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<pb facs="00057613_0001"/>
?he lEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No J9 i i<lb/>
Tuesday, January 10,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
Technology Center<lb/>
Aspires To Serve<lb/>
Campus, Region<lb/>
Patience Is A Virtue<lb/>
N?IL JOHNSON - ICU Phot, L.h<lb/>
These students are enjoying one of ECL's major attractions ? drop- and waiting patiently, sometimes to the point of death. So far, it<lb/>
add. Drop-add is intended to teach students the art of starding in line seems to be working.<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
AakUil ttmm Editor<lb/>
ECU is establishing a Center<lb/>
for Applied Technology with the<lb/>
goal of making Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina more responsive to high<lb/>
technological developments and<lb/>
bringing ECU into the realm of<lb/>
support for industrial activities.<lb/>
In an earlier statement, Angelo<lb/>
A. Volpe, vice chancellor of<lb/>
academic affairs, said, "The high<lb/>
degree of technological expertise<lb/>
that is present within the ranks of<lb/>
our faculty has been the prime<lb/>
catalyst that has led to the forma-<lb/>
tion of this center<lb/>
Jerry V. Tester, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor in industrial and technical<lb/>
education and director of the<lb/>
center, said that the three main<lb/>
goals of the center are to provide<lb/>
technological assistance to<lb/>
organizations who need it, to con-<lb/>
duct research on technology-<lb/>
related problems and to provide<lb/>
training opportunities through<lb/>
contract with clients.<lb/>
"The center is viewed as a<lb/>
means of making a student's<lb/>
education and training more up to<lb/>
date and more relevant to the<lb/>
needs of the individual and of in-<lb/>
dustry said Calfrey C. Calhoun,<lb/>
dean of the School of<lb/>
Technology.<lb/>
Professors with technological<lb/>
expertise will have easy access to<lb/>
the center's services and will<lb/>
therefore be able to extend this<lb/>
practical knowledge to his or her<lb/>
students, Tester said. "If a pro-<lb/>
fessor is working with an industry<lb/>
and he brings these experiences in-<lb/>
to the classroom, it's much easier<lb/>
for students to see what they're<lb/>
studying Tester added.<lb/>
Professors who involve their<lb/>
students directly in industry ac-<lb/>
tivities may help students obtain<lb/>
jobs more quickly, Tester said.<lb/>
"If an industry is familiar with<lb/>
professors in the student's major.<lb/>
or even with the student himself,<lb/>
then he or she certainly doesn't<lb/>
have to sell himself when inter-<lb/>
viewing for a job Tester said.<lb/>
"So we're hoping that the ac-<lb/>
tivities at the center will certainly<lb/>
benefit students in terms of jobs<lb/>
See NEW SERVICE, Page 3<lb/>
Center Alters<lb/>
Class Schedule<lb/>
This Semester<lb/>
Bv DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
MmaacM MMoc<lb/>
The ECU Counseling Center is<lb/>
changing and expanding its<lb/>
seminar program this semester to<lb/>
help students learn good study<lb/>
habits, test taking techniques and<lb/>
stress-reducing exercises before<lb/>
the dreaded midterm exam period<lb/>
begins this spring.<lb/>
The center is changing the<lb/>
schedule of the classes this<lb/>
semester to allow students to com-<lb/>
plete the program, "How to Suc-<lb/>
ceed in College: Studying<lb/>
Smarter in January, before<lb/>
most major exams. One-hour<lb/>
classes will be offered four times a<lb/>
week from Jan. 16 to Jan. 31 at 3<lb/>
p.m. on such topics as taking<lb/>
notes effectively, managing time,<lb/>
improved textbook reading and<lb/>
successful test taking.<lb/>
"It's not just for the so-called<lb/>
poor students said Dr. lone<lb/>
Ryan, who works at the Counsel-<lb/>
ing Center and is coordinating the<lb/>
program. "It's a continuing need.<lb/>
Figures show one out of five<lb/>
freshman tend not to re-register<lb/>
Ryan said the center will also<lb/>
offer the classes on the regular<lb/>
schedule of twice a week for five<lb/>
weeks, from 1 p.m. to 2 p.m<lb/>
though she believes "the timing<lb/>
will be better" for students with<lb/>
the new schedule.<lb/>
"There is some indication that<lb/>
students do do better after the<lb/>
Med School Seeks Rise In Donations<lb/>
Dr. Steven Deters<lb/>
courses Ryan said. "The grade<lb/>
point (average) does go up" for<lb/>
many students.<lb/>
The courses are free and require<lb/>
no advance registration. Students<lb/>
may come to all courses or only<lb/>
those they are particularly in-<lb/>
terested in, though Ryan said,<lb/>
"we would hope students would<lb/>
stay for the whole experience to<lb/>
benefit maximally from the pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Ryan said the courses are<lb/>
helpful for students of all majors,<lb/>
and seminars will cover specific<lb/>
study techniques for different<lb/>
types of classes such as foreign<lb/>
language, science and math. The<lb/>
program also offers self-rating<lb/>
See MID-TERM, Page 2<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Mbtaal Ntn Kd?or<lb/>
Officials at the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine are seeking a 25 percent<lb/>
increase in donations during their<lb/>
annual fund-raising drive. Last<lb/>
year's drive raised $200,000 and<lb/>
Robert K. Adams II, executive<lb/>
director of the ECU Medical<lb/>
Foundation, said that this year's<lb/>
goal is $250,000.<lb/>
In an interview in The Raleigh<lb/>
News and Observer, Dr. William<lb/>
E. Laupus, dean of the medical<lb/>
school, cited rising costs and the<lb/>
loss of federal funding as reasons<lb/>
for the increased need for private<lb/>
donations.<lb/>
According to Adams, dona-<lb/>
tions are solicited in several ways<lb/>
Board Drafting Plan<lb/>
from different types of sources.<lb/>
Persons on the school's mailing<lb/>
list receive letters three times a<lb/>
year requesting their contribu-<lb/>
tions. Letters are also sent to cor-<lb/>
porations and medical industries<lb/>
doing business with the school on<lb/>
a regular basis. Adams and<lb/>
Laupus also visit individuals to<lb/>
ask for large donations. Adams<lb/>
said planned gifts are the major<lb/>
source of donations.<lb/>
Although the solicitation of<lb/>
funds is carried on throughout the<lb/>
yesj the foundation concentrates<lb/>
its efforts during December.<lb/>
Adams said this is to encourage<lb/>
donations made for tax purposes.<lb/>
The foundation was established<lb/>
in 1971 for the sole purpose of<lb/>
soliciting and processing private<lb/>
donations benefiting the medical<lb/>
school. Adams has been director<lb/>
since 1977 and said that in that<lb/>
time period the foundation has<lb/>
raised $4.5 million.<lb/>
Some of the money raised goes<lb/>
for tuition scholarships. The<lb/>
medical school is currently accep-<lb/>
ting 64 students in each class and<lb/>
this has an increased need for stu-<lb/>
dent financial aid. Laupus said in<lb/>
a letter that officials were trying<lb/>
to economize, but would not do<lb/>
so at the expense of quality<lb/>
teaching, and they would not let a<lb/>
student's financial resources be a<lb/>
determinant of his acceptance.<lb/>
Faculty research and training<lb/>
and some visiting professorships<lb/>
are also funded through the dona-<lb/>
tions. Both activities are impor-<lb/>
tant in the quality and reputation<lb/>
of the medical school program.<lb/>
"We want our programs to be a<lb/>
little better than what the state<lb/>
provides for said Adams.<lb/>
Adams added that the dona-<lb/>
tions are of major importance<lb/>
now, and he sees them becoming<lb/>
more important in the future.<lb/>
"On the horizon, we can see state<lb/>
appropriations not being as much<lb/>
as they've been because we won't<lb/>
be in a developmental phase he<lb/>
said. Once the program is set up,<lb/>
state aid will be decreased.<lb/>
"I think we'll reach our goal<lb/>
Adams said.<lb/>
Requirements May Be Raised<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
AateUat N?wi E4iior<lb/>
UNC administrators are currently drafting a plan<lb/>
which will make admission to the University of North<lb/>
Carolina System, including ECU, more difficult.<lb/>
The plan is scheduled to be voted on by the UNC<lb/>
Board of Governors sometime this month. It will<lb/>
probably take effect in the fall of 1984 or the spring<lb/>
of 1985, and is designed to reduce the need of<lb/>
remedial programs as well as increase the number of<lb/>
high school graduates entering college.<lb/>
Under the new plan, 20 high school credits would<lb/>
be required for admission to any school in the UNC<lb/>
System: four credits in English, three in<lb/>
mathematics, three in social sciences and economics<lb/>
and one in health and physical education, plus<lb/>
several electives such as foreign languages.<lb/>
ECU currently requires four units of English, three<lb/>
of mathematics, two of social science, one of natural<lb/>
science and six units of electives.<lb/>
A problem is created because the requirements for<lb/>
high school graduation are different: a student must<lb/>
earn four credits in English, two each in<lb/>
mathematics, science and social sciences, one in<lb/>
health and physical education and nine in electives.<lb/>
According to ECU Chancellor Dr. John Howell,<lb/>
these requirements were recently raised.<lb/>
"The essence of it is that the state department of<lb/>
public instruction has already raised the number of<lb/>
units required but has left electives. The university<lb/>
system would be specifying what the electives would<lb/>
be beyond what the department of public instruction<lb/>
requires Howell said.<lb/>
See ADMISSIONS, Page 3<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Entertainment7<lb/>
Sports 10<lb/>
Classifieds13<lb/>
? The Sports Section is<lb/>
featuring an article on various<lb/>
aspects of the ECU Athletic<lb/>
Program. See USFL Picks<lb/>
Pirates, page 10.<lb/>
? The Entertainment Sec-<lb/>
tion is running today a short<lb/>
 summary and review rating of<lb/>
all movies currently showing<lb/>
in the Greenville area. See<lb/>
Local Cinema, page 9.<lb/>
Cold Temperatures Cause Damage<lb/>
Some Campus Buildings Flooded<lb/>
  i.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
By ANDREA MARKELLO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Record cold temperatures<lb/>
which passed hit the university<lb/>
area as well as the rest of the na-<lb/>
tion during the Christmas<lb/>
holidays and froze pipes in several<lb/>
univeristy facilities, damaging the<lb/>
physics department wing of the<lb/>
science complex and at least six<lb/>
dormitories. Housing and<lb/>
maintenance officials said total<lb/>
costs from the minor disaster are<lb/>
still unknown at present.<lb/>
The Department of Physics in<lb/>
the east wing of the science com-<lb/>
plex was flooded because a con-<lb/>
trol device was not functioning<lb/>
properly, one official said.<lb/>
Louvers to the penthouse were left<lb/>
open which caused entering cold<lb/>
air to freeze coils in the air handl-<lb/>
ing units. The coils burst when<lb/>
thawed, causing an outflow of<lb/>
water.<lb/>
Pipes burst in two bathrooms in<lb/>
Jones Residence Hall, but floor<lb/>
drains allowed proper drainage of<lb/>
water. Residents in Aycock dor-<lb/>
mitory weren't as lucky. Pipes<lb/>
broke in the fourth floor shower,<lb/>
and drains, clogged from fallen<lb/>
ceiling material, did not permit<lb/>
adequate run-off of incoming<lb/>
water. As a result, water flowed<lb/>
from the fourth floor down to the<lb/>
basement.<lb/>
Investigations concluded that in<lb/>
both Aycock and Jones dorms,<lb/>
windows in the rooms where the<lb/>
pipes froze had not been ade-<lb/>
quately secured. Strong winds<lb/>
blew open the windows, allowing<lb/>
cold air to enter and freeze the<lb/>
pipes.<lb/>
In Tyler dormitory, twenty heat<lb/>
convectors, turned off by energy<lb/>
conscious students, froze and<lb/>
burst. The same problem occurred<lb/>
in Clement and Fletcher dorms,<lb/>
where convectors had been shut<lb/>
off. Housing Operations director<lb/>
Dan Woten explained that water<lb/>
is not turned off when dorms are<lb/>
not in use as packing in pipes dries<lb/>
out causing leaks.<lb/>
In the attic of Slay dorm where<lb/>
no heat is circulated, a pipe servic-<lb/>
ing the structure for thirty years<lb/>
without any prior trouble burst<lb/>
and flooded thirty rooms.<lb/>
No one around the campus area<lb/>
was aware of the problem until<lb/>
pipes thawed and broke. Basket-<lb/>
ball players returning to the<lb/>
dorms complained of cold<lb/>
temperatures and pipes were<lb/>
discovered frozen.<lb/>
Housekeeping personnel work-<lb/>
ed everyday after Dec. 26 cleaning<lb/>
up the mess, with eight members<lb/>
working all night Dec. 27. At least<lb/>
400 rugs had to be removed from<lb/>
student rooms, dried and return-<lb/>
ed. In the physics complex, floors<lb/>
had to be dried. In total, person-<lb/>
nel spent over 300 hours cleaning<lb/>
up the water.<lb/>
Students discovering property<lb/>
damaged from the water have<lb/>
been advised to give notice of the<lb/>
damage for reimbursement.<lb/>
More Lines, Less Money<lb/>
NCIL JOHNSON ? ?CO<lb/>
The Student Supply Store b the scene of a lot of activity tab week at studeats crowd la to bay<lb/>
semester's textbooks. The baited value of a dollar b always evident here.<lb/>
 ;? I<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAR<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The Fast Carolinian<lb/>
Seeing the cjmpui community<lb/>
sinct 1933<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday di'r?g the<lb/>
academic yea' and every<lb/>
Wednesday dunng the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian s trie<lb/>
Official newspaper o? Eas'<lb/>
Carolina University carted<lb/>
operated and published tor<lb/>
ana by the students of 6as<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate UO yearly<lb/>
Tha East Carolinian oltices<lb/>
art located in tha Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU Greenville N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Se -? ?d<lb/>
dress changes '  tas'<lb/>
Caroimia" 0 ' Soutl<lb/>
jing t Greenville<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 'S1 ?J ?'<lb/>
?3(X<lb/>
NURSING<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
rde? to recede your Nt<lb/>
a n r. Apt :T 1VB4 orders must be<lb/>
. , ta m the student Supp ? Store<lb/>
-? Building no late than<lb/>
ceoruar 3 1984 Orders shoc-ld be<lb/>
placed a' 'he ewelry Count.<lb/>
Orders must be paid In Ml when ?e<lb/>
order is placed<lb/>
PHYS ED<lb/>
! a education department<lb/>
w.ii oHer aerobics tor facuit, and<lb/>
staff a' noon on M A F Start ng<lb/>
January ? Classes will be he1 n<lb/>
Mp-ioriai Gym Room '08 No en<lb/>
oer,ence Is necessary<lb/>
BALL ROOM<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
B Room Dance for F ?<lb/>
oatfvv.i: begm on Janua-<lb/>
in verbal Gym Roor- 1M Classes<lb/>
Bre scheduled tor Tuesday and Th rs<lb/>
, -h?rf, s no charge Bnng a oar<lb/>
e? and plan lo ieam baa s<lb/>
Tr0l ? , tta Wa ?: - "? range<lb/>
sic Boc<lb/>
PIRATE WALK<lb/>
pi, ,? . , . begin rjpe? 1<lb/>
. -6 1984 Thei<lb/>
etlng of a escorts on<lb/>
? in '84 ,n roorr ?<lb/>
enhall Student Center at<lb/>
This meeting is manoa'<lb/>
 e a-e a persons no <lb/>
m an escort or ope-ator tr-ev<lb/>
- Bttend mis meeting At me<lb/>
mee ng I mes will be set tor me<lb/>
 r this semes'e'<lb/>
SENIORS GRAD<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
The Career planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service will meet with those in<lb/>
teres'ed in learning more about this<lb/>
service This general session will en<lb/>
.ourage those graduating In the spr<lb/>
ing and summer to pick up reglstia<lb/>
lion packets and return them In<lb/>
January The session will be held m<lb/>
Mendenhali 221 at 4 00 p m on<lb/>
January 19 n<lb/>
SCHOOL OF<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ient service will offer an Intorma<lb/>
'ion session for students wanting to<lb/>
iearn more about how to effectively<lb/>
utilize this service Some discussion<lb/>
of how to prepare before graduation<lb/>
will be ottered in this session on<lb/>
lanuary 18 at 3 30 p m In Rawl 130<lb/>
MARAUDERS<lb/>
The Depar'ment of Military<lb/>
v Icncc invites you to participate In<lb/>
the ECU Marauders an organiiation<lb/>
cnenteci toward leadership develop<lb/>
