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<pb facs="00057570_0001"/>
2e<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No jf<lb/>
Thursday September 1,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Ship's Anchor Causes International Waves<lb/>
B DrNMSKlLCOYNE<lb/>
Maff Writer<lb/>
he past two weeks, interna-<lb/>
ntion has come to ECU,<lb/>
Aith a sports championship<lb/>
an achievement of one of<lb/>
olastic programs. Under the<lb/>
hip of William Still,<lb/>
r of maritime history,<lb/>
Gordon Watts Jr under-<lb/>
archaeologist, the<lb/>
pound anchor of the Civil<lb/>
battleship Monitor was<lb/>
ered Monday.<lb/>
l Dec 31, 1862, the Monitor,<lb/>
world's first ironclad warship,<lb/>
down in a storm off Cape<lb/>
eras. It remained there in an<lb/>
nknown grave for more than 100<lb/>
rs.<lb/>
The vessel foundered as it was<lb/>
tig towed to Beaufort, NC,<lb/>
where it was to particilpate in a<lb/>
Union blockade of Confederate<lb/>
poi v In March 1862, it had won<lb/>
fame in its standoff duel with the<lb/>
Merrimac, the premier ironclad of<lb/>
the Confederacy, in history's first<lb/>
battle between armored ships.<lb/>
In 1973 came the news that<lb/>
underwater archaeologists had<lb/>
discovered the wreck in 230 feet of<lb/>
water 16 miles off the cape. Public<lb/>
interest appeared at once and was<lb/>
stimulated from time to time by<lb/>
the recovery of materials from the<lb/>
vessel. An especially interesting<lb/>
recovered artifact was the ship's<lb/>
latern. As the Monitor took on<lb/>
water that fatal night in 1862, its<lb/>
crew hoisted a red light, signaling<lb/>
the tow ship that the ironclad was<lb/>
in distress. That was the last word<lb/>
from the doomed ship. When this<lb/>
small latern was brought to the<lb/>
surface, the press covered the<lb/>
event and ECU was in the news.<lb/>
The research team was ready<lb/>
for a bigger and heavier object<lb/>
and Monday they got it. Despite<lb/>
careful planning, glitches<lb/>
developed and the event became a<lb/>
movie scenario writer's dream,<lb/>
with all the necessary tension and<lb/>
high drama caused by technical<lb/>
problems. At the last minute the<lb/>
flotation bags ruptured. Down<lb/>
went the partially lifted anchor,<lb/>
plunging to the sea bottom. Time<lb/>
pressed the researchers. Because<lb/>
of the depth of the wreck and the<lb/>
pioneering nature of their<lb/>
recovery effort ("this is the<lb/>
deepest underwater ar-<lb/>
chaeological project ever under-<lb/>
taken" Still said), the equipment<lb/>
was hi-tech and very expensive to<lb/>
use, the research ship alone<lb/>
costing $8,000 per day while on<lb/>
station. Finally, on August 29<lb/>
came the triumph, as the heavily<lb/>
encrusted anchor broke the sur-<lb/>
face.<lb/>
The world paid attention to the<lb/>
historic moment; newspapers and<lb/>
TV stations across the country<lb/>
noted it, and the big-time an-<lb/>
chormen of the networks all<lb/>
reported the event. Still says that<lb/>
the expedition is giving valuable<lb/>
information to scholarly research<lb/>
and a big boost to ECU and its<lb/>
unique maritime program. He ad-<lb/>
ded, "Ours is the only university<lb/>
that combines maritime history<lb/>
with an underwater research pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
The Monitor project, which<lb/>
was also sponsored by the<lb/>
Washington-based National<lb/>
Oceanic and Atmospheric Ad-<lb/>
ministration, has made possible<lb/>
the eventual recovery of the<lb/>
Monitor's iron gun turret and<lb/>
cannons.<lb/>
However, Still noted that since<lb/>
the wreck is upside down, with the<lb/>
hull above the turret, the attempt<lb/>
to raise the turret, nicknamed the<lb/>
"cheese box must be carefully<lb/>
planned and executed so that<lb/>
there will be no damage to the<lb/>
fragile wooden hull, which is in<lb/>
"horrible condition" and<lb/>
"resembles Swiss cheese<lb/>
Although divers made videod-<lb/>
tapes deemed necessary for the<lb/>
plotting of the recovery of the tur-<lb/>
ret, time restrictions kept them<lb/>
from collecting sediment samples<lb/>
of the ocean floor, also essential<lb/>
in planning the lift. However,<lb/>
Watts says further tests will be<lb/>
made in an expedition tentatively<lb/>
set for August 1984. He estimates<lb/>
that the turret will be recovered in<lb/>
1987.<lb/>
Watts expects the anchor to ar-<lb/>
See MONITOR, Page 3<lb/>
ECU Low On Black Faculty Members<lb/>
By KIM RICE<lb/>
staff Writer<lb/>
According to statistics released<lb/>
the ECU institutional research<lb/>
department, in the 1982-83 school<lb/>
there were 129 ad-<lb/>
ministrative positions. Only one<lb/>
f these positions was, and is still,<lb/>
held by a black.<lb/>
There are approximately 800<lb/>
faculty positions: 21 are held by<lb/>
blacks � about 2.5 percent. These<lb/>
numbers are compared to a 10.3<lb/>
percentage of black students on<lb/>
the ECU campus.<lb/>
'ECU governs its faculty selec-<lb/>
tions by the Affirmative Action<lb/>
3Ian stated Dr. Mary Ann<lb/>
Rose, assistant to the chancellor.<lb/>
This plan is in compliance vn'th<lb/>
universities nationwide.<lb/>
"We actively reach out and<lb/>
Death Penalty<lb/>
make an effort to recruit<lb/>
minorities to our faculty and<lb/>
staff Rose said.<lb/>
The university has many pro-<lb/>
cedures for recruitment of<lb/>
minorities. Flyers are sent to black<lb/>
colleges and universities, along<lb/>
with advertisments. "We get the<lb/>
word out to out black faculty<lb/>
members in hopes that they will<lb/>
notify friends who they feel are<lb/>
qualified Rose said.<lb/>
ECU does not hire faculty<lb/>
members solely because of their<lb/>
race, she added. "A person must<lb/>
be qualified first and foremost.<lb/>
Then, if it so happens that the<lb/>
qualified person is a member of a<lb/>
minority � we�t<lb/>
Not only nre the overwhelming<lb/>
majority of administrators at<lb/>
ECU white, they are also<lb/>
predominantly male. Both ad-<lb/>
ministrative and faculty positions<lb/>
at ECU are dominated by men<lb/>
with 279 faculty positions held by-<lb/>
women out of a total of 854 op-<lb/>
portunities (29.5 percent.)<lb/>
"There is not a structured pro-<lb/>
gram in place at ECU to recruit<lb/>
black faculty members said Dr.<lb/>
Donald Ensley, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor community health. Ensley<lb/>
is one of ECU's black faculty<lb/>
members .<lb/>
According to Ensley, there is a<lb/>
change of attitude taking place by<lb/>
the federal, state and local<lb/>
governments towards the Affir-<lb/>
mative Action Plan. "The feeling<lb/>
seems to be that there should not<lb/>
be an affirmative action plan, <lb/>
Ensley said. "The government is<lb/>
beginning to feel that people<lb/>
Murderer To Be Executed<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Seven people have been ex-<lb/>
ecuted in the United States in<lb/>
almost 20 years. Tomorrow in<lb/>
Mississippi, Jimmy Lee Gray<lb/>
could become the eigth.National-<lb/>
ly, there are 1,202 people on death<lb/>
row, a record for this country.<lb/>
In North Carolina, there have<lb/>
been no executions since 1964, but<lb/>
experts predict a new wave of<lb/>
N.C. executions could begin soon.<lb/>
At present, N.C. has 34 people on<lb/>
death row; all are waiting for the<lb/>
results of their court appeals to<lb/>
determine if they will have to die<lb/>
in the gas chamber of Raleigh's<lb/>
Central Prison.<lb/>
Although Gray's case is in<lb/>
Mississippi, a Durham-based<lb/>
organization called North Caroli-<lb/>
nians Against the Death Penalty is<lb/>
holding a vigil Thursday evening<lb/>
outside the mansion of Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr. NCADP is ask-<lb/>
ing people from across the state to<lb/>
join their vigil. "We oppose ex-<lb/>
ecutors wherever and whenever<lb/>
they happen says Kristin<lb/>
Paulig, a spokesperson for<lb/>
NCADP. "State boundaries don't<lb/>
matter, the issues are really the<lb/>
same; its's always the poor<lb/>
minorities who are executed<lb/>
NCADP has been sponsoring<lb/>
the vigils at the governor's man-<lb/>
sion on the eve of any scheduled<lb/>
execution anywhere in the coun-<lb/>
try. Hunt is on record supporting<lb/>
capital punishment.<lb/>
Paulig is urging people opposed<lb/>
to the death penalty to come to<lb/>
Raleigh "to let Gov. Hunt know<lb/>
that we don't want to see any ex-<lb/>
ecutions here, and we're always<lb/>
watching<lb/>
Paulig claims three-quarters of<lb/>
the inmates on deathrow are in the<lb/>
Southern states. "Most of the<lb/>
lead cases are in the South she<lb/>
said. "Lead" refers to those cases<lb/>
of inmates nearest to the end of<lb/>
their appeals options.<lb/>
She believes a "lot of work"<lb/>
must be done if trends (which<lb/>
show the majoiity of people sup-<lb/>
porting the death penalty) are to<lb/>
be changed.<lb/>
Paulig noted two myths she<lb/>
says are associated with the death<lb/>
penalty. "One of the myths is that<lb/>
executions are plainless and<lb/>
quick she said.<lb/>
She illustrated her point with<lb/>
the case of John Evans of<lb/>
Alabama. Evans was executed by<lb/>
electrocution last April.<lb/>
Eyewitnesses to his execution<lb/>
reported it took three jolts of elec-<lb/>
tricity to stop Evans' heartbeat<lb/>
and that it appeared Evans was<lb/>
suffering throughout the ordeal.<lb/>
"The reports were detailed and<lb/>
gruesome Paulig said, calling<lb/>
the event "particularly<lb/>
gruesome<lb/>
Another myth Paulig cited is<lb/>
that the death penalty works as a<lb/>
deterrent to murder. "The death<lb/>
penalty has no deterrent effect<lb/>
Paulig said. "It does not reduce<lb/>
murder rates<lb/>
Paulig said studies have been<lb/>
conducted which prove her point<lb/>
that "violence begets violence<lb/>
"When you have the state in the<lb/>
business of killing people, you're<lb/>
sanctioning violence she added.<lb/>
According to statistics quoted<lb/>
by NCDP, there are currently<lb/>
1,202 people on death row nation-<lb/>
wide. Blacks account for 508, or<lb/>
42 percent. Whites number 623,<lb/>
or 52 percent, with other<lb/>
minorities accounting for the re-<lb/>
mainder.<lb/>
See MISSISSIPPI, Page 5<lb/>
should be capable of getting a job<lb/>
on their own qualifications<lb/>
Ensley said the change in<lb/>
climate is causing a "benign<lb/>
neglect attitude " that is impac-<lb/>
ting negitively on blacks.<lb/>
Dr. Lilla Holsey, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of home economics, said<lb/>
that ECU's percentage of black<lb/>
faculty members is "very low" in<lb/>
relation to the black student<lb/>
population<lb/>
Dr. Dennis Chestnut, associate<lb/>
professor of psychology agrees<lb/>
with Ensley. "It is essential that<lb/>
ECU make an active and assertive<lb/>
effort to recurit blacks. Chestnut<lb/>
said<lb/>
"There is no systematic ap-<lb/>
proach to the recruitment of<lb/>
blacks Ensley said, adding that<lb/>
the state of North Carolina re-<lb/>
quires recruitment of black facul-<lb/>
ty members, as well as students, to<lb/>
all 16 of the state's universities.<lb/>
ECU maintains a black enroll-<lb/>
ment of 10.3 percent, compared<lb/>
to an 87.4 percentage of white<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Recruiting women to ECU's<lb/>
faculty is also a difficult process,<lb/>
according to Rose. Of 129 ad-<lb/>
ministrative positions, only 33 are<lb/>
held by women. No ad-<lb/>
ministrative position is held by a<lb/>
black woman.<lb/>
The ony area in which women<lb/>
show any noticeable gains are in<lb/>
secretarial and clerical oppor-<lb/>
tunities. Of 565 employed by ECU<lb/>
in these areas, 545 are women.<lb/>
William Still<lb/>
Gordan Watts<lb/>
Department Of English<lb/>
Begins Writing Center<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Staff �rii�<lb/>
This fall ECU Students who<lb/>
need additional help with writing<lb/>
skills may seek assistance at the<lb/>
Writing Center � a program<lb/>
sponsored by the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of English.<lb/>
Dr. Patrick Bizzaro, associate<lb/>
professor and writing center direc-<lb/>
tor, says, "The center's program<lb/>
will be parallel to and in support<lb/>
of the objectives of ECU's basic<lb/>
English composition course<lb/>
This year, English 1100 students<lb/>
are required to write a placement<lb/>
essay. "The placement essay writ-<lb/>
ten by all freshman will help make<lb/>
certain each student is receiving<lb/>
an appropriate dose of writing in-<lb/>
struction Bizzaro said.<lb/>
Students may also be referred<lb/>
to the center by faculty members.<lb/>
Bizzaro estimates that 300-350,<lb/>
students will require this<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
A special program is also set up<lb/>
for special admissions students. A<lb/>
weekly commitment of five hours<lb/>
is required � three in class with<lb/>
the instructor, and two in the lab<lb/>
with a teaching assitant. The assis-<lb/>
tant leads small group exercises<lb/>
and tutorials. The lab meets at 10<lb/>
a.m. Monday thru Friday.<lb/>
"Also, for the first time at the<lb/>
university Bizzaro added, "all<lb/>
students, regardless of their year<lb/>
in college or their discipline they<lb/>
are writing for, will have a place<lb/>
to �o for help with their writing<lb/>
problems He stressed that' tile<lb/>
purpose of the lab is to give sup-<lb/>
port to all writing that is done on<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Throughout the year, the center<lb/>
will also hold "mini-workshops<lb/>
The workshops will cover<lb/>
"universal problems" such as<lb/>
grammar, study skills, proofing,<lb/>
and editing.<lb/>
Approximately 40 graduate<lb/>
teaching assistants and faculty<lb/>
will staff the center. "The<lb/>
teaching assistants in the English<lb/>
department are exceptionally<lb/>
qualified to help students with<lb/>
their writing Bizzaro said.<lb/>
The writing Center is located in<lb/>
Austin 308 and 309. Permanent<lb/>
hours have not been set.<lb/>
Fraternities Considering Dry Rush<lb/>
Marching Pirates<lb/>
These drummers are undoubtedly thinking of ways to "heat the heat" as they practice for their opening<lb/>
performance. Watch for the band at upcoming football games.<lb/>
By LARRY WILLIAMS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Due to the recent revisions iff<lb/>
North Carolina's laws concerning<lb/>
alcohol consumption, skepticism<lb/>
has arisen on campus as to the<lb/>
feasibility and legality of holding<lb/>
the traditional "wet" fraternity<lb/>
rush. Subesquently, a drive has<lb/>
been initiated by Associate Dean<lb/>
of Student Life James Mallory<lb/>
and Interfraternity Council Presi-<lb/>
dent Bobby Pierce to change rush<lb/>
to a "dry" event.<lb/>
Although this fall's rush will<lb/>
not be affected by the drive,<lb/>
Pierce feels the new rules will pro-<lb/>
bably be in effect by the time spr-<lb/>
ing rush 1984 rolls around. "It is<lb/>
almost a sure thing that rush will<lb/>
be dry next year Pierce said.<lb/>
As mentioned, the main reason<lb/>
for rush's going dry is the new<lb/>
state drinking statute, which takes<lb/>
effect Oct. 1, raising the legal<lb/>
drinking age in North Carolina<lb/>
from 18 to 19.<lb/>
Mallory said reasonable precau-<lb/>
tions have to be taken to meet the<lb/>
new regulations. Consequently,<lb/>
either campus fraternity rush goes<lb/>
dry or each participant must be<lb/>
carded to avoid liability suits<lb/>
against the fraternities or ECU.<lb/>
"The fraternities must adapt to<lb/>
the new laws Pierce said, ad-<lb/>
ding that ECU would be the first<lb/>
N.C. college system to go dry.<lb/>
Pierce claims the alternative of<lb/>
carding people at rush would<lb/>
eliminate 80 percent of the<lb/>
freshmen from these events. "We<lb/>
(the fraternities) don't want to<lb/>
eliminate anyone he emphasiz-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
The fraternities did not want to<lb/>
switch to a dry rush this fall,<lb/>
claiming they would not have ade-<lb/>
quate time to prepare for the<lb/>
switch. But most fraternity<lb/>
presidents asked are supportive of<lb/>
the new plan for dry rush, most<lb/>
saying that although fewer people<lb/>
may participate, those in atten-<lb/>
dance will be more truly in-<lb/>
terested, making for a more pro-<lb/>
ductive rush.<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha President<lb/>
Randy Tyler likes the idea. "In<lb/>
the long run, it will be better<lb/>
Tyler said.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma President Floyd<lb/>
Oakley said he hopes the new plan<lb/>
will bring more people to the<lb/>
smaller houses which are not<lb/>
financially able to put on<lb/>
elaborate rush parties.<lb/>
Although most fraternities sup-<lb/>
port dry rush, Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
president, Glenn Conway said the<lb/>
plan might be restrictive. "We<lb/>
will have to see in the spring he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
ECU Beta Theta Pi president<lb/>
Jim Ussery said "approximately<lb/>
75 percent" of the colleges in the<lb/>
nation already have dry rush and<lb/>
it has been successful.<lb/>
Bank 24 Hours A Day<lb/>
By PATRICK O'NEILL<lb/>
NewiEMfcor<lb/>
On August 19 two North<lb/>
Carolina banks began operating<lb/>
automated banking machines on<lb/>
ECU's campus.<lb/>
The machines, operated by<lb/>
Wachovia Bank &amp; Trust Co. &amp;<lb/>
Branch Banking and Trust, are<lb/>
located near the north-west en-<lb/>
trance to Mendenhall.<lb/>
On Friday, the ECU "Teller<lb/>
II" machine, installed by<lb/>
Wachovia, completed 184 transac-<lb/>
tions, the highest single day figure<lb/>
thus far<lb/>
Wachovia accounting clerk<lb/>
Ariston Langley said the amount<lb/>
of students using Teller II has<lb/>
been lower than expected.<lb/>
Weekend figures released by<lb/>
Wachovia show only 400 transac-<lb/>
tions from Friday to Monday.<lb/>
"We were hoping that it would be<lb/>
booming Langley said. She<lb/>
blamed poor publicity for the low<lb/>
use figures.<lb/>
BB&amp;T had no official figures<lb/>
on the number of transactions on<lb/>
their ECU "BB&amp;T 24" machine,<lb/>
but BB&amp;T marketing manager<lb/>
Mimi Miller said the bank was<lb/>
"very pleased" with the activity<lb/>
thus far. Both Langley and Miller<lb/>
said they hoped more students<lb/>
would begin to use the machines<lb/>
once the word got out.<lb/>
BB&amp;T maintains another<lb/>
automatic banking machine on<lb/>
the campus of N.C. State Univer-<lb/>
sity. Wachovia maintains<lb/>
machines at six other N.C. college<lb/>
campuses.<lb/>
Any ECU student, faculty or<lb/>
staff member with a Wachovia or<lb/>
BB&amp;T banking card is eligible to<lb/>
use the banking machines.<lb/>
rfAptft<lb/>
m��eme - - S&amp;J!ijfUtJJ3�j� -<lb/>
I � . . - - 4<lb/>
� �� �<lb/>
-� mil m. mmK<lb/>
�� ms, � m m v, <lb/>
' �Hi "l� �!�<lb/>
�� OkSSS<lb/>
in �' m  i<lb/>
m .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SPETEMBER I, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
4<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed in the announcement<lb/>
column, please type if on an an<lb/>
nouhcement form and send it to<lb/>
The Eatt Carolinian m care of<lb/>
?he production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications<lb/>
Building Flyers and handwrit<lb/>
ten copy on odd sued paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge for an<lb/>
nouncements but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that vour announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want and suggest that you do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column for<lb/>
PuMiCity<lb/>
The deadline for an<lb/>
nouncements .s 3 p m Monday<lb/>
for the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m Wednesdavv for the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcement;<lb/>
received �fter these deadline;<lb/>
will be printed<lb/>
This space is available to ail<lb/>
campus organizations and<lb/>
departments<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
ZBT wekomes ECU back on<lb/>
our second year of existance<lb/>
Congratulations to the Epsilon<lb/>
Kappa Chapter of Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
tor receding their charter1<lb/>
Many Thanks to the Founding<lb/>
Fathers and Alpha pledge class<lb/>
for making ,t happen<lb/>
Welcome back little sisters! A<lb/>
meeting has been scheduled for<lb/>
Monday the Sth at 7 30 it will be<lb/>
held In the Basement of<lb/>
Umsfead All sisters must at<lb/>
tend because of officer elections<lb/>
CAMPUSCRUSADE<lb/>
Please 'om us for our firts<lb/>
PRIME TIME fellowship this<lb/>
Thu- Sep' at 7 p m in the<lb/>
Nursing Building 101 We are<lb/>
featuring a film entitled "The<lb/>
Secret of Loving " The Gallop<lb/>
Poll rated McDowell as the most<lb/>
popular speaker on the<lb/>
American college campus<lb/>
Come ioin m the fun We are<lb/>
'poking forward to meeting you<lb/>
BE A LEADER<lb/>
interested in �"laking a change<lb/>
tor tne befrer n N.C.? Be ome a<lb/>
member o the group that makes<lb/>
a difference The North Carolina<lb/>
Student Legislature We are<lb/>
meeting Mondays at 7 00 in<lb/>
Poom 212 Mendenhall Hope to<lb/>
see you there<lb/>
HORSEBACK RIDING<lb/>
The Outdoor recreaton center<lb/>
it sponsor ng horseback riding<lb/>
trips t0 Jarman's stables<lb/>
Peservat.ons and payment J5 00<lb/>
�or fh� Thurs afternoon trips<lb/>
art due by 4 00 p m each Aed<lb/>
Tr-Tsportation and a fun filled<lb/>
uninterrupted hour of horseback<lb/>
riding are provided The shuttle<lb/>
leaves Memorial Gym at 3 30<lb/>
p m and part.c pants should be<lb/>
back at the gym by 5 45 p m Get<lb/>
together a han a dorm or ,ust a<lb/>
few friends and see f our seat<lb/>
fits the saddle<lb/>
BUCCANEER BABES<lb/>
There will be a group picture<lb/>
taken Thurs. September 1, 1983<lb/>
at 3 00 Meet at Scales<lb/>
Fieldhouse before 3 00. All<lb/>
1983 84 Buccaneer Babes are<lb/>
asked to attend<lb/>
UNDERSTAND<lb/>
THE BIBLE<lb/>
Do you want to really know<lb/>
