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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057592_0001"/>
OHie lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.S?Nor<lb/>
Tuesday, November 22,1983<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages,<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Committee Says No To December Ceremony<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
The ECU Commencement<lb/>
Committee, chaired by Handicap-<lb/>
ped Services Coordinator C.C.<lb/>
Rowe, examined the possibility of<lb/>
a mid-year commencement during<lb/>
the 1984-85<lb/>
school year,<lb/>
and last<lb/>
month recom-<lb/>
mended to<lb/>
Chancellor<lb/>
John M.<lb/>
Howell that<lb/>
ECU not hold<lb/>
a graduation<lb/>
ceremony in<lb/>
December<lb/>
unless several<lb/>
problems can be overcome.<lb/>
According to statistics from the<lb/>
Registrar's Office, approximately<lb/>
50 percent of ECU graduates<lb/>
Nuclear War<lb/>
Movie Boosts<lb/>
ABC Ratings<lb/>
(UPI) ? ABC Research said<lb/>
Monday an estimated 100 million<lb/>
Americans watched the network's<lb/>
nuclear war movie The Day After,<lb/>
according to the overnight Nielsen<lb/>
Ratings from six of the nation's<lb/>
largest TV markets.<lb/>
ABC called the viewing rate ex-<lb/>
ceptional and predicted Day<lb/>
After would be the highest rated<lb/>
movie ever to air on network<lb/>
television but in February, more<lb/>
viewers watched the last episode<lb/>
of the CBS series "M?ASH<lb/>
National ratings are not releas-<lb/>
ed by the A.C. Nielsen Company<lb/>
until Tuesday, but ABC said an<lb/>
average of the overnight figures<lb/>
for the six markets gave The Day-<lb/>
After a 52.2 rating with a 68 per-<lb/>
cent share of the viewing au-<lb/>
dience.<lb/>
In February of 1983, the last<lb/>
episode of "M?AS? H" had a<lb/>
60.3 rating and a 77 percent share.<lb/>
The Nielsen base includes about<lb/>
83 million households in America<lb/>
and each rating point represents<lb/>
some 838,000 homes ? as oppos-<lb/>
ed to individual viewers.<lb/>
The network's viewership drop-<lb/>
ped off immediately after the<lb/>
movie, during the "Viewpoint"<lb/>
special featuring an interview with<lb/>
si?rrMarv of<lb/>
State George<lb/>
For ECU<lb/>
Students sion of the<lb/>
pih'tMr -? movie mode<lb/>
reactions to rated by ABC<lb/>
The Day newsman Ted<lb/>
After, see ABC said<lb/>
story, page tne special,<lb/>
? which aired<lb/>
 from 10:25<lb/>
p.m. to 11:40<lb/>
p.m. EST and was aimed at put-<lb/>
ting the nuclear armament issue<lb/>
back in perspective after the emo-<lb/>
tion charged movie, had an over-<lb/>
night average rating of 30.4 with a<lb/>
52 percent share of the viewing<lb/>
audience.<lb/>
There was little joy over at<lb/>
NBC, where the first part of its<lb/>
three part miniseries "Kennedy"<lb/>
ran head on against the ABC<lb/>
"media event<lb/>
In the nation's three major<lb/>
television markets 'Kennedy"<lb/>
starring Martin Sheen and Bar-<lb/>
bara Blair did as follows: New<lb/>
York, 11 rating with a 14 percent<lb/>
share of the viewing audience;<lb/>
Chicago, 11.7 rating, 14 share,<lb/>
and Los Angeles, 9.4 rating and a<lb/>
13 share.<lb/>
The second and third parts of<lb/>
"Kennedy air Tuesday and<lb/>
Wednesday, with the assassina-<lb/>
tion scene occurring at the end of<lb/>
the film, on the 20th anniversary<lb/>
of the shooting of the president.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment6<lb/>
Sports9<lb/>
10<lb/>
? Tne 194 Phi Kappa Phi<lb/>
SypiaJMi to scftedaled for<lb/>
Feoraary 2?-24. See story,<lb/>
3.<lb/>
complete their schooling during<lb/>
the summer and fall semesters.<lb/>
Weighing the pros and cons of<lb/>
the December ceremony, ECU<lb/>
contacted almost a dozen univer-<lb/>
sities, including Appalachian<lb/>
State, Florida State University,<lb/>
the University of Georgia, UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill, UNC-Charlotte,<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, and Virginia<lb/>
Commonwealth. Of these, only<lb/>
FSU holds a mid-year commence-<lb/>
ment. The school established the<lb/>
commencement a few years ago<lb/>
and plans to continue it because it<lb/>
has been well received by<lb/>
graduates and faculty.<lb/>
ECU Commencement is<lb/>
scheduled in Ficklin Stadium next<lb/>
May. However, in the event of<lb/>
foul weather, commencement<lb/>
must be moved to Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum, which safely holds only<lb/>
6,800 people. This limits the<lb/>
number of guests each graduate<lb/>
can invite. A December com-<lb/>
mencement would alleviate the at-<lb/>
tendance problem, and both<lb/>
ceremonies could be held in<lb/>
Minges since there would be fewer<lb/>
graduates. Also, graduates would<lb/>
not be limited in the number of<lb/>
guests they could invite.<lb/>
A mid-year commencement<lb/>
could cause cost increases of ap-<lb/>
proximately $7,066.87, according<lb/>
to a study done by the Com-<lb/>
mencement Committee. Rowe<lb/>
said the $15 fee each graduate<lb/>
pays "barely" covers expenses.<lb/>
The committee predicted<lb/>
students and faculty members<lb/>
who have Christmas plans will be<lb/>
anxious to leave school after final<lb/>
exams, not wanting to shorten<lb/>
Christmas break for the<lb/>
ceremony. Herbert L. Carter,<lb/>
chairman of the instrumental<lb/>
department in the School of<lb/>
Music, said he didn't think he<lb/>
could depend on orchestra<lb/>
members remaining on campus to<lb/>
play at the graduation service.<lb/>
The commencement committee<lb/>
surveyed 700 randomly selected<lb/>
1981 graduates and discovered<lb/>
that 64 percent of the summer and<lb/>
fall semester graduates would like<lb/>
to have a December commence-<lb/>
ment. This data was based on 107<lb/>
of the returned, usable question-<lb/>
naires.<lb/>
Because of the questionable<lb/>
validity of the 1981 Commence-<lb/>
ment Survey, the Commencement<lb/>
Committee suggested that present<lb/>
juniors and seniors be allowed to<lb/>
provide input.<lb/>
Mid-Year Commencement Ceremony<lb/>
Academic attire ?<lb/>
Platform party<lb/>
Academic attire ?<lb/>
Graduates<lb/>
Traffic control staff<lb/>
Printing costs<lb/>
Memoranda ? faculty<lb/>
and graduates<lb/>
65 piece orchestra<lb/>
Flowers<lb/>
Total<lb/>
Actual Cost<lb/>
1983<lb/>
$205.92<lb/>
$19,701.76<lb/>
$520<lb/>
$6,384.88<lb/>
$291.43<lb/>
$2,925<lb/>
$187.20<lb/>
$30,216<lb/>
Projected Cost<lb/>
1984-1985<lb/>
$411.84<lb/>
$21,671.94<lb/>
$1,040<lb/>
$7,400<lb/>
$534.88<lb/>
$5,850<lb/>
$374.40<lb/>
$37,283<lb/>
SGA Approves Music School Funding<lb/>
Easor<lb/>
By GREG R1DEOUT<lb/>
Editorial P??r Editor<lb/>
The Student Forum for Musical<lb/>
Organizations received $3,516.50<lb/>
from the Student Government<lb/>
Association Monday night, but<lb/>
not until after a long debate en-<lb/>
sued over whose responsibility it<lb/>
was to fund the group. The money<lb/>
is to cover expenses for two trips<lb/>
that have already occured. The<lb/>
group represents the School of<lb/>
Music and its various music<lb/>
ensembles.<lb/>
The music school, as well as the<lb/>
art school and drama department,<lb/>
traditionally send students to the<lb/>
SGA for additional funding the<lb/>
departments can't get from the<lb/>
university. During the debate, a<lb/>
few SGA members suggested the<lb/>
arouD ask university officials for<lb/>
the $15,053 needed for travel. The<lb/>
group's chairman, Steve<lb/>
Chenault, said School of Music<lb/>
Dean Charles F. Schwarz has ex-<lb/>
hausted all other methods of fun-<lb/>
ding.<lb/>
Chenault said the different<lb/>
ensembles were caught in a<lb/>
catch-22 situation. The SGA ex-<lb/>
pects the group to get funding<lb/>
from the school, and the school<lb/>
tells them to go to the SGA.<lb/>
The first strike against the bill<lb/>
was a non-prejudicial report from<lb/>
the appropriations committee.<lb/>
The committee took the stance<lb/>
because of a guideline which<lb/>
prevents the committee from fun-<lb/>
ding groups for travel. Then, as<lb/>
soon as the bill hit the floor,<lb/>
legislator Jim Ensor offered an<lb/>
amendment to reduce the bill to<lb/>
ECU Economics Minor<lb/>
Offered Next Semester;<lb/>
Major To Come Later<lb/>
By STEPHEN SHERBIN<lb/>
Son Writer<lb/>
An economics minor at ECU<lb/>
was unanimously approved by the<lb/>
Faculty Senate in October, and an<lb/>
economics major is tentatively<lb/>
scheduled for the fall semester of<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
According to Dr. Carson Bays,<lb/>
the coordinator of economics pro-<lb/>
gram in the Department of<lb/>
Sociology, Anthropology and<lb/>
Economics, a student currently<lb/>
has to major in decision sciences<lb/>
with a concentration in economics<lb/>
to get the recognition of an<lb/>
economics degree. The creation of<lb/>
the new degrees is "shifting" of<lb/>
economics from the School of<lb/>
Business to social sciences with<lb/>
sociology and anthropology.<lb/>
Bays said the economics pro-<lb/>
gram will include "analytical and<lb/>
quantitative" courses formerly in<lb/>
the School of Business in addition<lb/>
to eight new courses designed to<lb/>
reinstate a more traditional,<lb/>
theoretical approach to<lb/>
economics.<lb/>
While Bays admitted that "the<lb/>
university is sensitive to any<lb/>
change he said he foresees no<lb/>
problems with the new program.<lb/>
Bays also complimented the deci-<lb/>
sion sciences department, under<lb/>
Dr. Louis H. Zincone, with being<lb/>
"extremely cooperative and very<lb/>
helpful<lb/>
Eight new courses added to the<lb/>
economics curriculum will be<lb/>
available in January. They include<lb/>
intermediate economics,<lb/>
econometrics, money and bank-<lb/>
ing, antitrust and regulations,<lb/>
Bays<lb/>
labor economics, industrial<lb/>
organizations, international trade<lb/>
and business cycles and<lb/>
forecasting.<lb/>
The qualifications for the new<lb/>
minor, also available in January,<lb/>
will require twenty-four credit<lb/>
hours with twelve credit hours of<lb/>
specified courses.<lb/>
Still in the planning stage, the<lb/>
economics major will probably<lb/>
allow flexibility between a more<lb/>
mathematically-aimed bachelor of<lb/>
sciences degree and a more<lb/>
generalized, theoretical bachelor<lb/>
of arts degree, Bays said.<lb/>
Bays encourages people to<lb/>
educate themselves in economics<lb/>
"to avoid being deceived by peo-<lb/>
ple who say they are economists<lb/>
Rebel '84 Reception<lb/>
Contest Winners Announced<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 19, the Rebel,<lb/>
ECU's LiteraryArt Magazine<lb/>
held a reception to announce the<lb/>
winners of the 1984 Rebel<lb/>
LiteraryArt contest. The gather-<lb/>
ing, held at the Art and Camera<lb/>
Gallery on Cotanche Street, began<lb/>
at 7 p.m. Winners were announc-<lb/>
ed at approximately 8.p.m.<lb/>
In the prose competition, Cam<lb/>
Sloan won first place with a short<lb/>
story, "Random Scenes Se-<lb/>
cond place went to Jeff Jones for<lb/>
"Captain Danger Jones was<lb/>
also awarded second place in the<lb/>
poetry competition for his work,<lb/>
"Kentucky Grandpa Malynn<lb/>
Linton won first place in poetry<lb/>
with "Passing<lb/>
A third place award was given,<lb/>
without a monetary gift, to<lb/>
Elizabeth Ito Hart and Sherrill<lb/>
Owens.<lb/>
In the visual art competition,<lb/>
George McKim took the best-in-<lb/>
show prize with a drawing,<lb/>
"Vicissitude First place in pain-<lb/>
ting went to Marty Harden, while<lb/>
Leslie Karpinski had the best mix-<lb/>
ed media piece in the competition.<lb/>
First place in the graphics<lb/>
category went to Christopher<lb/>
Palmer, and the best illustration<lb/>
was done by John Boone.<lb/>
Jo Pumphrey took the top prize<lb/>
for drawing with "The Arrival<lb/>
and Gregory Shelnutt won the<lb/>
sculpture competition for the se-<lb/>
cond year in a row with "Tripod<lb/>
Landscape First place in design<lb/>
went to Diane Maisel, and the<lb/>
award in the ceramics category<lb/>
went to James Lux.<lb/>
Prize money was donated by<lb/>
The Attic and Budweiser. Cash<lb/>
awards for 1st place in prose and<lb/>
poetry were $80; second place<lb/>
winners received $25. Prizes for<lb/>
visual art were $20 for first place<lb/>
in each category and $125 for the<lb/>
best-in-show.<lb/>
Judges for prose were Bill<lb/>
Hallberg and Carlyn Ebert of the<lb/>
English department. Poetry<lb/>
judges were Pat Bizzaro and Luke<lb/>
Whisnant. Art school faculty<lb/>
members Tran Gordley, Marilyn<lb/>
Gordley, Michael Ehlbeck and<lb/>
John Satterfield judged the art<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
"There were a lot of good, ex-<lb/>
perienced artists this year, in-<lb/>
cluding some graduate students<lb/>
Ellen Moore, editor of the Rebel,<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"We'd like to thank all the<lb/>
judges and contestants Moore<lb/>
said, "but we're sorry we didn't<lb/>
have more faculty and Media<lb/>
Board support<lb/>
Ellen Moore<lb/>
The winners works will be<lb/>
published in Rebel '84 and sent<lb/>
with the magazine to the 61st an-<lb/>
nual Columbia Scholastic Press<lb/>
Association Contest.<lb/>
Approximately 75 people at-<lb/>
tended the wine and cheeze recep-<lb/>
tion at which the announcements<lb/>
of winners was made. The winn-<lb/>
ing visual art works, as well as<lb/>
other entries judged worthy of<lb/>
note, were on display in The<lb/>
Frame Shop gallery.<lb/>
The Rebel '84 will be published<lb/>
next spring and available to<lb/>
students by the fall semester of<lb/>
1984. It will include many works<lb/>
that did not win awards.<lb/>
$1,000 with the recommendation<lb/>
Chancellor Howell fund the addi-<lb/>
tional $14,053.<lb/>
Ensor's amendment was further<lb/>
amended to $3,516.50 to fund the<lb/>
trips that have already taken<lb/>
place. SGA President Paul Naso<lb/>
then urged the legislature to con-<lb/>
sider the importance of the School<lb/>
of Music and how it enhances the<lb/>
prestige of the students and the<lb/>
university. Legislator David<lb/>
Brown also praised the school and<lb/>
suggested the ensembles asking<lb/>
for money consider performing<lb/>
concerts for the students on<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
The amendment was passed by<lb/>
a 22-9 vote; the bill was then pass-<lb/>
ed by consent.<lb/>
If the forum is unable to get the<lb/>
rest of the money through the un-<lb/>
viversity, they will have to come<lb/>
back to the SGA for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the money needed.<lb/>
Forum Chairman Chenault said<lb/>
his group had discussed with Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life Elmer<lb/>
Meyer the possibility of a student<lb/>
fee to fund the groups. This<lb/>
method, he said, would assure the<lb/>
groups of the money needed.<lb/>
Meyer said he felt the groups<lb/>
should continue to come to the<lb/>
SGA for their money. He sug-<lb/>
gested alternativemethods be set<lb/>
up to guarantee the music, drama<lb/>
and art groups of the money they<lb/>
need.<lb/>
The SGA, after this appropria-<lb/>
tion, has slightly under $14,000 to<lb/>
spend for the remainder of '83-84<lb/>
academic vear.<lb/>
Gillam Announces<lb/>
Candidacy Monday<lb/>
For Congress Seat<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Saying he will provide "the<lb/>
energy, spirit, compassion and<lb/>
youth to provide new solutions to<lb/>
the problems" of eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, State Representative<lb/>
John Gillam announced his can-<lb/>
didacy Monday for the First<lb/>
District Congressional seat now<lb/>
held by Walter B. Jones.<lb/>
The 37-year-old Democrat<lb/>
made a swing through seven<lb/>
eastern North Carolina cities<lb/>
Monday, stopping in Greenville at<lb/>
noon to kick off his campaign.<lb/>
Gillam, the Sixth House<lb/>
District Representative to the<lb/>
N.C. General Assembly, spoke to<lb/>
a crowd of approximately 100, in-<lb/>
cluding many prominant members<lb/>
of the black community. City<lb/>
Councilman-elect Edward Carter<lb/>
served as moderator, and D.D.<lb/>
Garrett, chairman of the Pitt<lb/>
County NAACP, opened the<lb/>
ceremony with a prayer.<lb/>
Gillam focused on economic<lb/>
and environmental issuses affec-<lb/>
ting the region, pledging to fight<lb/>
"economic recession, unemploy-<lb/>
ment, burdensome taxes,<lb/>
