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<pb facs="00057614_0001"/>
?<lb/>
Bht<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No JO 2 j<lb/>
Thursday , January 12, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages,<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Study Ranking SAT Scores<lb/>
Contested By ECU Officials<lb/>
WZMBDJ At Work<lb/>
NdL JOHNSON ? KCU<lb/>
Overworked volunteer WZMB disc jockefs and news casters may one day be paid for their efforts at the<lb/>
student radio station if a proposed Media Board fee increase is approved.<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
C-N?w IMMar<lb/>
North Carolina students'<lb/>
Scholastic Aptitude Test scores<lb/>
were among the lowest in the na-<lb/>
tion, according to a survey com-<lb/>
piled by the National Center on<lb/>
Education Statistics and released<lb/>
last week. The survey statistics are<lb/>
misleading, contend two ECU of-<lb/>
ficials.<lb/>
"One has to look at the data<lb/>
and be aware of the fact that the<lb/>
states that score high have very<lb/>
few students taking the exam<lb/>
said Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Academic Affairs Angelo Volpe.<lb/>
Volpe pointed out that in Iowa<lb/>
(ranked number two in the nation<lb/>
by the survey) only three percent<lb/>
of the high school students take<lb/>
the SAT, while approximately 50<lb/>
percent of the students in North<lb/>
Carolina take the test.<lb/>
Charles Seeley, director of ad-<lb/>
missions at ECU, said this is<lb/>
because most students in the<lb/>
Media Board<lb/>
To Propose<lb/>
Fee Increase<lb/>
B JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
(o-Srwi Ml for<lb/>
Price increases have stretched<lb/>
budgets everywhere, and the ECU<lb/>
Media Board budget is among<lb/>
those needing an increase. Plans<lb/>
are currently being drafted for a<lb/>
proposed Media Board student<lb/>
fee increase.<lb/>
The media board budget is<lb/>
funded entirely by student fees,<lb/>
although many publications<lb/>
budgets are not. The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian, for example, covers most of<lb/>
its expenses through advertising<lb/>
revenues. Each student currently<lb/>
pays $6.35 per semester for media<lb/>
services, and according to Media<lb/>
Board Chairman Mark Niewald,<lb/>
this would be increased by $2 per<lb/>
semester if the plan is approved.<lb/>
"We had been discussing a fee<lb/>
increase for the last month and a<lb/>
half. We haven't had a fee in-<lb/>
crease for the media in the last few<lb/>
years Niewald said.<lb/>
The additional money would be<lb/>
used in several different areas.<lb/>
Printing costs for the Buccaneer<lb/>
and the Rebel have increased<lb/>
resulting in a need for more fun-<lb/>
ding. Computer equipment in also<lb/>
needed to increase productivity in<lb/>
billing and payroll computation.<lb/>
The bulk of the increase would be<lb/>
to pay the disc jockeys and<lb/>
newscasters at WZMB, the cam-<lb/>
pus radio station. The staff there<lb/>
currently works on a volunteer<lb/>
basis.<lb/>
"We hope to be able to pay<lb/>
enough to provide some sort of<lb/>
professionalism at WZMB<lb/>
Niewald said, "It's a lot harder<lb/>
for management to manage<lb/>
volunteers<lb/>
midwest use the American College<lb/>
Membership Increases<lb/>
Testing program. The students<lb/>
who do take the SAT are usually<lb/>
applying to schools in the East.<lb/>
"People taking the SAT in Iowa<lb/>
will be people going to Harvard or<lb/>
Yale Seeley said.<lb/>
"In North Carolina, in order to<lb/>
get into a public university, a stu-<lb/>
dent is encouraged to take the<lb/>
SATs Volpe said. "The data (in<lb/>
the survey) needs to be normalized<lb/>
before you make an assessment<lb/>
he added. Comparing states where<lb/>
different percentages of students<lb/>
take the SAT, Volpe said, "is like<lb/>
comparing apples and oranges<lb/>
Billy Helton, associate director<lb/>
of institutional research, said<lb/>
average SAT scores for the 1983<lb/>
ECU freshman class were 840 for<lb/>
in-state students and 850 for the<lb/>
entire class. Asked whether these<lb/>
scores are low, Volpe said, "It's<lb/>
hard to tell. I would want to see<lb/>
data for all of the states before I<lb/>
said one way or another<lb/>
"I think they are a little low<lb/>
compared to some, but of course<lb/>
Angelo Volpe<lb/>
they're improving Seeley said.<lb/>
According to Linda Balfour.<lb/>
director of data collection and<lb/>
reporting for the UNC system,<lb/>
ECU's average SAT scores for<lb/>
students enrolled during the<lb/>
1982-1983 school year uere 85<lb/>
continued on page 5<lb/>
Fraternities Becoming More Popular<lb/>
<lb/>
Elmer Meyer<lb/>
Niewald and all the media<lb/>
heads are currently working on<lb/>
the proposal. It will be presented<lb/>
to the Media Board today and, if<lb/>
approved will be sent to Dr. Elmer<lb/>
Meyer, vice chancellor for student<lb/>
life. His office will approve the<lb/>
plan and then send it to ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell, who has<lb/>
the final decision on the increase.<lb/>
"I think some fee increase is<lb/>
justified, particularly since<lb/>
WZMB hasn't had the budget to<lb/>
pay its announcers a stipend<lb/>
Meyer said.<lb/>
"It has been four years since we<lb/>
have had a fee increase. In order<lb/>
to continue to grow, we need it. I<lb/>
would like to see the newscasters<lb/>
and disc jockeys at WZMB paid<lb/>
for the overtime they put in said<lb/>
Hunter Fisher, general manager<lb/>
of The East Carolinian.<lb/>
According to Meyer, Student<lb/>
Health, Student Unions, In-<lb/>
tramural Recreation Services and<lb/>
Housing are also planning to pro-<lb/>
pose fee increases. All proposals<lb/>
will be in Meyer's office by Jan.<lb/>
15 and, if approved, will take ef-<lb/>
