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<pb facs="00057580_0001"/>
?ht<lb/>
(ftarolmran<lb/>
,4<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.J2<lb/>
Thursday, October 6,1983<lb/>
Greenville, s.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
ECU Minister<lb/>
Makes Bid For<lb/>
City Council<lb/>
<lb/>
a<lb/>
Hadden<lb/>
By ANDREA MARKELLO<lb/>
SiafT Writer<lb/>
The Greenville City Council's comprehensive plan<lb/>
for growth in downtown Greenville over the next<lb/>
10 12 years is a primary concern in Rev. William L.<lb/>
Hadden's decision to run for a fourth term on the<lb/>
council.<lb/>
Hadden, who has also served as ECU's Episcopal<lb/>
campus minister for the past 15 years, believes the<lb/>
key to the plan is revitaliza-<lb/>
tion. According to Hadden,<lb/>
the university is represented<lb/>
by a strong hand with<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell<lb/>
and Mayor Percy Cox<lb/>
working together.<lb/>
Major issues of current<lb/>
relevance include student<lb/>
transit and private off-<lb/>
campus housing. Dick<lb/>
Blake, assistant to<lb/>
Chancellor Howell, hopes<lb/>
to combine the campus and<lb/>
community bus systems.<lb/>
'The city is talking about combined grants from<lb/>
the city transit agency for the students and the com-<lb/>
munity Hadden said. "The city currently main-<lb/>
tains the responsibility for repairing campus buses.<lb/>
With the availability of federal grants to the city of<lb/>
Greenville, used with the city bus system, plans could<lb/>
be made to incorporate them into the campus bus<lb/>
system he said. A final goal would be to establish a<lb/>
bus system to serve the campus and community<lb/>
together.<lb/>
With the issue concerning student housing, Had-<lb/>
den supports construction of private dorm-<lb/>
condominiums in the downtown Greenville area.<lb/>
"Business has fallen in downtown Greenville during<lb/>
the last years Hadden said. "The population is<lb/>
moving away, and establishment of more adult<lb/>
dorms and condominiums would be a first step in<lb/>
creating a bigger tax base he said.<lb/>
Hadden also supports the "talent bank made up<lb/>
of volunteers used in city commissions and commit-<lb/>
tees. Hadden said there is a large group of talented<lb/>
people from the university involved in city govern-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
First elected in in 1975, Hadden was re-elected to<lb/>
the city council in 1979 and 1981.<lb/>
MedProfessor<lb/>
Dies At 35;<lb/>
Shocks School<lb/>
By ELIZABETH PAGE<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Dr. John C. Yeager, 35,<lb/>
associate professor of physiology<lb/>
at ECU, died Sept. 26 in Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital. The<lb/>
cause has not been released.<lb/>
"It was a shock to the whole<lb/>
department said Robert<lb/>
Thurber, chairman of the<lb/>
physiology Department. "He was<lb/>
an excellent researcher, teacher<lb/>
and gentleman<lb/>
Yeager conducted research in<lb/>
cardiovascular disease and was an<lb/>
active member of the American<lb/>
Heart Association.<lb/>
Yeager had worked for seven<lb/>
years in the ECU physiology<lb/>
department, since 1976.<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Defender Claims<lb/>
Honor Board 9s<lb/>
Actions Improper<lb/>
4 ?Mn<lb/>
ROB POOLC - ft, L,b<lb/>
 Swear, He Was This Tall<lb/>
An ECU student discusses her last blind date with friends in front of the Student Supply<lb/>
More. Come Now, surely he wasn't that short.<lb/>
School Emblem<lb/>
ECU Gets New Mascot<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
This year ECU will be sporting a new<lb/>
mascot which has been described as more<lb/>
clear, classier and better than before.<lb/>
After two years and 16 revisions, the<lb/>
university has come up with a new image<lb/>
to symbolize its athletic teams.<lb/>
The new pirate mascot was drawn by<lb/>
senior art major David Franks, who took<lb/>
ideas from an ad hoc committee set up by<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell and chaired by<lb/>
David B. Stevens, university attorney. The<lb/>
new mascot is a cartoon character with a<lb/>
broad chest, a trimmed appearance in<lb/>
comparison to the former figure and a<lb/>
tough look.<lb/>
"The image of the old pirate was to do<lb/>
in your opponent any way possible,<lb/>
whether sub him in the back or cut his<lb/>
throat Stevens said. "We think the new<lb/>
pirate is just as tough, rugged and ready<lb/>
for battle with all opponents without hav-<lb/>
ing the appearence of a<lb/>
scrunge he said.<lb/>
Stevens said the new<lb/>
mascot reflects the<lb/>
tougher image ECU is<lb/>
trying to project of its<lb/>
athletic teams.<lb/>
The comparison of<lb/>
ECU's mascot to other<lb/>
universities' emblems<lb/>
was another reason for<lb/>
the change, according<lb/>
to Richard Laing, former dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Art. He said that when one<lb/>
looks at the mascots of different university<lb/>
teams a good caricature is easy to pot.<lb/>
"We wanted something that showed some<lb/>
class Laing said.<lb/>
Pirate Mascot<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Start Writer<lb/>
Student Public Defender<lb/>
Stephen Sherbin contends that a<lb/>
recent hearing of the ECU Honor<lb/>
Board was handled improperly. In<lb/>
response to Sherbin's contention,<lb/>
James Mallory, associate dean of<lb/>
student life, said "He's all wet<lb/>
During the hearing ECU stu-<lb/>
dent Keith Carter was convicted<lb/>
of plagiarism resulting from a<lb/>
poem published in the 1983 Rebel.<lb/>
Carter was then given a $250 fine,<lb/>
one year's probation and a written<lb/>
reprimand as well as being re-<lb/>
quired to write a formal letter of<lb/>
apology to the Rebel.<lb/>
Sherbin said he feels Carter<lb/>
should not have been given the<lb/>
punishment because the hearing<lb/>
was handled improperly. "I<lb/>
recommended that they (the<lb/>
Honor Board) hand down no<lb/>
sanction because of the<lb/>
violation Sherbin said. The case<lb/>
will be appealed after Fall break<lb/>
when the Review Board is ap-<lb/>
pointed. Sherbin said he plans to<lb/>
bring out the alleged improprieties<lb/>
in the appeal.<lb/>
Carter's poem was taken from a<lb/>
song on an Alice Cooper album<lb/>
and according to Sherbin, assis-<lb/>
tant student attorney general,<lb/>
Rick Brown, who tried the case,<lb/>
was unprepared because he did<lb/>
not have the album. "The defen-<lb/>
dant was the only person in the<lb/>
room who had heard the record<lb/>
Sherbin said.<lb/>
"I plead no contest to not being<lb/>
prepared Brown said. "The<lb/>
reason 1 didn't bring the album<lb/>
was that I was not aware the<lb/>
defense was going to contend a<lb/>
difference between the two (the<lb/>
song and the poem)<lb/>
After Brown and Sherbin made<lb/>
their closing statements, the board<lb/>
requested the Cooper album as<lb/>
additional evidence. Brown then<lb/>
purchased the album and addi-<lb/>
tional statements were made, a<lb/>
procedure Sherbin says was im-<lb/>
proper because closing statements<lb/>
had already been presented.<lb/>
"I gave the Honor Board ab-<lb/>
solute hell and told them they<lb/>
were violating procedure Sher-<lb/>
bin said. He added that he felt<lb/>
they had overstepped their bounds<lb/>
in asking for further evidence and<lb/>
stated that their sole duty was to<lb/>
pass down a sanction.<lb/>
"I was very disappointed with<lb/>
the performance of the Honor<lb/>
Board, but my faith in the judicial<lb/>
system is still as strong as ever<lb/>
Sherbin said.<lb/>
"I checked with the university<lb/>
attorney and the procedures were<lb/>
correct Mallory said. Mallory<lb/>
also said the appeal was granted<lb/>
only because of the severity of<lb/>
Carter's sentence, not because the<lb/>
procedures were in question.<lb/>
"The main objective of the<lb/>
system is to be fair and make sure<lb/>
the truth comes out said Stu-<lb/>
dent Attorney General Harry<lb/>
Dest. "The Honor Board did not<lb/>
do anything out of the ordinary<lb/>
nor did it violate students' con-<lb/>
stitutional rights<lb/>
"I think the Honor Board did<lb/>
what was right. They found out<lb/>
the truth; they got the informa-<lb/>
tion to mmkc m decision. Mad they<lb/>
made it Brown said.<lb/>
Honors Seminars 'Bigger And Better9<lb/>
Yeager<lb/>
Yeager received his<lb/>
undergraduate degree at Miami of<lb/>
Ohio. He also attended Ohio State<lb/>
University, where he received a<lb/>
doctorate in physiology.<lb/>
Yeager also attended Michigan<lb/>
State University for post-<lb/>
doctorate work.<lb/>
Yeager is survived gby his two<lb/>
children, Matie, 4, and Danny,2,<lb/>
as well as his wife, Elizabeth.<lb/>
The ECU Honors Program has<lb/>
announced its list of seminars and<lb/>
course sections for the Spring<lb/>
semester in time for pre-<lb/>
registration, and the offerings and<lb/>
range of topics is bigger and better<lb/>
than ever, according to the pro-<lb/>
gram's director, English professor<lb/>
David Sanders.<lb/>
The program is offering five<lb/>
special topic seminars beginning<lb/>
in January, including one that is<lb/>
being repeated from last Spring by<lb/>
popular demand and one that is<lb/>
being co-taught, for the first time<lb/>
ever, by an undergraduate honors<lb/>
student.<lb/>
Honors seminars are designed<lb/>
to be taught primarily through<lb/>
class discussion rather than by lec-<lb/>
ture. Most seminars are headed by<lb/>
two professors and meet once a<lb/>
week for two hours. They count<lb/>
for three semester hours of<lb/>
General College credit.<lb/>
,4The Literature of the<lb/>
Holocaust" is the course, taught<lb/>
by foreign language associate pro-<lb/>
fessor Michael Bassman, to be of-<lb/>
fered for the second time next<lb/>
Spring. The Tuesday night class<lb/>
will look at the reign of Nazis and<lb/>
the lasting implications of their<lb/>
actions on the world through<lb/>
literature written from a variety of<lb/>
viewpoints.<lb/>
"Futures: An International<lb/>
Perspective" is the first seminar<lb/>
to be co-taught by an honors<lb/>
undergraduate student, Keith<lb/>
Hoggard. The course will focus<lb/>
on Alvin Toffler's The Third<lb/>
Wave and examine man's future<lb/>
through a variety of readings. The<lb/>
class will also be led by professor<lb/>
Ralph Steele.<lb/>
A seminar focusing on medicine<lb/>
from a humanistic point of view<lb/>
will be led by John Moskop of the<lb/>
medical school and associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of sociology Paul Tschet-<lb/>
ter. The course, "Patients, Physi-<lb/>
cians and Society: Exploring the<lb/>
Medical Humanities will have<lb/>
guest speakers from variety of<lb/>
disciplines including philosophy,<lb/>
literature, history and an-<lb/>
thropology.<lb/>
Yuri Karageorge of the foreign<lb/>
languages and literature depart-<lb/>
ment will lead the seminar<lb/>
"Reason and Libido in Contem-<lb/>
porary Theater which is to ex-<lb/>
amine man's concern for his own<lb/>
survival as reflected through<lb/>
European and American drama.<lb/>
A seminar taught by George<lb/>
Bailey of the philosophy depart-<lb/>
ment, "Classical Philosophical<lb/>
Problems and Current Attempts<lb/>
to Resolve Them will present<lb/>
living philosphers' attempts to ad-<lb/>
dress traditional questions. This is<lb/>
the only course set to meet three<lb/>
times a week for one hour ses-<lb/>
sions.<lb/>
The Honors Program is also of-<lb/>
fering several special sections of<lb/>
regular freshman and sophomore<lb/>
courses such as freshman English,<lb/>
introductory anthropology,<lb/>
health and American history.<lb/>
The courses are designed for<lb/>
and limited to students with a 3.5<lb/>
grade point average. Those who<lb/>
have a special interest in a class<lb/>
can obtain permission to enroll by<lb/>
getting a recommendation from a<lb/>
faculty member or from Sanders.<lb/>
Sanders urged interested<lb/>
students to sign up for the courses<lb/>
and told them not to be afraid of<lb/>
the "honors" label. Students<lb/>
grades usually go up rather than<lb/>
down after taking the honors<lb/>
courses, he said.<lb/>
The honors department has not<lb/>
only expanded its course offerings<lb/>
but its overall program as well this<lb/>
year. There is an honors lounge<lb/>
available to students in the pro-<lb/>
gram, on the second floor of<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall, and Sanders' posi-<lb/>
tion as head of the program has<lb/>
been upgraded from coordinator<lb/>
to director, allowing him to spend<lb/>
more time with the program.<lb/>
Languages Learned Too Late<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) ? A study<lb/>
committee urged the State Board<lb/>
of Education Wednesday to offer<lb/>
foreign language classes to every<lb/>
student every day, but some board<lb/>
members worried the idea would<lb/>
translate into expensive programs.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the board told of-<lb/>
ficials in the state Department of<lb/>
Public Instruction to write a<lb/>
timetable and a budget for im-<lb/>
plementing the committee's 19<lb/>
recommendations.<lb/>
The Foreign Language Cur-<lb/>
riculum Study Committee, con-<lb/>
sisting of language teachers and<lb/>
state education officials, said cur-<lb/>
rent language programs begin too<lb/>
late in a student's career, are of-<lb/>
fered too sporadically, stress<lb/>
academic rather than practical<lb/>
training and generally do not take<lb/>
advantage of new teaching techni-<lb/>
ques.<lb/>
It recommended every student<lb/>
study a second language from<lb/>
Kindergarten through 12th grade.<lb/>
Currently only 10 percent of all<lb/>
high school students complete at<lb/>
least two years of high school<lb/>
language classes, and only S3 per-<lb/>
cent of all high schools offer<lb/>
more. In addition, just eight<lb/>
school units teacher elementary<lb/>
school students a foreign<lb/>
language.<lb/>
The committee said the<lb/>
language training should be ex-<lb/>
panded in the high schools first<lb/>
and then go into junior high<lb/>
school and Kindergarten classes<lb/>
simultaneously.<lb/>
French, German and Spanish<lb/>
should remain the basic modern<lb/>
foreign languages offered, the<lb/>
committee said, but every high<lb/>
school student eventually should<lb/>
get the chance to take Latin as<lb/>
well. It added that non-traditional<lb/>
languages, such as Japanese and<lb/>
Arabic, should be offered when<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
The subject matter should be<lb/>
shifted slightly, the committee<lb/>
said, to include more practical in-<lb/>
formation that a worker in North<lb/>
Carolina could use. There is a<lb/>
need for North Carolinians who<lb/>
can speak German and work in<lb/>
the state's furniture industry, for<lb/>
example, the group said.<lb/>
Most of the other recommenda-<lb/>
tions call for improving the quali-<lb/>
ty of language teachers as well as<lb/>
their work surroundings.<lb/>
Several board members said<lb/>
they liked the ideas but worried<lb/>
about the cost or the time involv-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
"It looks to me like we're going<lb/>
to have to take out of what we're<lb/>
already doing to do this said<lb/>
board member John Tart of<lb/>
Goldsboro.<lb/>
But George T. "Terry"<lb/>
Whitlatch, a Winston-Salem<lb/>
junior high school principal who<lb/>
served as study committee chair-<lb/>
man, said researchers have found<lb/>
that foreign language courses can<lb/>
improve a student's abilities in<lb/>
English as well. He also disputed<lb/>
arguments that the program will<lb/>
be too expensive.<lb/>
"It would be fiscally irresponsi-<lb/>
ve to start a massive program,<lb/>
but there are cost-effective ways<lb/>
to do this he said. For example,<lb/>
he said students can take courses<lb/>
by television or with the help of<lb/>
computers.<lb/>
ROMRT PtAatAU.<lb/>
All The Comforts Of Home<lb/>
ECU students<lb/>
gad a roof over<lb/>
this squirrel and set him op in kb owa penoaal pad. A soft, comfy place to He dowa<lb/>
bead - he's doiag better thaa soaae ECU<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057580_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 6, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
n you or your organization<lb/>
ouid like to have an item<lb/>
pr nted in the announcement<lb/>
cdumn please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form and send it to<lb/>
Tie East Carolinian in care ot<lb/>
the production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
dvd 'able f the East Carolinian<lb/>
Office m the Publications<lb/>
Budding Ryers and handwnt<lb/>
'en copy on odd sued paper can<lb/>
? accepted<lb/>
" e is no charge tor an<lb/>
tmenfs ru? space s often<lb/>
? ted 1 heretore we cannot<lb/>
otec that your announce<lb/>
"lent ah' un as long as you<lb/>
.van' ana suggest that you do not<lb/>
? . on this column tor<lb/>
'?<lb/>
r h e oeadime tor an<lb/>
merits is 3 p m Monday<lb/>
lor 'he Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
? Aeanosdav tor the Thurs<lb/>
c?- pape' No announcements<lb/>
? eo .itter these deadlines<lb/>
 be p' "?ed<lb/>
- - space is available to ail<lb/>
rgani tations and<lb/>
? ts<lb/>
