ha plmis of umf to p?rts became H'i<lb/>
studs-sman our sf minar will be pe ronalh conducted bi B H Ouas. roasattaat. author and lecturer He is a onetime college dn.poui ?ho Jesrloped this<lb/>
studs-smart ssstem out of hi. o?n mistaken, then used it to become a douhle-major Iean"j I ist student and uni?erm teacher<lb/>
UHI lOl<lb/>
VMM LEARN A total package from the basic to subtle persuasion tactics W he ?f percent ot .tudenis neser astualls studs Ho? to studs in junk<lb/>
time Insights and sirategies that sour lea, herN ??n t and can I reseal to s?u from an ex-teachersimple. enible do-it-once trvhn.gur. Lsualiatioo kilU<lb/>
that can make sour memon almost photographic Ho? sour classmates make it eass for sou to gain the secret edge that jumps sou ?as ahead in the race for<lb/>
 ? . I he 3 hours per month spend not studying that vsill raise s?ur score Hoc, to guarantee .our grace Put an end to Tet-Tenion and much much<lb/>
more'<lb/>
Tl I)t N I RATE -eminar fee ot S45 include workbook with additional reading and resources<lb/>
Gl ARAM EE It ioa are no, .omple.eh satisfied ??h this seminar after jus. ,hr firx, hour, sour tumon ?,ll immediate be refunded ,n full.<lb/>
Decide this srmeMer to stop settling for c s and start going tor v. hat sou realls ant to be! ttend this unigue and rxctttaa VudMnirt semmar 6 Vo-10 00<lb/>
pm Ihurs s,fpl , (,reenve y l Hamada Inn. :o4 Bspass at (.reensille Blsd<lb/>
Kegistraiion M minutes prior to seminar ash. M( . i,a andhecks accepted<lb/>
P,?i.Performance Programs. In. Hodges t po Box<lb/>
414<lb/>
Oriental<lb/>
:??'<lb/>
.?!??.<lb/>
:4?.t?ii<lb/>
aiiMliioiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHllilllllliniiiiiMllllllllliiliiiiiiiiniiiilni no 11 in i -<lb/>
in hi ininin no ' nunHIIMIIIIMMIIIIMIiiiiihhhhhnhiiiiiHHiaillHIIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIIlallllC<lb/>
BB&amp;T 24 NOW AT MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
S1 00 OFF A LARGE MEAT BALL SU8<lb/>
 - see: bcse eese<lb/>
S' DC OFF A GREEK SAA0<lb/>
se?.e: -afw(E'i :??Est:<lb/>
 ? CfcO'C? o D'Aitc<lb/>
IT<lb/>
ir ??.<lb/>
BE.<lb/>
' :? :i. ?? <lb/>
$? 00OFF ON A Chef 5 SAIA0<lb/>
$1 00 OFF ON A<lb/>
MOT PAS'RAWISoB<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
ONL FOB DELIVERIES<lb/>
One Dollar Off Small Pizza<lb/>
Spacify On The Phone<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
ONLY FOB DELIVERIES<lb/>
Two Dollars Off Large Pizza<lb/>
Specify On The Phone<lb/>
HOLLOWELL'S<lb/>
DRUG STORES<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
Orangeades and Lemonades<lb/>
'o<lb/>
i'<lb/>
Coke, Mellow Yellow, Tab, Sprite i<lb/>
991 e<lb/>
We feature<lb/>
Fountain Coke and Pepsi<lb/>
Banana Splits<lb/>
Sundaes<lb/>
Milkshakes<lb/>
I ' ' ' 1<lb/>
f Back to School Special <lb/>
? 2 Hotdogs and Small Coke I<lb/>
J or Pepsi <lb/>
I $1.00 J<lb/>
I Offer Good Thru Sept. 4, 1983 <lb/>
We have 3 stores to serve you in Greenville<lb/>
911 Dickinson Avenue 752-7105<lb/>
1700 West Sixth Street 758-4104<lb/>
315 SUntonsburg Road 7571076<lb/>
BB&amp;T 24 can handle your banking trans-<lb/>
actions any day or night, on weekends and<lb/>
holidays, 365 days a year.<lb/>
You can access up to 10 different BB&amp;T<lb/>
accounts. In less than 30 seconds you can<lb/>
get cash with your BB&amp;T 24 card, Visa or<lb/>
MasterCard. You can also make deposits,<lb/>
transfers and payments.<lb/>
Late in the fall, you will be able to use<lb/>
BB&amp;T 24 across the nation through the<lb/>
PLUS? SYSTEM network. You'll have access<lb/>
to your accounts at over 3,000 locations<lb/>