fect July 1.<lb/>
BOSTON, Mass. (CPS) ?<lb/>
Fraternities will enjoy<lb/>
"dramatic" increases in member-<lb/>
ship over the next several years as<lb/>
more students reach for "stability<lb/>
and structure" during their time<lb/>
in college, two Northeastern<lb/>
University reasearchers predict.<lb/>
"Fraternities are coming back<lb/>
for the same reason that the<lb/>
junior prom is coming back<lb/>
says sociology Professor Jack<lb/>
Levin, who co-authored a study<lb/>
of fraternities with Northeastern<lb/>
criminal justice instructor James<lb/>
Fox.<lb/>
Fraternity membership hit its<lb/>
peak in the early and middle '60s,<lb/>
and then dropped off sharply dur-<lb/>
ing the campus protests of the late<lb/>
'60s and early 1970s.<lb/>
In the ten years between 1966<lb/>
and 1976, for instance, the pro-<lb/>
portion of college students in<lb/>
greek organizations plummeted<lb/>
from 39 percent to 19 percent.<lb/>
The average fraternity chapter<lb/>
membership dropped from 50 to<lb/>
only 34 during that same period,<lb/>
according to the National Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Conference.<lb/>
"During the late '60s and early<lb/>
'60s, fraternities lost the support<lb/>
of students, particularly at elite,<lb/>
private institutions where they<lb/>
were the strongest Levin ex-<lb/>
plains.<lb/>
"Fraternity members became<lb/>
stigmatized as members of the<lb/>
establishment<lb/>
But today students are looking<lb/>
for the security and structure that<lb/>
fraternity membership offers, and<lb/>
a "dramatic reversal" of the<lb/>
decline in frat membership taking<lb/>
place, Levin asserts.<lb/>
Based on the study of frater-<lb/>
nities at over 160 colleges,<lb/>
membership in fraternities has<lb/>
climbed from 19 to 20 percent of<lb/>
the student population.<lb/>
That trend is even stronger at<lb/>
influential schools on the east and<lb/>
west coasts, he adds, where social<lb/>
patterns typically are more rigid.<lb/>
But with an increased member-<lb/>
ship on campuses, fraternities are<lb/>
also garnering more attention,<lb/>
often of a disciplinary nature,<lb/>
from college administrators and<lb/>
police.<lb/>
"Fraternities were less pro-<lb/>
blemtic a few years ago because<lb/>
they didn't have many members.<lb/>
In fact, membership in some<lb/>
fraternities sank to zero. Now,<lb/>
just by the increase in sheer<lb/>
numbers of fraternity members,<lb/>
they're having more problems on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Indeed, last year a College<lb/>
Press Service survey of ad-<lb/>
ministrators and campus police<lb/>
officials indicated a new, "get<lb/>
tough" attitude with fraternities<lb/>
nationwide.<lb/>
Many states have now enacted<lb/>
anti-hazing statutes which forbid<lb/>
fraternities from requiring<lb/>
recruits to go through<lb/>
humiliating, sometimes very<lb/>
dangerous rituals to become<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Colleges, along with national<lb/>
chapters for many fraternities,<lb/>
have also clamped down on drink-<lb/>
ing, fizzing, and discriminatory<lb/>
policies which have plagued greek<lb/>
organizations in the past.<lb/>
4'As fraternities return, their<lb/>
character is changing quite a bit<lb/>
Levin points out. "They're doing<lb/>
more philanthropic work, they're<lb/>
less elitist and discriminatory, and<lb/>
they are controlling hazing ac-<lb/>
tivities<lb/>
But, he adds, the fraternities<lb/>
are cleaning up their acts "not<lb/>
necessarily because they want to,<lb/>
but because of pressure from<lb/>
legislatures, administrators, and<lb/>
other organizations<lb/>
Hazing still exists, but has<lb/>
become "more subtle and more<lb/>
psychological, like telling pledges<lb/>
they've flunked an important ex-<lb/>
am or telling them no one likes<lb/>
them and they can't be in the<lb/>
fraternity<lb/>
More ECU Students<lb/>
Affiliate With Greeks<lb/>
By DALE SWANSON<lb/>
StafT Writer<lb/>
ECU's Greek system is ex-<lb/>
periencing a membership boom.<lb/>
According to a spokesman for<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon, membership<lb/>
has been on the rise since about<lb/>
1977 and is finally approaching the<lb/>
popularity it had in the 1950s and<lb/>
'60s.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Vice President<lb/>
Dwayne Wiseman claims an in-<lb/>
crease from 10 to 15 pledges per<lb/>
rush in the late '60s to 35 in this<lb/>
year's fall pledge class. Both<lb/>
fraternity spokesman said the<lb/>
slump of the early '70s was the<lb/>
result of the war and the anti-<lb/>
establishment feelings of the<lb/>
period.<lb/>
Sororities have also experienced<lb/>
a marked increase over the past<lb/>
three years. According to<lb/>
Panhailenic Council advisor<lb/>
Laura Sweet, the late '60s<lb/>
membership drop that hurt frater-<lb/>
nities and some northern<lb/>
sororities had little affect on<lb/>
ECU's sororities and those at<lb/>
other southern schools. Sweet said<lb/>
that during that period, most<lb/>
ECU sororities saw drops in<lb/>
pledge classes of about embers<lb/>
each.<lb/>
The recent surge in fraternity<lb/>
membership, however, has been<lb/>
accompanied by a major boost in<lb/>
sorority pledging.<lb/>
In contrast to the nationwide<lb/>
increase in hazing problems and<lb/>
fraternity related offenses.<lb/>
Associate Dean of Orientation<lb/>
and Judiciary James B. Mallory<lb/>
said that fraternity problems on<lb/>
ECU's campus are down. He at<lb/>
tributed this to the North<lb/>
Carolina's anti-hazing laws, na-<lb/>
tional chapter rules and fraternity<lb/>
cooperation. Mallory also said<lb/>
most students pledging here will<lb/>
not allow such practices.<lb/>
Philanthropy is up in fraternity<lb/>
activities while misconduct is<lb/>
down. The upcoming dry rush is<lb/>
an example of this, Mallory said.<lb/>