PRE HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
There will be a pledge meeting<lb/>
tor al' interested pre health pro<lb/>
tessions students of Alpha Ep<lb/>
Silon Delta. ECU Pre medical<lb/>
ronor society at 7 p m on Tues<lb/>
day Oct ll in Flanagan 307<lb/>
AEO provides many contacts<lb/>
ana ?un tor all pre professioanl<lb/>
students Refreshments will be<lb/>
served Dr Ed Bartlert will<lb/>
scea on Sports Medicine and<lb/>
aspec's of Orthopedic Surgery<lb/>
a ' .10 p m.<lb/>
PRIMETIME<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ is<lb/>
sponsoring -prime Time" this<lb/>
Thursday at 7 p m in the Nurs<lb/>
ing Building Rm 101 Please<lb/>
- s for fun fellowship and<lb/>
B-bie ?'jdy We are looking for<lb/>
warn  -?eting you<lb/>
SURFING CLUB<lb/>
There will be a surfing club<lb/>
meeting down stairs in<lb/>
Memorial Gym a' 7 cm on<lb/>
tnursdey Od 6 Anyone who<lb/>
p am tc go to cioaa tor fall<lb/>
IeaK must a'tencf this meeting<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A serv ce o? Evening Prayer<lb/>
w be reaa at St Paul's<lb/>
EP'Scopa Church (one block<lb/>
north of Garret Mall at 40e<lb/>
courth st on Tuesday. Oct ll at<lb/>
5 X p m<lb/>
CAOPTRAINING<lb/>
There will be a tracing ses<lb/>
sion held by the campus Alcohol<lb/>
and Drug Program on Monday,<lb/>
Oct 10 at 4 p m in room 210 Er<lb/>
win Hall This will be the third in<lb/>
a senes of none framing sessions<lb/>
or- peer counseling Help pro<lb/>
-note responsible decisions con<lb/>
cermng drugs and alcohol<lb/>
Become a trained student<lb/>
volunteer CADP is student<lb/>
operated service<lb/>
AFTER THE GAME<lb/>
"COURT PARTY"<lb/>
kappa Sigma, Kappa Alpha.<lb/>
Alpha XI Delta and Alpha Phi,<lb/>
will be sponsoring a court party<lb/>
to be held at the KA House after<lb/>
tha game, Saturday Oct. ?<lb/>
against Southwest Loulsana.<lb/>
Tha party starts at 5,00 and<lb/>
there will be a live band to be en<lb/>
nounced later. BYOB. Go<lb/>
Plratesl See you mere!<lb/>
SIERRA CLUB<lb/>
Interested in canoeing, hiking,<lb/>
conservation and environment?<lb/>
Try the Sierra Club. This<lb/>
month's meeting program<lb/>
features reptiles of NC. Upcom<lb/>
ing canoe trips to Hammock's<lb/>
Beach and Whlteoak River will<lb/>
be described Current conser<lb/>
vaiton information discussed<lb/>
Meeting time 0 p.m Monday<lb/>
Oct 10 basement of First<lb/>
Presbyterian Church, corner of<lb/>
14th St and Elm<lb/>
NATIONAL<lb/>
TEACHER<lb/>
EXAMINATIONS<lb/>
The National Teacher<lb/>
Examinations Sepcialty Areas<lb/>
will be offered at East Carotin<lb/>
University on Saturday. Nov 12.<lb/>
Appiicaiton blanks are to be<lb/>
completed an mailed to the<lb/>
Educational Testing Service,<lb/>
Box 911 R. Princeton, NJ 08541<lb/>
to arrive by Oct 10. applications<lb/>
may be obtained from the ECU<lb/>
Testing Center, RM 105 Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
ALLIED HEALTH<lb/>
PROFESSIONS<lb/>
ADMISSION TEST<lb/>
The Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test will be offered<lb/>
at East Carolina University on<lb/>
Saturday. Nov 19 Appiicaiton<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Psychological<lb/>
Corp 304 East 45th St. New<lb/>
York, NY 10017 to arrive by Oct<lb/>
U. Applications may be obtain<lb/>
ed from the ECU Testing<lb/>
Center, Rm 105 Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
CLUBMEETING<lb/>
The Sign Language Club is<lb/>
having a meeting mis coming<lb/>
Monday in Mendenhali rm 244<lb/>
We ere discussing tne proposed<lb/>
camping trip and other ec<lb/>
tivities in this coming year The<lb/>
meeting will start at 6 30 p m<lb/>
please come Oin us, everyone is<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
IFCMEETING<lb/>
The Inter Fraternity Council<lb/>
will have a meeting today at 5 00<lb/>
p m in the Multi purpose room<lb/>
in Mendenhali<lb/>
SIGMA TAU<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
Sigma Teu Delta, me English<lb/>
honor society, will hoM Its first<lb/>
meeting of tha year on Thurs-<lb/>
day, Oct. at 7 jo p.m. In room<lb/>
Ml of Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Canter<lb/>
SNOW SKI<lb/>
XMAS BREAK<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all<lb/>
persons interested In snow ski<lb/>
Ing on Tuesday October 25 at<lb/>
4:30 p.m. In Memorial Gym lot.<lb/>
A trip to Snowshoe W VA. for<lb/>
Janurary l 6 has been schedul<lb/>
ed. Reservations for slopeslde<lb/>
accomodations will be taken at<lb/>
this meeting. Slides and movies<lb/>
will be shown. Classes are<lb/>
available for all levels of skiers-<lb/>
novice thru super advanced<lb/>
racers. There Is limited space<lb/>
available this year so get your<lb/>
group together early to insure<lb/>
your space on the ECU<lb/>
Christmas Ski Trip to snow shoe,<lb/>
W VA. for further Information<lb/>
contact Ms. Jo Saunders, 205<lb/>
Memorial Gym or call 757 6000<lb/>
TRANSFORM<lb/>
YOURSELF<lb/>
Is change and growth good?<lb/>
What does God's Word, the Bi<lb/>
ble, say. Read Romans 12:1,2<lb/>
and Epheslans Chapter 4.<lb/>
(especially verses 15 and la)<lb/>
YES, God wants us to grow up<lb/>
spiritually so we can be our best<lb/>
in all categories of life Come by<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center<lb/>
Monday, Oct 10 at 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
where we teach the truth of<lb/>
God's Word dynamicly. (Room<lb/>
212, next to the Music Listening<lb/>
Center)<lb/>
BINGOICE<lb/>
CREAM PARTY<lb/>
The Department of University<lb/>
Unions is sponsoring another<lb/>
ever popular bingoice cream<lb/>
party on Tuesday, Oct 11 at 7<lb/>
p.m. In the Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center Multi-purpose room.<lb/>
Ya'M come and bring a friend I<lb/>
Admission is only 50 cents and<lb/>
the ice cream Is delicious<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
ALPHA THETA<lb/>
There will be a meeting of Phi<lb/>
Alpha Thefa on Thursday, Oc<lb/>
tober 6 at 3 p.m. In the Richard<lb/>
C Todd Room. Allmembers and<lb/>
perspective members are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SOCCER<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
The training clinic for Soccer<lb/>
Officials to be hired by the<lb/>
Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services will begin<lb/>
Tuesday October 11, 1903 at 6<lb/>
p.m in Room 102 of Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium Rules, interpreta<lb/>
tions and mechanics will be<lb/>
discussed Off trials will be hired<lb/>
based on practical and written<lb/>
tests. Soccer Officials clinic,<lb/>
Tues Oct 11, 1983, 4pm Rm<lb/>
102, Mem Gym<lb/>
PREMEDT<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Pre registration tor general<lb/>
college students Intending to<lb/>
major in medical Technology<lb/>
has been changed to THURS<lb/>
DAY, OCT 6. 19?3 in Brewster<lb/>
D112 at 7 p.m. Forms and<lb/>
schedules will not be available<lb/>
in time to pre register on Tues-<lb/>
day<lb/>
HONORS<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
SOCIAL<lb/>
All students who have recelv<lb/>
ed Invitations to take courses in<lb/>
the Honors Program spring<lb/>
semester are Invited to socialize<lb/>
with otherHonors students and<lb/>
meet the Honors faculty for the<lb/>
present and the spring<lb/>
semesters on Monday. October<lb/>
10. from 3 - 5 p.m. In the Honors<lb/>
Lounge (next to 201 Ragsdale)<lb/>
OLD TESTAMENT<lb/>
Topics presented in our class<lb/>
on the Old Testament have<lb/>
been: How the Old Testament<lb/>
testifies of Jesus Christ, The<lb/>
Creation, The Fall of Adam, and<lb/>
The Patriarchs. Please attend I<lb/>
We promise that you will not be<lb/>
disappointed. Class meets from<lb/>
6 30 8 00 p m each Thursday in<lb/>
Brewster building room 3038<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
The Brothers and Pledges of<lb/>
PI Kappa Phi fraternity would<lb/>
like to congratulate the Little<lb/>
Sisters Pledges. We know that<lb/>
you made an excellent choice<lb/>
and will have a great time. Just<lb/>
work hard) Also congratulations<lb/>
to the PI Kapp "A" football<lb/>
team for making the playoffs<lb/>
and also to the "B"football team<lb/>
tor finishing 5 1. Good luck in the<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
The ECU Frisbee Club wil be<lb/>
hosting the NATURAL LIGHT<lb/>
ULTIMAX ULTIMATE TOUR<lb/>
NAMENT this weekend Come<lb/>
on our and bring your Frisbee,<lb/>
your cat, your dog and your<lb/>
grandmother. Everyone is in<lb/>
vltedlll<lb/>
FACULTYSTAFF<lb/>
INTRAMURALS<lb/>
Intramural competition for<lb/>
ECU FacultyStaff members<lb/>
will begin Monday October 10.<lb/>
1983 Flag Football Is the activt<lb/>
ty and sign up days to enter a<lb/>
team art Monday October 3 and<lb/>
Tuesday October 4 from 8am<lb/>
to 4 p.m in Room 105B of<lb/>
Memorial Gym Teams play<lb/>
with six (6) playes on the field<lb/>
and a maximum of six (A)<lb/>
substitutes Games are played<lb/>
on the Intramural fields just<lb/>
north of Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
Teams can consist of members<lb/>
of a department or of several<lb/>
different departments However<lb/>
the teams are constructed<lb/>
loosen up the hands tor catching<lb/>
and the legs for running Get a<lb/>
team together and get with the<lb/>
action<lb/>
BE A CLOWN<lb/>
irs time to enter the fun and<lb/>
exciting world of entertainment<lb/>
The 1983 Homecoming Parade is<lb/>
iust around the corner Any<lb/>
valid ECU student, faculty or<lb/>
staff member is invited to dress<lb/>
as a clown and walks In the<lb/>
parade if you like helium<lb/>
balloons, there will be lots of<lb/>
purple and gold ones to give to<lb/>
people along the parade route If<lb/>
interested, call Mendenhali Stu<lb/>
dent Center at 757 6411, Ext 213.<lb/>
Everyone Is welcome<lb/>
POETRY FORUM<lb/>
The ECU Poetry Forum will<lb/>
meet this Thursday, October 4,<lb/>
In Mendenhali Rm. 235 at 8:00<lb/>
p.m. Those planning to attend<lb/>
and wanting clritcal feedback on<lb/>
their poetry should bring six or<lb/>
eight copies of each poem to be<lb/>
read and discussed. Meetings<lb/>
are open to anyone Interested in<lb/>
poetry. Participation In reading<lb/>
and discussion is optional.<lb/>
ULTIMAX<lb/>
It's this weekend The<lb/>
NATURAL LIGHT ULTIMAX<lb/>
ULTIMATE TOURNAMENT<lb/>
Games will begin at 12 00 noon<lb/>
on Saturday and Sunday Oct 8<lb/>
and 9 and will be played on the<lb/>
College Hill fields (bottom of<lb/>
College Hill Drive). This Is your<lb/>
chance to see the hottest<lb/>
ultimate teams on the East<lb/>
Coast. Come watch the "Irate"<lb/>
attack.<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
The ECU Wrestling Sport Club<lb/>
is practicing Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday evenings from 9 p.m.<lb/>
to 11 p.m. In the Exercise Room<lb/>
108 of Memorial Gym All<lb/>
students Interested in working<lb/>
our with the Wrestling Club<lb/>
should attend these work-out<lb/>
sessions.<lb/>
MARCH ON<lb/>
RALEIGH<lb/>
On Oct. 22 people from<lb/>
throughout the state will par<lb/>
tlcipate In the "March on<lb/>
Raleigh The focous of the<lb/>
march is to "Stop first strike<lb/>
weapons in Europe, Reverse the<lb/>
arms race, Freeze nuclear<lb/>
weapons (and) Fund human<lb/>
needs Several speakers will<lb/>
speak during a morning rally<lb/>
behind the M.C. State<lb/>
Legislature For more into. Call<lb/>
758 4904 or 752 5724<lb/>
S.A.B. MEETING<lb/>
There will be a S A B Meeting<lb/>
in Room 248 of Mendenhali.<lb/>
Monday, Oct 10 at 5 p m All<lb/>
members should attend!<lb/>
CRESCENTCLUB<lb/>
The Crescent Club of Phi Beta<lb/>
Sigma Fraternity, Inc , will<lb/>
sponsoring a car wash on Friday<lb/>
evening from 2 4 pm and Sun<lb/>
day evening Irom 12:30 3 30<lb/>
p.m. at the corner of 10th and<lb/>
Cofanche St in the parking lot<lb/>
between McDonald's and Fast<lb/>
Fare Come support a good<lb/>
FRAT. while you eat a BIG Mac<lb/>
CHEMISTRY<lb/>
SEMINAR<lb/>
Or Charles B Boss. North<lb/>
Carolina State University will<lb/>
present a seminar entitled<lb/>
"Chemistry in Flames Atomic<lb/>
Spectrometric Studies" (A joint<lb/>
seminar with the trace elements<lb/>
lab. Department of Surgery,<lb/>
ECU School o? Medicine) on Fri<lb/>
day, October 7, 1983 2 p m In<lb/>
Flanagan Building Room 201<lb/>
Refreshments will be served in<lb/>
room 204 following the seminar.<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
CAMPUS RACE<lb/>
Two Cross Campus races will<lb/>
be held Homecoming Day Satur-<lb/>
day Oct 29. A 2.5 mile race will<lb/>
start at 9 a.m. and a 5.0 mile<lb/>
race will start at 9:30 a.m. Both<lb/>
races start near the bleachers at<lb/>
the ECU varsity track. Bunting<lb/>
Field. The race course is 95 per-<lb/>
cent on grass and traverses In<lb/>
and about the area surrounding<lb/>
Mlnges Coliseum, Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, Bunting Field, Harr-<lb/>
ington and the women's Softball<lb/>
field. The races, which are spon-<lb/>
sored by the Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices, are open to participation<lb/>
by all ECU students, staff and<lb/>
ECU alumni.<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL<lb/>
THERAPY MIXER<lb/>
The ECSCOTA (East Carolina<lb/>
Student committee Occupa-<lb/>
tional Therapy Association) will<lb/>
be having a mixer party at 4:30<lb/>
p m Wednesday Oct 12 in<lb/>
Mendenhali Multipurpose Rm.<lb/>
All interested Students pursuing<lb/>
a career in O.T should attend,<lb/>
there will be Demonstrations, a<lb/>
movie and presentations by<lb/>
local O.T. clinlcans. Pre-<lb/>
reglstration will take place im-<lb/>
mediately following the mixer at<lb/>
7:30 p.m.<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
Watch for the Natural Light<lb/>
"Ultlmax Ultimate" Tourna<lb/>
ment coming Oct 8-9 to the East<lb/>
Carolina University campus.<lb/>
Top North Carolina ultimate<lb/>
teams will compete cash and<lb/>
prizes in this event sponsored by<lb/>
the ECU Frisbee Disc Sport<lb/>
Club The weekend should prove<lb/>
to be ultimate The IRATES<lb/>
practice every Tuesday, Thurs<lb/>
day and Sunday on the College<lb/>
Hill fields at 5 p.m. and promise<lb/>
to be one of the favorites in the<lb/>
tournament All interested disc<lb/>
duffers are encouraged to attend<lb/>
the practices and whip the disc<lb/>
The Frisbee Club will meet<lb/>
Tuesday oct 2 at 830 p.m. in<lb/>
Rm 247 of Mendenhali. Join one<lb/>
of ECU'S most exciting sport<lb/>
clubs Be there or be octangular.<lb/>
SPORT<lb/>
CLUB COUNCIL<lb/>
The second meeting for the<lb/>
1983 84 Sport Club Council will<lb/>
be held Wednesday Oct 19, at 4<lb/>
p m in Rm. 1058 of Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium. Attendance ts re-<lb/>
quired of representative of ac-<lb/>
tive sport clues Persons or<lb/>
groups Interested m forming a<lb/>
sport club are invited at attend<lb/>
Representatives are asked to<lb/>
prepare. H needed. Trip Ap-<lb/>
plications and Vehicle Requests<lb/>
for the fall semester Sprot<lb/>
Club Council Meeting. Weds Oct<lb/>
19 4 p m RM I05B, Memorial<lb/>
Gym<lb/>
WORLD FOOD<lb/>
DAY SKIT<lb/>
Participats in next weeks<lb/>
World Food Day skit are asked<lb/>
to attend tonights meeting at<lb/>
7 30 p m at the Catholic<lb/>
Newman Center (953 E 10th<lb/>
St.) 752 4214<lb/>
ALBUM SPECIALS<lb/>
Album Specials slated for this<lb/>
week's Electric Rainbow Radio<lb/>
Show are as follows: Friday<lb/>
night at 2 a.m if s tne new Dofc<lb/>
ken album, titled "Breaking tha<lb/>
Chains Saturday night at 4<lb/>
a.m it's Black Sabbath's album<lb/>
"The Mob Rules The Electric<lb/>
Rainbow Radio Show has a<lb/>
predominantly Heavy Metal for<lb/>
mat and can be heard exclusive-<lb/>
ly on WZMB 91.3 FM Friday 12 4<lb/>
a.m. and Saturday 2-4 a.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
Alpha Epsiion Delta, ECU<lb/>
pre medical honor society, will<lb/>
have a meeting on Tuesday, Oct.<lb/>
ll In Flanagan 307 at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
Dr. Ed Bertlett, an alumnus of<lb/>
ECU, graduate of UNC CH<lb/>
Medical School and a practicing<lb/>
orthopedic surgeon, will speak<lb/>
on Sports Medicine and aspects<lb/>
Of orthopedic surgery All<lb/>
members and guests are en-<lb/>
couraged to attend I<lb/>
SENIORS<lb/>
The Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement Service offers a can<lb/>
tralized place to have three let<lb/>
ters of reference as you talk to<lb/>
potential employers this year. If<lb/>
you wish to use this sevlce, come<lb/>
by the Bloxton House and pick<lb/>
up a self explanatory Registra<lb/>
fion packet. Everyone should<lb/>
read the description of the office<lb/>
in you UNIVERSITY<lb/>
CATALOG. Some companies<lb/>
send recruiters to Interview<lb/>
those who have registered.<lb/>
Those who are registered can<lb/>
receive a list of the employers<lb/>
who come starting October 11.<lb/>
INTENDED<lb/>
SLAP MAJORS<lb/>
Students interested in major<lb/>
ing in Speech Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology will meet on<lb/>
Tuesday evening October 11 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Brewster D-113 Intend-<lb/>
ed maiors and transfer students<lb/>
with problems in their program<lb/>
of study should contact the dept.<lb/>
(757 4941) to make an appoint<lb/>
ment to discuss their curriculum<lb/>
with the chairman<lb/>