ment through adventure training<lb/>
military tactics and other outdoor<lb/>
a tivities<lb/>
All students aie welcome The next<lb/>
meeting will be held on Thursday<lb/>
jan 19 at 7PM In room 221<lb/>
Mendenhali Student Center For<lb/>
more information contact CPT<lb/>
Liivak. at 757 6967<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
Its summer camp employment<lb/>
time Are you interested Summer<lb/>
Camp representatives will be In<lb/>
Menoenhall Student Center from<lb/>
11 00 am to 3 00 pm Tuesoar<lb/>
'anuarv 31 to interview students in<lb/>
? erested in summer employment<lb/>
'obs available include but are not<lb/>
limited to Counselors Lifeguards<lb/>
Cooks and dietitians, Nurses. Arts<lb/>
and crafts directors Waterfront<lb/>
Assistants Sailing and canoeing<lb/>
directors Recreation Counselors<lb/>
Persons sk 'led in swimming, riflery.<lb/>
nature lore horseback riding, sports<lb/>
and other areas<lb/>
These positions will provide<lb/>
valuable work experience and salary<lb/>
Some Obs will involve working wit<lb/>
-andicapped campers<lb/>
job information is available in the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office 313<lb/>
Rawl Bldg<lb/>
Summer Camp Employ ment Day is<lb/>
sponsored by the following offices<lb/>
career Planning and Placement<lb/>
"ooperative Education Counseling<lb/>
enter Handicapped Student Ser<lb/>
vices Program tor Hearing Imparieo<lb/>
Students and Parks Recreation and<lb/>
Conservation<lb/>
Contact the Cooperative Education<lb/>
Office 313 Rawl Bldg Telephone<lb/>
s'6979 or 757 6375 immediately to<lb/>
arrange interviews<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
will meet Monday. January la at 7:30<lb/>
p m The meeting will be held at the<lb/>
Catholic Newman Center, 953 E 10th<lb/>
St (at the bottom o college Hill) All<lb/>
interested persons are cordially In<lb/>
vited to attend<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
welcome Back Ambassadors! We<lb/>
will have our first meeting of 1984 on<lb/>
Wednesday, January 11 Wewlllmeet<lb/>
m the Mendenhali Multipurpose room<lb/>
at 5 00 We will discuss plans for our<lb/>
induction ceremony scheduled<lb/>
January 18 Please make plans to at<lb/>
tend this important meeting<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
The NC institute of Government<lb/>
Summer Intern Program provides 24<lb/>
internships in government for<lb/>
outstand.ng students from a variety<lb/>
of academic backgrounds Students<lb/>
must have completed their<lb/>
sophomore year to be eligible Ap<lb/>
plication deadline is February 7 Con<lb/>
tact the Coop office, 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building to apply<lb/>
ECONOMICSMINOR<lb/>
An Economics minor is now being<lb/>
ottered by the Department of<lb/>
Sociology, Anthropology and<lb/>
Economics It involves 18 hours of<lb/>
course work beyond the two introduc<lb/>
fory courses Intermediate and ad<lb/>
vanced courses which will be ottered<lb/>
in the future include both<lb/>
microeconomic and macroeconomic<lb/>
theory, antitrust and regulation, in<lb/>
dustrial organization and structure,<lb/>
econometrics, international trade<lb/>
money and banking and business<lb/>
cycles and economic forecasting The<lb/>
minor is especially recommended tor<lb/>
students in business computer<lb/>
science and math For more infor<lb/>
?nation contact Professor Carson<lb/>
Bays. Coordinator tor Economics.<lb/>
Brewster A 413. 757 6883<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
All University faculty and all<lb/>
students participating In the Honors<lb/>
Program are reminded of their op<lb/>
portunlty of designing or requesting<lb/>
the Honors Seminar ot their choice.<lb/>
The Honors Committee makes the<lb/>
final selection from among proposals<lb/>
submitted each semester Seminars<lb/>
are topic oriented and are often Inter<lb/>
disciplinary and team taught Pro<lb/>
posals for courses to be taught fall<lb/>
semester 19?4 should be submitted<lb/>
before Wednesday. January 18, l?t4,<lb/>
to Or David Sanders, Director of the<lb/>
Honors Program, co Engligh<lb/>
Department, Campus For further in<lb/>
formation see Dr Sanders In<lb/>
Ragsdale 212 or call 757 6373<lb/>
IRS AEROBIC<lb/>
CLASSES<lb/>
The Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services Is ottering Spr<lb/>
ing semester aerobic fitness classes<lb/>
Registration for the first session will<lb/>
be held January 17 20 Cost for<lb/>
students, four dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting once per week, eight dollars<lb/>
for classes meeting twice per week<lb/>
FacultyStaff, five dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting once per week, ten dollars<lb/>
for classes meeting twice per<lb/>
week Registration for aerobic<lb/>
fitness classes Jan 17 20, Memorial<lb/>
Gym. rm 204<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
You may use the form at right<lb/>
or use a separate sheet of<lb/>
paper if you need more lines<lb/>
There are 33 units per line<lb/>
Each letter, punctuation mark<lb/>
and work space counts as one<lb/>
unit Capitalize and hyphenate<lb/>
words properly Leave space<lb/>
at end of line if word doesn't fit<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/>
NAVIGATORS<lb/>
Check it out! The Navigators in<lb/>
v e s t i g a t i v e Bible Study and<lb/>
fellowship Brewster B Wing Room<lb/>
304 every Tuesday, 7 30 PM, beginn<lb/>
ng January 10th<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
Approximately 115 jobs are<lb/>
available m this program Pay is<lb/>
$3 73'hr for full time positions<lb/>
Beginning June 1 August 10, 1984<lb/>
Students must have finished their<lb/>
sophomore year and have a 2 5 GPA<lb/>
Graduate students are also eligible to<lb/>
apply Application deadline is<lb/>
cebruary 7 Interested students<lb/>
should contact the Coop office. 313<lb/>
Rawl Bldg it interested Details<lb/>
about this program will be presented<lb/>
at our regular Co op seminars<lb/>
scheduled for January 11 from 12<lb/>
noon to 1 PM and January 12 from 4 5<lb/>
PM in 306 Rawl Bldg<lb/>
EDUCATION<lb/>
GRADUATES<lb/>
Those finishing with Degrees in<lb/>
Education may sign up for Interviews<lb/>
starting on January 11 at 2 30 pm at<lb/>
the Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service if they are registered in that<lb/>
office Six school systems will be here<lb/>
this month<lb/>
NCIO<lb/>
The Co-op Office has information<lb/>
concerning jobs available In state<lb/>
government which will be located<lb/>
throughout the state Students who<lb/>
are interested should attend one of<lb/>
the two information sessions which<lb/>
are planned for January 11 at 12 noon<lb/>
in 306 Rawl and January 12 at 4 p m<lb/>
in 306 Rawl Dr Don Ensley, board<lb/>
member of the internship program,<lb/>
will briefly discuss the various iob op<lb/>
portunitles available to students<lb/>
These summer jobs will begin June 1<lb/>
and end August 10<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA<lb/>
IOTA<lb/>
Sigma Alpha lota Composer s<lb/>
Musicale Compositions will be ac<lb/>
cepted from students, faculty, and<lb/>
members of the community who<lb/>
would like to participate in this con<lb/>
cert of originally composed music<lb/>
The Musicale will be held on January<lb/>
23. 19?4 at 8 00 p m in A J Fletcher<lb/>
Recital Hail Contact Natalie<lb/>
Beacham (7566252) or Betsy Laroer<lb/>
(758 6712) this week<lb/>
SPORTS CLUB<lb/>
The fifth meeting for the 1983 84<lb/>
Sport Club Council will be held Wed<lb/>
Jan 18, 1984 at 4 00 pm In room 105B<lb/>
of Memorial gym Representatives of<lb/>
active sport clubs are required to at<lb/>
tend Schedules for spring semester<lb/>
activities must be submitted at this<lb/>
meeting Persons or groups In<lb/>
terested in the sport club program<lb/>
are Invited to attend this<lb/>
meeting Sport Club Council<lb/>
Meeting, Wed Jan 18, 1984, 4 00 pm<lb/>
Rm 105B Mem Gym<lb/>
IRS AQUAROBICS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering an<lb/>
aquarobics class Registration will be<lb/>
held January 17 20 Cost for students<lb/>
four dollars for classes meeting once<lb/>
per week, eight dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting twice per week<lb/>
Facultystaff, five dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting once per week, ten dollars<lb/>
for classes meeting twice per<lb/>
week Registration for aquarobics<lb/>
will be Jan 17 20, Memorial Gym<lb/>
room 204<lb/>
IRS WEIGHT<lb/>
TRAINING<lb/>
The Department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering a<lb/>
weight training class Registration<lb/>
will be held January 17 20 Cost for<lb/>
students four dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting once per week, eight dollars<lb/>
for classes meeting twice per week<lb/>
Faculty staff five dollars for classes<lb/>
meeting once per week ten dollars<lb/>
for classes meeting twice per<lb/>
week Registration for weight train<lb/>
ing Jan 17 20 Memorial Gym room<lb/>
204<lb/>
REPRESENTATIVES<lb/>
MEETING<lb/>
The Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services represen<lb/>
tatives meeting will be held on Thurs<lb/>
day, January 12, 194, Brewster<lb/>
building room C 103 at 5 00 pm. It is<lb/>
Important that all Intramural<lb/>
Representatives attend Represen<lb/>
tatives meeting, Jan 12, 5 00.<lb/>
Brewster C 103<lb/>
VIDEOGAMES<lb/>
The department of intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services along with the<lb/>
Student Residence Association is con<lb/>
ducting a video games tournament to<lb/>
be held In the Aycock game room<lb/>
Registration will be held January<lb/>
16 18, 19fU, Memorial gym room 204<lb/>
INTRAMURAL<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
Registration for men's and<lb/>
women's 5 player basketball will be<lb/>
held January 16 and 17 A mandatory<lb/>
team captains meeting will be held on<lb/>
Jan 19. 194 at 7 00 pm in Biology<lb/>
building room 103 Play will begin<lb/>
January 23 Registration for basket<lb/>
ball will be held Jan 16, 17, MM H<lb/>
Memorial Gym room 204<lb/>
2BT<lb/>
Welcome back brothers and<lb/>
pledges of Zeta Beta Tau! Your little<lb/>
listers hope that your Christmas was<lb/>
the best yet Hope you all are looking<lb/>
forward to a great semester because<lb/>
we sure are! Love, your little sisters<lb/>
SOAPBOX FORUM<lb/>
There will be a Soapbox Forum in<lb/>
front of the Student Supply Store on<lb/>
Thursday at 1200 The topic will be<lb/>
the Kissinger Commission's report on<lb/>
Central America Everyone is invited<lb/>
to listen and to speak An open<lb/>
microphone will be available<lb/>
COLLEGE<lb/>
REPUBLICANS<lb/>
The ECU College Republicans will<lb/>
have a meeting on Wednesday night<lb/>
in Mendenhali room 238 at 5 30 p.m<lb/>
The Pitt County Young<lb/>
Republicans will hve a meeting<lb/>
tonight at 7 30 in Cindy Story's home<lb/>
Ail College Republicans are en<lb/>
couraged to attend For more infor<lb/>
mation call Stephen at 757 1559 or<lb/>
Dennis at 758 2448<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
NEEDED<lb/>
interested in officiating intramural<lb/>
basketball Attend the training clinic<lb/>
held by the Department of<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
Monday Jan 16. 19t4 at 6 00 pm m<lb/>
room 102 Memorial Gym Rules, in<lb/>
terpretations and mechanics will be<lb/>
discussed Officials will be hired bas<lb/>
ed on praticai and written tests<lb/>
Basketball officials Clinic Mon Jan<lb/>
16. 1984. Rm 102 Mem Gym<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
Just a reminder that we have a<lb/>
very Important meeting on Thursday<lb/>
January 12 at 5 pm in Mendenhaii's<lb/>
Coffeehouse Please try to be on<lb/>
time! Remember that the cut system<lb/>
is Still in effect, so if you can not make<lb/>
it please call one of the officers<lb/>
IRS DEFENSE<lb/>
CLASSES<lb/>
The Department of Intramura<lb/>
Recreational Services is Offa , ?<lb/>
personal defense class Registra- v<lb/>
will be held January 17 20 Cos' lor<lb/>
students, four dollars C ?<lb/>
facutlystaff. five dollars rWs ass<lb/>
will meet once per week reg jtri<lb/>
tion for personal defense ciass -j<lb/>
held Jan 17 20 Memor a Gy- 'oo?-<lb/>
204<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Art Exhibition Comm-riee j<lb/>
the Student Union is accept ng ac<lb/>
plications for committee tM-i<lb/>
now through January 20 '984 Mora<lb/>
information and applications a't<lb/>
available at the Office of Hm Student<lb/>
Union (Room 234 Menoenna<lb/>
Center) why not get involved<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal serv ceo h<lb/>
Communion will be oatabratM v<lb/>
Tuesday evening Jan 10 m th cac<lb/>
of St Paul's Episcopal Churc ?<lb/>
4th St (one block from Garret!<lb/>
Dorm) The service will be a1 5 X<lb/>
pm with the Episcopal Chapia ftn<lb/>
Rev Bill Hadden. celebrating s E<lb/>
per will follow<lb/>
ROLLER HOCKEY<lb/>
Registration tor intramurai roi-e'<lb/>
hockey will be held January 23 anc Z<lb/>
This activity utilizes 3 men anc I<lb/>
vomen Play will begm January 30 a'<lb/>
Sportsworid Registration for r0; f<lb/>
hockey jan 23 and 24 Memor.a<lb/>
Gym room 204<lb/>
Marsh's Surf-n-Sea<lb/>
206 E. 5th St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
WINTER SALEI<lb/>
30 off Woolrich Jackets<lb/>
(men's &amp; women's)<lb/>
OP Jackets (ski)-30"off<lb/>
30 off Hobie Jackets<lb/>
Timberland Boots - 30' off<lb/>
Sperr, OP &amp; Cool Shoes - 30'dff<lb/>
OP V omen Sweaters 306ff<lb/>
Ml Sweatjackets 30?oft<lb/>
-Coming-<lb/>
MEVS&amp; WOMEN'S<lb/>
NEW SUMMER BATHING<lb/>
SUITS<lb/>
r<lb/>
$<lb/>
00<lb/>
OFF ON<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
PAIRSOF<lb/>
GLASSES<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Opan Mon. thru Fit 9 A.M. til 5:30 P.M<lb/>
Beechar Klrkley-Dlspanalng Optician<lb/>
X<lb/>
sZ-sJSf<lb/>
M<lb/>
'o "M<lb/>
6P<lb/>
it<lb/>
stereo<lb/>
0 SENIORCITIZEN<lb/>
O DISCOUNT<lb/>
OFFER GOOD THRU JAN. 31. 1984<lb/>
DISCOUNT NOT GOOD ON OTHER SALE ITEMS.<lb/>
SIMPLY ADVANCED<lb/>
audio -technics<lb/>
$<lb/>
59<lb/>
10<lb/>
HR-S02 AMFM<lb/>
HEADPHONE<lb/>
RADIO<lb/>
CR-02<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
RADIO<lb/>
Not much<lb/>
bigger than<lb/>
a BIC Lighter<lb/>
$<lb/>
53<lb/>
10<lb/>
AT-632<lb/>
TURNTABLE<lb/>
Fluorescent Light<lb/>
with Auto-Switch<lb/>
<lb/>
Zg<lb/>
<lb/>
97<lb/>
v<lb/>
?SHU<lb/>
jjIPP<lb/>
PDMagnetics<lb/>
512 E 14th Street<lb/>
Greenville. North Carolina<lb/>
down from mens dorm on 14th<lb/>
OPEN i 1 a.m8 p.m<lb/>
Monday-Friday<lb/>
I 2-8 Saturday k Sunday<lb/>
TAKE OUT OKDEKS<lb/>
752-0476<lb/>
)<lb/>
?HUY<lb/>
Served from 1 1-2<lb/>
ruut<lb/>
TEA<lb/>
(TAX<lb/>
Audio &amp; Video<lb/>
Cassettes<lb/>
C-90 CHROME<lb/>
3for$1 000<lb/>
Lit-i'i<lb/>
Record<lb/>
Cleaner<lb/>
rfS-<lb/>
$<lb/>
99<lb/>
SC-2<lb/>
E-<lb/>
CASE<lb/>
PRICES<lb/>
AVAILABLE<lb/>
P!Nu<lb/>
3Mjn?tlcs<lb/>
1-120 or L-750<lb/>
HIGH<lb/>
GRADE<lb/>
99<lb/>
Stylus<lb/>
Cleaner<lb/>
49<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
7<lb/>
EACH<lb/>
uu<lb/>
We Offer Meal Plans<lb/>
Call 752-0476<lb/>
All You Can Eat Vegetables<lb/>
?,?g On Large Plate<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
$3.85 -? tax<lb/>
Special Offer<lb/>
Buy 1 Pair of POINT 2<lb/>
Stereophones<lb/>
by (audio-technica<lb/>
fy only $25.00 and get a pair of<lb/>
POINT 15 Stereophones for only<lb/>
$5.00 or a pair of ESKIMO<lb/>
earmuffs FREE!<lb/>
<lb/>
New Dro<lb/>
Mixed Re:<lb/>
ByTINAMAKOSCHAi<lb/>
ECU students had mix<lb/>
tions towards the nc<lb/>
procedure implement<lb/>
semester. Registrar<lb/>
said, "Our main pur<lb/>
first assist students n<lb/>
get a good schedule, the<lb/>
remaining stud<lb/>
According<lb/>
ere basical<lb/>
groups and assigned<lb/>
dinglv The mon<lb/>
scheduling problemv<lb/>
afternoon group<lb/>
quested courses b .<lb/>
preferred hours We<lb/>
schedule itsell<lb/>
Donaid Font<lb/>
who worked at tl<lb/>
Counseling lei<lb/>
Mid- Ti<lb/>
Continued Fron<lb/>
technique I<lb/>
weaknesses in S<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Though stud<lb/>
seminars in one la g<lb/>
Counseling Cent<lb/>
nex room 305 r.<lb/>
Supply Store. R<lb/>
dividual c i<lb/>
aallablefor stuJ<lb/>
other problems. '<lb/>
tion of the coin<lb/>
help studc l<lb/>
netting she<lb/>
Starting in<lb/>
follow-up tc<lb/>
program will be a a<lb/>
classes on "Cor a<lb/>
taught b C ounseling Ce;<lb/>
member Dr. Steven Dei<lb/>
classes will focus<lb/>
such problems a-<lb/>
other stress-rela:<lb/>
ming from such<lb/>
loads, career j<lb/>