The only serious hazing pro<lb/>
blem over the past decade occured<lb/>
last year and involved the Omega<lb/>
Phi Phi fraternity.<lb/>
Book Prices Increase;<lb/>
Bad News For Students<lb/>
By OLTDA HORTON<lb/>
SUff Wrtur<lb/>
Textbook prices have increased<lb/>
this semester, according to<lb/>
bookstore spokesmen, causing<lb/>
many students to leave the book<lb/>
stores with empty pockets.<lb/>
Don Edwards, manager of the<lb/>
University Book Exchange, said<lb/>
that textbook prices rose about<lb/>
five percent (one dollar) this<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
Edwards attributes the rise in<lb/>
costs to increases passed down<lb/>
from textbook publishers. "Book<lb/>
prices are still going up more than<lb/>
they should be Edwards said.<lb/>
According to Joe Clark,<lb/>
manager of the ECU Student Sup-<lb/>
ply Store, publishers generally in-<lb/>
crease prices before fall semesters.<lb/>
Some ECU students have<lb/>
already discovered the price in-<lb/>
creases. Aletta Dixon, a math stu-<lb/>
dent, said, "I bought fewer books<lb/>
this semester, but I ended up pay-<lb/>
ing more for them<lb/>
"I paid $112 for five paperbacks<lb/>
and two hardbacks, which is<lb/>
ridiculous said Carla Waters,<lb/>
an industrial technology major.<lb/>
According to some professors,<lb/>
price is a major factor considered<lb/>
when placing textbook orders.<lb/>
Collett Dilworth, assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of English, said, "Cost is a<lb/>
major consideration when choos-<lb/>
ing books Dilworth said he tries<lb/>
to use the same books each<lb/>
semester, but situations such as<lb/>
new editions prevent this.<lb/>
For Betty Long, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of elementary education,<lb/>
quality is a major factor con-<lb/>
sidered when choosing books.<lb/>
However, to reduce costs, Long<lb/>
said, "I try not to require addi-<lb/>
tional textbooks<lb/>
Edwards believes that the situa-<lb/>
tion will get better because of the<lb/>
improved economy. "It looks like<lb/>
prices are beginning to stabilize'<lb/>
Edwards said.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
New Housing<lb/>
Mill JOHNSON ? BCU<lb/>
Construction on RiaggoM Towen Stadent Coadoaalaianat la<lb/>
Many of the 180 units are already sold.<lb/>
expected to be completed by August.<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Style6<lb/>
Sports9<lb/>
Classifieds8<lb/>
? The East Carolinian<lb/>
begins today an original car-<lb/>
toon strip, Wolkin' the Plonk,<lb/>
by A. Guy, that will appear<lb/>
regularly each week in The<lb/>
East Carolinian this semester.<lb/>
See page 5.<lb/>
? Several ECU student<lb/>
leaders will meet with Gov.<lb/>
James Hunt later this month<lb/>
to discuss important issues for<lb/>
the future off North Carolina.<lb/>
See page 3.<lb/>
? For the latest on the ECU<lb/>
women's swimming team<lb/>
which coach Rick Kobe says is<lb/>
better than ever and can finish<lb/>
In the national top 20, see<lb/>
Sports, page 9.<lb/>
? Jay Stone reviews Hunter<lb/>
's latest new jour-<lb/>
effort, Curse of Lono<lb/>
Style, page 6.<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
?-? - - ? man<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 12, 1984<lb/>
I<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every<lb/>
Wednesday during the sum<lb/>
mer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the<lb/>
official newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published tor<lb/>
and by the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Subscription Rate: $20 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the Old South<lb/>
Building on the campus of<lb/>
ECU, Greenville, N C<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send ad<lb/>
dress changes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian, Old South<lb/>
Building, ECU Greenville,<lb/>
NC 27834<lb/>
Telephone 7S7 34, 37,<lb/>
?309<lb/>
SIGMA ALPHA<lb/>
IOTA<lb/>
Sigma Alpha lota Composer's<lb/>
Wuslcale Compositions will be ac<lb/>
ceo'ed 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 Hall Contact Natalie<lb/>
Beacham (756-6252) or Betsy Larder<lb/>
17586712) this week<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
All University faculty and all<lb/>
students participating In the Honors<lb/>
Program are reminded of their op-<lb/>
portunity of designing or requesting<lb/>
the Honors Seminar of 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. Pr&amp;<lb/>
posals for courses to be taught fall<lb/>
semester 194 should be subm'tted<lb/>
before Wednesday, January 18, 19t4,<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 4373<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
Approximately 115 lobs are<lb/>
available In this program Pay Is<lb/>
$3 73hr for full time positions.<lb/>
Beginning June 1 August 10, MM<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/>
February 7. Interested students<lb/>
should contact the Co-op office, 313<lb/>
Rawl Blag if Interested Details<lb/>
about this program will be presented<lb/>
at our regular Co-op seminars<lb/>
scheduled for January II from 12<lb/>
noon to 1 PM and January 12 from 4 5<lb/>
PM In 306 Rawl Blag<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 lobs 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/>
art planned for January 11 at H noon<lb/>
In 30 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 lob op<lb/>
portunltles available to students.<lb/>
These summer lobs will begin June 1<lb/>
and end August 10.<lb/>
ECGC<lb/>
The East Carolina Gay Community<lb/>
will meet Monday, January 16 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 of college Hill). AM<lb/>
interested persons are cordially In<lb/>
vlted to attend.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