T&amp;mttoj'MaU<lb/>
491IW<lb/>
a?? hx.<lb/>
Latest Styles ia<lb/>
Ladies Hats and accessories<lb/>
MAM.SMPM<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
ce.<lb/>
?<lb/>
?:<lb/>
Shrimp Lovers<lb/>
vo "VxN why travel 100 miles to th<lb/>
G beach and pay high prices<lb/>
amily Restaurants for fresh shrimp<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Srrinn the campus comrrun-ty<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Wednesday during the Sur.i<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the<lb/>
oHtcial newspaper of East<lb/>
?Carolina University, owned.<lb/>
operated, and published for<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carotina University<lb/>
?es?:8?reerty<lb/>
T?e staat Cm saf adhces<lb/>
are kscassd ta ?a<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
dress changes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Old South<lb/>
Building. ECU Greenville.<lb/>
NC ?7834<lb/>
Telephone 717-4344. 4147.<lb/>
J0t<lb/>
A WHALE OF A MEAL<lb/>
<lb/>
Tarlanding seafood<lb/>
is offering a special<lb/>
popcorn shrimp dinner<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
TUES WED THURS.<lb/>
Banquet Facilities Available<lb/>
YoungDem<lb/>
CollegeRepu<lb/>
Hope To In<lb/>
Active Mem<lb/>
758-0327<lb/>
Student Opiniol<lb/>
Ele<lb/>
Kim<lb/>
Fontenot<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Bv<lb/>
SHARON<lb/>
GRA v E5<lb/>
Staff,Mar<lb/>
Register ow!<lb/>
Register GNow!<lb/>
The ECU chapter<lb/>
of the NAACP has<lb/>
various goals for this<lb/>
school year, including<lb/>
increasing participa-<lb/>
tion bv black<lb/>
-<lb/>
registr<lb/>
mg i<lb/>
tion<lb/>
m a j o I<lb/>
organ)<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
FREE TRIP FOR TWO<lb/>
to<lb/>
"LAS VEGAS"<lb/>
(3 Days, 2 Nights)<lb/>
X<lb/>
?<lb/>
,<lb/>
?<lb/>
?$-<lb/>
mm<lb/>
V<lb/>
.<lb/>
1<lb/>
we?<lb/>
vrPtJaiiwSr<lb/>
Ut<lb/>
w<lb/>
?&amp;&amp;<lb/>
While Ordering Your<lb/>
Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
DATE: Oct. 4,5,6 TIME: 9:00-4:00p.m.jyf HERFF JONES<lb/>
SOULS G<lb/>
By ANDREAne se<lb/>
MARKELLOCannc<lb/>
Staff ?rttcr:<lb/>
?<lb/>
The new presidentform'<lb/>
of ECU-SOULSBar be;<lb/>
organization for thegroup<lb/>
83-84 school year. Jimgood<lb/>
Hackett, won a land-during<lb/>
slide victory in theyea:<lb/>
organization'sthe ?<lb/>
Wednesday elections.King<lb/>
Winning the vice-leader<lb/>
president office wasSOUL<lb/>
Juan Seivlav, and theand tt<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs. Air Conditioners<lb/>
Stereos guns eoid silver<lb/>
diamonds cameras ana<lb/>
equipment typewriters<lb/>
kerosene heaters<lb/>
refrigerators tdorm sue on<lb/>
ly), video games 4 car<lb/>
tridges power tools<lb/>
musical instruments<lb/>
microwave evens video<lb/>
recorders bicycles and<lb/>
anytnmg else of value<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop<lb/>
located ?8S Evans Street<lb/>
downtown 7 S3 344<lb/>
??<lb/>
'<lb/>
yirr<lb/>
rl&amp;<lb/>
PurchaM t Carolina<lb/>
your choice of either<lb/>
Also ob Oct. 8, 1983<lb/>
FOOTBALL TI<lb/>
OUR HAPPY HOI<lb/>
T<lb/>
r<lb/>
<pb facs="00057580_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Tiea ej 7?at<lb/>
403 i rvAM? ?<lb/>
?llEMVHli. N.C<lb/>
a test Soles in<lb/>
Hats and accessories<lb/>
TlMMAMttPM<lb/>
'opcorn<lb/>
Shrimp<lb/>
?OU CAN EAT<lb/>
$4.99<lb/>
Shrimp Lovers<lb/>
 h travel 100 miles to thi<lb/>
 ach and pay high prices<lb/>
I ts tor fresh shrimp<lb/>
nding seafood<lb/>
:ering a special<lb/>
-n shrimp dinner<lb/>
Ol CAN EAT<lb/>
4.99<lb/>
KDTHURS.<lb/>
bciiities Available<lb/>
-0327<lb/>
OW<lb/>
!<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1983<lb/>
Young Democrats,<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
Hope To Increase<lb/>
Active Membership<lb/>
By TINA<lb/>
MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
With the '84 elec-<lb/>
tions approaching,<lb/>
ECU'S College<lb/>
Republicans and<lb/>
Young Democrats are<lb/>
making plans for the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Stephen Sherbin,<lb/>
chairman of the Col-<lb/>
lege Republicans, new<lb/>
members are needed<lb/>
more than ever in an<lb/>
election year. The<lb/>
group currently has<lb/>
approximately 20 ac-<lb/>
tive members, most of<lb/>
whom are up-<lb/>
perclassmen.<lb/>
Two tactics will be<lb/>
used in the recruiting<lb/>
process. The first,<lb/>
tentatively set for Oct.<lb/>
24-25, will be a<lb/>
"membership table<lb/>
The College<lb/>
Republicans will be at<lb/>
the ECU Student Sup-<lb/>
Dly Store distributing<lb/>
information.<lb/>
A "Campus Can-<lb/>
vas" will be the se-<lb/>
cond recruiting<lb/>
method. A survey will<lb/>
be conducted door-to-<lb/>
door, designed to poll<lb/>
student opinions on a<lb/>
series of political<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
The College<lb/>
Republicans recently<lb/>
met with the Pitt<lb/>
County Republicans<lb/>
and plan next year to<lb/>
support Sen. Jesse<lb/>
Helms' (R-N.C.) re-<lb/>
election bid and Mar-<lb/>
tin in the N.C.<lb/>
goovernor's race.<lb/>
"Let the People<lb/>
Go" is the motto of<lb/>
the College<lb/>
republican's national<lb/>
project. Each<lb/>
Republican campus<lb/>
chapter tries to help a<lb/>
Soviet family come to<lb/>
America by writing<lb/>
letters to Soviet<lb/>
leaders.<lb/>
One issue that both<lb/>
parties oppose is the<lb/>
PIRG funding<lb/>
system. The Public<lb/>
Interest Research<lb/>
Group's favored fun-<lb/>
ding option is<lb/>
"negative checkoff<lb/>
? raising student ac-<lb/>
tivity fees by two<lb/>
dollars.<lb/>
Buddy Connor,<lb/>
chairman of the<lb/>
Young Democrats,<lb/>
said that they favored<lb/>
PIRG but most<lb/>
members oppose the<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
funding system.<lb/>
The Young<lb/>
Democrats, which<lb/>
was established two<lb/>
weeks ago, currently<lb/>
has about 15 active<lb/>
members. Connor<lb/>
said their recruitment<lb/>
efforts will be geared<lb/>
toward<lb/>
underclassmen. Lack<lb/>
of money is the big-<lb/>
gest problem facing<lb/>
the group.<lb/>
The College<lb/>
Republicans meet<lb/>
every Tuesday at 5.30<lb/>
in Mendenhall, room<lb/>
212. The Young<lb/>
Democrats meet in<lb/>
Mendenhall the first<lb/>
Thursday ard third<lb/>
Tuesday of each<lb/>
month at 7 p.m.<lb/>
"We're going to try<lb/>
to sponsor a can-<lb/>
didate forum for local<lb/>
or statewide<lb/>
elections Connor<lb/>
said. "We're also sup-<lb/>
porting voter registra-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Elections Discussed<lb/>
Kim<lb/>
Fontenot<lb/>
By THERESA DULSKI<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Students comment on last<lb/>
week's SGA elections, which were<lb/>
canceled after 20 students' names<lb/>
were left off the ballot for not fil-<lb/>
ing financial reports.<lb/>
Dokyung Kim ? "They should<lb/>
count those who filed the right<lb/>
forms because it was one of the<lb/>
things they had to do to make the<lb/>
election process right. There<lb/>
shouldn't be any new elections for<lb/>
those who failed to file a Financial<lb/>
Statement<lb/>
Denise Williams, Nutrition,<lb/>
Sophomore ? "New elections<lb/>
should be held. It was unfair. I<lb/>
don't think it had equal oppor-<lb/>
tunity involved<lb/>
Donald Fontenot, Biology,<lb/>
Senior?"Everyone was informed<lb/>
that they had to file a financial<lb/>
statement before the election. I<lb/>
feel those who filed a financial<lb/>
statement should not be penalized<lb/>
for those who didn't abide by the<lb/>
rules<lb/>
Gary Ingram, Music,<lb/>
Sophomore ?"A new election is<lb/>
called for because evidently it's<lb/>
not going to go through because<lb/>
not enough people filed for a<lb/>
financial statement. It was unfair<lb/>
to those who had filed for the<lb/>
financial statement and that their<lb/>
should do the elections over<lb/>
Cancer Researcher<lb/>
Scheduled To Speak<lb/>
Williams<lb/>
Ingram<lb/>
ROB POOLE ? Photo !??<lb/>
A nationally promi-<lb/>
nent cancer researcher<lb/>
is scheduled to give a<lb/>
public address on the<lb/>
effects of contem-<lb/>
porary science on<lb/>
man's future at the<lb/>
ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine Oct. 10.<lb/>
Donald S. Coffey,<lb/>
Ph.D who holds<lb/>
professorships in<lb/>
urology, oncology,<lb/>
pharmacology and ex-<lb/>
perimental<lb/>
therapeutics at the<lb/>
Johns Hopkins<lb/>
School of Medicine in<lb/>
Baltimore, Md will<lb/>
present his lecture,<lb/>
"Human Destiny: A<lb/>
Look at Science in<lb/>
1983<lb/>
The lecture will be<lb/>
given at 4 p.m. in the<lb/>
auditorium of the<lb/>
Brody Medical<lb/>
Sciences Building on<lb/>
the medical school<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Coffey's speech,<lb/>
the same one<lb/>
presented to medical<lb/>
students at Hopkin's<lb/>
convocation last Spr-<lb/>
ing, will be delivered<lb/>
NAACP Sets Goals For School Year<lb/>
By<lb/>
SHA.tON<lb/>
GRAVES<lb/>
Staff W.ittr<lb/>
? The ECU chapter<lb/>
of the NAACP has<lb/>
various goals for this<lb/>
school year, including<lb/>
increasing participa-<lb/>
tion bv black<lb/>
students, making a<lb/>
push for voter<lb/>
registration and work-<lb/>
ing in closer conjunc-<lb/>
tion with the other<lb/>
major minority<lb/>
organization on cam-<lb/>
pus, SOULS.<lb/>
"The<lb/>
black<lb/>
students on campus<lb/>
are just not<lb/>
involved said Karen<lb/>
McGill, president of<lb/>
the chapter. Par-<lb/>
ticipation in the<lb/>
voting process by<lb/>
black students needs<lb/>
to be increased, she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The NAACP helps<lb/>
the community by<lb/>
tutoring children on<lb/>
various subjects at<lb/>
Cornerstone Baptist<lb/>
Church. There are<lb/>
also plans for a free<lb/>
blood pressure check<lb/>
to be held on campus.<lb/>
This year, the<lb/>
NAACP wants to<lb/>
work in closer con-<lb/>
junction with<lb/>
SOULS, the Society<lb/>
Of United Liberal<lb/>
Students. In the past,<lb/>
there has been little<lb/>
coordination between<lb/>
the two groups.<lb/>
SOULS Getting The Year Underway<lb/>
By ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The new president<lb/>
of ECU-SOULS<lb/>
organization for the<lb/>
83-84 school year, Jim<lb/>
Hackett, won a land-<lb/>
slide victory in the<lb/>
organization's<lb/>
Wednesday elections.<lb/>
Winning the vice-<lb/>
president office was<lb/>
Juan Seivlay, and the<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs, Air Conditioners,<lb/>
Stereos, guns, gold I silver,<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm size on-<lb/>
ly), video games &amp; car<lb/>
tridges, power tools,<lb/>
musical instruments,<lb/>
microwave ovens, video<lb/>
recorders, bicycles, and<lb/>
anything else of value.<lb/>
Southern Pawn Shop,<lb/>
located 40$ Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown. 752-244.<lb/>
new secretary is Tracy<lb/>
Cannon.<lb/>
At the installation<lb/>
of the new officers,<lb/>
former president<lb/>
Barber Battle said the<lb/>
group has made some<lb/>
good achievements<lb/>
during the 1982-83<lb/>
year. Some include<lb/>
the Martin Luther<lb/>
King Celebration, a<lb/>
leadership workshop,<lb/>
SOULS On The Mall,<lb/>
and the Miss SOULS<lb/>
ItiUIwS HEALTH<lb/>
gYOUCAN Aaxo<lb/>
DtPtNDON. SOTmorinvxfceowexby<lb/>
OrxKk3b? dov ana ntght to support and unde-<lb/>
rtone" you Vour wWy. comfort and privacy am<lb/>
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3r education far o-  nHHIl?p<lb/>
pageant. Battle said<lb/>
she hoped students<lb/>
will become more in-<lb/>
volved in the<lb/>
organization<lb/>
throughout the 83-84<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"I plan to broaden<lb/>
the scope of SOULS<lb/>
during the new year,<lb/>
with a hope to involve<lb/>
other minority<lb/>
groups, such as In-<lb/>
dians and foreign<lb/>
students, in the<lb/>
organization said<lb/>
Hackett after taking<lb/>
the oath of presiden-<lb/>
cy. .<lb/>
Hackett said he<lb/>
wants to change the<lb/>
image of SOULS<lb/>
from being just a<lb/>
black organization,<lb/>
and emphasizing it as<lb/>
a society of liberal<lb/>
students. In doing so,<lb/>
Hackett plans to send<lb/>
letters and circulate<lb/>
pamphlets to other<lb/>
?.<lb/>
f<lb/>
?1<lb/>
organizations.<lb/>
SOULS, the Society<lb/>
of United Liberal<lb/>
Students, is the largest<lb/>
minority organization<lb/>
on campus. Every<lb/>
minority student is<lb/>
considered a member<lb/>
and each is encourag-<lb/>
ed to be an active par-<lb/>
ticipant in the group.<lb/>
The new SOULS of-<lb/>
ficers will be working<lb/>
out of room 239 in of<lb/>
.Mendenhall mm<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
T0 12THWEEK<lb/>
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Delbert McClinton<lb/>
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Sat. Oct. 8,1983<lb/>
Purchase a Carolina Opry, House membership for the regular price of $10.00 and receive<lb/>
your choice of either ticket FREE!<lb/>
Also on Oct. 8,1983 (DELBERT McCLINTON with Steve Bassett): BRING YOUR ECU<lb/>
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OUR HAPPY HOUR FROM 8:30 -10;30.<lb/>
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to the ECU chapter of<lb/>
Sigma XI, a national<lb/>
fraternity of profes-<lb/>
sional scientific<lb/>
researchers. Medical<lb/>
school officials stress-<lb/>
ed, however, that the<lb/>
public is welcome and<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
44Dr. Coffey is an<lb/>
outstanding teacher<lb/>
and medical<lb/>
scientist said<lb/>
Wilhelm Frisell, assis-<lb/>
tant dean and chair-<lb/>
man of the<lb/>
biochemistry depart-<lb/>
ment ai the medical<lb/>
school. "His lecture<lb/>
will be of interest to<lb/>
the layman as well as<lb/>
faculty and students<lb/>
of the university<lb/>
A native Virginian,<lb/>
Coffey began his<lb/>
career as a corporate<lb/>
chemical engineer,<lb/>
then in 1959 began his<lb/>
24-year association<lb/>
with Johns Hopkins.<lb/>
During that time he<lb/>
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Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Fielding Miller, cw u.<lb/>
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Geoff Hudson. cr?w ?- Lizanne Jennings. &amp;,<lb/>
Michael Mayo. r? a? todd Evans, a<lb/>
October 6. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Honor Board<lb/>
Plagiarism Proceedings Propei<lb/>
There seems to be some haggling<lb/>
over the procedures in last Thurs-<lb/>
day's Honor Board hearing where<lb/>
an ECU student was found guilty<lb/>
of plagiarism. Student Public<lb/>
Defender Stephen Sherbin charged<lb/>
that his client received an improper<lb/>
hearing because of the prosecu-<lb/>
tion's handling of the case.<lb/>
Associate Dean of Student Life<lb/>
James B. Mallory rebutted Sher-<lb/>
bin's charges, saying that all mat-<lb/>
ters were handled properly. Who is<lb/>
to be believed?<lb/>
Well, a look at the facts will<lb/>
show the case was handled dif-<lb/>
ferently, but not improperly. Most<lb/>
cases are handled cut and dry. In<lb/>
fact, most don't even reach the<lb/>
Honor Board ? only the more<lb/>
serious ones make it that far. But,<lb/>
this case, involving a charge con-<lb/>
sidered quite serious within an<lb/>
academic community, called for<lb/>
the upmost care by the student<lb/>
defenders and prosecutors handl-<lb/>
ing it. Extraordinary measures,<lb/>
like the Honor Board having the<lb/>
prosecution go out and buy the<lb/>
album the plagiarized song was on,<lb/>
were definitely appropriate.<lb/>
Courts in the "outside world"<lb/>
frequently employ measures such<lb/>
as these. It is not uncommon for a<lb/>
judge, in the middle of an impor-<lb/>
tant case, to ask the prosection or<lb/>
the defense to go and find certain<lb/>
pieces of information that would<lb/>
help bring out the truth in the mat-<lb/>
ter. And, after all, isn't justice the<lb/>
ultimate goal of any judicial<lb/>
system ? school, state or federal?<lb/>
Sherbin's contention that no<lb/>
eBtmmocit<lb/>
sanctions should be handed down<lb/>
is wrong. He should be glad the<lb/>
Honor Board cared enough to seek<lb/>
out who was right and who was<lb/>
wrong. The next time another<lb/>
client of his might be innocent, and<lb/>
he just may want the Honor Board<lb/>
to resort to the type of tactics it did<lb/>
last Thursday.<lb/>
There seems to us to be a type of<lb/>
"junior lawyer" playing going on.<lb/>
Sherbin is grasping for<lb/>
technicalities that don't exist and is<lb/>
hurting the judicial system in the<lb/>
process. Does he not want the guilt<lb/>
or innocence of a person to be pro-<lb/>
ved by the proceedings? Does he<lb/>
just want to win? Through Dean<lb/>
Mallory's comment that Sherbin is<lb/>
"all wet" in his accussations, we<lb/>
can assume that the public<lb/>
defender is stumbling for ways to<lb/>
salvage his and his client's already<lb/>
lost case.<lb/>
The importance of the universi-<lb/>
ty's judicial system is a given.<lb/>
Students before the Honor Board,<lb/>
or any of the schools boards for<lb/>
that matter, must be treated fairly<lb/>
by all parties involved. To us, in<lb/>
this case, the student was.<lb/>
The argument that the public<lb/>
defender is only trying to help his<lb/>
client is not valid here. We agree<lb/>
that it his right to appeal, but it is<lb/>
not right to make accusations that<lb/>