Admissi<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
Howell :dciec ha<lb/>
tain courses, a<lb/>
not satisfactory<lb/>
the necessary :<lb/>
schools do not of f j<lb/>
a contingent <lb/>
basis is "very re-<lb/>
"We end up '<lb/>
not applying here<lb/>
course Hov,el! said '<lb/>
math credit- are<lb/>
while three n a<lb/>
ZP<lb/>
rncoco<lb/>
i urn to<lb/>
fSKMO<lb/>
WE CATER ANY OCCASION - CALL US!<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Only<lb/>
?. ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MNUARY 10. 1984<lb/>
- -?,<lb/>
<lb/>
4?t??<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?f?<lb/>
<lb/>
J?<lb/>
IRS DEFENSE<lb/>
CLASSES<lb/>
 S?rvlc? H offering a<lb/>
v casi He?itratiofi<lb/>
? tew artu?r? 17 20 Cost tor<lb/>
JOMar Cost tor<lb/>
? aodars Th.j ciass<lb/>
i cw w?e re?istra<lb/>
? UstcnMctMswiHst<lb/>
Memorial Gym room<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
bitton Comm.rte? of<lb/>
?" ? accepting ap<lb/>
- n?? members<lb/>
' ? 20 19fc? More<lb/>
?  applications are<lb/>
?? i of the Student<lb/>
I - Mindsnhall Stuoent<lb/>
a- not je' rivolvec"<lb/>
EPISCOPAL<lb/>
WORSHIP<lb/>
I C? se c of Holy<lb/>
: reiecated on<lb/>
-2a? tvw ng a- '0 In the rhapei<lb/>
v Ecsoca Church. 40<lb/>
J" Die; from Oarren<lb/>
'?ve srv C( MatJx<lb/>
 ? ne Ep voca Cl apiam, tne<lb/>
3 -acoe- e eorating Sup-<lb/>
ROLLER HOCKEY<lb/>
- ia- or -or -vjmgrtl roJIer<lb/>
 ?  . a?uary 23 arm 24<lb/>
? "?  J? 3 men aryj 3<lb/>
- ?? bteta January 30 at<lb/>
? Itr?1 on for roller<lb/>
3 anc :4 Memorial<lb/>
Ofi<lb/>
0 4f<lb/>
nca<lb/>
Record<lb/>
Cleaner<lb/>
rOCOOUTSlOC<lb/>
MCOtttOtT<lb/>
New Drop-Add Procedure Brings<lb/>
Mixed Responses From Students<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
ECU students had mixed reac-<lb/>
tions towards the new drop-add<lb/>
procedure implemented this<lb/>
semester. Registrar Gil Moore<lb/>
said, "Our main purpose was to<lb/>
first assist students who did not<lb/>
get a good schedule, then help the<lb/>
remaining students more efficient-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
According to Moore, students<lb/>
were basically divided into two<lb/>
groups and assigned times accor-<lb/>
dingly. The morning group had<lb/>
scheduling problems, and the<lb/>
afternoon group received the re-<lb/>
quested courses but not at the<lb/>
preferred hours. "We went on the<lb/>
schedule itself Moore said.<lb/>
Donald Fontenot, a student<lb/>
who worked at the ROTC booth,<lb/>
said the new procedure was more<lb/>
organized than it has been in<lb/>
previous semesters. "Of all the<lb/>
years I've gone through drop-add,<lb/>
they've finally thought of a better<lb/>
way to organize it to cut down on<lb/>
the long lines and having to get up<lb/>
at 6 a.m<lb/>
Business major Jennifer Parker<lb/>
agreed with Fontenot. "I thought<lb/>
it wasn't bad at all Parker said.<lb/>
"It was better than it was last<lb/>
year she added.<lb/>
Moore said the new system was<lb/>
more efficient. "By the time the<lb/>
second group came in, 've were<lb/>
almost completely finished with<lb/>
the first group Moore said.<lb/>
Student Rick Brown said there<lb/>
was little difference between this<lb/>
semester's drop-add procedures<lb/>
and previous ones. "I thought the<lb/>
people were generally pretty slack-<lb/>
they could have been more effi-<lb/>
cient Brown said. "I could have<lb/>
stood around a lot less he said.<lb/>
Susan Tollefsen, a student who<lb/>
changed her major and had to<lb/>
drop 18 hours, was angry about<lb/>
the new procedure. "I had to wait<lb/>
until 1 p.m. to go to drop-add and<lb/>
the lines were ridiculous<lb/>
Tollefsen said. "I don't unders-<lb/>
tand why I couldn't get special<lb/>
permission to go in the morning<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
Nursing major, Jeri Hingo<lb/>
thought this semester's pro-<lb/>
cedures were about the same as<lb/>
last semester's. "I got the classes<lb/>
that I wanted, but not the times<lb/>
Hingo said.<lb/>
Moore said that the new pro-<lb/>
cedure will be evaluated to deter-<lb/>
mine whether or not it will be con-<lb/>
t i n u e d .<lb/>
Counseling Center Offering Study Program<lb/>
Mid- Term Exam Skills Studied<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
techniques for students to find<lb/>
weaknesses in specific areas of<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Though students attend the<lb/>
seminars in one large group at the<lb/>
Counseling Center, in Wright An-<lb/>
nex room 305 next to the Student<lb/>
Supply Store, Ryan said in-<lb/>
dividual counseling is still<lb/>
available for study techniques and<lb/>
other problems. "The basic func-<lb/>
tion of the counseling center is to<lb/>
help students succeed in a college<lb/>
setting she said.<lb/>
Starting in February as a<lb/>
follow-up to the study techniques<lb/>
program will be a a series of four<lb/>
classes on "Coping with Stress<lb/>
taught by Counseling Center staff<lb/>
member Dr. Steven Deters. The<lb/>
classes will focus on alleviating<lb/>
such problems as test anxiety and<lb/>
other stress-related problemsstem-<lb/>
ming from such causes as work<lb/>
loads, career decisions or living<lb/>
conditions, according to Deters.<lb/>
He said about 10 percent of all<lb/>
students have lower test scores<lb/>
because of test anxiety.<lb/>
The classes will use lectures,<lb/>
audio tapes and printed hand-outs<lb/>
to help students recognize stress<lb/>
and learn techniques such as<lb/>
relaxation exercises to alleviate<lb/>
stress. Deters said such ideas as<lb/>
"psyching up" for a test can often<lb/>
produce excess stress that hurts<lb/>
test performance. "Going blank"<lb/>
during a test is also a stress-related<lb/>
condition that will be dealt with in<lb/>
the classes, he said.<lb/>
New Service For ECU<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
in the technological areas Tester<lb/>
auded.<lb/>
Because a major portion of the<lb/>
funding will come from private<lb/>
sources, Tester said the center will<lb/>
always maintain close ties withthe<lb/>
industrial business community.<lb/>
To assure this, a 15-member Ad-<lb/>
visory Board of Directors from<lb/>
business, industry and local<lb/>
governments, including mayors,<lb/>
legislators and chamber of com-<lb/>
merce officials, was chosen to<lb/>
"assure industrial and community<lb/>
input on activities and programs<lb/>
within the center Tester said.<lb/>
The Center for Applied<lb/>
Technology staff will conduct a<lb/>
survey of ECU to determine those<lb/>
services it can offer industry in<lb/>
this region. "We're hoping to in-<lb/>
volve the university as a whole in<lb/>
this service Tester said. "We're<lb/>
also hoping it will serve the<lb/>
technological needs of the region<lb/>
and will impact directly upon the<lb/>
students Tester said. "That, in<lb/>
a nutshell, is what it's all about<lb/>
Admissions Standards To Be Raised<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Howell added that admission to ECU requires cer-<lb/>
tain courses, and a high school diploma by itself is<lb/>
not satisfactory. A few students who have not taken<lb/>
the necessary courses (generally because their high<lb/>
schools do not offer them) are currently admitted on<lb/>
a contingency basis, but Howell said this contingency<lb/>
basis is "very restricted<lb/>
"We end up not admitting students, or students<lb/>
not applying here, because they didn't take that math<lb/>
eourse Howell said, referring to the fact that two<lb/>
math credits are required for high school graduation<lb/>
while three math credits are required for admission to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
One ot me reasons cuea ior lmpiciiicuuuiuu ui mc<lb/>
ntw plan is the amount of money the UNC System<lb/>
expends for remedial work.<lb/>
According to a UNC official, last spring 210<lb/>
remedial courses were offered throughout the UNC<lb/>
System at a cost of approximately $4 million.<lb/>
Howell said remedial courses were not a major ex-<lb/>
pense at ECU. He estimated the cost at "between<lb/>
$40,000 and $50,000, a small amount compared to<lb/>
what is spent in the system<lb/>
"If you don't take this course, it's not a question<lb/>
of whether or not we'll provide remedial work, it's a<lb/>
matter of whether or not we'll admit you Howell<lb/>
said, describing the ramifications the plan will have if<lb/>
put into effect.<lb/>
The East Carolinian 1$<lb/>
Now Accepting Applications For<lb/>
Circulation Manager<lb/>
Only Responsible, Highly Motivated Persons Need Apply<lb/>
See General Manager 7576309<lb/>
355??y!5??S?W??Wi<lb/>
FREE LUNCH<lb/>
to<lb/>
First 10 Customers<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Today's REOPENING (1-10-84)<lb/>
of the<lb/>
soup<lb/>
sandwiches<lb/>
7njenden7iacL -student cercttv<lb/>
east carol?n&amp; 3ining services<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?U Greenville ftiva.<lb/>
7S4-JW3 ? 24 MRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHEL<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
U-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
California<lb/>
Concept<lb/>
Hair Design Center<lb/>
QUALITY HAIR DESIGN<lb/>
AFFORDABLE PRICES<lb/>
Special New Years Offer<lb/>
For New Customers<lb/>
Pay For Your First Hair<lb/>
Design Get Your Second<lb/>
One FREE<lb/>
Must get 1st Cut By<lb/>
Feb. 15 with this ad.<lb/>
Appt Please<lb/>
1100 CHARLES BLVD.<lb/>
752-2967<lb/>
Class Rings Diamond Rings<lb/>
Gold &amp; Silver Jewerly<lb/>
SilverCoins<lb/>
WE BUY &amp; PAY CASH FOR<lb/>
T.V's, stereo's, cameras, video, microwave<lb/>
ovens, bicycles, watches, musical instruments,<lb/>
portable AM-FM, cassette, walkmans, heaters,<lb/>
good furniture, china &amp; crystal, typewriters, etc.<lb/>
rOlH&amp; RING Ala,<lb/>
400 EVANS, "on the corner<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
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HOUSE<lb/>
ye<lb/>
?t<lb/>
Fountain Drinks<lb/>
Fluff - Fold<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Cable Color T.V.<lb/>
758-6001<lb/>
Happy Hour 5-7 Daily<lb/>
HOW OPEN AT CAROLINA EAST CENTER.<lb/>
WHAT'S AMORE?<lb/>
in<lb/>
EXPECT THE BEST WFLL DO THE REST!<lb/>
SERVING GREAT PIZZA PiES,<lb/>
LASAGNA, SPAGHETTI, AND SANDWICHES.<lb/>
COME DINE IN OR TAKE OUT FOR LUNCH OR DINNER.<lb/>
r<lb/>
$2.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
LARGE PIZZA PIE OR<lb/>
$1.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
MEDIUM PIZZA PIE<lb/>
756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
(next to<lb/>
Carolina East Mall)<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Expires March 1 1984<lb/>
Cannot De used with any dail special<lb/>
wmumkmtmtmtm.<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
(11.00 AM Jo 2:00 PM)<lb/>
756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
(next to<lb/>
Carolina East Mall)<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Expires March 1. 1984<lb/>
Cannot be used with any daily special<lb/>
<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DINNER<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
(next to<lb/>
Carolina East Mali1<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Expires March 1 1984<lb/>
amot Df jsed satfi ar? jaiiy speva<lb/>
$2.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
LARGE PIZZA PIE OR<lb/>
$1.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
MEDIUM PIZZA PIE<lb/>
756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
(next to<lb/>
Carolina East Mall)<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Expires March 1.1904<lb/>
Cannot be used wrth any (My special<lb/>
i.epMfejtoji<lb/>
m<lb/>
m urn m??? m am ?<lb/>
iii i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0004"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?tje ?a0t Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, Gtmi?,?<lb/>
DARRYL BROWN, Manafin, Editor<lb/>
J.T. PlETRZAK, Director of Advtrtain,<lb/>
Mike McPartland, ??dm.?v<lb/>
Tom Norton, o? Mont<lb/>
Michael Mayo, Ttcmucm super<lb/>
ED NlCKLAS, Sports Editor<lb/>
Gordon I pock, Emmam Editor<lb/>
Lizanne Jennings, stykEdnor<lb/>
KATHY FUERST, Production MaMtrr<lb/>
January 10, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Jackson's Coup<lb/>
could yield spot on ticket<lb/>
Without much doubt, the major<lb/>
news event over the holiday break<lb/>
was the Rev. Jesse Jackson's suc-<lb/>
cessful mission to bring home Lt.<lb/>
Robert Goodman, the American<lb/>
flyer held prisoner by the Syrians.<lb/>
The event has been much lauded<lb/>
and even more debated, but in hind-<lb/>
sight it is clearly a triumph for<lb/>
Jackson, and probably more impor-<lb/>
tant for him than for Goodman<lb/>
himself. The ambitious and risky<lb/>
move showed Jackson's strength of<lb/>
character and placed him in the<lb/>
limelight of the Democratic<lb/>
presidential race, and probably the<lb/>
inside track for the vice presidency.<lb/>
Assuming (and it is a big assump-<lb/>
tion) that the Democratic race stays<lb/>
much as it is now until the conven-<lb/>
tion this summer, Mondale should<lb/>
wrangle the nomination, and<lb/>
Jackson, very possibly, will get the<lb/>
vice presidential spot on the ticket.<lb/>
Consider the alternatives. Glenn is<lb/>
unlikely to gain the No. 2 spot, if<lb/>
for no other reason than geography<lb/>
(Mondale is from Minnesota, Glenn<lb/>
from Ohio); Jackson is No. 3 in the<lb/>
polls, and Hart, Hollings and<lb/>
Askew are so far back in the runn-<lb/>
ing that none would be an irrestible<lb/>
candidate. Among other possible<lb/>
Democrats, Ted Kennedy would<lb/>
never take a back seat on the ticket;<lb/>
a long shot such as Patrick<lb/>
Moynihan is a possibility, but not<lb/>
likely in the face of Jackson.<lb/>
Jackson would deliver many<lb/>
more voters to the polls on election<lb/>
day than he will delegates to the<lb/>
convention, though he cannot<lb/>
guarantee, as could most other can-<lb/>
didates, to carry his home state. His<lb/>
presence on the ticket would surely<lb/>
increase black voter turnout<lb/>
significantly, and yet in the No. 2<lb/>
spot perhaps wouldn't lose as many<lb/>
white voters via that underlying<lb/>
stench of racism that still pervades<lb/>
American life and politics.<lb/>
Too, Jackson is perhaps one of<lb/>
the best candidates for vice presi-<lb/>
dent, regardless of race. The job is<lb/>
largely a symbolic one, that of a<lb/>
figure head a official and foreign<lb/>
occasions, delivering the American<lb/>
presence and point of view where<lb/>
ever the president can't go. The<lb/>
United States probably would<lb/>
benefit greatly from a black vice<lb/>
president, especially in dealing with<lb/>
Third World nations, where, in-<lb/>
cidentally, Jackson has the most in-<lb/>
terest and influence within his<lb/>
foreign policy experience. Too, if<lb/>
Jackson's trip to Syria proved<lb/>
nothing else, it showed he is an<lb/>
astute politician able to seize the<lb/>
moment and make the most of it.<lb/>
Jackson is not likely to sit in<lb/>
obscurity as vice president, and he<lb/>
would probably make a capable and<lb/>
uniquely effective ambassador and<lb/>
spokesman for the nation. He could<lb/>
reach sectors both within the coun-<lb/>
try and around the world that are<lb/>
not easily opened to yet another<lb/>
rich, white, male U.S. president.<lb/>
A Mondale-Jackson ticket would<lb/>
be a liberal one for sure ? no trying<lb/>
to appease the moderates with a<lb/>
more conservative choice such as<lb/>
Glenn. But if the economy manages<lb/>
to out run the deficit for another 11<lb/>
months, and Reagan makes no ma-<lb/>
jor foreign policy gaff, he'll be hard<lb/>
to beat anyway. If the fourth of Ju-<lb/>
ly polLal climate resembles that of<lb/>
early January, the Democrats best<lb/>
political bet, as well its most impor-<lb/>
tant symbolic stance, may be to put<lb/>
up a Minnesota farmboy and<lb/>
Chicago preacher against the<lb/>
Hollywood actor and his produc-<lb/>
tion company.<lb/>
Ever Wonder<lb/>
if anyone has ever dropped dead<lb/>
during drop-add?<lb/>
CONCCPNM6- THE ?CU 5-GOtR?u. PoPOL.A'noN<lb/>
) It 5 ays li V&amp;o? your.<lb/>
AKQ -)WWU COUMT To<lb/>
A THOU5Af4t-<lb/>
i'<lb/>
Orwell Strikes Again<lb/>
More Trouble Than Big Brother<lb/>
By DICK WEST<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) ? In the<lb/>
many parallels I have seen drawn bet-<lb/>
ween the year 1984 and the book<lb/>
"1984 the emphasis has been on<lb/>
govermental invasion of individual<lb/>
privacy.<lb/>
None has dealt with what I consider<lb/>