God and his will tor your life? If<lb/>
so. you need to know how to read<lb/>
the bible, and understand what<lb/>
you have read (ACTS 8 30 31)<lb/>
This is the key to a dynamic<lb/>
Christian life tilled with power<lb/>
love, and sound thoughts (11<lb/>
TIMOTHY 1 7 We will be star<lb/>
tmg a class soon to teach in<lb/>
terested people how to underst<lb/>
sand The Bible Stop by<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Room 212 on Monday,<lb/>
September 5th between 5 30 and<lb/>
6 30 for more information<lb/>
i Hebrews 11.6)<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
CLUBS<lb/>
The following Recreation<lb/>
Clubs sponsored by the Depart<lb/>
ment of University Unions will<lb/>
meet on the ground floor of Men<lb/>
danhall Student Center at the<lb/>
following times Table Tennis<lb/>
Club, Monday, September 12th<lb/>
at 5 00 p m Chess Backgam<lb/>
mon Clubs. Tuesday. September<lb/>
13th at 5 00 p m . Headr<lb/>
ts. Spades Clubs, Wednesday,<lb/>
September 14th at 5 00 p.m<lb/>
Bridge Club, Thursday.<lb/>
September 15th at 5 00 p m<lb/>
All ECU students, faculty,<lb/>
staff and their guests are<lb/>
welcome to join The above<lb/>
meetings are organization<lb/>
meetings only Tme of play and<lb/>
location of meetings will be<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
BOWLING<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring a Mixed<lb/>
Doubles Bowling League this<lb/>
Fall Each team will consist of<lb/>
two (2) men and two (2) women<lb/>
Sign up on the main bulletin<lb/>
board on the bottom floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center in<lb/>
dividuals are encouraged to<lb/>
sign up as the MSC Staff will<lb/>
organize teams All ECU<lb/>
Students. Faculty. Staff, and<lb/>
their guests are welcome<lb/>
The organizational meeting is<lb/>
Monday September 12, 1983 at<lb/>
6 00 p m in the Bowling Center<lb/>
Team Captains, League Pres<lb/>
dent and Secretary will be<lb/>
determined at this meeting as<lb/>
well as t;me of play<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
Linda Barkand Crafts and<lb/>
Recreation Director at 757 6611<lb/>
ext 260 (after 5 p.m call the<lb/>
Bowling Center at ext 267<lb/>
MEETTHE<lb/>
COACHES DAY<lb/>
The Student Athletic Board is<lb/>
sponsoring a meet the coaches<lb/>
dav on September 1 1983 from<lb/>
11 30 to 1 00 m front of the stu<lb/>
dent supply store Come out and<lb/>
meet your favorite coach<lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
ECU Circle K Club invites you<lb/>
to come out and join us this com<lb/>
ing and every Tuesday night at 7<lb/>
p.m in Mendenhall room 221 for<lb/>
fun and socializing Hope to see<lb/>
you there<lb/>
WOMEN'S RUGBY<lb/>
Any women interested in play<lb/>
Ing rugby, please come to the<lb/>
organizational meeting to be<lb/>
held Wednesday, Sept 7, at 5<lb/>
p.m in Memorial Gym Room<lb/>
102 Practices will be held<lb/>
Tuesdays, Wednesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays 4 530 beginning<lb/>
Sept 13 at the Allied Health<lb/>
Field Absolutely no experience<lb/>
necessary<lb/>
BUCANEER BABES<lb/>
There will be a meeting on<lb/>
Tuesday Sept 6 for any girl in<lb/>
terested in helping out with foot<lb/>
ball recruiting at 8 30 p.m at<lb/>
Scales Field House All previous<lb/>
members are asked to attend at<lb/>
9 00 pm For more information<lb/>
call Scales Field House<lb/>
SOULS<lb/>
ELECTION<lb/>
Anyone interested in running<lb/>
for an office in SOULS should<lb/>
submit the application blank<lb/>
found in the Souls ad in this<lb/>
paper This application should<lb/>
be submitted no later than<lb/>
Wednesday, September 7, 1983<lb/>
by 5:00 p m to the circulation<lb/>
desk in Mendenhall Elections<lb/>
will be held on Thursday<lb/>
September 8 An installation<lb/>
meeting will be held on Thurs<lb/>
day night at 7 00 in Mendenhall<lb/>
Everyone is urged to attend this<lb/>
meeting All faculty, staf<lb/>
members and students are in<lb/>
vited<lb/>
COOP JOBS<lb/>
Black and Decker in Tarboro<lb/>
NC has an opening for a Co op<lb/>
accounting student part time for<lb/>
Fall 1983 Must be a junior or<lb/>
senior and have a 2 5 GPA In<lb/>
terested students should contact<lb/>
the Co op Office. 313 Rawl. im<lb/>
mediately!<lb/>
GAO<lb/>
The U S General Accounting<lb/>
Office will be interviewing on<lb/>
campus in October for Coop<lb/>
iobs for Spring 1984 Must be a<lb/>
Sophomce or jun.or bus npss<lb/>
maior anc have a 2 5 GPA or<lb/>
be'ter For more information<lb/>
students should contact the Co<lb/>
op Office in 313 Rawi<lb/>
OLD TESTAMENT<lb/>
Beginning on 8 Sep a course<lb/>
on the Old Testament will meet<lb/>
once a week during the 83 84<lb/>
school year from 6 30 8 00 p m<lb/>
each Thursday m Brewster<lb/>
building room 303 B The class s<lb/>
open to an students The mstruc<lb/>
tor wil1 be B'll Evenhuis of the<lb/>
Church Education System of the<lb/>
Church of Jesus Christ of matter<lb/>
Day Saints Please come and en<lb/>
toy an excellent review of the<lb/>
Old Testament<lb/>
BASEBALL<lb/>
TRYOUTS<lb/>
Anyone interested in trying<lb/>
out for the ECU Baseball team<lb/>
should meet at Harrington Field<lb/>
on Friday, September 2, at 3 30<lb/>
p m Prospective players should<lb/>
be dressed in workout attire.<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
ANDAED<lb/>
Free Hot dogs will be served<lb/>
at our first meeting of the<lb/>
semester, Monday at 6 30 out<lb/>
side, behind the greenhouse The<lb/>
calendar of the year is on the<lb/>
agenda plus a film presentation<lb/>
on the Caribbean medical school<lb/>
at Ross University Dr Ayers,<lb/>
advisor to AED, will present<lb/>
slides of his summer visit to<lb/>
Ross University m the<lb/>
chemistry building on Sept 13th<lb/>
at the AED meeting to give the<lb/>
students another "perspective<lb/>
regareding this out of the county<lb/>
medical school So all biology<lb/>
club members. AED members<lb/>
and interested persons are<lb/>
welcome to come.<lb/>
KA<lb/>
We invite you to visit our<lb/>
house during Rush We are<lb/>
ECU'S oldest fraternity and<lb/>
maintain the highest standards<lb/>
m intramural athletic competi<lb/>
tion, service to the community<lb/>
and charitable organizations<lb/>
scholarship and social functions<lb/>
The same ideals and traditions<lb/>
that made Kappa Alpha one of<lb/>
the school's most outstanding<lb/>
fraternities 111 1958. can still be<lb/>
found today Check the other<lb/>
houses ano then let us tell you<lb/>
why we think KA may be the<lb/>
best for you The parties start at<lb/>
9 00 on Sept 6 ana 7 We are<lb/>
located on 500 East nth<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
Dr Grover Evereh, r will be<lb/>
holding a sem.nar on ' Bind f0<lb/>
of Cations by Lasalood A, A<lb/>
microbial lonophore EHects of<lb/>
cation charge and solvent<lb/>
polarity" focusing on the<lb/>
Chemical aspects To be held<lb/>
Friday. Sept 9 at 2 00 in<lb/>
Flanigan 201<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
The Department of<lb/>
intramural Receational Ser<lb/>
vices will begin tram-ng clinics<lb/>
for intramural Flag Football Of<lb/>
fioais Thursda . per 1<lb/>
1983 a' 6 prti m Roorr<lb/>
Memorial Grrnnasturn An<lb/>
ECU student may attend these<lb/>
framing clinics Rules inter<lb/>
pre'ations ano mechanics will<lb/>
be discussed Officials will be<lb/>
hired based on practical and<lb/>
written tests Flag Football Of<lb/>
fioais Clinic Thurs Sept l<lb/>
1983. 6 pm. Rm 102 Mem<lb/>
Gym<lb/>
PHI SIGMA PI<lb/>
Aelcome oack brothers! This<lb/>
semester's first meeting will be<lb/>
Sept 1 at 5 00 .n Austin 130<lb/>
There will be an Executive<lb/>
Council meeting Sept 6 in David<lb/>
Whitley s Time TBA<lb/>
PAPA PATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
i<lb/>
TMUR. SEPT. 1<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
-FREE ADMISSION<lb/>
-FREE. DRAFT" f WINE<lb/>
if ALL. MIXED DRINKS<lb/>
M PRICE<lb/>
�n Life<lb/>
Papa Katz Is A Private Cluh<lb/>
For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
We Have All ABC Perms<lb/>
10th St. Ext At<lb/>
Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
N<lb/>
H<lb/>
f I 1NarHe<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS Ymi maw nu ttu ln� �� :��� �- Ad(<lb/>
us a separate sheet o paper ���,� <lb/>
units per line Each letter, pone- i M  ���� �i.  � ,�. No lines. at .<lb/>
'vsiiwi mom mrni www wimum j counts as one unit. Capitalize and <lb/>
nyphenate words proper 1 y. Leave space at end of line if word j doesn't fit No ads will be ac j cepted over the phone We reserve the right to reject any ad. All ads must be prepaid. Enclose j 75� per line or fraction of a hue. j Pkase print legibly! Use capital and f tower wasc letters Return to Ihe Media Board secretary by 3 p.m. the day before j publication. j I<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
��<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
4 I<lb/>
I� �<lb/>
CANOE<lb/>
TRIP<lb/>
The outdoor recreation center<lb/>
operated by the Department of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices is sponsoring a conoe trip<lb/>
on Tuesday Sept 6 The trip is<lb/>
suitable for beginning canoers<lb/>
The trip will be a leisurely pad<lb/>
die down the tar river lasting ap<lb/>
proximately 2 hours Par<lb/>
ticipants will meet at the out<lb/>
door recreation center in<lb/>
Memorial at 3 30 p m and<lb/>
should arrive back at the gym<lb/>
by 6 00 p m Advance registra<lb/>
tion and a $3 00 payment due by<lb/>
4 00 p m on Monday Sept 5 The<lb/>
Outdoor Center's hours are<lb/>
Mon Pri 1 5 p m<lb/>
Fn 9 11pm<lb/>
Tues Wed Thur 2 4pm<lb/>
ADVISARY<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
The intramural Advsary<lb/>
Board meeting is scheduled for<lb/>
today from 4 6 p m m Memorial<lb/>
Gym room 105 All necessary<lb/>
parties should attend<lb/>
GYMNASTICS<lb/>
Don't let those skills waste<lb/>
awa' if vour gymnastically In<lb/>
dined, or iust need a little prac<lb/>
tice for that methods class 'hen<lb/>
fake advantage of the free use<lb/>
periods of the gymnastics room<lb/>
m Memorial Gym The IRS<lb/>
�ment sponsoring a<lb/>
supervised per.od for recrea<lb/>
t.onal use of the gymnastics<lb/>
room on Tuesday ano Thursday<lb/>
n ghts from 740pm 900pm<lb/>
The area will be open for free<lb/>
apoaratus The room will open<lb/>
for use beginning Sept 6 Your<lb/>
ECU ID s required tor admit<lb/>
tonce<lb/>
FIELD HOCKEY<lb/>
Attention anyone interested in<lb/>
pli.ing Women's intramural<lb/>
field hockey there is a meeting<lb/>
on Wednesday Sept 7 at 4 p m<lb/>
m Room 102 of the Memorial<lb/>
Gym If you can't make the<lb/>
meeting please call Cory at<lb/>
758 8985<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
Golf Clubs J160 00 per set<lb/>
SoftbaM Gloves $21.00<lb/>
per glove<lb/>
Basketballs S16 00 each<lb/>
Footballs $24.00 each<lb/>
Soccer Balls S?8 00 each<lb/>
Bats $12 00 each<lb/>
BUT WAIT! WHY BUY<lb/>
Stop by the Equipment check<lb/>
out room located in 114<lb/>
Memorial Gym and borrow the<lb/>
equipment you need Cut your<lb/>
costs for having fun by borrow<lb/>
mg these items and many more<lb/>
including frisbees, jump ropes,<lb/>
softballs, towels, tug o war<lb/>
ropes, badminton requets, ten<lb/>
nts racquets, racquetball rec<lb/>
quets to mention just a few This<lb/>
is a free service excluding late<lb/>
fees or feess for lost damaged<lb/>
equipment Be sure to bring<lb/>
your ID and Activity Card for<lb/>
rour check out and CHECK<lb/>
OUT the Equipment Room<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
Current Honors students and<lb/>
an faculty are reminded of the<lb/>
opportunity to propose Honors<lb/>
Seminars for spring 1984 See<lb/>
pp 87 188 of the catalogue for<lb/>
categories Seminars are ideailr<lb/>
generatist, interdisciplinary,<lb/>
and team taught<lb/>
To be considered proposals<lb/>
must be submitted in writing to<lb/>
Dr David Sanders, coordinator<lb/>
of the Honors Program c o<lb/>
English Department For fur<lb/>
fher details, call 6373<lb/>
CHECK USOUT<lb/>
Check us out! There's no bet<lb/>
ter deal in town than at the IRS<lb/>
equipment check out room m 115<lb/>
Memorial Gym The room is<lb/>
operated by the department of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices to provide students and<lb/>
staff archery equipment, bad<lb/>
minton equip , basketballs, foot<lb/>
balls, golf equip racquetball<lb/>
racquets and bails soffbal!<lb/>
equip , soccerbalis, volley balls,<lb/>
and mucn more at no charge<lb/>
Yep! This is a<lb/>
tree service ahvated to the pur<lb/>
suit of life, liberty and FUN!<lb/>
Take charge of your life at r�o<lb/>
charge1 Check us out!<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
Archery. Fnsbee Disc,<lb/>
Karate, Lacrosse. Racquetball<lb/>
Rugby Men and Women, Soccer<lb/>
Women. Surfing, Team Hand<lb/>
ball Men and Women. Badmm<lb/>
ton. Chess, Cycling. Fencing<lb/>
Field Hockey. Gymnastics.<lb/>
Outing, Snow Ski, Water Polo,<lb/>
Water Ski, Wind Surfing<lb/>
Wrestling if you are m<lb/>
terested in one of these sports or<lb/>
you want to organize a group for<lb/>
a sport, contact the ECU<lb/>
Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services SPORT<lb/>
CLUB PROGRAM in Room 105A<lb/>
of Memorial Gymnasium,<lb/>
757 6064<lb/>
"TOGA,TOGA"<lb/>
Everyone has been waiting for<lb/>
't and here it is. The 3rd annual<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi all campus Toga<lb/>
Party it will be as wild anc<lb/>
crazy as ever Don't miss Gold<lb/>
Rush in action! Please bring<lb/>
proper I D Get wild with the Pi<lb/>
Kapps by the lake<lb/>
ABA<lb/>
Alpha Beta Alpha the Library<lb/>
Science Fraternity, will hold its<lb/>
first meeting of the school ear<lb/>
on Tuesday Sept 6th af 5 30 in<lb/>
the Library Science Building<lb/>
All members and potential<lb/>
members are myited to attend<lb/>
HEARING IMPAIRED<lb/>
The ECU Program for Hear<lb/>
mg impaired Students and the<lb/>
Sign Language Club announce a<lb/>
non credit Introductory Sign<lb/>
Language class beginning 6 00<lb/>
p m Wednesday. September<lb/>
14th m Brewster B Wing 203 For<lb/>
those who have already taken<lb/>
the introductory course an in<lb/>
termediate course will be of<lb/>
tered on Tuesday nights starting<lb/>
September 13 at 6 00 p m in<lb/>
Brewster B Wing 205 The class<lb/>
will be free to Greenville<lb/>
student ano adults There is no<lb/>
registration required and no age<lb/>
limit Students may enroll for<lb/>
the class on Sept 14th and Sept<lb/>
21 For more information, call<lb/>
757 672?<lb/>
WORK STUDY<lb/>
EMPLOYEES<lb/>
Students who have Deen<lb/>
assigned by the Financai Aid<lb/>
Office to the Work Study Pro<lb/>
gram and who are further<lb/>
assigned tdo tne Department of<lb/>
intramural Recrea'ional Ser<lb/>
vices are scheduled to meet<lb/>
Tuesday September 6. 1983 a'<lb/>
5 30 p m n Room 102 Of<lb/>
Memorial GmnaS'um Upon<lb/>
arriving at ECU these students<lb/>
should acquire their Aork Study<lb/>
Contracts at the Financial Aid<lb/>
Office The contract, ciass<lb/>
schedule and soc ai security<lb/>
card should accompany the s'u<lb/>
dent to the (M.Rec<lb/>
meeting IM Rec Work Study<lb/>
Meetng Tuesday September 6.<lb/>
1983 5 30 p m . Rm 102. Mem<lb/>
Gym<lb/>
PRCCLUB<lb/>
Hey an you PRC maiors ge'<lb/>
involved with the PRC club Dy<lb/>
attending an .ce cream soca.i<lb/>
Tuesday September 6. 7 30 p m<lb/>
m room 244 Mendenha Don t<lb/>
m ss Out on the tun<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There wiii oe a mee' ng of the<lb/>
Campus Alcohoi and Drug Pro<lb/>
gram on Tuesdar September 7th<lb/>
at4 OOociock.n room 21C Ei-wn<lb/>
Had Anyone interested -s in<lb/>
vited to attend<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
BETA PHI<lb/>
Welcome bacx mempers Our<lb/>
first genera: mee'ing a oe<lb/>
held on Thursda. September 1<lb/>
� n 244 Mendenha.1 � c in E�<lb/>
ecutive committee members<lb/>
will meet In Room 243 a 4 30<lb/>
p m Please hr c a'e-d<lb/>
ARCHERY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Archery Club s pro<lb/>
ud to announce its f.rsf meeting<lb/>
o the 83 84 school year on Tues<lb/>
day Sept 6. a' 8 p r- n room 102<lb/>
Memoria. Gym Anyone who is<lb/>
interested s welcome to attend<lb/>
For more information call Gene<lb/>
Taylor at 752 1062 or Todd Ban'<lb/>
toy at 752 8768<lb/>
STRONG-CAMPBELL<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
The Strong Campbel. mteres'<lb/>
inventory :s ofered every Tues<lb/>
day - 305 A' ght Annex at 4<lb/>
p m when school 'S in sess-on<lb/>
wth the exceptions o rxafnfcta<lb/>
tion period and registrsa or<lb/>
day Th.s is avaiiaole to a,<lb/>
students at no cost No torrra<lb/>
registration is required For<lb/>
more formation, ca Mta<lb/>
Counseling Center at 757 64<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The iRS Department w -y-<lb/>
art opportunity for free f 3.<lb/>
volleyball and or badminton In<lb/>
M nges Coliseum on August 31<lb/>
Sep'emoer 7. 14. 21 2 fron 8 OC<lb/>
pm 10 00 pm These da'es <lb/>
provide a rare opportune. o-<lb/>
voiieybaii and. or badm.tor ac<lb/>
tivities on campus due to the<lb/>
busy schedule o' ac' . I es<lb/>
reflected in the packed use 01<lb/>
our facilities The equipment<lb/>
and superv S'on wii be proineM<lb/>
and a cour' rnaf even pe rese'v<lb/>
ec by calling 757 6064 between I<lb/>
a m and Ham "the only thing<lb/>
else you need s your body and a<lb/>
little swea<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
i.i.r .  3<lb/>
Published eery Tjesda.<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year anc every<lb/>
Aednescay dur.ng tie sum<lb/>
T.er<lb/>
Tne East Career a- s the<lb/>
 ie'MMr M Eas<lb/>
Caronna Univers'y 0"f;<lb/>
operatec. and pub'ished tor<lb/>
and by 'ne s'jOf o Eas<lb/>
Car3 r-d ,ers �,<lb/>
Subscript,on Rate t?0 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU. Greenville. N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Se"d a?<lb/>
:ress cfanges to The Eas<lb/>
Carolinian O'd South<lb/>
Bu id.ng ECU Greeny 1<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone rS7-Me, 6347<lb/>
630<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECU'S WTV CENT6P<lb/>
roe 15 veacs<lb/>
Q&amp;QD<lb/>
FUWD-RAISGR lOtrr- OimtCfeNT<lb/>
EVENTS EACH IVTOC . FffOM&amp;KHVl<lb/>
OOtfTCST 10 AIR GUTAe COWCST.<lb/>
OUftX KHZ EAST CAt?oaviAKj ft?<lb/>
UPCOiMlrSfO gvCKTTS<lb/>
'COU�G� MGMT'L WfiTU IVZMI<lb/>
HAPPV HOUR, l.OOAOW.<lb/>
CAWS TIL i:�j TS CAWS<lb/>
Til cufeiMG - C0M.N6 Soon<lb/>
WZMB'UVC<lb/>
ENDOFTHCW6K PARTV<lb/>
3:3o-7:oo FffBF ADM. 5oiG4N3 "TfL E:IS<lb/>
70CANS TIL 7:3o -7WG OftfiTY OOMniSrlCS<lb/>
pgtm :ooil moo iuiTH car� sna iot<lb/>
7U� 86ST<lb/>
IK)<lb/>
MU5.C<lb/>
OUR f&amp;AOUS LADIE5 MGUT -<lb/>
.5 YG&amp;SS, ScMOAVUAS BBM OUR SPECll MGMT<lb/>
KH? LAOICS - 5DBfcFT ftR lAOlES WUILFfT UST<lb/>
ANO FREE ADM. R LAOftSS<lb/>
W0UBS 00-V.OO<lb/>
&amp;20-i;6o E�T.<lb/>
TUE SWF OF U49 ELBO R6WMMDS YOU TO j<lb/>
DWV9 OWFULLY. WE ARE COWEMfcTLY LOCATED<lb/>
MTUIN WALKING DISTANCE OP E.C.U. OAMPtS<lb/>
VwMTM UPCOMING ECU. BOS S6RSMCE FOR WE<lb/>
campus 4 Community . toMT �sk vcoe upe 4<lb/>
Your fRcwos laves, use responsibility<lb/>
VfUGN CONSUMING AlCoMOU C BtVE?AGE;<lb/>
?<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
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4<lb/>
prom<lb/>
formal<lb/>
Drug<lb/>
JENNIFER<lb/>
JFNDRAMAk<lb/>
s��ff ttrwrr<lb/>
During the o<lb/>
of their college<lb/>
careers, most student<lb/>
come into contact<lb/>
with alcohol I<lb/>
most, this doev .<lb/>
constitute a probic<lb/>
but for some it may.<lb/>
For the latter group.<lb/>
ECU has a program<lb/>
designed to help<lb/>
The Cam<lb/>
Alcohol and Dr<lb/>
Program, located<lb/>
IrvMn Hall (ro<lb/>
301-303).<lb/>
Black Pro<lb/>
B SI AVF<lb/>
DARWIN<lb/>
SUff �m,i<lb/>
Black studen<lb/>
narrowing the<lb/>
tional gap with -<lb/>
students. Test scores<lb/>
on standard<lb/>
achieemen'<lb/>
taken b<lb/>
children have<lb/>
ed, according to D-<lb/>
Lyle V. Jone<lb/>
professor<lb/>
psychology. c<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Jones<lb/>
reported that b . �<lb/>
students born<lb/>
made 10 percent revser<lb/>
errors on the<lb/>
than black child<lb/>
born in 195?<lb/>
In some instanc<lb/>
the error rate has been<lb/>
cut in half, but in a<lb/>
story to L'Pl Monday,<lb/>
Jones added<lb/>
I<lb/>
Dc<lb/>
Peti<lb/>
agr,<lb/>
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fur<lb/>
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STRONG CAMPBELL<lb/>
INVENTORY<lb/>
� .�-� T jes<lb/>
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v 04 e�amin<lb/>
� hJ reg.s'rsa'ion<lb/>
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IRS<lb/>
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'4 21 28 tr-om 8 OC<lb/>
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nay eve1"1 De reserv<lb/>
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�atP uo yearly<lb/>
� E ast Carolinian offices<lb/>
d'ed in the Old South<lb/>
- -Qing on the campus o�<lb/>
C U Greenville N C<lb/>
'�" �� TEH Send as<lb/>
� Be " Te Eas<lb/>
Ola S<lb/>
�reen lie<lb/>
Telephone 757 6366 6367<lb/>
&amp;30�<lb/>
I<lb/>
!T�J?<lb/>
BACK<lb/>
aifOuuc<lb/>
poe<lb/>
sesr<lb/>
ic<lb/>
fGWT<lb/>
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TO<lb/>
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PCS<lb/>
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t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 1. 1983<lb/>
Drug Rehabilitation Program Helps Students<lb/>
B<lb/>
JENNIFER<lb/>
JFNDRASIAK<lb/>
Sl.ff Wrllrr<lb/>
During the course<lb/>
of their college<lb/>
careers, most students<lb/>
come into contact<lb/>
with alcohol. For<lb/>
most, this does not<lb/>
constitute a problem,<lb/>
but for some it may.<lb/>
For the latter group,<lb/>
ECU has a program<lb/>
designed to help.<lb/>
The Campus<lb/>
Alcohol and Drug<lb/>
Program, located in<lb/>
Iiwin Hall (rooms<lb/>
301-303). is<lb/>
"committed to the<lb/>
promotion of a cam-<lb/>
Pus environment<lb/>
wnich is conducive to<lb/>