wherever you travel throughout the USA.<lb/>
NO SERVICE CHARGE CHECKING<lb/>
FOR STUDENTS AT BB&amp;T<lb/>
When you open your checking account<lb/>
at one of BB&amp;Ts three convenient Green-<lb/>
ville locations, just tell the lady that you're a<lb/>
full-time student at ECU. She'll flag your<lb/>
account to waive all service charges.<lb/>
PRIZES1 PRIZES! PRIZES!<lb/>
We're going to give away lots of prizes on<lb/>
Wednesday, September 7, from 9 a.m. until 5<lb/>
p.m. at the BB&amp;T 24 machine at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
If you already have your BB&amp;T 24 card,<lb/>
bring it along. If you don't, we'll lend you<lb/>
ours. You may win cash, tickets to athletic<lb/>
events, or other valuable prizes.<lb/>
Don't forget September 7.<lb/>
BB&amp;T<lb/>
?Owned by PLUS SYSTEM. Inc 752-6889<lb/>
Member Federal DepoeH Ineurence Corporation<lb/>
? ???ail mimmmmmmm<lb/>
p ? <lb/>
P<lb/>
<pb facs="00057569_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
-IHgJEAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 30. 1<lb/>
983<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
NEED A BABYSITTER<lb/>
Dependable Junior in Nursing in<lb/>
need o? jorne e?tr money is<lb/>
available to babysit m the even<lb/>
mgs and some mornings. Has<lb/>
had much experience caring tor<lb/>
infants and small children. Have<lb/>
own transportation Please call<lb/>
7SJJ 2M or 7Si 6:0 ask tor Kim<lb/>
C <lb/>
LEGAL HASSLES Call<lb/>
Howard J Cummtngs, attorney<lb/>
at Law No charge tor initial<lb/>
consultation for ECU Students<lb/>
Call 7SI 0006<lb/>
LOWEST TYPING RATES on<lb/>
campus include experienced<lb/>
professional work pro<lb/>
otreadmg. spelling and gram<lb/>
matical corrections 35S ?74i<lb/>
after 5 30<lb/>
If YOU NEED to make extra<lb/>
money working on your own,<lb/>
part time call 752 52?7 between<lb/>
6 and 6 p m<lb/>
SPANISH PROBLEMS Affor-<lb/>
dable tutoring available for info<lb/>
'S2 40-19<lb/>
ANYONE INTERESTED in<lb/>
attending the Jewish high noli<lb/>
day servicw picas call Jac-<lb/>
queline Kartchner at 7M-?M5 or<lb/>
Or. Resmk 7S4-S440. Tickets<lb/>
FREE to students. Transporta-<lb/>
tion is available. Please call to<lb/>
? ? r'rv?tions now.<lb/>
IF YOU NEED to make extra<lb/>
money working on your own,<lb/>
part time, call 752 5H7 between<lb/>
? and I p.m.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED: FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MATE. Furnished 1 bebroom<lb/>
apt. microwave, HBO, TV, pool.<lb/>
Kings Row apt. Half rent and<lb/>
utilities. Call after ? p.m.<lb/>
752 77JT<lb/>
FREE ROOM ? BOARD in ex<lb/>
change for house cleaning ?<lb/>
some child care Call J55 417<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dresser with mir-<lb/>
ror and matching headboard on-<lb/>
ly ?S. Call Debra, nights and<lb/>
weekends 7 54005 <lb/>
CARPET Uxi5 Like new. great<lb/>
tor dorm room, color: autumn<lb/>
7S2-414t.<lb/>
FURNITURE FOR SALE:<lb/>
Single bed with frame, springs,<lb/>
mattress, dresser, kitchen table<lb/>
with 4 chairs, Prices are low and<lb/>
negotiable. Call Bobby 752 9453<lb/>
FOR SALE: ACOUSTIC<lb/>
RESEARCH AR ? l Speakers.<lb/>
SJSO tor the pair. Three years<lb/>
old, still under warranty.<lb/>
7S2 457 between s ans 10<lb/>
o'clock.<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
RIDES NEEDED: To Wilson on<lb/>
Mondays will help pay for gas.<lb/>
Call 7S2 1770 Ask for Sherri.<lb/>
Pirate Pride<lb/>
Bravo!<lb/>
?J&amp;vaSM <lb/>
Offensive tackle coach Chariie Elmquist looks on as Mac Powers (64) collides with a fellow teammate in practice drills.<lb/>