an equally significant, if less Orwellian,<lb/>
theme: the extent to which we private<lb/>
citizens are snooping on each other.<lb/>
However, that deficiency has now<lb/>
been remedied by Forum magazine.<lb/>
Not just Big Brother is watching you;<lb/>
thanks to modern technology,<lb/>
Suspicious Spouse also may have you<lb/>
under surveillance.<lb/>
"A new generation of sophisticated<lb/>
electronic gadgets requires little exper-<lb/>
tise and costs surprisingly little<lb/>
Forum reports in its February issue.<lb/>
"Not only can we now be heard<lb/>
whispering in the closet, but seen,<lb/>
videotaped and instant-replayed as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Gee! America's divorce lawyers must<lb/>
have greeted the New Year by rubbing<lb/>
their hands together in gleeful anticipa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Here are some of the more advanced<lb/>
"snoopware" devices that presumably<lb/>
are capable of standing up in court:<lb/>
? For as little as $20, "a jealous hus-<lb/>
band or wife can easily install a hidden<lb/>
tape recorder that automatically turns<lb/>
on when the phone is in use<lb/>
? A $24.95 spray that makes<lb/>
envelopes temporarily transparent,<lb/>
thereby revealing their contents to the<lb/>
naked eye. Conveniently, "the solution<lb/>
evaporates quickly and the envelope<lb/>
reverts to its untampered-with ap-<lb/>
pearance Forum assures us. It sug-<lb/>
gests the spray will surplant "a stan-<lb/>
dard ploy of the jealous spouse which<lb/>
is "to steam open incoming mail ?<lb/>
especially those slightly perfumed let-<lb/>
ters without a return address<lb/>
? A $125 "night vision enhancer"<lb/>
that can penetrate the cover of darkness<lb/>
and expose what is going on in the<lb/>
moonlight, starlight or "ordinary<lb/>
skyglow<lb/>
All of these prices seem dirt cheap to<lb/>
me, compared to the alimony they have<lb/>
the potential of producing, although<lb/>
some of the equipment originally was<lb/>
developed for other purposes.<lb/>
The aforementioned envelope spray,<lb/>
for example, is called a "Letterbomb<lb/>
Visualizer That evidentally means it<lb/>
was primarily intended to be used as an<lb/>
anti-terrorist tool.<lb/>
One can easily imagine how<lb/>
suspicious spouses could terrorize un-<lb/>
faithful mates with it.<lb/>
"True phone taps Forum tells us,<lb/>
"present formidable problems for the<lb/>
amateur<lb/>
Nevertheless, trysts and assignations<lb/>
can be bugged fairly inexpensively.<lb/>
According to the magazine, the costs<lb/>
of "miniature FM transmitters ranging<lb/>
from the size of a quarter to half a pack<lb/>
of cigarettes" run from $20 to $150.<lb/>
"Stuck under a shelf or table and<lb/>
tuned to any standard FM frequency,<lb/>
they can broadcast anywhere from<lb/>
several feet to half a mile, depending on<lb/>
quality and external surroundings it<lb/>
advises.<lb/>
What I fear is that such technology<lb/>
might fall into the hands of government<lb/>
busybodies, thereby creating a<lb/>
"Snoopgate" scandal, with attendant<lb/>
cover-ups.<lb/>
That sort of corruption could give<lb/>
marital reconnaissance a bad name.<lb/>
utrior<lb/>
,EORGt OPWELL<lb/>
 'tffAZTl<lb/>
Waghom<lb/>
CPS<lb/>
Nine-<lb/>
Teen<lb/>
Eighty<lb/>
Four<lb/>
i? Campus Forum<lb/>
Naso Asks For Participation<lb/>
KS1<lb/>
t<lb/>
Fellow students,<lb/>
I hope that all of you have had a very<lb/>
restful and enjoyable vacation and are<lb/>
once again ready to undergo the stress<lb/>
and strain of college life. In an attempt<lb/>
to alleviate some of the problems ac-<lb/>
companied with student life here at<lb/>
ECU, we, at the Student Government<lb/>
Association, will be setting up some<lb/>
trouble shooting committees to look<lb/>
into the current problems which plague<lb/>
our campus. I write to you today to ask<lb/>
for your help. I need some students<lb/>
who are interested in helping with these<lb/>
committees<lb/>
There has been much progress so far<lb/>
in the Student Government this year.<lb/>
Plans devised last semester have been<lb/>
set into motion and will soon become a<lb/>
reality. Thanks to an energetic<lb/>
legislature, under the leadership of the<lb/>
Speaker, Chris Townsend, along with<lb/>
his competent committee chairpersons,<lb/>
we have been able to make great strides<lb/>
in dealing with student concerns. Cur-<lb/>
rently, we have set up a network of<lb/>
communication between all s adent<lb/>
organizations on campus. This<lb/>
achievement tnables the student voice<lb/>
to reach directly to more than 400 stu-<lb/>
dent leaders and indirectlv to<lb/>
thousands more. There still is much<lb/>
progress to be made and many goals to<lb/>
be reached, however, the first step has<lb/>
been taken.<lb/>
I realize that classes, homework and<lb/>
extra curriculars take up the better part<lb/>
of your week. However, I urge you to<lb/>
become involved regardless of the time<lb/>
you can contribute. What I am looking<lb/>
for is your interest. If I can get that, we<lb/>
can work together to see in what<lb/>
capacity you can help us.<lb/>
The SGA is an exciting organization.<lb/>
It is growing and becoming involved<lb/>
into more facets of student life than<lb/>
ever before. You will benefit and grow<lb/>
from the experience.<lb/>
I would like to take this opportunity<lb/>
to express my thanks to the staff at The<lb/>
East Carolinian, for without their help,<lb/>
this message would not have been<lb/>
possible. Moreover, The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian's co-operation throughout the<lb/>
year has played a big role in enabling<lb/>
our plans to become a reality.<lb/>
If anyone has any questions or<lb/>
would like to get involved, feel free to<lb/>
give a call at 757-6611, Ext 218 or<lb/>
come up to the offices on the second<lb/>
floor of Mendenhall. Thank you for<lb/>
your connderiiion.<lb/>
Paul Naso<lb/>
SGA President<lb/>
Knocking Knox<lb/>
I noted witi great interest that<lb/>
Charlotte Mayor Eddie Knox, now a<lb/>
candidate for governor, has been going<lb/>
around Eastern North Carolina, look-<lb/>
ing for votes.<lb/>
He must think that we Eastern North<lb/>
Carolinians have very short memories.<lb/>
Mayor Knox led the fight against the<lb/>
East Carolina medical school in the<lb/>
early '70s, voting against it numerous<lb/>
times and proposing amendments<lb/>
which would have denied it and con-<lb/>
tinued his fight against it up until the<lb/>
last vote, which we won.<lb/>
Does anyone in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina believe we could get a road<lb/>
from this man when we couldn't get a<lb/>
medical school?<lb/>
I also recall that in early 1974 this big<lb/>
city mayor introduced gun control<lb/>
legislation in the Senate which would<lb/>
have required all of us to register our<lb/>
guns.<lb/>
In my opinion, this big city mayor<lb/>
had better stick to going on television<lb/>
singing the praises of the PTL Club<lb/>
and leave governing our state to a can-<lb/>
didate more in tune with the wishes of<lb/>
our people.<lb/>
Peggy Greene<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Campus Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail<lb/>
them to or drop them by the<lb/>
newspapers offices on the second<lb/>
floor of the publications building,<lb/>
across from Joyne? Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of author(s). 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/>
1<lb/>
Break-1<lb/>
Highlig<lb/>
By DALESANSO?<lb/>
?MtfMki<lb/>
The cold weather was thj<lb/>
problem for campus secun<lb/>
the 1983 Christmas holid;<lb/>
cording to Assistant Direcj<lb/>
Public Safety Francis E(<lb/>
larcenies and break-ins rej<lb/>
normal for this period.<lb/>
bursted pipes caused mor<lb/>
blems than in past yearj<lb/>
pipes bursted in Jones,<lb/>
Clement and Tyler (see<lb/>
story).<lb/>
Six bicycle thefts were r<lb/>
between Dec. 20 and Jar<lb/>
Dec. 31 a non-student was<lb/>
from the campus for su<lb/>
activity around the bicyci<lb/>
outside White dormitory<lb/>
Jan. 6 a head lamp was I<lb/>
stolen from a woman's bi<lb/>
side Cotten dorm.<lb/>
Group<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO.<lb/>
Calif. (CPS) - Colleges<lb/>
that give too much we j<lb/>
to standardized exam<lb/>
scores when deciding<lb/>
whether to admit a stu-<lb/>
dent won't be able to see<lb/>
any students' scores in<lb/>
the future if the Mexican-<lb/>
American Legal Defense<lb/>
and Education Fund gets<lb/>
its way.<lb/>
In November.<lb/>
MALDEF asked the na-<lb/>
tion's three largest stan-<lb/>
dardized test givers<lb/>
stop sending test results<lb/>
to schools that reject ap<lb/>
plicants who don't get al<lb/>
certain minimum scorr<lb/>
on the exams.<lb/>
But the test givers<lb/>
the Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, the American<lb/>
College Testing program<lb/>
and the College Entrance!<lb/>
Examination Board ? aJ<lb/>
say there may be legal<lb/>
reasons why they car.<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
SEL<lb/>
mm<lb/>
'<lb/>
 ? ?-<lb/>
- Tim<lb/>
mp<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0005"/><lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 10. 1984<lb/>
 I <lb/>
'<lb/>
?C <lb/>
 lAta mt<lb/>
ther<lb/>
;ps<lb/>
e-<lb/>
n<lb/>
ty<lb/>
r<lb/>
on<lb/>
.idn't get a<lb/>
74 ? is big<lb/>
led gun control<lb/>
Wch ould<lb/>
to register our<lb/>
J Pig city mayor<lb/>
Jing on eievision<lb/>
If the PTL Club<lb/>
1 tate to a can-<lb/>
nth the wishes of<lb/>
Peggy Greene<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
ules<lb/>
welcomes letters<lb/>
of view. Mail<lb/>
them by the<lb/>
m the second<lb/>
utions building,<lb/>
ibrary.<lb/>
'fication, all iet-<lb/>
xame, major and<lb/>
phone number<lb/>
or(s). Letters are<lb/>
'written pages,<lb/>
uly printed. All<lb/>
editing for brevi-<lb/>
Students, facul-<lb/>
pers for this page<lb/>
'v are limited to<lb/>
m is a regular<lb/>
U Carolinians's<lb/>
allows students,<lb/>
to express opi-<lb/>
It is a visible<lb/>
for expressing<lb/>
ucating ideas on<lb/>
Break-Ins, Bicycle Thefts<lb/>
Highlight Police Activity<lb/>
Bv DALE SWANSON<lb/>
Staff Wrttar<lb/>
The cold weather was the main<lb/>
problem for campus security over<lb/>
the 1983 Christmas holiday. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Assistant Director for<lb/>
Public Safety Francis Eddings,<lb/>
larcenies and break-ins remained<lb/>
normal for this period, while<lb/>
bursted pipes caused more pro-<lb/>
blems than in past years. The<lb/>
pipes bursted in Jones, Aycock,<lb/>
Clement and Tyler (see related<lb/>
story).<lb/>
Six bicycle thefts were reported<lb/>
between Dec. 20 and Jan. 8. On<lb/>
Dec. 31 a non-student was banned<lb/>
from the campus for suspicious<lb/>
activity around the bicycle racks<lb/>
outside White dormitory, and on<lb/>
Jan. 6 a head lamp was reported<lb/>
stolen from a woman's bike out-<lb/>
side Cotten dorm.<lb/>
Campus police also said a<lb/>
female student reported a rape on<lb/>
Jan. 5 that allegedly occured on<lb/>
Oct. 27 at about 10 p.m. in a<lb/>
wooded area near the intersection<lb/>
of 10th Street and Rock Springs<lb/>
Road. The suspect was described<lb/>
only as a white male. The public<lb/>
safety department is investigating<lb/>
the case, but currently has no<lb/>
leads.<lb/>
The first report of a breaking<lb/>
and entering came Jan. 3 from an<lb/>
Aycock resident. On Jan. 4 a<lb/>
Scott resident reported a larceny<lb/>
of personal property, and a Jones<lb/>
resident reported a radio cassette<lb/>
player and a stereo stolen. Three<lb/>
other reports of missing or stolen<lb/>
property have been reported by<lb/>
students in Greene and Aycock<lb/>
dormitories during the past week.<lb/>
Thcives also struck while<lb/>
students were moving back into<lb/>
their rooms. A Greene resident<lb/>
reported property stolen from her<lb/>
car on Jan. 5, and on Jan. 8<lb/>
camera equipment was stolen<lb/>
from a woman's suitcase in the<lb/>
lobby of Tyler dorm.<lb/>
Academic buildings affected by<lb/>
holiday crime included state pro-<lb/>
perty stolen from Joyner Library<lb/>
on Dec. 20. An attempt to break<lb/>
and enter a safe in Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium was reported on Jan.<lb/>
5. No arrests have been made.<lb/>
It was a typical holiday break<lb/>
for the campus police, according<lb/>
to Eddings. Two DWI arrests<lb/>
have been made so far in 1984 by<lb/>
campus security. Five arrests were<lb/>
made in December. Eddings<lb/>
hopes DWI arrest will remain low<lb/>
because of the new Safe Roads<lb/>
Act laws.<lb/>
New Video Equipment<lb/>
1983 Senior Class Gift of videotape equipment presented for ECU Graduates to refine their<lb/>
interviewing skills or review company information tapes. Shown are David Cook, 1983 Senior Class<lb/>
President, Furnev James, director of career planning service, and Jim Westmoreland, assistant<lb/>
director.<lb/>
Group Seeks To Reduce Importance of SAT, ACT<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO,<lb/>
Calif. (CPS) ? Colleges<lb/>
that give too much weight<lb/>
to standardized exam<lb/>
scores when deciding<lb/>
whether to admit a stu-<lb/>
dent won't be able to see<lb/>
any students' scores in<lb/>
the future if the Mexican-<lb/>
American Legal Defense<lb/>
and Education Fund gets<lb/>
its way.<lb/>
In November,<lb/>
MALDEF asked the na-<lb/>
tion's three largest stan-<lb/>
dardized test givers to<lb/>
stop sending test results<lb/>
to schools that reject ap-<lb/>
plicants who don't get a<lb/>
certain minimum score<lb/>
on the exams.<lb/>
But the test givers ?<lb/>
the Educational Testing<lb/>
Service, the American<lb/>
College Testing program,<lb/>
and the College Entrance<lb/>
Examination Board ? all<lb/>
say there may be legal<lb/>
reasons whv they can't<lb/>
stop sending students'<lb/>
test scores to specific<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
MALDEF says they<lb/>
need to stop, however,<lb/>
because the current<lb/>
system has "the potential<lb/>
for screening out some<lb/>
very able people" from<lb/>
college, spokeswoman<lb/>
Annette Oliveira said.<lb/>
Setting "cutoff scores<lb/>
presumes that an in-<lb/>
dividual scoring a few<lb/>
points below the<lb/>
minimum acceptable<lb/>
score has a significantly<lb/>
lower likelihood of suc-<lb/>
cess in college than does<lb/>
the individual scoring a<lb/>
few points above<lb/>
MALDEF's petition to<lb/>
the testing agencies said.<lb/>
Julio Franco, for ex-<lb/>
ample, was a high school<lb/>
academic honors student<lb/>
who couldn't get into the<lb/>
University of California-<lb/>
Berkeley's engineering<lb/>
school because of the<lb/>
school's combined<lb/>
Schlastic Aptitude test<lb/>
minimum score of 1000.<lb/>
Because Franco had<lb/>
570 math and 390 verbal<lb/>
scores, Berkeley "sum-<lb/>
marily rejected" is ap-<lb/>
plication, Oliveira said.<lb/>
MALDEF subsequent-<lb/>
ly intervened in the case,<lb/>
and Franco got into the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Estimating just how<lb/>
many schools do set<lb/>
minimum score cutoffs<lb/>
depends on which survey<lb/>
one views.<lb/>
A 1979 study by the<lb/>
College Board and the<lb/>
American Association of<lb/>
Collegiate Registrars and<lb/>
Admissions Officers<lb/>
found that only two per-<lb/>
cent of the nation's col-<lb/>
leges use test scores as the<lb/>
single most important<lb/>
factor in deciding<lb/>
whether to admit a stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
Forty-three percent<lb/>
judged scores very impor-<lb/>
tant. Thirty-one percent<lb/>
of the admissions officers<lb/>
called high school<lb/>
achievement the most im-<lb/>
portant factor, with 34<lb/>
percent listing it as very<lb/>
important.<lb/>
But a 1980 study by the<lb/>
same two organizations<lb/>
found that 39 percent of<lb/>
the country's public and<lb/>
42 percent of its private<lb/>
four-year colleges set<lb/>
minimum SAT scores for<lb/>
admissions.<lb/>
Approximately a third<lb/>
of all four-year schools<lb/>
have minimum ACT<lb/>
scores.<lb/>
Using those numbers,<lb/>
MALDEF's Oliveira con-<lb/>
tends "the use (of<lb/>
minimum test scores) is<lb/>
definitely growing<lb/>
MALDEF has not yet<lb/>
drawn up a list of schools<lb/>
it wants cut off from test<lb/>
scores, but Oliveira nam-<lb/>
ed Berkeley, Florida and<lb/>
Texas as three likely<lb/>
targets.<lb/>
Admissions officers at<lb/>
Florida and Texas con-<lb/>
cede they use minimum<lb/>
test scores in screening<lb/>
out applicants, but also<lb/>
weigh high schools grade<lb/>
point averages heavily.<lb/>