responsible decision-<lb/>
making concerning<lb/>
alcohol use or non-use<lb/>
by all members of our<lb/>
community accor.<lb/>
d,n8 to one of<lb/>
CADP's informa-<lb/>
tional brochures.<lb/>
CADP aims to<lb/>
provide education, in-<lb/>
formation and refer-<lb/>
ral for students with<lb/>
problems involving<lb/>
alcohol and drug<lb/>
abuse in order to pro-<lb/>
mote responsible deci-<lb/>
sions regarding<lb/>
substance use.<lb/>
CADP's staff<lb/>
generally consists of<lb/>
between 25 and 35<lb/>
student volunteers<lb/>
who provide peer<lb/>
counseling and a<lb/>
reference group for<lb/>
their fellow students.<lb/>
The staff is all-<lb/>
volunteer and is cur-<lb/>
rently in the process<lb/>
of rebuilding.<lb/>
ECU student Keith<lb/>
Blanks, president of<lb/>
CADP, said that,<lb/>
while the staff has<lb/>
traditionally come<lb/>
from areas such as<lb/>
social work,<lb/>
psychology and nurs-<lb/>
ing, members are<lb/>
drawn from all areas.<lb/>
Staff members are<lb/>
oriented by means of<lb/>
a seven-week training<lb/>
course consisting of<lb/>
approximately one<lb/>
two-hour session a<lb/>
week. During this<lb/>
course, they are<lb/>
educated in issues<lb/>
concerning substance<lb/>
abuse and are taught<lb/>
techniques to be used<lb/>
in dealing with their<lb/>
peers.<lb/>
McGuire says that<lb/>
CADP's major goal is<lb/>
prevention. For this<lb/>
reason, one of<lb/>
CADP's primary<lb/>
Black Professors Voice Opinions<lb/>
B SUZANNE<lb/>
DARWIN<lb/>
SUff Hrtler<lb/>
Black students are<lb/>
narrowing the educa-<lb/>
tional gap with white<lb/>
students. Test scores<lb/>
on standardized<lb/>
achievement tests<lb/>
taken b black<lb/>
children have improv-<lb/>
ed, according to Dr.<lb/>
1 vie V. Jones, alumni<lb/>
professor of<lb/>
psychology, UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill. Jones<lb/>
reported that black<lb/>
students born in 1970<lb/>
made 10 percent fewer<lb/>
errors on the tests<lb/>
than black children<lb/>
born in 1953.<lb/>
In some instances,<lb/>
the error rate has been<lb/>
cut in half, but in a<lb/>
story to UPI Monday,<lb/>
Jones added that<lb/>
black improvement<lb/>
varies depending<lb/>
upon their ages, tests<lb/>
and subject matter.<lb/>
Among other factors,<lb/>
Jones cited the long-<lb/>
term effects of<lb/>
desegregation as a<lb/>
reason for improving<lb/>
scores. He said,<lb/>
"There's no way to<lb/>
tease out (of the data)<lb/>
what caused the<lb/>
higher scores<lb/>
Desegregation is a<lb/>
determining factor,<lb/>
however<lb/>
Commenting on the<lb/>
findings. Dr. Joyce<lb/>
Pettis, ECU associate<lb/>
professor of English<lb/>
agreed with Jones.<lb/>
"Since integration,<lb/>
black students have<lb/>
access to the same<lb/>
amounts of money<lb/>
funded to schools<lb/>
She added. "Being<lb/>
born after the civil<lb/>
rights movement of<lb/>
the 60s brought about<lb/>
new attitudes and ex-<lb/>
pectations<lb/>
Another ECU<lb/>
faculty member, Dr.<lb/>
L. i 11a Holsey,<lb/>
associate professor of<lb/>
home economics said,<lb/>
"I'm happy to hear of<lb/>
the results and the<lb/>
change will continue<lb/>
as a result of better<lb/>
educational oppor-<lb/>
tunities<lb/>
Dr. Jasper Register,<lb/>
ECU associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of sociology,<lb/>
questioned the results.<lb/>
"It's easy to accept<lb/>
something like these<lb/>
studies on standardiz-<lb/>
ed tests, but you can't<lb/>
be sure about them<lb/>
when you don't know<lb/>
how biased the tests<lb/>
were.<lb/>
Pettis was also<lb/>
skeptical about the<lb/>
validity of standardiz-<lb/>
ed tests. "There has<lb/>
to be some kind of<lb/>
measuring device<lb/>
There are other<lb/>
aspects besides test<lb/>
results � like high<lb/>
school grades � to be<lb/>
considered<lb/>
Pettis and Register<lb/>
said that a cultural<lb/>
bias exists on standar-<lb/>
dized tests and was a<lb/>
reason why blacks<lb/>
and other minorities<lb/>
fair poorly as com-<lb/>
pared to white<lb/>
children.<lb/>
Speculating on<lb/>
future results, Jones<lb/>
emphasized educators<lb/>
"have to do better<lb/>
even if the scores are<lb/>
narrowing; we could<lb/>
narrow the gap fur-<lb/>
ther, improve it<lb/>
Watch the Pirates in Action!<lb/>
ECU vs. Florida State<lb/>
Sat. (Sept. 3) on BIG SCREEN T. V.<lb/>
at MR. GA TTIS Kick off 7P.M.<lb/>
a great way to have a good time<lb/>
Pizza and the Game.<lb/>
Corner of Cotanche and 10th<lb/>
HOLLOWELL'S<lb/>
DRUG STORES<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
Orangeades and Lemonades<lb/>
Coke, Mellow Yellow, Tab, Sprite <lb/>
99t<lb/>
Wefeature<lb/>
Fountain Coke and Pepsi<lb/>
Banana Splits<lb/>
Sundaes<lb/>
Milkshakes<lb/>
Back to School Special <lb/>
2 Hotdogs and Small Coke I<lb/>
or Pepsi 1<lb/>
SI 00<lb/>
Offer Good Thru Sept. 4,1983 j<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 Stantonsburg Road 757 -1076<lb/>
focuses is on educa-<lb/>
tion. Dorm advisers<lb/>
are trained in the early<lb/>
recognition of pro-<lb/>
blems and are taught<lb/>
to intervene, referring<lb/>
the students to CADP<lb/>
if necessary. Staff<lb/>
members use<lb/>
breathalyzer<lb/>
demonstrations,<lb/>
social affairs, movies<lb/>
and slides to educate<lb/>
students. This year,<lb/>
they will also work<lb/>
with fraternities to<lb/>
promote responsible<lb/>
drinking. Blanks said<lb/>
he wants to stress the<lb/>
fact that CADP<lb/>
members are "not<lb/>
prohibitionists" and<lb/>
wants to promote the<lb/>
idea that "you can<lb/>
have fun with alcohol<lb/>
and not put yourself<lb/>
in a dangerous posi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Many of the<lb/>
students who take ad-<lb/>
vantage of CADP's<lb/>
services are referred<lb/>
by James Mallory,<lb/>
assistant dean for stu-<lb/>
dent life. If ECU<lb/>
students get into trou-<lb/>
ble, and alcohol is a<lb/>
cause or an allied<lb/>
cause, they are sent<lb/>
through a program<lb/>
consisting of a<lb/>
workshop and a one-<lb/>
on-one counseling ses-<lb/>
sion. Between<lb/>
75 and 100 students<lb/>
went through the pro-<lb/>
gram last year, and,<lb/>
according to Mallory,<lb/>
the results were "very<lb/>
positive<lb/>
Students do not<lb/>
have to be referred to<lb/>
CADP in order to<lb/>
benefit from its pro-<lb/>
grams. The office is<lb/>
open between 8 a.m.<lb/>
and 5 p.m. on<lb/>
weekdays, and<lb/>
visitors are welcome.<lb/>
Strict confidentiality<lb/>
is guaranteed. Staff<lb/>
members are also<lb/>
available to give ad-<lb/>
vice to students who<lb/>
may be worried about<lb/>
problems their friends<lb/>
or relatives are hav-<lb/>
ing. Students with ex-<lb/>
tensive problems are<lb/>
referred to Alcoholics<lb/>
Anonymous, Nar-<lb/>
cotics and<lb/>
Anonymous or Men-<lb/>
tal Health.<lb/>
Monitor Will Undergo<lb/>
Extensive Examinations<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1<lb/>
rive at ECU on Fri-<lb/>
day, when a painstak-<lb/>
ing restoration effort<lb/>
will begin.<lb/>
Still stressed how<lb/>
hard it is to think of<lb/>
anything that could<lb/>
equal the degree of at-<lb/>
tention the Monitor<lb/>
project has focused<lb/>
on ECU. Watts was<lb/>
quick to add that the<lb/>
project was "just one<lb/>
aspect of the complex<lb/>
program" in maritime<lb/>
research at this<lb/>
school.<lb/>
He says that the<lb/>
next project is an ex-<lb/>
pedition this fall to<lb/>
study a sunken British<lb/>
blockade runner from<lb/>
Civil War day .<lb/>
In addition, Watts<lb/>
hopes to eventually<lb/>
investigate the "large<lb/>
concentration of<lb/>
sunken blockade run-<lb/>
ners off Cape Fear<lb/>
But in the mean-<lb/>
time, as other trips are<lb/>
made to the Monitor<lb/>
and as more of its<lb/>
parts are raised, the<lb/>
eyes of the world will<lb/>
turn to ECU. Under-<lb/>
water research of<lb/>
historically important<lb/>
ships arouses public<lb/>
interest.<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
AND<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
ON MON SEPT. 5 HELP US<lb/>
CELEBRATE THE ATTIC'S<lb/>
12th AIW1VERSARY<lb/>
with 197 prices on the car (&amp;5t H H j<lb/>
and pay what yc j want at the joor over<lb/>
12.<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SOUTHS '6 ROCK NIGHTCLUB<lb/>
i<lb/>
J :thee.c.u. vs. f.s.u. football:<lb/>
J; GAME WILL BE SHOWN ON �<lb/>
: THE ATTIC'S 7FT T.V. AT 7:00 :<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
�$<lb/>
NEW PERMANENT POLICY<lb/>
V FREE fc<lb/>
ADMISSION<lb/>
EVERY NIGHT FOR ALL<lb/>
ECU GIRLS DORM STUDENTS<lb/>
(EXCEPT CONCERTS)<lb/>
WED SEPT. 7th<lb/>
12th ANNIVERSARY<lb/>
PARTY COIIT.<lb/>
99C ADMISSION FOR<lb/>
ALL ECU STUDENTS ALL<lb/>
NIGHT WITH<lb/>
 KAPP4 T4<lb/>
7p1<lb/>
"Welcome Back ECU Party"<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
Your Favorite Beverage Will Be Provided<lb/>
(Please Have Proper Identification)<lb/>
THURSDAY, SEPT 1<lb/>
9:00 p.m.<lb/>
409 ELIZABETH STREET<lb/>
THE<lb/>
HILL<lb/>
lOTH ST<lb/>
CAMPUS<lb/>
3THST<lb/>
DOWNTOWN - �v E<lb/>
PAJlTV<lb/>
4THST<lb/>
Don't Forget Rush<lb/>
TUES WEDSTHURS�<lb/>
SEPT. 6,7,8, at 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
752-4379 409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
�. . .1 X�' M .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0004"/><lb/>
QUr Eaat (Eoruliniatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Mil ler. 0y.w���,<lb/>
Darryi Brown, wna�mfFrfor<lb/>
Waveri y Merritt.  irifMMu Cindy Pleasants. .Wj ���,<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, sR�n�, ���� Patrick Oneill, ta &amp;-<lb/>
ALI AFRASHTEH, rrf, Manner CARLYN EBERT. ��m�mm�.��a,or<lb/>
Geoff Hudson, fvk va�,r Lizanne Jennings, ����<lb/>
Clay Thornton, r�hn,cai sur Todd Evans, Produce Manr<lb/>
September 1, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Leo In '84<lb/>
Chancellor For Governor<lb/>
Indications are that former ECU<lb/>
Chancellor Leo Jenkins will try for<lb/>
the Democratic nomination for<lb/>
governor next year. Jenkins is said<lb/>
to be encouraged by the support he<lb/>
is getting for the governor's race<lb/>
and has said, in an interview with<lb/>
the Raleigh News and Observer, of<lb/>
his current campaign, "This is for<lb/>
keeps<lb/>
Jenkins was chancellor of ECU<lb/>
for 18 years, until he retired in 1978.<lb/>
He was by all accounts an effective,<lb/>
forceful leader capable of getting<lb/>
things done in the face of long odds<lb/>
or strong opposition. Jenkins is the<lb/>
man primarily responsible for<lb/>
upgrading East Carolina from a col-<lb/>
lege to a university, a status that was<lb/>
granted in 1967. There was opposi-<lb/>
tion within the UNC system and the<lb/>
state legislature for the increased<lb/>
prestige and funding the move<lb/>
brought to ECU, but Jenkins show-<lb/>
ed himself to be an influential politi-<lb/>
cian and lobbyist, and university<lb/>
status was granted in large part<lb/>
because of his tenacity.<lb/>
A fight that was even more dif-<lb/>
ficult was the struggle to establish a<lb/>
medical school at ECU. Jenkins put<lb/>
in years of lobbying efforts at the<lb/>
state level to gain support for the<lb/>
med school. Schools of Medicine<lb/>
mean big cash outlays for develop-<lb/>
ment and continued large funding<lb/>
for operation. Some officials at<lb/>
other leading UNC univeristies, in-<lb/>
cluding UNC-Chapel Hill<lb/>
Chancellor Christopher C. Ford-<lb/>
ham, opposed the ECU medical<lb/>
school. Despite the powerful objec-<lb/>
tions, Jenkins won state approval<lb/>
and funding and brought the med<lb/>
school to ECU.<lb/>
Jenkins brought other im-<lb/>
provements to ECU, including a<lb/>
substantial increase in enrollment<lb/>
and improvement of the School of<lb/>
Art, the only accreditated one in the<lb/>
state, that now bears his name.<lb/>
During his tenure, he<lb/>
demonstrated himself to be an ef-<lb/>
fective leader, not only of the<lb/>
university, but on a state-wide level.<lb/>
His influence with the N.C.<lb/>
legislature has proved to be effec<lb/>
tive, and he has continued his work<lb/>
with state government as a special<lb/>
consultant to Gov. James Hunt.<lb/>
His familiarity with state govern-<lb/>
ment, matched with his interest and<lb/>
expertise in one of the most impor-<lb/>
tant issues a North Carolina gover-<lb/>
nor must deal with � education �<lb/>
(over two-thirds of the state's<lb/>
general fund budget goes to public<lb/>
schools and colleges) makes him one<lb/>
of the few people who know the<lb/>
structure and needs of the N.C.<lb/>
education system well enough to<lb/>
continue and expand Hunt's work<lb/>
in maintaining the quality of the<lb/>
UNC system and making much<lb/>
needed improvements in state<lb/>
secondary education.<lb/>
Jenkins faces an uphill battle in<lb/>
his bid for the governor's seat. His<lb/>
campaign coffers are low in com-<lb/>
parison to other candidates; he<lb/>
listed only $2,100 in contributions<lb/>
with the State Board of Elections as<lb/>
of Tuesday, according to the News<lb/>
and Observer. His campaign of-<lb/>
ficials are counting on grass roots<lb/>
support and Jenkin's speeches on<lb/>
important issues to counter the<lb/>
larger budgets of other candidates.<lb/>
But if the citizens of North Carolina<lb/>
listen to the man who last Spring<lb/>
received ECU's first honorary<lb/>
degree, they should find a capable<lb/>
leader for the state and a candidate<lb/>
they can support.<lb/>
Three Years Later<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
Americans have learned a lot<lb/>
about the Polish people in the last<lb/>
three years. Since the inception of<lb/>
the eastern bloc's first free trade<lb/>
union, Solidarity, three years ago<lb/>
yesterday, Poland and the plight of<lb/>
its people under a repressive com-<lb/>
munist regime have made frequent<lb/>
headlines in U.S. newspapers.<lb/>
Americans have learned of a people<lb/>
who used to be thought of only<lb/>
vaguely in the context of a<lb/>
"Polack" joke. We have since come<lb/>
to know, better understand and<lb/>
sympathize with this deeply<lb/>
religious, courageous people.<lb/>
Wednesday, thousands turned<lb/>
out in cities across Poland to mark<lb/>
the third anniversary of the creation<lb/>
of Solidarity. In silent vigils and<lb/>
peaceful gatherings, children,<lb/>
housewives and the elderly, as well<lb/>
as workers, defied the government's<lb/>
demand to ignore the anniversary, a<lb/>
demand they backed up with threats<lb/>
of severe punishment. Groups were<lb/>
stopped with water cannons, tear<lb/>
gas and blockades by military<lb/>
police, but they still turned out.<lb/>
Strikes planned by Solidarity of-<lb/>
ficials did not turn out to be massive<lb/>
or very effective, but workers still<lb/>
showed loyalty to the organization.<lb/>
Most heavily gaurded by the<lb/>
government were the major cities of<lb/>
Warsaw and Gdansk, the place of<lb/>
Solidarity's origin. It was here the<lb/>
crowds faced the greatest<lb/>
belligerence by the government.<lb/>
Change will not come soon or<lb/>
drastically for the Polish people.<lb/>
Revolution is unlikely, especially<lb/>
under the heavy guard of Polish and<lb/>
Soviet government repression, but<lb/>
at least the world has a better<lb/>
understanding of the nation's<lb/>
dilemma, and at least the Polish<lb/>
people are united, through their<lb/>
Catholic religion, to continue to<lb/>
hope for a better way of life. Their<lb/>
solid determination and resilience<lb/>
may, someday, bring small changes,<lb/>
such as the installation of a<lb/>
Solidarity-like union or more civil<lb/>
rights and freedoms, but until then<lb/>
the people have only their religion,<lb/>
common conviction and hope.<lb/>
It is a tragedy that so many<lb/>
millions must put up with such<lb/>
repression when it is clear the ma-<lb/>
jority of the people do not approve<lb/>
of their government. Self-<lb/>
determination, the right of a people<lb/>
to choose their own form of govern-<lb/>
ment, is a basic human right, and<lb/>
one that the Soviet Union and the<lb/>
government of Poland have<lb/>
violated. There are nations who<lb/>
have chosen Communism and Soviet<lb/>
aid, for better or worse, but they<lb/>
have not in Poland, and they have<lb/>
not in other places such as<lb/>
Afghanistan.<lb/>
The past three years have given,<lb/>
to the American people, a better<lb/>
understanding of the Poland and<lb/>
the repression of its governing<lb/>
regime. It has also, incidentally,<lb/>
caused a decline in popularity of the<lb/>
Polish joke. One cannot look at<lb/>
Lech Walesa, or see crowds oppos-<lb/>
ing military watercannons and tear<lb/>
gas, and then ask "How many<lb/>
Polacks does it take to change a<lb/>
lightblub?"<lb/>
'Tell them to forget raising only the Monitor's anchor and to raise the<lb/>
whole thing We can use it off Nicaragua<lb/>
Military Muscle Needs Moderation<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
The recent battle casualties in war -<lb/>
torn Beirut, Lebanon, have vividly<lb/>
reminded those of us back at home of<lb/>
the world-wide military commitments of<lb/>
the United States. The two marines who<lb/>
gave their lives were part of a huge<lb/>
number of permanent and non-<lb/>
permanent detachments stationed in<lb/>
places as diverse as Panama and Great<lb/>
Britian and as far apart as Brazil and<lb/>
Japan.<lb/>
With more than 500,000 sailors and<lb/>
soldiers on duty throughout the world,<lb/>
and with continuing crises in the Middle<lb/>
East, Central America, the Persian Gulf<lb/>
and North Africa, people have begun to<lb/>
question our showing of the flag in all<lb/>
corners of the world. We are overex-<lb/>
tended, say some military experts. I tend<lb/>
to agree.<lb/>
First of all, it's good to show the nag,<lb/>
and President Reagan has certainly done<lb/>
it as much as any president since Teddy<lb/>
Roosevelt. But running it up the pole<lb/>
and splitting it down the seams are two<lb/>
entirely different things. Reagan must<lb/>
reassess his priorities and determine ex-<lb/>
actly where he wants his battleships and<lb/>
tanks to go. Careful planning, not<lb/>
haphazard action, are the keys to show-<lb/>
ing Moscow they can't run at will<lb/>
against the gipper's defenses.<lb/>
The current Big Pine II maneuvers in<lb/>
Honduras are a case in point. They were<lb/>
hastily thrown together as a signal to the<lb/>
Sandinista regime and the rebels in El<lb/>
Salvador; Pentagon officials were flab-<lb/>
bergasted. According to one general, it<lb/>
usually takes from six months to a year<lb/>
to set up a field operation of this type �<lb/>
Reagan gave them a matter of weeks to<lb/>
draw up the plans. Maybe this time lapse<lb/>
shouldn't be, but it made us look sloppy<lb/>
in Andropov's eye. Good intentions,<lb/>
bad execution.<lb/>
Reagan definitely wants to be viewed<lb/>
with more respect by the guys in<lb/>
Moscow, and he certainly wants to pre-<lb/>
vent the Soviet Union from filling any<lb/>
future geopolitical gaps in key world<lb/>
areas. But, he has to realize that the<lb/>
manpower he has is limited. Careful<lb/>
allocation of troops and, as he has<lb/>
shown, the willingness to use them are<lb/>
the the two tasks he must show the<lb/>
Kremlin he can master.<lb/>
What's a good suggestion for getting<lb/>
the necessary number of troops to send<lb/>
across the world? NATO. The United<lb/>
States at present has 333,000 men and<lb/>
women stationed on bases and bat-<lb/>
tleships in and around Europe. This is a<lb/>
majority of our armed forces<lb/>
worldwide. Reagan must urge his allies<lb/>
to be responsible for their own<lb/>
backyards if he is going to protect those<lb/>
places on the planet where our help is<lb/>
really needed.<lb/>
Britain and West Germany must, as<lb/>
Reagan has implicitly implied, accept<lb/>
our help in defending the European con-<lb/>
tinent in terms of missiles, not men.<lb/>
Freeing of American troops to go<lb/>
elsewhere is essential if Reagan is to put<lb/>
a halt to our stretching of the defense<lb/>
rubber band before it snaps back in our<lb/>
face.<lb/>
So, with the problem of overextension<lb/>
of the nation's military might laid before<lb/>
us, we must examine briefly the underly-<lb/>
ing theory of showing a strong defense.<lb/>
So far, in terms of Soviet and Cuban ac-<lb/>
quiesence, it seems to be working. Fidel<lb/>
Castro has called for talks on the Cen-<lb/>
tral American situation and Anaropov is<lb/>
taking seriously our desire to tc rou�<lb/>
on nuclear defense issues.<lb/>
Like it or not, it's a mean world with<lb/>
the Soviets. They may not be bent on<lb/>
good ol' world domination anymore,<lb/>
but they sure like throwing their AK-47s<lb/>
around to every insurgent group that<lb/>
rises up against democracy. We have to<lb/>
show them that Uncle Sam has been lif-<lb/>
ting weights lately.<lb/>
VMM mm SHORTEST LIFE WAl<lb/>
s<lb/>
BRAZILIAN<lb/>
APHID<lb/>
AFRICAN<lb/>
TSE-TSE<lb/>
r-Campus Forum<lb/>
GUATEMALAN<lb/>
DICTATOR<lb/>
Cheerleader's Leader Is Tops<lb/>
Last week my college cheerleading<lb/>
squad attended a cheering camp at<lb/>
George Mason University in Fairfax,<lb/>
Va. The cheerleaders from ECU were<lb/>
also in attendance at this camp. During<lb/>
the course of the four days we had the<lb/>
fortunate experience of getting to<lb/>
know one of your representatives, Mr.<lb/>
James K. Elkins. The purpose of this<lb/>
letter is to commmend your univeristy<lb/>
on your selection of such a Fine in-<lb/>
dividual.<lb/>
My squad, along with several others<lb/>
from smaller schools, was getting a bit<lb/>
discouraged by the vast disparity bet-<lb/>
ween themselves and those from larger<lb/>
schools. Mr. Elkins took time from a<lb/>
harried schedule to sit down with them<lb/>
and offer some encouragemnt to them.<lb/>
His gentle understanding and genuine<lb/>
concern was, for them, one of the most<lb/>
rewarding and memorable experiences<lb/>
of the camp.<lb/>
In a time earmarked by intense com-<lb/>
petition between schools, it is indeed<lb/>
refreshing to encounter such an unbias-<lb/>
ed, sincere, good-will ambassador.<lb/>
You have every reason to be proud of<lb/>