are not true. The facts he presents<lb/>
of how the proceedings were con-<lb/>
ducted are correct, but we, and ap-<lb/>
parently Dean Mallory, find<lb/>
nothing wrong with them. Instead,<lb/>
it seems the case was handled cor-<lb/>
rectly by the Honor Board.<lb/>
Let's Balance The Budget<lb/>
"NE NEW ,<lb/>
PERSHINSI<lb/>
MISSILE<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
WHENITABSCTSLV,<lb/>
POSTWELV. DOESNT<lb/>
HAYETU&amp;nHERE.<lb/>
Can we who man the ship of state<lb/>
deny it is somewhat out 0control? Our<lb/>
national debt is approaching $1<lb/>
trillion. A trillion dollars would be a<lb/>
stack of $1,000 bills 67 miles high.<lb/>
President Reagan, Feb. 18, 1981.<lb/>
It took 205 years for that stack to pile<lb/>
up 67 miles high. After four years of<lb/>
Reagan's leadership, there will be<lb/>
another 30 miles on the stack. Pass the<lb/>
maple syrup!<lb/>
These days, though, talk of scary<lb/>
deficits is dismissed by people like<lb/>
Treasury Secretary Donald Regan as a<lb/>
plot by "liberals" with a "hidden<lb/>
motive In fact, "deficits" has always<lb/>
been a conservative war cry, not a liberal<lb/>
one. Nevertheless, some liberals, in-<lb/>
cluding this one, were prepared to<lb/>
acknowledge in 1981 that, after 50 years<lb/>
of activist government, the Augean<lb/>
stable could use some tidying up.<lb/>
Much of the federal budget had little<lb/>
to do with stale thinking and powerful<lb/>
interest groups. Perhaps Reagan, with<lb/>
his charisma and his conservative ma-<lb/>
jority in Congress, could do some good<lb/>
that no Democrat would dare.<lb/>
As it develops, Reagan has shown<lb/>
almost no guts at all about clearing out<lb/>
the crap. It takes no courage to slash<lb/>
food stamps and other help for the poor.<lb/>
It also doesn't save much money. As a<lb/>
result, we now have $200 billion deficits<lb/>
as far as the eye can see.<lb/>
Despite all the talk about "en-<lb/>
titlements" and "uncontrollables" and<lb/>
so on, it's not so hard to balance the<lb/>
budget. In fact, I did it over the<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
My self-imposed rules were to cut<lb/>
nothing that actually helps poor people,<lb/>
and to raise no new revenues in ways<lb/>
that would actually inhibit the<lb/>
Republican virtues of work and thrift. I<lb/>
didn't even start until Saturday after-<lb/>
noon, and by dinner time I was halfway<lb/>
there. Sunday's half was a bit tougher,<lb/>
but even with time out for the papers<lb/>
and the interview shows, I was done with<lb/>
billions to spare by "Masterpiece<lb/>
Theater You, too, can do it! Here's<lb/>
how:<lb/>
? Don't pay Social Security retirement<lb/>
to people under 70. Depending on the<lb/>
details, we could easily save $35 billion a<lb/>
year this way. Life expectancy has in-<lb/>
creased more than five years since Social<lb/>
Security began in the 1930s. Today's<lb/>
retirees would still be getting more in<lb/>
benefits than what they paid in (with in-<lb/>
terest). They also would still be getting a<lb/>
better deal than future retirees, who will<lb/>
be paying today's high payroll taxes over<lb/>
most of their working lives.<lb/>
? Eliminate all farm price supports.<lb/>
(An optimistic $9 billion projected for<lb/>
1984 ? this year it was more than dou-<lb/>
ble that.) Why artificially raise prices for<lb/>
anything? Why aid farmers who aren't<lb/>
poor? Why pay people not to grow food<lb/>
when other people are going hungry?<lb/>
While we're at it let's knock out $4.4<lb/>
billion in special tax subsidies for the oil,<lb/>
gas and timber industries. They don't<lb/>
need it either.<lb/>
? Stop giving away valuable services<lb/>
to people who ought to pay for them.<lb/>
"User fees" could raise almost $6 billion<lb/>
? more than a billion just from private<lb/>
plane users, this nation's most im-<lb/>
probable charity case.<lb/>
? Cancel the tax deduction for con-<lb/>
sumer interest, including mortgages. If<lb/>
we want to increase private savings and<lb/>
business investment, encouraging people<lb/>
to spend and borrow makes no sense.<lb/>
And this deal gets better, of course, the<lb/>
higher a person's tax bracket. It will cost<lb/>
$36.4 billion in 1984.<lb/>
? Tax capital gains at death. When<lb/>
rich people die with appreciated assets,<lb/>
the potential tax on their profit dies,<lb/>
too. Now that there's virtually no estate<lb/>
tax, this loophole is particularly un-<lb/>
justified. Closing it would bring in about<lb/>
$4 billion a year, even at today's very<lb/>
low capital gains tax rates.<lb/>
? Crack down on the tax-free fringe<lb/>
benefits. Why should employer-paid<lb/>
medical insurance be completely tax-free<lb/>
when people who buy their own in-<lb/>
surance (if they can afford it), such as<lb/>
the unemployed, must use mostly after-<lb/>
tax money? This oddity alone costs<lb/>
about $18 billion a year in tax revenues,<lb/>
while encouraging ever-higher medical<lb/>
costs. Another $2 billion is lost to tax-<lb/>
free "business" meals and entertain-<lb/>
ment (the "three-martini lunch").<lb/>
? Remember John Anderson's<lb/>
50-cents-a-gallon gasoline tax? It's still a<lb/>
good idea, to reduce gas consumption<lb/>
and kick OPEC while it's down. The<lb/>
federal gasoline tax went up a nickel last<lb/>
year.<lb/>
? Tax all federal benefits. Unemploy-<lb/>
ment insurance, Social Security and so<lb/>
on are all payments for not working.<lb/>
Why should they go untaxed when<lb/>
payments for working get hit? Really<lb/>
poor people don't pay taxes when<lb/>
they're working, and wouldn't have to<lb/>
pay taxes on their benefits. The almost-<lb/>
poor would pay almost nothing. But<lb/>
those whose combined benefits and<lb/>
wages add up to middle-class incomes<lb/>
ought to pay middle-class taxes. Even<lb/>
forgetting all that Social Security we're<lb/>
not going to pay anymore, there's a<lb/>
good $15 billion here.<lb/>
? Defense. Defense spending increas-<lb/>
ed from $136 billion in fiscal 1980 to<lb/>
$205 billion in fiscal 1983. That's a 20<lb/>
percent increase, even after inflation.<lb/>
Isn't that enough? Just by holding the<lb/>
line for 1984 (after inflation), we could<lb/>
save $25 billion over current plans.<lb/>
Total? About $190 billion, which is<lb/>
just about next year's projected deficit.<lb/>
Now, of course I've blithely ignored all<lb/>
sorts of transitional problems and feed-<lb/>
back effects and sundry complications<lb/>
and blah blah blah etc etc. Complete<lb/>
tax and welfare reform would be better<lb/>
than these piecemeal measures, and<lb/>
maybe even politically easier to achieve,<lb/>
since people would be utterly bewildered<lb/>
about whether they were ahead or<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
Most of the burden from these<lb/>
changes would fall on the middle class,<lb/>
since that's where most of the money is,<lb/>
but there are plenty of little $2 billion<lb/>
scams for the affluent that are even<lb/>
more dispensible.<lb/>
The point is, though, that it's not just<lb/>
possible but easily possible to imagine a<lb/>
balanced budget that's better for the<lb/>
poor, for general prosperity and even<lb/>
for national security than the sad,<lb/>
deficit-ridden thing we now have (since<lb/>
the best defense is a towering economy).<lb/>
Maybe a real balanced budget can't be<lb/>
achieved over the weekend. But<lb/>
Reagan's had three years.<lb/>
(c) 1983. United Feature Syndicate, loc<lb/>
1 Repnmed from TTu V? Rtpv&amp;Mcj<lb/>
Employment of Distortion Tactics Seen In PIRG Editorial<lb/>
I was genuinely shocked to see the<lb/>
blatant disregard for the truth evidenc-<lb/>
ed by the author of the editorial titled<lb/>
"PIRG Accused of Being Leftist,<lb/>
Deceitful" which appeared in the Sept.<lb/>
29 issue of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
To begin with, the author attempted<lb/>
to characterize PIRGs as "left-wing<lb/>
and socialist" by misrepresenting the<lb/>
causes that PIRGs have been<lb/>
associated with. First, he distorted the<lb/>
endorsement which some PIRGs have<lb/>
given to the concept of a bilateral<lb/>
nuclear freeze to read that PIRGs have<lb/>
worked for "disarmament for the<lb/>
USA"<lb/>
He twisted the work some PIRGs<lb/>
have done to assure homosexuals will<lb/>
not be discriminated against while<lb/>
seeking employment to say that PIRGs<lb/>
have worked for "job preference for<lb/>
homosexuals In addition, he<lb/>
characterized the Institue for Policy<lb/>
Studies, a think tank founded by<lb/>
members from the Kennedy Ad-<lb/>
ministration's State Department, as be-<lb/>
ing a "marxist and anti-American<lb/>
agitation and propaganda think tank<lb/>
Most any faculty member in the<lb/>
Political Science department would<lb/>
laugh out loud at such a definition.<lb/>
Moreover, the author alleged that<lb/>
PIRG has "links" with IPS. What<lb/>
links? PIRG has no formal links with<lb/>
IPS or any other organization because<lb/>
PIRGs are thoroughly decentralized<lb/>
student-run organizations. Some PIRG<lb/>
at some school may have gotten some<lb/>
literature from IPS because IPS had<lb/>
conducted a study which provided in-<lb/>
formation that was valuable to a<lb/>
research project which the PIRG in<lb/>
question was carrying out. For that<lb/>
matter, some PIRG somewhere may<lb/>
have gotten information from the<lb/>
Heritage Foundation. So what?<lb/>
The larger issue here; however, is<lb/>
that these are just a few examples of<lb/>
select issues which some PIRGs have<lb/>
chosen to work on which the author<lb/>
selected in an effort to portray PIRG in<lb/>
an idealogicai manner. At the schools<lb/>
where these projects were undertaken,<lb/>
there was a concensus among PIRG<lb/>
members that these were legitimate<lb/>
areas of study. PIRG members propos-<lb/>
ed the projects, and the PIRG board of<lb/>
directors ? elected by PIRG members<lb/>
? selected them. What could be more<lb/>
democratic?<lb/>
Yet, these issues do not characterize<lb/>
the work PIRGs do in general. PIRGs<lb/>
primarily work on issues like women's<lb/>
health care, the feasibility of building<lb/>
bike paths, compiling shopper's guides<lb/>
to help consumers find bargain and<lb/>
the list goes on. What is socialistic or<lb/>
left-wing about these issues.<lb/>
The author goes on to allege that the<lb/>
PIRG at Duke University attempted to<lb/>
make it difficult for students to obtain<lb/>
refunds by refusing to offer them in a<lb/>
convenient place. This is patently un-<lb/>
true. Duke PIRG gave out refunds this<lb/>
year in Flower's lounge, right in the<lb/>
center of campus.<lb/>
What is the point of distorting the<lb/>
truth and misrepresenting the facts<lb/>
concerning an important issue which<lb/>
students will be asked to vote on?<lb/>
Shouldn't we, instead, be trying to pre-<lb/>
sent the facts in an honest, clear, and<lb/>
concise manner so as to educate<lb/>
students? I must question what so-<lb/>
meone who would willfully and<lb/>
deliberately mislead people is trying to<lb/>
accomplish and why.<lb/>
Jay Stone<lb/>
Junior, Political Science<lb/>
Once More<lb/>
On Sept. 29, The East Carolinian<lb/>
ran a column on PIRG. The article,<lb/>
filled with half truths, innuendo and<lb/>
outright lies, attempted to throw a<lb/>
shadow of fear over the entire PIRG<lb/>
issue by describing PIRGs as deceitful<lb/>
and leftist. Among the author's sallies<lb/>
was the contention that some members<lb/>
of PIRG who were running for SGA<lb/>
were one-issue candidates and "robot-<lb/>
like creatures<lb/>
I am a candidate for day represen-<lb/>
tative for SGA. I guess I am supposed<lb/>
to be one of these "robot-like<lb/>
creatures" because I support PIRG.<lb/>
However, I support a number of other<lb/>
issues, such as rent controls in Green-<lb/>
ville, something every day student<lb/>
should be interested in. As student co-<lb/>
ordinator for the Poetry Forum, I am<lb/>
interested in support for the aits. I<lb/>
have no intention of "fading out" and<lb/>
1 'leaving my voters without representa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
PIRGs involve themselves in a<lb/>
number of projects such as women's<lb/>
health care and rape awareness, en-<lb/>
vironmental issues such as dumping of<lb/>
toxic wastes and consumer issues like<lb/>
informing shoppers where to find<lb/>
bargains and critically evaluating utili-<lb/>
ty rate increases. In short, PIRG tries<lb/>
to give students a political organization<lb/>
through which they can have an impact<lb/>
on the community. After all, we live<lb/>
here too.<lb/>
Nor are PIRG meetings secretive.<lb/>
Meetings are held at 6:30 p.m. every<lb/>
Tuesday night at Mendenhall. Anyone<lb/>
is welcome to attend.<lb/>
Don't be swayed by a few who<lb/>
would distort the facts and try,<lb/>
through fear, to decide for the many!<lb/>
Aware yourself of the facts ? they are<lb/>
readily available. And most important-<lb/>
ly, vote on Oct. 13.<lb/>
AlMaginnes<lb/>
Senior, English<lb/>
Brewless<lb/>
As we were sitting in our room the<lb/>
other day sipping one of our last legal<lb/>
beers, a rare thought entered our<lb/>
brains: Oh No! Prohibition is back!<lb/>
What is the world coming to? As of<lb/>
Oct. 1, the well has run dry. Eighteen<lb/>
year olds are now being treated like<lb/>
Rodney Dangerfield ? with absolutely<lb/>
no respect.<lb/>
Seriously, we must admit that we<lb/>
agree with most of the provisions of<lb/>
the Safe Roads Act. But when a group<lb/>
of adults is stripped of its earned<lb/>
priveleges for no good reason, then<lb/>
there is something rotten in Denmark<lb/>
(or North Carolina, as the case mav<lb/>
be).<lb/>
Well, the law is the law. But take<lb/>
note all of you dry 18 year olds: The<lb/>
1984 election will be here soon! Let's<lb/>
all remember our gracious Governor<lb/>
when we go to the polls, if we are not in<lb/>
a combat zone then. The BOONE'S<lb/>
FARM Boys will prevail!<lb/>
David Maufeus<lb/>
Gerald Johnson<lb/>
General College<lb/>
(Editor's Note: We agree the new<lb/>
law was wrong for being applied<lb/>
retroactively. We sincerely offer our<lb/>
condolences to all those students under<lb/>
19 years of age.)<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/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every frve issues.<lb/>
<lb/>
Safe Road<lb/>
EC<lb/>
B PA1KK K<lb/>
ONKI1 I<lb/>
?xatWrtwr<lb/>
Not only did trill<lb/>
Safe h<lb/>
the legal drmkir . <lb/>
to 19, bir N (<lb/>
ficials de.i :<lb/>
enact the ia on<lb/>
day mgru' Insull <lb/>
added to thi<lb/>
when manv of ECl<lb/>
1 8 - e a<lb/>
discovered<lb/>
time to drink<lb/>
one da e<lb/>
Green<lb/>
nightclub<lb/>
decided n<lb/>
any char. -<lb/>
18-year-oids<lb/>
on F<lb/>
because<lb/>
vohed<lb/>
them out a<lb/>
As a result.<lb/>
as the la<lb/>
night for<lb/>
freshmen fl<lb/>
few. 18-c<lb/>
manager<lb/>
Frida-<lb/>
tior<lb/>
"1:<lb/>
tonight -v<lb/>
nightclub owner To<lb/>
Haines on T<lb/>
There<lb/>
availar<lb/>
ton, Flei:<lb/>
Cane<lb/>
President.<lb/>
Oct 12<lb/>
All studer<lb/>
filed with<lb/>
Oct. 1:<lb/>
Candida<lb/>
and uork<lb/>
qualifk .<lb/>
jMiiiiiimiuimtfm<lb/>
?WlWIISii.<lb/>
il<lb/>
L&amp;j<lb/>
KELDOVOt!<lb/>
doing nr<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
i oo-4 .v<lb/>
M-9 30<lb/>
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FUHHir<lb/>
1:10-3:10-5.10-7: H<lb/>
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MOVIES<lb/>
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ONLY S2.M 11<lb/>
?oxomcFjL<lb/>
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- BOONE'S<lb/>
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J Johnson<lb/>
nera! College<lb/>
new<lb/>
' - applied<lb/>
ncerety offer our<lb/>
? tents under<lb/>
im Rules<lb/>
? elcomes letters<lb/>
? Mail or<lb/>
tfice in the Old<lb/>
rom Joyner<lb/>
nfication, all let-<lb/>
re name, major and<lb/>
i hone number<lb/>
the authorts Letters<lb/>
typewritten pages,<lb/>
' nted. All<lb/>
 ting for brevi-<lb/>
l nd no personal<lb/>
' permitted. Students,<lb/>
' anting letters for this<lb/>
led that thev are limited<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
Safe Roads Act<lb/>
ECU Students Not Pleased With Law<lb/>
B PATRICK<lb/>
O'NEIl I<lb/>
Maff W n,?<lb/>
Not onl) did the<lb/>
Sate Roads Act raise<lb/>
the legal drinking age<lb/>
to 19, but N C. of-<lb/>
ficials decided to<lb/>
enact the law on a Fri-<lb/>
day night' Insult was<lb/>
added to this injur<lb/>
when mam of ECU's<lb/>
18-year-olds<lb/>
discoered that their<lb/>
time to drink ran out<lb/>
one da ear!<lb/>
G r e e n i 1 1 e<lb/>
nightclub owners<lb/>
decided not to take<lb/>
any chances b letting<lb/>
18-year-olds in clubs<lb/>
on Fnda night<lb/>
because of hassles in-<lb/>
volved in clearing<lb/>
:hem out at midnight<lb/>
As a result. Thursda<lb/>
was the last "party"<lb/>
night m a n <lb/>
freshmen (Though a<lb/>
few 18-year-olds<lb/>
managed to hit the<lb/>
Frida) happ hour ac-<lb/>
tion.)<lb/>
' 11 stops a tt e r<lb/>
:onight said Attic<lb/>
nightclub owner Tom<lb/>
Haines on Thursdaj<lb/>
l?AW.??.  ? '?i<lb/>
referring to the admis-<lb/>
sion o' 18-year-olds in<lb/>
his dub "At 12:01<lb/>
a.m. (Saturday morn-<lb/>
ing) it would be<lb/>
almost impossible to<lb/>
try to get the 18-year-<lb/>
olds out, so we're not<lb/>