1 "The stronger the<lb/>
academic record, the<lb/>
lower the test score re-<lb/>
quired explains James<lb/>
Parrish, Florida's admis-<lb/>
sions director.<lb/>
Texas, like Florida, of-<lb/>
fers chances to make up<lb/>
deficiences to students<lb/>
who don't score a com-<lb/>
bined 1100 or meet other<lb/>
admissions requirements.<lb/>
"In effect, we don't<lb/>
close off UT to anybody<lb/>
who wants us asserts<lb/>
Sterling Miller, a Texas<lb/>
admjsMonounselor<lb/>
Even the ETS, ACT<lb/>
and the College Board<lb/>
agree that schools<lb/>
shouldn't use test scores<lb/>
as the sole admissions<lb/>
criterion.<lb/>
"To rely on the SAT or<lb/>
ACT alone is tremendous<lb/>
injustice, not only to the<lb/>
students but to the<lb/>
parents and the school as<lb/>
well says Thomas Ew-<lb/>
ing of ETS. "We have<lb/>
always said from the<lb/>
beginning that the high<lb/>
school transcript is the<lb/>
best indicator of achieve-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
But the testing<lb/>
organizations object to<lb/>
trying to punish schools<lb/>
that do set minimum<lb/>
standards.<lb/>
Because students pay<lb/>
the testing services to<lb/>
send their scores to<lb/>
schools that they choose,<lb/>
"we would have to look<lb/>
long and hard at whether<lb/>
we'd withhoia or deny ac-<lb/>
cess of test scores to col<lb/>
leges the ACT's Dave<lb/>
Crockett says. "That<lb/>
data belong to the stu-<lb/>
dent<lb/>
But College Board<lb/>
President Gregory Anrig<lb/>
last week said his<lb/>
organization would<lb/>
withhold the scores of<lb/>
teacher competency ex-<lb/>
ams to states that use the<lb/>
scores to determine<lb/>
teachers' salaries and<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
"It seems just plain<lb/>
wrong to tell someone<lb/>
who has been judged a<lb/>
satisfactory teacher for<lb/>
10 or 15 or 20 years that<lb/>
the passing of one test on<lb/>
one day is necessary to<lb/>
keep his or her job or<lb/>
salary as a teacher<lb/>
Anrig says.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
WED.<lb/>
'<lb/>
ALL ECU<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
DIAMONDS<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
X-RA VES<lb/>
w ZMB LADIES LIGHT MTF<lb/>
FRJ.&amp;SAT.<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
SUNDAY<lb/>
FABULOUS<lb/>
KSOBS<lb/>
OUR BIGGEST "USED"<lb/>
TEXTBOOK IIVENTORY<lb/>
EVER!<lb/>
IENCE<lb/>
r(TH<lb/>
"Our December Book Buy Back has produced the largest used tex-<lb/>
tbook inventory in the history of the U.B.E. We've got 20more used<lb/>
texts in our store than in Jan. of 1983. Check Downtown first for all<lb/>
your books and supplies.<lb/>
SHOP EARLY FOR BIGGEST<lb/>
SELECTION OF USED<lb/>
TEXTBOOKS!<lb/>
Open Tonite until 9:00PM<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
tp?-?m w<lb/>
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Save One Dollar on any small pizza.<lb/>
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Each additional topping $1 50<lb/>
Offer good through March 1. 1 984 with this coupon. One discount per pizza<lb/>
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buy one get one free<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057613_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN DECEMBER 8, 1983 Page 7<lb/>
Pat Carrol Plays<lb/>
Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein, Gertrude Stein<lb/>
The award-winning play Ger-<lb/>
trude Stein, Gertrude Stein, Ger-<lb/>
trude Stein will star Pat Carroll<lb/>
who bringhs to life the controver-<lb/>
sial poet in a role she has played to<lb/>
great acclaim for the past three<lb/>
years. The performance is<lb/>
scheduled for Monday, January<lb/>
16 at 8:15 p.m. in McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
This remarkable one-woman<lb/>
play is an imaginary monologue<lb/>
by Gertrude Stein set on the eve of<lb/>
her eviction from the famous<lb/>
studio at 27 rue de Fleurus. Begin-<lb/>
ning with her irritation at being<lb/>
evicted, she reminisces ? in true<lb/>
Stein style ? about her life in<lb/>
Paris, her childhood in Califor-<lb/>
nia, studies at Harvard with<lb/>
William James, the decision to<lb/>
come to Paris with her brother,<lb/>
her discovery of Alice B. Toklas<lb/>
and the pleasure of that relation-<lb/>
ship, and the famous people they<lb/>
entertained: Picasso, Matisse,<lb/>
Cezanne, Bernard Berenson,<lb/>
Isadora and Raymond Duncan,<lb/>
Scotty and Zelda Fitzgerald,<lb/>
Ernest Hemingway and a host of<lb/>
others.<lb/>
Winner of the 1980 Outer Circle<lb/>
Award as the outstanding produc-<lb/>
tion of a play off-Broadway, this<lb/>
is a work of theatrical magic that<lb/>
captures the essence of Gertrude<lb/>
Stein. Pat Carrol has worked<lb/>
theatre, televison, supper clubs,<lb/>
films and radio consistently for 33<lb/>
years. She has been honored with<lb/>
numerous awards and citations<lb/>
for her work, including the<lb/>
Drama Desk award as best actress<lb/>
in 1980 for Gertrude Stein, Ger-<lb/>
trude Stein, Gertrude Stein and<lb/>
other recognitions for her<lb/>
outstanding perfromance in this<lb/>
play.<lb/>
Tickets for the play are current-<lb/>
ly on sale at the Central Ticket Of-<lb/>
fice, Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(757-6611, ext. 266). The ticket<lb/>
office is open Monday - Friday,<lb/>
10 a.m. to 4 p.m. Prices are $5 for<lb/>
ECU students, $7 for youths 14<lb/>
and under, and $10 for ECU<lb/>
faculty, staff and the public.<lb/>
Mick Rates Best And Worst Films Of 1983<lb/>
It was a decent year for movies<lb/>
but a much better year for movie<lb/>
reviews. But now it's 1984. And<lb/>
that calls for a look back with<lb/>
Mick LaSalle's Top 5 and Bottom<lb/>
5 of 1983.<lb/>
L- s<lb/>
?.<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
LaSalle<lb/>
 - <lb/>
St: !?.<lb/>
?<lb/>
'if<lb/>
The Top Five of '83<lb/>
Scarf ace. Al Pacino's got pizazz.<lb/>
He's my kind of actor. In Scar-<lb/>
face he plays Tony Montana, a<lb/>
Cuban refugee who becomes King<lb/>
of the cocaine smuggling racket.<lb/>
"Only balls gives orders<lb/>
Montana says. And so he starts<lb/>
off by going after the boss's<lb/>
girlfriend ? a sweet, young,<lb/>
chain-smoking, liquor-ridden,<lb/>
coke addicted, Deborah Harry<lb/>
look-alike named Elvira. And he<lb/>
ends up by firing a machine gun<lb/>
from his balconey at a hundred<lb/>
guys who've come to kill him.<lb/>
Don't believe all that stuff<lb/>
about violence in this picture. The<lb/>
movie is less violent than you'd<lb/>
expect.<lb/>
Tootsie. Tootsie is sensitive and<lb/>
well-acted. Jessica Lange plays<lb/>
the kind of woman a guy just<lb/>
wants to take care of. Dustin Hof-<lb/>
fman plays the guy. Lange thinks<lb/>
Hoffman in drag is a woman, and<lb/>
so Lange and Hoffman get to<lb/>
know each other better than they<lb/>
ever would have.<lb/>
Tootsie is a funny movie about<lb/>
men, women, and sex roles that<lb/>
tells the truth and steers clear of<lb/>
the cheap laugh.<lb/>
Flashdance. This movie was so<lb/>
bad I saw it three times. Don't<lb/>
believe the critics. You walk out<lb/>
of this film feeling like you own<lb/>
the street.<lb/>
Rear Window. A guy is recovering<lb/>
from a broken leg. He spends<lb/>
everyday looking out the window,<lb/>
and what d'ya know? He and his<lb/>
girlfriend wind up solving a<lb/>
murder.<lb/>
Rear Window is a 1954 Hit-<lb/>
chcock flick that for some reason<lb/>
or other hasn't been seen in<lb/>
theatres since its original release.<lb/>
It stars James Stewart ? playing<lb/>
his usual likeable self ? and<lb/>
Grace Kelly.<lb/>
I gotta go on record saying<lb/>
Grace Kelly in Rear Window<lb/>
knocked me for a loop. The lady<lb/>
had it all. I walked out of the<lb/>
theatre feeling real bad for both<lb/>
of us that I wasn't born 30 years<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
Zelig. Zelig is a mock documen-<lb/>
'Sudden Impact9<lb/>
Eastwood's Film A Social Reaction<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
taurlaiamral Ulttw<lb/>
Are you a bull dyke? Do you sit<lb/>
around and suck on fish heads?<lb/>
Are you a psychopathic pervert<lb/>
who loves to kill and rape? Are<lb/>
you a liberal female judge? Are<lb/>
you a fat-ass lazy cop? Are you a<lb/>
scum-sucking punk, or a junk-<lb/>
shooting piece of dog shitIf<lb/>
so, you won't like Clint<lb/>
Eastwood's latest film, Sudden<lb/>
Impact. Eastwood's out to get<lb/>
you.<lb/>
But. If you own a handgun, if<lb/>
you're a Republican, if you think<lb/>
the U.S. should invade Nicaragua<lb/>
and you'd volunteer to lead the<lb/>
assault, if you think capital<lb/>
punishment is the answer to<lb/>
America's problems then Sud-<lb/>
den Impact is your kind of movie.<lb/>
Clint Eastwood is your kind of<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Sudden Impact is not just pulp<lb/>
entertainment for the redneck<lb/>
masses. It is a reflection, or better<lb/>
yet, a reaction to the times if ever<lb/>
there was one. It is a reaction in<lb/>
much the same way that Jesse<lb/>
Helms, the Moral Majority and<lb/>
N.C.P.A.C. are. Eastwood pro-<lb/>
duces it, directs it and stars in it.<lb/>
It's his baby, and he's making a<lb/>
statement with it ? a blunt state-<lb/>
ment. "There is a thing called<lb/>
justice leading lady Sondra<lb/>
Locke says at the film's close.<lb/>
And when the government and it's<lb/>
laws make a mockery of justice,<lb/>
the individual is compelled to take<lb/>
justice into his own hands. This is<lb/>
Sudden Impact's message ? or<lb/>
warning.<lb/>
Over the holidays I watched a<lb/>
segment of ABC's "Nightline a<lb/>
news analysis program. The sub-<lb/>
ject was capital punishment and<lb/>
the skyrocketing crime rate, par-<lb/>
ticularly capital crimes. A panel<lb/>
of experts including the articulate<lb/>
George F. Will, film director<lb/>
Brain DePalma, an A.C.L.U.<lb/>
lawyer and a Georgetown Univer-<lb/>
sity professor could not explain<lb/>
the nationwide explosion in<lb/>
heinously violent crime. Each<lb/>
mumbled something about the na-<lb/>
tary by Woody Allen about a<lb/>
"human chameleon" living in the<lb/>
Jazz Age. The picture is a<lb/>
technical masterpiece that's in-<lb/>
telligent and funny. It's probably<lb/>
the best movie of 1983.<lb/>
I hear people handing out the<lb/>
word genius to people like Eddie<lb/>
Murphy or Richard Pryor. Next<lb/>
thing they'll tell me David Bren-<lb/>
ner's a genius. But Woody Allen<lb/>
manages to get laughs without<lb/>
saying f? every five words. Plus,<lb/>
he's made a handful of the best<lb/>
films of the past ten years. If<lb/>
there's a genius working in com-<lb/>
CHat Eastwood Is toagk ?? paai-J, dykes, Jaakftes sssd perverts la Us<lb/>
Utt?tfilm Sua Impact. Montlumpwiptmt?iaaami$tkt mm iau<lb/>
reactionary statesaeat agaiaat the American legal system.<lb/>
tion's social fabric coming apart<lb/>
at the seams, but none had any<lb/>
solutions to the problems of<lb/>
justice and law and order in<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Sudden Impact deals with these<lb/>
problems much more effectively<lb/>
than Ted Koppel or his experts<lb/>
did. Basically, the answer is to<lb/>
meet the junkies and perverts<lb/>
head on with brute force, ie. with<lb/>
a slug from a .44-caliber<lb/>
Magnum. Eastwood as police in-<lb/>
spector Harry Callighan does just<lb/>
that. He and Sondra Locke blast<lb/>
at least a bus load of scum into<lb/>
oblivion. At the film's end, the ac-<lb/>
ting credits roll on and on listing<lb/>
the thugs who have had their<lb/>
brains blown out and their balls<lb/>
shot off.<lb/>
In a civilized state, government<lb/>
is the only agency that is legally<lb/>
sanctioned to use force ? in-<lb/>
cluding violent force ? to insure<lb/>
justice. Anyone else who resorts<lb/>
to violence is cast an outlaw. The<lb/>
frightening aspect, though, is that<lb/>
many Americans now see<lb/>
themselves with their backs<lb/>
against the wall, with<lb/>
psychopathic killers at their door<lb/>
and their only salvation a han-<lb/>
dgun. Call it a siege mentality or<lb/>
the Dirty Harry syndrome, but<lb/>
more average citizens than ever<lb/>
are packing handguns. They're<lb/>
losing faith in law and govern-<lb/>
ment and adopting a Magnum<lb/>
Force brand of justice. They're<lb/>
listening to Clint Eastwood's<lb/>
message.<lb/>
As entertainment, Sudden Im-<lb/>
pact is superb. The film is a<lb/>
Christmas-season, box-office<lb/>
smash hit, one of Eastwood's best<lb/>
efforts. But the film also hits a<lb/>
raw nerve in the current American<lb/>
psyche. It poses some serious<lb/>
questions about American justice<lb/>
in the the 1980s. It's a dark,<lb/>
brooding, angry film with gut-<lb/>
level honesty that appeals to the<lb/>
average citizen ? especially those<lb/>
concerned about crime and<lb/>
justice. Eastwood is a modern-day<lb/>
Arthur weilding his awesome .44<lb/>
Magnum like Excalibur, bringing<lb/>
justice to the land: heroic but<lb/>
serious stuff, and a great topic for<lb/>
discussion in Sociology 2111.<lb/>
edy today, it's Woody Allen.<lb/>
The Worst of '83<lb/>
The Big Chill. A band of old<lb/>
potheads get together for a<lb/>
friend's funeral and end up hump-<lb/>
ing each other. If that sounds like<lb/>
something you want to watch, lot-<lb/>
sa luck. I'd just as soon stick my<lb/>
fingers down my throat.<lb/>
Stroker Ace. If they wanted Loni<lb/>
Anderson to play a 30-year-old<lb/>
virgin they should've made this<lb/>
picture 10 years ago. At least then<lb/>
she was 30.<lb/>
As for Burt Reynolds: The gu<lb/>
has money, right? He doesn'i<lb/>
haveto make these pictures. So<lb/>
why does he bother?<lb/>
Stayin' Alive. This movie was so<lb/>
bad I didn't even bother to see it.<lb/>
Brainstorm. The movie had<lb/>
Natalie Wood and an interesting<lb/>
premise. But it had no heart.<lb/>
To Be Or Sot To Be. I'll tell you<lb/>
more about this one when it<lb/>
comes to our fair city. To put it<lb/>
briefly, this is a very disappoin-<lb/>
ting ? and dismal ? remake of a<lb/>
great movie. But more on that<lb/>
later.<lb/>
Guest Pianist Cynthia Lawing<lb/>
The Charlotte Symphony Or-<lb/>
chestra will perform in Wright<lb/>
Auditorium on the ECU campus<lb/>
this Thursday, Jan. 12 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The performance replaces the<lb/>
cancelled appearance of the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony from the<lb/>
1983-84 Artists Series.<lb/>
This marks the fifty-second<lb/>
season of the Charlotte Sym-<lb/>
phony Orchestra. Considered one<lb/>
of the nation's finest regional or-<lb/>
chestras, the Charlotte Symphony<lb/>
has grown and greatly expanded<lb/>
its schedule of performances and<lb/>
its wealth of talent. The orchestra<lb/>
has earned the highest praise from<lb/>
the general public and critics alike<lb/>
for outstanding musicianship.<lb/>
Music Director Leo Driehuys,<lb/>
now in his seventh season with the<lb/>
orchestra, brings to the podium<lb/>
an exciting blend of charisma and<lb/>
musical intelligence which has<lb/>
made him a favorite with au-<lb/>
diences everywhere. Born in<lb/>
Holland, Maestro Driehuys has<lb/>
had a distunguished career in<lb/>
Europe as an oboist as well as a<lb/>
conductor.<lb/>
The 75 musicians who make up<lb/>
the Charlotte Symphony Or-<lb/>
chestra come from all parts of the<lb/>
United States, and many of them<lb/>
have studied at the nation's most<lb/>
prestigious conservatories. The<lb/>
musicians are a vital force in the<lb/>
state's musical life, not only as<lb/>
members of the Charlotte Sym-<lb/>
phony, but also as teachers and<lb/>
recitalists across the area.<lb/>
The program for the Jan. 12<lb/>
performance includes Mozart's<lb/>
"Symphony No. 35 in D Major<lb/>
"Haffner, K.385 Ravel's<lb/>
"Piano Concerto in G Major;<lb/>
and Rimsky-Korsakov's<lb/>
"Scherazade: Suite Symphoni<lb/>
que Guest pianist is Cynthia<lb/>
Lawing whose performances have<lb/>
gained her great acclaim from the<lb/>
Far East where she was born to<lb/>
the United States where she has<lb/>
won numerous concerto competi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Tickets are on sale at the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center: $2.50 for ECU<lb/>
students, $3.50 for youths 14 and<lb/>
under and $7.50 for ECU faculty,<lb/>
staff and the public. Persons with<lb/>
individual tickets for the North<lb/>
Carolina Symphony Orchestra<lb/>
performance and season ticket<lb/>
holders may use those tickets for<lb/>
admission to the Charlotte Sym-<lb/>
phony as this concert replaces the<lb/>
former.<lb/>
,<lb/>