this mature young man.<lb/>
Loraine M. Boudreau<lb/>
Cheerleader Advisor,<lb/>
Sacred Heart University<lb/>
Carribean Basin<lb/>
The Caribbean Basin is the soft<lb/>
under-belly of the United States. If we<lb/>
allow further extension of Russian-<lb/>
instigated communism in this area, we<lb/>
shall be flooded with millions of<lb/>
refugees, even though the military'<lb/>
threat is minimal, thanks to President<lb/>
Kennedy's naval blockade of Cuba in<lb/>
the missile crisis.<lb/>
President Monroe has said we regard<lb/>
any attempt by the European powers to<lb/>
extend their system to any portion of<lb/>
this hemisphere as dangerous to our<lb/>
peace and safety. We view any in-<lb/>
tervention for the purpose of oppress-<lb/>
ing the free and independent American<lb/>
nations, or controlling in any other<lb/>
manner their destiny, as the manifesta-<lb/>
tion of an unfriendly disposition<lb/>
towards the United States.<lb/>
In 1906, when Germany sent a bat-<lb/>
tleship to Venezuela to exact payment<lb/>
of a debt, President Roosevelt advised<lb/>
the German government that if any at-<lb/>
tempt was made to occupy Venezuelan<lb/>
territory, he would dispatch the U.S.<lb/>
fleet.<lb/>
Now hear this: The United States<lb/>
must project immediate police power<lb/>
throughout the Basin, using our<lb/>
destroyers and frigates. Critical areas,<lb/>
such as Nicaragua, should be blockad-<lb/>
ed and ALL military arms should be<lb/>
considered contraband, subject to<lb/>
seizure.<lb/>
All American nations and peoples<lb/>
should be free to work out their own<lb/>
destiny without interference in their in-<lb/>
ternal affairs, even as the United States<lb/>
has done. This is in accordance with<lb/>
International Law, the Charter of the<lb/>
United Nations, the Charter of the<lb/>
Organization of American States and<lb/>
the U.S. tradition, as ably expressed<lb/>
and practiced by Presidents Teddy and<lb/>
Franklin Roosevelt and Woodrow<lb/>
Wilson.<lb/>
Wake up, America!<lb/>
Ken Tomkinson<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from Joyner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
tetters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel.<lb/>
<lb/>
BL<lb/>
Dr. Gerhard Kalrnu<lb/>
the vearS first Biol<lb/>
Laws<lb/>
i'<lb/>
-<lb/>
-<lb/>
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irr.pairec b<lb/>
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arc i?<lb/>
2 Bsho� .<lb/>
0 10 or more<lb/>
If Joe -� -<lb/>
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If Joe <lb/>
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hour<lb/>
- -<lb/>
Joe ,ar be I Bed <lb/>
- - . .<lb/>
�:&amp;<lb/>
��<lb/>
.�� PA<lb/>
clas:<lb/>
otw<lb/>
401 S. EVANS<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSEl<lb/>
YOURPROFE!<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
S<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0005"/><lb/>
THfc EAS1AKOLINIAN<lb/>
SLPTLMBtR I, 1983<lb/>
;<lb/>
nd to raise the<lb/>
leration<lb/>
igan musi urge his allies<lb/>
: sible for their own<lb/>
f is going to protect those<lb/>
el vheie our help is<lb/>
West Germans must, as<lb/>
plicitly implied, accept<lb/>
ding the European con-<lb/>
' of misiies. not men.<lb/>
American troops to go<lb/>
sential if Reagan is to put<lb/>
stretching of the defense<lb/>
it -naps back in our<lb/>
pe problem of oerextension<lb/>
- military might laid before<lb/>
I nine bneflx the underly-<lb/>
t showing a strong defense.<lb/>
rm- of Soviet and Cuban ac-<lb/>
eems to be working. Fidel<lb/>
:alled for talks on the Cen-<lb/>
to situation and Andropov is<lb/>
fusly out desire to be tough<lb/>
defense issues.<lb/>
not, it's a mean world with<lb/>
They may not be bent on<lb/>
lurid domination anymore,<lb/>
j like throwing their AK-47s<lb/>
� er insurgent group that<lb/>
democracy . We have to<lb/>
I Uncle Sam has been lif-<lb/>
latelv<lb/>
I<lb/>
,LAM<lb/>
&amp;L4Ajew&amp;-vvtT3 �54TO 9M).<lb/>
military arms should be<lb/>
:ontraband, subject to<lb/>
can nations and peoples<lb/>
re to work out their own<lb/>
ut interference in their in-<lb/>
, even as the United States<lb/>
us is in accordance with<lb/>
Law, the Charter of the<lb/>
ns, the Charter of the<lb/>
of American States and<lb/>
dition, as ably expressed<lb/>
' by Presidents Teddy and<lb/>
osevelt and Woodrow<lb/>
America!<lb/>
Ken Tomkinson<lb/>
urn Rules<lb/>
iroliman welcomes letters<lb/>
points oj view. Mail or<lb/>
p our office in the Old<lb/>
n?, arrows from Joyner<lb/>
es of verification, all let-<lb/>
ude the name, major and<lb/>
address, phone number<lb/>
of the author(s). Letters<lb/>
two typewritten pages,<lb/>
or neatly printed. All<lb/>
tyect to editing for brevi-<lb/>
md libel.<lb/>
��<lb/>
' U<lb/>
4<lb/>
Biology Club Meets<lb/>
Dr. Gerhard Kalmus and Roxanne Tavlor discuss student turn-out at<lb/>
the ear s first Biolog C lub meeting!<lb/>
Laws Concerning DWI<lb/>
� �' and umvenuy ttudenn from the<lb/>
n Department aft rtme Prevention<lb/>
On October I, 1�8V North Carolina wiii nave a tie<lb/>
Id ol ia� dealing with those who operate a vehicle while<lb/>
mpaired hv alcoholx bevcrafa or jn other impairing<lb/>
our 1 he sale K,mj  ol 1983 Joe much more<lb/>
dive the drinking age tor heer and unfortified wine<lb/>
9. W� would ike tor :he students attending our col<lb/>
reges and unrsersities to he aware ot the new law<lb/>
Perhaps the h-s; was to evplain some ot the .on<lb/>
ptehensise provisions ol the new law is to state a<lb/>
hypothetical -ase involving a student -we will call him<lb/>
.Use stopped bj a Stale Highwav Patrolman for driving<lb/>
under :he influence ot an impairing substance<lb/>
Joe ma have been cropped at one ol the roadblocks<lb/>
law enforcement agencies can now establish under the<lb/>
Safe Roads V: to check tor drunk drivers He ma have<lb/>
been stopped because the trooper saw him drinking a<lb/>
beet while driving<lb/>
I nder the Sale Road- Vt. it is unlawful lor ihc driver ol<lb/>
a vehicle to consume anv alcoholic beverage while dm<lb/>
mg<lb/>
I nder the new law. Joe van be arrested and charged<lb/>
nder the single offense of impaired driving There are<lb/>
no lesser included offenses, such as careless and reckless<lb/>
driving alter drinking, in the new law. thus, there will be<lb/>
no more plea bargaining There is onlv one charge, and it<lb/>
can Pe proved in one of two wave<lb/>
I Bv showing the driver's physical or manial (acuities<lb/>
are appereciablv impaired bv an impairing substance or.<lb/>
2 Bv showing the driver's alcohol concentration i C) is<lb/>
0 10 or more<lb/>
If Joe refuses to submit to a chemical test, his license<lb/>
will be revoked for one vear He can appls lor limited<lb/>
driving privileges onlv after surrendering his license lor<lb/>
six months of the revocation<lb/>
If Joe registers 0 10 AC or more on a chemical test, Ot<lb/>
refuses the test, he will be taken before a magistrate and<lb/>
his license will be suspended immediateh for 10 das-<lb/>
This is mandati-rv No one gets oft Out-of-state students<lb/>
will have their privilege to drive in North Carolina<lb/>
suspended for 10 davs, just the same as studenis licensed<lb/>
in North Carolina<lb/>
If the magistrate determines Joe Is too unpaired to he<lb/>
released the magistrate is empowered under the a to<lb/>
hold Joe lor up to T4 hours or until a responsible, sober<lb/>
adult will take responsibilitv for him In no event mav<lb/>
live be held for more rhan 24 hours<lb/>
rsl�-�. J� will hme m rrijii on ibr charge- If l.sc is con<lb/>
victed of driving while impaired, the law requires the<lb/>
rudge to hold a sentencing hearing where Crossh <lb/>
gravating Drunk Driving (GADO) factors, aggra<lb/>
factors and mitigating factors are presented bv the pro<lb/>
secutor and defense attorness The judge must wcig:<lb/>
these factors in imposing sentences<lb/>
If two GADD factos ia prior impaired driving offense<lb/>
in the past seven vears. driving with revoked license lor<lb/>
an impaired offense, causing an accident resulting in<lb/>
senous Injur) to another i are present, there is a man<lb/>
dators minimum jail term of 14 davs and Joe can be I'm<lb/>
ed up to S2.O00 If one GADD factor is present. Joe 'aces<lb/>
a mandators minimum seven davs in lail and a fine up to<lb/>
$1,000 II Joe has two or more prior convict:����<lb/>
mg impaired within seven vears. punishment is the same<lb/>
as if he had two GADD (actors<lb/>
If no GADD factors are present, the ludge wri-<lb/>
aggravating and mitigating factors It aggravate .<lb/>
tors outweigh mitigating factors. Joe can be seme<lb/>
a minimum of 72 hours in jail, or I! hours of commumtv<lb/>
service or 90 days without driving or a combination ot<lb/>
all He also faces a fine of up to $500 If aggravating and<lb/>
mitigating factors balance out, Joe faces a sentence of 4<lb/>
hours in jail, 4X hours commumtv service or 60 davs<lb/>
without driving or a combination of all Additionally.<lb/>
Joe can be fined up to $250 'f the mitigating factors<lb/>
outweigh the aggravating factors, Joe faces a jail term of<lb/>
24 hours, or 24 hous commumtv service or V) davs<lb/>
without driving or a combinai in ol all Joe can be fined<lb/>
up to $100<lb/>
Some aggravating factors are gross impairment or an<lb/>
�U ol 0 20 or mote, especially reckless driving, an acci<lb/>
dem causing over $500 damage or personal injury; dnv-<lb/>
ing while license revoked, two or more 3 point motor<lb/>
vehicle otlcnses within 5 vears. or one or more prior con<lb/>
vtcrjoas ot l)W more than " vears old. speeding lo elude<lb/>
arrest, speeding more lhar 30 miles per hour above the<lb/>
posted limit, and passing a slopped school bus<lb/>
Some mitigating factors are slight impairment solelv<lb/>
(torn alcohol. AC of 0 11 or less, slight impairment solely<lb/>
ftom alcohol and no chemical test available, generally<lb/>
safe driving at time ol offense, no setious tralfic offenses<lb/>
within pasi s vears. impairment caused bv lawfullv<lb/>
prescribed drug, and voluntarv submission to ireatment<lb/>
before trial<lb/>
II this is J.ve's first unpaired driving otlense. he will<lb/>
lose his driving privileges for one vear He is eligible for a<lb/>
severelv curtailed limned driving privilege onlv after he<lb/>
has served a court ordered period ol vehicle non-<lb/>
operahon If it is Joe's second offense, he loses his<lb/>
license for four vears and can get no limited privilege<lb/>
Revocation is permanent lor ihe thud offense<lb/>
In matters of license revocation tor out of stale<lb/>
students. North c aiolina has reciprocity with mosi states<lb/>
lor impaired driving crimes Ihe North Carolina Dvi-<lb/>
sion of Motor vehicles would send the report of vour<lb/>
conviction to vour home siate and that siate could apply<lb/>
the sanction In anv evenr. North Carolina will revoke<lb/>
vour privilege to operate a motor vehicle in this state<lb/>
If Joe holds a North Carolina provisional license<lb/>
(issued to 16 and 17-year olds) and is convicted of DWI<lb/>
or refuses 10 take a chemical test, or is caught driving<lb/>
with anv amount ol alcohol or anv impairing substance<lb/>
in his svstcm (excluding prescriptions taken in a lawful<lb/>
amount), his license will be revoked until he is 18. or for<lb/>
45 davs. whichever is longer<lb/>
The law also provides a one vear license revocation if<lb/>
An underage person attempts to purchase or pur<lb/>
ises an alcoholic beverage.<lb/>
J1 underage person aids or abets another to artempt<lb/>
to purchase or purchase an alcoholic beverage,<lb/>
An underage person attempts to purchase, purchases<lb/>
possesses alcoholic beverages bv using or attempting<lb/>
to use a fraudulent duvet's license ot other I D . or by<lb/>
� ending his driver's bcense or anv other I D lor that put-<lb/>
pose<lb/>
II lor rrgisicis 0 20 or more on a chemical te�r. h will<lb/>
h- referred (o an appropriate puhln 01 private laceihtv for<lb/>
��raiment and .ounseluig Ac levels ia those langes are<lb/>
indicative ot problem drinkers Problem drinkers cause<lb/>
the matoruv ot accidents involving impaired drivers<lb/>
It Joe is caught tor Dk I alter his license is revoked, he<lb/>
lacev forfeiture ol his vehicle<lb/>
Another important aspect ol the Safe Roads Act which<lb/>
mav allect students is the "Dramshop" provision Under<lb/>
this provision, negligent sale of beer, wine or liquor to an<lb/>
underage person mav subject the seller to civil liability if<lb/>
ihe underage person (hen i nniHBMI the beverage and as a<lb/>
result ot consuming the beverage has an accidenl while<lb/>
driving impaired This provision led operators of<lb/>
establishments which sell alcoholic beverages lo ask for<lb/>
the power 10 hold a person's I D lor a reasonable time to<lb/>
check the I Ds validitv The seller must tell ther person<lb/>
whv he is holding the I I)<lb/>
In addition to the criminal and administrative sanc-<lb/>
tions mennoned above, loe laces a host of other pro<lb/>
biems arising trom a conviction tor DW I If he is a first<lb/>
ol'rnder. he will he required to pas lot and attend classes<lb/>
at one ol the slate's Alcohol Drug tducalion Traffic<lb/>
Sch.vols His car insurance will climb precipitously.<lb/>
Whatever it cost before the conviction, u will now cost<lb/>
him 39s percent more- 395 percent more tor ihree years!<lb/>
Ii is not worth it to drink and drive Your persona<lb/>
COM are too high The costs to society are too high. If<lb/>
vou drink, don't drive If you drive, don't drink<lb/>
-SLA&amp;<lb/>
;v� PAY IMMEDIATE CASH FOR<lb/>
CLASS RINGS WEDDING BANDS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
ALLGOLD&amp;SILVER<lb/>
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VV � 0F KEY SALES CO ,? Af<lb/>
401 S. EVANS ST. open9.30-5:30monsat.<lb/>
(HARMONY HOUSE SOUTH) PHON E 7523866<lb/>
YOUR PROFESSIONAL PERMANENT DEALER<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
THEATER ft<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
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WE'RE OPEN LATE!<lb/>
Stnp in ;tt Subway after your late night fun Try cine of our<lb/>
I .� � , mh'  i lorn' sandwiches We have P mouth water<lb/>
k. , ii- ��� m top U v. ur inch We're open til! 2 ') a m<lb/>
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.SUB<lb/>
A"ie'ic's Famous<lb/>
Foot Long Sandwich<lb/>
208 E. 5th Street<lb/>
N.C. Coastal Waters Polluted<lb/>
By<lb/>
GLENN MAUGHAN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
be<lb/>
on<lb/>
In a soon to<lb/>
published report<lb/>
coastal<lb/>
ECU'S<lb/>
Sociology, An-<lb/>
thropology and<lb/>
Economics will<lb/>
release information<lb/>
proving that the ef-<lb/>
fects of pollution have<lb/>
seriously deteriorated<lb/>
North Carolina's<lb/>
coastal waterways. Maiolo, chairman of<lb/>
The report is a follow- the school and coor-<lb/>
up to a similar study dinator of the study,<lb/>
conducted in 1978, is the author of<lb/>
which stated:<lb/>
"population growth<lb/>
pollution, in two (coastal) coun-<lb/>
School of ties was found to be<lb/>
accompanied by in-<lb/>
creased amounts of<lb/>
estuarine acreage clos-<lb/>
ed to shell-fishing as a<lb/>
result of the degrada-<lb/>
tion of water quali-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
Dr. John R.<lb/>
Mississippi Prisoner<lb/>
Awaiting Execution:<lb/>
numerous articles and<lb/>
textbooks dealing<lb/>
with maritime<lb/>
sociology.<lb/>
Maiolo said the<lb/>
study shows that in-<lb/>
creases in population<lb/>
are causing havoc<lb/>
with the local<lb/>
fishermen and<lb/>
creating a pollution<lb/>
problem that<lb/>
threatens the<lb/>
harvesting of shellfish<lb/>
and other marine life.<lb/>
"Effluent containing<lb/>
coliform bacteria is<lb/>
closing down a hell of<lb/>
a lot of acreage<lb/>
Maiolo said.<lb/>
Maiolo noted<lb/>
that4 'tremendous<lb/>
pressure" has been<lb/>
placed on the North<lb/>
Carolina coast; clos-<lb/>
ing coastal areas due<lb/>
to pollution means<lb/>
losses in the<lb/>
thousands of dollars<lb/>
for coastal fishermen<lb/>
and communities<lb/>
As more and more<lb/>
people move into the<lb/>
area, their septic<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1<lb/>
North Carolina has<lb/>
34 death row inmates,<lb/>
16 of whom are black.<lb/>
There are also one<lb/>
native American and<lb/>
one white women on<lb/>
awaiting execution.<lb/>
"It's no accident<lb/>
that nearly a majority<lb/>
of the people on death<lb/>
row are people of col-<lb/>
or Paulig said, ad-<lb/>
ding that N.C, a state<lb/>
with a 22-percent<lb/>
black population, has<lb/>
a 50-percent non-<lb/>
white death row slate.<lb/>
"The death penalty<lb/>
is the racist institu-<lb/>
tion Paulic said.<lb/>
She also disputed the<lb/>
argument that<lb/>
justifies the higher<lb/>
number of blacks on<lb/>
death row because<lb/>
they commit more<lb/>
murders. "There's no<lb/>
relationshp between<lb/>
crime rates, race and<lb/>
the institution of the<lb/>
death penalty<lb/>
Paulig said.<lb/>
Paulig said<lb/>
NCADP recognizes<lb/>
there are dangerous<lb/>
people who need to be<lb/>
segregated from the<lb/>
rest of society, but she<lb/>
doesn' t believe<lb/>
prisons � as they are<lb/>
� are doing the job<lb/>
humanely. "We can<lb/>
imagine alternatives<lb/>
that are secure, keep<lb/>
dangerous people off<lb/>
the streets and are not<lb/>
made of steel and con-<lb/>
crete and do not in-<lb/>
volve the terrible<lb/>
deprivation that our<lb/>
prisons do Paulig<lb/>
said.<lb/>
NCADP will be<lb/>
vigiling for one hour<lb/>
Thursday night.<lb/>
Members are urging<lb/>
citizens to send<lb/>
telegrams to<lb/>
Mississippi Gov.<lb/>
William Winter urg-<lb/>
ing him to commute<lb/>
Grey's sentence to life<lb/>
in prison.<lb/>
PART TIME<lb/>
City afl Grata rife<lb/>
Far�rgi Cot�<lb/>
�� to ��� cMcfce are �4t4 to �t .tin yo�ik ia 1st<lb/>
!����� � grate kr��aj la the M aaaaai paaaaaai win.<lb/>
� he Kermtio. u. r�r.i DtjMrt. -�, ia-�ho�r<lb/>
r TUllw��������.Se���aaern. Mia ho.r<lb/>
bvaataaat bj aftajaaj aaaaai aaal haja tab �j � re,ulr<lb/>
Aaaj at tht City rTv,art OfIte. Maakiaal IuWm<lb/>
caraw of Wfal Fifth aaal Waahiattoa Smcb. GraeaviU s.(<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
tanks will only add to<lb/>
the situation<lb/>
Maiolo added.<lb/>
Funded in part by<lb/>
ECU, the UNC Sea<lb/>
Grant College Pro-<lb/>
gram and the South<lb/>
Atlantic Fishery<lb/>
Management Council,<lb/>
the project included<lb/>
the work of several<lb/>
ECU graduate and<lb/>
undergraduate<lb/>
students. Reba Lewis,<lb/>
graduate student<lb/>
assistant in Sociology<lb/>
who designed a ques-<lb/>
tionaire for the pro-<lb/>
ject, said shell fishing<lb/>
was "just about<lb/>
finished in Brunswick<lb/>
county<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Lewis, many of the<lb/>
coastal residents "feel<lb/>
helpless" and are<lb/>
unaware of steps to<lb/>
take to solve their<lb/>
problems. Many of<lb/>
the permanent<lb/>
residents resent out-<lb/>
siders fishing there<lb/>
and friction exists bet-<lb/>
ween those who<lb/>
harvest shellfish<lb/>
manually and those<lb/>
who use mechanical<lb/>
means. All of these<lb/>
problems add to a<lb/>
larger problem that<lb/>
results when restric-<lb/>
tions are placed on<lb/>
fishermen after areas<lb/>
have to be closed due<lb/>
to pollution.<lb/>
The nine county<lb/>
project concluded this<lb/>
past summer, but the<lb/>
study will be ongoing.<lb/>
"This involves ECU<lb/>
in world-wide plans<lb/>
for fishery manage-<lb/>
ment, Maiolo said.<lb/>
g t.t.t.l �.� 8 8 8 8 8 B.B.t llllllMIIHHHi 11 in n�ai m m m ne o a a a aa B)t<lb/>
"Welcome Back ECU"<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057570_0006"/><lb/>
THl EASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1983<lb/>
Group Wants Jobs, Peace, Freedom Coalition<lb/>
WASHINGTON<lb/>
(I PI) - The chair-<lb/>
man of last weekend's<lb/>
'March on<lb/>
Washington" said<lb/>
I uesdav the broad<lb/>
based coalition that<lb/>
drew 300,000 mar<lb/>
chers will now lobby<lb/>
for specific "Jobs,<lb/>
Peace and Freedom"<lb/>
legislation.<lb/>
Walter Fauntroy,<lb/>
who is also the<lb/>
District of Colum-<lb/>
bia's non-voting<lb/>
member of Congress,<lb/>
predicted his "New<lb/>
Coalition of Cons-<lb/>
cience" could have a<lb/>
"decisive impact" on<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Meyer<lb/>
Advises ECU Students<lb/>
Dear Student,<lb/>
All of un in the Division of Student Life are happy that you<lb/>
are with us as students. Our staff are here to serve and work<lb/>
with you as you begin or continue your education at ECU.<lb/>
This issue and the last issue of The East Carolinian spotlighted<lb/>
some of our departments which are here to serve you.<lb/>
It you have questions, problems or ways we can improve<lb/>
our services to you, please contact the various student life of-<lb/>
fices.<lb/>
I once heard a distinguished university president spell out<lb/>
what he thought you, as students, ought to receive from your<lb/>
university education:<lb/>
1) To read and analve competently, write clearly, speak<lb/>
fluentlv;<lb/>
2) To develop life-long curiosity and self-discipline;<lb/>
3) To understand the foundations, assumptions, limitations<lb/>
and interrelationships of knowledge of ourselves, our society<lb/>
and our environment;<lb/>
4) To understand some culture and time other than our<lb/>
Ow n;<lb/>
5) To understand the issues of life, the problems of society<lb/>
and the value sstems tor conduct in order to allow commit-<lb/>
ment;<lb/>
6) To learn to live in a diverse community; to treasure �<lb/>
not just tolerate � a difference of opinion; to form some<lb/>
lasting friendships;<lb/>
7) To develop skill, precision and competence in one chosen<lb/>
area,<lb/>
8) To experience some creative opportunity.<lb/>
Thes. goals can be attained both in the classroom and out-<lb/>
side the classroom. Strive to attain them. If you do, you will<lb/>
be getting the most out of your years at ECU.<lb/>