bureaucracy and waste in govern-<lb/>
ment He stressed the need for<lb/>
non-polluting industry in the<lb/>
region and improved public<lb/>
schools with assistance from state<lb/>
and national government.<lb/>
Asked if he supported increased<lb/>
federal aid for schools, Gillam<lb/>
said "We need to look very<lb/>
carefully at how we can improve<lb/>
the educational system for eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Gillam is a<lb/>
former English teacher and has a<lb/>
master's degree in education.<lb/>
Gillam claimed thet "for eight<lb/>
generations my family has framed<lb/>
the lands in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina He promised to find<lb/>
See GIL LAM, Page 5<lb/>
Homeward Bound<lb/>
wilbe<lb/>
at 10 p.m. Moat ECU<lb/>
for tarkey, dreariat aad<lb/>
. . .<lb/>
 - ??????- a s<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22, 1983<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your organization<lb/>
would like to have an item<lb/>
printed In the announcement<lb/>
column, please type it on an an<lb/>
nouncement form ana1 send If to<lb/>
The East Carolinian in care of<lb/>
tte production manager<lb/>
Announcement forms are<lb/>
available at the East Carolinian<lb/>
office in the Publications<lb/>
Building Flyers and handwrlt<lb/>
ten copy on odd sized paper can<lb/>
not be accepted<lb/>
There is no charge tor an<lb/>
nouncements but space is often<lb/>
limited Therefore we cannot<lb/>
guarantee that your announce<lb/>
ment will run as long as you<lb/>
want and suggest that yoc do not<lb/>
rely solely on this column tor<lb/>
publicity<lb/>
The deadline tor an<lb/>
nouncements is 3 p m Monday<lb/>
tor the Tuesday paper and 3<lb/>
p m Wednesday tor the Thurs<lb/>
day paper No announcements<lb/>
received after these deadlines<lb/>
will be pr.nted<lb/>
This space is available to an<lb/>
campus organizations ana<lb/>
departments<lb/>
CORRECTION<lb/>
The Committee on the Status<lb/>
of Minorities headed by Dr Clln<lb/>
ton Downing will hold a meeting<lb/>
Nov ?9 not the l?th as previous<lb/>
ly announced in last weeks<lb/>
paper at 3 00 p m in<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center We<lb/>
would like the student leaders of<lb/>
this campus to come and share<lb/>
their ideas with us Please at<lb/>
teno' <lb/>
CIRCLE K<lb/>
ECU CIRCLE K Club InvitM<lb/>
you to come out and join us this<lb/>
coming and every 1 uesdav night<lb/>
at 7 00 P m m Mendenhali room<lb/>
221 tor fun and socializing Hope<lb/>
to see you there<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
BEST BODY<lb/>
CONTEST RESULTS<lb/>
Congratulations to Jack<lb/>
Ciower who received firs' place<lb/>
teff Cherry for second and Sa!<lb/>
Anello for third We also thank<lb/>
all the contestants who put on an<lb/>
excellent show tor the girls<lb/>
JL<lb/>
<lb/>
INFORMAL<lb/>
RECREATION<lb/>
HOURS<lb/>
All services will follow a nor<lb/>
mal schedule through Tuesday<lb/>
Nov 22 All services will be clos<lb/>
ed Thursday Nov 24 through<lb/>
Sunday Nov 27 Wednesday<lb/>
Nov 23, Memorial Gymnasium<lb/>
Equipment Room. Gymnasium<lb/>
Weight Room Pool will be open<lb/>
following normal schedules.<lb/>
Close at 5 00 p m<lb/>
Minges Coliseum Weight<lb/>
Room and pool will be closed<lb/>
PHI<lb/>
ETA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be a meeting today<lb/>
in Mendenhali room 212 at 5 IS<lb/>
p m Following the meeting we<lb/>
will go to Mr Gatti's for dinner<lb/>
We hope everyone will attend!<lb/>
BEER MUGS<lb/>
Today is your last day to order<lb/>
beer mugs They make great<lb/>
Christmas gifts The cost is only<lb/>
15 00 with 3 tree letters on the<lb/>
front of the mug Call tor details<lb/>
752 7290. 758 8293. or 757 3843<lb/>
ATTENTION<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
There win be a spec Bl<lb/>
general meeting tor all Am<lb/>
bassadors on Wednesday. Nov<lb/>
30 at 5 p m in MenoenhaH Stu<lb/>
dent Center Room 221<lb/>
Members are especially en<lb/>
couraged to attend as this will be<lb/>
our last official meeting of the<lb/>
semester<lb/>
CANDY CANE<lb/>
O'GRAMS<lb/>
Candy cane o grams are com<lb/>
ingll The AOH's are selling<lb/>
giant candy canes to be<lb/>
delivered with your holiday<lb/>
message By a Santa Come by<lb/>
the student Store Nos 30 Dec<lb/>
6th for more informal on<lb/>
PRE SEASON<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
A limited number of Basket<lb/>
ball Officials are needed by the<lb/>
Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services tor Pre<lb/>
Season Basketball Tournament<lb/>
The training clinic will begin<lb/>
Monday Nov 28 at 6 p m in<lb/>
Room 102 Memorial Gym<lb/>
nasium Rules, interpretations<lb/>
and mechanics will be discuss<lb/>
ed Officials will be hired based<lb/>
on experience and practical and<lb/>
written tests Pre Season<lb/>
Basketball Officials Clinic Mon<lb/>
day Nov 28 6 p m Rm 102.<lb/>
Mem Gym.<lb/>
EVERYONE<lb/>
WHO'S ANYONE!<lb/>
ECU Millet will be sponsoring<lb/>
a Chanukah Celebration on<lb/>
Wednesday Nov 30th at 7 30<lb/>
p m at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center located at 501 E 5th St<lb/>
across from Garret Dorm<lb/>
Fina out what the "Festval of<lb/>
Lights is all about! Everyone<lb/>
in welcome Free of charge<lb/>
MALE STRIPPER<lb/>
The pledges of Sigma Nu pre<lb/>
sent the first ever Ladies Lock<lb/>
in a' the Elbo room, Nov 29<lb/>
featuring a professional Male<lb/>
Stripper Ladies will be allowed<lb/>
m at 8 p m to get happy hour<lb/>
prices and to see the STRIP<lb/>
PER Then at 10 p m the men<lb/>
will be let in to get the same hap<lb/>
py hour prices all night Great<lb/>
door prizes will be given out at<lb/>
11 p m Get your advance tickets<lb/>
Irom any Sigma Nu pledge<lb/>
THANKSGIVING<lb/>
STORY<lb/>
It Is Important during the up<lb/>
coming holiday that we not<lb/>
overlook the significance of the<lb/>
original Thanksgiving Day The<lb/>
socialistic communal theories<lb/>
brought from Europe by the<lb/>
Pilgrims settling at Plymouth in<lb/>
1620 resulted In most of them dy<lb/>
ing by starvation Only after the<lb/>
Pilgrims realized that taking the<lb/>
fruits of labor from one In<lb/>
dividual and bestowing those on<lb/>
another diminishes the incentive<lb/>
of both individuals, did their<lb/>
celebration of a bountiful<lb/>
harvest become possible<lb/>
Hopefully we all will tind time<lb/>
to reflect on the blessing we<lb/>
Americans have received as a<lb/>
nation From the ECU College<lb/>
Republicans have a good<lb/>
Thanksgiving!<lb/>
FNIMMEETING<lb/>
There will be an official<lb/>
meeting of all graduate students<lb/>
who are in the Department of<lb/>
Food Nutrition and Institution<lb/>
Management in the School of<lb/>
Home Economics This meeting<lb/>
will be held on Dec 1 at 8:30<lb/>
p m in the Vanlanding Room of<lb/>
the Home Economics building<lb/>
All FNIM graduate students are<lb/>
encouraged to attend.<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The CR swill meet tonight in the<lb/>
Mendenhali Coffee house at 5 30<lb/>
p m Committees will report<lb/>
ACCOUNTING<lb/>
SOCIETY<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
The Accounting Society will<lb/>
hold it s dinner meeting on Mon<lb/>
day Dec 5 at 7 p m at Western<lb/>
Sizznn, 10th St The guest<lb/>
speaker will be Larry Keech,<lb/>
CPA from Pittard and Perry<lb/>
Members and prospective<lb/>
members are invited to attend<lb/>
Sign up sheet is on Accounting<lb/>
Society Bulletin Board<lb/>
ZBTLIL'<lb/>
SISTERS<lb/>
The brothers of ZBT would<lb/>
like to thank the LIT sisters for a<lb/>
great Thanksgiving dinner As<lb/>
you well know, the way to a<lb/>
brother's heart is through his<lb/>
stomach and you reached the<lb/>
heart of every brother. The food<lb/>
was excellent and we appreciate<lb/>
the effort It took to prepare<lb/>
VARIETY SHOW<lb/>
Variety show for the benefit<lb/>
of the Pitt County Foster<lb/>
Childrens Fund Saturday, Dec<lb/>
3, at 7 30 p m In Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium Jenkins Fine Arts<lb/>
Center A $2 00 minimum dona<lb/>
tlon (ticket requests should be<lb/>
made at the circulation desk at<lb/>
Joyner Library)<lb/>
Door Prizes donated by<lb/>
Greenville Area Merchants<lb/>
sponsored by J Y. Joyner<lb/>
Library ECU<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
BETA PHI<lb/>
Help support the Casweii<lb/>
Center in Kinston for mentally<lb/>
retarded by participating in<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi's ticket sale<lb/>
For a 50 cent donation in<lb/>
dividual may win gifts which<lb/>
include: tour large two item plz<lb/>
zas from PTA, two passes for a<lb/>
free week of exercise at<lb/>
Southern Health Spa, one large<lb/>
ECU ceramic mug from the Stu<lb/>
dent Supply Store, and two ECU<lb/>
shirts from the UBE All pro<lb/>
ceeds will benefit the Caswell<lb/>
center Our drawing will be held<lb/>
on our regularly scheduled<lb/>
meeting Dec 1 Thank you for<lb/>
your support in helping the men<lb/>
tally retarded<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS N?me<lb/>
i<lb/>
You may use the form at right <lb/>
or use a separate sheet of j<lb/>
paper if you need more lines. <lb/>
There are 33 units per line, j<lb/>
Each letter, punctuation mark <lb/>
and work space counts as one j<lb/>
unit. Capitalize and hyphenate <lb/>
words properly Leave space j<lb/>
at end of line if word doesn't fit. j<lb/>
No ads will be accepted over <lb/>
the phone. We reserve the right <lb/>
to reject any ad. All ads must ?<lb/>
be prepaid. Enclose 75 cents<lb/>
per line or fraction of a line.<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use<lb/>
capital and lower case letters.<lb/>
Return to the Media Board<lb/>
secretary by 3 p.m. the day<lb/>
before publication.<lb/>
Address<lb/>
CityState<lb/>
No. Lines.<lb/>
.zp.<lb/>
at 73?<lb/>
?Ml.<lb/>
.No<lb/>
S.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I L<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
? I ? ? i t i i I I I I I I I I I I I 1 1 I I I 1 I I I<lb/>
?<lb/>
2r illlZIII<lb/>
ZZZZZ<lb/>
, iI?? i??<lb/>
IH<lb/>
?i. i? ? ? ? ? ? ? ? ?<lb/>
JjjJ-<lb/>
1?4? i<lb/>
1 I M I j 1 M 1 1 1 I I I I 11 M 1 I M I ' ' ? ? ' ? <lb/>
THANK YOU<lb/>
Thanks Pi Kapp's for the fun<lb/>
in the Sun The Tri Sigs<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA'S THE<lb/>
DAY AFTER THE DAY<lb/>
AFTER PARTY<lb/>
Tonight at the Kappa Slg<lb/>
House at 11 00 p m will be the<lb/>
night of the day after the day<lb/>
after party Kappa Sigma has<lb/>
lust deployed 572 pershing and<lb/>
cruise missiles aimed God<lb/>
knows where so your safety<lb/>
should be assured Gas masks,<lb/>
gelger counters and radloac<lb/>
tivegear will be available upon<lb/>
request There won't be any<lb/>
mushroom clouds but there may<lb/>
be some mushrooms So what do<lb/>
you do when under nuclear at<lb/>
tack Pour yourself a kamikaze<lb/>
and tell your girlfriend to bend<lb/>
over you;ll drive her to the<lb/>
fallout shelter<lb/>
THANKS TRI SIGS<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity would<lb/>
like to thank the Sisters and<lb/>
Pledges of Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sorority tor a great social<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
"PI Kapp Day" was a great<lb/>
success. Thanks goes out to<lb/>
everyone for working so hard<lb/>
PUSH (Play Units for the<lb/>
Severly Handicapped) was also<lb/>
another success Any support<lb/>
for this national philanthropy<lb/>
would be appreciated The Pi<lb/>
Kapps hope everyone will have a<lb/>
safe and fun Thanksgiving<lb/>
break.<lb/>
AOirs<lb/>
Hope everyone had tun at the<lb/>
Holiday mn. Just think in one<lb/>
week the whole thing will be<lb/>
repeated at the big R B III Have<lb/>
a great Thanksgiving Rest up<lb/>
and come back ready for a ter<lb/>
rifle end of the semester <lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
Ultimate Tuesdays.<lb/>
Thursday- and Sundays at 3 00<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
Come out and start your<lb/>
Thanksgiving Dreak early ' Join<lb/>
the brothers of Thata Chi frater<lb/>
nlty for a Happy Hour at<lb/>
Pharos Tuesday. Novemoer 22<lb/>
from 8 12pm Don't forget to<lb/>
buy a ticket tor the Theta Chi<lb/>
Kappa Delta Holiday<lb/>
Giveaway! The drawing will be<lb/>
held at the Happy Hour ana you<lb/>
can use your ticket to get reduc<lb/>
ed admission Let's PARTY1<lb/>
WIN!<lb/>
WIN) WIN!<lb/>
Win a Randix Waikarouno X<lb/>
portable cassette player w.ft<lb/>
auto reverse from Pair Eiec<lb/>
tronics Win ?100 00 in wom?r ?<lb/>
fashions ?rom Susans win ?<lb/>
pair of 14 karat gold eerr no,<lb/>
from T,son s Jewelers Justou.<lb/>
a ticket m me Theta Ch. Kappa<lb/>
Delta Holiday Giveaway ana ge'<lb/>
started on your Christmas shop<lb/>
ping'<lb/>
403 . IVANS ST.<lb/>
?MfNV&amp;U. N.C<lb/>
Latest Styles in<lb/>
Ladies Hats and accessories<lb/>
I10:mAM.3flPM<lb/>
YOUNG<lb/>
DEMOCRATS<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the<lb/>
East Carolina Young Demoo ats<lb/>
Tuesday Nov 22 at 7 30 Come to<lb/>
"vvendenhall room 23 Bring an<lb/>
open minded friend<lb/>
 The East Carolinian<lb/>
Ser tig thf campus community<lb/>
smcr I92<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday dur.ng the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Wednesday during the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the<lb/>
official newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned<lb/>
operated and published for<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: ?J0 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
art located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU. Greenville NC<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
dress changes to The Eas'<lb/>
Carolinian Old South<lb/>
Building. ECU Greenville.<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 434 4347.<lb/>
.104<lb/>
?YOU CAN ABoanoHadmojndoo-<lb/>
DEPEND ON. iOTmcrsrTvxtoeosrbv<lb/>
the Woman of the HerrWno Center, GounMkM an<lb/>
ovaiiabta dov ord night to support ond under<lb/>
stand you Your Kety. comtort ond pnvocv are<lb/>
awured by the caring if off of the H?m?ng Center<lb/>
SHrVfCU ? Tuesday - Saturday Abortion Ap-<lb/>
pointments! 1st &amp; 2nd Trimester Abortions up to<lb/>
16 Weeks ? Free Pregnancy Tests ? Very Early<lb/>
Pregnancy Tests ? All lncusrve Fees ? Insurance<lb/>
Accepted ? OAU 7?1-eSS0 DAY Of NIGHT ?<lb/>
mmamtmmm THg FLEMING<lb/>
Can We Talk<lb/>
I have left George Coiffeur's<lb/>
to join the professional design<lb/>
staff of<lb/>
La Kosmetique Inc.<lb/>
on East 10th Street<lb/>
and education tor ?r<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?10 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
756 3023 ?24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
I Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Cut &amp; Blow On<lb/>
$10.00<lb/>
Jerome Dixon<lb/>
also open 2 nights a week for your<lb/>
convenience<lb/>
For appointment or consultation<lb/>
Contact me at 752-3419<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Kingston Place is especially for the student at ECU<lb/>
An ideal alternative to the crowded dorm is at hand. Kingston Place offers two bedroom, two bath Garden or two bedroom, two and a half<lb/>
bath townhouse condominiums, fully furnished, including all accessories, easy access to tennis, on-site pool and clubhouse with laundry<lb/>
facility. With the spacious size of each condo, the quality furnishings and appliances and the well planned amenities, Kingston Place will<lb/>
become the standard by which all student housing will be judged. Yet, with all these quality features, the best part of Kingston Place is the<lb/>
ability to select the roommate you want. Call the Kingston Place Sales Office at 756-0285 or come by 3101 S. Evans Street and get the facts and<lb/>
figures to take to your parents. A limited number of these quality condominiums are available at the pre-construction price of $59,900.00.<lb/>
If you are a freshman or sophmore attending ECU and would like to register for a free three day vacation to Hilton Head Island, South<lb/>
Carolina, fill out the attacheeed form and mail to the Kingston Place office or stop by and register and pick up a free brochure.<lb/>
Name<lb/>
ID number<lb/>
Home Address<lb/>
Home Phone <lb/>
Zip.<lb/>
School Phone.<lb/>