- - ? - - ??-<lb/>
m ?i?,?<lb/>
 ?? ?<lb/>
 ?"f<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
"??<lb/>
1<lb/>
t<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JAM<lb/>
?<lb/>
English Literature Class Focuses<lb/>
In American Film<lb/>
THP PAST CAROLINIANJANUARY 10, 1914<lb/>
Women<lb/>
The way Hollywood<lb/>
has presented women and<lb/>
their lives on screen, and<lb/>
also the actual careers of<lb/>
some great Hollywood<lb/>
female stars, writers, and<lb/>
directors, will be the sub-<lb/>
ject of a special course in<lb/>
Spring Semester 1984.<lb/>
Students in the class, call-<lb/>
ed "Women in American<lb/>
Film: Image and<lb/>
Reality will have a<lb/>
chance to see classic<lb/>
feature films ranging<lb/>
from Lillian Gish in Hay<lb/>
Down East (1920) to Jane<lb/>
Fonda in Julia (1977).<lb/>
The legends and careers<lb/>
of stars of the past such<lb/>
as Marlene Dietrich,<lb/>
Bette Davis, and<lb/>
Elizabeth Taylor will be<lb/>
studied along with their<lb/>
greatest films. So will the<lb/>
upsurge of women's films<lb/>
since the late 1970's.<lb/>
Dr. William Stephen-<lb/>
son, professor of film<lb/>
literature in the English<lb/>
Department, recently ex-<lb/>
plained the course offer-<lb/>
ing. "Actually, the<lb/>
course number is English<lb/>
5900, and it appears in<lb/>
the cataloge as Special<lb/>
Studies in Film. That's<lb/>
the general course title. I<lb/>
choose a different topic<lb/>
for study each time. I've<lb/>
only offered the tonic of<lb/>
women in film a couple<lb/>
of times before, and it<lb/>
was a fantastic class ex-<lb/>
perience. The students<lb/>
really enjoyed it. I'm<lb/>
looking forward to offer-<lb/>
ing it again in 1984<lb/>
Asked what the<lb/>
prevailing image of<lb/>
women is, Stephenson<lb/>
commented, "A lot of<lb/>
times it's just the sweet<lb/>
little homebody who only<lb/>
wants to knit socks for<lb/>
hubbv and bake cookies<lb/>
for the kids. That's<lb/>
generally what the<lb/>
American public has<lb/>
wanted to see over the<lb/>
years. But there have<lb/>
been times, like the<lb/>
Depression and Second<lb/>
World War years, when<lb/>
women were forced into<lb/>
the labor market. Then<lb/>
you had some tremen-<lb/>
dous films about women<lb/>
who could make it own<lb/>
their own, like Joan<lb/>
Crawford in Mildred<lb/>
Pierce and Katharine<lb/>
ried man.vAll the men in<lb/>
the class sympathized<lb/>
with her, thought she was<lb/>
adorable and<lb/>
misunderstood. All the<lb/>
women in class hated her.<lb/>
They call her a<lb/>
homewrecker and worse.<lb/>
The sparks really flew<lb/>
between the sexes when<lb/>
we had a class discussion<lb/>
of Garbo. I wonder if it<lb/>
will happen the same way<lb/>
again?"<lb/>
Stephenson said the<lb/>
class will meet on<lb/>
Tuesdays and Thursdays<lb/>
from 2:00 to 4:00.<lb/>
"There are no special<lb/>
prerequisites. I'll<lb/>
welcome all students with<lb/>
a personal interest in film<lb/>
or in women's studies.<lb/>
The course can be taken<lb/>
for credit or audited<lb/>
For further information,<lb/>
contact Professor<lb/>
William Stephenson in<lb/>
Austin 217.<lb/>
Godfather's Pizza<lb/>
Hepburn in Adam's Rib.<lb/>
Yes, I'll be showing both<lb/>
of those<lb/>
Besides the big-star<lb/>
films, Stephenson will of-<lb/>
fer offbeat films of<lb/>
special interst. "There<lb/>
have been some<lb/>
devastating comedies<lb/>
made about how men<lb/>
treat women and how<lb/>
some women hook onto<lb/>
men like parasites said<lb/>
Stephenson. He spoke of<lb/>
another very unusual<lb/>
film. "There's a film of<lb/>
1958 nobody ever heard<lb/>
of, called The Goddess,<lb/>
that offers the best com-<lb/>
ment on the life of<lb/>
Marilyn Monroe I've ever<lb/>
seen. It even predicted<lb/>
her suicide four years in<lb/>
advance<lb/>
He expects sharpest<lb/>
class reaction will be to<lb/>
Greta Garbo who stars in<lb/>
Flesh and the Devil. "The<lb/>
last time, class reaction<lb/>
was amazing. Garbo<lb/>
plays a femme fatale who<lb/>
has an affair with a mar-<lb/>
'Flashdance' Plays Hendrix<lb/>
Great Flick With No Plot<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
- - - ?( Mltor<lb/>
It's the big'un, the one<lb/>
we've all been waiting for<lb/>
? and the one we've all<lb/>
probably seen.<lb/>
Flashdance!<lb/>
So if you've already<lb/>
seen it (maybe even twice,<lb/>
like 1 have), and you've<lb/>
already read everything in<lb/>
print about it (Mick<lb/>
LaSalle pretty much<lb/>
covered it last semester as<lb/>
well), then why am 1<lb/>
wasting time and print<lb/>
with this.<lb/>
But!<lb/>
In case you just got<lb/>
here from off the farm,<lb/>
and your Primitive Bap-<lb/>
tist ma and pa wouldn't<lb/>
let you go into town and<lb/>
watch this sinful filth,<lb/>
then the following is just<lb/>
for you.<lb/>
Filthy? Yes. Sinful?<lb/>
Yes, yes. Jennifer Beais<lb/>
plays a grimy, sweaty<lb/>
18-year-old construction<lb/>
worker by day who sleeps<lb/>
around with older men by<lb/>
night. In between she<lb/>
aspires to become a pro-<lb/>
fessional dancer. And, as<lb/>
is the nature of all sinful<lb/>
filth, this is indeed en-<lb/>
joyable fare.<lb/>
Mouthwatering fare!<lb/>
Whether we're gazing<lb/>
into Beals' dark seductive<lb/>
eyes or staring at her dan-<lb/>
cing double's firm sleek<lb/>
thighs, young dancing<lb/>
flesh is this films's major<lb/>
attraction. The dance se-<lb/>
quences are superb.<lb/>
Whether it's Beals work-<lb/>
ing out in her warehouse<lb/>
flat, her French double<lb/>
nightclub dancing at the<lb/>
local pub, the break dan-<lb/>
cing by street kids, or the<lb/>
euphoric dance finale it<lb/>
doesn't matter. All of it<lb/>
works and works well.<lb/>
The plot?<lb/>
What plot? I never saw<lb/>
it, but I'll bet Bedtime<lb/>
For Bonzo has a more<lb/>
believable plot. Most of<lb/>
the films at the 264<lb/>
Playhouse probably have<lb/>
a better plot. The plot is<lb/>
insipid, idiotic,<lb/>
unbelievable. Forget the<lb/>
plot. You don't think a<lb/>
complex believable plot<lb/>
makes for sinful filth. It's<lb/>
the flesh in Flashdance,<lb/>
my boy. Go to Hendrdix<lb/>
and drool this weekend.<lb/>
See it all three nights. Ad-<lb/>
mission is by student I.D.<lb/>
and activity card.<lb/>
? COUPON<lb/>
OFF LARGE<lb/>
ANY PIZZA<lb/>
Coupon must be printed Offer aaat-a- A? ? 9atf<lb/>
Not valid w.th any o?h?r otter<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville, N-C.<lb/>
COUPON.<lb/>
OFF -SLPIZZA<lb/>
Coupon must b presented Offer ?P?? '? '7' l "<lb/>
Not valid with any other otter<lb/>
Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
smoking<lb/>
5-Day Plan, Jan. 16-20m 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER, Coffee Shop<lb/>
Group Therapy - Films - Lectures -<lb/>
Demonstrations - Buddy System, Your Own<lb/>
Control Book. Its Great! And You Won't Gain<lb/>
Weight If You Follow The 5-Day Plan.<lb/>
Directed by Allen F. Bowyer. Chief of Cardiology. ECU, la cooper-Mon with Pitt Coaaty<lb/>
Hedth Ateacies. For iaformatioa c. 757-H51. 756-5543. It is -o. -ecesry to pre-regteter.<lb/>
Stop Smoking Week. Jan. 16-20, 7:00PAA<lb/>
Located in Carolina East Centre<lb/>
Tues Jan 10th<lb/>
First 50 people get FREE Membership<lb/>
Your Favorite Top 40 Music.<lb/>
Come Visit Us, Greenville's Newest Night Club<lb/>
Mon-Thurs. 5:00-8:00 Happy Hour<lb/>
Fri. H.H. 4-8:00<lb/>
Sat. H.H. 1-6:00<lb/>
Sun. H.H. 1-6:00<lb/>
MlntiD Mug<lb/>
For Cars &amp;(? -s and People on the move<lb/>
OPTICAL HI PALACE<lb/>
HALF PRICE SALE<lb/>
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I With Purchase Of Prescription Lenses Must Present<lb/>
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Expires Jan. 20th j<lb/>
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for people on the move The<lb/>
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The price? It's even finer.<lb/>
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PILOT PRECISE ROLLING BALL PENS.<lb/>
2 OF THE FINER THINGS IN LIFE.<lb/>
fpiioT precise<lb/>
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For Everyone Wearing<lb/>
Fraternity or Sorority shirts<lb/>
Happy Hour Prices - 5pm til closing<lb/>
Pitcher of choice with large pizza<lb/>
Current movies or basketball game<lb/>
GREEK NIGHT<lb/>
?fCOtaKattttailitfl<lb/>
ptasa hi tore. fie1<lb/>
Local Cin<lb/>
Each week the East Caroling<lb/>
will attempt to give a brief reie<lb/>
of every movie playing at Green<lb/>
ville's four major cinemas. CarlyX<lb/>
Ebert, Darryl Brown, Mic<lb/>
LaSalle and myself will nte tl<lb/>
reviews and give a personal raw<lb/>
from one to five stars. Of cours<lb/>
each of us has different opintot<lb/>
and tastes, and our ratings M<lb/>
reflect this. For example. I ?oul<lb/>
give All The Right Moves foi<lb/>
stars and The Man Hno Lovf<lb/>
Women two But then, eero<lb/>
has their own opinions, and ajt<lb/>
you see the films, l'm sure<lb/>
have your own us ?elt Me hoi<lb/>
this new feature is of some<lb/>
to ECU students, and that<lb/>
enjoy the films you decide to si<lb/>
The Ratings<lb/>
 Awful. Don't bother to sec rJ<lb/>
even if someone gives you a<lb/>
pass. A total waste of time<lb/>
 Poor. Save your money<lb/>
catch this at Hendrix<lb/>
semester, or watch it wher<lb/>
TV.<lb/>
 A Decent film If y j<lb/>
an interest in either the ad<lb/>
the topic, go see it.<lb/>
 ? A very good film<lb/>
worth the price of idmissi<lb/>
Anyone should enjoy this.<lb/>
 ? Great stuff A<lb/>
tial classic. Deser.es an Os<lb/>
Forget tommorrow's ex<lb/>
Forget everything. Go see it<lb/>
Buccaneer Movies<lb/>
Terms of Endearment, rae,<lb/>
Comedy-drama starring<lb/>
Maclaine as an eccentric, eg<lb/>
trie mother. Debra Wing<lb/>
well-adjusted daughter anc<lb/>
Nicholson as their neighbc j<lb/>
astronaut John Glenn could<lb/>
be. Chronicles the lives and<lb/>
of a peculiar but lnitmate mol<lb/>
daughter relationship, revealj<lb/>
mother who needs and<lb/>
from her daughter as x<lb/>
daughter from her The<lb/>
age together and d<lb/>
themselves and their relatioj<lb/>
before the film's end. The<lb/>
somehow rushes through<lb/>
lives while dragging in plac<lb/>
the same time, but examines<lb/>
interesting human reiatior<lb/>
problems and faults in a<lb/>
made two hours. Guarantf<lb/>
jerker.<lb/>
D.B. <lb/>
Uncommon Valor rated R<lb/>
With financial backing<lb/>
Texas oil baron (Robert St<lb/>
retired Marine colonel<lb/>
Hackman) rectruits and on<lb/>
a group of Vietnam vets at<lb/>
leads them back into the<lb/>
of Southeast Asia to<lb/>
American POWs that are sj<lb/>
ing held there years after<lb/>
has ended. The film's i<lb/>
stvle violence and ballsy<lb/>
humor should appeal to real<lb/>
Soldier of Fortune and Gu<lb/>
Ammo magazines A <lb/>
version of The Dirty<lb/>
without the big names<lb/>
quality of acting. A cath<lb/>
those who still chafe over <lb/>
of Nam.<lb/>
G.I.<lb/>
The Man WTio loved<lb/>
rated R<lb/>
If this picture is mildly<lb/>
taming it's only becau-<lb/>
Burt Reynolds and a<lb/>
prettv girls. Overall it's<lb/>
pointing picture: not furuj<lb/>
dramatic, not intelligent<lb/>
Reynolds plays a<lb/>
sculptor who goes to a lacv<lb/>
TTIXT<lb/>
cw<lb/>
? I i I HI<lb/>
3<lb/>
P<lb/>
Tu<lb/>
Papa MB ? l<lb/>
r1 n-<lb/>
: <lb/>
Wr<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0009"/><lb/>
iAM ARY 10,1984<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 10, 1984<lb/>
ZZA<lb/>
<lb/>
ZA<lb/>
j<lb/>
l<lb/>
re<lb/>
rship<lb/>
ightClub<lb/>
our<lb/>
I<lb/>
7.95<lb/>
6.95<lb/>
zeBo<lb/>
fi Bkd<lb/>
UT<lb/>
dJ<lb/>
y -<lb/>
<lb/>
0<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
75S-797<lb/>
Local Cinemas9 Movie Fare Rated<lb/>
Each week the East Carolinian<lb/>
will attempt to give a brief review<lb/>
of every movie playing at Green-<lb/>
ville'sour major cinemas. Carlyn<lb/>
Ebert, Darryl Brown, Mick<lb/>
LaSalle and myself will write the<lb/>
reviews and give a personal rating<lb/>
from one to five stars. Of course,<lb/>
each of us has different opinions<lb/>
and tastes, and our ratings will<lb/>
reflect this. For example, I would<lb/>
give All The Right Moves four<lb/>
stars and The Man Who Loved<lb/>
Women two. But then, everyone<lb/>
has their own opinions, and after<lb/>
you see the films, I 'm sure you '11<lb/>
have your own as well. We hope<lb/>
this new feature is of some value<lb/>
to ECU students, and that you '11<lb/>
enjoy the films you decide to see.<lb/>
The Ratings:<lb/>
 Awful. Don't bother to see this<lb/>
even if someone gives you a free<lb/>
pass. A total waste of time.<lb/>
? ? Poor. Save your money and<lb/>
catch this at Hendrix next<lb/>
semester, or watch it when it hits<lb/>
TV.<lb/>
? A Decent film If you have<lb/>
an interest in either the actors or<lb/>
the topic, go see it.<lb/>
??? A very good film well<lb/>
worth the price of admission.<lb/>
Anyone should enjoy this.<lb/>
 Great stuff. A poten-<lb/>
tial classic. Deserves an Oscar.<lb/>
Forget tommorrow's exam.<lb/>
Forget everything. Go see it!<lb/>
Buccaneer Movies<lb/>
Terms of Endearment, rated PG<lb/>
Comedy-drama starring Shirley<lb/>
Maclaine as an eccentric, egocen-<lb/>
tric mother, Debra Winger as her<lb/>
well-adjusted daughter and Jack<lb/>
Nicholson as their neighbor, an<lb/>
astronaut John Glenn could never<lb/>
be. Chronicles the lives and times<lb/>
of a peculiar but initmate mother-<lb/>
daughter relationship, revealing a<lb/>
mother who needs and learns<lb/>
from her daughter as much as the<lb/>
daughter from her. They come of<lb/>
age together and define<lb/>
themselves and their relationship<lb/>
before the film's end. The movie<lb/>
somehow rushes through their<lb/>
lives while dragging in places at<lb/>
the same time, but examines some<lb/>
interesting human relationships,<lb/>
problems and faults in a well-<lb/>
made two hours. Guaranteed tear-<lb/>
jerker.<lb/>
D.B. ? ?<lb/>
Uncommon Valor rated R<lb/>
With financial backing from a<lb/>
Texas oil baron (Robert Stack), a<lb/>
retired Marine colonel (Gene<lb/>
Hackman) rectruits and organizes<lb/>
a group of Vietnam vets and then<lb/>
leads them back into the jungles<lb/>
of Southeast Asia to rescue<lb/>
American POWs that are still be-<lb/>
ing held there years after the war<lb/>
has ended. The film's military-<lb/>
style violence and ballsy macho<lb/>
humor should appeal to readers of<lb/>
Soldier of Fortune and Guns and<lb/>
Ammo magazines. A Vietnam<lb/>
version of The Dirty Dozen<lb/>
without the big names or high<lb/>
quality of acting. A catharsis for<lb/>
those who still chafe over the loss<lb/>
of Nam.<lb/>
G.I. <lb/>
The Man Who Loved Women,<lb/>
rated R.<lb/>
If this picture is mildly enter-<lb/>
taining it's only because it has<lb/>
Burt Reynolds and a couple of<lb/>
pretty girls. Overall it's a disap-<lb/>
pointing picture: not funny, not<lb/>
dramatic, not intelligent.<lb/>
Reynolds plays a famous<lb/>
sculptor who goes to a lady shrink<lb/>
(Julie Andrews) to talk about his<lb/>
problem: Every woman he meets<lb/>
falls in love with him. Reynolds<lb/>
spends most of the movie whining<lb/>
on a couch and trying to look up<lb/>
Julie Andrews' skirt. Give me a<lb/>
break. The picture is long on<lb/>
psychological explanation and<lb/>
short on action. When they film<lb/>
my life story I hope they do a bet-<lb/>
ter job.<lb/>
M.L. ?<lb/>
Plaza Cinema<lb/>
Sudden Impact rated R<lb/>
Clint Eastwood and perennial<lb/>
leading lady Sondra Locke star in<lb/>
this action-filled drama about per-<lb/>
sonal revenge and American<lb/>
justice. Ten years after a group of<lb/>
thugs rape and brutalize her and<lb/>
her sister, artist Jennifer Spencer<lb/>
(Locke) buys a .38 caliber<lb/>
Magnum pistol and one-by-one<lb/>
kills the men, and one lesbian,<lb/>
who raped her. A slug in the groin<lb/>
followed by another in the<lb/>
forehead is her trademark. Harry<lb/>
Callighan (Eastwood) is sent to<lb/>
solve the murders a"d ultimately<lb/>
must save Spencer and himself<lb/>
from the final psychopath. With<lb/>
viens popping out on his<lb/>
forehead, a bitter Harry must bat-<lb/>
tle a soft, bureaucratic justice<lb/>
system as well as thugs. The<lb/>
former is intent on putting him<lb/>
out to pasture and the latter wants<lb/>
to put him six feet under. Clint<lb/>
Eastwood at his best.<lb/>
G.I. ? ? ? ? See feature article.<lb/>
D.C. Cab rated R<lb/>
Stars Mr. T. What more need be<lb/>
said? Not reviewed No rating.<lb/>
The Keep rated R<lb/>
It's 1941, and a column of Nazi<lb/>
soldiers flushed with recent vic-<lb/>
tory are reduced to ashes by a<lb/>
mysterious and sinister force. The<lb/>
German soldiers occupy a granite<lb/>
fortress (The Keep) of inex-<lb/>