Again, rhose of us in the Division of Student Life and your<lb/>
own elected student leaders want to hear from you so that we<lb/>
can all work together to improve student life at ECU. Always<lb/>
fee! free to ask us questions and make comments on how we<lb/>
can work better with and for you.<lb/>
BeM wishes for a successful 198r 84 experience.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
Elmer Meyer<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
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Congress and on next<lb/>
fall's election<lb/>
The coalition's im<lb/>
mediate goals include<lb/>
passage of the rem-<lb/>
troduced Equal<lb/>
Rights Amendment, a<lb/>
bill to create jobs in<lb/>
high unemployment<lb/>
areas and another to<lb/>
make Martin I uther<lb/>
King Jrs birthday a<lb/>
national holiday.<lb/>
'More than<lb/>
300, ()()() marchers<lb/>
revived Martin I uther<lb/>
King Jrs dream of<lb/>
jobs, peace and<lb/>
freedom for all<lb/>
Americans, Fauntroy<lb/>
told a news con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
"Now the millions<lb/>
of Americans<lb/>
represented by those<lb/>
maichers must let<lb/>
their political leaders<lb/>
know that the march<lb/>
was only the first step<lb/>
in making that dream<lb/>
a reality he said.<lb/>
"The second step<lb/>
will come in the<lb/>
statehouses, halls of<lb/>
Congress and the elec-<lb/>
tion booths next<lb/>
November said<lb/>
ly<lb/>
The march Satur<lb/>
day commemorated<lb/>
the 20th anniversary<lb/>
of King's landmark<lb/>
civil rights march on<lb/>
Washington. Par-<lb/>
ticipants called for<lb/>
n�.ui fulfillment of King's<lb/>
Fauntroy, who led the dream of equality and<lb/>
crowd in chants justice for all.<lb/>
against President Speaker<lb/>
Reagan several times<lb/>
during Saturday's ral-<lb/>
after<lb/>
speaker at the rally<lb/>
denounced the<lb/>
�viuic man Know mat tne march during Saturday s ral- denounced the<lb/>
Campus Regional Development Institute<lb/>
Helps Resolve Community Problems<lb/>
Among ECU'S Since Its indention nrnfit nroani7atinn: nf accictQne tr cr<lb/>
Among ECU's<lb/>
most prominent<lb/>
outreach service pro-<lb/>
grams is the Regional<lb/>
Development In<lb/>
stitute, housed in the<lb/>
Willis Building, at the<lb/>
corner of First and<lb/>
Reade streets.<lb/>
Organized in 19M,<lb/>
the Institute was<lb/>
developed to provide<lb/>
a practical approach<lb/>
to the resolution of<lb/>
economic and social<lb/>
problems within a<lb/>
32-county region as<lb/>
well as to help<lb/>
capitalize on the<lb/>
strengths for future<lb/>
economic and social<lb/>
development.<lb/>
Since its inception,<lb/>
the Institute has<lb/>
gradually grown in<lb/>
staff, scope and com-<lb/>
mitment to the<lb/>
development of<lb/>
eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, with a full-<lb/>
time staff of five pro-<lb/>
fessionals under the<lb/>
direction of Janice<lb/>
Faulkner. Staff<lb/>
responsibilities are<lb/>
divided into three<lb/>
areas: community,<lb/>
business and environ-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
r h e c o m m unit v<lb/>
section works with<lb/>
local governments,<lb/>
quasi-local govern-<lb/>
ment groups and non-<lb/>
profit organizations.<lb/>
The business facet<lb/>
promotes small<lb/>
business and in-<lb/>
dustrial development,<lb/>
and the environmen-<lb/>
tal section provides<lb/>
assistance with<lb/>
physical design plans,<lb/>
permit assistance and<lb/>
investigative reports<lb/>
concerning specific<lb/>
environmental pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
The Institute's<lb/>
plans for the near<lb/>
future include the<lb/>
completion of a data<lb/>
service on eastern<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
municipalities and<lb/>
counties, expansion<lb/>
of assistance to small<lb/>
businesses, an in-<lb/>
crease in efforts to<lb/>
market the region's<lb/>
attractiveness for<lb/>
retirement develop-<lb/>
ment and the initia-<lb/>
tion of a<lb/>
canoe nature trail<lb/>
through eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Interested students,<lb/>
faculty and staff<lb/>
members are welcom-<lb/>
ed to use any of the<lb/>
institute's resources<lb/>
and discuss involve-<lb/>
ment in projects af-<lb/>
fecting the future of<lb/>
eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Reagan administra<lb/>
tion and called tor an<lb/>
end to what thev call<lb/>
ed unfair and un<lb/>
sound economic,<lb/>
social and defense<lb/>
policies<lb/>
Fauntroy an-<lb/>
nounced that the ycaj<lb/>
old coalition, com-<lb/>
posed of abou! 700<lb/>
groups representing<lb/>
causes ranging trom<lb/>
civil rights and labor<lb/>
to the nuclear treeze<lb/>
and the environment,<lb/>
will maintain a per<lb/>
manent National<lb/>
fice in Washington<lb/>
The central office<lb/>
will provide 325 .<lb/>
offices with manuals<lb/>
"outlining the<lb/>
targeted legislation.<lb/>
the local legislator's<lb/>
voting records and<lb/>
publicity and l � I<lb/>
ing hints he<lb/>
Just as the lYr<lb/>
march galvanized the<lb/>
nation to enact the<lb/>
Civil Righ; v of<lb/>
19M. the enormo<lb/>
successful Marh<lb/>
Saturday and the con-<lb/>
tinuing I i t i c a 1<lb/>
pressure of the new<lb/>
coalition" will pro-<lb/>
duce reform, aid<lb/>
Fauntrov.<lb/>
I arlier Tut :<lb/>
the Nj'i.iiij; l<lb/>
vatne Polii; ai Act<lb/>
( ommittee<lb/>
rtfei<lb/>
a here it an:<lb/>
the formatioi<lb/>
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I Hi 1 M i AK�.M IN! AN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1. 198?<lb/>
Page<lb/>
To Cramped Dorm Rooms<lb/>
GORDON I POCK Photo Lab<lb/>
Doubling Up<lb/>
Pam, standing, and Donna live the split level life in .larvis.<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
Staff Wrii�<lb/>
ECU's warren-like dorms seem<lb/>
unlivable to many students used<lb/>
to more spacious accomodations.<lb/>
The standard dorm furnishings of<lb/>
two beds, a couple of desks or<lb/>
table and some chest of drawers<lb/>
leave scant room for an extra<lb/>
chair or sofa from home. Besides<lb/>
books and clothes, a student can<lb/>
squeeze in a rent-a-frig, a hot<lb/>
plate and a ghetto blaster and<lb/>
that's about it.<lb/>
The solution? Go split level<lb/>
with a dorm loft.<lb/>
According to the campus hous-<lb/>
ing office, lofts can be con-<lb/>
structed in any ot ECU's dorms.<lb/>
Unfortunately, in the newer<lb/>
dorms where the ceilings are low<lb/>
and the beds and everything else<lb/>
are often bolted to the floor, lofts<lb/>
are difficult to build and of<lb/>
limited value. But the older dorms<lb/>
like Jarvis, Fleming and Cotton<lb/>
are loft haven. Their cavernously-<lb/>
high, ten-and-a-half foot ceilings<lb/>
offer a lot of extra living space to<lb/>
any resident that's handy with a<lb/>
hammer and a saw.<lb/>
Sophomores John Greif from<lb/>
Baltimore and Ron Gatto from<lb/>
Fort I auderdale have turned a<lb/>
once-crowded and drab Jarvis<lb/>
room into a slick and roomy<lb/>
bachelor's pad. Their six-foot-<lb/>
high loft covers about half their<lb/>
room. Both beds are on the loft<lb/>
leaving the floor for a living and<lb/>
study area. There's plenty of<lb/>
room for their large sofa, a coffee<lb/>
table and a hi-fi cabinet.<lb/>
"We had to make an estimate<lb/>
of what lumber we needed, the<lb/>
amount we needed, went out and<lb/>
bought it, brought it back here,<lb/>
brought one piece in at a time and<lb/>
constructed it that way explain-<lb/>
ed John. "The room wasn't big<lb/>
enough to bring all the lumber in<lb/>
at once, so we brought it in piece-<lb/>
by-piece, measured it, cut it and<lb/>
put it up.<lb/>
"We had a basic plan and<lb/>
diagram, but a lot of it was im-<lb/>
provised along the way con-<lb/>
tinued John.<lb/>
Ron worked as a carpenter this<lb/>
summer, but both he and John<lb/>
agreed that professional skills are<lb/>
not needed to build a loft.<lb/>
"We had all the power tools we<lb/>
needed and all the wood tools<lb/>
said Ron. He walks to the closet,<lb/>
reaches in and pulls out a skill<lb/>
saw.<lb/>
The guys said they built the loft<lb/>
in only three hours � an amazing<lb/>
feat considering the high quality<lb/>
of design and construction.<lb/>
"It's held up on four-by-fours,<lb/>
supported by two-by-fours with<lb/>
half-inch plywood on topsaid<lb/>
John. "The lumber cost $150<lb/>
A knock at the door.<lb/>
RonCome in<lb/>
John Who is it<lb/>
A blond coed pokes her head<lb/>
around the doorCan I come<lb/>
in?" She's followed by her<lb/>
mother.<lb/>
"Oh wow says the mother,<lb/>
walking about and ogling the loft.<lb/>
"This is really something<lb/>
"People like it says Ron.<lb/>
"Everybody likes it. They all want<lb/>
us to buld them oneespecially<lb/>
girls.<lb/>
As a rule, girls aren't as hands<lb/>
with hammers and saws as guys<lb/>
are, but that doesn't mean they<lb/>
don't have lofts. There are per-<lb/>
mits for 23 lofts in Jarvis and<lb/>
Fleming dorms alone with most of<lb/>
the lofts in girls rooms. Many girls<lb/>
get boyfriends and fathers to<lb/>
build them, but some, like<lb/>
sohomores Pam Vernon from<lb/>
Chapel Hill and Donna Spurrier<lb/>
from Charlotte, simply buy a loft.<lb/>
Pam and Donna bought their<lb/>
loft at the end of spring semester<lb/>
from two girls across the hall.<lb/>
Since lofts usually must be taken<lb/>
down over the summer, they<lb/>
crated it home and then brought it<lb/>
back when school began last<lb/>
week. With the help of dear old<lb/>
dad and some brothers, the had<lb/>
it nailed together in no time.<lb/>
Buying a loft is apparentlv a<lb/>
smart move.<lb/>
"We got a good deal on<lb/>
itsaid Donna. "It oniv cost us<lb/>
S70<lb/>
"And it cost them SI 10 just to<lb/>
make it added Pam.<lb/>
Pam and Donna's loft covers<lb/>
one side of tjieir room. and. as<lb/>
with most lofts, supports their<lb/>
beds. With the beds out ot the<lb/>
way, they've added wicker fur-<lb/>
niture and cushions to the room.<lb/>
The redwood-stained two-bv-<lb/>
fours of their loft add to the relax<lb/>
ed Bohemian decor.<lb/>
For most dorm residents, get<lb/>
ting out of the dorm and into an<lb/>
apartment is a major goal. But<lb/>
John and Ron. and Pam and<lb/>
Donna intend to stay in Jarvis un-<lb/>
til they graduate. Dorm lofts, thev<lb/>
say. make dorm life livable. Oniv<lb/>
Pam could think of a dorm-loft<lb/>
disadvantage.<lb/>
"If you're drunkshe said,<lb/>
"it's hard to climb up the lad-<lb/>
der<lb/>
But Dorm Loft Regs Can Be A Hang-Up<lb/>
oniv real disadvantage � pain in the neck is<lb/>
more like n � with dorm lofts is the red tape that<lb/>
comes with them.<lb/>
You can't just throw one up. First you must get a<lb/>
building permit from campus housing Alone with<lb/>
permit thev give you three pages o! regulations.<lb/>
I he regulation, set up bv the campusoccupational<lb/>
Health and Satetv Office, ate checked by dorm<lb/>
K A.s Ignore the tegs and your name starts travel-<lb/>
g up campus housing's bureaucratic lad-<lb/>
dereventually your lott gets thumped.<lb/>
John and Ron discoverd this Then ladder didn't<lb/>
descend towards tHe door. Instead, it was located in<lb/>
the center of ifio room facing ihc window lire<lb/>
� ard i - to the regs. John and Ron didn't<lb/>
know   ghl come and thump their loft; thev<lb/>
knew it was in jeopardy I he relocated the<lb/>
ladder to avoid having to tear their lott down.<lb/>
Curious who the loft-thumping heavy in housing<lb/>
is, I followed a tangle o red tape finding as many<lb/>
sstions as answers. The R.A s don't thump lofts;<lb/>
neither do residence hall directors Connie Burgess,<lb/>
director for larvis and Fleming dorms, has a<lb/>
temperment as pleasing as Snow White's. She<lb/>
wasn't abo . fluff and puff and thump anyone's<lb/>
� down.<lb/>
1 did set. a note, however, in Burgess' office that<lb/>
stated: "I se ot milk crates in dormitories is il-<lb/>
legal She had no idea why the rule existed; she<lb/>
just knew it had come down the bureaucratic<lb/>
pipeline the same as all other rules.<lb/>
Nancy Smith, assistant dean of resident life, was<lb/>
not the loft thumper either, but she tipped me that<lb/>
the milk-crate rule originated in N. C. state law<lb/>
Finally Carolyn Fulghum, associate dean and<lb/>
director of residence life, admitted that she and<lb/>
Director of Housing Operations Dan Wooten are<lb/>
the loft thumpers. They have final say on whether a<lb/>
loft stays or goes. And the milk crates? According<lb/>
to Fulghum, the law was prompted by the N.C.<lb/>
Milk Commission. Ira Simon, director of campus<lb/>
food services, Fulghum said, had more details.<lb/>
Simon said there indeed is a state law that forbids<lb/>
the ownership oi milk crates bv anyone but dairy<lb/>
companies. You can be fined and jailed for having<lb/>
one in your dorm room or any place else.<lb/>
So what did all this red-tape chasing prove? Well,<lb/>
nothing about Dean Fulghum, Dan Wooten or<lb/>
anyone else in campus housing. They're not out to<lb/>
harass dorm students. As individuals they're all fine<lb/>
people doing their jobs, and the loft regs they en-<lb/>
force are designed only to protect students from in-<lb/>
jury and dorm rooms from damage.<lb/>
But somehow, when you paste the individuals<lb/>
ogether with rules, permits and regs that might<lb/>
orginate from who knows where, it can all seem<lb/>
like z gooey bureaucratic mess to a peon student<lb/>
down in the dorms.<lb/>
An easily crafted loft can make a crowded dorm room fun to live in.<lb/>
GORDON IPOCK - Prvo'o LaB<lb/>
Flunk A Test? Take A Deep Breath And Keep Slouching<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) 1<lb/>
first began hearing rude com-<lb/>
ments about my posture when 1<lb/>
was a itty bitty baby toddling<lb/>
about in them old cotton fields<lb/>
back home.<lb/>
Later, Army drill sergeants<lb/>
sounded the same theme.<lb/>
"Shoulders back thev would<lb/>
shout. "Stomach in! Chin out<lb/>
Even then, I instinctively knew<lb/>
that slouching was good for you 1<lb/>
just couldn't figure out how I was<lb/>
being benefitted. Now I know.<lb/>
According to the September<lb/>
Omni magaine, slumping helps<lb/>
ward off mental depression<lb/>
brought on by failure.<lb/>
Omni cites studies in which 50<lb/>
college students who were in-<lb/>
structed to sit in a slouched posi-<lb/>
tion after failing a test suffered<lb/>
less remorse than 50 flunkers who<lb/>
sat erect.<lb/>
Moreover, the magazine re-<lb/>
ports, those who slumped "were<lb/>
more self-confident and actually<lb/>
tried harder" on the next test.<lb/>
"Slouching promotes a kind of<lb/>
detachment it quotes a<lb/>
psychologist as concluding. "If<lb/>
depression starts to set in, it might<lb/>
not be a bad idea to take on a<lb/>
slumped position and withdraw<lb/>
for a while<lb/>
My sentiments exactly.<lb/>
But you don't have to rely on<lb/>
college students for documenta-<lb/>
tion of the value of slouching.<lb/>
Take some of the great figures of<lb/>
history and divide them according<lb/>
to posture. Those who assumed a<lb/>
ramrod stance and those who,<lb/>
when not actually lying down,<lb/>
moved about in a sort of semi-<lb/>
crouch.<lb/>
You will find, I think, that the<lb/>
latter were less likely to sink into a<lb/>
blue funk when life dealt them a<lb/>
nasty blow, as life has a way of<lb/>
doing.<lb/>
Two examples spring to mind:<lb/>
Abe Lincoln and Groucho Marx.<lb/>
Photographs of the day make it<lb/>
clear that Lincoln brooded a lot.<lb/>
Although he obviously had much<lb/>
to be depressed about, his reac-<lb/>
tion to failure probably was in-<lb/>
fluenced by the fact that he wore<lb/>
stovepipe hats and had to stand<lb/>
straight to keep them from falling<lb/>
off.<lb/>
I am now convinced the reason<lb/>
all that brooding never took him<lb/>
over the deep end was because he<lb/>
was taller than most folks and had'<lb/>
to bend over slightly to make<lb/>
conversation.<lb/>
Groucho, by contrast, was<lb/>
about as straight as a coathanger.<lb/>
Stooping made it easier for him to<lb/>
go with the flow and maintain his<lb/>
equilibrium.<lb/>
His perpetual tilt undoubtedly<lb/>
did as much as funny punch lines<lb/>
to enhance his career in comedy.<lb/>
It is, however, not enough<lb/>
merely to observe the psycho-<lb/>
logical benefits of slouching, as<lb/>
Omni has done. There also is a<lb/>
physical reason why slouchers are<lb/>
more likely to stay in a roseate<lb/>
frame of mind.<lb/>
Look closely at the spinal discs<lb/>
and you will see thev are<lb/>
something like dominoes. When<lb/>
stacked one atop the other in<lb/>
perfect symmetry, dominoes tend<lb/>
to sway at the top. In human<lb/>
spinal cords, this is about where<lb/>
the medulla oblongata connect-a<lb/>
to the hypothalamus.<lb/>
Better stability is achieved bv<lb/>
offsetting the discs through slum-<lb/>
ping, thereby creating a can-<lb/>
tilevered effect.<lb/>
Physiology aside, it was good<lb/>
of Omni to give us a rationale for<lb/>
drooping. Next time someone ad-<lb/>
monishes you for slouching, just<lb/>
explain you are trying to keep a<lb/>
stiff upper lip.<lb/>
Dieters Beat The Big Battle Of The Bulge<lb/>
STANLEY LEARY - Photo Lab<lb/>
Munch Out<lb/>
Although these fellas have kept their trim physique, many have been caught by the forbidden 'bulge<lb/>
By ROBIN AYERS<lb/>
Staff Write<lb/>
Here it is! One more article on<lb/>
one of the most disliked words in<lb/>
the English language: Dieting.<lb/>
It is a small comfort to know<lb/>
I'm not the only one with a weight<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
Where are the rest of you?<lb/>
Hiding behind a crowd of svelte,<lb/>
physically fit beach bunnies and<lb/>
jocks?<lb/>
Show yourself. As one who has<lb/>
spent (at least) two years trying to<lb/>
beat the battle of the bulge, I've<lb/>
become familiar with the traps<lb/>
and tribulations of dieting.<lb/>
America is in the midst of a<lb/>
fitness craze and I am briefly jum-<lb/>
ping on the bandwagon. Here are<lb/>
some basic guidelines and tips I've<lb/>
digested along the way.<lb/>
Road blocks and pitfalls await<lb/>
anyone trying to lose five pounds<lb/>
or a hundred pounds. Inspiration<lb/>
and motivation for dieting ranges<lb/>
from elusiveness to disap-<lb/>
pearance. Losing weight for a par-<lb/>
ty or a sweetheart may provide<lb/>
temporary motivation. Unless you<lb/>
want to lose for yourseIf,the<lb/>
weight may be back in a short<lb/>
time. Inspiration comes from in-<lb/>
side and the pounds fall away.<lb/>
There is no substitution for a<lb/>
balanced, nutritious diet. It has<lb/>
been found that skipping meals is<lb/>
no help but may often be a hin-<lb/>
drance.<lb/>
Diet pills are a popular way of<lb/>
trying to lose weight easily. If you<lb/>
want caffeine, drink a couple cups<lb/>
of coffee. You'll become full, not<lb/>
to mention the work out your<lb/>
digestive system gets from the<lb/>
Java. Wait awhile and you'll be in<lb/>
a position where you feel like<lb/>
you're alredy losing several<lb/>
ounces. Quickly.<lb/>
When beginning a diet, you<lb/>
may lose a few pounds fast and<lb/>
will then seem unable to lose any<lb/>
more. Initial weight loss may just<lb/>
be water; the fat goes later. The<lb/>
body will reach "plateaus" as the<lb/>
weight will level off temporarily<lb/>
while the body is adjusting to the<lb/>
loss.<lb/>
Exercise is an excellent and<lb/>
painful supplement to dieting.<lb/>
Dedication is put lo the test with<lb/>
running shoes, jump ropes.<lb/>
bicycles and aerobics class, every-<lb/>
day. You may not be losing<lb/>
weight at the present, but toning<lb/>
the muscles regularly will bring<lb/>
about a desired body faster. So I<lb/>
keep telling myself.<lb/>
Holidays and skimpy summer<lb/>
clothes may be pitfalls or excuses<lb/>
for not losing. All the trimmings<lb/>
of Thanksgiving and Christmas<lb/>
go from the table to the waist at<lb/>
lightning speed. And how many<lb/>
people (including myself) wish to<lb/>
hide in tents rather than be caught<lb/>
dead in a swimsuit, much less a<lb/>
pair of Bermudas.<lb/>
All the more reason for trying.<lb/>
A good attitude reaps a healthy<lb/>
spirit, a healthy body.<lb/>
Alchoholic beverages are lethal<lb/>
to the life of a diet. If anything is<lb/>
loaded with calories, it is this li-<lb/>
quid diet of ECU. know.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
?. THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 1, 1983<lb/>
Working Conditions For Mig<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
As the new crop of apples<lb/>
begins coming in from the western<lb/>
part of the state, and as the fresh<lb/>
vegetables keep coming from the<lb/>
eastern, western, and central parts<lb/>
of the state; few people realize<lb/>
that the issues involving migrant<lb/>
workers and the conditions under<lb/>
which they are working remain.<lb/>
The issue is a complex one involv-<lb/>
ing human rights, growers' rights,<lb/>
and the very underpinning of sup-<lb/>
ply and demand which dominates<lb/>
the food industry.<lb/>
There is a symbiotic relation-<lb/>
ship between growers and<lb/>
migrants that would affect the<lb/>
price and availability of fresh<lb/>
fruits and vegetables were it to<lb/>
change. And yet the question<lb/>
must be asked: "What is the cause<lb/>
of the problem? Are the growers<lb/>
all profit seekers who do not care<lb/>
about the rights of their workers?<lb/>
Are the migrant workers reallv<lb/>
predominantly alcoholics and<lb/>
"ne're do wells?" Or is there<lb/>
something basically wrong with<lb/>
the way the food marketing<lb/>
system works?<lb/>
In a UPI interview with Fred<lb/>
McNeeve, George Sorn, general<lb/>
manager of the Florida Fruit and<lb/>
Vegetable Growers Association,<lb/>
said the percentage of the cost of<lb/>
raising such crops as citrus<lb/>
vegetables and sugar cane that can<lb/>
be attributed to labor is 30 to 60<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
"Any increase in the labor cost<lb/>
will impact on the total cost of the<lb/>
product he said. "The more<lb/>
substantial the increase, the more<lb/>