Only freshman and sophmores eligible for vacation offer. Drawing to hi Ml byjec. MJ?<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Topic For<lb/>
Symposiw<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAk<lb/>
Stan Wrttaf<lb/>
"Peace and War<lb/>
1984 Power and<lb/>
Moral<lb/>
Responsibility" is<lb/>
year's topic for the.<lb/>
Ninth Annual ECU<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi Svm-<lb/>
posium. which<lb/>
take place Feb 20-24<lb/>
1984<lb/>
A different paper<lb/>
topic is chosen each<lb/>
year by the Phi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Symposium Com-<lb/>
Deficit<lb/>
B JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Statl ?-<lb/>
The financially un-<lb/>
successful Charlie<lb/>
Daniels v all<lb/>
Tucker concert as<lb/>
one of the U<lb/>
discussed at a Th<lb/>
day meeting of<lb/>
Student Union Be<lb/>
The Charlie Daniels<lb/>
concert Home,<lb/>
weekend was onh<lb/>
second conceri<lb/>
Faster,<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
The tenth annul<lb/>
Oxfam America I<lb/>
for a World Harves:<lb/>
was held Thurs.<lb/>
Nov. 7. The eva<lb/>
international in s<lb/>
and v?.as sponsore<lb/>
Greenville by the<lb/>
ECU Hunger C<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Tomorrow<lb/>
incomple<lb/>
KASH<lb/>
 m i<lb/>
i<lb/>
n?if?mmw-(0mm u?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22, 1983<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
4 -?<lb/>
f-<lb/>
(MINI<lb/>
S WIN!<lb/>
 a i ?a- owj JO<lb/>
siiee pia?er artMl<lb/>
? ? n womn j<lb/>
Mfl v At a<lb/>
? ? ?' Joii2 e?rnrvgS<lb/>
WWlin j?T boy<lb/>
11 - ?-?PM<lb/>
?MJy ?r3 o?1<lb/>
?na4 shop<lb/>
I eur s<lb/>
i deign<lb/>
inc.<lb/>
eet<lb/>
I A Blow Dr<lb/>
S10.00<lb/>
k for vour<lb/>
IrsMiltation<lb/>
3419<lb/>
Committee Picks<lb/>
Topic For February<lb/>
Symposium Papers<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
"Peace and War<lb/>
1984: Power and<lb/>
Moral<lb/>
Responsibility" is this<lb/>
year's topic for th<lb/>
Ninth Annual ECU<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi Sym-<lb/>
posium, which will<lb/>
take place Feb. 20-24,<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
A different paper<lb/>
topic is chosen each<lb/>
year by the Phi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Symposium Com-<lb/>
mittee. "We pick a<lb/>
topic that we believe<lb/>
to be of interest to<lb/>
world scholarship,<lb/>
and this year we pick-<lb/>
ed one that we believ-<lb/>
ed to be timely and of<lb/>
general interest said<lb/>
Dr. J. William Byrd,<lb/>
ECU physics pro-<lb/>
fessor and a member<lb/>
of the Symposium<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
The committee will<lb/>
select both student<lb/>
and faculty papers for<lb/>
presentation during<lb/>
the symposium.<lb/>
Awards if $100 each<lb/>
will be presented to<lb/>
the two students<lb/>
whose papers are<lb/>
judged to be best in<lb/>
terms of creativity,<lb/>
constructive ideas and<lb/>
overall quality.<lb/>
The writer of the<lb/>
best student paper will<lb/>
present his paper dur-<lb/>
ing the syposium. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Byrd,<lb/>
faculty papers will be<lb/>
selected on the basis<lb/>
of their specific<lb/>
topics, with an em-<lb/>
phasis placed on a<lb/>
balance of view-<lb/>
points. All papers<lb/>
selected for presenta-<lb/>
tion in the symposium<lb/>
will be published in a<lb/>
special proceedings<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
The deadline for<lb/>
submission of faculty<lb/>
abstracts is Dec 9,<lb/>
1983, while the<lb/>
deadline for student<lb/>
papers is January 27,<lb/>
1984. All papers and<lb/>
abstracts should be<lb/>
submitted to Dr. Fred<lb/>
Broadhurst at the<lb/>
School of<lb/>
Technology. A list of<lb/>
guidelines is available.<lb/>
"We would like to<lb/>
see more students<lb/>
writing papers. We<lb/>
believe that the sym-<lb/>
posium has emerged<lb/>
as one of the more<lb/>
significant scholarly<lb/>
institutions on cam-<lb/>
pus and we encourage<lb/>
participation in it<lb/>
said Byrd.<lb/>
The committee also<lb/>
hopes to bring in<lb/>
well?known outside<lb/>
speakers. Byrd said he<lb/>
is currently in contact<lb/>
with several people<lb/>
and hopes to schedule<lb/>
one for the sym-<lb/>
posium.<lb/>
Lawyer Discusses Women's Legal Rights<lb/>
By ANDREA<lb/>
MARKELLO<lb/>
stair mm<lb/>
Property and<lb/>
domestic laws, finan-<lb/>
cial security and credit<lb/>
options currently<lb/>
changed in N.C.<lb/>
legislation were some<lb/>
of the topics discussed<lb/>
by local Greenville at-<lb/>
torney Ann<lb/>
Hefflefinger-Bamhill<lb/>
last Thursday in her<lb/>
talk "Legal Issues Af-<lb/>
fecting Women in<lb/>
North Carolina The<lb/>
presentation was<lb/>
sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU's Committee on<lb/>
the Status of Women<lb/>
as a part of their<lb/>
1983-84 Lunch Time<lb/>
Learning Series<lb/>
Seminar program.<lb/>
"Effective July 1,<lb/>
1983, both the hus-<lb/>
band and wife have<lb/>
equal rights to rent in-<lb/>
comes and control of<lb/>
property held by the<lb/>
entirity said<lb/>
Hef flefinger-Barnhill.<lb/>
Also, the new<lb/>
Equitable Distribu-<lb/>
tion Act allows more<lb/>
appropriate distribu-<lb/>
tion of property in<lb/>
divorce cases.<lb/>
Divorce laws have<lb/>
changed and effective<lb/>
since Oct. 1, the only<lb/>
way to obtain a<lb/>
divorce in North<lb/>
Carolina is through a<lb/>
one-year separation,<lb/>
eliminating the prior<lb/>
popular "no-fault"<lb/>
method.<lb/>
In the area of finan-<lb/>
cial security,<lb/>
Hefflefinger-Bamhill<lb/>
discussed women hav-<lb/>
ing fewer retirement<lb/>
benefits, and said<lb/>
women have difficulty<lb/>
obtaining health in-<lb/>
surance. She said<lb/>
women being in and<lb/>
out of the work force,<lb/>
due to such reasons as<lb/>
location changes,<lb/>
can't get pensions<lb/>
since previous work<lb/>
records don't<lb/>
transfer.<lb/>
However, also em-<lb/>
phasized is women<lb/>
wanting equal pay for<lb/>
equal work and the<lb/>
reality there is a<lb/>
strong demand for<lb/>
more women in the<lb/>
work force with<lb/>
women needing a<lb/>
credit rating in their<lb/>
own name.<lb/>
Hefflefinger-<lb/>
Barnhill said a good<lb/>
way to gain a credit<lb/>
rating is to begin in<lb/>
college by obtaining a<lb/>
credit card at a<lb/>
popular department<lb/>
store and charge small<lb/>
amounts each month.<lb/>
Other current<lb/>
changes in N.C.<lb/>
legislation include<lb/>
permission for mid-<lb/>
wives to practice<lb/>
under the supervision<lb/>
of a physician, or if<lb/>
they are skilled<lb/>
enough, alone,<lb/>
"which is done a lot<lb/>
in North Carolina<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Day care legislation<lb/>
is not good, according<lb/>
to Hefflefinger-<lb/>
Bamhill said. "No<lb/>
real legislation exists,<lb/>
and standards need to<lb/>
be set<lb/>
In terms of child<lb/>
support legislation,<lb/>
effective ways to col-<lb/>
lect are difficult. In<lb/>
Pitt County 2,000<lb/>
child support orders<lb/>
have been sent to non-<lb/>
custodial parents and<lb/>
a good response has<lb/>
been obtained,<lb/>
Heffiefinger-Barnhill<lb/>
concluded.<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Deficit Is Subject Of Meeting Reagan, Business Leaders<lb/>
Differ On Education Issues<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Staft Writer<lb/>
The financially un-<lb/>
successful Charlie<lb/>
DanielsMarshall<lb/>
Tucker concert was<lb/>
one of the topics<lb/>
discussed at a Thurs-<lb/>
day meeting of the<lb/>
Student Union Board.<lb/>
The Charlie Daniels<lb/>
concert Homecoming<lb/>
weekend was only the<lb/>
second concert to<lb/>
have lost money at<lb/>
ECU in recent years.<lb/>
The loss is estimated<lb/>
as being between<lb/>
$8,000 and $12,000 by<lb/>
Jerry Dilsaver, chair-<lb/>
man of the Special At-<lb/>
traction Committee.<lb/>
The gate receipts from<lb/>
the concert were not<lb/>
even enough to cover<lb/>
the fee for Daniels<lb/>
and Tucker.<lb/>
The Evelyn<lb/>
KingDazz Band con-<lb/>
cert last spring also<lb/>
lost money after poor<lb/>
attendance.<lb/>
According to<lb/>
Regina Hardec, presi-<lb/>
dent of the Student<lb/>
Union Board, the<lb/>
financial outcome of<lb/>
the concert was<lb/>
discussed, but no con-<lb/>
clusions were reached.<lb/>
The board plans to<lb/>
discuss the financial<lb/>
situation further at its<lb/>
meeting Dec. 8.<lb/>
Regarding the out-<lb/>
come of the concert,<lb/>
Hardee said, "I was<lb/>
disappointed. I think<lb/>
we need to evaluate<lb/>
what kind of music<lb/>
the students want to<lb/>
hear so we can get<lb/>
them to come to the<lb/>
concerts<lb/>
Special Attractions<lb/>
Committee meetings<lb/>
are open to the public<lb/>
and the board decided<lb/>
to advertise the<lb/>
meetings in order to<lb/>
increase student at-<lb/>
tendence and input.<lb/>
Fasters Include Students<lb/>
By JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Staff Welter<lb/>
The tenth annual<lb/>
Oxfam America Fast<lb/>
for a World Harvest<lb/>
was held Thursday,<lb/>
Nov. 17. The event is<lb/>
international in scope<lb/>
and was sponsored in<lb/>
Greenville by the<lb/>
ECU Hunger Coali-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Dozens of ECU<lb/>
students who par-<lb/>
ticipated in the day-<lb/>
long fast were asked<lb/>
to donate the money<lb/>
they would have spent<lb/>
on food to Oxfam<lb/>
America.<lb/>
The fast ended with<lb/>
a meal at the Baptist<lb/>
Student Center 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Thursday night.<lb/>
ECU Baptist Campus<lb/>
Minister Bob Clyde<lb/>
held a short prayer<lb/>
service before the<lb/>
meal.<lb/>
ECU occupational<lb/>
therapy student<lb/>
Theresa Dulski,<lb/>
said she is uncertain<lb/>
about the amount of<lb/>
money raised because<lb/>
pledges are still being<lb/>
mailed in. During the<lb/>
past nine years, ap-<lb/>
proximately $2.5<lb/>
million has been rais-<lb/>
ed worldwide by fast<lb/>
participants.<lb/>
"It's not the<lb/>
number of par-<lb/>
ticipants that<lb/>
matters Dulski said.<lb/>
"What matters is that<lb/>
through the fast there<lb/>
was a little bit of<lb/>
public consciousness<lb/>
raised<lb/>
(CPS) ? The top executiv s of<lb/>
the biggest companies in the U.S.<lb/>
? generally assumed to be major<lb/>
supporters of the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration ? differ sharply with<lb/>
the president over some education<lb/>
issues, according to a new poll of<lb/>
business leaders' views of educa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The majority of the business<lb/>
leaders asked favored forming a<lb/>
national policy to enforce school<lb/>
excellence, reports Mary Kay Har-<lb/>
rity of Research and Forecasts,<lb/>
Inc the New York-based polling<lb/>
firm that did the survey.<lb/>
President Reagan frequently<lb/>
has advocated leaving education<lb/>
policies up to the states, and set-<lb/>
ting up the federal government<lb/>
only as a sort of education clear-<lb/>
inghouse.<lb/>
A majority of executives of<lb/>
firms that rank among the 1300<lb/>
largest corporations listed in For-<lb/>
tune Magazine favored increasing<lb/>
teacher's salaries, but according<lb/>
to merit, not seniority, Harrity<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
Most of the business leaders<lb/>
Tomorrow is the last day to make up an<lb/>
incomplete from spring or summer.<lb/>
Spring Breok Cruise<lb/>
March 5th-9th Cruise From Miami to<lb/>
Nassau &amp; Freeport, S.S. Emerald Seas<lb/>
$517.75 per person 4 people per room<lb/>
For more info:<lb/>
Call Greenville Travel Center<lb/>
756-1521<lb/>
NEED A<lb/>
TYPEWRITER?<lb/>
talk to us about<lb/>
our typewriter<lb/>
rental program.<lb/>
We rent Smith-CoroM electric<lb/>
portablestoe finest oa the<lb/>
market They may be rented by<lb/>
the day, week or month For your<lb/>
next typed project tbiak of as.<lb/>
Stwdvfit Supply Store ? Wrifjht Building,<lb/>
Owned end opwojlad by East Carolina University<lb/>
also believed trade schools would<lb/>
become a more important part of<lb/>
the American education system,<lb/>
that students should have to pass<lb/>
competency tests to be promoted<lb/>
to the next grade, and that schools<lb/>
should make computer courses<lb/>
mandatory.<lb/>
Despite favoring a national<lb/>
education policy, however, the ex-<lb/>
ecutives were split on devoting<lb/>
more federal money to improving<lb/>
math and science courses in<lb/>
schools. President Reagan unveil-<lb/>
ed plans for such additional fun-<lb/>
ding over the summer.<lb/>
The president and business<lb/>
leaders agreed on other education<lb/>
matters, however.<lb/>
Forty-nine percent of the<lb/>
leaders want to dismantle the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Education, which<lb/>
was a Reagan campaign pledge. A<lb/>
majority favored giving tuition<lb/>
tax credits to parents who enroll<lb/>
their children in private schools,<lb/>
and an even bigger majority<lb/>
favored allowing prayers in<lb/>
classrooms.<lb/>
ECU Students A Faculty<lb/>
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Starts $17,200 - $2?.10u increasing<lb/>
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locations - we pay relocation e?penses.<lb/>
It ynu're interested in finding out<lb/>
more, see the liavy Officer Programs<lb/>
Tear they '11 be OW campus 29 Wovewber -<lb/>
1 DpceHver ar the Student Union. Tf you<lb/>
can 't make it, send your resume or<lb/>
transcripts to:<lb/>
ROYSARVIS<lb/>
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Across from U.B.t.<lb/>
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HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
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WED. and PRI.<lb/>
5:00 25C DRAFT<lb/>
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LAMES NIGHT<lb/>
with<lb/>
Comiag Noy. 29<lb/>
iBjyAjHEY<lb/>
Gold:<lb/>
FlemingSofter hour<lb/>
English Annex 10 after hour<lb/>
10th AtheHiil 13 after hour<lb/>
College HiB15 after hour<lb/>
Stratford Arms Apts.  hour<lb/>
Hargett's Drugs25 f.l hour<lb/>
Home Federal 15 til hour<lb/>
Univ.CondolOafterhour<lb/>
Cannon Court 12 after hour<lb/>
EastbrookUafterhnur<lb/>
RiverbiuffTQafte'hour<lb/>
Kings Row Vj hour<lb/>
VUllage Green25 til hour<lb/>
College View24 til hour<lb/>
Cypress23 id hour<lb/>
13 tH hour<lb/>
e0tmrai0 i ? ?-??? ?- ????<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0004"/><lb/>
uttfe laHt Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, owm<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ??????Editor<lb/>
J.T. Pietrzak, D.rtoorom?h? Cindy Pleasants. ???<lb/>
Robert Rucks, ??? m Greg Rideout, worn mEditor<lb/>
Al.I AFRASHTEH, ? Ma?rr GORDON IPOCK, Entenmimmemt Editor<lb/>
Geoff Hudson. gmmm .??? Lizanne Jennings, so m<lb/>
Michael Mayo, 7f,??wrrvmr Todd Evans, productionmmtm<lb/>
November 22. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Pirate Football<lb/>
,4 o&amp; We Doit? Gi5<lb/>
Sometimes you have to state the football people across the land the<lb/>
obvious. The Pirates should have that we are among the nation's<lb/>
been invited to a bowl. But,<lb/>
somehow, there 8-3 record got lost<lb/>
among the political undertones of<lb/>
those people selecting the teams.<lb/>
We're mad, just as Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory and his players should be<lb/>
mad.<lb/>
Yet, the loss of a bid should not<lb/>
take away from what the team ac-<lb/>
best.<lb/>
But, alas, the team has been told<lb/>
it must sit home. Why we're not<lb/>
going anywhere is something we<lb/>
can't be sure of; we only know<lb/>
what everyone else does ?<lb/>
somebody made a mistake.<lb/>
So, for the students, we wish to<lb/>
say thanks to all the coaches,<lb/>
complished this year. We would players, trainers, cheerleaders,<lb/>
like to commend and give a hand support personnel and fans. We<lb/>
to the 1983 Pirate football team. know its not much of a consola-<lb/>
Throughout the season, they tion, but, if it helps, we're sure<lb/>
played well above what was ex-<lb/>
pected and along the way brought<lb/>
much needed praise on themselves<lb/>
and the university. Their wins over<lb/>
N.C. State, Missouri and Southern<lb/>
Mississippi, along with their near<lb/>
misses down in Florida, proved to<lb/>
proud of you.<lb/>
The East Carolinian would like<lb/>
to take this opportunity to wish all<lb/>