plicable origins recessed into a<lb/>
mountain pass in Romania.<lb/>
Suspense is provided by an evil be-<lb/>
ing imprisoned within The Keep<lb/>
who preys upon the soldiers.<lb/>
Filmed in England, crystalline<lb/>
photography and beautiful<lb/>
scenery ? along with the requisite<lb/>
special effects ? can't compen-<lb/>
sate for a plot that might have<lb/>
been lifted from an MTV video. If<lb/>
films with nether world themes<lb/>
are your bag, this should prove<lb/>
acceptable fare. Anyone else will<lb/>
need a bong hit to get through it.<lb/>
G.I.<lb/>
Park Theatre<lb/>
All the Right Moves, rated PG<lb/>
High School drama starring<lb/>
Tom (Risky Business) Cruise as a<lb/>
football player whose only chance<lb/>
to escape a life in his steel mill<lb/>
home town is an athletic scholar-<lb/>
ship to college. The story is also<lb/>
about the changing of the guard in<lb/>
steel mill families; as the industry<lb/>
is dying, so is the town and their<lb/>
way of life. The younger genera-<lb/>
tion can count on neither the<lb/>
plodding but secure life of a steel<lb/>
worker nor any way to escape the<lb/>
mill town. The film is full of<lb/>
parallels: the high school coach's<lb/>
fate for a college job depends as<lb/>
much on the big game as does his<lb/>
players' hopes for a scholarship;<lb/>
Cruise is kicked off the team just<lb/>
as his older brother is laid off at<lb/>
the steel mill. The film is full of<lb/>
slow spots but is as good a film<lb/>
about high school as is likely to<lb/>
come along for a while.<lb/>
D.B. <lb/>
PUtt Theatres<lb/>
Christine rated R<lb/>
Highly predictable and not the<lb/>
least bit horrifying, unless the<lb/>
sound of crumpling steel bothers<lb/>
you, Christine recasts the plot of<lb/>
Carrie as an unpopular high<lb/>
school kid gets supernatural<lb/>
revenge on his tormenting peers.<lb/>
Arnie, the boy who falls for and<lb/>
buys a '58 Plymouth with a buried<lb/>
past, goes from Scrabble-playing<lb/>
nerd to possessed demon on<lb/>
wheels with laughable<lb/>
unbelievability. Director John<lb/>
Carpenter (Halloween, The Fog)<lb/>
shies away from actually shooting<lb/>
much bloody gore, instead favor-<lb/>
ing shots of Christine's mangled<lb/>
red body rejuvenating itself to a<lb/>
score of '50s hits that not-so-<lb/>
mysteriously issue from the car's<lb/>
AM radio. Christine's trademark<lb/>
blinding brights as she stalks her<lb/>
victims are about as subtle as the<lb/>
theme music from Jaws. Despite<lb/>
Christine's violent disposition,<lb/>
Carpenter succeeds in making you<lb/>
root for the car, not the kid. Car<lb/>
buffs remembering an obsession<lb/>
with their own first set of wheels<lb/>
will get a real kick out of this tur-<lb/>
nabout fantasy, but much of the<lb/>
film (taken from a Stephen King<lb/>
novel, not from a "My Mother,<lb/>
The Car" TV show) is pretty fun-<lb/>
ny stuff for a horror movie.<lb/>
C.E. <lb/>
Two of a Kind, rated PG<lb/>
A romantic comedy starring<lb/>
John Travolta and Olivia Newton<lb/>
John as a down-on-his-luck inven-<lb/>
tor and a down-on-her-luck ac-<lb/>
tress, respectively. The couple<lb/>
goes through the requisite eccen-<lb/>
tric meeting (he robs her at a<lb/>
bank), period of mutual disdain,<lb/>
then well, you can fiqure it out.<lb/>
The film has a Heavan Can Wait<lb/>
twist with the fate of mankind<lb/>
resting on this nouvelle Adam and<lb/>
Eve, guided by some good-<lb/>
hearted, bungling angels who<lb/>
have a week to prove mankind's<lb/>
goodness in Travolta and<lb/>
Newton-John. Not a really fine<lb/>
performance in the film, but en-<lb/>
joyable if you take your 13-year-<lb/>
old sister. D.B. <lb/>
Scarface rated R<lb/>
Al Pacino plays an often uncon-<lb/>
vincing Cuban political refugee<lb/>
rising and falling through the<lb/>
Miami drug underworld in Brain<lb/>
DePalma's remake of the 1932<lb/>
film directed by Howard Hawks.<lb/>
Pacino's performance as Tony<lb/>
Montana, the gangster who's as<lb/>
overprotctive of his kid sister as<lb/>
he is of his wife and his empire, is<lb/>
much like the film itself ? flashy,<lb/>
harsh, oversimplified and uneven.<lb/>
Director DePalma got the film's<lb/>
much publicized X rating reduced<lb/>
to an R by removing the visual in<lb/>
an early scene in which a drug<lb/>
dealer uses an electric chainsaw to<lb/>
get tough with one of Montana's<lb/>
pals, but there's plenty of blood<lb/>
and guts left in for fans of movie<lb/>
violence. Doused in machine-gun<lb/>
fire, billows of blood and what<lb/>
the Goldsboro News-Argus tact-<lb/>
fully calls "the F word Scarface<lb/>
is still enthralling on a gut-level ?<lb/>
if you've got those kind of guts.<lb/>
C.E. <lb/>
Mickey's Christmas Carol and<lb/>
The Rescuers rated G<lb/>
Animated Disney double feature.<lb/>
Not reviewed. No rating.<lb/>
? TT II TJLjpjjjjDp<lb/>
iiiiii<lb/>
iiiiii<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Tues. - Sun.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Wednesday Nite<lb/>
Greenville's First &amp; Still 1<lb/>
LADIES LOCK OUT<lb/>
8:30- 10:00<lb/>
Free Draft &amp; Wine<lb/>
Where the Sight comes tn Life<lb/>
Papa Hatz is Private Clue<lb/>
For Members ? Guests<lb/>
We nave M ABC Permits<lb/>
10th St Ext<lb/>
At Riverbluff Rd<lb/>
Thursday Nite<lb/>
Penny Draft Nite<lb/>
Doors Open 8:30<lb/>
Friday Nite<lb/>
College Nite<lb/>
25c Draft<lb/>
Doors Open 8:30<lb/>
Saturday Nite<lb/>
John Moore Beach Show<lb/>
Lady Members Free All Nite<lb/>
Doors Open 8:30<lb/>
Happy Hour Til 9:30<lb/>
Sunday Nite<lb/>
25C Draft<lb/>
6:00-8:00 P.M.<lb/>
k<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
ITEM POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised items is required to be readily available for<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price in each A&amp;P Store except as<lb/>
specifically noted in this ad<lb/>
)<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU S??.J?ai. 14 A&amp;P IN ?W?vllU( MC<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
Clip MFCs "Cents-Off" Coupons from your mail, newspapers<lb/>
and magazines. . . then bring them to your A&amp;P Food Store.<lb/>
IHWW now and Jan 14 wa will redeem national man<lb/>
utacturar s cents-ot coupon up to SO tor double their<lb/>
value Otter good on  onai manufacturers cents-ott<lb/>
coupons only (Food retailer coupons not accepted i<lb/>
Customer must purchase coupon product in specified<lb/>
size Eiptred coupons will not be honored One coupon<lb/>
par customer per item No coupons doubled for free<lb/>
marcnandtaa Offer does not apply to A4P or other store<lb/>
coupons whether manufacturer is mentioned or not<lb/>
Whan the value of the coupon exceeds SO or the retail<lb/>
of the Item this offer is limited to the retail price<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND,<lb/>
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MANUFACTURERS COUPONS<lb/>
EXAMPLE: $10 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS.<lb/>
S20 PURCHASE 10 COUPONS, AND SO ON.<lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN Greenville, NC<lb/>
SAVE ?1.01 LB.<lb/>
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REDEEM YOUR AAP GOLD REGISTER TAPES FOR<lb/>
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?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0010"/><lb/>
("HE EASTCARO! INI AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
DECEMBER 8. 1983<lb/>
Pae 10<lb/>
PirateYout<lb/>
Growing Up<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
Sports fjllio.<lb/>
Be patient East Carolina fans,<lb/>
says basketball coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison. The Pirates are not far<lb/>
away from being a contender.<lb/>
 The team is in a cocoon<lb/>
stage Harrison said. "One day<lb/>
they will be a butterfly<lb/>
The Pirate youth element is<lb/>
promising, but. after winning its<lb/>
first two games against Cambell<lb/>
and Christopher Newport, the<lb/>
team dropped seven straight.<lb/>
However, except for the losses to<lb/>
Virginia Commonwealth, Bradley<lb/>
and Duke, Harrison's youngsters<lb/>
have not been blown out, and<lb/>
could have won had it not been<lb/>
for "mental lapses<lb/>
"I thought we would be better<lb/>
as far as record right now Har-<lb/>
rison said. "They are not playing<lb/>
consistently well. The mistakes<lb/>
are magnified three-fold<lb/>
"They played well at times he<lb/>
continued, reflecting on the losing<lb/>
streak. "1 can't describe it. It<lb/>
seems like I'm watching the same<lb/>
movie over and over again. Usual-<lb/>
ly at the start of the second half<lb/>
the have the lapse<lb/>
The "mental lapses" Harrison<lb/>
refers to. which include bad shot<lb/>
selection, forced passes and miss-<lb/>
ed lay-ups, occur in three to five<lb/>
minute stretches. "They are the<lb/>
same mistakes that occur in prac-<lb/>
tice and by the same people he<lb/>
said- "1 keep using the term 'men-<lb/>
tal lapses 1 can't correct that.<lb/>
They'll have to<lb/>
The team is going through a dif-<lb/>
ficult stage, Harrison said,<lb/>
because there is not a good blend<lb/>
of older and younger players. And<lb/>
the older players do not have the<lb/>
leadership personality.<lb/>
So the success of the team will<lb/>
depend on how the freshmen, i.e.<lb/>
Leon Bass, Derrick Battle, Keith<lb/>
Sledge. Jack Turnbill and Roy<lb/>
Smith, progress.<lb/>
According to Harrison, that<lb/>
progression will not ccur over-<lb/>
night. "Last year at thk time they<lb/>
(t,he freshman) were playing<lb/>
against high school kids he said,<lb/>
noting that in the Duke game, the<lb/>
Pirates were<lb/>
outmuscledPhysically, we are<lb/>
weak right now. We are working<lb/>
on that with the weight program<lb/>
and learning to play with<lb/>
agressiveness<lb/>
"We have good players and<lb/>
they will be very good Harrison<lb/>
added. "Right now we can't sur-<lb/>
vive on their talent and size<lb/>
(height)<lb/>
For example, Harrison men-<lb/>
tioned Smith, who has displayed<lb/>
great potential in various games<lb/>
thus far, has had a difficult time<lb/>
adjusting to the physical nature of<lb/>
college basketball.<lb/>
In addition, Harrison called<lb/>
Battle a "super athlete but said<lb/>
he has had some defensive lapses<lb/>
in the second halves that have led<lb/>
Hedges, Lady Pirates<lb/>
Break Losing Streak<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Dariene Hedges drives in for two of her 23 points in Sunday's 67-58<lb/>
victory over Fairleigh Dickinson.<lb/>
Dariene Hedges scored 23<lb/>
points and pulled down 14 re-<lb/>
bounds to lead the ECU women's<lb/>
basketball team to a 67-58 Sunday<lb/>
night victory over Fairleigh<lb/>
Dickinson in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"Dariene played the best game<lb/>
of her career Coach Cathy An-<lb/>
druzzi said. "She was the game's<lb/>
leading scorer and rebounder and<lb/>
just did a great overall job<lb/>
Going into the game, Hedges<lb/>
had been averaging a mere 5<lb/>
points and 4.8 rebounds per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Fairleigh Dickinson jumped on<lb/>
the Pirates early in the contest, as<lb/>
Stephanie Burt and Carolyn<lb/>
Rodgers combined for 10 points<lb/>
to give the Knights a 15-5 edge<lb/>
with only six minutes elapsed.<lb/>
The two teams exchanged<lb/>
baskets for most of the half, but<lb/>
the Pirates were unable to cut into<lb/>
the lead.<lb/>
Lynn Jackson gave the Knigths<lb/>
their biggest lead of the game at<lb/>
37-25 when she hit a 10-foot<lb/>
jumper with 4:25 remaining in the<lb/>
half, but the Pirates connected on<lb/>
their last three shots narrowing<lb/>
the score to 39-34 before the inter-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
"We didn't play a good first<lb/>
half Andruzzi said. "We<lb/>
weren't executing like we should<lb/>
have and that took us out of our<lb/>
game plan<lb/>
The second half was a different<lb/>
story as the Pirates came out of<lb/>
the lockerroom like a team<lb/>
possessed. Lisa Squirewell hit<lb/>
four consecutive shots inside the<lb/>
lane as ECU outscored the<lb/>
Knights 16-5 in the first nine<lb/>
minutes of play.<lb/>
The Knights were never able to<lb/>
regain their composure as ECU<lb/>
extended its lead to as many as 11<lb/>
points on a Hedges layup with<lb/>
2:23 left in the game.<lb/>
At that point the Knights began<lb/>
commiting a barrage of inten-<lb/>
tional fouls, but were never able<lb/>
to come any closer then 66-58 as<lb/>
the Pirates were successful from<lb/>
the line.<lb/>
"We came back because we<lb/>
played the game we wanted to<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "When we got<lb/>
down by 10 points in the first half<lb/>
we became anxious and started<lb/>
taking bad shots, but in the se-<lb/>
cond half we were patient<lb/>
Andruzzi said another key to<lb/>
the Pirate's victory was their in-<lb/>
side play. "We knew we had to be<lb/>
physical to win the game, and it<lb/>
turned out that we got 40 points<lb/>
from our inside people<lb/>
Other Pirates to have good<lb/>
games included Lisa Squirewell<lb/>
with 8-11 from the field for 1"<lb/>
points and 10 rebounds, and point<lb/>
guard Delphine Mabry with four<lb/>
steals and six assists.<lb/>
ECU broke a three-game losing<lb/>
streak with their victory and now<lb/>
stand at 6-6 on the season.<lb/>
USFL Picks Pirates<lb/>
B ED MCKLAS<lb/>
sprii Mllor<lb/>
Offensive guard Terry Long<lb/>
and defensive back Clint Harris<lb/>
participated for the South against<lb/>
the North in the frigid Blue-Gray<lb/>
all-star game, which was played<lb/>
over the holidays. Long's and<lb/>
Harris' Rebels beat the Yanks on<lb/>
a last-minute touchdown pass by<lb/>
Duke's Ben Bennett.<lb/>
Long, Harris, defensive tackle<lb/>
Hal Stephens, defensive end Steve<lb/>
Hamilton, offensive tackle John<lb/>
Robertson and quarterback Kevin<lb/>
Ingram were chosen in the United<lb/>
States Football League draft.<lb/>
Long and Harris went to<lb/>
Washington in the fourth and<lb/>
sixth rounds, Robertson to<lb/>
Arizona in the tenth, Ingram to<lb/>
Tampa Bay in the fifth, Stephens<lb/>
to Memphis in the fourth and<lb/>
Hamilton to Michigan in the<lb/>
fourth.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Once again, Long made the<lb/>
news. He appeared on the Bob<lb/>
Hope Christmas special on Dec.<lb/>
19, along with .lie rest of the AP<lb/>
All-America team. The jocular<lb/>
Hope said Long "flattens more<lb/>
ends than a masseur at a fat<lb/>
farm<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
ECU Sports Information made<lb/>
the national news in Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated's year-end issue. The<lb/>
subject concerned a promotional<lb/>
poster of Long, which showed<lb/>
him flexing in the weight room<lb/>
and listed his lifting achievements.<lb/>
The poster was sent the media by<lb/>
ECU Sports Info before the<lb/>
season, and some contend that<lb/>
this strategy enabled the less-<lb/>
touted Long to make first team<lb/>
AP Al-America instead of Lom-<lb/>
bardi Award and Outland Trophy<lb/>
winner Dean Steinkuhler of<lb/>
Nebraska. Neverthless, in the arti-<lb/>
cle, Sports Info was commended<lb/>
for a "creative publicity<lb/>
endeavor<lb/>
Former ECU football coach<lb/>
Pat Dye, who is now at Auburn,<lb/>
said he didn't think Miami should<lb/>
have been ranked number one<lb/>
because of its easy schedule.<lb/>
However, he said ECU was the<lb/>
best team Miami played, and<lb/>
Miami played bowl winners<lb/>
Florida, Florida State and Notre<lb/>
Dame. Brownie points?<lb/>
ECU defensive secondary coach<lb/>
Phil FJmassian is giving up his<lb/>
football job to serve as an assis-<lb/>
tant at the University of Min-<lb/>
nesota under the recently hired<lb/>
Lou Holtz, the former N.C. State<lb/>
mentor.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
Derrick Battle, freshman for-<lb/>
ward from Whitakers, N.C, was<lb/>
named ECAC-Southrookie of the<lb/>
week for scoring 15 points and<lb/>
pulling down four rebounds in the<lb/>
Pirates' 80-64 loss to Duke on<lb/>
Dec. 10.<lb/>
Kevin Ingram (left), Terry Long (center) and John Robertson talk<lb/>
things over in a game earlier this season. All three were drafted by the<lb/>
USFL last week.<lb/>
to easy buckets.<lb/>
"Nothing is going to happen<lb/>
overnight Harrison said. "We<lb/>
need hard work and good people,<lb/>
and we have them<lb/>
"They (the players) have been a<lb/>
joy for me to be around. They are<lb/>
very good people. It would be<lb/>
good for the students to come<lb/>
watch them grow he added.<lb/>
Yates Leads George Mason Past ECU<lb/>