CLASSES<lb/>
Yoga Feb 6, Beginning Ballroom<lb/>
Dance Feb. 10; intermediate<lb/>
Ballroom Dance-Feb. 10; Beginning<lb/>
Plano-Feb. 11 ? Contact Continuing<lb/>
Education, Erwln Hall. Call 757 6143<lb/>
FRISBEE FEVER<lb/>
The I rates art back and ready to<lb/>
start another year of competition<lb/>
The ECU Frlsbee club is open to all<lb/>
people Interested in learning a new<lb/>
skill or refining their old ones. The<lb/>
first club meeting for the Spring<lb/>
semester will be held Monday, Jan<lb/>
16 at 8:00 pm In Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center room 248.<lb/>
MARAUDERS<lb/>
The Department of Military<lb/>
Science Invites you to participate in<lb/>
the ECU Marauders, an organliation<lb/>
oriented toward leadership develop<lb/>
ment through adventure training,<lb/>
military tactics, and other outdoor<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
All students are welcome. The next<lb/>
meeting will be held on Thursday,<lb/>
Jan. 19 at 7PM in room 221,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center. For<lb/>
more Information, contact CPT.<lb/>
Lllvak at 757 6967<lb/>
VISUAL ARTS<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum of the<lb/>
School of Art will meet Tuesday, Jan<lb/>
17 at 5 p.m. In Jenkins room 1326. All<lb/>
interested people are asked to attend<lb/>
RUSH PI KAPP<lb/>
The Brothers and little sisters of Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi Fraternity would like to<lb/>
welcome everyone back for the spr<lb/>
ing semester. It will be lamming.<lb/>
We want to remind everyone that<lb/>
RUSK begins Jan 23 and lasts all<lb/>
week. Everyone Is welcome to come<lb/>
out and see what the PI Kapps are all<lb/>
about. Listen and watch for the men<lb/>
of Pi Kappa Phi.<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
irs summer camp employment<lb/>
time Are you interested' Summer<lb/>
Camp representatives will be in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center, from<lb/>
11 00 am to 3 00 pm Tuesday<lb/>
January 31 to interview students in<lb/>
terested in summer employment<lb/>
Jobs 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 skilled 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 iocs will Involve working with<lb/>
Handicapped campers.<lb/>
job information is available in the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office, 313<lb/>
Rawl Bidg<lb/>
Summer Camp Employment Day is<lb/>
sponsored Dy the following offices<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement,<lb/>
Cooperative Education, Counseling<lb/>
Center Handicapped Student Ser<lb/>
vices Program for Hearing lmparled<lb/>
Students and Parks, Recreation, and<lb/>
Conservation<lb/>
Contact the Cooperative Education<lb/>
Office, 313 Rawl Bidg Telephone<lb/>
757 6979 or 757 6375 immediately to<lb/>
arrange interviews<lb/>
SCHOOL OF<lb/>
BUSINESS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place-<lb/>
ment service will offer an Informa<lb/>
tlon session for students wanting to<lb/>
learn more about how to effectively<lb/>
utilize this service Some discussion<lb/>
of how to prepare before graduation<lb/>
will be offered in this session on<lb/>
January IB at 3:30 p.m. in Rawl 130<lb/>
SENIORS GRAD<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service will meet with those In<lb/>
terested in learning more about this<lb/>
service This general session will en<lb/>
courage those graduating In the spr<lb/>
Ing and summer to pick up reglstra<lb/>
tion packets and return them in<lb/>
January The session will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall 221 at 4:00 pm on<lb/>
January 19, 1984<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
The NC Institute of Government<lb/>
Summer Intern Program provides 24<lb/>
Internships In government for<lb/>
outstanding 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/>
tacl the Co-op office, 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building to apply<lb/>
COFFEEHOUSE<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Do you want to help make the world<lb/>
around you a more Interesting place<lb/>
for everyone Are you tired of lust go-<lb/>
ing to classes and then going home<lb/>
Well you can moke a difference. The<lb/>
Student union Coffeehouse Commit<lb/>
tee located in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center Is taking applications for<lb/>
membershlp. This committee Is sole<lb/>
ly In charge of booking and proofing<lb/>
local and national entertainment in<lb/>
the Coffeehouse Application will be<lb/>
available at the Student Union Office<lb/>
(Room 234 Mendenhall) from<lb/>
January 16-20. Take an active role in<lb/>
the world around and get Involved!<lb/>
SAB<lb/>
There will be a Student Athletic<lb/>
Board meeting on Monday, Jan. 16 at<lb/>
t 3C in Room 248 at Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Lady Pirate Classic<lb/>
details will be discussed All<lb/>
members are urged to attend<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Minority Arts<lb/>
Committee will meet on Thursday,<lb/>
January 12, 1984, at 8:00 P.M. In<lb/>
Room 248 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center All members and any In-<lb/>
teresting students are urged to at<lb/>
tend.<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. It's Great! And You Won't Gain<lb/>
Weight If You Follow The 5-Day Plan.<lb/>
Directed by Alien F. Bowyer, Chief of Cardiology, ECU, in cooperation with Pitt County<lb/>
Health Ate.de For Inform.tio. oil, 757-4651,756-5543. It b not nectary to pre-reter.<lb/>
Stop Smoking Week. Jan. 16-20, 7:00PM<lb/>
? ? 1 ttTi .TTI ?<lb/>
PHOTOS - BUTTONS - PHOTOS -<lb/>
BUTTONS - PHOTOS - BUTTONS<lb/>
GREATEST CONCERT ROCK N5 ROLL<lb/>
STARS &amp; MOVIE GREATS.<lb/>
COLOR PHOTOGRAPHS &amp; BUTTONS<lb/>