201 c. 5th otreet ? Greenville, N.C. 27834 ? 758-6190<lb/>
For Heads Only<lb/>
( <lb/>
$1.00 Discount Off<lb/>
Any Wet Cut or Style.<lb/>
Call for Appointment ? 758-6190<lb/>
TC !D REQUIRED Expires 11-30. 1983<lb/>
??<lb/>
Blue Moon Cafe<lb/>
Fresh Homecooking<lb/>
Healthy Foods<lb/>
Breakfast Anytime<lb/>
Meal Plan For Students-Faculty<lb/>
Wed. is 99C Sub Day<lb/>
Open 8:30 a.m. MonSat.<lb/>
Open 10:00 a.m. Sun.( Brunch )<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 3 to 7 - Mon. thru Sun<lb/>
205 E. 5th Street<lb/>
Bring in this Ad for a 10 Discount<lb/>
UUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUUOUUUUUUOUUUUUUOOOOOfl<lb/>
758-7008 o<lb/>
Mr. C Tennis Center ?<lb/>
??TT1I i ximmuL<lb/>
iiiiimim<lb/>
Klean Jeans<lb/>
Laundromat<lb/>
Located at 208 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Behind Subway<lb/>
Fluff-n-FoldDry Cleaning i<lb/>
Dropoff and Pick Up<lb/>
25 off on Dry Cleaning<lb/>
Thru September<lb/>
? PA'S ? GUITARS<lb/>
? STRINGS ? AMP'S<lb/>
? ACCESSORIES ? DRUMS<lb/>
MON. - SAT. 10:30 - 6 P.M.<lb/>
752-1159<lb/>
218-A E. 5TH ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
BUY ?SELL ?TRADE &amp; REPAIR<lb/>
D<lb/>
D<lb/>
D<lb/>
3<lb/>
D<lb/>
D<lb/>
D<lb/>
3<lb/>
D<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
D<lb/>
D<lb/>
3<lb/>
D<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
3<lb/>
218-CEast5thSt.<lb/>
Hrs. 11-6 Mon-Sat<lb/>
! (1 coupon per racket) J<lb/>
Converse Shoes<lb/>
Racket:<lb/>
Power Ace $50.00<lb/>
Bronze Ace $65.00<lb/>
Silver Ace $85.00<lb/>
Composite Denominator $95.00<lb/>
Jimmy Connors Leather $35.00<lb/>
Canvas $26.00<lb/>
Chris Evert Leather $36.00<lb/>
Canvas $26.00<lb/>
30oqooooooooooooooooooo0000000000000000<lb/>
s<lb/>
. afHearts<lb/>
Wf Delight<lb/>
Open 12 to 12 Daily<lb/>
COUPON:<lb/>
TIREDOF JUNKFOOD<lb/>
:COME TO US FOR GREAT<lb/>
NUTRICIOUS BANANA<lb/>
SPILTS-10OFF<lb/>
12 to 1 AND 5 to 7<lb/>
COME TO US FOR<lb/>
YOUR MEAL<lb/>
752-5878<lb/>
in University Arcade<lb/>
218 E. 5th St.<lb/>
???????????????????????????????????????????<lb/>
arshs<lb/>
?URP-N-MA<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
r ATLANTIC EACH<lb/>
orth Carolina<lb/>
50 Off 50 Off<lb/>
Ocean Pacific All Sperry<lb/>
Children's Shorts Topsider Shoes<lb/>
Mm 4 To 30<lb/>
20 off ?Ppfi<lb/>
Hawaiian<lb/>
Print Shirts<lb/>
Men's &amp; Women's<lb/>
Ocean Pacific<lb/>
Adult Shorts<lb/>
206 Easi Fifth Street<lb/>
50 Off<lb/>
Men's &amp; Women's<lb/>
Bathing Suits<lb/>
20 Off<lb/>
All Other<lb/>
Remaining<lb/>
Summer Stock<lb/>
752 7711<lb/>
WE ARE YOUR ICE CREAM<lb/>
PALOR! OUR ICE CREAM IS<lb/>
GOOD TASTING, FUN AND<lb/>
HEARTWARMIING! CHILL OUT<lb/>
WITH THE BEST!<lb/>
? Phone 758-4061<lb/>
? 203 East 5th Street<lb/>
? Greenville. Nopth Carolina 27834<lb/>
S2.00 OFF OF<lb/>
$10.00 Olv MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
INCLUDES &amp; 4LE MERCHANDISE<lb/>
OFFER I'XPIRES 9-13-83<lb/>
RIGHT BROTHERS BIKE SHOP<lb/>
207 E 5th St<lb/>
Open 10 30 6 00<lb/>
752-6181 MIYATA<lb/>
SPECIAUZED UNIVEGA<lb/>
BICYCLES<lb/>
AND<lb/>
COMPONENTS<lb/>
$10 OFF on a NEW BICYCLE<lb/>
or<lb/>
10 DISCOUNT on Parts and Labor<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL SERVICE BY AVID CYCLISTS'<lb/>
tf?.<lb/>
Tapscott Designs<lb/>
222 E 5n St<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
757 3558<lb/>
10 Off Merchandise<lb/>
with coupon<lb/>
limit<lb/>
one coupon per purchase<lb/>
Speciality Gift Shop<lb/>
Wicker, Brass, Custom Framing<lb/>
Gift Wrapping A vailable<lb/>
m<lb/>
I7<lb/>
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