By ED MCKLAS<lb/>
ECU seemed hungry. In prac-<lb/>
tice the day before, Leon Bass<lb/>
gave teammate Jack Turnbill an<lb/>
elbow that resulted in a concus-<lb/>
sion. The Pirates weren't about to<lb/>
be outmuscled this game.<lb/>
However, George Mason had a<lb/>
say in the game, too.<lb/>
Forward Carlos Yates came off<lb/>
the bench to pump in 18 points,<lb/>
and guard John Neihoff scored all<lb/>
his game high 13 points in the first<lb/>
half, as the Patriots won its ninth<lb/>
straight game,beating the Pirates,<lb/>
83-66, in the ECAC-South opener<lb/>
at George Mason Gymnasium.<lb/>
Yates, who was supposedly ser-<lb/>
ving the second of a two game<lb/>
suspension, came into the game<lb/>
midway through th first half,<lb/>
with George Mason leading 16-10.<lb/>
That was when the roof fell in<lb/>
on the Pirates. With ECU guard<lb/>
Tony Robinson sitting out with<lb/>
three fouls and Niehoff continual-<lb/>
ly driving the lane effectively, the<lb/>
Patriots ran off a 16-3 advan-<lb/>
tage to take a 31-13 lead.<lb/>
The spree began when Yates,<lb/>
who is the leading returning scorer<lb/>
in NCAA division one and has<lb/>
never scored below double figures<lb/>
at home, went up for a shot and<lb/>
was fouled by ECU forward Bass.<lb/>
Yates made the basket and added<lb/>
the freethrow to give George<lb/>
Mason a 19-10 advantage.<lb/>
Niehoff, a walk-on who became<lb/>
a starter under Patriot coach Joe<lb/>
Harrington, hit a jumper and the<lb/>
next time down the court tossed in<lb/>
two free throws, as ECU fell<lb/>
behind 23-10.<lb/>
The Pirates attempted a corn-<lb/>
back with George Mason leading<lb/>
31-13, as guard Kurt Vanderhorst<lb/>
hit for four points and forward<lb/>
Barry Wright connected on both<lb/>
ends of a one-and-one to cut the<lb/>
lead to 31-19.<lb/>
But the Pirates trailed 41-23<lb/>
halftime and were behind as much<lb/>
as 26 in the second.<lb/>
The loss was ECU's ninth in a<lb/>
row. The Pirates, last in the<lb/>
EC AC in field goal percentage,<lb/>
shot onlv 26 per cent in the first<lb/>
half.<lb/>
Keith Sledge pumped in a career<lb/>
high for the Pirates with 16<lb/>
points, and Wright added 10.<lb/>
George Mason now holds a 4-2<lb/>
advantage in the series and aveng-<lb/>
ed a 66-64 loss to ECU in last<lb/>
year's conference tournament.<lb/>
Sports Schedule<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 14<lb/>
7:30pm<lb/>
7:30pm<lb/>
2pm<lb/>
Cart Vaaderhorst Is Just one of the many talented yoaag players on<lb/>
ECU's squad.<lb/>
?<lb/>
3pm<lb/>
Men's Basketball at William and<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
Men's and Women's Swimming<lb/>
vs UNC-Wilmington (Home)<lb/>
Men's and Women's Indoor<lb/>
Track at George Mason<lb/>
Sun. Jan. 15<lb/>
Women's Basketball vs George<lb/>
Mason (Home)<lb/>
Swim<lb/>
By JOEL SCALE<lb/>
MVVMhi<lb/>
The ECU women s<lb/>
swim team easilv di-<lb/>
ed of Navy Satui<lb/>
winning bv a 9 4<lb/>
margin, but the a<lb/>
team did not fare<lb/>
dropping its meet 71 -33<lb/>
In their meet. th<lb/>
women's 400 medl<lb/>
relay team qua.<lb/>
the nationals and set<lb/>
freshman record<lb/>
"The girls swarr.<lb/>
cellent meet coacr -<lb/>
Kobe said. "Il was th<lb/>
best performance<lb/>
year, and the wei<lb/>
to several nation<lb/>
times<lb/>
Both worr-<lb/>
teams won w<lb/>
pressive time<lb/>
medley relav tea<lb/>
sisting of Je<lb/>
Feinberg, Jean Kr<lb/>
Lori Livingston and Ci<lb/>
dy Newman, with a tir<lb/>
of 4:09.95<lb/>
the NCAA d<lb/>
championsh<lb/>
Keating and v-<lb/>
also participated<lb/>
400 free relav, alonj<lb/>
Lon Miller and C a<lb/>
ECU' diver Scott Eagle<lb/>
mance in Saturday m<lb/>
bet<lb/>
I<lb/>
A:<lb/>
I<lb/>
men<lb/>
of rtl<lb/>
out<lb/>
the<lb/>
On your mark, get set<lb/>
V<lb/>
? ??. v '?????'<lb/>
'&amp;f ? ?? 'fNii<lb/>
ft<lb/>
<pb facs="00057613_0011"/><lb/>
Pa?e 10<lb/>
ates<lb/>
ak<lb/>
a barrage of inten-<lb/>
rut were never able<lb/>
closer then 66-58 as<lb/>
?re successful from<lb/>
hack, because we<lb/>
e e wanted to<lb/>
"When we got<lb/>
: its in the first half<lb/>
:ious and started<lb/>
s lots, but in the se-<lb/>
vere patient<lb/>
iid another key to<lb/>
v or as their in-<lb/>
e knew we had to be<lb/>
n the game, and it<lb/>
hat we got 40 points<lb/>
ie people<lb/>
ites to have good<lb/>
led Lisa SquireweU<lb/>
rom the field for 17<lb/>
abounds, and point<lb/>
 Mabry with four<lb/>
assists.<lb/>
e a three-game losing<lb/>
heir victory and now<lb/>
It a the season.<lb/>
'W-<lb/>
fonn Robertsoa talk<lb/>
were drafted by the<lb/>
CU<lb/>
le-and-one to cut the<lb/>
<lb/>
iPirates trailed 41-23<lb/>
were behind as much<lb/>
second.<lb/>
as ECU's ninth in a<lb/>
Pirates, last in the<lb/>
field goal percentage,<lb/>
per cent in the first<lb/>
lge pumped in a career<lb/>
the Pirates with 16<lb/>
Wright added 10.<lb/>
lason now holds a 4-2<lb/>
the series and aveng-<lb/>
loss to ECU in last<lb/>
;rence tournament.<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
Swimmmers Split<lb/>
By JOEL SCALES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU women's<lb/>
swim team easily dispos-<lb/>
ed of Navy Saturday,<lb/>
winning by a 95-47<lb/>
margin, but the men's<lb/>
team did not fare as well,<lb/>
dropping its meet 78-35.<lb/>
In their meet, the<lb/>
women's 400 medley<lb/>
relay team qualified for<lb/>
the nationals and set a<lb/>
freshman record.<lb/>
"The girls swam an ex-<lb/>
cellent meet coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe said. "It was their<lb/>
best performance of the<lb/>
year, and they were close<lb/>
to several national cut-off<lb/>
times<lb/>
Both women's relay<lb/>
teams won with im-<lb/>
pressive times. The 400<lb/>
medley relay team, con-<lb/>
sisting of Jessica<lb/>
Feinberg, Jean Keating,<lb/>
Lori Livingston and Cin-<lb/>
dy Newman, with a time<lb/>
of 4:09.95, qualified for<lb/>
the NCAA division II<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Keating and Newman<lb/>
also participated in the<lb/>
400 free relay, along with<lb/>
Lori Miller and Caycee<lb/>
Poust. They turned in a<lb/>
time of 3:43.7, which is a<lb/>
freshman record.<lb/>
Besides winning both<lb/>
relays, the women also<lb/>
captured six individual<lb/>
first place wins. The team<lb/>
was paced by Keating,<lb/>
who won the 50 free in<lb/>
:25.6. She was also a<lb/>
member of both relay<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
Feinberg won both the<lb/>
100 breast in 1:12.7 and<lb/>
the 200 breast in 2:41.1.<lb/>
The other two firsts were<lb/>
by Poust in the 100 back<lb/>
in a time of 1:02.6 and<lb/>
Newman in the 100 fly in<lb/>
1:01.5.<lb/>
"We swam our best<lb/>
meet of the year Kobe<lb/>
said. "We beat a team<lb/>
that finished in top 20 last<lb/>
year<lb/>
The outcome of the<lb/>
men's meet was quite dif-<lb/>
ferent, but Kobe com-<lb/>
mented: it wasn't that<lb/>
we swam that poorly,<lb/>
Navy just had a good<lb/>
team; we got beat by a<lb/>
pretty good team<lb/>
The men managed only<lb/>
two first place and three<lb/>
second place finishes.<lb/>
However, six of them<lb/>
swam their best times<lb/>
ever.<lb/>
The team was paced by<lb/>
Scott Eagle, who finished<lb/>
first in the 3-meter dive<lb/>
with 249.6 points and se-<lb/>
cond in the 1-meter dive<lb/>
with 274.4. The other<lb/>
first place finish came<lb/>
from Chris Pittelli, who<lb/>
won the 200 free in<lb/>
1:45.5. The remaining se-<lb/>
cond place finishes were<lb/>
obtained by Kevin<lb/>
Richards in the 200 back<lb/>
and Kevin Hidalgo in the<lb/>
200 fly.<lb/>
The men's and<lb/>
women's records are now<lb/>
an identical 4-2. Both<lb/>
teams recently returned<lb/>
from Florida, where they<lb/>
were victorious over<lb/>
Johns Hopkins. The next<lb/>
meet is Saturday at UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington.<lb/>
An ECU swimmer gets off to aa earty start la ?i of<lb/>
season.<lb/>
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ECU diver Scott Eagle turned in another fine perfor-<lb/>
mance in Saturday's meet.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057613_0012"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
Baker Leaves<lb/>
ECU associate head<lb/>
coach and offensive coor-<lb/>
dinator Art Baker ac-<lb/>
cepted a position at<lb/>
Florida State Sunday,<lb/>
having just finished a suc-<lb/>
cessful first season under<lb/>
Pirate head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
Baker, mentor of<lb/>
ECU's explosive offense<lb/>
last fall, which averaged<lb/>
350 yards per game, will<lb/>
succeed Mike Kruczek,<lb/>
FSU's quarterback coach<lb/>
who just recently ac-<lb/>
cepted a job in the United<lb/>
States Football League.<lb/>
In a United Press inter-<lb/>
view, Dean Pearson, FSU<lb/>
assistant sports informa-<lb/>
tion director, said Baker<lb/>
will "take over a lot of<lb/>
Bowden's administrative<lb/>
duties and also coach the<lb/>
quarterbacks under of-<lb/>
fensive coordinator<lb/>
Wayne McDuffie<lb/>
Under head coach Bob-<lb/>
by Bowden, whose team<lb/>
went 7-4 this year with a<lb/>
season ending 28-3 Peach<lb/>
Bowl victory over North<lb/>
Carolina, Baker will be<lb/>
next in command.<lb/>
Baker began his col-<lb/>
legiate career as an assis-<lb/>
tant at Clemson<lb/>
(1965-69). He later<lb/>
became a head coach at<lb/>
Furman (1973-77) and<lb/>
The Citadel (1978-82),<lb/>
prior to his arrival at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The 54-year old<lb/>
Sumter, S.C. native is a<lb/>
graduate of Presbyterian<lb/>
College.<lb/>
Perkins Honored<lb/>
, N.C. (UPI) ? Universi-<lb/>
Vv of North Carolina All-<lb/>
America Sam Perkins is<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Con-<lb/>
ference Player-of-the-<lb/>
Week for his perfor-<lb/>
mance in two Tar Heel<lb/>
wins last week, league of-<lb/>
ficials announced Mon-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
Perkins, a 6-foot-9<lb/>
senior from Latham,<lb/>
NY started the week<lb/>
off with a strong 21-point<lb/>
performance as North<lb/>
Carolina breezed by<lb/>
Boston University 87-54.<lb/>
Perkins scored 22 points<lb/>
in North Carolina's con-<lb/>
ference opening victory<lb/>
over North Carolina<lb/>
State 81-60.<lb/>
Perkins, one of the<lb/>
league's best rebounders,<lb/>
added 11 rebounds in the<lb/>
two games to move his<lb/>
per game average to 9.3.<lb/>
His 43 total points last<lb/>
week increased his scor-<lb/>
ing average to 16.9 per<lb/>
game.<lb/>
For the week, Perkins<lb/>
connected on 16 of 21<lb/>
shots from the field while<lb/>
making 11 of 16 tries at<lb/>
the line.<lb/>
A special committee of<lb/>
the Atlantic Coast Sports<lb/>
Writers Association<lb/>
selected Perkins as well as<lb/>
gave honors to North<lb/>
Carolina's standout<lb/>
center Tresa Brown,<lb/>
named the conference's<lb/>
Women's Player-of-the-<lb/>
Week.<lb/>
Brown led the Tar<lb/>
Heels to an 80-79 win<lb/>
over ninth-ranked<lb/>
Maryland last week.<lb/>
Brown, a 6-foot-2<lb/>
senior from Raleigh,<lb/>
scored 27 points and pull-<lb/>
ed down 11 rebounds<lb/>
against the Terrapins.<lb/>
North Carolina was down<lb/>
42-39 at the half, but<lb/>
behind Brown's seven of<lb/>
eight shooting from the<lb/>
floor, they pulled out the<lb/>
one-point victory.<lb/>
Brown is averaging 21<lb/>
points a game, the second<lb/>
best mark in the con-<lb/>
ference, while reboun-<lb/>
ding at a league-leading<lb/>
10.6<lb/>
SyMa Brmf<lb/>
? Ml attempt<lb/>
against <lb/>
Dickinson<lb/>
East Carolina offensive lineman Terry Long Uses ap opposite Dtooey Lands Ontiandtsa Trophy winner, Goofy, during a visit<lb/>
to the famous theme park In December.<lb/>
?5uAppfe $oede<lb/>
ML 9 SI.<lb/>
TM-1427<lb/>
Newest LPs ? Cassettes bathes artist<lb/>
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LOTS MORE<lb/>
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l 05 Airport Rd<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27834<lb/>
019)758-0327<lb/>
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BICYCHv<lb/>
90S<lb/>
January<lb/>
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Tube<lb/>
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27X114 Gum wall 4.95<lb/>
27 X1 18 Skinside 4.95<lb/>
27 X1 14 IRC 4.95<lb/>
Tubes 2.75<lb/>
it OfFER<lb/>
SET aESXWfclBUITY FAST<lb/>
CUSRENT npPOF - s "<lb/>
530 Cotanche Street<lb/>
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Starfns s'ry 'r0f $la,0OC  Nuclear Engineering<lb/>
S22.bUO with increases to. HuSineSS N??iagee?"t<lb/>
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i.<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
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Hrtt month ? r?i and 1215 ma?-aft?f<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT ?i <lb/>
dutanca to campvi 1  M p4u?<lb/>
utilities ?ne pftona Sroci ??- ?<lb/>
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ri 518 SOUTH COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NX. 27834<lb/>
752-0688<lb/>
Your One Stop Store For Everything Creative<lb/>
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?? M month on half sat ?-??<lb/>
We Offer a Complete Line<lb/>
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by Colorcraft<lb/>
Nikon and Canon Cameras<lb/>
Lenses, and Accessories<lb/>
A Complete Line of Kodak<lb/>
Film, Equipment and Supplies<lb/>
? Kodak, Agfa, and Word<lb/>
Photo Papers<lb/>
Supplies for the Student<lb/>
Amateur, and Professional<lb/>
Graphic Supplies by Letraset,<lb/>
Zipatone, Tactype, Alvin,<lb/>
Decodry, E-Z Letter, and many more.<lb/>
Custom Framing<lb/>
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Largest Selection of Mat Board<lb/>
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In the East<lb/>
 Ready Mode Frames and Framing Supplies<lb/>
 Framed and Unframed Posters and Prints<lb/>
QUIXOTE<lb/>
GET AWAY<lb/>
Ski Wintergreen Packj<lb/>
3 days unlimited ?i<lb/>
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March 5 -5-day ci<lb/>
included all tips, port<lb/>
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QUIXOTE TRA<lb/>
319 Cotanche<lb/>
Greenville,<lb/>
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GREENVILLE<lb/>
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i. IT<lb/>
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Dickinson.<lb/>
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USDA Choice Beef Chuck<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, January 14, 1984<lb/>
-n<lb/>
m-<lb/>
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FOR SALE<lb/>
fOR RENT 2 bedroom duplux<lb/>
Vacated on Dickinson ?vi 14J or<lb/>
first month s rent tnO 1215 thereafter<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT Walklno.<lb/>
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students onl Plaasa call 752 214<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
CONGATS to Susia T , Cindy W . and<lb/>
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FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED to<lb/>
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immed 7Se I7t7. Total rent MM e<lb/>
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WANTED: Responsible party to<lb/>
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QUIXOTE TRAVELS<lb/>
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Ski Wintergreen Package:<lb/>
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Cruise - Spring Break:<lb/>
March 5 -5-day cruise $399 per person<lb/>
included all tips, port tax and meals<lb/>
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319 Cotanche St.<lb/>
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27 X1 18 Skinside 4.95<lb/>
27 X1 14 IRC 4.95<lb/>
Tubes 2.75<lb/>
530 COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
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757 3616<lb/>
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12 0t. - AMtriata Slices<lb/>
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??<lb/>
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14 Or Riftrt D?i Fo4<lb/>
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399.<lb/>
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Shedtfs Spread Krispy Crackers 7 Chicken Noodle<lb/>
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<lb/>
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6800 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
? ?- . ;?" a?muaKi<lb/>
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Our 12" pizza has 8<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057613_0015"/>
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