NOW ON SALE<lb/>
Dates: Mon Jan 16-Fri Jan 20<lb/>
Place: MSC ? I st Floor Newspaper Lounge,<lb/>
Sponsored By: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Adam &amp; the Ants<lb/>
Pat Benatar Eddie Money<lb/>
Beatles Genesis<lb/>
Clash C ?. . " "7<lb/>
Hi<lb/>
<lb/>
Springsteen<lb/>
Lep Zepplin<lb/>
Police<lb/>
J. Geils<lb/>
 L<lb/>
1<lb/>
a<lb/>
.i<lb/>
)<lb/>
a<lb/>
Skynyrd<lb/>
Tom Petty<lb/>
Rolling Stones<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Springfield<lb/>
Journey<lb/>
Van Halen<lb/>
the Who<lb/>
And Hundreds More.<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS ? Nime<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/>
I<lb/>
 Address<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
No. Lines-<lb/>
.z.<lb/>
(IrXpakacl.<lb/>
. ?? ? M<lb/>
 . ?  ? i? ? ? ?<lb/>
<lb/>
TTT" "tt ? tt X<lb/>
SPECIAL CONCERTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Th? Student union Special Concerts<lb/>
Commltee will meet on Tuesday,<lb/>
January IT. 1?4. at 5:00 P.M In<lb/>
Room 243 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center All members and any In<lb/>
terestlng students are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
BASKETBALL<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
Interested In officiating intramural<lb/>
basketball Attend the training clinic<lb/>
held by the Department ot<lb/>
Intramural Recreational Services<lb/>
Monday, Jan , 16, 19?4 at 600 pm In<lb/>
room 102 of Memorial gym Rules, in<lb/>
terpretatlons and mechanics will be<lb/>
discussed. Officials will be hired bas<lb/>
ed on practical and written tests<lb/>
ROLLER HOCKEY<lb/>
OFFICIALS<lb/>
Can you Roller skate Interested lr.<lb/>
making some money Try officiating<lb/>
Intramural Roller Hockey The<lb/>
department of Intramural Recrea<lb/>
tlonal Services will begin training<lb/>
clinics for Roller Hockey Officials<lb/>
Mon Jan 23 at 6 00 pm In room 102<lb/>
of Memorial gym Rules, Interpreta<lb/>
tlons and mechanics will be discuss<lb/>
ed Officials will be hired based on<lb/>
skating ability and practical and<lb/>
written tests<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are needed from those<lb/>
persons who are interested In becom<lb/>
Ing Personal Care Attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students We are par<lb/>
tlcularly Interested In anyone who<lb/>
has a background of assisting in<lb/>
dividual with their activities of daily<lb/>
living.<lb/>
For further details, contact Office<lb/>
of Handicapped Student Services, 212<lb/>
Whichard Building, Phone 757 67V9<lb/>
LACROSSE<lb/>
There will be a meeting for all who<lb/>
are Interested In playing Lacrosse<lb/>
this spring. The meeting will be held<lb/>
January 17 at 7:30 pm In the base-<lb/>
ment of Memorial Gym. There will be<lb/>
a sign posted on the door where the<lb/>
meeting Is being held. If you can not<lb/>
attend this meeting please call: Bob<lb/>
Fox at Sports Club Information or<lb/>
Chris Tomaskl at 752 4999 Please try<lb/>
to come to the meeting.<lb/>
HEALTH ALLIANCE<lb/>
The Pre-Professional Health<lb/>
Alliance will hold Its first meeting for<lb/>
the semester on Thursday, January<lb/>
12, at 5:30, at the Cultural Center. All<lb/>
persons planning to be inducted must<lb/>
be present or contact the President or<lb/>
Vice President Plans for the<lb/>
semester will also be discussed and<lb/>
all Interested persons are urged to at<lb/>
tend.<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
The ladies of Zeta Phi Beta Sororl<lb/>
ty, inc. will start the new year off<lb/>
right by having a party at the<lb/>
Cultural Center on Friday, January<lb/>
13, 19f4from 10:00 p.m2:00 a.m.<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE<lb/>
The sign language club would like<lb/>
to Invite all past and present<lb/>
members and anyone Interested to at<lb/>
tend our first meeting. We strongly<lb/>
encourage new members. Sign<lb/>
language skills are not necessary. We<lb/>
will meet on Monday, Jan. 16 at 6:30<lb/>
in Mendenhall, Room 24t. We will be<lb/>
showing the video tape of the<lb/>
Christmas Fantasy performance.<lb/>
SPORTS CLUB<lb/>
The fifth meeting for the 193 t4<lb/>
Sport Club Council will be held<lb/>
Wednesday, January II, 19(4 at 400<lb/>
pm in Room 105B of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Representatives of active sport clubs<lb/>
are required to attend. Schedules for<lb/>
spring semester activities must be<lb/>
submitted at this meeting.<lb/>
NAVIGATORS<lb/>
Check It outi The Navigators In<lb/>
vestlgatlve Bible study and<lb/>
fellowship. Brewster B Wing, room<lb/>
304. Every Tuesday, 7:30 PM, beglnn<lb/>
Ing January 10th.<lb/>
ZETA PHI BETA<lb/>
AND PHI BETA<lb/>
SIGMA<lb/>
The Blue and White Family an<lb/>
nounces Its INFORMAL<lb/>
SMOKERRUSH on Sunday. January<lb/>
15, 19?4, at 7:00 p.m. The event will<lb/>
take place in'Mendenhall Multi<lb/>
Purpose Room All Interested young<lb/>
ladles and gentlemen are encouraged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON<lb/>
We'd like to welcome back all ECU<lb/>
students and congradulate our new<lb/>
executive board members President<lb/>
Jim White, Vice-Pres MlkeMoriey<lb/>
Comptroller: Glenn Gorham, Recor<lb/>
ding Sec : Joe Leonard. Correspon<lb/>
ding Sec James Griffin Good Luckl<lb/>
We're looking forward to a great<lb/>
year<lb/>
KINGTRIBUTE<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of N.A.A C.P<lb/>
will sponsor a Tribute to Or Martin<lb/>
L King, Jr. on Friday 13, 194. at 6 00<lb/>
p.m. In Jenkins Auditorium A special<lb/>
guest will by there There is no<lb/>
change Everyone Is welcome<lb/>
FITNESSCLASSES<lb/>
Registration will be held for classes<lb/>
in Aerobics, Weight training, Per<lb/>
sonai Defense and Aquaroblcs on<lb/>
Jan. 1620 in Memorial Gym room<lb/>