food prices go up<lb/>
Sorn said labor costs could af-<lb/>
fect the farmer's choice which<lb/>
crop to plant and how much to<lb/>
plant.<lb/>
"If he knows he cannot retrieve<lb/>
those costs in the market place,<lb/>
he'll think twice about planting a<lb/>
particular crop, or he may reduce<lb/>
the acreage he plants<lb/>
According to a UPI report on<lb/>
the migrant worker situation,<lb/>
North Carolina is the third largest<lb/>
employer of farm labor in the<lb/>
country. It is 11th in the country<lb/>
in its number of migrant farm<lb/>
workers.<lb/>
According to Tom Myers, NC<lb/>
State Administrator for the<lb/>
Migrant and Seasonal Farm-<lb/>
workers Association, there were<lb/>
an estimated 40,000 migrant<lb/>
workers employed in the state in<lb/>
mid-July. The majority of these<lb/>
migrant workers come into the<lb/>
state from Florida in mid-April to<lb/>
harvest cabbage. Many will move<lb/>
on to the vegetable and tobacco<lb/>
harvest in this state and in<lb/>
Virginia. Many will stay in" the<lb/>
state through the fall to work in<lb/>
the yam crop.<lb/>
A report prepared for the North<lb/>
Carolina General Assembly<lb/>
estimated that the average annual<lb/>
income of a farm worker is less<lb/>
than $4,000. Some estimates put<lb/>
that figure as low as $1,500 per<lb/>
annum.<lb/>
Many of the migrant workers<lb/>
who pick North Carolina apples<lb/>
are strictly fruit pickers, moving<lb/>
from citrus to peach groves to ap-<lb/>
ple orchards. Some of these<lb/>
pickers are Haitians and Mexicans<lb/>
who are in the US illegally.<lb/>
"North Carolina does not have<lb/>
"guest workers" who are invited<lb/>
from other countries as in the case<lb/>
in some states where apples are<lb/>
grown Myers said.<lb/>
Because of their mobility, many<lb/>
migrant farmworkers do not vote<lb/>
and many also do not receive the<lb/>
unemployment and welfare<lb/>
benefits which other low-income<lb/>
workers receive.<lb/>
Joan Preiss, NC Staffperson<lb/>
for the National Farmworkers<lb/>
Ministry, feels that the crew<lb/>
leader system is reponsible for<lb/>
much of the exploration of<lb/>
migrant farmworkers.<lb/>
"Growers are rising the crew<lb/>
leader system to absolve<lb/>
themselves of responsibility to<lb/>
their workers Preiss said on<lb/>
Tuesday.<lb/>
"In California the crew leader<lb/>
system has been done away with<lb/>
Preiss said. "The unions there are<lb/>
using hiring halls and the seniority<lb/>
systems to hire workers; the union<lb/>
runs the hiring hall. This has suc-<lb/>
ceeded in doing away with the ex-<lb/>
ploitive crew leader system<lb/>
Pink Francis runs a relatively<lb/>
small apple orchard near<lb/>
Waynesville, North Carolina.<lb/>
Francis seldom uses migrant<lb/>
workers; he mainly uses locals<lb/>
who have worked for him for 5 or<lb/>
10 years, drifters who wander in<lb/>
to work, and some members of<lb/>
the Cherokee Nation who return<lb/>
each year to help him with his<lb/>
crop.<lb/>
Francis does not use the crew<lb/>
leader system because he likes to<lb/>
speak directly with each of his<lb/>
pickers. He does, however, de-<lb/>
fend the crew leaders system<lb/>
"The crew leader system is<lb/>
good and needed Francis said<lb/>
"The crew leader takes a lot of<lb/>
pressure off the farmer. The<lb/>
farmer is taken up with<lb/>
marketing, harvesting, shipping,<lb/>
packing, and looking for new<lb/>
markets. He usually doesn't have<lb/>
time during the harvest to inter-<lb/>
view and pay each worker<lb/>
When asked about the union<lb/>
hiring hall system in California,<lb/>
Francis said, "I think the Farm-<lb/>
workers Association is a unioniza<lb/>
tion here in North Carolina<lb/>
Interviewed at his home in<lb/>
Winterville on Tuesday evening.<lb/>
State Senator Vernon White said,<lb/>
"Some of the crew leaders do ex-<lb/>
ploit their labor. You have to take<lb/>
into consideration that much of<lb/>
the migrant labor force is<lb/>
alcoholic. They're looking for<lb/>
something to eat, to wear, and to<lb/>
drink. The farmers aren't respon-<lb/>
sible for the way their labor is<lb/>
treated<lb/>
"Crew leaders pav by produc-<lb/>
tion White said, "so much per<lb/>
bushel. It's not a desirable system.<lb/>
We've had some bad crew leaders;<lb/>
some crew leaders have been<lb/>
sentenced and convicted<lb/>
Four Orlando, Florida men<lb/>
were convicted on Tuesday of<lb/>
holding migrant workers as slaves<lb/>
at agricultural labor camps in<lb/>
Florida and North Carolina. The<lb/>
four men have been sentenced to<lb/>
five to fifteen years in prison.<lb/>
North Carolina recently passed<lb/>
an anti-slavery law. Senator<lb/>
White handled the bill on the<lb/>
floor of the state senate.<lb/>
"I think it tracks the federal<lb/>
law Senator White said. "The<lb/>
House version wanted to make the<lb/>
farmer responsible, but the<lb/>
farmer never knows what is going<lb/>
on with the crew<lb/>
Preiss was extremely disap-<lb/>
pointed with the North Carolina<lb/>
anti-slavery bill. "It was a very<lb/>
gutted bill Preiss said. "Two<lb/>
vital provisions were deleted. One<lb/>
would have made the owners<lb/>
ultimately responsible for labor<lb/>
conditions on their farms; and the<lb/>
other would have given the State<lb/>
Bureau of Investigation the right<lb/>
to investigate labor practices if<lb/>
See Migrant, Page 9<lb/>
Actress Lee Grant Directs<lb/>
Film 'Women Who Kill'<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI)�<lb/>
HBO's Women Who<lb/>
Kill is a provacative<lb/>
study of the shattered<lb/>
lives of some of the<lb/>
500 women in U.S.<lb/>
prisons for murder of<lb/>
-manslaughter �<lb/>
isually in the deaths<lb/>
of people they knew<lb/>
:nd once loved.<lb/>
Seven women at<lb/>
'wo prisons, inducing<lb/>
Charles Manson cult<lb/>
killer Leslie Van<lb/>
Houten, are inter-<lb/>
viewed during the<lb/>
nour-long documen-<lb/>
tary that begins airing<lb/>
Sept. 7.<lb/>
Several of the<lb/>
dories stir the cons-<lb/>
cience � some of<lb/>
hese women serving<lb/>
14 years to life were<lb/>
"up until that par-<lb/>
ticular moment"<lb/>
:av -abiding citizens<lb/>
� but a couple sound<lb/>
quite callous.<lb/>
Oscar-winning ac-<lb/>
tress Lee Grant, who<lb/>
is director and nar-<lb/>
rator of the film,<lb/>
generally seems sym-<lb/>
pathetic, but she cau-<lb/>
tions viewers to<lb/>
remember that the<lb/>
�victim's accounts can-<lb/>
not be heard.<lb/>
At the Bedford<lb/>
Hills Correctional<lb/>
Facility for Women in<lb/>
Westchester County,<lb/>
N.Y 42 -year-old<lb/>
Violet is being visited<lb/>
for the first time in<lb/>
two years by her two<lb/>
daughters and their<lb/>
children. They have<lb/>
made a 19-hour trip<lb/>
by bus from Ap-<lb/>
palachia with $20 in<lb/>
their pockets to see<lb/>
their mother.<lb/>
It is a touching reu-<lb/>
nion and especially<lb/>
disturbing is what the<lb/>
daughters have to say-<lb/>
about their mother's<lb/>
relationship with the<lb/>
man she killed.<lb/>
"He beat her up an<lb/>
awful lot for no<lb/>
reason. Knocked her<lb/>
down, kicked her. But<lb/>
I guess there was love<lb/>
there. She always<lb/>
took him back<lb/>
A fellow inmate is<lb/>
Virginia, who shot to<lb/>
death her husband of<lb/>
26 years, an airline<lb/>
pilot, after they had<lb/>
been separated for<lb/>
two years. The former<lb/>
high school beauty<lb/>
queen said it happen-<lb/>
ed when her husband<lb/>
came to her in one of<lb/>
his frequent violent<lb/>
rages.<lb/>
Miss Grant states<lb/>
that if these women<lb/>
had been attacked by<lb/>
strangers, their<lb/>
chances of acquittal<lb/>
by a jury would have<lb/>
been much better. But<lb/>
when their victims are<lb/>
husbands or<lb/>
boyfriends, women<lb/>
almost always are<lb/>
held responsible in<lb/>
some way for the<lb/>
abuse they suffered.<lb/>
There are other<lb/>
reasons why women<lb/>
kill, however.<lb/>
At the California<lb/>
Institution for<lb/>
Women in Chino,<lb/>
Calif Judy talks<lb/>
about killing a man<lb/>
during a robbery<lb/>
when she was 25 years<lb/>
old.<lb/>
Her boyfriend, a<lb/>
professional burglar,<lb/>
was shot in the leg<lb/>
during a robbery. He<lb/>
told her to shoot the<lb/>
man and she did,<lb/>
Judy says. "I don't<lb/>
know what happens<lb/>
to me with men she<lb/>
says. "Women here I<lb/>
can say no if they sug-<lb/>
gest some weird ac-<lb/>
tivity. But men, some<lb/>
chemical goes off in<lb/>
my brain.<lb/>
��<lb/>
A prison official<lb/>
says that women im-<lb/>
prisoned for murder<lb/>
or manslaughter are<lb/>
passive, rather than<lb/>
aggressive � the can't<lb/>
say no.<lb/>
Miss Grant<lb/>
describes only one of<lb/>
the seven women as<lb/>
the stereotype hard-<lb/>
core criminal and that<lb/>
is Marie, whom the<lb/>
narrator says has a<lb/>
lifelong criminal<lb/>
record.<lb/>
But there also is<lb/>
Frannie, 20, a New<lb/>
York music student<lb/>
whose drug dealing<lb/>
finally led to a fatal<lb/>
argument with a<lb/>
fellow dealer.<lb/>
"I don't go around<lb/>
shooting-people she<lb/>
protests. "I had to<lb/>
close my eyes to do it.<lb/>
But the guy's got<lb/>
four shots in him<lb/>
There's Manson<lb/>
cultist Van Houten,<lb/>
the "high school<lb/>
princess turned<lb/>
runaway" who at the<lb/>
age of 19 held down<lb/>
the middle-age wife of<lb/>
a Los Angeles<lb/>
businessnman while<lb/>
the pleading woman<lb/>
was stabbed repeated-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
"I believed that<lb/>
Charlie held the<lb/>
answer to truth and if<lb/>
1 turned my back on<lb/>
doing something, it<lb/>
was morally wrong<lb/>
she says.<lb/>
I iiiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiifiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiMiiiiiMiiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimmiiiins<lb/>
AXA<lb/>
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ESTABLISHED FRATERNITY:<lb/>
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RUSH Sept. 6,7,8 9:00<lb/>
For Rides And Info<lb/>
Call 752-6159<lb/>
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Introducing the<lb/>
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Weekends 10 til 2<lb/>
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2 - 5p.m. everyday<lb/>
Every Nite<lb/>
Georgetown Shops<lb/>
521 ContancheSt.<lb/>
MtSWW<lb/>
BB&amp;T 24 NOW AT MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
HWST,<lb/>
�&amp;fel<lb/>
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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. Shell 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, well lend you<lb/>
ours. You may win cash, tickets to athletic<lb/>
events, or other valuable prizes.<lb/>
Don't forget September 7.<lb/>
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Owned by PLUS SYSTEM, Inc 752-6889<lb/>
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'Rowa<lb/>
HOLLYWOOD<lb/>
(UPI) � "Rowan and<lb/>
Martin's Laugh-In<lb/>
the innovative group<lb/>
comedy series that in-<lb/>
spired "Saturdav<lb/>
Night Live" and<lb/>
others, returns to TV<lb/>
in abbreviated, syn-<lb/>
dicated reruns this<lb/>
month<lb/>
The old hour-long<lb/>
shows have been whit-<lb/>
tled down to 30<lb/>
minutes each and<lb/>
should prove more<lb/>
than nostalgic visits<lb/>
with the wild and<lb/>
wooly band of zanies<lb/>
that captured the na-<lb/>
tion's fancy - and<lb/>
ratings - 15 years ago.<lb/>
Romping back on<lb/>
screen will be half-<lb/>
clad Goldie Hawn,<lb/>
colorfully body-<lb/>
painted with sug-<lb/>
gestive slogans Arte<lb/>
Johnson in his Ger-<lb/>
man helmet. Henrv<lb/>
Gibson with bis out-<lb/>
sized posey and Ruth<lb/>
Buzzie in her<lb/>
atrocious hairnet.<lb/>
On hand, too, will<lb/>
be Judy Carne holler-<lb/>
ing "Sock it to me"<lb/>
and being drenched<lb/>
with buckets of water.<lb/>
Chelsea Brown and<lb/>
I<lb/>
re<lb/>
tn<lb/>
th<lb/>
Rl<lb/>
Tr<lb/>
Grl<lb/>
ch<lb/>
an<lb/>
sh<lb/>
Migrant<lb/>
Has Fina<lb/>
Downfall<lb/>
Cond From P. 8<lb/>
called upon by the<lb/>
governor<lb/>
Preiss went on to<lb/>
say, "In a sense this<lb/>
bill says it's all right<lb/>
to hire a slave holder;<lb/>
it's just not right to be<lb/>
on<lb/>
Myers fees that the<lb/>
new anti-slavery bill<lb/>
provides no incentive<lb/>
to prosecute. "When<lb/>
migrants have been<lb/>
victims in the state<lb/>
Myers said, "usually<lb/>
the law enforcement<lb/>
of the county has talk-<lb/>
ed them out of press-<lb/>
ing charges. We have<lb/>
a criminal system that<lb/>
allows a sheriff to talk<lb/>
a migrant worker out<lb/>
of filing a com-<lb/>
plaint<lb/>
"The price human<lb/>
dignity has suffered in<lb/>
the crew leader svsiem<lb/>
has no price Myers<lb/>
said. "If a crew leace:<lb/>
wants to charge S2 for<lb/>
a pack of cigarettes<lb/>
and $5 for a bottle of<lb/>
wine, usually the<lb/>
worker has no alter-<lb/>
native but to pay these<lb/>
prices. The worker<lb/>
usually ends up los-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
I<lb/>
veg<lb/>
s ippj<lb/>
corn<lb/>
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fed<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER I. 1983<lb/>
'Rowan And Martin's Laugh-In' Returns<lb/>
HOI LYWOOD<lb/>
 PI)  "Rowan and<lb/>
Martin's Laugh-In<lb/>
the innovative group<lb/>
comedy series that in-<lb/>
spired "Saturday<lb/>
Night Live" and<lb/>
others, returns to TV<lb/>
in abbreviated, syn-<lb/>
dicated reruns this<lb/>
month.<lb/>
The old hour-long<lb/>
shows have been whit-<lb/>
tled down to 30<lb/>
minutes each and<lb/>
should prove more<lb/>
than nostalgic visits<lb/>
uith the wild and<lb/>
woo!) band of zanies<lb/>
that captured the na-<lb/>
tion's fancy - and<lb/>
ratings - 15 years ago.<lb/>
Romping back on<lb/>
screen will be half-<lb/>
clad Goidie Hawn,<lb/>
colorfully body-<lb/>
painted with sug-<lb/>
gestive slogans; Arte<lb/>
Johnson in his Ger-<lb/>
man helmet, Henry<lb/>
Gibson with his out-<lb/>
sied posey and Ruth<lb/>
Buzie in her<lb/>
atrocious hairnet.<lb/>
On hand, too, will<lb/>
be Judy Carne holler-<lb/>
ing "Sock it to me"<lb/>
and being drenched<lb/>
with buckets of water,<lb/>
Chelsea Brown and<lb/>
Theresa Graves danc-<lb/>
ing in sexy bikinis and<lb/>
Joanne Worley shat-<lb/>
tering eardrums.<lb/>
Lily Tomlin's<lb/>
Ernestine, the swit-<lb/>
chboard operator,<lb/>
and Suzie Cheerleader<lb/>
characters are back<lb/>
and the joke wall re-<lb/>
mains intact.<lb/>
Best of all, Dan<lb/>
Rowan and Dick Mar-<lb/>
tin will be seen in their<lb/>
Farkle Family sket-<lb/>
ches and staggering<lb/>
through the old<lb/>
cocktail party<lb/>
bedlam.<lb/>
Behind the madness<lb/>
is producer George<lb/>
Schlatter, the ir-<lb/>
reverent comedy en-<lb/>
trepreneur who push-<lb/>
ed double-entendre to<lb/>
the limit on network<lb/>
TV.<lb/>
Viewers will be able<lb/>
to pick out guest stars<lb/>
Richard Nixon,<lb/>
William Buckley,<lb/>
Truman Capote, Billy<lb/>
Graham, Martha Mit-<lb/>
chell, Oral Roberts<lb/>
and other unexpected<lb/>
characters in the<lb/>
show's cavalcade of<lb/>
comedy.<lb/>
Topical gags that<lb/>
would seriously date<lb/>
the show have been<lb/>
lopped. But producer<lb/>
Schlatter was<lb/>
astonished at how lit-<lb/>
tle the country has<lb/>
changed since<lb/>
"Laugh-In" left the<lb/>
air in 1972.<lb/>
"Some jokes were<lb/>
prophetic Schlatter<lb/>
said in his cluttered<lb/>
office, from which he<lb/>
produces "Real Peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
"In one sketch we<lb/>
did a number about<lb/>
Ronald Reagan in the<lb/>
White House. But we<lb/>
were doing jokes on<lb/>
inflation, ecology,<lb/>
pentagon spending,<lb/>
nuclear waste, drugs,<lb/>
unemployment. And<lb/>
Pentagon spending.<lb/>
They're still with us.<lb/>
"I predict Dan ana<lb/>
Dick will become<lb/>
gigantic stars again.<lb/>
They were funny and<lb/>
the show still makes<lb/>
me laugh.<lb/>
Laugh-In' had an<lb/>
impact on all TV com-<lb/>
edy and commercials.<lb/>
It opened the door for<lb/>
'All In The Family'<lb/>
and 'Saturday Night<lb/>
Live' by being funny<lb/>
on serious subjects. It<lb/>
did the same for video<lb/>
music tapes with art<lb/>
pieces on Kenny<lb/>
Rogers and The First<lb/>
Edition, the Nitty<lb/>
Gritty Dirt Band and<lb/>
the Temptations.<lb/>
"There was a fast-<lb/>
paced compression of<lb/>
time and group com-<lb/>
edy that influenced<lb/>
the electronic editing<lb/>
of taped shows, which<lb/>
we developed<lb/>
Schlatter gives full<lb/>
credit to his writers,<lb/>
most of whom are<lb/>
now producers of<lb/>
comedy shows of their<lb/>
own, for the brevity,<lb/>
attack, impudence<lb/>
and irreverence that<lb/>
became the show's<lb/>
hallmark.<lb/>
"The BBC in Lon-<lb/>
don studied our tapes<lb/>
and came up with<lb/>
'Monty P y t h o n's<lb/>
Flying Circus<lb/>
Schlatter said.<lb/>
"Much of today's<lb/>
TV comedy is<lb/>
derivative of<lb/>
'Laugh-In But our<lb/>
show was derivative<lb/>
too. We took liberally<lb/>
from Laurel and Har-<lb/>
dy, Milton Berle,<lb/>
Burns and Allen and<lb/>
mostly from Ernie<lb/>
Kovacs<lb/>
Some of<lb/>
"Laugh-In's" best<lb/>
moments are the<lb/>
unrehearsed bloopers,<lb/>
dialogue botches, un-<lb/>
scheduled pratfalls<lb/>
and others that<lb/>
Schlatter insisted re-<lb/>
main in the show.<lb/>
"I used to do terri-<lb/>
ble things to Cioldie<lb/>
get her to break up or<lb/>
blow lines Schlatter<lb/>
said. "It drove her<lb/>
crazy because she<lb/>
knew we'd just keep<lb/>
going with the scene.<lb/>
Finally she'd just<lb/>
walk off camera.<lb/>
"We were bawdy<lb/>
and sexy but there was<lb/>
also an innocence to<lb/>
Migrant Work<lb/>
Has Financial<lb/>
Downfalls<lb/>
Con'd From P. 8<lb/>
called upon by the<lb/>
governor<lb/>
Preiss went on to<lb/>
say. "In a sense this<lb/>
bill says it's all right<lb/>
to hire a slave holder;<lb/>
it's just not right to be<lb/>
on<lb/>
fyers feels that the<lb/>
new anti-slavery bill<lb/>
provides no incentive<lb/>
to prosecute. "When<lb/>
migrants have been<lb/>
victims in the state<lb/>
Myers aid, "usually<lb/>
the law enforcement<lb/>
of the county has talk-<lb/>
ed them out of press-<lb/>
ing charges. We have<lb/>
a criminal svstem that<lb/>
allows a sheriff to talk<lb/>
a migrant worker out<lb/>
of filing a com-<lb/>
plaint<lb/>
'The price human<lb/>
dignity has suffered in<lb/>
the crew leader system<lb/>
has no price Myers<lb/>
�aid. "If a crew leader<lb/>
wants to charge $2 for<lb/>
a pack of cigarettes<lb/>
and $5 for a bottle of<lb/>
wine, usually the<lb/>
worker has no alter-<lb/>
native but to pay these<lb/>
prices. The worker<lb/>
usually ends up los-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
Because many<lb/>
tobacco farmers in the<lb/>
state are turning to<lb/>
vegetable crops to<lb/>
supplement their in-<lb/>
come it is generally<lb/>
felt that the state will<lb/>
feel an increase in the<lb/>
need for migrant<lb/>
labor.<lb/>
According to a<lb/>
report prepared for<lb/>
the NC General<lb/>
Assembly earlier this<lb/>
year, projections in-<lb/>
dicate an 80 percent<lb/>
growth in demand for<lb/>
food crops in the state<lb/>
by the year 2000, and<lb/>
much of that growth<lb/>
will be in vegetable<lb/>
production.<lb/>
"All of this is to say-<lb/>
that by all projections<lb/>
the problems<lb/>
associated with<lb/>
migrant labor will not<lb/>
decrease the study<lb/>
says. North Carolina<lb/>
must recognize that<lb/>
the situation will not<lb/>
disappear. Therefore,<lb/>
the state must begin to<lb/>
propose some solu-<lb/>
tions not only for<lb/>
humanitarian reasons<lb/>
but also from an<lb/>
economic point of<lb/>
view<lb/>
Shrimp lovers<lb/>
Why travel 100 miles<lb/>
to the beach and pay<lb/>
high prices for<lb/>
fresh shrimp?<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
$s Shrimp<lb/>
P 0� ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
:amily Restaurants<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
A WHALE OF A MEAL<lb/>
Tarlanding seafood<lb/>
is offering a special<lb/>
popcorn shrimp dinner<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
TUESWEDTHURS.<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Kappa Alpha (jr&amp;gr<lb/>
The Home of Southern Gentlemen<lb/>
 -rift <lb/>
invites all men to<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Tuesday and Wednesday Night<lb/>
Parties begin at 9:00 P.M.<lb/>
500 East 11th Street<lb/>
We invite you to visit our house during rush. We<lb/>
are ECLTs oldest fraternity and maintain the<lb/>
highest standards in intramural athletic com-<lb/>
petition, service to the community and chari-<lb/>
table organizations, scnolarship and social<lb/>
funct' �ns. The same ideals and traditions that<lb/>
made Kappa Alpha one of the school's most<lb/>
outstanding fraternities in 1958 can still be<lb/>
found today. Check the other houses and then<lb/>
let us tell you why we think KA may be the best<lb/>
for vou<lb/>
the show. We could<lb/>
be outrageous but<lb/>
stay within the<lb/>
bounds of good taste.<lb/>
We never did any pro-<lb/>
drug jokes.<lb/>
"In some respects<lb/>
we were doing im-<lb/>
provisational theater,<lb/>
thinking jokes and<lb/>
trying to reach a<lb/>
balance between the<lb/>
silly and the signifi-<lb/>
cant<lb/>
The 140 shortened<lb/>
"Laugh-In" segments<lb/>
will be syndicated in<lb/>
71 cities beginning<lb/>
Sept. 19, which<lb/>
Schlatter hopes will<lb/>
attract a new genera-<lb/>
tion of young viewers<lb/>
along with millions of<lb/>
established<lb/>
"Laugh-In" fans.<lb/>
pooooooooooooopo.ooooooooo<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
Announcing!<lb/>
The (.rand Opening of<lb/>
SOPHIE'S<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
 ?��???? ����<lb/>
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Sept. 7<lb/>
9am-9pm<lb/>
ITIK�<lb/>
Handmade Clothing, toys, etc.<lb/>
Two Blocks from Dickenson<lb/>
Between 10th St. and 14th St.<lb/>
10ao off with this Coupon<lb/>
oooooooooooooooooooooooo<lb/>
Lowest TV Rent<lb/>
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o<lb/>
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I Phone: 758-9102<lb/>
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PAWN SHOP<lb/>
Receive Cash Fast<lb/>