going to let them in in<lb/>
the first place<lb/>
Haines, who is also<lb/>
vice-president of the<lb/>
Greenville Downtown<lb/>
Night Club Associa-<lb/>
tion, has been oppos-<lb/>
ed to the new drinking<lb/>
age law from its in-<lb/>
ception. "1 sa the<lb/>
same thing every body<lb/>
else does Haines<lb/>
said, "It's not going<lb/>
to stop a thing.<lb/>
"All it's going to<lb/>
do is change their<lb/>
drinking habits ' not<lb/>
their drinking.<lb/>
K l r b y Bryson,<lb/>
owner of the Elbo<lb/>
Room Taern, had<lb/>
similar sentiments<lb/>
'They're (18-year-<lb/>
olds) just going to go<lb/>
and buy a case of<lb/>
beer, ride out in the<lb/>
country, away from<lb/>
the road blocks, awa<lb/>
from the highway<lb/>
patrol, drink all they<lb/>
want and go slam<lb/>
right into a telephone<lb/>
pole<lb/>
Bryson, president<lb/>
of the nightclub<lb/>
association, said the<lb/>
new law would hurt<lb/>
his sales because 20<lb/>
percent of his business<lb/>
comes from 18-year-<lb/>
olds.<lb/>
To offset revenue<lb/>
loss Bryson will con-<lb/>
tinue to allow 18-year<lb/>
olds in his club, but<lb/>
not allow them to<lb/>
drink. Patrons age 19<lb/>
and above will be<lb/>
identified bv hospital<lb/>
arm bands<lb/>
designating age.<lb/>
Eighteen-year-olds<lb/>
will have to drinks<lb/>
soft drinks. They will<lb/>
also have to pay a<lb/>
double admission<lb/>
charge to compensate<lb/>
for the arm band<lb/>
costs.<lb/>
ECU 18-year-olds<lb/>
do no appear to be<lb/>
pleased with the new<lb/>
law. Those downtown<lb/>
on Thursday night<lb/>
aUo didn't think the<lb/>
law would do the job<lb/>
it was created to do.<lb/>
"I think it's<lb/>
TT"<lb/>
 , ??11 ?a?<lb/>
mere is one Dorm Representative position<lb/>
available in each of the following dorms: Belk, Cot-<lb/>
ton, Fleming, Scott and White.<lb/>
Candidates are also needed to run for Junior Class<lb/>
President.<lb/>
Oct. 12 is the deadline for all write-in candidates.<lb/>
All students wishing to run for an office who have not<lb/>
tiled with the SGA office must file before noon on<lb/>
Oct .12.<lb/>
Candidates must fill out expense account sheets<lb/>
and worker lists Failure to do so will result in dis-<lb/>
qualification.<lb/>
Urfr-rYrr?WWWWAV.W<lb/>
(SSjSEHSTtS $2.00 TIL 5:30 ? jIm)<lb/>
HE! DOVER!<lb/>
doing rr<lb/>
ENDS TODAY:<lb/>
1 10-3-10-5 10 10-9 10<lb/>
"A BOY AND<lb/>
HIS DOG R<lb/>
ENDS TODAY<lb/>
1 20-V20-? 2ft 2ft- 20<lb/>
THE GATES<lb/>
OF HELL-<lb/>
RATH) R<lb/>
1:10-3 10 5:10-7:10-9:10<lb/>
STARTS<lb/>
FRIDAY!<lb/>
<lb/>
ONL1<lb/>
l-J-5-7-9<lb/>
 ! ? In space no one<lb/>
fri -sat j can hear you scream.<lb/>
ONLYS2.00IJL IBM<lb/>
OPENS NOT ALL E.T.s ARE NICE rSl<lb/>
V 11:30 PM THIS IS THE STORY OF ONE.J<lb/>
MONTY<lb/>
PYTHONS'<lb/>
MEANINGl<lb/>
OF LIFE"<lb/>
unfair said 18-year-<lb/>
old freshmen James<lb/>
Lucas. "If 1 can be<lb/>
drafted, I ought to be<lb/>
able to drink Lucas<lb/>
believes North<lb/>
Carolina should have<lb/>
inacted a grandfather<lb/>
clause with the new<lb/>
law which would<lb/>
premit people who<lb/>
turned 18 before Oct.<lb/>
1 to continue to pur-<lb/>
chase beer and wine.<lb/>
"I think it stinks<lb/>
said student Jill<lb/>
Halley, who won't<lb/>
turn 19 until next<lb/>
September. "1 finally<lb/>
get the privilege to<lb/>
drink and now I<lb/>
can't<lb/>
Mark Turnillo, an<lb/>
ECU 18-year-old<lb/>
from Marylrnd, has<lb/>
been affected twice by<lb/>
new drinkig age<lb/>
laws. "It changed in<lb/>
Maryland right before<lb/>
I turned 18 Tornillo<lb/>
said. "I missed by<lb/>
about six months up<lb/>
there and I came<lb/>
down here and they<lb/>
changed the law<lb/>
again<lb/>
Holley and Lucas<lb/>
both say the new law<lb/>
won't stop them from<lb/>
getting alcohol. "I'm<lb/>
going to find a way to<lb/>
get out anyway<lb/>
Halley said. "All the<lb/>
other 18-year-olds I<lb/>
know are going to go<lb/>
out anyway ' we'll<lb/>
find a way to drink<lb/>
"It's not going to<lb/>
chance my drinking<lb/>
habits; it's not going<lb/>
to change most of my<lb/>
friends' drinking<lb/>
habits Lucas said.<lb/>
"I'll get it, it's no pro-<lb/>
blem<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The<lb/>
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SUBCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
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The East Carolinian offices, second floor. Publica-<lb/>
tions building, across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
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months. See Geoff Hudson, circulation manager.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
OCT 77<lb/>
 Rll G-IRL5<lb/>
Ev&amp;Ry VrcrHr<lb/>
(e'Kceer Concerts)<lb/>
Lflprtrs'&amp;<lb/>
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BE PREPARED FOR ?octwg goods<lb/>
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NO CIVILIAN BAND<lb/>
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If you re a musician who's serious<lb/>
about performing, you should take a<lb/>
senous look at the Army.<lb/>
Army bands offer you an average<lb/>
ot 40 performances a month In every-<lb/>
thing from concerts to parades.<lb/>
Army bands also offer you a<lb/>
chance to travel<lb/>
The Army has bands performing<lb/>
in Japan, Hawaii, Europe and all<lb/>
across America.<lb/>
And Army bands offer you the<lb/>
chance to plav with good musiaans. Just<lb/>
to qualify, you have to be able to sight-<lb/>
read music you've never seen before and<lb/>
demonstrate several other musical skills<lb/>
It s a genuine, right-now. imme-<lb/>
diate opportunity<lb/>
Compare it to your civilian offers<lb/>
Then write: Army Opportunines, PO<lb/>
Box 300, North Hollywood. CA 91603<lb/>
ARMY BAND.<lb/>
BEALLVOUCANBE.<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057580_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINJAN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1983 Page 6<lb/>
J.C. Superstar Is Slick Entertainment<lb/>
Timothy Parker plays Jesus of Nazareth as he appears in the ironic<lb/>
apotheosis, a prelude to his crucifiction, in Jesus Christ Superstar.<lb/>
GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
The audience at Wednesday<lb/>
evening's opening of Jesus Christ<lb/>
Superstar genuinely enjoyed this<lb/>
rock passion play ? but for the<lb/>
usual and wrong reasons. Rather<lb/>
than being moved by the story,<lb/>
the audience was probably ex-<lb/>
pressing delight at slick entertain-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
This fault, if you want to call it<lb/>
a fault, has nothing to do with the<lb/>
East Carolina Playhouse's perfor-<lb/>
mance. The group of<lb/>
predominantly student actors did<lb/>
a superb job. But slick entertain-<lb/>
ment is what Jesus Christ<lb/>
Superstar is all about. It's not<lb/>
sophisticated fare, but slick,<lb/>
brazen and audacious, and the<lb/>
singers, actors and dancers were<lb/>
equal to the task of pulling it off.<lb/>
However, this is 1983, a dozen<lb/>
years after the rock opera first<lb/>
opened on Broadway in October<lb/>
1971, and Superstar doesn't have<lb/>
the shock value it once had. No<lb/>
church groups protested outside<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre as they did on<lb/>
Broadway. There has been no<lb/>
brouhaha here. Personally, I find<lb/>
many of the TV charlatans mas-<lb/>
qurading as evangelists religiously<lb/>
more offensive than Superstar.<lb/>
If the production doesn't of-<lb/>
fend, it's not because Director<lb/>
Edgar Loessin backs away from<lb/>
the aspects of the opera that<lb/>
originally had Christian critics so<lb/>
outraged. There was plenty of<lb/>
bare flesh exposed in numerous<lb/>
lascivious scenes. The opening<lb/>
scene of act one looked more like<lb/>
Lucifer's court in hell in a rock<lb/>
opera of Paradise Lost. Later, as<lb/>
Jesus reclined under the tender<lb/>
caress of Mary Magdalene, the<lb/>
apostles lounged about, each with<lb/>
a concubine at his side. The in-<lb/>
timation of sexual relations bet-<lb/>
ween Jesus and Mary was also<lb/>
played up. When Jesus sings,<lb/>
"And I think I'll sleep well<lb/>
tonight Mary nods with a<lb/>
knowing smile. Like Tom O'<lb/>
Horgan, the original Broadway<lb/>
director of Superstar, Loessin<lb/>
gives full play to licentiousness.<lb/>
Besides the flesh, the other<lb/>
aspect that had Christians up in<lb/>
arms in '71 was the denial of<lb/>
Jesus' Divinity. Andrew Lloyd<lb/>
Webber and Tim Rice who wrote<lb/>
the music and lyrics cast Jesus as<lb/>
"just a man the right man in the<lb/>
right place at the right time, not<lb/>
the divine Son of God. They also<lb/>
ignored his Resurrection.<lb/>
The ECU production retains<lb/>
this humanization of Jesus.<lb/>
Timothy Parker plays Jesus as a<lb/>
man and a weakling of a man at<lb/>
that. After Jesus' death on the<lb/>
cross, the opera ends in darkness<lb/>
as an unseen voice explains that<lb/>
Jesus was buried in a nearby<lb/>
tomb. I sat hoping to hear "And<lb/>
three days later, He arose But<lb/>
this production is faithful to the<lb/>
original script, and the Resurrec-<lb/>
tion was ignored. Perhaps this<lb/>
predictable ending shouldn't have<lb/>
bothered me, but it did. I left the<lb/>
theatre feeling depressed rather<lb/>
than uplifted.<lb/>
Well enough background and<lb/>
history. What of the performance<lb/>
itself?<lb/>
The rock music coming from<lb/>
the orchestra pit electrified the au-<lb/>
dience as the rock opera began.<lb/>
Former Laughing Matter guitarist<lb/>
John Shannon and bassist David<lb/>
Garza worked well with the or-<lb/>
chestra. Expectations were high as<lb/>
the curtain opened, and no one<lb/>
was disappointed, at least not dur-<lb/>
ing the first act.<lb/>
Jeanne Resua as Mary<lb/>
Magdalene earned strong ap-<lb/>
plause after each of her solos.<lb/>
Microphones were standard for<lb/>
soloists, but Resua demonstrated<lb/>
that her strong, clear voice could<lb/>
fill McGinnis without amplifica-<lb/>
tion: She sang some solos sans<lb/>
mike. Besides a strong voice,<lb/>
Resua had the ability to inject<lb/>
emotion into her singing at will<lb/>
and give the entire performance a<lb/>
lift.<lb/>
Aubrey Barnes as Simon<lb/>
Zealotes also deserves praise. His<lb/>
single solo was the most dramatic<lb/>
of the evening and earned him<lb/>
bravos at curtain call. Barnes<lb/>
generated charisma and excite-<lb/>
ment that no other soloist match-<lb/>
ed. He combined a powerful stage<lb/>
presence and strong acting with a<lb/>
dynamic voice.<lb/>
Barnes brings to mind Ben<lb/>
Vereen who played Judas in the<lb/>
original Broadway production.<lb/>
This production of Superstar<lb/>
would have been much stronger<lb/>
had Barnes also been cast as<lb/>
Judas. He could have contrasted<lb/>
with Jesus in a way that Loren<lb/>
Watkins' Judas didn't.<lb/>
Both Watkins and Timothy<lb/>
Parker as Jesus gave credible per-<lb/>
formances, but their physical and<lb/>
emotional similarities (both<lb/>
played weak men) muddied any<lb/>
real conflict between Jesus and<lb/>
Judas, a conflict central to<lb/>
Superstar. During scenes of the<lb/>
Last Supper and Jesus' arrest, the<lb/>
conflict between Jesus and Judas<lb/>
should be piercing; instead, it was<lb/>
While Corporations Occupy South Africa,<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill Debate Fund Divestment s<lb/>
Bv JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
There is a large and growing movement in the<lb/>
United States today calling for divestment of funds<lb/>
from corporations that invest in South Africa.<lb/>
Students have been at the forefront of this move-<lb/>
ment and the number of universities that have taken<lb/>
action toward divestment is too numerous to list.<lb/>
Those that have sold all their shares in corpora-<lb/>
tions doing business in South Africa include An-<lb/>
tioch and Hampshire College, Ohio University,<lb/>
Michigan State, Indiana Cenral and the Universities<lb/>
of Massachusetts, Oregon and Wisconsin and the<lb/>
list is growing.<lb/>
The divestment movement on the country's cam-<lb/>
puses centers upon the university's endowment<lb/>
fund and the feeling on the part of students that an<lb/>
institution of higher learning must have a socially<lb/>
responsible investment policy.<lb/>
Currently the University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill is embroiled in the controversy sur-<lb/>
rounding the issue of divestment. On Februrary 8,<lb/>
1983, the students at UNC were presented with a<lb/>
referendum condemning the system of aparthied in<lb/>
South Africa, and calling for more student involve-<lb/>
ment in UNC investment decision making policy.<lb/>
When the vote was tabulated the Elections Board<lb/>
announced that students had voted 3,313 to 1,891<lb/>
to pass a resolution to have the university divest its<lb/>
stock from corporations in South Africa, and to im-<lb/>
plement a task force with student representatives to<lb/>
help the Board of Trustees better serve the needs of<lb/>
the student body.<lb/>
Ten days later, a group of students calling<lb/>
themselves the UCN Public Interest Research<lb/>
Group appeared before the university's Endowment<lb/>
Board. UNC-PIRG presented the Board with the<lb/>
results of the student referendum and their case in<lb/>
support of divestment. Soon after hearing the<lb/>
students' case, however, the Board of Trustees of<lb/>
the Endowment decided against divestment.<lb/>
The position taken and maintained by the Board<lb/>
according to UNC chancellor Christopher C. For-<lb/>
dham, "is that they are simply stewards of the en-<lb/>
dowment fund which he added, "is similar to the<lb/>
position taken by officals at Harvard University<lb/>
Some students, however, interpreted the Board's<lb/>
response in a less flattering manner. According to<lb/>
one UNC student, John Tate, chairman of the<lb/>
Board, simply handed the PIRG students a hand-<lb/>
written note which said "the business of the En-<lb/>
dowment Board is to maximize profit and that's<lb/>
it In any case the divestment movement at UNC<lb/>
did not end with the Board's decision. Students held<lb/>
demonstrations in support of divestment during the<lb/>
1983 spring semester. As recently as Wednesday,<lb/>
Sept. 28, the Campus Government Council, the<lb/>
legislative branch of the UNC student government,<lb/>
passed a resolution reaffirming the students' call<lb/>
for divestment.<lb/>
Admittedly, the divestment issue is a complex one<lb/>
and most students know very little about the<lb/>
political system of a country that is thousands of<lb/>
miles away. Nevertheless, many facts about the<lb/>
country are clear and much more information is<lb/>
readily available from a multitude of different<lb/>
sources.<lb/>
It is common knowledge, for example, that the<lb/>
institutional foundation of South African society is<lb/>
racism. Blacks are denied the right to vote in a<lb/>
country where they constitute 72 percent of the<lb/>
population. Yet, whites earn 64 percent of the in-<lb/>
come generated by the economy while comprising<lb/>
only 16 percent of the population, according to the<lb/>
Africa Fund, a New York based research organiza-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Black political dissidents may be jailed without<lb/>
trial and the press is prohibited from reporting the<lb/>
cases of people who have been detained in this man-<lb/>
ner. According to Amnesty International, the<lb/>
government sanctions the use of torture on political<lb/>
detainees. In addition, a shockingly, dispropor-<lb/>
tianate number of blacks are excuted as compared<lb/>
to whites. In 1980, out of a total of 129 people<lb/>
hanged in South Africa, 85 were Africans, 43 were<lb/>
coloureds, one was Indian and one was white.<lb/>
The infant mortality rate is also distributed ine-<lb/>
quitably among the population. According to the<lb/>
Rand Daily Mail, a South African newspaper, the<lb/>
infant mortality per 1000 in 1980 was 12 whites, 69<lb/>
Urban Africans and 282 Rural Africans. Also,<lb/>
See African, p. 7<lb/>
? School Of Music Events ?<lb/>
2 Oct. 7OPERA SCENES, 8:15 ? Scenes from: The Magic Flute 2 and The Daughter of the Regi- ment. (Please note: The Opera Scenes program will be performed on Oct. 7 onlv and there will be 9 no performance on Oct. 8 ast originally scheduled.) ?<lb/>
I Oct. 9DONNA COLEMAN, piano J Facultv Recital, 8:15 ?<lb/>
? Oct.12PERCUSSION ENSEMBLE CONCERT, 8:15 ?<lb/>
? Oct. 21-22ELECTRONIC MUSIC PLUsJ FESTIVAL ? Oct. 21, Concert, 8! 15 ? Oct. 22, All Day J<lb/>
? Oct. 23SYMPHONIC WIND ENSEM-S BLE CONCERT, 8:15 ? Wright Auditorium ?<lb/>
? Oct. 24RICHARD WITHERSPOON.J trumpet ? KEITH BECK, percussion ? Senior Recital, 7:30 ?<lb/>
? Oct. 26DAVID HASS, Trombone I Graduate Recital, 7:30 ?<lb/>
? Oct. 27KELLY VIA, flute J Graduate Recital, 7:30 <lb/>
J Oct. 28TIM WARD, voice ? KIM GATLIN, piano Senior Recital, 7:30 -<lb/>
Never Sav Never.9 'Bis Chill9Hit<lb/>
4Never Say Never'<lb/>
James Bond, British Secret Ser-<lb/>
vice Agent 007, is dangerous in his<lb/>
new action-packed film Sever Say<lb/>
Sever Again.<lb/>
In a world dominated by com-<lb/>
puters and bureaucracy, he is a<lb/>
man whose greatest strength lies<lb/>
in his own intuitions, a man who<lb/>
allows his hunches to take him<lb/>
straight to the heart of the danger<lb/>