204 Cost. Students, 4 dollars tor one<lb/>
classweek, S dollars for two<lb/>
classesweek<lb/>
PSICHI<lb/>
Welcome back to school I We hope<lb/>
you all had a great vacation and are<lb/>
looking forward to an eventful<lb/>
semester We will have a dinner<lb/>
meeting at 600 pm on Monday, Jan.<lb/>
23, In the Psl Chi library It will be<lb/>
covered dish, so call Trlna at 75a S552<lb/>
or Cathy at 758 2293 and let us know<lb/>
what you can bring This Is an Impor<lb/>
?ant business meeting, so please plan<lb/>
to attend I<lb/>
Applications for membership and<lb/>
for our two scholarships will be<lb/>
available next week Check the an<lb/>
nouncements on Tuesday for the<lb/>
criteria for each and for more Info<lb/>
about upcoming meetings<lb/>
HOURS CHANGED<lb/>
Weekend clinic hours for the Stu<lb/>
dent Health Service have been chang<lb/>
ed to 3:10-5:30 pm on Saturdays and<lb/>
Sunday A physician will be<lb/>
available during those times. Nursing<lb/>
staff will be available during other<lb/>
weekend hours and will have a physl<lb/>
clan on call for emergencies. The'e<lb/>
will be no Saturday morning clin!<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
The Electric Rainbow Radio Show is<lb/>
back on WZMB Late night Friday<lb/>
and Saturday nights Heavy Metal<lb/>
fills the airwaves This weeks album<lb/>
specials are Fri van Haien's 19H<lb/>
album and Sat Coney Hatch's album<lb/>
ta Hand<lb/>
CATHOLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
Sunday Mass at 12 30 in Biology<lb/>
Building Room 103 Everyone is<lb/>
welcome This Sunday (Jan IS)<lb/>
Leaf Raking PARTY at 300<lb/>
URGENT EVERYONE NEEDED<lb/>
Daily mass on Wednesday at 5 00 PM<lb/>
at Newman Center on Tenth Street at<lb/>
the bottom of the hill Dinner<lb/>
afterwards Come Celebrate with US I<lb/>
4-H<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the 4 h<lb/>
Club Thursday. Jan 12 at 600 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Everyone Is welcome inquire at the<lb/>
information desk for location<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
The International Student Assocla<lb/>
tion will be having their first meeti.tg<lb/>
and dinner on Saturday. Jan. 14 at<lb/>
5:30 p.m. at the International House<lb/>
306 East Ninth St Old and new In<lb/>
terested students are welcome<lb/>
BIOLOGY CLUB<lb/>
The ECU Biology Club will hofd its<lb/>
first meeting for the semester on<lb/>
Mon , January 16th. at 7 p.m. In<lb/>
BN 102 All members and interested<lb/>
persons are grged to attend Lers<lb/>
start the New Year off rlghtl<lb/>
GAMMA SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
There will be a sorority meeting<lb/>
Tuesday, January 17 in room 212<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center See ya'<lb/>
there sisters!<lb/>
Wim.?ij.i;irf.iiiii.iiri.ng.i:M.iiiJ.i;i.i?iiui;w?i'ii?i;i?Mm?g<lb/>
$ -j 00 OFF ANY DINNER<lb/>
TACO CID<lb/>
B<lb/>
Hwy 264 By-Pass<lb/>
756-2072 <lb/>
Expires Jan. 25. 1984 j<lb/>
Otter not good with any other special -  :e' CUStomet<lb/>
 EVERY WEDNESDAY 4 TACOS FOR M.39 <lb/>
Something That You Will<lb/>
Always Treasure!<lb/>
o5v&amp;<lb/>
.V.VV<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
Your Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
Order Now For Early Delivery<lb/>
Date: Jan. 24 &amp; 25 Time: 9:XM;00pm<lb/>
pi e. Student Supply Store ? Wright Building<lb/>
j<lb/>
Gov. Hi<lb/>
ECU,<lb/>
Three ECU students lncj<lb/>
SGA President Paul Nas<lb/>
scheduled to meet with<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr. latel<lb/>
month at a gathering gover<lb/>
hosting for student leaders<lb/>
the state<lb/>
Naso, East Carolinian<lb/>
Manager Hunter Fishe:<lb/>
Managing Editor Darryl<lb/>
and Ebony 7eraFeatures<lb/>
Rueben Ingram were invi<lb/>
the Governor's Mansion . j<lb/>
along with student<lb/>
presidents and college newj<lb/>
editors from every collej<lb/>
university in the staj<lb/>
Univer<lb/>
(CPS) "The cost of liv-<lb/>
ing in the residence halls<lb/>
will rise predicts Allan<lb/>
Slagel. a junior at<lb/>
diana L'niversitv.<lb/>
"Billing will be her-<lb/>
oic" adds freshman<lb/>
Mark Kurowski.<lb/>
They're probably rig<lb/>
for when students return<lb/>
to campuses nationwide<lb/>
in January they'll be<lb/>
ing the brave new world<lb/>
of telephone service<lb/>
brought on by the<lb/>
breakup of AT&amp;T<lb/>
Kurowski, a business ma-<lb/>
jor who actually has tried<lb/>
to calculate the impact on<lb/>
student phone bi.ls.<lb/>
estimates his own dorm<lb/>
ECU Stud!<lb/>
Be Affect<lb/>
Phone Ra<lb/>
B STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
be affected by thi<lb/>
breakup of America)<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph<lb/>
at the present time,<lb/>
however, there is n<lb/>
guarantee they will not b<lb/>
in the future, sai.<lb/>
Ramona Nor mar.I<lb/>
Business Office Manager<lb/>
of Carolina Telephom<lb/>
and Telegraph in Green-<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
WELO<lb/>
25<lb/>
ON AN)<lb/>
G'eenvtlle Squat<lb/>
Open ?<lb/>
Seven Di<lb/>
I<lb/>
CEN<lb/>
Now Ope ' <lb/>
Located Bestd<lb/>
Plan Now For<lb/>
Let Our Tan <lb/>
You Gin Stav<lb/>
Without Burnim<lb/>
Before.<lb/>
One Free Vis<lb/>
Complete haircare<lb/>
Cathy Davenpoi<lb/>
Operator;<lb/>
Donnell E<lb/>
Dora Gower<lb/>
Hettie Johi<lb/>
FayeNorrii<lb/>
Donna PhiBi<lb/>
KatrinaPi<lb/>
? '<lb/>
 i<lb/>
??? .<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 12, 194<lb/>
r' i<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
L i i<lb/>
1<lb/>
??<lb/>
<lb/>
j<lb/>
OLIC NEWMAN<lb/>
ENTER<lb/>
Mi a' 12 X in Biology<lb/>
ort lOj Fvvryon is<lb/>
Ml Soro?y ij-n 15)<lb/>
8 PARTY at 300<lb/>
EVERYONE NEEDED<lb/>
lor Weone?j?y it; 00 PM<lb/>
 l enter or T?ntt Srr?t ??<lb/>
of the hill Dlhr??r<lb/>
. - Celebrate with USI<lb/>
4 H<lb/>