Accepting Any Items Of Value For Collateral<lb/>
All Transactions Confidential<lb/>
At Mill's Pawn Shop<lb/>
We Loan Top Dollars<lb/>
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Why Sell Your Valuables When You Can Bring Them To<lb/>
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k� fcLWe Rrnt (Pig CMmiKJ )<lb/>
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WE BUY GOLD &amp; SILVER<lb/>
JK � t�m Uwp Is C ommitted To Not Being Undersold We<lb/>
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Fairness And Confidentiality We Cooperate Fully With<lb/>
Local &amp; Federal Authorities<lb/>
Jolly's Pawn Shop<lb/>
Corner of Greene St. &amp; Pactolus Huy.<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
752-5759<lb/>
Hours: 9-6 Mon -Fri � 8-5 Sat.<lb/>
 �����nn�.� ���.���. ���<lb/>
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 � ?<lb/>
HAS A RING TO IT.<lb/>
SEE THE ENTIRE COLLECTION OF<lb/>
HERFF JONES COLLEGE RINGS AT:<lb/>
September 9:00am-<lb/>
DATF: 7,8,9,12,13 TIME: 4:00pm<lb/>
PLACE: Student Stores<lb/>
if<lb/>
HERFF JONES<lb/>
Division of Carnation Company<lb/>
t<lb/>
 -<lb/>
fi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0010"/><lb/>
llll t S I Mt l INI N<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Bucs Aren't Afraid Of Sunshine Boys<lb/>
HIM VI - ss<lb/>
�p -1 .in.<lb/>
and two<lb/>
. ECl football coach<lb/>
his Pirates are<lb/>
ay's game<lb/>
anked Floi<lb/>
set<lb/>
sed the<lb/>
i it a press con<lb/>
I<lb/>
beco i<lb/>
C S <lb/>
. W<lb/>
motive in mind foi the trip to<lb/>
rallahassee, I la "We're looking<lb/>
foi respect he said "Even it<lb/>
you lose il c lose, that's a big dil<lb/>
ference than being blown out<lb/>
I he I'uaics will be counting on<lb/>
a large group ol eteran players to<lb/>
prevent anothei blowout. Last<lb/>
year, Emory took 2b freshmen to<lb/>
rallahassee but will take only<lb/>
three this weekend No. 3 quartet<lb/>
back Ron Jones, runningback<lb/>
Darrell speed and tinebackei Ron<lb/>
Ciilliard will be making the tup.<lb/>
"We ha e more depth on tins<lb/>
team than am I've coached in<lb/>
lour eats he said "I've got<lb/>
more pro scouts in tin office than<lb/>
I've ever had I ither they're look<lb/>
ing toi good football players oi<lb/>
they 're a 'hen time<lb/>
� North . arolii i<lb/>
 e relatively<lb/>
N i o 's game but<lb/>
a ithout players w ho<lb/>
expei n see action.<lb/>
i ' fei ard Ricl<lb/>
�<lb/>
� .<lb/>
v rreg 1 homas ha i I i i<lb/>
shoulder<lb/>
Second team qnaUeih.uk lohll<lb/>
v illiams has returned to ;<lb/>
aftei suffering an ankle ��;<lb/>
.ind is "i iinmiiL about 91' ,<lb/>
right now Emory said.<lb/>
I i eshman quai tei bai k B<lb/>
Herndon just withdrew I<lb/>
school a few day s I he<lb/>
Greensboro native has had<lb/>
blems �ith his joints "He sa<lb/>
k<lb/>
just got too painful foi hin<lb/>
1 HUM <lb/>
I rnory, however, said despite<lb/>
those injuries, the Pirates 'are the<lb/>
healthiest we've evei been "<lb/>
I here will be one startet miss<lb/>
from Saturday's lineup Ot<lb/>
ive i,i, kle (ireg Qui k didn't<lb/>
meet II  ademit<lb/>
despite fulfilling <lb/>
quirements He's ineligible<lb/>
(ffensively, the Pirates will be<lb/>
 - i<lb/>
<lb/>
ft <lb/>
<lb/>
Emory More Fired<lb/>
Up In Fourth Year<lb/>
L-mmm<lb/>
depending on quarterback k<lb/>
Ingran id the w i<lb/>
"He's had the best pre<lb/>
practice he's evei I<lb/>
said "We just feel real good<lb/>
fensively. except tor the lad<lb/>
the depth in the offensive line<lb/>
1 si Kelly 1 owrey. I<lb/>
finished with 1,67 I ya<lb/>
and 1 1 touchdown fall, will<lb/>
more than likely be calling the<lb/>
signals tor the Seminoles. 1 owrey<lb/>
missed several pi i<lb/>
because ol a shouldei spi<lb/>
she .<lb/>
"We hope hi<lb/>
Emoi "That1 a I v<lb/>
� -<lb/>
I he But , will a t<lb/>
I inior i<lb/>
. Mien He le 1 the nat<lb/>
scoi ing last yea<lb/>
while registering 21 ' lowi<lb/>
�<lb/>
rh � ti � ��<lb/>
FSI<lb/>
pt En<lb/>
� I aftei i<lb/>
he<lb/>
�<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
J<lb/>
.<lb/>
it of 1<lb/>
<lb/>
�� Sow 1 �<lb/>
<lb/>
SIud<lb/>
mked highthe Bucs will be successful<lb/>
in Division-1 football "Right v aldn't lake a 7-4 he sa d " V ere e<lb/>
<lb/>
( inch Pleasantsd aboul the season, and we � see how fai we' v e come<lb/>
 I :k InsideW( ne at a time a little m ip this sea<lb/>
<lb/>
'also m<lb/>
'ire H 1 si begins a<lb/>
�me game, a Seminole ma � o the centei<lb/>
I heId, w here he then throws<lb/>
into the ground. 1 he<lb/>
am1 si goes beserk. 1<lb/>
' 1 .ball players had to in the dressing room during<lb/>
re school's ritual.<lb/>
i- MianBut not this yeai "I'm noi<lb/>
r i d a. n tl them do that this<lb/>
.year Emory said. "1 want<lb/>
peninj maythem ro see that renegade ind<lb/>
� across the field<lb/>
.ill Emory . his<lb/>
� ;B : ise the '83 squad<lb/>
� 'something special. " I his<lb/>
It'steam has character, but football<lb/>
�� build that It (football)<lb/>
i Well,strengthens charactet 1<lb/>
Riordan Could Pose<lb/>
Problem For Pirates<lb/>
B Kr N BOI ION<lb/>
�<lb/>
I emple I niversity<lb/>
<lb/>
VETER NS SI D1<lb/>
I niversitv o<lb/>
year head Bt<lb/>
 ��� . . i<lb/>
"Bear" Bryai<lb/>
 � ft'a;<lb/>
 lai<lb/>
 i<lb/>
H<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
Headoach hd Emory sji.l ht is mure fired up this season than he's been in<lb/>
three tears. "We're excited this eaon, and we want to see him far we've<lb/>
tome he said.<lb/>
las; yeai<lb/>
I emple has not had a winning<lb/>
team since the 1979 team went 9-2<lb/>
and then beat Californi i in th :<lb/>
(ia ' i'e Bi a<lb/>
ne big<lb/>
I been r. the fool<lb/>
powers<lb/>
1940s . tht p rice of it<lb/>
neighboi - Penr v' ��� u<lb/>
Wii tw <lb/>
dependent- recruil<lb/>
: s. I<lb/>
�<lb/>
tovers.<lb/>
Bemg an Inde<lb/>
I<lb/>
with national po ers :h ii<lb/>
:he same manner as ECl<lb/>
year, remple plays five 1982 bowl<lb/>
earns: Pitt, Penn State. Georgia,<lb/>
v est irginia and Boston i<lb/>
ege<lb/>
If the Owl ive a w inn-<lb/>
ng season in v ; they will have to<lb/>
rely heavily on the arm oi senior<lb/>
tei back rim Riordan.<lb/>
Temple has always had a tradi<lb/>
tion ol fine quarterbacks.<lb/>
Riordan is no exception. The 6'<lb/>
1 185-pound QB complete M<lb/>
No<lb/>
thai number of bow; appearances<lb/>
70 "7 n<lb/>
- N .<lb/>
V<lb/>
; <lb/>
<lb/>
SOpt<lb/>
v. an<lb/>
. V bacl<lb/>
Marshall i<lb/>
�<lb/>
work ' �� pi<lb/>
ense wl<lb/>
per a i<lb/>
Mosi<lb/>
.<lb/>
See Bls. pJk;i 12<lb/>
Ingram Fits Role As Pirate QB<lb/>
Senior quarterback Kevin Ingram jukes a defender in 1st year's 23-10 victory over I emple In that game. Ingrain<lb/>
rushed for 105 vards and passed for 101 more.<lb/>
B kr N BOI ION<lb/>
XtMvlunl sprl. I <lb/>
Within the framework of any<lb/>
successful football team stands<lb/>
one position instrumental in the<lb/>
fortunes oi the entire team the<lb/>
quarterback.<lb/>
I he quarterback, aftei all,<lb/>
handles the ball on every offensive<lb/>
play He must be a master oi<lb/>
disguises, a stout-hearted leader<lb/>
and a jack oi all-trades.<lb/>
A team without a quarterback<lb/>
is like an attacking army without a<lb/>
general lacking cohesion and<lb/>
dii ection.<lb/>
W hen ECU marches into<lb/>
rallahassee Saturday night, the<lb/>
Pirates will be led b senior Kevin<lb/>
1 n g i am , the fleet- foot ed<lb/>
s i ambler from Philadelphia<lb/>
While playing only about halt<lb/>
the tune last year, Ingram threw<lb/>
foi 605 yards and ran foi anothei<lb/>
J20 He scored eight IDs on the<lb/>
ground and two more through the<lb/>
an<lb/>
But the 5 11. ISO pound signal<lb/>
callei wasn't originally a Pirate.<lb/>
ttei a highly successful high<lb/>
school career, Ingram enrolled at<lb/>
Villanova But aftei his first yeai<lb/>
at Villanova, the Wildcats drop<lb/>
ped then football program and<lb/>
Ingram chose to come to ECU<lb/>
ovei such schools .is Put.<lb/>
Maryland and Oklahoma State<lb/>
V (ording to Ingram, it was<lb/>
l�e at tirst sight "When I first<lb/>
came here. 1 really, loved it,<lb/>
responded. It was just one oi<lb/>
those things<lb/>
One thing that Ingram had to<lb/>
adapt to at ECU was a change in<lb/>
the offensive formation that he<lb/>
had been used to all his life.<lb/>
For many years, ECl tans were<lb/>
used to seeing the Pirates running<lb/>
out oi the wishbone back field for-<lb/>
mation. But last ear. under the<lb/>
direction ol former offensive<lb/>
coordinator 1 arr Beckish, ECl<lb/>
followed the lead of main schools<lb/>
around the country and switched<lb/>
to the Option I offense<lb/>
"I had run the wishbone all m<lb/>
life Ingram said, "but 1 think<lb/>
I've adapted ver well to the new<lb/>
offense and 1 actual!) think I like<lb/>
it better<lb/>
()ne o the main reasons tor the<lb/>
swith in formations was to in-<lb/>
crease the potency of the Pirates'<lb/>
aerial attack And while the<lb/>
Pirates still relied on then strong<lb/>
ground game last season, the ball<lb/>
was being put in the air more than<lb/>
in the past.<lb/>
1 he aerial attack will be needed<lb/>
this Naturdav night when Ingram<lb/>
and Co. travel south to face the<lb/>
powerful Seminoles from Florida<lb/>
State.<lb/>
W hile a IrM of people are worn<lb/>
ing about playing the Seminoles as<lb/>
a season opening oppenent. In-<lb/>
gram sees one way in which it<lb/>
might be an advantage.<lb/>
"Wc  a ays seen<lb/>
to a good<lb/>
stated "So 1 see t as a<lb/>
age to stai t off wii<lb/>
probably be o i<lb/>
so far, the P<lb/>
ry ' � ee<lb/>
i<lb/>
yeai<lb/>
Ingi in . �. :<lb/>
ing one oi the ma<lb/>
the Pira<lb/>
in the pasi <lb/>
e c o ac I<lb/>
stafl. especially new<lb/>
eoordm.r v Bal<lb/>
"Withou<lb/>
bettei team tl<lb/>
been here Ingram stated �<lb/>
asked to compare ECU t<lb/>
the past with this year's � <lb/>
have a lot ol . �<lb/>
quickness<lb/>
Ihe Pirate ofl<lb/>
a long way n pi<lb/>
this year, as the entire unit<lb/>
the 40 in less than, 5 0 seconds i<lb/>
averages close to 270 p<lb/>
person<lb/>
s fai as life aftei I I<lb/>
Business dministration n rj<lb/>
still up in the air about h<lb/>
"n !UvI let nature take its<lb/>
course he said with a relaxed<lb/>
tone<lb/>
Xnd it the Pirates follow the<lb/>
course laid out bv Ingram<lb/>
year, it should be smooth filing<lb/>
tor EC I plavers and tans<lb/>
t<lb/>
Thes attl<lb/>
and i oache<lb/>
Turner<lb/>
Bv K sm M<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ECl �<lb/>
and a<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
�<lb/>
�<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
"Vs <lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
More Tfon Pq<lb/>
w<lb/>
1st A<lb/>
Sundt<lb/>
�SS555i-iii<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0011"/><lb/>
I HI I ASTAKOI IMAN<lb/>
SFPTKMBFR 1, ISM<lb/>
11<lb/>
1V <lb/>
(f jf<lb/>
vJ<lb/>
J<lb/>
�?<lb/>
$<lb/>
<lb/>
Torre Not Losing Faith<lb/>
In His Stumbling Braves<lb/>
d Pose<lb/>
 irates<lb/>
These aihletes are enjoying a pia dinner sponsored by the ECU Student Athletic Board (SAB) Tuesday night. Players<lb/>
and coaches from all the Pirate teams were invited to get acquainted with each other.<lb/>
Turner Left With Few Players<lb/>
ATLANTA (UPI)<lb/>
� The Atlanta Braves<lb/>
have misplaced their<lb/>
winning touch the<lb/>
past several weeks,<lb/>
but Joe Torre has no<lb/>
intention of throwing<lb/>
in the towel, not while<lb/>
there are still a half<lb/>
dozen games left<lb/>
against Los Angeles.<lb/>
"Sure, there's<lb/>
reason for concern<lb/>
said Atlanta's<lb/>
manager after the<lb/>
Braves went from a<lb/>
six and one-half game<lb/>
lead over the Dodgers<lb/>
on Aug. 11 to a one<lb/>
and one-half game<lb/>
deficit on Aug. 30 by<lb/>
losing nine of 14<lb/>
games. "But, there's<lb/>
still plenty of time<lb/>
left. When you still<lb/>
have 30 games to<lb/>
play, being a game or<lb/>
two behind isn't that<lb/>
drastic.<lb/>
"The kev to this<lb/>
thing is those six<lb/>
games we still hae<lb/>
with the Dodgers<lb/>
(three in Los Angeles<lb/>
Sept. 9-11 and the<lb/>
other three in Atlant.i<lb/>
Sept. 23-25) said<lb/>
Torre. "We can't<lb/>
count on other teams<lb/>
doing our work for<lb/>
us. We've got to sta<lb/>
within striking<lb/>
distance, close enough<lb/>
so we can get the job<lb/>
done when we go<lb/>
head-to-head with the<lb/>
Dodgers<lb/>
The defending<lb/>
champion Braves led<lb/>
the National League<lb/>
West most of this<lb/>
season, but fell<lb/>
behind on Aug. 29 tor<lb/>
the first time since<lb/>
early July when they<lb/>
lost to the Chicago<lb/>
Cubs while the<lb/>
Dodgers were sweep-<lb/>
ing a doubleheader<lb/>
against the Mets.<lb/>
I he Cubs beat them<lb/>
7-5 that night and 9-6<lb/>
the next and that had<lb/>
Torre moaning about<lb/>
his pitching.<lb/>
"You can't fault<lb/>
our bats (the Braves<lb/>
were hitting .276 as a<lb/>
team) said Torre<lb/>
"Any time you score<lb/>
live or more runs you<lb/>
should win<lb/>
Pascual Perez and<lb/>
rookie Craig McMur-<lb/>
trv were the stars of<lb/>
the Braves' pitching<lb/>
staff over the first<lb/>
half of the season<lb/>
But even though his<lb/>
13-5 record is still one<lb/>
of the league's best,<lb/>
Perez has been strug-<lb/>
gling of late and<lb/>
12-game winner<lb/>
McMurtry hasn't<lb/>
posted a victorv sine<lb/>
July 27<lb/>
Torre feels it's just<lb/>
a coincidence that the<lb/>
Dodgers won 13 of 15<lb/>
at the same time the<lb/>
Braves were in a<lb/>
slump<lb/>
"We can't be<lb/>
distracted bv what the<lb/>
Dodgers are doing<lb/>
he said. "You stil!<lb/>
have to play your<lb/>
game on the field<lb/>
They're on a streak<lb/>
now but that<lb/>
shouldn't last and.<lb/>
anyway, we're due for<lb/>
a streak of our own<lb/>
"1 still have con<lb/>
fidence in this ball<lb/>
club Torre<lb/>
tinued "We're stil!<lb/>
playing at a better<lb/>
pace than when we<lb/>
won the division last<lb/>
year. When vou plav<lb/>
lfS2 game <lb/>
going to have periods<lb/>
when you lose a few<lb/>
more than you win<lb/>
The important thii<lb/>
to stay out of a pro<lb/>
longed slump, to �<lb/>
yourself together<lb/>
Bv KM) MrWs<lb/>
M�l rrr<lb/>
: illeyball<lb/>
Imogene<lb/>
l nigh<lb/>
ahead with onlv<lb/>
. plaver<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
I aear's coach,<lb/>
i)j id son, n the hear: r u i t i n c<lb/>
1 December.<lb/>
i e a '<lb/>
l) where to<lb/>
a replace-<lb/>
menTurner, who<lb/>
hasbeena physical<lb/>
educanonteacher at<lb/>
'forthe last yeai<lb/>
imed<lb/>
i<lb/>
i s a �� �.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
all<lb/>
. .<lb/>
. young<lb/>
pet ienced<lb/>
j "but this<lb/>
ha- shown more<lb/>
ement in the<lb/>
veeks than<lb/>
any team I've ever<lb/>
coached before<lb/>
Foremost among<lb/>
the returning plavers<lb/>
will be senior Diane<lb/>
1 loyd. Captain of this<lb/>
year team. 1 loyd<lb/>
plavv the setter posi-<lb/>
tion and will have<lb/>
most of the offense<lb/>
revolving around her.<lb/>
Hitter L it a 1 amus<lb/>
is the tther senior on<lb/>
the team. "She<lb/>
(1 .unus) has added a<lb/>
lot to our offense<lb/>
Turner said, "and will<lb/>
be instrumental to us<lb/>
in the season ahead<lb/>
Perhaps the<lb/>
Pirates' most versatile<lb/>
player v.ill be defen-<lb/>
sive specialist Sandy<lb/>
Gideons. 'Sandy is<lb/>
onlv 5-5, but she can<lb/>
also help out as a hit-<lb/>
ter Turner said,<lb/>
'he has a tremen-<lb/>
dous attitude and will<lb/>
be a great asset at any<lb/>
position<lb/>
Sophomore setter<lb/>
Ann Guida missed<lb/>
part of last season due<lb/>
to a knee injury but<lb/>
has been working<lb/>
hard and is expected<lb/>
to contribute to this<lb/>
year's effort.<lb/>
The top newcomers<lb/>
for the Pirates are<lb/>
both upperelassmen<lb/>
who played different<lb/>
sports for ECl' last<lb/>
vear Former swim-<lb/>
mer Jennifer Jays will<lb/>
be a hitter, and<lb/>
basketball player Lor-<lb/>
raine Foster will play<lb/>
setter.<lb/>
Although Turner<lb/>
has to completely<lb/>
regroup a team this<lb/>
season, her toughest<lb/>
task may be com-<lb/>
peting against some of<lb/>
the teams on this<lb/>
year's schedule.<lb/>
"I felt bad for the<lb/>
football team when 1<lb/>
saw their schedule<lb/>
Turner said, "but if<lb/>
there's a division-I<lb/>
school between<lb/>
Virginia and Florida<lb/>
not on our schedule,<lb/>
they were probably<lb/>
over-looked<lb/>
The Pirates will<lb/>
face such teams as<lb/>
North Carolina,<lb/>
Virginia, South<lb/>
Carolina, Clemson,<lb/>
Kentucky, Georgia<lb/>
and Duke, as well as<lb/>
compete in four ma-<lb/>
jor tournaments.<lb/>
The Pirates began<lb/>
practicing as soon as<lb/>
school started in order<lb/>
to prepare for the dif-<lb/>
ficult games that he<lb/>
ahead. "We've just<lb/>
been working on fun-<lb/>
damentals so far<lb/>
Turner said but<lb/>
there's no doubt in<lb/>
my mind that we'll get<lb/>
stronger as the year<lb/>
goes on.<lb/>
"Last year's team<lb/>
was taller and more<lb/>
experienced she ad-<lb/>
ded, "but once the<lb/>
season rolls around,<lb/>
we will be able to<lb/>
compete with<lb/>
anybody<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
� U Grvtltc ft).<lb/>
7S4-3013 � 14 HRS<lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
I Haul Rcnlab<lb/>
Available<lb/>
t<lb/>
STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
irate QB<lb/>
MoreTron Pageant . . . .<lb/>
MlArt Opportunity<lb/>
1984 MISS NORTH CAROLINA �<lb/>
k USA PAGEANT <lb/>
Jk The Official Preliminary to .<lb/>
W trie Miss USA Pageant �<lb/>
He.<lb/>
4U ' k&amp;&amp; � <lb/>
IB talent � � � '<lb/>
Wk<lb/>
t HVMM<lb/>
m PnIW�.<lb/>
lSir "<lb/>
A ma '<lb/>
3 � ' pr"<lb/>
HlSrffor free entry and " Eligibility information <lb/>
mO 2i- . - t � t n fOUl  � � ess DOB<lb/>
L V�T w" it - �� a '<lb/>
k jMK � iMISS NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
HvO SW USA HEADQUARTERS<lb/>
Lfr'l� t 1755 N � 149 SUI<lb/>
BnfK W i Miami Florida 33181<lb/>
�WBPSIBI r �OR CALL 305i 944 3268<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
L<lb/>
i<lb/>
THl RS: Jr. Sirloin $2.69<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Potato<lb/>
or F.F. and Texas Toast<lb/>
FRISATSUN<lb/>
Buy one 8oz. Ribeye<lb/>
at Reg. Price $5.09, Get second<lb/>
8oz. Ribeye 12 Price $2.55<lb/>
Served with King Idaho Potato<lb/>
Or F.F.and Texas Toast<lb/>
Try our Ne Fruit Bar<lb/>
and Improved Veg Bar<lb/>
I<lb/>
L<lb/>
2 Locations u Better Serve You<lb/>
500 W. Greenville Blvd<lb/>
2903 E. 10th St.<lb/>
� � � � �-� <lb/>
Welcome Back<lb/>
Pi Kapps<lb/>
1st Little Sister Meeting<lb/>
Sunday, Sept. 4th, 8:00pm<lb/>
SSSSS5S$SSSSS3<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
9S 00 Prt" Tn�. trt<lb/>
Control �Md PrlHM.<lb/>
Prynct Cou���ln�� for<lb/>
Ivrmtr morm�1io call<lb/>
� 37 0S3 (Toll Fra� Ng��f<lb/>
tOO ?? 1S44) ���� A M<lb/>
and J P M WHkUyi<lb/>
RALEIGHS WOMEN S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
917 WMt Morgan Si<lb/>
Boi.jh HC<lb/>
L<lb/>
WOMEN'S HEALTH<lb/>
CARE YOU CAN ajoodon a acw oec<lb/>
DEPEND ON. sioo that smjoeeasie d<lb/>
,hewomeno�mingCe.i'9' Courise'Cv:ye<lb/>
avaiiaDte aay and night to support and uOe'<lb/>
stand vou vour safety comfort and prvao ore<lb/>
assured tv t� caring staff of the fiemmg Center<lb/>
SEBVtCES: � Tuesday - Saturday Aportion Ap-<lb/>
pcxntnnents � 1 st flt 2nd Tnmester Aportons up to<lb/>
18 Weeks � -ree egnaricv Tests � very Eanv<lb/>
Pregnaney T�st$ � AJi inclusive ees � insurance<lb/>
Accepted � CALl 7�1-5550 DAY O NIGHT �<lb/>
Hearhcare counsohny THE FLEMING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
and education to wo-<lb/>
"nen of o! oges<lb/>
w<lb/>
"<lb/>
X<lb/>
THE CAROLINA OPRY HOUSE WELCOMES ALL<lb/>
ECU STUDENTS BACK TO GREENVILLE:<lb/>
SEE<lb/>
MIKE CROSS<lb/>
in concert<lb/>
at the CAROLINA OPRY HOUSE<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
! �-<lb/>
I 3<lb/>
r<lb/>
Sunday, Sept. 11<lb/>
HERE'S HOW<lb/>
Clip coupon below for $5.00 off the regular $10.00<lb/>
Carolina Opry House Membership Fee.<lb/>
Present this coupon at the Carolina Opry House<lb/>
before Sept. 11, 1983 and purchase your membership<lb/>
for only $5.00. You will also recieve 1 ticket<lb/>
to see Mike Cross absolutely FREE! (You save 10.00)<lb/>
Also Coming to the Opry House this Fall:<lb/>
North Tower, Embers, Leon Russell, Super Grit Cowboy<lb/>
Band, Jerry Lee Lewis, Chairman of the Board,<lb/>
and many more.<lb/>
The Carolina Opry House is a private club<lb/>
members and invited guests only.<lb/>
�MVWI.w�HlM All ABC Permits �,����,<lb/>
   -COUPON-   <lb/>
<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
off regular $10.00 COH membership fee<lb/>
offer expires Sept. 11,1983<lb/>
You must be 19 by Oct. 1, 1983<lb/>
You must present valid ID<lb/>
-COUPON-<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0012"/><lb/>
12 THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 1. 1983<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
Pirates To Battle Gators<lb/>
Cont'd From Page 10<lb/>
scalping scheme,<lb/>
alleged recruiting<lb/>
violations and<lb/>
academic im-<lb/>
proprieties.<lb/>
But if there are any<lb/>
violations of NCAA<lb/>
regulations, they<lb/>
haven't been proven<lb/>
as yet and the Gators<lb/>
are concentrating on<lb/>
another successful<lb/>
season in 1983.<lb/>
East Tennessee State<lb/>
Oct. 29 � 2:00<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM<lb/>
When East Ten-<lb/>
nessee State visits<lb/>
Greenville, it will be<lb/>
ECU's Homecoming,<lb/>
and Pirate fans will be<lb/>
hoping for a repeat of<lb/>
last year's ETSU<lb/>
game.<lb/>
In last season's con-<lb/>
test, the Pirates total-<lb/>
ly dominated the<lb/>
visiting Buccaneers<lb/>
while posting a 30-0<lb/>
victory. ECU out-<lb/>
distanced ETSU in<lb/>
total yards, 474 to<lb/>
158.<lb/>
The Buccaneers<lb/>
have a battle shaping<lb/>
up for the starting<lb/>
quarterback between<lb/>
Robert Achoe and<lb/>
Walt Bowlin, who<lb/>
split duties last year.<lb/>
Running back Jerry<lb/>
Butler, who gained<lb/>
644 yards in '82,<lb/>
returns to lead the<lb/>
running attack, which<lb/>
will be guided by an<lb/>
offensive line featur-<lb/>