and who has the courage and the<lb/>
skill to face the gravest perils ?<lb/>
and survive.<lb/>
So when SPECTRE (Special<lb/>
Executor for Counter-<lb/>
intelligence, Terrorism, Revenge<lb/>
and Extortion) holds the world to<lb/>
ransom with a devastating act of<lb/>
nuclear terrorism, only Bond is<lb/>
able to cut straight through to the<lb/>
rotten core of the operation.<lb/>
While recharging his batteries<lb/>
at a health clinic, Bond's sixth<lb/>
sense picks up an early warning of<lb/>
SPECTRE'S plan. His involve-<lb/>
ment leads him from England to<lb/>
the Bahamas and the South of<lb/>
France, pursued along the way by<lb/>
the beautiful but deadly Fatima<lb/>
Blush, a SPECTRE assassin who<lb/>
is determined to get her man ? in<lb/>
more ways than one.<lb/>
He encounters the charming but<lb/>
sinister Largo, one of the richest<lb/>
and most lethal men in the world,<lb/>
and his mistress, the enigmatic<lb/>
Domino, who is unaware of<lb/>
Largo's true nature and who<lb/>
becomes quite taken with the<lb/>
charming Mr. Bond. The entire<lb/>
SPECTRE operation is master-<lb/>
minded by Bond's long-time<lb/>
enemy. Ernst Stavro Blofeld.<lb/>
Against this arsenal of evil,<lb/>
Bond is backed up by his<lb/>
American pal, Felix Leiter (who<lb/>
has the knack of turning up at the<lb/>
most opportune moments), as<lb/>
well as by members of the British<lb/>
Secret Service: "M the adoring<lb/>
Miss Moneypenny, and Algy the<lb/>
Armorer with his sophisticated<lb/>
and ingenious collection of<lb/>
devices.<lb/>
Stunts, special effects and high-<lb/>
speed action abound as James<lb/>
Bond follows the story to its<lb/>
dramatic conclusion, refusing to<lb/>
take anything ? well, hardly<lb/>
anything ? lying down.<lb/>
Never Say Never Again will be<lb/>
released to theatres at East<lb/>
Carolina Oct. 7.<lb/>
'The Big Chill'<lb/>
Writerdirector Lawrence<lb/>
Kasdan has helped create some of<lb/>
the most popular and successful<lb/>
screen entertainment in recent<lb/>
years, writing or co-writing<lb/>
Raiders of the Lost Ark, Con-<lb/>
tinental Divide, The Empire<lb/>
Strikes Back, Return of the Jedi<lb/>
and the powerful drama Body<lb/>
Heat, which also marked his<lb/>
directorial debut.<lb/>
He has now directed a unique<lb/>
ensemble of contemporary young<lb/>
actors in The Big Chin, which are<lb/>
true to people's lives. In this film,<lb/>
the characters are former college<lb/>
housemates who, over the years,<lb/>
have drifted apart. Members of<lb/>
the baby-boom generation who<lb/>
entered young adulthood as<lb/>
idealistic non-conformists, they<lb/>
are now, for the most part,<lb/>
member of the establishment. The<lb/>
young men of the story have<lb/>
"grown up" to be a running-shoe<lb/>
store entrpreneur, a journalist for<lb/>
a popular magazine, a television<lb/>
star and a disillusioned Vietnam<lb/>
veteran. The women have become<lb/>
a doctor, a lawyer and the wife of<lb/>
a businessman.<lb/>
Suddenly and unexpectedly,<lb/>
this group of old friends is<lb/>
reunited at the funeral of one of<lb/>
their own who has committed<lb/>
suicide; he was a drop-out who in<lb/>
their earlier years served as their<lb/>
collective conscience. Stunned by<lb/>
the loss, each comes to the reu-<lb/>
nion with a deep need to<lb/>
reestablish the bond of caring<lb/>
they once shared.<lb/>
The Big Chill emerges as a bit-<lb/>
tersweet testimony to a confused<lb/>
generation, one that has serviced<lb/>
the passions of youth and grown<lb/>
through painful self-awareness<lb/>
and love into adulthood.<lb/>
In this context, the title The Big<lb/>
Chill takes on several resonant<lb/>
metaphorical meanings, from the<lb/>
obvious reference to the group's<lb/>
own mortality (strongly reinforc-<lb/>
ed by the occasion of their reu-<lb/>
nion), to the cooling of idealistic<lb/>
fires in the face of more calculated<lb/>
self-interest.<lb/>
Kasdan and producer Michael<lb/>
Shamberg cast the eight equally<lb/>
important leading roles with some<lb/>
of the most gifted young actors in<lb/>
films today: Tom Berenger, Glenn<lb/>
Close, Jeff Goldblum, William<lb/>
Hurt, Kevin Kline, Mary Kay<lb/>
Place, Meg Tilly and Jobeth<lb/>
Williams. With the exception of<lb/>
Meg Tilly, all the actors are ap-<lb/>
proximately the same age and<lb/>
more or less at a similar point in<lb/>
each of their careers.<lb/>
African<lb/>
Cont'd from p. 6<lb/>
while Africans make<lb/>
up 72 percent of the<lb/>
population, they are<lb/>
allowed to per-<lb/>
manently live on only<lb/>
13 percent of the land.<lb/>
Opponents of<lb/>
divestment state that<lb/>
investment by cor-<lb/>
porations provides<lb/>
job opportunities for<lb/>
blacks and helps pro-<lb/>
mote positive change.<lb/>
They often site the<lb/>
Sullivan Principles, a<lb/>
voluntary code of<lb/>
conduct for U.S.firms<lb/>
operating in South<lb/>
Africa drafted in<lb/>
1976, which call for<lb/>
non-segregation in the<lb/>
work place and fair<lb/>
employment prac-<lb/>
tices.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
William Lucy,<lb/>
Secretary Treasurer<lb/>
for the American<lb/>
Federation fo State,<lb/>
County, and<lb/>
Municipal<lb/>
Employees, stated the<lb/>
Sullivan Principles<lb/>
have very little impact<lb/>
on the realities of<lb/>
apartheid.<lb/>
"Although<lb/>
(the Sul<lb/>
Priciples) si<lb/>
splendid on pi<lb/>
Lucy was quo<lb/>
saying by<lb/>
News, "that<lb/>
they essential<lb/>
main. Paper<lb/>
ciples. Anothei<lb/>
of someone's gc<lb/>
tentions<lb/>
against the r<lb/>
reality U.S.<lb/>
porations, prof<lb/>
of divestment<lb/>
employ fewe-<lb/>
one percent<lb/>
working poej<lb/>
South Africa<lb/>
Thus, even<lb/>
Principles weri<lb/>
ticed they won<lb/>
feet an msigi<lb/>
number of wi<lb/>
The Sullivan<lb/>
ciples make<lb/>
mand for ch<lb/>
the fundai<lb/>
structure of<lb/>
thied, no demj<lb/>
black political<lb/>
In response <lb/>
arguemeiv<lb/>
who oppose<lb/>
ment, UNC<lb/>
Doug Berger i<lb/>
East Caro,<lb/>
"The arguem<lb/>
Slick E<lb/>
limp,<lb/>
bordering on bathos.<lb/>
Though the central<lb/>
conflict between Jesus<lb/>
and Judas was disap-<lb/>
pointing, several<lb/>
other actors kept the<lb/>
show alive. Gregory<lb/>
Smith as Caiaphas<lb/>
was evil incarnate, a<lb/>
veritable Darth<lb/>
Vader. Tmothy White<lb/>
as Annas played his<lb/>
part well as did all of<lb/>
the Jewish priests.<lb/>
John Kuhn's pro-<lb/>
fessional acting didn't<lb/>
go unnoticed either.<lb/>
His portrayl of Pon-<lb/>
tius Pilate was strong<lb/>
and imperial, befit-<lb/>
ting a Roman gover-<lb/>
nor. Yet, he convinc-<lb/>
ed the audience that<lb/>
he really cared about<lb/>
this humble Jesus<lb/>
before him, a nice<lb/>
balance of strength<lb/>
and tenderness.<lb/>
A serious flaw in<lb/>
the Broadway version<lb/>
of Superstar was the<lb/>
non-stop action, no<lb/>
seperate acts or inter-<lb/>
mission. To Loessin's<lb/>
credit, he divided the<lb/>
ECU production into<lb/>
two acts. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, the slow<lb/>
start of the second act<lb/>
with scenes at the Last<lb/>
Supper and in the<lb/>
Garden of<lb/>
Gcthsemane make for<lb/>
a slow start after in-<lb/>
termission, and the se-<lb/>
cond act never<lb/>
to hit the moi<lb/>
the first act acl<lb/>
But this w(<lb/>
may be inherent<lb/>
rock opera<lb/>
music is inter<lb/>
therefore sua<lb/>
short worl<lb/>
doesn't hold<lb/>
for opera<lb/>
works. The<lb/>
loses its pow<lb/>
an hour or so<lb/>
it doesn't hi<lb/>
diversity "J<lb/>
phonic mus<lb/>
rock music,<lb/>
undeniably wi<lb/>
none of the<lb/>
the show's e<lb/>
begins with<lb/>
our senses an<lb/>
by its onsu<lb/>
never could<lb/>
the entire all<lb/>
one sitting<lb/>
Costuming<lb/>
production<lb/>
superb. Jesus<lb/>
touted<lb/>
robe appear<lb/>
tical to the ?i<lb/>
ing S20.000<lb/>
ed on Broadi<lb/>
sets were sim<lb/>
tional and tot<lb/>
quate ? an<lb/>
ment from t<lb/>
Broadway i<lb/>
The focu<lb/>
is, as it shoul<lb/>
people<lb/>
The East<lb/>
Plavhouse<lb/>
ECU School<lb/>
must be co<lb/>
for a fine ef<lb/>
rt<lb/>
A woman wfc<lb/>
tot I<lb/>
her greatest tj<lb/>
bet greatest<lb/>
pOf. 8 shot M<lb/>
tornpei-l<lb/>
Witch it! ?7s tack with Us<lb/>
ffiai 'Never Say Never Agahi Eight totaled pert<lb/>
the<lb/>
of the<lb/>
Friday aed<lb/>
's Heedrix Theatre. Shoi<lb/>
at 7 p.m. sod 36 p.m. Adaus.<lb/>
I.D. Ami Activity Card.<lb/>
.X<lb/>
? Oj<lb/>
MM MM<lb/>
waft<lb/>
?' 0m, mMmw?Mifc<lb/>
<pb facs="00057580_0007"/><lb/>
Page b<lb/>
inment<lb/>
iid had the- ability to inject<lb/>
'tion into her singing at will<lb/>
v ve the entire performance a<lb/>
 Barnes as Simon<lb/>
jo desenes praise. His<lb/>
 tv :he most dramatic<lb/>
vening and earned him<lb/>
.it curtain call. Barnes<lb/>
d charisma and excite-<lb/>
U no other soloist match-<lb/>
combined a powerful stage<lb/>
f. md strong acting with a<lb/>
imic voice.<lb/>
rings to mind Ben<lb/>
plaed Judas in the<lb/>
Broadway production.<lb/>
?duction of Superstar<lb/>
Id have been much stronger<lb/>
also been cast as<lb/>
 He could hae contrasted<lb/>
n a a that Loren<lb/>
I is didn't.<lb/>
" ? Kins and Timothy<lb/>
v gave credible per-<lb/>
? their physical and<lb/>
larities (both<lb/>
en) muddied any<lb/>
'tween Jesus and<lb/>
central to<lb/>
v During scenes of the<lb/>
: and Jesus' arrest, the<lb/>
between Jesus and Judas<lb/>
ild be piercing; instead, it was<lb/>
Music Events<lb/>
3:15 ?<lb/>
The Magic Flute<lb/>
.?hter of the Regi- ?<lb/>
The Opera ?<lb/>
vill be performed <lb/>
and there will be 9<lb/>
Ocl. 8 as ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
EM . piano 9<lb/>
8:15 ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
NSEMBLE?<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
TR ' Ml sic PLUS,<lb/>
1<lb/>
: cert, 8:15 '<lb/>
?  ah Dav<lb/>
WIND FNSEM-i<lb/>
RT. 8:15 <lb/>
irium '<lb/>
A R<lb/>
WITHERSPOON<lb/>
; on<lb/>
Recital, 7:30<lb/>
ID HASS, Trombone<lb/>
aduate Recital, 30<lb/>
LY VIA, flute<lb/>
ite Recital. 7:30<lb/>
K ARD. voice<lb/>
II IN, piano<lb/>
Recital, 7:30<lb/>
Town<lb/>
mortality (strongly reinforc-<lb/>
the occasion of their reu-<lb/>
to the cooling of idealistic<lb/>
Is in the face of more calculated<lb/>
-i merest.<lb/>
asdan and producer Michael<lb/>
iberg cast the eight equally<lb/>
bortant leading roles with some<lb/>
he most gifted young actors in<lb/>
is today: Tom Berenger, Glenn<lb/>
Ise, ?eff Goldblum, William<lb/>
t, Kevin Kline, Mary Kay<lb/>
:e, Meg Tilly and Jobeth<lb/>
liams. With the exception of<lb/>
Tilly, all the actors are ap-<lb/>
Ixiinately the same age and<lb/>
pe or less at a similar point in<lb/>
of their careers.<lb/>
u<lb/>
? Hi,<lb/>
Big Chill.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1983<lb/>
African Rights Threatened<lb/>
<lb/>
Cont'd from p. 6<lb/>
while Africans make<lb/>
up 72 percent of the<lb/>
population, they are<lb/>
allowed to per-<lb/>
manently live on only<lb/>
13 percent of the land.<lb/>
Opponents of<lb/>
divestment state that<lb/>
investment by cor-<lb/>
porations provides<lb/>
job opportunities for<lb/>
blacks and helps pro-<lb/>
mote positive change.<lb/>
They often site the<lb/>
Sullivan Principles, a<lb/>
voluntary code of<lb/>
conduct for U.S.firms<lb/>
operating in South<lb/>
Africa drafted in<lb/>
1976, which call for<lb/>
non-segregation in the<lb/>
work place and fair<lb/>
employment prac-<lb/>
tices.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
William<lb/>
Secretary<lb/>
for the<lb/>
Federation<lb/>
County,<lb/>
M u n i c i<lb/>
Lucy,<lb/>
Treasurer<lb/>
American<lb/>
fo State,<lb/>
and<lb/>
p a 1<lb/>
Employees, stated the<lb/>
Sullivan Principles<lb/>
have very little impact<lb/>
on the realities of<lb/>
apartheid.<lb/>
"Although these<lb/>
(the Sullivan<lb/>
Priciples) sound<lb/>
splendid on paper<lb/>
Lucy was quoted as<lb/>
saying by Action<lb/>
News, "that is what<lb/>
they essentially re-<lb/>
main. Paper prin-<lb/>
ciples. Another case<lb/>
of someone's good in-<lb/>
tentions dashed<lb/>
against the rocks of<lb/>
reality U.S. cor-<lb/>
porations, proponents<lb/>
of divestment say,<lb/>
employ fewer than<lb/>
one percent of all<lb/>
working poeple in<lb/>
South Africa anyway.<lb/>
Thus, even if the<lb/>
Principles were prac-<lb/>
ticed they would af-<lb/>
fect an insignificant<lb/>
number of workers.<lb/>
The Sullivan Prin-<lb/>
ciples make no de-<lb/>
mand for change in<lb/>
the fundamental<lb/>
structure of apar-<lb/>
thied, no demand for<lb/>
black political rights.<lb/>
In response to the<lb/>
arguements of those<lb/>
who oppose divest-<lb/>
ment, UNC student<lb/>
Doug Berger told The<lb/>
East Carolinian,<lb/>
"The arguement that<lb/>
U.S. corporations are<lb/>
a progressive force in<lb/>
South Africa is a very<lb/>
fallacious arguement.<lb/>
If anything, U.S. cor-<lb/>
porations strengthen<lb/>
apartheid by selling<lb/>
the government com-<lb/>
puters which help it to<lb/>
maintain the pass laws<lb/>
and by the statements<lb/>
of some indication<lb/>
that they will<lb/>
cooperate with the<lb/>
South African<lb/>
government in the<lb/>
event of civil unrest<lb/>
In fact, according<lb/>
to a study published<lb/>
by the Africa fund,<lb/>
contingency plans<lb/>
prepared by the<lb/>
General Motors cor-<lb/>
poration indicated<lb/>
that vehicles may be<lb/>
taken over by the<lb/>
government for civil<lb/>
defense purposes. The<lb/>
study added that Con-<lb/>
trol Data Corporation<lb/>
sold equipment to the<lb/>
South African police<lb/>
in violation of U.S.<lb/>
commerce department<lb/>
regulations.<lb/>
UNC has approx-<lb/>
imately two million<lb/>
dollars invested in<lb/>
such corporations as<lb/>
General Motors,<lb/>
IBM, Control Data<lb/>
Corporation and<lb/>
Colgate-Palmolive.<lb/>
The referendum pass-<lb/>
ed by students last<lb/>
Feburary called for all<lb/>
of the school's money<lb/>
to be divested from<lb/>
these corporations<lb/>
within one year.<lb/>
Those who favor<lb/>
divestment added that<lb/>
the arguement would<lb/>
result in a loss of<lb/>
money for the school<lb/>
is contradicted by<lb/>
facts. According to a<lb/>
letter to the editor<lb/>
written by Ashley<lb/>
McKinney in The Dai-<lb/>
ly Tarheel, UNC's<lb/>
student newspaper,<lb/>
Michigan State<lb/>
University, among<lb/>
other schools, actual-<lb/>
ly realized a substan-<lb/>
tial profit by diversi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
In the meantime,<lb/>
the students involved<lb/>
in the divestment<lb/>
movement at Chapel<lb/>
Hill continue to work<lb/>
to persuade the<lb/>
members of the Board<lb/>
of Trustees to change<lb/>
their position on<lb/>
divestment.<lb/>
"I'm hoping that the<lb/>
student government<lb/>
will begin to apply<lb/>
organized pressure<lb/>
Berger said.<lb/>
"One thing that<lb/>
Harvard students did<lb/>
was set up an endow-<lb/>
ment fund for divest-<lb/>
ment in which seniors<lb/>
donate to an alter-<lb/>
native endowment<lb/>
fund. They solicit<lb/>
funds from alumni<lb/>
wheh put financial<lb/>
pressure on the Board<lb/>
of Trustees Berger<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Recently those who<lb/>
worked on divestment<lb/>
presented their case to<lb/>
the campus YMCA, a<lb/>
large contributor to<lb/>
the endowment fund.<lb/>
According to Andrea<lb/>
Stumpf, a spokesper-<lb/>
son for the YMCA,<lb/>
the organization<lb/>
decided not to en-<lb/>
dorse divestment'<lb/>
because they felt that<lb/>
the move would notj<lb/>
be representative or<lb/>
the sentiments of the,<lb/>
Y's total membership.<lb/>
"We have, however,<lb/>
issued a statement I<lb/>
calling for an invest-<lb/>
ment policy based on<lb/>
social responsibility<lb/>
said Stumpf.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Berger<lb/>
said that he and a<lb/>
group of students,<lb/>
have formed a<lb/>
political party and<lb/>
will run candidates<lb/>
for the student<lb/>
government in<lb/>
Feburary. If they are<lb/>
successful he said,<lb/>
they will work to<lb/>
make the student<lb/>
government adopt a<lb/>
much more active role<lb/>
on the issue.<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
College Night<lb/>
FREE DRAFT FOR ALL ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS 9-10<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
SUPER HAPPY HOUR 4-9<lb/>
25C DRAFT WITH IOC INCREASE<lb/>
EVERY HOUR.<lb/>
ECU CHEERLEADERS<lb/>
PERFORM FROM 9-until<lb/>
Join the Pirates to yet another victory!<lb/>
752-1493 200 W. 10th St.<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB ALL ABC PERMITS<lb/>
SEE<lb/>
Slick Entertainment<lb/>
limp,<lb/>
bordering on bathos.<lb/>
Though the central<lb/>
conflict between Jesus<lb/>
and Judas was disap-<lb/>
pointing, several<lb/>
other actors kept the<lb/>
show alive. Gregory<lb/>
Smith as Caiaphas<lb/>
was evil incarnate, a<lb/>
veritable Darth<lb/>
Vader. Tmothy White<lb/>
as Annas played his<lb/>
part well as did all of<lb/>
the Jewish priests.<lb/>
John Kuhn's pro-<lb/>
fessional acting didn't<lb/>
go unnoticed either.<lb/>
His portrayl of Pon-<lb/>
tius Pilate was strong<lb/>
and imperial, befit-<lb/>
ting a Roman gover-<lb/>
nor. Yet, he convinc-<lb/>
ed the audience that<lb/>
he really cared about<lb/>
this humble Jesus<lb/>
before him, a nice<lb/>
balance of strength<lb/>
and tenderness.<lb/>
A serious flaw in<lb/>
the Broadway version<lb/>
of Superstar was the<lb/>
non-stop action, no<lb/>