be a rne?t,r?fl o m? 4-h<lb/>
Jan 12 at a 00 in<lb/>
Student Canter<lb/>
?eicome ? ??Mjuirt at the<lb/>
oe? tor location<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
?? ona Student Auocia<lb/>
r . ?? ? rH meeting<lb/>
n Saturday Jan 14 at<lb/>
?w nrernafionai Mouae.<lb/>
n s? Ola and new In<lb/>
" are welcome<lb/>
icOGY CLUB<lb/>
? oiogy Cue win hoicj its<lb/>
tor the semester on<lb/>
I ?th at 7 p m m<lb/>
isanalkan and interested<lb/>
r9c t0 attend Let's<lb/>
v??r OH right!<lb/>
SIGMA SIGMA<lb/>
Be a sorority meeting<lb/>
i ary 17 n room ?lj<lb/>
sTvoent Center See ya'<lb/>
I COUPON COUPON<lb/>
a<lb/>
i COUPON COUPON<lb/>
jre!<lb/>
<lb/>
x<lb/>
M<lb/>
aafat v '<lb/>
Gov. Hunt Will Meet With<lb/>
ECU, N.C. Student Leaders<lb/>
Three ECU students including<lb/>
SGA President Paul Naso are<lb/>
scheduled to meet with Gov.<lb/>
James B. Hunt Jr. later this<lb/>
month at a gathering governor is<lb/>
hosting for student leaders around<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Naso, East Carolinian General<lb/>
Manager Hunter Fisher and<lb/>
Managing Editor Darryl Brown<lb/>
and Ebony eraMFeatures Editor<lb/>
Ruebcn Ingram were invited to<lb/>
the Governor's Mansion Jan. 30<lb/>
along with student body<lb/>
presidents and college newspaper<lb/>
editors from every college and<lb/>
university in the state. A<lb/>
spokesman for the event said 150<lb/>
to 200 students are expected at the<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Also scheduled to be in atten-<lb/>
dance are UNC system president<lb/>
William Friday, Community Col-<lb/>
lege President Bob Scott and John<lb/>
Henley, president of the N.C.<lb/>
Association of Independent Col-<lb/>
leges and Universities.<lb/>
Each student received a per-<lb/>
sonal letter signed by Hunt in-<lb/>
viting them to the Monday even-<lb/>
ing gathering "for a forum and<lb/>
discussion of the important issues<lb/>
that face us Students were also<lb/>
The meeting is part of N.C.<lb/>
2000, a Hunt-supported program<lb/>
to examine the future of North<lb/>
Carolina in the next century. A<lb/>
spokesman with the Department<lb/>
of Administration said Hunt will<lb/>
meet student leaders to hear their<lb/>
ideas on important issues concern-<lb/>
ing North Carolina since they will<lb/>
be the citizens leading the state in<lb/>
the next century.<lb/>
asked to identify the five issues<lb/>
most important to them for the<lb/>
future of North Carolina and<lb/>
return them early so they could be<lb/>
compiled and discussed at the<lb/>
meeting.<lb/>
Democrats Seek<lb/>
1st District Seat<lb/>
University Student Predicts High Phone Bills<lb/>
(CPS) "The cost of liv-<lb/>
ing in the residence halls<lb/>
will rise predicts Allan<lb/>
Slagel, a junior at In-<lb/>
diana University.<lb/>
"Billing will be horri-<lb/>
ble adds freshman<lb/>
Mark Kurowski.<lb/>
They're probably right,<lb/>
for when students return<lb/>
to campuses nationwide<lb/>
in January they'll be fac-<lb/>
ing the brave new world<lb/>
of telephone service<lb/>
brought on by the<lb/>
breakup of AT&amp;T.<lb/>
Kurowski, a business ma-<lb/>
jor who actually has tried<lb/>
to calculate the impact on<lb/>
student phone bi.ls,<lb/>
estimates his own dorm<lb/>
bill of $20 to $50 a month<lb/>
may rise to $35 to $65.<lb/>
Some observers think<lb/>
basic campus phone ser-<lb/>
vices may triple in cost.<lb/>
In early December, a<lb/>
group of higher educa-<lb/>
tion associations<lb/>
predicted the higher<lb/>
phone rates caused by the<lb/>
breakup could<lb/>
"devastate" research<lb/>
libraries that use phone<lb/>
lines to tie into shared<lb/>
data bases.<lb/>
The National Associa-<lb/>
tion of State Universities<lb/>
and Land-Grant Colleges<lb/>
estimates some schools<lb/>
may pay up to $500,000<lb/>
more a year in phone<lb/>
bills.<lb/>
While no one yet<lb/>
knows the exact impact<lb/>
on students themselves,<lb/>
Kurowski concludes the<lb/>
breakup will "make<lb/>
dorm life harder<lb/>
The event, of course, is<lb/>
the breakup of giant<lb/>
AT&amp;T. As of January<lb/>
1st, 1984, AT&amp;T will spin<lb/>
off into eight separate<lb/>
companies: a massive<lb/>
long-distance phone and<lb/>
communications com-<lb/>
pany still called AT&amp;T,<lb/>
develop.<lb/>
The breakup will mean<lb/>
a number of changes in<lb/>
phone costs as well as in<lb/>
the way people get phone<lb/>
service.<lb/>
dependent of institutional<lb/>
systems - will continue to<lb/>
deal with the local phone<lb/>
company to get a dial<lb/>
tone and access to local<lb/>
and long-distance service,<lb/>
dent would have to make<lb/>
up the cost difference.<lb/>
The university wouldn't<lb/>
be able to absorb higher<lb/>
local call costs.<lb/>
In the past, AT&amp;T kept explains Joyce Berryman,<lb/>
residential and local an AT&amp;T district<lb/>
phone rates low by charg- manager in Denver,<lb/>
ing artificially-high long- Students with their<lb/>
distance rates. The pro- own phones will be sub-<lb/>
fits from long-distance ject to the same residen-<lb/>
calls went to help pay for tial rates as everyone else,<lb/>
local service. But students who use<lb/>
But after the breakup, phones provided by their<lb/>
the regional phone com- schools may face even<lb/>
The two Democratic<lb/>
candidates for the 1st<lb/>
District congressional<lb/>
seat formally filed with<lb/>
the State Board of Elec-<lb/>
tions this week, with in-<lb/>
cumbent Walter B. Jones<lb/>
seeking re-election and<lb/>
State Rep. John Clllam<lb/>
 of Windsor hoping to<lb/>
unseat the 11-term con-<lb/>
gressman.<lb/>
Jones formally filed<lb/>
for re-election Wednes-<lb/>
day in Washington,<lb/>
N.C, after an announce-<lb/>
ment at a local hotel. His<lb/>
filing fee was donated by<lb/>
area supporters.<lb/>
Giliam filed his can-<lb/>
didacy at the end of a<lb/>
"John Giliam Apprecia-<lb/>