faculty, staff and students a very<lb/>
safe and happy Thanksgiving.<lb/>
Businesses Discriminate<lb/>
By GLENN MAUGHAN<lb/>
After a careful check of businesses<lb/>
which advertise in The East Carolinian, 1<lb/>
have come to the conclusion that some<lb/>
openly discriminate. It is not the overt<lb/>
get-to-the-back-of-the-bus, whites-only,<lb/>
lunch-counter form, but a more subtle,<lb/>
shadowy prejudice that has swept<lb/>
throughout society since the enactment of<lb/>
civil rights legislation.<lb/>
This de facto discrimination takes form<lb/>
at the country club where the implied<lb/>
message is "for white males only h<lb/>
comes from the mouths of real estate<lb/>
agents ? "You don't want a house in this<lb/>
neighborhood; you won't be happy<lb/>
here" And, then there are the barbers<lb/>
and hair stylists who flaunt their expertise<lb/>
through ads. They are as blatantly pre-<lb/>
judiced as the rest.<lb/>
At least one ECU coed has experienced<lb/>
the barbers' message. She "won" three<lb/>
free passes during a give-away sponsored<lb/>
by the university this fall. The passes were<lb/>
good for haircuts at a local salon. Imagine<lb/>
her dismay at being turned away. "We<lb/>
don't cut black hair" were the words she<lb/>
heard.<lb/>
This barber and others often give a<lb/>
message that reads, "Welcome ECU<lb/>
Students Yet, that open invitation is a<lb/>
lie. The sizeable minority population at<lb/>
ECU and in Greenville are not welcome in<lb/>
most area salons. What would be a more<lb/>
appropriate slogan for these businesses is<lb/>
something similar to, "for white male<lb/>
ECU students only<lb/>
Of course, such a message is clearly il-<lb/>
legal. However, these businesses operate<lb/>
with impunity while ECU blindly accepts<lb/>
their donations. Indeed, the travesty is<lb/>
furthered by those persons who would<lb/>
hide behind words which claim they do<lb/>
not have adequate training to serve<lb/>
minority customers. Many barber schools<lb/>
have required their students learn skills<lb/>
that cross the lines of gender and race.<lb/>
Can this univeristy guarantee this will<lb/>
not happen again? Or is ECU's support<lb/>
something akin to the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion's upholding of the apartheid regime<lb/>
in South Africa?.<lb/>
Coming to grips with the legal implica-<lb/>
tions of this issue is not easy. Calls to<lb/>
various state attorneys-general gave me<lb/>
the impression that nothing could be<lb/>
done. North Carolina upholds a barber's<lb/>
right to refuse a customer on the grounds<lb/>
that heshe is not proficient or might<lb/>
damage a customer's hair.<lb/>
But, those same laws are in conflict<lb/>
with civil rights legislation that mandates<lb/>
no discrimination regardless of race. One<lb/>
legal mind said that North Carolina law is<lb/>
silent regarding a barber's refusal to cut<lb/>
hair for any customer. Another stated<lb/>
barbers practice defacto discrimination<lb/>
and have been doing so for years.<lb/>
The student did manage to solve her<lb/>
dilemma. In place of a haircut, she receiv-<lb/>
ed some hair care products. But what of<lb/>
the next student? And what of those<lb/>
advertisements that "welcome ECU<lb/>
students?"<lb/>
It would seem prudent to bar any<lb/>
business that cannot open its doors to all<lb/>
from donating money or gifts to the<lb/>
university. The media board, pirate club,<lb/>
WZMB, The East Carolinian and others<lb/>
should review their policies and stop ac-<lb/>
cepting advertising and donations from<lb/>
those who would practice discrimination.<lb/>
&amp;&amp;deWDKpiut<lb/>
THIS ISNT WTI HAP IN MINP WHEN VOU SAIP WE'RE<lb/>
TAKING A CRUISE TO EUROPE. ?<lb/>
Blues Hit Congress Hubby<lb/>
As more women go into politics, the<lb/>
public becomes increasingly curious<lb/>
about their spouses. I found Horace<lb/>
Manley, the husband of Agatha Manley,<lb/>
who was running for Congress for the<lb/>
second time, at home the other day.<lb/>
He was flustered. "I wish I'd known<lb/>
you were corring he said. "The house<lb/>
is a mess<lb/>
"Don't worry, Mr. Manley, I'm not<lb/>
here to write about your housekeeping.<lb/>
Is the candidate home?"<lb/>
"No, she's out talking to the Unucd<lb/>
Metalworker's Union. She told me I<lb/>
could have a day off<lb/>
"Is it hard to be the husband of a<lb/>
political figure?"<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
"It has its pluses and minuses, but<lb/>
I've known ever since Agatha completed<lb/>
law school she wanted to go into<lb/>
politics, and as long as she's happy I'm<lb/>
willing to put up with our public life<lb/>
"What's the toughest part of it for<lb/>
you?"<lb/>
"Smiling all the time, and being nice<lb/>
to people because Agatha says they're<lb/>
important to her. I also have to worry<lb/>
about my appearance and wonder if I'm<lb/>
wearing the right suit and if my shoes are<lb/>
shined<lb/>
"You mean the voters care what the<lb/>
husband of a candidate looks like?"<lb/>
"Oh definitely. A husband plays a<lb/>
very important role in a candidate's elec-<lb/>
tion. Agatha says even though she does<lb/>
the talking, the electorate is always stu-<lb/>
dying me<lb/>
"What do they ask you?"<lb/>
"They want to know if Agatha is a<lb/>
good mother and what she really is like<lb/>
at home. I always say she is a real peachy<lb/>
wife<lb/>
"You don't sound like you mean it<lb/>
"There are times when I get<lb/>
discouraged. I would like Agatha all to<lb/>
myself and it would be nice if she could<lb/>
spend more time with the children. But I<lb/>
never nag or bother her with family pro-<lb/>
blems because I know she's got too<lb/>
many important things on her mind.<lb/>
When she comes home and we can<lb/>
squeeze in a few hours together, the<lb/>
children and I want her to relax<lb/>
"Does Agatha depend on you for<lb/>
political advice?"<lb/>
"Yes, she's very good about that. She<lb/>
lets me sit in on staff meetings at our<lb/>
house after I've served everyone a buffet<lb/>
dinner. She's told me many times I have<lb/>
a better reading on the public pulse than<lb/>
she does, because they say things to me<lb/>
that they're afraid to say to her<lb/>
"Could you give me an example of the<lb/>
kind of advice you give her?"<lb/>
"Well, Agatha, being a woman, is<lb/>
against nerve gas<lb/>
"And you're not?"<lb/>
"There are a lot worse things than<lb/>
nerve gas. But even if she doesn't agree<lb/>
with me, she's very interested in what<lb/>
the male gender is thinking. I wish 1<lb/>
could say the same thing for her staff "<lb/>
"They don't like you to talk to<lb/>
Agatha about politics?"<lb/>
"They treat me like a dodo<lb/>
"How is that?"<lb/>
"When I'm out campaigning someone<lb/>
is always afraid I'll make a slip if I ex-<lb/>
temporize, so they insist I stick with the<lb/>
script they've written for me. It's an<lb/>
awful speech, but every time I want to<lb/>
change it they say I could lose the elec-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
"Are you jealous of the men around<lb/>
Agatha?"<lb/>
"Not really. I know they are only at-<lb/>
tracted to her for her power. I can put<lb/>
up with a lot as long as she doesn't<lb/>
humiliate me or the children in pMc<lb/>
"But at least as a politician's husband<lb/>
you get invited to a lot of parties. That<lb/>
must be fun<lb/>
"It would be if some one knew my<lb/>
name. Agatha always introduces me by<lb/>
saying, 'I'd like you to meet mv better<lb/>
half "<lb/>
4I notice you're darning your wife's<lb/>
pantyhose<lb/>
Horace said bitterly, "Have you ever<lb/>
tried to live on a congresswoman's<lb/>
salary?"<lb/>
(c) 1M3. Lo? Aogcks Tuna Sywfacaic<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Paper A Place For Learning<lb/>
The recent effort to reaffirm The<lb/>
East Carolinian's statement, own-<lb/>
ed, operated and published for and by<lb/>
the students of East Carolina" (em-<lb/>
phasis on the word students) is to be<lb/>
commended. The paper's primary pur-<lb/>
pose should be to foster the learning<lb/>
process by which ECU students<lb/>
become competent writers. No single<lb/>
skill is in as great of a demand in the<lb/>
?<lb/>
MISS JONES, ITS MAR&amp;ftRET THATCHERS &amp;HWW,?SENP<lb/>
HER SOWE MARINES WITH A NICE UTTl? NOTE<lb/>
I<lb/>
workplace. Classroom learning cannot<lb/>
be a substitute for real "hands on ex-<lb/>
perience It is to this end that<lb/>
academic credit should be granted to<lb/>
encourage students to write for The<lb/>
East Carolinian.<lb/>
Another improvement of the<lb/>
newspaper would be to require<lb/>
editorial writers to write a minimum<lb/>
number of news stories.<lb/>
Now that students have control of<lb/>
the newspaper, we can look forward to<lb/>
continual improvement.<lb/>
William H. Wright<lb/>
Senior, Accounting<lb/>
Spelling Important<lb/>
In reference to the article written by<lb/>
Scarlet Jones in the Nov. 17 issue of<lb/>
The East Carolinian, a peak is<lb/>
something that comes to a point. But<lb/>
when you look at a good-looking per-<lb/>
son, you take a peek. One should<lb/>
always be careful when using bold<lb/>
print. Otherwise, it was a good article.<lb/>
Kathleen Monahan<lb/>
Senior, Psyc<lb/>
Daniels Dunked<lb/>
In regards to a story appearing in the<lb/>
Nov. IS issue of The East Carolinian, I<lb/>
would like to reply if I may. The story,<lb/>
labeled "Charlie Daniels, Marshall<lb/>
Tucker; ECU Concert Loses Money<lb/>
definitely did not come as a surprise to<lb/>
me I'll tell you.<lb/>
Why, as was debated in The East<lb/>
Carolinian before the concert, these<lb/>
backwoodsmen were allowed to come<lb/>
to ECU in the first place is beyond me.<lb/>
I personally know no one on campus<lb/>
who attended the concert. As the story<lb/>
pointed out, most students didn't at-<lb/>
tend. They didn't want to go and see<lb/>
someone talk about the devil going to a<lb/>
southern state.<lb/>
I think the Major Attractions Com-<lb/>
mittee should learn from this example.<lb/>
The students of ECU want quality per-<lb/>
formers to come to their campus. They<lb/>
want popular performers who can ap-<lb/>
peal to their tastes, not ones who ap-<lb/>
peal to the people living "around<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Now, about the money. 1 think its a<lb/>
shame that all that money was lost.<lb/>
Yet, concerts lose money, and even if<lb/>
we got an act the students all attended<lb/>
the concert might still lose money. I<lb/>
just hope the next concert is for the<lb/>
students. I think we have all learned<lb/>
our lesson from this mistake about the<lb/>
concert tastes of our campus. Next<lb/>
time, let's get someone good, okay.<lb/>
That's all.<lb/>
Robert Smithson<lb/>
Junior, Business<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail<lb/>
them to or drop them by the<lb/>
newspaper's offices on the second<lb/>
floor of the publications building,<lb/>
across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature ofauthorfs). Letters are<lb/>
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. Students, facul-<lb/>
ty and staff writing letters for this page<lb/>
are reminded that they are limited to<lb/>
one every five issues.<lb/>
The campus forum is a regular<lb/>
feature of The East Carolinians s<lb/>
editorial page which allows students,<lb/>
faculty and area citizens to express opi-<lb/>
nions on current issues. It is a visible<lb/>
and effective vehicle for expressing<lb/>
opinions and communicating ideas on<lb/>
the ECU campus.<lb/>
Student Opim,<lb/>
U.S<lb/>
?<lb/>
it<lb/>
Bartlett<lb/>
Pitt Plaz,<lb/>
Construe<lb/>
By MILLIE WH1<lb/>
TMin Sen MMsr<lb/>
Con-<lb/>
rent<lb/>
pand Gree<lb/>
Plaza ;<lb/>
into an er<lb/>
vironmerr i<lb/>
trolled mall<lb/>
The ren<lb/>
facility, to r<lb/>
"The Plaza,<lb/>
for completion ii<lb/>
August lv<lb/>
Avvording<lb/>
Kane. rrsiCi<lb/>
M Kane &amp; C .<lb/>
owns the si<lb/>
Call Pirat<lb/>
Thursday. No<lb/>
Thank<lb/>
Ca:<lb/>
?L<lb/>
Remember mends<lb/>
with Ambas;<lb/>
Ommid and operated Y<lb/>
from "Th<lb/>
CM<lb/>
Grec&amp;ville<lb/>
. yyn'??ii m t??????<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
-?4 <lb/>
M HWWHi??? ii W<lb/>
mmemm  .<lb/>
?r ?p r?4?- mm<lb/>
wtftm ? ?? ' ' ??Hwai<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22, Ijfj<lb/>
ERE<lb/>
bby<lb/>
se things than<lb/>
e doesn't agree<lb/>
i.erested in what<lb/>
inking, I wish I<lb/>
n her staff<lb/>
to talk to<lb/>
- rung someone<lb/>
ue a .p if I ex-<lb/>
I stick with the<lb/>
w me. It's an<lb/>
e I want to<lb/>
 ose the elec-<lb/>
mca around<lb/>
thcj are only at-<lb/>
 - a I can put<lb/>
as she doesn't<lb/>
: n in publk<lb/>
ian's husband<lb/>
)f -arties. That<lb/>
knew my<lb/>
? xiuces me by<lb/>
meet my better<lb/>
ping your wife's<lb/>
Have you ever<lb/>
r.gresswoman's<lb/>
: air<lb/>
Lttractions Com-<lb/>
m this example.<lb/>
-ant quality per-<lb/>
bir campus. They<lb/>
ers who can ap-<lb/>
t ones who ap-<lb/>
I living "around<lb/>
ley. I think its a<lb/>
loney was lost,<lb/>
ley, and even if<lb/>
?nts all attended<lb/>
II lose money. I<lb/>
Imcert is for the<lb/>
have all learned<lb/>
istake about the<lb/>
campus. Next<lb/>
le good, okay.<lb/>
Robert Smithson<lb/>
iunior, Business<lb/>
ules<lb/>
welcomes letters<lb/>
of view. Mail<lb/>
them by the<lb/>
on the second<lb/>
Rations building,<lb/>
ibrary.<lb/>
nfication, all let-<lb/>
ame, major and<lb/>
, phone number<lb/>
or(s). Letters are<lb/>
'written pages,<lb/>
uly printed. All<lb/>
iiting for brevi-<lb/>
Students, facul-<lb/>
tters for this page<lb/>
are limited to<lb/>
is a regular<lb/>
st Caroiinians's<lb/>
allows students,<lb/>
l to express opi-<lb/>
It is a visible<lb/>
for<lb/>
on<lb/>
Student Opinion<lb/>
U.S. Missiles Deployed<lb/>
f1<lb/>
i<lb/>
I ? ,<lb/>
Colbert<lb/>
Bartlett<lb/>
Bv THERESA DULSKI<lb/>
Staff WiM<lb/>
The first U.S. nuclear cruise missiles<lb/>
to be deployed in Western Europe ar-<lb/>
rived in Britian last Monday. NATO<lb/>
plans to install 572 new missiles in Ita-<lb/>
ly, Britian, West Germany, Beligium<lb/>
and Netherlands. Students were asked<lb/>
their opinion on the installation of the<lb/>
cruise missiles in Europe.<lb/>
Kathleen Colbert, social work,<lb/>
senior ? "It makes me mad because it<lb/>
seems like we are playing a cat and<lb/>
mouse game. I am against them being<lb/>
there. We should be able to have peace<lb/>
talks rather than all the spy games<lb/>
Johnnie Bartlett, drama and speech,<lb/>
junior ? "1 don't think we are any<lb/>
more secure with the missiles in<lb/>
Europe. I feel the whole idea of nuclear<lb/>
war is devastation anyway so I don't<lb/>
think it will help. The spend could have<lb/>
been used elsewhere, like for social<lb/>
programs or education. There is too<lb/>
much money pumped into defense<lb/>
Tim Thomas, computer sciene,<lb/>
senior ? "I'm in favor of the missiles<lb/>
being installed in Europe as a better<lb/>
deterrent against Russian nuclear first<lb/>
strike<lb/>
James Corbett, accounting, junior<lb/>
? "I've been in Europe. I have visited<lb/>
the Czeckoslovkia border. And I've<lb/>
seen their troops snearing at us. They<lb/>
actually have their people fenced in. I<lb/>
feel the missile will serve effectively as<lb/>
a deterrent against Communist attack,<lb/>
at least we better pray so<lb/>
Outlook Gloomy For U.S.Colleges<lb/>
Thomas<lb/>
(CPS) ? An<lb/>
analyst of how state<lb/>
legislatures fund col-<lb/>
leges says states na-<lb/>
tionwide are cutting<lb/>
back on their support<lb/>
of higher education,<lb/>
that the long-term<lb/>
outlook is gloomy,<lb/>
and that they ought to<lb/>
consider closing some<lb/>
state colleges in order<lb/>
to save others.<lb/>
Tax cuts and the<lb/>
recession have forced<lb/>
many states to slow<lb/>
the growth in the<lb/>
amount of money<lb/>
they give to colleges,<lb/>
says Steven Gold,<lb/>
who analyzes govern-<lb/>
ment financing for the<lb/>
National Conference<lb/>
on State Legislatures.<lb/>
As a result, Gold<lb/>
foresees ongoing cut-<lb/>
backs on public cam-<lb/>
puses, schools charg-<lb/>
ing students higher<lb/>
tuition to help com-<lb/>
pensate for funding<lb/>
cutbacks, and even<lb/>
some "small private<lb/>
colleges" who will ask<lb/>
state governments to<lb/>
contribute money to<lb/>
help keep them alive.<lb/>
"With the number<lb/>
of college graduates<lb/>
expected to decrease<lb/>
in most states and<lb/>
with the fiscal outlook<lb/>