seperate acts or inter-<lb/>
mission. To Loessin's<lb/>
credit, he divided the<lb/>
ECU production into<lb/>
two acts. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, the slow<lb/>
start of the second act<lb/>
with scenes at the Last<lb/>
Supper and in the<lb/>
Garden of<lb/>
Gethsemane make for<lb/>
a slow start after in-<lb/>
cond act never seemed<lb/>
to hit the momentum<lb/>
the first act achieved.<lb/>
But this weakness<lb/>
may be inherent to the<lb/>
rock opera. Rock<lb/>
music is intense and<lb/>
therefore suited to<lb/>
short works, but it<lb/>
doesn't hold up well<lb/>
for opera-length<lb/>
works. The music<lb/>
loses its power after<lb/>
an hour or so because<lb/>
it doesn't have the<lb/>
diversity of sym-<lb/>
phonic music. The<lb/>
rock music, though<lb/>
undeniably witty, has<lb/>
none of the punch by<lb/>
the show's end that it<lb/>
begins with because<lb/>
our senses are dulled<lb/>
by its onslaught. I<lb/>
never could listen to<lb/>
the entire album at<lb/>
one sitting.<lb/>
Costuming for the<lb/>
production was<lb/>
superb. Jesus' much-<lb/>
touted crucifiction<lb/>
robe appeared iden-<lb/>
tical to the shimmer-<lb/>
ing $20,000 gown us-<lb/>
ed on Broadway. The<lb/>
sets were simple, fun-<lb/>
tional and totally ade-<lb/>
quate ? an improve-<lb/>
ment from the garish<lb/>
Broadway originals.<lb/>
The focus in the play<lb/>
is, as it should be, the<lb/>
people.<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
Playhouse and the<lb/>
ECU School of Music<lb/>
must be commended<lb/>
Jesus Christ<lb/>
Superstar. The rock<lb/>
opera was originally<lb/>
intended to be an ex-<lb/>
travaganza, a shocker<lb/>
that overwhelms the<lb/>
senses. Elaborate<lb/>
lighting, staging,<lb/>
costumes and a large<lb/>
and talented cast are<lb/>
prerequisites before<lb/>
even attempting it.<lb/>
For the departments<lb/>
involved, this rock<lb/>
opera provides the<lb/>
same challenge that<lb/>
playing and defeating<lb/>
a Big Eight team pro-<lb/>
vided the ECU foot-<lb/>
ball team. Pulling it<lb/>
off says a lot about<lb/>
the Playhouse's<lb/>
credentials.<lb/>
Even though it's<lb/>
not as controversial as<lb/>
it once was,Jesus<lb/>
Christ Superstar is<lb/>
worth seeing for the<lb/>
sheer excitement it of-<lb/>
fers.<lb/>
CHUBBY CHECKER<lb/>
Thursday, Oct. 6,1983<lb/>
HH<lb/>
Purchase a Carolina Opry House membership for the regular price of $10.00 and receive<lb/>
one ticket of your choice to see either: CHUBBY CHECKER, NITTY GRITTY DIRT<lb/>
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Also Thursday, Oct 6 with CHUBBY CHECKER: TWIST CONTEST FINALS! Winner<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057580_0008"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Emory Enjoys Victory<lb/>
By CINDY PLEAS ANTS<lb/>
Spom Editor<lb/>
When ECU Head football<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory took off for his<lb/>
weekly recruiting trip Monday<lb/>
morning, he almost decided not to<lb/>
come back.<lb/>
After ECU'S 13-6 win over<lb/>
Missouri Saturday, Emory found<lb/>
that the Pirates are becoming a<lb/>
household name throughout the<lb/>
state.<lb/>
"I had principals coming up to<lb/>
me and congratulating me<lb/>
Emory said. "It's brought us a lot<lb/>
of attention. I just couldn't<lb/>
believe the enthusiasm I saw. 1<lb/>
just went crazy and started driving<lb/>
ail around the place.<lb/>
"I ended up driving over 500<lb/>
miles and visited 15 different<lb/>
schools<lb/>
The victory over Missouri was<lb/>
still fresh on Emory's mind at<lb/>
Tuesday's press conference, and<lb/>
with good reason ? this is the<lb/>
first time ECU has ever beaten a<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Although the ECU Pirates just<lb/>
returned from Big-Eight country,<lb/>
Head Coach Ed Emory said the<lb/>
Pirates won't have any trouble<lb/>
getting ready for Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana.<lb/>
Big-Eight school.<lb/>
"It's a big win he said. "It<lb/>
made the whole state proud. It<lb/>
was a win for North Carolina<lb/>
The Pirates, now 3-1, have got-<lb/>
ten off to a good start but still<lb/>
have a long way to go. According<lb/>
to Emory, the first wins of the<lb/>
season get more important down<lb/>
the road.<lb/>
"If we continue winning, it (the<lb/>
victory over the Tigers) will be one<lb/>
of the biggest in the history of the<lb/>
school he said. "But it will also<lb/>
help our scheduling and<lb/>
recruiting<lb/>
Missouri, which is the only<lb/>
Division-1 school in the state,<lb/>
wasn't embarrassed Saturday<lb/>
afternoon, according to Emory.<lb/>
"They lost to a heckuva foot-<lb/>
ball program Emory said. "It<lb/>
takes pressure off an athletic<lb/>
director when they schedule us.<lb/>
They're not scheduling a win for a<lb/>
homecoming game<lb/>
Although the Pirates lost a<lb/>
heartbreaker to Florida State<lb/>
(47-46) and went on to beat N.C.<lb/>
State, Emory believes the Pirates<lb/>
didn't come together as a whole<lb/>
until meeting Missouri.<lb/>
"We lined up with more con-<lb/>
fidence he said. "The defense<lb/>
played the most dominating game<lb/>
they've played since I've been<lb/>
head coach.<lb/>
A few players responsible for<lb/>
the defensive showing were defen-<lb/>
sive tackles Hal Stephens and<lb/>
Steve Hamilton, defensive ends<lb/>
Maury Banks and Kenny Phillips<lb/>
and nose guard Gerry Rogers.<lb/>
Rogers, a senior from Pott-<lb/>
stown, Pa said the defense final-<lb/>
ly had a chance to prove<lb/>
themselves Saturday.<lb/>
"For some reason, we just<lb/>
didn't click before the Missouri<lb/>
game he said. "We knew we<lb/>
had the potential, but we hadn't<lb/>
used it all. We had 3 good games,<lb/>
but we hadn't had a great game<lb/>
antil Missouri<lb/>
LOU CLI UMONS ? CCU ??? L??<lb/>
Pirate Head Coach Ed Emory is still enjoying ECU's victory over Missouri Saturday, but he's got the<lb/>
corner of his eye resting on this week's opponent?Southwestern Louisiana.<lb/>
"The Ragin' Cajuns Emory<lb/>
said, "they've been a thorn in my<lb/>
side. You know, they beat me here<lb/>
in my first season when we were<lb/>
supposed to win.<lb/>
Then, back in 1977, they also<lb/>
upset East Carolina<lb/>
Both of those games were<lb/>
-?? mm tl rW9<lb/>
i r ? i<lb/>
2SFi<lb/>
Home Win Ag<lb/>
played in Greenville, and the<lb/>
Pirates would indeed like a chance<lb/>
to finally knock off the Cajuns on<lb/>
ECU's home turf.<lb/>
In 1980, the Pirates fumbled<lb/>
five times in the second half and<lb/>
lost to USL 27-21.<lb/>
Despite USL's 0-3 record,<lb/>
Emory and the Pirates aren't tak-<lb/>
ing the Cajuns lightly. "They do<lb/>
have fine personnel, and vou can<lb/>
expect the Ragin' Cajuns to be<lb/>
ragin' when they come to Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium Saturday.<lb/>
"We don't have any teams that<lb/>
are breathers. We're not the type<lb/>
of team that can just show up and<lb/>
e ect to win<lb/>
At Missouri, Emory believes<lb/>
the Pirates out-communicated the<lb/>
Tigers and will have to do the<lb/>
same against USL.<lb/>
"We've got to be sound on<lb/>
communication he said. "If<lb/>
we're not ready mentally and<lb/>
physically, they're (USL) good<lb/>
enough to beat you<lb/>
The Cajuns, however, haven't<lb/>
been able to beat their first three<lb/>
opponents this year. USL fell on<lb/>
the road to Northeast Louisiana<lb/>
(31-6), at home to Tennessee-<lb/>
Chattanooga (38-14) and on the<lb/>
road to Rice (22-21) two weeks<lb/>
ago.<lb/>
The Cajuns had an open r.ate<lb/>
last weekend. "They have had<lb/>
two weeks to prepare for us with<lb/>
an open date last weekend<lb/>
Emory said. "This is an advan-<lb/>
tage for them, both is getting<lb/>
ready for East Carolina, but also<lb/>
in working out some things that<lb/>
may not have gone the way they<lb/>
wanted them to in the first three<lb/>
games. I fully expect a real tough<lb/>
game Saturday with Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana<lb/>
The four-game series between<lb/>
ECU and USL is 2-2. Neither<lb/>
team has won a game in the series<lb/>
on its home field. The Pirates<lb/>
have won 38-9 and 35-31 in<lb/>
Lafayette, while the Cajuns have<lb/>
won 9-2 and 27-21 in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium.<lb/>
Emory said he will never forget<lb/>
his first meeting with the Cajuns<lb/>
in 1980. "We had just beat Duke,<lb/>
and we were ahead 7-6 at<lb/>
Cajuns<lb/>
halftime, and in tne third quarter,<lb/>
we came out and fumbled five<lb/>
times inside the 20-yard line They<lb/>
go ahead 27-7, and we storm back<lb/>
27-21. We scored again, but it was<lb/>
called back.<lb/>
"After that game, it was a long<lb/>
year. We lost some confidence<lb/>
then<lb/>
Emory suspects the Cajuns are<lb/>
disappointed with their record<lb/>
and should come into Greenville<lb/>
more hungry than ever.<lb/>
"They thought they'd be 9-2<lb/>
with a great chance to go to a<lb/>
bowl game he said. "People<lb/>
here and the students will be very<lb/>
surprised with the caliber of foot-<lb/>
ball team they've got. We are real-<lb/>
lv concerned<lb/>
Shy Stephens Looking Good<lb/>
several black schools, including<lb/>
LOU COMMONS ?<lb/>
ECU's John Robertson (79), Reggie Branch (32) and Jimmy<lb/>
Walden (36) celebrate after a good offensive play against the<lb/>
Missouri Tigers Saturday.<lb/>
aN???ASANTS origin.lly hails from<lb/>
Whiteville?a small town just a<lb/>
When ECU defensive tackle few hours down the road. He has<lb/>
Hal Stephens was asked to attend six brothers and sisters. Although<lb/>
Tuesday's press conference for in- all of the Stephens boys are<lb/>
terviews, Head Coach Ed Emory athletic, Hal is the first to play on<lb/>
was a little shocked. a collegiate level.<lb/>
"I hope you guys (reporters) Stephens was recruited by<lb/>
can get Hal to talkhe said. "I've<lb/>
been coaching Hal for four years,<lb/>
and he still won't talk to me<lb/>
Stephens smiled?slightly,<lb/>
while his coach continued. "Now<lb/>
don't let this guy fool you he<lb/>
said. "He'll use all the blood and<lb/>
sweat he has to get you. If he<lb/>
touches you, you won't get away<lb/>
from him<lb/>
Stephens, known as somewhat<lb/>
of an introvert is one of the<lb/>
senior defensive players on the '83<lb/>
squad. Last week, the defense<lb/>
played its most outstanding game<lb/>
yet against hard-hitting Missouri.<lb/>
According to Stephens, the<lb/>
seniors want to go out in style.<lb/>
"This is the first recruiting<lb/>
class he said. "We want to go<lb/>
out looking good<lb/>
6-4, 235-pound Stephens<lb/>
Winston Salem State. His coacn,<lb/>
Shelton Chesson, encouraged him<lb/>
to take a look at ECU?his alma<lb/>
mater.<lb/>
Stephens did and came as a<lb/>
walk-on in 1980. During that<lb/>
year, he had 55 tackles to finish<lb/>
sixth on the team.<lb/>
In 1981, Stephens was seventh<lb/>
on the defense list as a sophomore<lb/>
with 43 tackles, including two for<lb/>
minus 22 yards.<lb/>
In 1982, this year's all-star can-<lb/>
didate was the team's fifth leading<lb/>
tackier with 58 tackles.<lb/>
Stephens, an industrial<lb/>
technology major, said the<lb/>
Missouri win was one of the big-<lb/>
gest thrills of his career<lb/>
"It proved that we're not a<lb/>
fluke team he said. "We knew<lb/>
we could play with them<lb/>
Coming from the southeastern<lb/>
part of the state, Stephens grew<lb/>
up hearing about Tar Heel fever<lb/>
and Wolf pack pride.<lb/>
That's why a win at N.C. State<lb/>
a few weeks ago had special mean-<lb/>
Hal Stephens<lb/>
ECU Swim Team Gears Up For Fall<lb/>
Season With Annual Pentathlon Races<lb/>
defense's play. "We played well<lb/>
enough to win, but we didn't do<lb/>
anything exceptional he said.<lb/>
"Last year, we really thought<lb/>
we had them. This year we went in<lb/>
with the attitude that we're gonna<lb/>
win no matter what The Pirates<lb/>
lost to the Wolfpack. 33-26 last<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Many players were hoping for a<lb/>
national ranking after beating<lb/>
Missouri, but Stephens isn't too<lb/>
concerned about that. "I know<lb/>
our team is just as good as<lb/>
anybody's he said. "It (rank-<lb/>
ing) doesn't really matter that<lb/>
much to me<lb/>
What does matter to Stephens is<lb/>
winning each game at a time.<lb/>
When asked how he gets psyched<lb/>
up before playing each Saturday,<lb/>
Stephens' response wasn't too<lb/>
surprising.<lb/>
"I don't like to talk to<lb/>
anybody he said. "I don't<lb/>
usually strike up a conversation<lb/>
ing for Stephens. He wasn't too when it's time to play. I want to<lb/>
thrilled, however, with the concentrate and be ready<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU swim team will gear<lb/>
up for the fall season this Thurs-<lb/>
day when all the swimmers com-<lb/>
pete against each other in the an-<lb/>
nual pentathlon.<lb/>
Each swimmer will compete in<lb/>
the 100-meter freestyle,<lb/>
breaststroke, butterfly and<lb/>
backstroke, as well as the<lb/>
200-meter individual medly event.<lb/>
Scoring will be based on how<lb/>
many tenths of a second the in-<lb/>
dividual's time is off the current<lb/>
ECU varsity record.<lb/>
"The pentathlon has become<lb/>
somewhat of a tradition Coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe said. "It's an excellent<lb/>
way of determining the best<lb/>
overall swimmer on the team,<lb/>
because each person has to swim<lb/>
every event regardless of what<lb/>
stroke they specialize in<lb/>
Kobe said the meet will also<lb/>
determine who is in the best<lb/>
shape. "Each swimmer will only<lb/>
get a 20-minute break between<lb/>
events, so we'll be able to see<lb/>
whose times drop off near the<lb/>
end<lb/>
The Pirates' season is only a<lb/>
month away, and Kobe will know<lb/>
after the pentahion if his team is<lb/>
ready for what he calls the<lb/>
toughest schedule in ECU history.<lb/>
The Bucs face such teams as<lb/>
North Carolina, N.C. State,<lb/>
Johns Hopkins, South Florida<lb/>
and the Naval Academy, as the<lb/>
men compete in 12 dual meets and<lb/>
the women in 13.<lb/>
Leading the men's team will be<lb/>
last year's most valuable swim-<lb/>
mer, freestyler Chris Pitelli. "We<lb/>
expect Chris to close in on several<lb/>
varsity records this year Kobe<lb/>
said, "as well as make our<lb/>
freestyle relay team one of the<lb/>
best in the country<lb/>
Complimenting Pitelli in the<lb/>
freestyle will be Stranton Smith, a<lb/>
very versatile swimmer who is also<lb/>
strong in the individual medley.<lb/>
Co-Captains Greg Wary and<lb/>
Doug MacMillan will both be<lb/>
dominaing forces in the butterfly.<lb/>
Each are freshman record<lb/>
holders, and MacMillan currently<lb/>
holds the 200-meter varsity mark.<lb/>
Diver Scott Eagle will be a key<lb/>
factor in the point totals as he at-<lb/>
tempts to repeat as an NCAA<lb/>
regional participant.<lb/>
Breaststroker and All-America<lb/>
Joanne Mc Culley will be the main<lb/>
force on the women's team. Kobe<lb/>
expects her to Finish in the top six<lb/>
at the nationals as she vies for All-<lb/>
America status once again.<lb/>
Cindy Newman is the most ver-<lb/>
satile of the women, leading the<lb/>
way in both the freestyle and but-<lb/>
terfly strokes. As a freestyler she<lb/>
is effective in the 50 all the way up<lb/>
to the 500-meters.<lb/>
Corrine Seech is strong as a<lb/>
diver, and is expected to qualify<lb/>
for the nationals for the second<lb/>
consecutive year.<lb/>
Kobe also had an excellent year<lb/>
recruiting, in what he described as<lb/>
"the finest crop of incoming<lb/>
swimmers ever to be assembled at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
"We filled all the spots where<lb/>
we had some problems last year<lb/>
he said, "and I don't see any<lb/>
weaknesses on the men's or<lb/>
women's team for the upcoming<lb/>
season<lb/>
Foremost among the recruits is<lb/>
Chema Larranaga from Lima,<lb/>
Peru. Larranaga holds two Peru-<lb/>
vian national records and was a<lb/>
participant in the 1980 Olympics<lb/>
in Moscow.<lb/>
Also joining the Pirates will be<lb/>
Kevin Hildago from Chester, va.<lb/>
and Caycee Paust from Rich-<lb/>
mond. Both hold times in their<lb/>
events that are better then the cur-<lb/>
rent ECU marks.<lb/>
Diver Lori Miller of Columbus,<lb/>
Pa. will be a fine addition com-<lb/>
plimenting current divers Eagle<lb/>
and Seech. Kobe Describes both<lb/>
as having national potential.<lb/>
Among the 26 new recruits, 16<lb/>
men and 10 women, Kobe also<lb/>
managed to sign iwo YMCA Na-<lb/>
tional Champions and a juinor<lb/>
college All-America.<lb/>
Although the Pirates are going<lb/>
to be strong in every event, Kobe<lb/>
will look for the most out of his<lb/>
frecstylers. "We're solid all the<lb/>
way from the 50 to the 1650-meter<lb/>
events<lb/>
Steven Hollett, a transfer stu-<lb/>
dent from Tennesse who becomes<lb/>
eligible in December, and Stan<lb/>
Williams who returns from a<lb/>
year's stay in Texas are two addi-<lb/>
tional swimmers that will join the<lb/>
freestyle corps in the fall.<lb/>
Kobe has high expectations for<lb/>
the upcoming year aad after the<lb/>
pentathalon, the Pirates should be<lb/>
as ready as ever to dive into the<lb/>
1983-84 season.<lb/>
Tbe ECU swim team<lb/>
pentathlon oa<lb/>
Nation's<lb/>
Mistake-<lb/>
By RANDY MEW<lb/>
The ECU soccer<lb/>
team went up against<lb/>