ing center Scott Rawl-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
The mainstays in<lb/>
the Buccaneer defen-<lb/>
sive front are end<lb/>
Kelvin Edwards and<lb/>
tackle Calvin Thomp-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
The Bucs, who are<lb/>
members of the<lb/>
Southern Conference,<lb/>
only lost four starters<lb/>
from last year's team<lb/>
that went 2-9.<lb/>
University of Miami<lb/>
Nov. 5 �2:00 p.m.<lb/>
ORANGE BOWL<lb/>
The Miami Hur-<lb/>
ricanes should once<lb/>
again be one of the<lb/>
strongest In-<lb/>
dependents in the<lb/>
country, but they'll<lb/>
have to perform this<lb/>
year without their Ail-<lb/>
American quarter-<lb/>
back Jim Kelly.<lb/>
But Coach Howard<lb/>
Schnellenberger is us-<lb/>
ed to playing without<lb/>
Kelly, who missed the<lb/>
second half of last<lb/>
season with a<lb/>
shoulder injury.<lb/>
Kyle Vanderwende<lb/>
started the last three<lb/>
games of '82 as a<lb/>
freshman, completing<lb/>
39 of 64 passes for 465<lb/>
yards. Along with<lb/>
Vanderwende,<lb/>
sophomore Vinnie<lb/>
Testaverde and red-<lb/>
shirt freshman Bernie<lb/>
Kosar can all throw<lb/>
the ball 70 yards.<lb/>
Schnellenberger<lb/>
claims that all three<lb/>
quarterbacks will be<lb/>
playing in the NFL<lb/>
someday.<lb/>
In the back field,<lb/>
senior Keith Griffin,<lb/>
the brother of two-<lb/>
time Heisman Trophy<lb/>
Archie Griffin, is the<lb/>
starting tailback.<lb/>
Speedy Neal and<lb/>
Albert Bentley will<lb/>
also see action.<lb/>
Miami was 7-4 last<lb/>
season, including a<lb/>
41-3 trouncing of<lb/>
N.C. State.<lb/>
William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Nov. 12�1:30 p.m.<lb/>
FICKLEN STADIUM<lb/>
When the Indians<lb/>
and Pirates get<lb/>
together to play foot-<lb/>
ball, the games never<lb/>
lack excitement.<lb/>
In 1981, the Indians<lb/>
came to Greenville<lb/>
and upset the Pirates<lb/>
31-21. The loss<lb/>
prevented ECU from<lb/>
having a winning<lb/>
season, as the Pirates'<lb/>
record slipped to 5-6.<lb/>
Then in 1982, ECU<lb/>
travelled to<lb/>
Williamsburg and<lb/>
came out on the front<lb/>
end of a see-saw bat-<lb/>
tle, 31-27.<lb/>
In the series with<lb/>
the Indians, ECU<lb/>
leads by a 10-4 margin<lb/>
with one tie.<lb/>
The Indians, coach-<lb/>
ed by Jimmie<lb/>
Laycock, finished the<lb/>
1982 season with a 3-8<lb/>
record. William &amp;<lb/>
Mary lost 16 starters<lb/>
from last year's<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Players to watch<lb/>
for the Indians in-<lb/>
clude quarterback<lb/>
Stan Yagiello, free<lb/>
safety Mark Kelso,<lb/>
tight end Glenn Bod-<lb/>
nar and offensive<lb/>
guard Mario Shaffer.<lb/>
Southern Mississippi<lb/>
Nov. 19� 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
CST<lb/>
ROBERTS STADIUM<lb/>
USM will have to<lb/>
replace explosive<lb/>
quarterback Reggie<lb/>
Collier, the school's<lb/>
total offense leader,<lb/>
who now plays in the<lb/>
USFL. His replace-<lb/>
ment will be inex-<lb/>
perienced Robert<lb/>
Ducksworth � Col-<lb/>
lier's second cousin.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles<lb/>
feature one of the<lb/>
finest running backs<lb/>
in the country in Sam<lb/>
Dejarnette. Last year,<lb/>
Dejarnette finished<lb/>
fifth in the country in<lb/>
rushing with 1,544<lb/>
yards.<lb/>
Southern Miss<lb/>
returns 14 starters,<lb/>
and coach Jim Car-<lb/>
mody will shape his<lb/>
defense around<lb/>
Gerald Baylis, one of<lb/>
the premier<lb/>
noseguards in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles<lb/>
finished the 1982 cam-<lb/>
paign with a 7-4<lb/>
record, including a<lb/>
38-29 defeat of the<lb/>
University of<lb/>
Alabama.<lb/>
In eight previous<lb/>
meetings with<lb/>
Southern Miss, ECU<lb/>
has only been able to<lb/>
defeat the Golden<lb/>
Eagles twice. The last<lb/>
time the two teams<lb/>
played (1980),<lb/>
Southern Miss down-<lb/>
ed the Pirates 35-7.<lb/>
��<lb/>
? �<lb/>
��-� �<lb/>
 �((&amp; fc<lb/>
 M<lb/>
c� . . , OABY PATTERSON - Ptxrto Lab<lb/>
Soccer coach Robbie Church gets in some per-season performers to a member of the soccer team. The soccer season eels<lb/>
underway Tuesday when the Pirates host Pfeiffer at 3 p.m. 8<lb/>
f MiiiiHiiiimiiiii�����-irttmiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiMiiH<lb/>
lllllllllllllllllIllIMIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIllllliiii<lb/>
IIIIIIIIIIIHIIIIIIillHIIIIIIIHHHHHIIIIIIIIIUIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIUIHIIIIIKfl<lb/>
SKMINAR: STUDY-SMART STATEGIES FOR GETTING<lb/>
HIGH GRADES<lb/>
NF :l R SV EAT ANOTHKR EXAM .STOP C RAMMING RELAX IN CLASSCONTROI <lb/>
OIR CAREER OPTIONS<lb/>
"HAT (H<lb/>
N ILL I.EARN ti, parkagr fr�m ,hf lilci ,� b, 9mmm,OB ltctic. Wh, , �, - - <lb/>
A .Th, J hour, p,r .oath ,pd no, �udng  .�, rah. .our �or� . Ho. ,o JZZtET? '7" "�<lb/>
1<lb/>
t.l ARANTEE II �ou arr n compel salttfied �nh this �minar after jul I<lb/>
guaranty our gracr P�i  �,) ,� Tol-Te-uo. aad mack. mU)l<lb/>
� fir�l hour. our lu.tioa .ill tmrntftMrty b rrfuaded la fall.<lb/>
Located<lb/>
521 CoroncheSt.<lb/>
Across from<lb/>
GiH't Doi-ms<lb/>
in Goorgofown Shoppot<lb/>
m<lb/>
4�-<lb/>
QWS<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
11-11<lb/>
rwooooy-Sot .<lb/>
Fot Toko-ovjt Coll:<lb/>
7524761<lb/>
GO PIRATES<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Saturday Night 7:00-till game's end<lb/>
Catch the EX.UFlorida St. game<lb/>
live on T.V. at Pharo's.<lb/>
24oz. beer $1.00<lb/>
(during the game)<lb/>
Nawttom Chicken Fish Only $1.85 plus tax with F.F.and<lb/>
$1.00 off shrimp in o bosket N (lettuce and tartar sauce j<lb/>
vog. $4.25 plus tax (with F.Fskrw and roHsTv Expires Sopt. 21,1933<lb/>
Expiros Sopt. 21,1983 with coupon only<lb/>
with coui<lb/>
I to be! M<lb/>
Ich�� ih�m�ler to s.�p �nH.f fo c � .nd Marl go �or �k.l yo. realj, M<lb/>
Regislr.in M) minute prior lo Maaar. C Mfe, M( . �a. and Ckttks .crrpird<lb/>
Pfik Pfrformamr ProRr.m. �r. Hodge Si. P.O. Boi 414<lb/>
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Orieaial. SC 2571 (919) 249-1511<lb/>
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MIIIIIIIIMI.IIIIIIIIMMIIIIIllMll.llllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIIIIIIHIilllHIMII.IIIII.IIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIIlllR<lb/>
3RD ANNUAL<lb/>
TTK0<lb/>
ANIMAL HOUSE<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
FRIDAY NITE<lb/>
AND ROCK<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR 8:30-10:00<lb/>
FREE DRAFT<lb/>
FREE WINE<lb/>
YOU WONT BEUEVE<lb/>
YOUR EARS<lb/>
i<lb/>
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Papa Katz Is A Private Cluh<lb/>
For Members ai Guasts<lb/>
We Have AI ABC Permits<lb/>
10th St. Ext At<lb/>
RiverMulf Rd.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
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FEATURING AL WILLIAMS AND GOLDRUSH<lb/>
(IN TOGAS)<lb/>
$50.00 WOMEN'S SEXY TOGA CONTEST<lb/>
WHEN: THURSDAY SEPT. 1 8:00-UNTIL<lb/>
WHERE: TTKf FRATERNITY HOUSE 803 HOOKER RD<lb/>
WHY: TO RAISE -ELL<lb/>
CALL 7564540 FOR RIDES OR INFO<lb/>
BRING ID'S<lb/>
ello<lb/>
"he 1983 Atlantic<lb/>
last Conference<lb/>
lotball season<lb/>
bns Saturday with<lb/>
rgia Tech in and<lb/>
Jmson out as far as<lb/>
league champion-<lb/>
is concerned<lb/>
"he Yellow Jackets<lb/>
eligible for the<lb/>
ipionship for the<lb/>
H time since joining<lb/>
conference in<lb/>
f8. The Tigers are<lb/>
inning a two-year<lb/>
,AA probation and<lb/>
ACC prohibition<lb/>
m competing for<lb/>
league crown.<lb/>
Saturday's league<lb/>
:hedule sees the<lb/>
"igers hosting<lb/>
Astern Carolina.<lb/>
hike at Virginia.<lb/>
lorth Carolina a:<lb/>
uth Carolina and<lb/>
ake Forest hosting<lb/>
Appalachian State of<lb/>
the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
The Tigers are ex-<lb/>
pected to be playing<lb/>
before a record<lb/>
crowd, following ex-<lb/>
pansion of its stadium<lb/>
to 74,000 seats. Clem<lb/>
son players say the<lb/>
are not about to a! <lb/>
the Clemson proba-<lb/>
tion to become an ex-<lb/>
cuse for losing.<lb/>
"Of course e<lb/>
can't officially win<lb/>
the title, but we can<lb/>
play for pride and I<lb/>
think that is our ob-<lb/>
jective this year � to<lb/>
keep that pride and<lb/>
respect we've earned<lb/>
the last two years<lb/>
said quarterback<lb/>
Mike Eppley. "I am<lb/>
sure there are hard<lb/>
feelings (about the<lb/>
probation) among<lb/>
some fans and<lb/>
players, but we just<lb/>
have to accept it he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Western Carolina is<lb/>
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Si<lb/>
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�<lb/>
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Buy<lb/>
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Please �Mresenl<lb/>
Lin it oi<lb/>
Voidwl<lb/>
Ollei<lb/>
3016 E. 11<lb/>
321 Greenvl<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER I. 1V83<lb/>
13<lb/>
brr learn The soccer eaon �tt<lb/>
k ARhhR OPTIONS<lb/>
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DRUSH<lb/>
ONTEST<lb/>
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ello w Jackets Eligible<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
The 1983 Atlantic<lb/>
oast Conference<lb/>
football season<lb/>
�gins Saturday with<lb/>
jeorgia Tech in and<lb/>
lemson out as far as<lb/>
le league champion-<lb/>
up is concerned<lb/>
The Yellow Jackets<lb/>
re eligible for the<lb/>
umpionship for the<lb/>
jrst time since joining<lb/>
he conference in<lb/>
R78. The Tigers are<lb/>
jeginning a two-year<lb/>
ICAA probation and<lb/>
in AC C prohibition<lb/>
from competing for<lb/>
le league crown.<lb/>
Saturday's league<lb/>
.hedule sees the<lb/>
igers hosting<lb/>
estern Carolina,<lb/>
uke at Virginia,<lb/>
.orth Carolina at<lb/>
jouth Carolina and<lb/>
�Vake Forest hosting<lb/>
Appalachian State of<lb/>
the Southern Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
The Tigers are ex-<lb/>
ected to be playing<lb/>
 e f o r e a record<lb/>
rowd, following ex-<lb/>
pansion of its stadium<lb/>
to 4,000 seats. Clem-<lb/>
son players say they<lb/>
ire not about to allow<lb/>
the Clemson proba-<lb/>
tion to become an ex-<lb/>
ruse for losing.<lb/>
'Of course we<lb/>
can't officially win<lb/>
the title, but we can<lb/>
'play for pride and 1<lb/>
think that is our ob-<lb/>
jective this year � to<lb/>
keep that pride and<lb/>
respect we've earned<lb/>
the last two years<lb/>
said quarterback<lb/>
Mike Eppley. "1 am<lb/>
sure there are hard<lb/>
feelings (about the<lb/>
probation) among<lb/>
some fans and<lb/>
players, but we just<lb/>
have to accept it he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Western Carolina is<lb/>
coming off a 6-5<lb/>
season. The Cata-<lb/>
mounts lost to Clem-<lb/>
son 21-10 last year.<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
players have been<lb/>
preparing for South<lb/>
Carolina by watching<lb/>
films of New Mexico.<lb/>
New Gamecock head<lb/>
coach Joe Morrison<lb/>
led New Mexico to a<lb/>
10-1 season last year.<lb/>
South Carolina has<lb/>
many of the same<lb/>
players from last year,<lb/>
when it finished 4-7,<lb/>
but Crum said he<lb/>
knows Morrison will<lb/>
use those players dif-<lb/>
ferently.<lb/>
"For personnel,<lb/>
you can look at South<lb/>
Carolina but you real-<lb/>
ly don't know where<lb/>
they would take that<lb/>
personnel and put it<lb/>
Crum said. "We had<lb/>
to get a general idea<lb/>
off what they would do<lb/>
offensively and defen-<lb/>
sively from looking at<lb/>
New Mexico<lb/>
Morrison has in-<lb/>
stalled a "veer" of-<lb/>
fense for the<lb/>
Gamecocks.<lb/>
"The last time we<lb/>
sav the veer was 1979<lb/>
when Bo Rein was at<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
State Crum said.<lb/>
While Crum is ex-<lb/>
pecting some sur-<lb/>
prises, Morrison said<lb/>
he expects little<lb/>
change in the North<lb/>
Carolina attack,<lb/>
despite the loss of<lb/>
running back Kelvin<lb/>
Bryant.<lb/>
"I don't expect any<lb/>
real drastic changes<lb/>
from North<lb/>
Carolina Morrison<lb/>
said. "They are solid,<lb/>
well-coached football<lb/>
team with great<lb/>
athletes<lb/>
Duke also will be<lb/>
under the direction of<lb/>
a new coach Saturday<lb/>
as the Blue Devils play<lb/>
their first game under<lb/>
former University of<lb/>
Mississippi coach<lb/>
Steve Sloan. Despite<lb/>
the change in the<lb/>
coaching staff, the<lb/>
fortunes of the Blue<lb/>
Devils are expected to<lb/>
continue to rest on the<lb/>
performance of<lb/>
quarterback Ben Ben-<lb/>
nett.<lb/>
Bennett needs just<lb/>
144 yeards to set the<lb/>
record for most total<lb/>
yards in a career. That<lb/>
record is currently<lb/>
held by former Duke<lb/>
star Leo Hart.<lb/>
Duke beat Virginia<lb/>
51-17 last year in<lb/>
Durham but Sloan<lb/>
isn't looking for a<lb/>
repeat performance<lb/>
against the Cavaliers,<lb/>
who are in their se-<lb/>
cond year under<lb/>
George Welsh.<lb/>
"We anticipate<lb/>
Virginia to be much<lb/>
improved, especially<lb/>
on defense Sloan<lb/>
said. "I have always<lb/>
had great respect for<lb/>
Coach Welsh and I<lb/>
admired the way in<lb/>
which his teams have<lb/>
always plaved tough<lb/>
football<lb/>
Virginia is hoping<lb/>
for a strong running<lb/>
attack led by<lb/>
sophomore tailback<lb/>
Antonio Rice, who<lb/>
rushed for 764 yards<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
Wake Forest, 3-8<lb/>
last year, will again be<lb/>
led by quarterback<lb/>
Gary Schofield, who<lb/>
needs just 105 yards<lb/>
passing to top Jay<lb/>
Venuto for the<lb/>
school's all-time pass-<lb/>
ing yardage record.<lb/>
Schofield passed for<lb/>
2,380 vards last vear<lb/>
alone and hass 4,952<lb/>
yards in his career.<lb/>
Wake Forest has<lb/>
beaten Appalachian<lb/>
State four straight<lb/>
times, coming away<lb/>
with a 31-22 victory<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
"It is a game that<lb/>
has taken on par-<lb/>
ticular interest over<lb/>
the past two seasons<lb/>
for both schools<lb/>
said Deacon head<lb/>
coach Al Groh. "We<lb/>
are anticipating this<lb/>
year's game to be the<lb/>
most hard fought bet-<lb/>
ween the two schools<lb/>
since I've been here<lb/>
because of the intensi-<lb/>
ty of the rivalry and<lb/>
the fact that it is the<lb/>
season opener for<lb/>
both teams<lb/>
FOR SALE: Obrien competitor<lb/>
with custom case $120.00. New<lb/>
Connelly wide track trick ski<lb/>
with front pro wrap binding<lb/>
$150.00<lb/>
FOR SALE: Dorm size trig.<lb/>
MOO, Full wetsuit MOO, bicycle<lb/>
SO 00, phone 751 731<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
ANYONE INTERESTED in<lb/>
attending the Jewish high hoi,<lb/>
day services please call lac-<lb/>
queline Kartchner at 75 425 or<lb/>
Dr. Resnik 75 540 Tickets<lb/>
FREE to students. Transport<lb/>
lion is available. Please call to<lb/>
make reservations new.<lb/>
IF YOU NEED to make extra<lb/>
money working on your own,<lb/>
part time, call 752 537 between<lb/>
 and � p.m.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
7S1-77S7<lb/>
MALE WANTS TO share apart<lb/>
merit Will share expenses call<lb/>
75753<lb/>
WANTED STUDENT Sales<lb/>
Rep to sell formats favors,<lb/>
glassware. sportswear,<lb/>
novelties to Creek's. Dorms,<lb/>
Clubs, Commission, own hours<lb/>
Call I 00 323 3101<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
"5 23i or 7520 ask for Km<lb/>
C.<lb/>
LEGAL HASSLES � Call<lb/>
Howard J. Cummings. attorney<lb/>
at Law No charge for MNajl<lb/>
consultation for ECU Students<lb/>
Call 750004<lb/>
LOWEST TYPING RATES on<lb/>
campus include experienced<lb/>
professional work Proof<lb/>
reading, spelling and gram<lb/>
matical corrections J55 74(<lb/>
after 5 30<lb/>
WANTED: FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MATE. 2 bebroom Eastbrook<lb/>
apt. one third rent and utilities<lb/>
Call 753 2335<lb/>
WANTED: FEMALE ROOM<lb/>
MATE furnished 2 bedrm apt,<lb/>
microwave. HBO, TV. pool.<lb/>
King Row apt. One half rent<lb/>
and utilities. Call after 00 p m.<lb/>
NEED A BABYSITTER �<lb/>
Dependable Junior in Nursing in<lb/>
need of some extra money is<lb/>
available to babysit m the even<lb/>
ings and some mornings Has<lb/>
had much experience caring for<lb/>
infants and small children Have<lb/>
own transportation Please call<lb/>
AND<lb/>
AVEZ VOUS des probiemes<lb/>
avec votre cours de francaise'<lb/>
C'est votre bete noir' Est ce que<lb/>
vos protesseurs sont heirs'<lb/>
Telephonei 555 �7�<lb/>
guiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiimiHiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiHiMiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimta<lb/>
m �<lb/>
SOULS ELECTIONS<lb/>
SOULS, MINORITY ORGANIZATION NEEDS<lb/>
YP?.yf9?IPPUCAT,0N BELOW-<lb/>
NAME<lb/>
PHONE<lb/>
CLASS<lb/>
OFFICE SEEKING<lb/>
 DEFINITION 1<lb/>
 OF FRATERNITY <lb/>
1 THOMAS RILEY MARSHALL I<lb/>
� (WABASH 1873) 1<lb/>
1 VICE-PRESIDENT OF THE 1<lb/>
1 UNITED STATES 1913-1921 �<lb/>
 "The greatest institution in America, as it <lb/>
 has always been in the world, is the home. �<lb/>
I When the young man leaves it and goes to <lb/>
E college he is wise to be grafted on to a new <lb/>
 home known as the fraternity. The mother <lb/>
 of this new home is high ideals: the father is <lb/>
 hard work, and brotherhood is mutual trust �<lb/>
 and assistance s<lb/>
 Come See What Makes the<lb/>
 Fraternity Experience<lb/>
 So Valuable! �<lb/>
1 RUSH NEKT TUES WEV 1<lb/>
 ASIV THURS. <lb/>
Riiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimiiiiiiimimmiiiim minis<lb/>
rUNSTtVANI<lb/>
f001SAU. PhliADUPnlA VALLEY FMU 6JKAT FOOD I DUTCH COUKTRt I GCTTVSMMC<lb/>
- - . . - - -<lb/>
�<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA FOR FALL BREAK '83<lb/>
OCTOBER 14 OCTOBER 18<lb/>
sstssMCLUDCS PtR PERSOM<lb/>
 1 . � . �� - . �� i' - -<lb/>
� . ��� J<lb/>
� � . � � �� -�.��-<lb/>
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� -��� � . . �<lb/>
pr�U 't<lb/>
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C0T�CTFOFUflTMC�<lb/>
IMFORMATIOM RESERVATIONS<lb/>
����<lb/>
� �<lb/>
�66 r. -<lb/>
MBEfl  '983<lb/>
SPONSORED BY THE STUDENT UNION TRAVEL COMMITTEE<lb/>
ECU STUDENT ATHLETIC BOARD AND BURGER KING<lb/>
R<lb/>
ute the spirit behind athletics<lb/>
our award winning 1983 Varsity Cheerleaders.<lb/>
'??<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'�??<lb/>
PHOTO BY STANLEY<lb/>
H4 '�� �<lb/>
LEARY<lb/>
National Cheerleading Association Camp<lb/>
George Mason University<lb/>
August 14-17 1983<lb/>
CAMP SPIRIT AWARD<lb/>
CAMP SPIRIT STICK<lb/>
4 Superior blue ribbons<lb/>
for technique and performance<lb/>
Karen Hall, Soph. Art Cindy Batson, Sr. Business<lb/>
Patti Harrill, Jr. Interior Design Lisa Chandler, Soph. Accounting<lb/>
Co-Captain Jennifer Cooper, Sr. Dance<lb/>
Co-Captain Scott Perry, Sr. Computer Science<lb/>
Chuck King, Sr. Communication Art<lb/>
Lisa Lyon, Soph. Computer Science<lb/>
James Elkins, Soph. Pre-Environmental Law<lb/>
Brian Foye, Sr. MathComputer Science<lb/>
Robbie Rice, Soph. Computer Science<lb/>
Ronnie Rice, Soph. Computer Science<lb/>
SUPPORT THE HOME OF THE WINNER at the following locations:<lb/>
New- 3016 E. 10th Street (across from Hastings Ford) Familiar- 321 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Buy a Pita or a salad, <lb/>
get a regular soft drink or ice tea, Free. J<lb/>
I<lb/>
Please present this coupon before ordering. I<lb/>
Limit one coupon per customer. J<lb/>
Void where prohibited by law. !<lb/>
Offer good through May 31,1984 <lb/>
I<lb/>
3016 E. 10th Street, Greenville, N.C. I<lb/>
321 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C. <lb/>
Buy a Chicken Sandwich<lb/>
and a regular size soft drink or ice tea,<lb/>
get a regular size French Fry, Free.<lb/>
Please present this coupon before ordering.<lb/>
Limit one per customer.<lb/>
Void where prohibited by law.<lb/>
Offer good through May 31,1984<lb/>
3016 E. 10th Street, Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
321 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Buy a WHOPPER and regular size soft drink J<lb/>
or ice tea, get a regular size French Fry, <lb/>
FREE. 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Please present this coupon before ordering 1<lb/>
Limit one per customer. <lb/>
Void where prohibited by law. <lb/>
Offer good though May 31,1984. <lb/>
I<lb/>
3016 E. 10th Street, Greenville, N.C. <lb/>
321 Greenville Blvd. Greenville, N.C. I<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057570_0014"/><lb/>
14 THEEASTCAROLONIAN SFPTLMBER 1, 1983<lb/>
�HiiatiuiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiimtiiHHiiiiiiiiiiiiHimi<lb/>
mn1��W���'�<lb/>
����I<lb/>
<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru<lb/>
Sat Sept. 3 1983.<lb/>
i<lb/>
FRESHORE BRAND<lb/>
ORIENTAL STYLE<lb/>
Breaded<lb/>
Fantail Shrimp<lb/>
$E49<lb/>
1-Lb fcJ<lb/>
Pkg. <lb/>
FRESHORE<lb/>
BREADED<lb/>
Butterfly<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
$A99<lb/>
Lb. �HT<lb/>
(LESS THAN 19c PER SHRIMP)<lb/>
FRESHORE PEELED DEVEINED<lb/>
30-35 READY TO COOK<lb/>
Cocktail<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
�<lb/>
i<lb/>
FRESHORE BREADED<lb/>
ButterflYa o,$269<lb/>
- Pkg �<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
1-<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
FRESHORE ROUND<lb/>
Breaded<lb/>
Shrimp .<lb/>
10-02 r m<lb/>
pkg. <lb/>
99<lb/>
1-Lb<lb/>
Pkg<lb/>
4<lb/>
99<lb/>
SERVE N SAVE COOKED<lb/>
Salad tjjqn<lb/>
Shrimp S� �<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
Back<lb/>
Students<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
IHIIIIIHIIMIIIIHIHimHHH�IMHIIimilllllllllH�MHIIIIHIIIMIIIIIM.IHIIIIIIHMIIIIIIIIIIMMMHIIHMIH<lb/>
MMMlMIHIMIMMIMIIIIIMHIMIIIIIIIIMIMIMHIIMIHIIIIMIII�IMIIIIIIIMIMHIIIIIIIIIIIIMIIimilMH<lb/>
M;��.�.ii 1 �i ��- in.�man iiw m a niilWlWwatj<lb/>
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5<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057570_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>