fairly gloomy Gold<lb/>
says, "I think higher<lb/>
education will con-<lb/>
tinue to take its lumps<lb/>
in most states<lb/>
But the man on<lb/>
whose research Gold<lb/>
bases his prognosis<lb/>
disagrees strongly.<lb/>
"The implication<lb/>
that (state funding of<lb/>
colleges) is about to<lb/>
fall on its face is simp-<lb/>
ly wrong says Dr.<lb/>
M.M. Chambers, an<lb/>
Illinois State Universi-<lb/>
ty professor who com-<lb/>
piles higher education<lb/>
funding statistics<lb/>
from all the states.<lb/>
"There has been no<lb/>
cutback he says.<lb/>
"The rate of growth<lb/>
(of funding) has<lb/>
declined by two per-<lb/>
cent, compared with<lb/>
the prior two-year<lb/>
period. But we've<lb/>
always had gains. The<lb/>
net gain has been 11<lb/>
to 12 percent in the<lb/>
past two years<lb/>
Chambers points<lb/>
out that the rate of<lb/>
growth in state fun-<lb/>
ding of higher educa-<lb/>
tion has been slowing<lb/>
since the 1960s, when<lb/>
state funding increas-<lb/>
ed by 40 percent in<lb/>
one period.<lb/>
But Gold insists the<lb/>
long-term decline will<lb/>
continue "partly due<lb/>
to the fact that most<lb/>
states cut their taxes<lb/>
in the wake of the tax<lb/>
revolt and "the<lb/>
depressing effect" of<lb/>
the recession on state<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
Although many<lb/>
states have passed in-<lb/>
creases in the last<lb/>
year, "the tax in-<lb/>
creases of 1983 in<lb/>
general are less than<lb/>
the tax cuts that<lb/>
preceded them he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
He says the rela-<lb/>
tionship between<lb/>
taxes and personal in-<lb/>
come is "still lower<lb/>
than it was five years<lb/>
ago<lb/>
As a result, "the<lb/>
prognosis is not very<lb/>
bright he con-<lb/>
cludes.<lb/>
With less money to<lb/>
spend, Gold thinks<lb/>
"school closings is an<lb/>
option that ought to<lb/>
be considered. In<lb/>
many states, we don't<lb/>
need the number of<lb/>
institutions that we<lb/>
have now by a long<lb/>
shot<lb/>
States, he says,<lb/>
"will have to choose<lb/>
whether they want a<lb/>
small number of<lb/>
strong institutions or<lb/>
a large number of<lb/>
somewhat-weaker in-<lb/>
stitutions<lb/>
He predicts that<lb/>
students will be pay-<lb/>
ing more to go to<lb/>
them, no matter how<lb/>
many there are.<lb/>
"States are going to<lb/>
be scrapping for<lb/>
funds he says,<lb/>
"there's going to be<lb/>
more reliance on user<lb/>
charges. So students<lb/>
will pay a higher<lb/>
percentage of their<lb/>
costs<lb/>
Gillam Emphasizes Compassion, Youth, Energy<lb/>
Cont. From Page 1<lb/>
new ways of helping<lb/>
"thousands of our<lb/>
farmers arc facing<lb/>
financial disaster<lb/>
Calling a strong na-<lb/>
tional defense "ab-<lb/>
solutely vital<lb/>
Gillam said he ap-<lb/>
proved of the U.S. ac-<lb/>
tion in Grenada but<lb/>
warned of an undefin-<lb/>
ed mission of U.S.<lb/>
troops Lebanon. "I<lb/>
do not want American<lb/>
troops to be sitting<lb/>
ducks he said.<lb/>
Gillam's campaign<lb/>
is focused on an im-<lb/>
age of new, youthful<lb/>
leadership for the<lb/>
future, providing an<lb/>
alternative to long-<lb/>
time incumbent<lb/>
Walter Jones, accor-<lb/>
ding to a campaign<lb/>
organizer. "The old<lb/>
ways just have not<lb/>
been effective It's<lb/>
time for a new genera-<lb/>
tion of leadership<lb/>
Gillam said. "It's<lb/>
finally time we had an<lb/>
active congressman<lb/>
with the ability, the<lb/>
strength and the<lb/>
perseverence to tap<lb/>
vital resources in<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Expanding;<lb/>
Construction Underway<lb/>
By MILLIE WHITE<lb/>
I<lb/>
Construction is cur-<lb/>
rently underway to ex-<lb/>
pand Greenville's Pitt<lb/>
Plaza shopping center<lb/>
into an enclosed, en-<lb/>
vironmentally con-<lb/>
trolled mall.<lb/>
The remodeled<lb/>
facility, to be called<lb/>
"The Plaza is due<lb/>
for completion in<lb/>
August 1984.<lb/>
According to John<lb/>
Kane, president of J.<lb/>
ML Kane &amp; Co. which<lb/>
owns the shopping<lb/>
center, the decision to<lb/>
renovate was made six<lb/>
months ago.<lb/>
Kane said the com-<lb/>
pany bought the<lb/>
center in 1978 with the<lb/>
intention of enclosing<lb/>
it. However,<lb/>
economic conditions<lb/>
delayed the plans.<lb/>
Kane said 25 to 30<lb/>
stores will be added to<lb/>
the center. The $3<lb/>
million project will<lb/>
enlarge the<lb/>
225,000-square-foot<lb/>
center to 300,000<lb/>
square feet.<lb/>
Many of the stores<lb/>
in Pitt Plaza have<lb/>
begun remodeling and<lb/>
many, such as<lb/>
Eckerds, will relocate<lb/>
within the mall, he<lb/>
said. Kane hopes at<lb/>
least 90 percent of the<lb/>
stores will be remodel-<lb/>
ed when the new plaza<lb/>
opens. Roses has<lb/>
already remodeled its<lb/>
store and J. C. Penny<lb/>
will begin remodeling<lb/>
in February.<lb/>
Kane said that in<lb/>
August the facility<lb/>
will be like a com-<lb/>
pletely new center.<lb/>
PARKS RECPvtATtON<lb/>
And conservation<lb/>
Call Pirate Walk 757-M<lb/>
PRESENTS THE YaANNUAL<lb/>
CONTEST<lb/>
NOVEMBER 2.2nd I'OOp<lb/>
jSTprae t 100.00 Dc<lb/>
2Vllc I 25.00 KEG- <lb/>
-2rWize KEG h<lb/>
 Registration begins at 9:00pm ?c<lb/>
15 Band limit b<lb/>
Entries must be 18 years old &amp; up<lb/>
Bring your own music. ALBUMS only<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
STUDENT UNION<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
STUDENT UNION PRESIDENT<lb/>
for the 1984-85 Term<lb/>
Any Full-time student can apply,<lb/>
applications available at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Information Desk.<lb/>
Deadline: December 2,1983<lb/>
Thursday, November 24<lb/>
Thanksgiving<lb/>
Cards<lb/>
Remember friends and loved ones<lb/>
with Ambassador cards.<lb/>
student Suppl Store<lb/>
Owned and operated by East Carolina University<lb/>
IF THERE'S I<lb/>
LEADERSHIP INYOU.<lb/>
OCS CAN BRING<lb/>
ITOUT.<lb/>
OCS (Amy Of fleer Candidate School) to a<lb/>
14-week challenge to all that's la youthe<lb/>
mental, the physical, the spirit that are part<lb/>
of what makes ? leader.<lb/>
If OCS were easy, It couldn't do the job. It<lb/>
wouldn't bring oat the leader la yon, or help<lb/>
yoa discover what yon have I aside.<lb/>
But when yoa finish and graduate as a<lb/>
commisioaed officer la the Army, yoa'B<lb/>
know. You'll kaow yoa have what It taken to<lb/>
toad. Aad yoa'B he Mat, alert, fit, aad ready<lb/>
to exerctoe the leadership skilb that civilian<lb/>
companies look for.<lb/>
If you're about to get your degree aad yoa<lb/>
waat to develop your leadership ability, take<lb/>
the OCS challenge.<lb/>
Cal yoar local Army Recruiter,<lb/>
about OCS.<lb/>
armt.be all<lb/>
you can be.<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT ,<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
from 'The Modern Master of Horror"<lb/>
STEPHEN KING<lb/>
CJJB1SIIME(p?p??<lb/>
pET SEMATARY tH.rdb.ck)<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK &amp; NEWS<lb/>
Grcemvtllc Square Open 9:30-9:30 Sma Days A W?k 754-7177<lb/>
Every Monday and Wednesday from now until Nov. 30th between<lb/>
5:00-10:00 DarryVs 1907, Greenville is celebrating the Holiday Season<lb/>
early with an ALL YOU CAN EAT FEAST of our tender, juicy beef ribs<lb/>
for the unbelievable price of $7.95. We'll even include a free salad!<lb/>
SO . . . COME AND GET A TASTE OF<lb/>
800 East 10th St Greenville<lb/>
m m ?? M ? mi - ? i-<lb/>
"TT<lb/>
??NfciT'i" i? vyy ' ?'<lb/>
? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0006"/><lb/>
h<lb/>
THF EAST CAROl 1NIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
'The Da<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22. 1'<lb/>
"age 6<lb/>
Tom Cruise<lb/>
Makes All The Right Moves<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
fMterlalmmemt tAUot<lb/>
The alarm goes off, and Tom<lb/>
Cruise ? young, lean and<lb/>
muscular ? climbs out of bed<lb/>
wearing nothing but boxer shorts.<lb/>
He hustles his balls on the way to<lb/>
the window, stands with arm rais-<lb/>
ed against the wall and stares out<lb/>
onto a bleak, ficticiousous steel<lb/>
town. He's looking for a way out,<lb/>
and he'll need all the right moves.<lb/>
Cruise is Steff Georgeovich, a<lb/>
young man just hitting his prime<lb/>
in Ampipe, a dying town in the in-<lb/>
dustrial Northeast where his<lb/>
working-class family has lived<lb/>
since they immigrated from<lb/>
Poland a few generations ago.<lb/>
Steff is a football jock. He's not<lb/>
big, but he's tough tough<lb/>
enough that a few college scouts<lb/>
are looking at him as a possible<lb/>
linebacker. Football is his one<lb/>
shot, his only chance to sidestep<lb/>
the steel-mill existence all the men<lb/>
in his family have known.<lb/>
Lea Thompson plays Steff's<lb/>
girl, Lisa. A saxophone player in<lb/>
the high-school band, Lisa loves<lb/>
Steff with the same youthful pas-<lb/>
sion all 17-year-old girls have felt<lb/>
for handsome football jocks since<lb/>
high-school football began. She<lb/>
dreams of studying music in col-<lb/>
lege; however, she's just a<lb/>
working-class Polack girl, and<lb/>
they don't give scholarships for<lb/>
that.<lb/>
"I'm stuck here, Steff she<lb/>
says. "I'm 17-years-old. I'll be a<lb/>
grocery clerk. I don't even have a<lb/>
chance<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
Review<lb/>
The biggest challenge for films<lb/>
about teenagers is finding kids<lb/>
who can act convincingly. Most<lb/>
such films settle for 25 and<lb/>
30-year-olds. For instance, John<lb/>
Travolta, Olivia Newton John<lb/>
and the rest of the actors in<lb/>
Grease were all well into their 20s<lb/>
? and looked it. Cruise and<lb/>
Thompson, however, look like<lb/>
real teenagers. I haven't seen the<lb/>
sort of youthful freshness they<lb/>
portray since Franco Zefferelli's<lb/>
Romeo and Juliet. Like the<lb/>
16-year-old Olivia Hussey who<lb/>
played Juliet so convincingly,<lb/>
Thompson is the essence of youth.<lb/>
And like Leonard Whiting, Zef-<lb/>
ferelli's 18-year-old Romeo,<lb/>
Cruise possesses the youthful<lb/>
vigor to make his character, Steff,<lb/>
real in a way that an older star like<lb/>
John Travolta just can no longer<lb/>
do.<lb/>
The poignancy of their youth is<lb/>
most evident when Lisa Finally<lb/>
gives herself to Steff. The couple<lb/>
peels off their jeans and shirts and<lb/>
are awed by each other's Firm<lb/>
young body. If you've forgotten<lb/>
how intense teenage love is, or<lb/>
never knew, this scene brings it all<lb/>
back.<lb/>
Not only Cruise and Thomp-<lb/>
son, but the rest of the young cast<lb/>
look like honest-to-God high<lb/>
schoolers as well. For example,<lb/>
the Ampipe cheerleaders are<lb/>
short, cute pixies, the kind of girls<lb/>
who blossom into womanhood<lb/>
early the way short girls do.<lb/>
Unlike most Hollywood efforts,<lb/>
the makers of this film resist the<lb/>
temptation to make these high-<lb/>
school cheerleaders look like long-<lb/>
legged Dallas Cowgirls. And the<lb/>
football scenes, whether on the<lb/>
practice field, playing field or<lb/>
locker room, are convincing. I<lb/>
never played high-school football,<lb/>
but now I know what I missed.<lb/>
Writer Michael Kane and direc-<lb/>
tor Michael Chapman have<lb/>
superbly captured the fish-bowl<lb/>
world of high school in All The<lb/>
Right Moves. Becuse it's not<lb/>
overblown, it rings true. As<lb/>
adults, Ampipe High seems small<lb/>
and absurd to us, just like a visit<lb/>
to Rose High would. But to Steff,<lb/>
Lisa and their friends, it's their<lb/>
entire world.<lb/>
Clad in faded jeans, sneakers<lb/>
and letterman's jacket, Cruise as<lb/>
the football jock Steff is a cock-<lb/>
sure B.M.O.C. He and his bud-<lb/>
dies loaf through class and make<lb/>
out with eager young girls during<lb/>
breaks. They're counting on a<lb/>
football scholarship to Penn,<lb/>
West Virginia ? or someplace ?<lb/>
to spring them into the bigger<lb/>
pond of college.<lb/>
Tom Cruise stakes a claim in Hollywood as its youngest malt<lb/>
heart breaker. His virile yet sensitive acting in All The Right<lb/>
Moves sets Cruise up as Travolta's likely successor to the Teen<lb/>
Beat crowd.<lb/>
But the old maxim,<lb/>
'if<lb/>
something can go wrong, it will<lb/>
proves true. A pregnant<lb/>
girlfriend, losing the big game and<lb/>
getting passed over by the college<lb/>
scouts, or any number of pro-<lb/>
blems conspire to damn the jocks<lb/>
to a working-class life in Ampipe.<lb/>
Is there life after high school? For<lb/>
most of these kids, no.<lb/>
Like Saturday Sight Fever, All<lb/>
The Right Moves deals honestly<lb/>
with the pressures poor kids face<lb/>
moving up and out into a better<lb/>
life. And like Fever, it's young<lb/>
stars bring its message to life.<lb/>
Tom Cruise shows that he mav in-<lb/>
deed be Hollywood's next John<lb/>
Travolta, and Lea Thompson<lb/>
makes a brilliant debu! Thv g;rl<lb/>
has a future.<lb/>
Filmed on location in<lb/>
Johnstown, Pennsylvania, t<lb/>
The Right Moves is a thick slice of<lb/>
working-class Americana that<lb/>
nobodv should miss.<lb/>
Mick Retrospects Conservative Columnist<lb/>
Whenever 1 get frustrated at the<lb/>
abuse a great writer has to put up<lb/>
with, I remember Kim Albin. Kim<lb/>
wrote a weekly column for this<lb/>
newspaper a couple of years back.<lb/>
Like the best of us, Kim had guts,<lb/>
style ? and critics.<lb/>
Kin Albin, The East Carolinian's one-time controversial columnist,<lb/>
stirred a furor with her stinging conservatism. kirns's style was a com-<lb/>
bination of George F. Will, Miss Manners, Ayan Rand and Miss<lb/>
Piggy.<lb/>
Over the course of 21 articles,<lb/>
from her first on September 24,<lb/>
1981 to her last on April 22, 1982,<lb/>
Kim Albin faced issues and made<lb/>
issues with such pizazz that she<lb/>
eventually became the issue. At<lb/>
her peak, in the Spring of '82,<lb/>
there were ten Campus Forum ar-<lb/>
ticles and one editorial mention-<lb/>
ing her by name.<lb/>
Kim Albin is described in the<lb/>
"Media" section of the 81-82<lb/>
Buccaneer as a "strong conser-<lb/>
vative And the name fits. When<lb/>
the issue of government funding<lb/>
for abortion came up, Kim wrote;<lb/>
As long as women use men<lb/>
as scapegoats for unwanted<lb/>
pregnancies and<lb/>
simultaneously refuse to<lb/>
grant them the opportunity<lb/>
to aid in the decision-<lb/>
making process, women<lb/>
should pay for their own<lb/>
abortions. (FEB 4)<lb/>
Responding to protests on campus<lb/>
against then Interior Secretary<lb/>
James Watt, Kim complained<lb/>
about "the loud-mouthed, un-<lb/>
contented liberals" who "read<lb/>
Doonesbury cartoons as a solitary<lb/>
source of information She went<lb/>
on to say, "Let's keep the John<lb/>
Wayne types in office and tell the<lb/>
cartoon-reading petitioners to get<lb/>
lost (FEB 25)<lb/>
Tough? Yes. Feminist? No. In<lb/>
one of her last columns Kim<lb/>
discussed feminism:<lb/>
I for one am not interested<lb/>
in their most unfeminine<lb/>
cause. Since when is it a<lb/>
safe assumption that all<lb/>
women are paranoid<lb/>
freedom-seekers, struggling<lb/>
to escape male dominance<lb/>
and obtain some liberation?<lb/>
I find that most women are<lb/>
content being themselves.<lb/>
(APR 15)<lb/>
For her critics, meeting Kim<lb/>
Albin was a frustrating ex-<lb/>
perience. Once guys saw what she<lb/>
looked like few wanted to disagree<lb/>
with her. And she'd rarely argue<lb/>
anyway. The Kim Albin response<lb/>
to criticism was a polite smile, a<lb/>
nod and a comment muttered<lb/>
under her breath. She knew the<lb/>
advantages of being a woman and<lb/>
felt no obligation to clobber<lb/>
anybody.<lb/>
Kim retained her politeness in<lb/>
print. And politeness ? that<lb/>
snooty kind of politeness that<lb/>
made her fans laugh and her<lb/>
critics pull out their hair ? was a<lb/>
big part of the Albin style. When<lb/>
a former SGA president made<lb/>
nasty remarks about Greenville<lb/>
merchants, Kim wrote, "Some of<lb/>
us are forgetting our manners<lb/>
(OCT 15) She even devoted an en-<lb/>
tire article to the "annoying and<lb/>
uncouth" habit of eavesdropping.<lb/>
"Those people who have nothing<lb/>
to say Kim wrote, "Can be very<lb/>
annoying to those of us who have<lb/>
something to say ? privately. A<lb/>
little mutual respect would be<lb/>
nice (JAN 21)<lb/>
Kim Albin could also use<lb/>
snootiness as a comic effect, mak-<lb/>