the best colle<lb/>
team in the r.ation<lb/>
Wednesday, losing to<lb/>
L'NC-Greensboro<lb/>
6-1.<lb/>
Although<lb/>
Pirates only mar <lb/>
one goal, it -a;<lb/>
the second time -<lb/>
year tha. the Spa-<lb/>
have been sc<lb/>
upon.<lb/>
In 13 games. <lb/>
which ha.e -<lb/>
shutouts, UNC-C<lb/>
outscored its<lb/>
ponents 69-1.<lb/>
The Spanar<lb/>
the defer, i .<lb/>
tiona! charr<lb/>
the top-ranked team<lb/>
in NCAA D<lb/>
III The <lb/>
the or<lb/>
untied record<lb/>
lege soccer a<lb/>
When sumrr.<lb/>
the game. ECU -<lb/>
coach Robbie C<lb/>
simplv sa.c: the Pii<lb/>
e:e beaten - ? i<lb/>
ter ream.<lb/>
UNC-C<lb/>
Rod ar.sk. -<lb/>
 <lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
i .<lb/>
mil<lb/>
- a<lb/>
UVI<lb/>
VERN GOSI<lb/>
Oct. 19,1<lb/>
At<lb/>
Tickets Avaiiai<lb/>
Extension acrosj<lb/>
from 8:30- 1:00PM<lb/>
Sam's Lock<lb/>
And Key Shoppe<lb/>
7570075<lb/>
1804 Dickinsen A i e<lb/>
(across from Pepsi<lb/>
Plant)<lb/>
(24 Hours,<lb/>
Complete<lb/>
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(she was formerly<lb/>
with Forrest L ock<lb/>
and key for 9 em<lb/>
Pre-<lb/>
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are<lb/>
ECU vs<lb/>
from<lb/>
in Universir<lb/>
parkii<lb/>
Chkken. ste. sla?<lb/>
t i ? ? <lb/>
-tmm mm?waWEWl<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
WE'RE<lb/>
208<lb/>
;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057580_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 6. 1983<lb/>
?A<lb/>
lou ci.e?Jos - tcu ro Lab<lb/>
oun salurda, but he's got the<lb/>
iana.<lb/>
Cajuns<lb/>
and in the third quarter,<lb/>
and fumbled five<lb/>
2 ard line. The<lb/>
d we storm back<lb/>
red again, but it was<lb/>
game, it was a long<lb/>
st some confidence<lb/>
ispects the Cajuns are<lb/>
:ed with their record<lb/>
d come into Greenville<lb/>
gi i than ever.<lb/>
ight they'd be 9-2<lb/>
 chance to go to a<lb/>
he said. "People<lb/>
jents will be very<lb/>
 n the caliber of foot-<lb/>
e got. We are real-<lb/>
?ned<lb/>
Good<lb/>
? pla We played well<lb/>
but we didn't do<lb/>
rial he said.<lb/>
 we really thought<lb/>
This year we went in<lb/>
'titude that we're gonna<lb/>
ter what The Pirates<lb/>
V 'pack, 33-26 last<lb/>
a ere hoping for a<lb/>
inking after beating<lb/>
it Stephens isn't too<lb/>
Kerned about that. "I know<lb/>
team is just as good as<lb/>
he said. "It (rank-<lb/>
doesrTt really matter that<lb/>
ich to me<lb/>
What does matter to Stephens is<lb/>
winning each game at a time.<lb/>
When asked how he gets psyched<lb/>
?re playing each Saturday,<lb/>
response wasn't too<lb/>
r ing.<lb/>
don't like to talk to<lb/>
iybod he said. "I don't<lb/>
sually strike up a conversation<lb/>
-hen it's time to play. I want to<lb/>
:oncentrate and be ready<lb/>
Nation 9s Best Puts It To<lb/>
Mistake-Riddled Pirates<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU soccer<lb/>
team went up against<lb/>
the best collegiate<lb/>
team in the nation<lb/>
Wednesday, losing to<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro,<lb/>
6-1.<lb/>
Although the<lb/>
Pirates only managed<lb/>
one goal, it was just<lb/>
the second time this<lb/>
year that the Spartans<lb/>
have been scored<lb/>
upon.<lb/>
In 13 games, 12 of<lb/>
which have been<lb/>
shutouts, UNC-G has<lb/>
outscored its op-<lb/>
ponents 69-1.<lb/>
The Spartans are<lb/>
the defending na-<lb/>
tional champions, and<lb/>
the top-ranked team<lb/>
in NCAA Division<lb/>
III. They also have<lb/>
the only unbeaten,<lb/>
untied record in col-<lb/>
lege soccer at 13-0.<lb/>
When summarizing<lb/>
the game, ECU head<lb/>
coach Robbie Church<lb/>
simply said the Pirates<lb/>
were beaten by a bet-<lb/>
ter team.<lb/>
UNC-G's Eddie<lb/>
Rodwanski was the<lb/>
star of the game, scor-<lb/>
ing a career-high three<lb/>
goals. He scored his<lb/>
first just seven<lb/>
minutes into the<lb/>
game, giving the Spar-<lb/>
tans the quick upper-<lb/>
hand.<lb/>
Teammate Brian<lb/>
Japp quickly followed<lb/>
suit, giving UNC-G a<lb/>
comfortable two-goal<lb/>
lead. The Pirates<lb/>
could have been<lb/>
counted out of the<lb/>
game at this point,<lb/>
but ECU'S Bill Mer-<lb/>
win scored an<lb/>
unassisted goal just<lb/>
before the half to put<lb/>
ECU within striking<lb/>
distance.<lb/>
Church felt the<lb/>
Pirates were in the<lb/>
game at the half, but<lb/>
said a lot of mistakes<lb/>
enabled the Spartans<lb/>
to turn the game into<lb/>
a rout.<lb/>
"Our goalie let<lb/>
several balls get by<lb/>
him that he shouldn't<lb/>
have Church said,<lb/>
"and we had a lot of<lb/>
freshmen go into the<lb/>
game and not do what<lb/>
thev were suppposed<lb/>
to "<lb/>
Japp opened the se-<lb/>
aaawMaaai<lb/>
cond period with his<lb/>
second goal, just 65<lb/>
seconds into the half.<lb/>
The Spartans then<lb/>
began to turn it on as<lb/>
Rodwanski scored<lb/>
twice and Mike<lb/>
Sweeney once, as<lb/>
UNC-G scored their<lb/>
three final goals<lb/>
within a seven-minute<lb/>
period midway<lb/>
through the final half.<lb/>
Spartan goalie Tim<lb/>
Boer only had to<lb/>
make three saves the<lb/>
entire half, as the<lb/>
Pirates were outshot<lb/>
15-6 for the game.<lb/>
The Pirates have a<lb/>
week off before they<lb/>
travel to UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington for their<lb/>
next match, and<lb/>
Church hopes to get a<lb/>
lot accomplished in(<lb/>
that time.<lb/>
"We're going to<lb/>
concentrate on tackl-<lb/>
ing and playing<lb/>
tighter defense he<lb/>
said. "The week off I<lb/>
should help us to<lb/>
regroup, and get<lb/>
everybody to the<lb/>
point where they're<lb/>
playing like a team!<lb/>
again<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Sez<lb/>
Pirate freshman Kevin Bigiey goes up against an earlier opponent this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Almost Anything<lb/>
Goes is gone, and the<lb/>
results are in. The<lb/>
overall winners were a<lb/>
team called the Little<lb/>
Rascals, and they<lb/>
were thrilled with<lb/>
their seemingly unex-<lb/>
pected victory.<lb/>
This was the ninth<lb/>
annual Almost<lb/>
Anything Goes, and it<lb/>
was again co-<lb/>
sponsored by<lb/>
Budweiser and Jef-<lb/>
frey's Beer and Wine<lb/>
There were six events<lb/>
in the competition,<lb/>
which involved<lb/>
everything from trac-<lb/>
tor tire inner tubes to<lb/>
shin guards for<lb/>
hockey. A tiebreaker<lb/>
of a tug of war across<lb/>
the creek had been an-<lb/>
ticipated, but the Lit-<lb/>
tle Rascals managed<lb/>
to pull out their<lb/>
24-point<lb/>
all. 52<lb/>
ticipated.<lb/>
victory. In<lb/>
teams par-<lb/>
Intramurais is also<lb/>
offering several events<lb/>
this weekend, in-<lb/>
cluding the beginning<lb/>
of several plavoffs in<lb/>
intramural sports.<lb/>
In addition to the<lb/>
Pirates' home foot-<lb/>
ball game this<lb/>
weekend, the Irates<lb/>
Frisbee Club will be<lb/>
sponsoring a match<lb/>
with UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro on Satur-<lb/>
day and Sunday. The<lb/>
matches are scheduled<lb/>
to begin at high noon,<lb/>
so if you are not into<lb/>
football, check out<lb/>
the Irate action.<lb/>
Next week is a big<lb/>
week for registration;<lb/>
four events will be<lb/>
registering students<lb/>
and faculty par-<lb/>
ticipants.<lb/>
One-on-one basket-<lb/>
ball, soccer and bowl-<lb/>
ing registration will be<lb/>
held on October 11<lb/>
and 12 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym Team capta<lb/>
meetings are schedul-<lb/>
ed for the 24th,<lb/>
the times and places<lb/>
will be available a<lb/>
registration. Racquet-<lb/>
ball singles registra-<lb/>
tion will be held Oc-<lb/>
tober 11-19<lb/>
Memorial Gvrr <lb/>
a partic pants<lb/>
meeting oched.e :<lb/>
October 25<lb/>
If ou need more<lb/>
information n an) ol<lb/>
these marra. <lb/>
es, fee: free<lb/>
come b the IM-Rec<lb/>
ffices weel.<lb/>
from 8 til 5<lb/>
LIVE IN CONCERT<lb/>
VERN GOSDIN and MEl McDANIEL<lb/>
Oct. 19,1983 7:00pm and 9:30pm<lb/>
At the Moose Lodge<lb/>
Tickets Available: Furniture World, 10th St.<lb/>
Extension across from Highway Patrol Station<lb/>
from 8:30-1:00PM Mon-Sat. WARWICK PROD. INC.<lb/>
?e-<lb/>
COMMERC1AL<lb/>
ART STUDENTS<lb/>
20 off<lb/>
rtek Camera<lb/>
Films, Stats, Screens<lb/>
(ask for discount card)<lb/>
OPEN 12 HOURS<lb/>
Monday - Thursday<lb/>
Friday 9-7 Saturday 9-2<lb/>
6 GEORGETOWN SHOPS<lb/>
JUNIORS AND SENIORS IARN OVR $1000.00 Pf R MONTH<lb/>
you are<lb/>
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Junior ad se-<lb/>
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hysics, chemistry or e n g  ?  - ? - . - -<lb/>
r, earn over $1000.00 per   - -<lb/>
?e3rs5e's I nc udedl The Navy's "? POC<lb/>
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transcripts to:<lb/>
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1001 Niviho Dr. Raleigh. NC lt<lb/>
or call 1-S00-662-T231 ?am-3pm. MON ? THl RS<lb/>
Sam's Lock<lb/>
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757-0075<lb/>
1804 Diclcinsen A ve.<lb/>
(across from Pepsi<lb/>
Plant)<lb/>
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Complete<lb/>
Friendly Service<lb/>
(she was formerly<lb/>
with Forrest Lock<lb/>
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COMPUTE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
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610 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
7S-Jt23 - 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA 3HEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Houl Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
HELL<lb/>
Pre-Game Bar-B-Q<lb/>
Abram's &amp; ZBT<lb/>
are holding a bar-b-q<lb/>
before the<lb/>
ECU vs S.W. Louisiana game<lb/>
Oct. 8<lb/>
from 11:00am to 1:00pm<lb/>
in University Professional Center<lb/>
parking lot on 10th St.<lb/>
Items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sept.<lb/>
October 8, 1983<lb/>
OPEN 21 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM<lb/>
POL tCV<lb/>
Eacf of meseadver<lb/>
tisec items is re<lb/>
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savings or a raif'<lb/>
cnectr wnicn wilt er<lb/>
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me aavertisea item<lb/>
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once witftm $C aavs<lb/>
Limit one manufac<lb/>
turers coupon per<lb/>
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WISE<lb/>
PLAIN RIDCIES<lb/>
Potato<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
7-Oz.<lb/>
Chicken, stew, slaw, Bar-b-q, hushpuppies, and lead las.<lb/>
S3.75 per plate<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
THEATER A<lb/>
MOVIES<lb/>
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WE'RE OPEN LATE!<lb/>
y S:ihvi .?1 rlt wmr Uilc nivht fun I r one of i<lb/>
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. ? .i i.?: ,oi r nich We're open til! 2 ')?) .)<lb/>
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DIET PEPSI, PEPSI FREE,<lb/>
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cola<lb/>
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Salad Dressing<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
JENOS<lb/>
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PREMIUM<lb/>
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$25<lb/>
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KROCER<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
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KROCER 2 SKIM OR<lb/>
Homogenized<lb/>
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Ground<lb/>
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IN STORE BAKED<lb/>
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Baked Ham<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057580_0010"/><lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 6.<lb/>
1983<lb/>
1<lb/>
ACC Slides Past Pirates<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU men's<lb/>
tennis team came as<lb/>
close as they could to<lb/>
upsetting nationally<lb/>
ranked Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College<lb/>
Tuesday, losing the<lb/>
match 5-4.<lb/>
The Pirates were<lb/>
without their top two<lb/>
players, as number<lb/>
one seed Galen Treble<lb/>
was sidelined with an<lb/>
ankle injury, and Paul<lb/>
Owen was unable to<lb/>
make the match.<lb/>
"All the players<lb/>
had to move up two<lb/>
places, but I was very<lb/>
pleased with our per-<lb/>
formance under the<lb/>
circumstances<lb/>
Coach Pat Sherman<lb/>
said. "Dan LaMont,<lb/>
David Creech and Bill<lb/>
O'Donnell played ex-<lb/>
ceptionally well.<lb/>
"The fine play of<lb/>
our team was a great<lb/>
credit to the depth we<lb/>
have on this very<lb/>
young team Sher-<lb/>
man added.<lb/>
The Pirates will be<lb/>
in action again this<lb/>
weekend when they<lb/>
compete in the Camp-<lb/>
bell Invitational Ten-<lb/>
nis Tournament in<lb/>
Buies Creek.<lb/>
Results:<lb/>
In singles, Thomas<lb/>
Line (ACC) def.<lb/>
Doug Otto 6-1, 6-3;<lb/>
Chris Erikson (ACC)<lb/>
def. O'Donnell 7-5,<lb/>
2-6, 6-2; Creech<lb/>
(ECU) def. Mike Yar-<lb/>
borough 6-4, 6-2;<lb/>
John Maples (ACC)<lb/>
def. David Turner<lb/>
6-2, 6-4; Chuck Burns<lb/>
(ACC) def. Greg<lb/>
Loyd 6-3, 6-1; Dan<lb/>
LaMont (ECU) def.<lb/>
Greg Smith 2-6, 6-4,<lb/>
6-0.<lb/>
In doubles, Line-<lb/>
Erikson (ACC) def.<lb/>
Owen-O'Donnell 6-2,<lb/>
6-4; Otto-Creech<lb/>
(ECU) def. Maples-<lb/>
Yarborough 6-3, 6-7,<lb/>
6-4; Turner-Loyd<lb/>
(ECU) def. Burns-<lb/>
Smith.<lb/>
Florida Under NCAA Watch<lb/>
GAINESVILLE,<lb/>
Fla. (UPI) ? Talk of<lb/>
Florida's first-ever<lb/>
Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference title has<lb/>
drowned out rumbl-<lb/>
ings of an ongoing<lb/>
NCAA investigation<lb/>
into alleged wrongdo-<lb/>
ing in the Gators'<lb/>
athletic department.<lb/>
Florida is rated<lb/>
sixth in this week's<lb/>
United Press Interna-<lb/>
tional Board of<lb/>
Coaches poll as the<lb/>
Gators continue to<lb/>
rise despite reports<lb/>
that the NCAA will<lb/>
levy a punishment of<lb/>
probation later this<lb/>
year for a series of in-<lb/>
fractions.<lb/>
But Florida Coach<lb/>
Charley Pell says he's<lb/>
more concerned with<lb/>
this weekend's oppo-<lb/>
nent ? Vanderbilt ?<lb/>
than any polls or in-<lb/>
vestigations.<lb/>
As for Gator<lb/>
players, they've<lb/>
previously dismissed<lb/>
any concern over the<lb/>
NCAA probe. Pell<lb/>
also believes his team<lb/>
is not starry-eyed over<lb/>
their lofty status in<lb/>
the rankings.<lb/>
Florida already has<lb/>
passed two major<lb/>
SEC road tests ?<lb/>
wins over Mississippi<lb/>
State and Louisiana<lb/>
State ? and op-<lb/>
ponents such as Van-<lb/>
dy Coach George<lb/>
Maclntyre are heap-<lb/>
ing praise all over the<lb/>
Gators.<lb/>
"Florida is the<lb/>
most talented team in<lb/>
the SEC and is<lb/>
definitely playing like<lb/>
it plans to win the<lb/>
conference champion-<lb/>
ship said Macln-<lb/>
tyre. "The Gators are<lb/>
an excellent group<lb/>
Pell dismisses such<lb/>
adulation and says<lb/>
he's got problems.<lb/>
Knee injuries have<lb/>
claimed both of<lb/>
Florida's starting<lb/>
wide receivers ?<lb/>
Dwayne Dixon and<lb/>
Gary Rolle. Pell also<lb/>
says strong-armed<lb/>
Commodore quarter-<lb/>
back Kurt Page<lb/>
presents a major pro-<lb/>
blem for the Gator<lb/>
defensive secondary,<lb/>
which has been stung<lb/>
for nearly 200 yards a<lb/>
game so far this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"Page sees the<lb/>
whole Field very well<lb/>
and they have an<lb/>
outstanding and ver-<lb/>
satile passing attack<lb/>
Pell said. "He's com-<lb/>
parable to Miami's<lb/>
Bernie Kosar but<lb/>
more experienced and<lb/>
he presents our<lb/>
defense with a big<lb/>
challenge in the air<lb/>
The ECU<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
LOU CLBMMOM1 ? BCU<lb/>
's tennis team is playing at Peace College today and will take on N.C. State at home Monday at 3<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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mmm<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
Lifht Ultlnit Towmamant tfcU<lb/>
WHWH at Coilaaa Hill Drlva.<lb/>
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FOR SALE: lttl Kawasaki. 175<lb/>
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7S4M attar 1: ? p.m.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
HAFFY BIRTHDAY Sldnay! I<lb/>
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I'M OOINO TO<lb/>
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LEOAL HASSLESB Call<lb/>
Howard J. Cummin, attorney<lb/>
ar Law. H9 chanp far initial<lb/>
consultation for ECU Students<lb/>
Call 71<lb/>
LOWEST TYFINO RATES an<lb/>
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matlcai corrections 35S-4744<lb/>
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FROFESSIONAL TYFINO.<lb/>
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ANYONE HAVINO INFORMA-<lb/>
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IMPORTANT<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity<lb/>
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Today at 5:00<lb/>
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WHEN: Monday, Oct. 10 at 6:00<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057580_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>