ing herself the object of fun even<lb/>
while she made a serious point. In<lb/>
her article, "Apathy Drug Grows<lb/>
In Power (OCT 15) Kim com-<lb/>
plained:<lb/>
(People) waltz up to me and<lb/>
ask if I "Wanna get<lb/>
stoned" quicker than I can<lb/>
say, in my most recalcitrant<lb/>
tone, "No, I don't smoke<lb/>
it; get away from me, you<lb/>
lethargic Pothead, you. "<lb/>
Kim would use her persona as the<lb/>
harmless, complacent female;<lb/>
then, with a prim smile, she'd<lb/>
drop a bomb.<lb/>
At their best, Kim's articles<lb/>
contained details about campus<lb/>
life. She talked about the Croatan<lb/>
and Mendenhall. She mentioned<lb/>
how she studied for Finals in the<lb/>
McDonald's on 10th Street. She<lb/>
complained about the busted<lb/>
water fountains in Austin and that<lb/>
"the air conditioner at Brewster<lb/>
seems broken, or else it is always<lb/>
set on 60 degrees on purpose<lb/>
(OCT 8) So, even when you<lb/>
disagreed with her, you at least<lb/>
knew she lived here and was one<lb/>
of us.<lb/>
Kim Albin rarely went straight<lb/>
into her subject. Instead, she'd<lb/>
begin an article on Jones<lb/>
Cafeteria with two paragraphs on<lb/>
the dangers of the "Croatarian<lb/>
diet (NOV 12) She'd begin ?n<lb/>
article criticizing liberal pro-<lb/>
fessors by talking about how<lb/>
students spend most of their time<lb/>
outside the classroom.(FEB 18)<lb/>
She'd start each article way off-<lb/>
base and yet, somehow, get exact-<lb/>
1 where she was going t a guv<lb/>
like me, who had spent m I oi<lb/>
his life watching Bogart movies<lb/>
and reading Mickey Spillane<lb/>
novels, this was something new<lb/>
But it was interesting. And i lili<lb/>
it.<lb/>
Kim Albin's most reme:<lb/>
articles appeared within a ?<lb/>
each other in April. 1982 and<lb/>
represent a high point and a low-<lb/>
point in her career. Her article<lb/>
"Liberals: All You Wanted to<lb/>
Know " (APR 8) is one of the fun-<lb/>
niest and on-target articles ever to<lb/>
appear in this newspaper. What<lb/>
followed a week later, a<lb/>
restaurant review of The Crow's<lb/>
Nest (APR 15). was also funny ?<lb/>
real i'unn. She butchered the<lb/>
place just for the hell of it.<lb/>
The "Liberals" article made<lb/>
Kim Albin the talk of the school.<lb/>
Four Campus Forum letters and<lb/>
one article in rebuttal appeared in<lb/>
response to it. But the "Crow's<lb/>
Nest" article a week later gave her<lb/>
critics the weapon they needed to<lb/>
get rid of Kim. The restaurant<lb/>
cancelled their advertising con-<lb/>
tract with the East Carolinian.<lb/>
And one of the best writers this<lb/>
town has ever seen found herself<lb/>
out of a job.<lb/>
When 1 came back to school in<lb/>
August of '82, I was sad to hear<lb/>
about it. There have been a lot of<lb/>
writers for the East Carolinian<lb/>
whose work I've admired. But it<lb/>
was only Kim Albin's stuff that 1<lb/>
ever looked forward to reading a<lb/>
day in advance.<lb/>
Kim Albin's articles are on<lb/>
microfilm in the library. (Her col-<lb/>
umn came out on Thursday<lb/>
Editorial page.) If you want to kill<lb/>
a couple of hours reading<lb/>
something good, check them out.<lb/>
ECU Students Gag On French Porn<lb/>
Beware! The following article<lb/>
deals with pornographic material<lb/>
of questionable taste. There are<lb/>
also bits of analysis and personal<lb/>
opinion interjected'at will that<lb/>
may offend some readers expec-<lb/>
ting a straight journalistic style.<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
<lb/>
Never mind that Emmanuelle is<lb/>
one of France's top box-office<lb/>
blockbusters. Never mind that<lb/>
after opening at the Paris Theater<lb/>
in August 1973, it's still playing<lb/>
on the Champs Elysees. Never<lb/>
mind that the French adore it<lb/>
because it bombed at ECU.<lb/>
I walked into Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
at 10:55 Friday night to see the<lb/>
late feature Emmanuelle and<lb/>
almost didn't get a seat. Other<lb/>
students were in fact turned away.<lb/>
Hendrix, balcony and all, was<lb/>
packed for the first X-rated film I<lb/>
can recall playing there. The place<lb/>
was a nut house. When the film<lb/>
began, I thought I'd stumbled in-<lb/>
to a hollerin' contest. A chorus of<lb/>
loud whistles and shouts of "Take<lb/>
it off filled the theater. The au-<lb/>
dience seemed primed as billy<lb/>
goats. There were shrieks of<lb/>
delight even during the opening<lb/>
credits. Maybe it had something<lb/>
to do with the French names,<lb/>
director Just Jaeckin for instance.<lb/>
Never mind the initial hoopla.<lb/>
After Emmanuelle got rolling, I<lb/>
found out ECU'S reputation as an<lb/>
over-sexed party school just ain't<lb/>
deserved. Students were soon<lb/>
walking out in droves. Granted,<lb/>
some of the first defectors were<lb/>
probably disgusted by the rowdy<lb/>
audience that made hearing the<lb/>
dialogue almost impossible. The<lb/>
softly spoken French-accented<lb/>
English that was dubbed in was<lb/>
hard enough to understand during<lb/>
the rare moments of quiet, but the<lb/>
din inside Hendrix rarely let up.<lb/>
The film had the same effect on a<lb/>
Urge portion of the audience that<lb/>
the moon has on mongrels ?<lb/>
dozens constantly howled like<lb/>
dogs and barked like baboons. I<lb/>
almost walked out after the initial<lb/>
onslaught of lunacy myself.<lb/>
But the soft-porn sexcapades<lb/>
soon proved too much for one<lb/>
group of spectators after another.<lb/>
A good many left as soon as Em-<lb/>
manuelle hit the rack with hubby.<lb/>
But then, a lot of people today<lb/>
find straight sex patently offen-<lb/>
sive ? or perhaps patently bor-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
? The next big wave of walk outs<lb/>
surgerd through the exits when<lb/>
Emmanuelle began her first of<lb/>
several lesbian encounters. And<lb/>
then there was Emmanuelle's hor-<lb/>
ny little friend Marianne who<lb/>
disgusted many a sensibility by<lb/>
masturbating to a picture of Paul<lb/>
Newman. Too strong a stuff for<lb/>
ECU party hounds.<lb/>
Most of Emmanuelle was early<lb/>
'70s bourgeois decadence at its<lb/>
peak. Emmanuelle's double<lb/>
coupling while flying high aboard<lb/>
a United Arlines 747 was the sort<lb/>
of schlock that littered the pages<lb/>
of Plaboy 10 years ago and made<lb/>
Erica Jong rich and famous. But<lb/>
then, any society that considered<lb/>
four-inch-wide ties and coat<lb/>
lapels, and platform-soled shoes<lb/>
fashionable had to be inherently<lb/>
sick.<lb/>
I figured Emmanuelle had<lb/>
shifted as many gears as was<lb/>
humanly possible, and that those<lb/>
left watching either couldn't be<lb/>
offended or were true con-<lb/>
noisseurs of French culture. But<lb/>
then the ever inquisitive Em-<lb/>
manuelle met Mario, senior<lb/>
French diplomat and granddaddy<lb/>
of sexual educators for the French<lb/>
embassy in Thailand. Mario<lb/>
reminded me of Henry Kissinger.<lb/>
He walked about stiffly mumbling<lb/>
profound gibberish (with a thick<lb/>
accent of course) such as, "It is<lb/>
not the orgasam, but the erection,<lb/>
my dear Emmanuelle<lb/>
And like Kissinger, Mario had a<lb/>
way of pissing off even the most<lb/>
enlightened. He escorted the leggy<lb/>
Emmanuelle from the high side to<lb/>
the low end of Bangkok culture.<lb/>
He took the wide-eyed<lb/>
mademoiselle to a dingy opium<lb/>
den and watched as a pack of (ob-<lb/>
viously not bombed-out-of-their-<lb/>
skulls-and-into-a-stupor-of-<lb/>
impotentcy) dope fiends raped the<lb/>
girl. Next he took her to a kick-<lb/>
boxing prize fight where she was<lb/>
the winner's prize. Even hard-core<lb/>
sex fiends got up and left at this<lb/>
juncture.<lb/>
By the movie's end, it was just<lb/>
me and a half-filled theater of<lb/>
howling dogs and barking ba-<lb/>
boons, connoisseurs of French<lb/>
culture one and all.<lb/>
B L1SAHORI<lb/>
The made-for-televisu<lb/>
The Day After presej<lb/>
graphic depiction ol j<lb/>
effects of nuclear war<lb/>
controversial film ? im<lb/>
mature audiences<lb/>
series of debate, re<lb/>
commentaries that<lb/>
opened the eyes f<lb/>
the United States Teiej<lb/>
nion lines on local an<lb/>
radio and television staj<lb/>
flooded with callers.<lb/>
response to the fiirr<lb/>
Although the 100 i<lb/>
pie who saw Kansas<lb/>
into the stoneage<lb/>
knew it was just a<lb/>
grotesqueness of th-<lb/>
the film a Wai<lb/>
reality at a time n<lb/>
is a reality<lb/>
Many EC I<lb/>
picture had positive<lb/>
that showing th-<lb/>
in question at ABC<lb/>
beginning, wa-<lb/>
following stude-<lb/>
ments on the movie.<lb/>
Mark Zelenz - Soc<lb/>
"The movie sr<lb/>
close we really are<lb/>
destruciton<lb/>
can only be taker<lb/>
takes is one misur.<lb/>
small slip up and i<lb/>
The film onlv <lb/>
face of what coulc<lb/>
think it's a step r the<lb/>
tion in informing peopl<lb/>
that's good or bac: I<lb/>
John Davis Bu <lb/>
"I feel the speba ?j<lb/>
superb in the aspeel<lb/>
the world that the idc<lb/>
war is nothing<lb/>
Hopefully this :<lb/>
perience of this bon <lb/>
Dave Robacze ?<lb/>
"After wa'<lb/>
4rer, my fee <lb/>
possibility of nu<lb/>
effects have made a<lb/>
It appears that th<lb/>
the world do not eve:<lb/>
issue; the issue c<lb/>
governments. Ol<lb/>
bigger than this pi <lb/>
created, and otj <lb/>
will solve it<lb/>
Clayman Norfli<lb/>
Science:<lb/>
"The Day Afte'<lb/>
realistic depiction<lb/>
dous aftermath<lb/>
nuclear weapc: I<lb/>
ween the United<lb/>
Soviet Union ar -<lb/>
fects if will have I<lb/>
The value of The Pa<lb/>
its non-partisar. '<lb/>
trayal of a nuclea- I<lb/>
Dale Swanson En<lb/>
"I enjoyed the<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
occepl<lb/>
Come b<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
DON'T l<lb/>
$1<lb/>
Anyfi<lb/>
with pun<lb/>
IF TOO MAN<lb/>
WE'LL LO!<lb/>
30s.<lb/>
GretaCarbo<lb/>
one of Mick's photo series, "Great Broads of the 20s<lb/>
????" m? ? ?. mmmttmtf<lb/>
mmmm mmm wamtm ????.<lb/>
OKWS<lb/>
mm m??"<lb/>
ii ii? ?' n r ?  -<lb/>
:Ste&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0007"/><lb/>
The Day After'<lb/>
THE EAST CAROI MAN<lb/>
NOVEMBF.R22 1983<lb/>
:<lb/>
roads of the 20s and<lb/>
Students Respond<lb/>
By LISA MORTON<lb/>
MMki<lb/>
I he made-for-television movie,<lb/>
The Day After presented a<lb/>
graphic depiction of the possible<lb/>
effects of nuclear war. This highly<lb/>
controversial film ? intended for<lb/>
mature audiences ? brought on a<lb/>
venes of debates, reviews and<lb/>
mmentaries that seemingly<lb/>
opened the eyes of viewers all over<lb/>
the I'nited States. Telephone opi-<lb/>
n lines on local and national<lb/>
adio and television stations were<lb/>
vdeJ with callers, and overall<lb/>
spouse to the film was positive.<lb/>
Although the 100 million peo-<lb/>
ple who saw Kansas City nuked<lb/>
the stoneage on television<lb/>
inc it was just a movie, the<lb/>
crotesqueness of the disaster gave<lb/>
film a War-of-the-Worlds<lb/>
? at a time when nuclear war<lb/>
is a reality.<lb/>
Many ECU students felt the<lb/>
ire had positive aspects and<lb/>
thai showing the film, which was<lb/>
question at ABC from the<lb/>
g lining, was a good idea. The<lb/>
wing students gave their com-<lb/>
its on the movie.<lb/>
Mark Zelenz - Social Work:<lb/>
The movie shows just how<lb/>
sc we really are to nuclear<lb/>
truciton. "To err is human"<lb/>
.an onlj be taken so far. All it<lb/>
. ts is one misunderstanding, a<lb/>
all slip up and it's all over,<lb/>
film only scratches the sur-<lb/>
face of what could happen, but I<lb/>
ink it's a step in the right direc-<lb/>
:n forming people. Whether<lb/>
good or bad, who knows?"<lb/>
Davis - Business:<lb/>
-i feel the special effects were<lb/>
iperb in the aspect of showing<lb/>
world th I the idea of nuclear<lb/>
is n thing to overlook.<lb/>
Hopefully this film is all we'll ex-<lb/>
perience of this horrid war<lb/>
lave Robaczewski - Biology:<lb/>
v:er watching The Day<lb/>
er. :m feelings about the<lb/>
. of nuclear war and its<lb/>
have made me frustrated.<lb/>
( appears that the governments of<lb/>
the world do not even control the<lb/>
the issue controls the<lb/>
ments. Only the Lord is<lb/>
in this problem we have<lb/>
created, and only praying to him<lb/>
vc it<lb/>
? Nor fleet - Political<lb/>
" The Day A fter is a graphic yet<lb/>
:tioii of the horren-<lb/>
iftermath of a minute<lb/>
weapons exchange bet-<lb/>
ween the United States and the<lb/>
and the ensuing ef-<lb/>
have on you and me.<lb/>
The Day After lies in<lb/>
partisan, objective por-<lb/>
trayal of a nuclear war<lb/>
laie Hanson - English:<lb/>
1 emoved the movie insofar as<lb/>
one can enjoy seeing the death<lb/>
and human suffering of the<lb/>
magnitude of an all out nuclear<lb/>
war. I would probably be better to<lb/>
say that I was deeply moved.<lb/>
Though far from being a great<lb/>
film in the critical sense, 1 feel the<lb/>
movie will affect the nuclear<lb/>
issues facing us. Over the past few<lb/>
years the only things the general<lb/>
public has been exposed to ? and<lb/>
therefore reacting to ? have been<lb/>
statistics and numbers comparing<lb/>
the strengths and weaknesses of<lb/>
the two major nuclear powers of<lb/>
the world. Statistics and numbers<lb/>
are easy to justify. The suffering I<lb/>
saw Sunday night is not<lb/>
Kathy Terry - Occupational<lb/>
Therapy:<lb/>
"I thought the movie was<lb/>
devastating. I'm glad it didn't<lb/>
take a stand on the issue and just<lb/>
showed the facts. It was accurate<lb/>
on the points on the immediate ef-<lb/>
fects (flashfires, windstorms etc.)<lb/>
and the effect's on the human<lb/>
body (radiation sickness, flash<lb/>
blindnes)<lb/>
Rene Seech - Nursing:<lb/>
"I thought the movie was very<lb/>
realistic to what could happen<lb/>
during and after a nuclear<lb/>
catastrophe. The devastation and<lb/>
suffering was so real but there<lb/>
might not even be any suffering;<lb/>
there might not be anything left if<lb/>
that happened. Everyone should<lb/>
react right away to alerts and<lb/>
follow instructions of authorities<lb/>
instead of assuming you already<lb/>
know what to do. This was a very<lb/>
effective film<lb/>
In foresight the conservatives<lb/>
saw it as political propaganda; the<lb/>
libarals saw it as graphic reality.<lb/>
Scientists said the destruction was<lb/>
"too optimistic; if we ever had a<lb/>
nuclear war, we probably<lb/>
wouldn't see the day after The<lb/>
movie quotes Albert Einstein as<lb/>
saying, "I don't know about the<lb/>
third world war, but the fourth<lb/>
world war will be fought with<lb/>
sticks and stones<lb/>
Pianist Henry Doskey, faculty member in the ECU School of Music, will perform a<lb/>
free recital in Hendrix Theatre this evening at 8:15. Clarinetist Brian Schweickhardt<lb/>
performs next Monday in Fletcher Recital Hall.<lb/>
School Announces Faculty Recitals<lb/>
Henry Doskey, pianist and<lb/>
member of the ECU School of<lb/>
Music keyboard faculty, will per-<lb/>
form a recital on Tuesday,<lb/>
November 22 at 8:15 p.m. in Hen-<lb/>
drix Theatre. For his program,<lb/>
Doskey has chosen works by two<lb/>
composers. The Sonata in B-flat,<lb/>
D.960 by Franz Schubert will<lb/>
open the program. After inter-<lb/>
misssion Doskey will play three<lb/>
works by Frederic Chopin: the<lb/>
Mazurka, Op. 17, No. 4; the Noc-<lb/>
turne, Op. 62, No. 2, and the An<lb/>
dante Spianto and Grande<lb/>
Polonaise Brilliante, Opus 22.<lb/>
A native of New Orleans,<lb/>
Henry Doskey holds bachelor's<lb/>
and master's degrees in piano<lb/>
from Southern Methodist Univer-<lb/>
sity and the doctor of music in<lb/>
piano performace from IndianaI<lb/>
University. He has been the reci-l<lb/>
pient of numerous awards in-<lb/>
cluding the prestigious Musical<lb/>
Arts Award presented by the<lb/>
Society of American Musicians,<lb/>
Chicago, 111. As a past winner of<lb/>
the Sorantin Award for young ar-<lb/>
tists sponsored by the Symphony<lb/>
Society of San Angelo, Texas, he<lb/>
has been invited to participate in a<lb/>
silver jubilee celebration in that ci-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
He is also scheduled to give per-<lb/>
formances this fall in Dallas and<lb/>
at East Texas State University in<lb/>
Commerce, Texas. Doskey<lb/>
presented his New York debut<lb/>
recital in Carnegie Recital Hall in<lb/>
1980. .<lb/>
Doskey's Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
recital is free to the public.<lb/>
Next Monday the ECU School<lb/>
of Music features another recital.<lb/>
Clarinetist Brian Schweickhardt,<lb/>
a visiting assistant professor in the<lb/>
school of music, will perform on<lb/>
November 28 at 8:15 p.m. in the<lb/>
Fletcher Music Center Recital<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
The program will include the<lb/>
Bellison arrangement of<lb/>
Beethoven's "Variations on a<lb/>
BUYING -<lb/>
LOANS<lb/>
TVs, Air Conditioners.<lb/>
Stereos guns, gold &amp; silver.<lb/>
diamonds, cameras and<lb/>
equipment, typewriters,<lb/>
kerosene heaters,<lb/>
refrigerators (dorm sue 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 405 Evans Street,<lb/>
downtown 757 2444<lb/>
theme of Mozart "Three In-<lb/>
termezzi Opus 13 by Charles<lb/>
Stanford; Janos Komives' "Flam-<lb/>
mes" for solo clarinet; the Paul<lb/>
Jeanjean "Carnival of Venice,<lb/>
Theme and Variations a Hon-<lb/>
negger sonatina; William<lb/>
Bolcom's "A Short Lecture on<lb/>
the Clarinet "Ice Age" by<lb/>
Henry Brant and Carlos<lb/>
Surinach's "Ritmo Jondo<lb/>
Pianist Donna Coleman and<lb/>
percussionist Harold Jones will<lb/>
also be featured in the recital.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$195.00 Abortion from 1 3<lb/>
to 18 wrlcj at nddition?l ;<lb/>
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Prnrnanrv Counseling. For<lb/>
further information rail<lb/>
832-0535 (ToB Free Numbei<lb/>
800-221-2568) between<lb/>
9A.M. and 5P.M. weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATION<lb/>
? i' West Morfan St<lb/>
Hale N C<lb/>
DauschOLomb<lb/>
Soft Lenses<lb/>
compietc<lb/>
Includes initial eye examination, lenses, care kit,<lb/>
instructions and follow-up visits for the month<lb/>
ECU studmts I.D. required.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
is now<lb/>
accepting applications for<lb/>
advertising sales.<lb/>
Come by MonWed. 1 pm-2pm<lb/>
OPfOMCTWC<lb/>
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visit, please Customer must pay any sales tax due This coupon not good in <lb/>
I combination with any other offers Offer good during regular breakfast hours m<lb/>
only at participating Hardee s Restaurants ? ? ? m I<lb/>
through May 31. 1984 WmMJklM9W<lb/>
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May 31. 1984 ft ft a f<lb/>
11983 HardeesFood Systems inc<lb/>
J 'A<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
Both are ECU music faculty<lb/>
members. Fellow faculty member<lb/>
Barry Shank will assist along with<lb/>
student percussionists Bill Con-<lb/>
gdon, Keith Beck, Brent Mon-<lb/>
tgomery and Sharon Ross.<lb/>
The Jeanjean work has been<lb/>
recorded by Schweickhardt on the<lb/>
Coronet label. Schweickhardt is<lb/>
featured on a soon-to-be-released<lb/>
Coronet recording, "The Com-<lb/>
poser's Clarinet vol. II.<lb/>
Scgweickhardt made his New<lb/>
York recital debut in May. 1980<lb/>
after more than a decade as as<lb/>
tant principal clarinetist with<lb/>
Detroit Symphony. He is a can<lb/>
didate for the doctoral degrc-<lb/>
from the Unversity of Michigan<lb/>
where he is active in two Or<lb/>
chestra Hall support groups. Hi<lb/>
numerous solo and chamer<lb/>
music performances include a r<lb/>
cent perfromance at the Intern a<lb/>
tional Brahms Festival al the in-<lb/>
vitation of Antal Dorati.<lb/>
Schweickhardt's Nov. 28 re<lb/>
is free and open to the public.<lb/>
PIRATES LANDING<lb/>
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We now have a model unit ready for your<lb/>
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5 Tues. &amp; Wed. Nov. 22 &amp; 23<lb/>
or call<lb/>
752-3565 or 756-6336<lb/>
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this weekend.<lb/>
<lb/>
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Tossed Salad may be substituted for slaw 35- extra<lb/>
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-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0008"/><lb/>
kv<lb/>
8 THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 22 1983<lb/>
<lb/>
Videocassettes Sell<lb/>
HAST??UANNE<lb/>
vrtry<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI)<lb/>
? "It's been a boom<lb/>
year for videocassette<lb/>
recorder sales, and the<lb/>
millions of home<lb/>
moviegoers are turn-<lb/>
ing many a box office<lb/>
miss into a livingroom<lb/>
hit said Nick San-<lb/>
trizos, president of<lb/>
Thorn EMI Home<lb/>
Video.<lb/>
Santrizos said there<lb/>
were some 5.5 million<lb/>
videocassette recorder<lb/>
owners at the beginn-<lb/>
ing of the year, and it<lb/>
now looks as if that<lb/>
number will reach 9<lb/>
million by the end of<lb/>
the year ? getting up<lb/>
there when you con-<lb/>
sider HBO has just<lb/>
over 12 million<lb/>
subscribers.<lb/>
What Santrizos is<lb/>
more excited about,<lb/>
however, is the fact<lb/>
that not only are the<lb/>
recorders selling at a<lb/>
rate of 80,000-90,000<lb/>
per week, but the sale<lb/>
and rental of video<lb/>
programming for the<lb/>
first time is experienc-<lb/>
ing a parallel boom.<lb/>
"It's making us all<lb/>
very optimistic about<lb/>
the future of this in-<lb/>
dustry. We really feel<lb/>
strongly that America<lb/>
has perceived pre-<lb/>
recorded video as the<lb/>
ultimate in viewing<lb/>
convenience in that<lb/>
you can watch what<lb/>
you want when you<lb/>
want to Santrizos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Rentals outnumber<lb/>
sales eight or nine to<lb/>
one, Santrizos said.<lb/>
But pre-recorded pur-<lb/>
chases are coming up<lb/>
as some key movie<lb/>
titles arc being offered<lb/>
at lower prices.<lb/>
The standard price<lb/>
tag on first-run<lb/>
theatrical movies still<lb/>
is $79.95 ? perhaps a<lb/>
little steep in the eyes<lb/>
of those who still turn<lb/>
ashen when the only<lb/>
thing they get in<lb/>
return for a five. at<lb/>
the box office is a<lb/>
ticket.<lb/>
But enough VCR<lb/>
owners are unper-<lb/>
turbed about the price<lb/>
to make it profitable.<lb/>
"We had (Sylvester<lb/>
Stallones's) First<lb/>
Blood at $79.95 retail,<lb/>
and between 55,000<lb/>
and 60,000 have been<lb/>
sold right now. We<lb/>
did the same thing<lb/>
with (Robert Duvall<lb/>
and Betty Buckley's)<lb/>
Tender Mercies, and<lb/>
(Sean Penn's) Bad<lb/>
Boys Santrizos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Tender Mercies had<lb/>
a very low box office<lb/>
turnover, and we did<lb/>
over $1 million with it<lb/>
at wholesale he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
All of the movies<lb/>
mentioned by San-<lb/>
trizos have been on<lb/>
Billboard's Top 40<lb/>
lists of videocassette<lb/>
rentals and sales for<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
Frances, Jessica<lb/>
Lange's portrayl of<lb/>
Frances Farmer, the<lb/>
Hollywood ingenue<lb/>
whose brief career<lb/>
ended with a<lb/>
lobotomy, is going at<lb/>
$69.95. "Froices only<lb/>
grossed $6 million at<lb/>
the box office, and yet<lb/>
we did $1 million in<lb/>
wholesale inFrances<lb/>
video Santrizos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
At the $29.95 level,<lb/>
Santrizos said, EMI<lb/>
tries to offer titles<lb/>
with "an inherent col-<lb/>
lectability agbout<lb/>
them ? PBS' The<lb/>
World At War series,<lb/>
children matinee or<lb/>
music titles. Santrizos<lb/>
feels that as long as<lb/>
more and more people<lb/>
have the means to buy<lb/>
VCRs, the market will<lb/>
grow. "It has very<lb/>
much to do with<lb/>
freedom of choice<lb/>
he said. "There's an<lb/>
infinite number of op-<lb/>
portunities that will<lb/>
open up<lb/>
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Pira<lb/>
ByCIMJt PI r v<lb/>
Nobody could I<lb/>
better ending for<lb/>
football saga<lb/>
Playing in mud a<lb/>
the Pirates battle:<lb/>
cond half to edj<lb/>
Mississippi, I<lb/>
Both team<lb/>
against torna :<lb/>
Emory said nc <lb/>
wanted to win his<lb/>
under any othei .ondit<lb/>
"You couldn't -<lb/>
ter storybook finj<lb/>
Emory said "To wii j<lb/>
home on our se<lb/>
playing in th. .<lb/>
and coming fron<lb/>
did made the <lb/>
"It's better : -<lb/>
me than to win<lb/>
48-0. It really rr<lb/>
that the co .<lb/>
adversity<lb/>
Trailing 6-0 i<lb/>
"flipper ret<lb/>
Williams spec<lb/>
soaking fir<lb/>
12-yard line f<lb/>
"Don't let the :<lb/>
you Willis<lb/>
jokingly<lb/>
that a million<lb/>
"and now H<lb/>
sure didn't<lb/>
it?"<lb/>
The B<lb/>
yard line, b<lb/>
Walden' can<lb/>
short in a foui<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Pirates aga<lb/>
??4<lb/>
&amp;&amp; <lb/>
i<lb/>
Pirate senior Emi<lb/>
game as a Pirate tht <lb/>
Lad<lb/>
By RNP MH<lb/>
I sp?ru m-<lb/>
The ECU worn<lb/>
team opened their<lb/>
Minges cohseurr. S<lb/>
noon with a 64-57 vj<lb/>
George Washington Ui<lb/>
The Lady Pirates buj<lb/>
lead after just six mim<lb/>
they never relmqi. ,<lb/>
game. ECU was up S<lb/>
one point and was ne<lb/>
challenged until GW1<lb/>
the Pirtes 15-2 in the fij<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
"At that time, we<lb/>
our starters in there <lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi said<lb/>
using a couple of frej<lb/>
had a few players out<lb/>
but I'm sure we'll g<lb/>
breaking the press as<lb/>
goes on<lb/>
For the first gamcj<lb/>
was pleased with her<lb/>
formance. She used<lb/>
players in all, startinl<lb/>
returning members froj<lb/>
along with transfer<lb/>
Phillips. Phillips m<lb/>
defensive player of the<lb/>
The only Lady Colo<lb/>
the Pirates was Kas<lb/>
scored a game-high 37<lb/>
connected on 16 of 2<lb/>
floor, five on eight fr<lb/>
-<lb/>
 i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
I Ml t AS1 t XKOl ININ<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22, 1983<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
PECIALS<lb/>
Id Under j<lb/>
Pirates End With Storybook Finish<lb/>
By CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
1 OUR<lb/>
PECIALS<lb/>
v r ruit Bar<lb/>
led alad Bar<lb/>
 Her Sene You<lb/>
Hhd 756-0040<lb/>
758-2712<lb/>
avorite<lb/>
iseof<lb/>
iner Buffet<lb/>
n &amp; Tues<lb/>
&amp;3.09<lb/>
hts weekly<lb/>
g<lb/>
lot<lb/>
1<lb/>
a<lb/>
I. Each air-<lb/>
tt down to<lb/>
chairs and<lb/>
rent from<lb/>
Ringgold<lb/>
n at com-<lb/>
;nse.<lb/>
vantages of<lb/>
-iation (in<lb/>
applicable<lb/>
renting to<lb/>
?rship, a<lb/>
it sensible<lb/>
Nobody could have written a<lb/>
better ending for the 1983 Pirate<lb/>
football saga.<lb/>
Plavmg in mud and heavy rain,<lb/>
the Pirates battled back in the se-<lb/>
cond half to edge out Southern<lb/>
Mississippi, 10-6.<lb/>
Both teams were fighting<lb/>
against tornado-watch winds, but<lb/>
Emory said he wouldn't have<lb/>
wanted to win his fourth road trip<lb/>
under any other conditions.<lb/>
"You couldn't have had a bet-<lb/>
ter storybook finish for me<lb/>
Emory said. "To win away from<lb/>
home on our seventh road trip,<lb/>
playing in this kind of weather<lb/>
and coming from behind like we<lb/>
did made the win so much better.<lb/>
"It's better to win that way to<lb/>
me than to win on a dry field,<lb/>
48-0. It really made the kids feel<lb/>
that they could overcome all<lb/>
adersit<lb/>
Trailing 6-0 at halftime. ECU's<lb/>
"flipper" return kicker Henry<lb/>
Williams sped down the mud-<lb/>
soaking field to the USM's<lb/>
12-yard line for an 84-yard return.<lb/>
"Don't let the rain intimidate<lb/>
ou Williams had told Emory<lb/>
jokingly. "I've told the players<lb/>
that a million times Emory said.<lb/>
"and now Henry's telling me. It<lb/>
sure didn't intimidate him did<lb/>
. -<lb/>
The Bucs moved to the four-<lb/>
yard line, but tailback Jimmy<lb/>
WaJden's carry was just inches<lb/>
short in a fourth-and-goai situa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Pirates again gained good<lb/>
field position minutes later when<lb/>
USM's Larry Boyd kicked into<lb/>
the wind for a 12-yard punt.<lb/>
The Bucs quickly moved from<lb/>
the 22-yard line to the 14. ECU<lb/>
quarterback Kevin Ingram then<lb/>
threw long to tightend Norwood<lb/>
Vann in the endzone, but the ball<lb/>
slipped out of Vann's hands.<lb/>
Vann redeemed himself,<lb/>
however, on the next play when he<lb/>
reached up and grabbed the ball<lb/>
down toward him in the endzone.<lb/>
That impressive catch gave the<lb/>
Bucs a 7-6 lead with 8:30 remain-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Sophomore placekicker Jeff<lb/>
Heath kicked a 37-yard field goal<lb/>
with 1:07 left to give the Pirates a<lb/>
10-6 advantage over the Eagles.<lb/>
According to Emory, Williams'<lb/>
run and Heath's field goal were<lb/>
the turning points in the game.<lb/>
"The team did gain some momen-<lb/>
tum after Henry's run, but more<lb/>
importantly, we gained good field<lb/>
position from it Emory said.<lb/>
"Wet or dry, field position is the<lb/>
key to offensive success.<lb/>
"They could have beaten us<lb/>
with a field goal, so I think<lb/>
Heath's kick was the turning<lb/>
point in the game<lb/>
STANLEY LKAKY?ICU Photo Lab<lb/>
ECU return-off kicker Henry Williams (15) wasn't able to do his touchdown Hip at USM this Saturday, but<lb/>
he did manage to run for 84 yards on one return.<lb/>
In the final quarter, both teams<lb/>
slipped around on a dim field<lb/>
after a section of lights went out<lb/>
from the storm. Neither team<lb/>
threatened until USM's Steve<lb/>
Hendrix blocked Jeff Bolch's<lb/>
punt with2:13 to go. The Eagles<lb/>
recovered at the 14-yard line.<lb/>
USM's running quarterback<lb/>
Robert Ducksworth and tailback<lb/>
Sam Dejarnette picked up five<lb/>
yards, but the Eagles faced a<lb/>
fourth-and-five situation with<lb/>
1:11 left in the game.<lb/>
"Our defense has gotten better<lb/>
and better since we played<lb/>
Southwest Louisiana Emory<lb/>
said. "To hold'em on the 14-yard<lb/>
line with two minutes to go shows<lb/>
a great deal of character<lb/>
Emory said he was just glad<lb/>
that things turned out in favor of<lb/>
the Pirates. "I'm thankful that we<lb/>
got the ball and the wind in the<lb/>
third quarter he said, "because<lb/>
the game was over when we got<lb/>
those 10 points. That field was so<lb/>
bad in the fourth quarter<lb/>
Since USM was playing with the<lb/>
wind in the first quarter, the<lb/>
Eagles were able to get off two<lb/>
field goals. Placekicker Steve<lb/>
Clark booted a 46-yard field goal<lb/>
with 10:40 remaining, and then<lb/>
followed with a 44-yard field goal<lb/>
to give the Eagles a 6-0 lead with<lb/>
one second left in the first<lb/>
quarter.<lb/>
In the second half, the Pirates<lb/>
were on USM's four-yard line<lb/>
when Walden fumbled with :55<lb/>
left.<lb/>
"1 thought momentum was on<lb/>
Southern Mississippi's side in the<lb/>
first half because they had the<lb/>
wind behind their backs, and we<lb/>
got poor field position Emory<lb/>
said. "We were lucky to come out<lb/>
behind 6-0 in the first half<lb/>
The Bucs possessed the ball<lb/>
35:20 to USM's 24:40. ECU still<lb/>
managed 165 yards rushing and 67<lb/>
yards passing for 232 yards on<lb/>
total offense.<lb/>
USM also had 67 yards passing<lb/>
and rushed for 119 yards to finish<lb/>
with 186 yards on total offense.<lb/>
Emory had nothing but praise<lb/>
for the Golden Eagles. "I think<lb/>
they're probably the best team we<lb/>
may have played he said. "I do<lb/>
believe it's the best defensive team<lb/>
we've played<lb/>
The USM win gave the Pirates a<lb/>
winning percentage on the road<lb/>
this season. The Bucs have beaten<lb/>
N.C. State, Missouri, Temple,<lb/>
and Southern Mississippi to win<lb/>
four of seven road trips.<lb/>
The USM game also marked the<lb/>
last time 20 ECU seniors would<lb/>
play as Pirates. According to<lb/>
Emory, the 1983 squad wanted to<lb/>
go out in style.<lb/>
"They showed that they<lb/>
weren't intimidated by anything<lb/>
he said. "I had to run my mouth a<lb/>
lot before playing Southern<lb/>
Mississippi, saying that we should<lb/>
go to a bowl.<lb/>
"The less you say, the less you<lb/>
have to take back, and I knew that<lb/>
I was sticking myself out on a<lb/>
plank. I'm just glad that plank<lb/>
didn't break off. Sometimes you<lb/>
say things for your program, and<lb/>
I'm just glad we backed up<lb/>
everything I said<lb/>
No Bowl Tough To Swallow<lb/>
Write senior Ernest Byner Is one of 20 seniors who played his last<lb/>
game as a Pirate this Saturday.<lb/>
Things are not always fair in<lb/>
this world. Coach Emory has been<lb/>
telling his senior players that for<lb/>
four years, but they haven't found<lb/>
out just how true that is until<lb/>
recently.<lb/>
Despite an 8-3 finish, the<lb/>
Pirates were not selected as a bowl<lb/>
team. That's a little hard to<lb/>
swallow when a team you have<lb/>
beaten with a 7-4 record gets an<lb/>
invitation.<lb/>
Sure, it's not fair. A lot of<lb/>
things in life aren't. But tell that<lb/>
to 20 players who will never have<lb/>
the opportunity o play in a col-<lb/>
lege bowl. Tell that to runn-<lb/>
ingbacks who have left pieces of<lb/>
their bodies all over Florida.<lb/>
CINDY PLEASANTS<lb/>
A Look Inside<lb/>
Tell that to the ECU football<lb/>
coaching staff who has out-<lb/>
scouted and just plain out-worked<lb/>
other schools. But most of all, tell<lb/>
that to Head Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
who hasn't had more than six<lb/>
hours of sleep a night (if that<lb/>
much) since the season began.<lb/>
The Pirates' last shot for a bowl<lb/>
bid came when it was thought that<lb/>
Notre Dame, now 6-5, might<lb/>
decline the Liberty Bowl's invita-<lb/>
tion after the Fighting Irish suf-<lb/>
fered a 23-22 loss to Air Force on<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
East Carolina, Virginia Tech,<lb/>
Oklahoma and Washington State<lb/>
were the other teams being con-<lb/>
sidered to take Notre Dame's<lb/>
place. Notre Dame, however,<lb/>
decided to accept.<lb/>
Emory said ECU has been<lb/>
qualified as a bowl team for the<lb/>
past two years. "We were 7-4 last<lb/>
year, and we were much better<lb/>
than some of the teams who went<lb/>
(to a bowl) he said. "There's no<lb/>
question that we should be one of<lb/>
the top bowl teams in the country.<lb/>
"It's a shame. I think the<lb/>
NCAA should set criteria because<lb/>
a bowl should be to reward a team<lb/>
for the season they played<lb/>
Emory said he knew that get-<lb/>
ting a bowl bid would be tough<lb/>
for the Pirates after they lost all<lb/>
three Florida games. "I thought<lb/>
all along that we'd have to be 9-2.<lb/>
"In the Liberty Bowl, I never<lb/>
thought they'd match up East<lb/>
Carolina and Boston College.<lb/>
They probably want a midwestern<lb/>
team like Oklahoma. We might<lb/>
have had a better chance as an<lb/>
eastern team if Boston College<lb/>
wasn't in the bowl<lb/>
Liberty Bowl officials reported<lb/>
that Oklahoma was their next<lb/>
choice after Notre Dame.<lb/>
Although a bowl bid would<lb/>
have been nice, the Pirates have<lb/>
come away with one of the best<lb/>
seasons in ECU's history. For<lb/>
Emory, 1983 has been a magical<lb/>
year. "It's the greatest year of<lb/>
football I've ever been associated<lb/>
with Emorysaid. "No one can<lb/>
understand the adversity and the<lb/>
up-hill climb this program has had<lb/>
to make.<lb/>
"We spend one dollar to every<lb/>
thousand dollars that Florida<lb/>
State spends. You might think I'm<lb/>
exaggerating, but I'm probably<lb/>
being very kind.<lb/>
"Florida State spends about<lb/>
five million dollars, the University<lb/>
of Florida spends seven or eight<lb/>
million dollars, and we spend less<lb/>
than a million.<lb/>
"It's just amazing that these<lb/>
guys have done what they have<lb/>
against these well-funded teams.<lb/>
I'm very proud of them. Nobody<lb/>
gave us a chance, and we thought<lb/>
we'd be 11-0. I'm glad we kept<lb/>
that belief all season<lb/>
Emory said the 1983 season has<lb/>
been so rewarding because of his<lb/>
Pirate seniors?his first senior<lb/>
class ever 3: ECU. "These kids<lb/>
are the most team-oriented<lb/>
players I've been around he<lb/>
said. "I guarantee you there has<lb/>
never been 20 like those, and there<lb/>
probably won't be another 20 like<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"They're my first group since<lb/>
I've been here, and they mean so<lb/>
much to me. I just want them to<lb/>
be successful.<lb/>
"That's why the bowl situation<lb/>
hurts so much. I'm gonna have<lb/>
another chance, but they won't.<lb/>
Most of them will have a chance<lb/>
at the Super Bowl but not a col-<lb/>
lege bowl<lb/>
Emory said he hopes he has<lb/>
taught his players at least one<lb/>
thing in four years. "Somebody<lb/>
asked me the other day what I feel<lb/>
like I've contributed to these 20<lb/>
seniors he said. "The only thing<lb/>
that came to me was that I just<lb/>
hope I've taught'em how to win. I<lb/>
think we've done that<lb/>
After finishing with a 5-6 mark<lb/>
his first year, Emory's record has<lb/>
gotten better each season. He<lb/>
followed that year by going 6-5,<lb/>
7-4 and now 8-3.<lb/>
Will next year's record be 9-2?<lb/>
Emory hopes not. "Let's go<lb/>
11-0 he said. "Let's go ahead<lb/>
and do away with all that waiting<lb/>
on bowls. Let's go all the way.<lb/>
"We're losing 20 great seniors.<lb/>
We want to reload, not rebuild. If<lb/>
you reload, you just fill holes and<lb/>
fire away<lb/>
If next year's team shows the<lb/>
same determination as this<lb/>
season's senior class, Emory<lb/>
shouldn't have anything to worry<lb/>
about.<lb/>
Lady Pirates Clinch Opener<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
I S?prH E411f<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team opened their season in<lb/>
Minges coliseum Sunday after-<lb/>
noon with a 64-57 victory over<lb/>
George Washington University.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates built up a 17-7<lb/>
lead after just six minutes, a lead<lb/>
they never relinquished the entire<lb/>
game. ECU was up by 20 points at<lb/>
ne point and was never seriously<lb/>
challenged until GWU outscored<lb/>
the Pirtes 15-2 in the final minutes<lb/>
of play.<lb/>
"At that time, we didn't have<lb/>
our starters in there Head coach<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi said. "We were<lb/>
using a couple of freshmen and<lb/>
had a few players out of position,<lb/>
but I'm sure we'll get better at<lb/>
breaking the press as the season<lb/>
goes on<lb/>
For the first game, Andruzzi<lb/>
was pleased with her team's per-<lb/>
formance. She used only seven<lb/>
players in all, starting the four<lb/>
returning members from last year,<lb/>
along with transfer Annette<lb/>
Phillips. Phillips was named<lb/>
defensive player of the game.<lb/>
The only Lady Colonial to hurt<lb/>
the Pirates was Kas Alien, who<lb/>
scored a game-high 37 points. She<lb/>
connected on 16 of 28 from the<lb/>
floor, five on eight from the line,<lb/>
and also led the game with 11 re-<lb/>
bounds.<lb/>
Although Allen almost seemed<lb/>
unstoppable, she received no sup-<lb/>
port from her teammates. No one<lb/>
else scored in double figures, and<lb/>
only two players connected on<lb/>
more then five points.<lb/>
"It seems like one of then-<lb/>
players always has a good game<lb/>
on us Andruzzi said. "Last time<lb/>
(Kelly) Ballentine scored 40<lb/>
points. It seems like when you<lb/>
work hard on one, another does<lb/>
the job<lb/>
Ballentine was held to just three<lb/>
of 13 shots from the floor and<lb/>
two-of-two at the line for a total<lb/>
of eight points.<lb/>
"I have to give Allen credit. She<lb/>
did a good job and got a lot of her<lb/>
points from out on the<lb/>
perimeter<lb/>
Andruzzi said rebounding was<lb/>
the key to the win. The Pirates<lb/>
finished with 43 rebounds to<lb/>
GWUs31.<lb/>
Individually, Darlene Hedges<lb/>
had 10 and Lisa Squirewell had<lb/>
nine for ECU.<lb/>
Andruzzi said she was unsure<lb/>
what to expect from her team<lb/>
before the game was played. "It's<lb/>
a new blend, but I thought<lb/>
Delphine (Mabry) showed great<lb/>
leadership out there, and Darlene<lb/>
Hedges played what was probably<lb/>
her best game ever<lb/>
Hedges is the lone senior on the<lb/>
team and pumped in 10 points<lb/>
after averaging only 0.4 points per<lb/>
game last season.<lb/>
Andruzzi was also pleased with<lb/>
the play of freshman Lynn Nance<lb/>
who played with a face-mask<lb/>
because of a broken nose sustain-<lb/>
ed in practice. In 23 minutes of<lb/>
play she scored seven points and<lb/>
pulled down six rebounds.<lb/>
Of the seven players that saw<lb/>
action, Andruzzi said all of them<lb/>
came in and fulfilled their<lb/>
assignments.<lb/>
"We did make a number of<lb/>
mistakes that we'll have to work<lb/>
on correcting Andruzzi added.<lb/>
"But I think winning a game like<lb/>
this against a team that had<lb/>
everyone back and beat us last<lb/>
year, will give us a lot of con-<lb/>
fidence<lb/>
The Lady Colonials ralied once<lb/>
in the first half to come within<lb/>
four on a three-point play by<lb/>
Allen. The play cut ECU's lead to<lb/>
22-18 with 8:37 remaining in the<lb/>
half, but two technicals called on<lb/>
the GWU bench, and a layup by<lb/>
Phillips got the Pirates out of<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
Over the final five minutes of<lb/>
the half, ECU pulled away to go<lb/>
to the locker room with a 39-25<lb/>
bulge.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates picked up<lb/>
where they left off in the second<lb/>
half, reaching their biggest lead of<lb/>
20 points with 7:32 remaining in<lb/>
the game.<lb/>
Phillips and Sylvia Bragg both<lb/>
finished with 15 points to lead the<lb/>
scoring for the Pirates.<lb/>
ECU will be in action again this<lb/>
weekend, playing on the road<lb/>
against St. Peters on Saturday,<lb/>
and Iona on Sunday.<lb/>
fHMMQMpMf'<lb/>
' fe- m ????? i' HH W" ??lll?Hi"M" ??ii' il<lb/>
m m  "<lb/>
' - -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057592_0010"/><lb/>
M <lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 22, 1983<lb/>
Karate Members Wi<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
tawui Sawti f dH.x<lb/>
Eleven members of<lb/>
the ECU Karate Club<lb/>
traveled to<lb/>
Swansboro, N.C<lb/>
this weekend to com-<lb/>
pete in the Goju-<lb/>
Shonn North<lb/>
Carolina State Cham-<lb/>
pionships<lb/>
Club President<lb/>
Chuck Johnson was<lb/>
erv pleased with how<lb/>
ECTU was represented.<lb/>
"Our club got started<lb/>
er late in the<lb/>
semester, and we were<lb/>
still able to have a<lb/>
good showing. We<lb/>
have a lot of ex-<lb/>
perienced members,<lb/>
and even the people<lb/>
who didn't place had<lb/>
a good tournament<lb/>
Most members<lb/>
chose to participate in<lb/>
the two major<lb/>
categories: kumite<lb/>
(fighting) and kata<lb/>
(forms).<lb/>
Johnson and James<lb/>
White were the two<lb/>
black belts represen-<lb/>
ting the club. Johnson<lb/>
placed second in the<lb/>
middleweight kumite,<lb/>
while White placed se-<lb/>
cond in both kata and<lb/>
lightweight kumite.<lb/>
Underbelts who<lb/>
placed in both events<lb/>
included Ronnie<lb/>
Langley (Green belt)<lb/>
with a first in kumite<lb/>
and second in kata,<lb/>
and Willie Murphy<lb/>
(Green-tip) with a<lb/>
first in kumite and<lb/>
third in kata.<lb/>
Other members<lb/>
who placed for the<lb/>
club included brown-<lb/>
belt Rusty Foster<lb/>
(kata), and green-belt<lb/>
Odell Hemley and<lb/>
green-tip Mott Mc-<lb/>
Campbell (kumite).<lb/>
Sixth-degree black<lb/>
belt Bill McDonald<lb/>
was the tournament's<lb/>
special guest.<lb/>
McDonald, a resident<lb/>
of Greenville, is head<lb/>
sensei and creator of<lb/>
the Goju-Shorin st<lb/>
of Karate. He is<lb/>
club's advisor, and<lb/>
occasion has provided<lb/>
instruction for the<lb/>
club members.<lb/>
Johnson plans for<lb/>
the club to compete in<lb/>
one more tournament<lb/>
before Christmas in<lb/>
preparation for their<lb/>
busy spring season.<lb/>
Included among those<lb/>
spring trips is the<lb/>
prestigious Battle of<lb/>
Atlanta, a tourna-<lb/>
ment which draws the<lb/>
highest-ranking mar-<lb/>
tial art experts from<lb/>
across the country<lb/>
and abroad.<lb/>
Pirates Sink ODU<lb/>
Diver Dale Swanson<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Dublin Sport Mllof<lb/>
The ECU swimm-<lb/>
ing team won both<lb/>
meets against Old<lb/>
Dominion this<lb/>
weekend, with the<lb/>
men winning 82-31,<lb/>
and the women com-<lb/>
ing out on top 57-56.<lb/>
"The men swam a<lb/>
great meet Coach<lb/>
Rick Kobe said<lb/>
"ODU beat us last<lb/>
year, but this year we<lb/>
totally dominated<lb/>
them<lb/>
The Pirtes won 10<lb/>
of 13 events, while<lb/>
Scott Eagle, Chris<lb/>
Pitelli and Chem l.ar-<lb/>
ranaga each won two<lb/>
individual events.<lb/>
fagle was vic-<lb/>
torious in both the<lb/>
one and three-meter<lb/>
diving events, Pitelli<lb/>
won the 100 and<lb/>
200-meter freestyle,<lb/>
while I arranaga cap-<lb/>
tured the 500 and<lb/>
1000 free<lb/>
Other individual<lb/>
winners for the men<lb/>
included Stan<lb/>
Williams in the 50<lb/>
freest vie, Kevin<lb/>
Richards in the 200 in-<lb/>
dividual niedly and<lb/>
Greg Wrav in the 200<lb/>
fly.<lb/>
Scotia Miller and<lb/>
Caycec Poust stood<lb/>
out for the women as<lb/>
they took their first<lb/>
meet ever against Old<lb/>
Dominion<lb/>
Miller took both<lb/>
the c00 and 1000<lb/>
freestyles, while Poust<lb/>
won the 100<lb/>
backstroke and placed<lb/>
second in the 200 in-<lb/>
dividual medly.<lb/>
First-place finishers<lb/>
for the women also in-<lb/>
cluded Jean Keathmg<lb/>
in the 50 freestyle,<lb/>
Jessica Eeinberg in the<lb/>
100 breaststroke and<lb/>
Lon Miller in the one-<lb/>
meter dive.<lb/>
Kobe said he was<lb/>
encouraged by both<lb/>
the men and womens'<lb/>
performances, and is<lb/>
looking forward to a<lb/>
very successful<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Sneaker Sam Congratulates Winners<lb/>
Champions<lb/>
CrownedAfter four<lb/>
weeks of head-to-<lb/>
head (give an inch or<lb/>
two) competition on<lb/>
the hardwoods, three<lb/>
champions have been<lb/>
crowned in the one-<lb/>
on-one basketball<lb/>
competition.<lb/>
In the women's<lb/>
division, Johnnie Mae<lb/>
Livingston gained the<lb/>
title by defeating<lb/>
Margaret Ray 10-8,<lb/>
10-7 in the title game.<lb/>
Both women were<lb/>
undefeated through<lb/>
semi-final action,<lb/>
when Ray sent Liv-<lb/>
ingston to the loser's<lb/>
side of the bracket.<lb/>
Johnnie Mae defeated<lb/>
Linda Gassaway to<lb/>
gain another shot at<lb/>
Ray. Since the com-<lb/>
petition was double<lb/>
elimination and Ray<lb/>
lost to Livingston in<lb/>
their second en-<lb/>
counter, a third match<lb/>
was necessay to deter-<lb/>
mine the winner.<lb/>
Gregory Richard-<lb/>
son proved to be too<lb/>
much in the mens<lb/>
6-1-and-under divi-<lb/>
sion by breezing<lb/>
through the tourna-<lb/>
ment undefeated.<lb/>
David Mitchell, who<lb/>
lost to Richardson in<lb/>
the second round of<lb/>
competition, fought<lb/>
his way through the<lb/>
loser's bracket by<lb/>
defeating four more<lb/>
opponents before fall-<lb/>
ing victim for a se-<lb/>
cond time to the vic-<lb/>
torious Richardson.<lb/>
It was a suprising<lb/>
upset for the "little<lb/>
guy" in the men's 6-1<lb/>
and over competition.<lb/>
Ed Clark standing at a<lb/>
meek 6-3 was able to<lb/>
capture the cham-<lb/>
pionship from 6-9<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
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IBM selectnc typewriter Call<lb/>
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ski weeks from $17? Spring<lb/>
break Florida weaks trom tll?<lb/>
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WIN t!00 00M Come to Hearts<lb/>
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YO. EVERYONE! ECU Hillel<lb/>
will be sponsoring a chanukah<lb/>
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The celebration will include the<lb/>
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with the<lb/>
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Jeff Best. Clark had<lb/>
defeated Best in the<lb/>
semi-finals of the<lb/>
tourney and gained a<lb/>
victory over Mark<lb/>
Davidson to remain<lb/>
undefeated<lb/>
throughout the com-<lb/>
petition.<lb/>
Congratulations to<lb/>
all three winners and a<lb/>
sincere thank' you to<lb/>
all one-on-one par-<lb/>
ticipants.<lb/>
SUGAR MOUNTAIN<lb/>
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Kroger Sav on<lb/>
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None Sold To Deaen<lb/>
rtems and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru sat<lb/>
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k'VJ<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057592_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>