tion Day" in his home<lb/>
town of Wmdsor, which<lb/>
featured a parade down<lb/>
Main Street in his honor.<lb/>
The two candidates will<lb/>
face one another in the<lb/>
May 8 primary.<lb/>
Jones, 70, is running<lb/>
on his 18-year voting<lb/>
record in the U.S. House<lb/>
of Representatives, which<lb/>
he said Wednesday is<lb/>
"consistant with the<lb/>
views of the majority of<lb/>
the citizens of the 1st<lb/>
Congressional District<lb/>
Giliam, 37, is an<lb/>
astern North Carolina<lb/>
agribusinessman who has<lb/>
served in the State House<lb/>
of Representatives since<lb/>
1980. In a speech declar-<lb/>
ing his candidacy he<lb/>
stressed the need to work<lb/>
for economic develop-<lb/>
ment, environmental pro-<lb/>
tection and protection<lb/>
for the region's farmers.<lb/>
He also pledged to hold<lb/>
1,300 town meetings<lb/>
before the primary for<lb/>
voters and said "their<lb/>
message will go to<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
Giliam, a former<lb/>
English teacher with a<lb/>
master's degree in educa-<lb/>
tion, also stressed the<lb/>
need for improved public<lb/>
schools with assistance<lb/>
from the state and federal<lb/>
government.<lb/>
Jones has been rated by<lb/>
the National Education<lb/>
Association as having a<lb/>
100 percent voting record<lb/>
in support of educational<lb/>
programs, according to<lb/>
his Washington office.<lb/>
Jones has served as<lb/>
chairman of the House<lb/>
Merchant Marine and<lb/>
Fisheries Committee for<lb/>
three years and is credited<lb/>
with upgrading the Mer-<lb/>
chant Marine fleet and<lb/>
Coast Guard. He is also a<lb/>
member of the House<lb/>
Agricultural Committee.<lb/>
plus seven regional com- panies will have to charge higher rate hikes.<lb/>
panies that will handle<lb/>
local telephone service<lb/>
and any other kinds of<lb/>
businesses they can<lb/>
ECU Students Probably Won't<lb/>
Be Affected By AT&amp;T Breakup;<lb/>
Phone Rates Shouldn't Increase<lb/>
customers enough to<lb/>
make a profit off local<lb/>
service, too.<lb/>
Just what those charges<lb/>
will be remains to be<lb/>
worked out by phone<lb/>
companies, local utility<lb/>
rate boards, and Con-<lb/>
gress.<lb/>
For the moment,<lb/>
however, much will de-<lb/>
pend on the kind of<lb/>
phone system a campus<lb/>
has.<lb/>
Students who get their<lb/>
own phones - who are in-<lb/>
At Indiana, for exam-<lb/>
ple, students historically<lb/>
pay local call costs as part<lb/>
of their flat room rental<lb/>
fee, paying extra only for<lb/>
their long-distance calls.<lb/>
But now, local rates<lb/>
also depend not just on<lb/>
the number of lines or<lb/>
phones, but on how often<lb/>
a student uses them, even<lb/>
for local calls.<lb/>
"Undoubtably says<lb/>
Tom Meglemre,<lb/>
Indiana's communica-<lb/>
tions director, "the stu-<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
mi STUDENT UNiON<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOf NT UNION<lb/>
Needs YOU!<lb/>
m<lb/>
mm<lb/>
STUOBfTUNMN<lb/>
By STEPHEN<lb/>
HARDING<lb/>
a5CV students will not<lb/>
be affected by the<lb/>
breakup of American<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph<lb/>
at the present time,<lb/>
however, there is no<lb/>
guarantee they will not be<lb/>
in the future, said<lb/>
Ramona Norman,<lb/>
Business Office Manager<lb/>
of Carolina Telephone<lb/>
and Telegraph in Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
On Jan. 1, AT&amp;T<lb/>
broke up. Local<lb/>
telephone service is now<lb/>
handled by seven regional<lb/>
companies, however,<lb/>
AT&amp;T still controls long-<lb/>
distance service.<lb/>
ECU telephones are<lb/>
connected with Carolina<lb/>
Telephone, part of the<lb/>
United Telephone System<lb/>
and not affiliated with<lb/>
AT&amp;T.<lb/>
The Federal Com-<lb/>
munications Commission<lb/>
proposed that in April an<lb/>
access fee be required to<lb/>
help pay for long-<lb/>
distance lines. "There is<lb/>
considerable doubt there<lb/>
will be any access charges<lb/>
in 1984 said H.D.<lb/>
Terry, public relations<lb/>
supervisor for Carolina<lb/>
Telephone in Tarboro.<lb/>
Due to the different<lb/>
proposals by government<lb/>
members, what will hap-<lb/>
pen is not certain.<lb/>
WELCOME BACK STUDENTS<lb/>
25 Discount<lb/>
ON ANY BOOK IN STOCK<lb/>
Expires Jan. 17. 1984<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 9 30 a m 9 30 p m<lb/>
Seven Days a Week<lb/>
756 7177<lb/>
CENTRAL BOOK &amp; NEWS<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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A WHALE OF AMtAL <lb/>
FAMILY RESTAURANTS<lb/>
1 05 ARPORT RD<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 758-0327<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
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Help us plan CONCERTS, TRIPS, MOVIES,<lb/>
DANCES, ART EXHIBITIONS, MINORITY<lb/>
PROGRAMS, and otner SPECIAL EVENTS!<lb/>
Applications for<lb/>
m COMMITTEE CHAIRPERSONS<lb/>
are available at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center's<lb/>
Information Desk.<lb/>
Applications are being accepted from<lb/>
December 12, 1983 - January 13, 1984.<lb/>
Are You a Hot Dog?<lb/>
OPTIONAL<lb/>
SNOW BUNNY<lb/>
Winter modei<lb/>
SHOULDER PADS<lb/>
Ftv the dreaded Chinese downhill<lb/>
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Let Our Tan Tanning Booth Condition Your Skin So That<lb/>
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One Free Visit to the Tanning Booth with this ad and a haircut.<lb/>
Complete haircare for men and women "Specializing in cutting"<lb/>
Manicures and eyebrow waxing<lb/>
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THIRST-AID KIT<lb/>
For emergencies.<lb/>
or any other time<lb/>
FUR-LINED GLOVES<lb/>
100? o imitation mink<lb/>
PILLOW<lb/>
Even the great skiers<lb/>
need something to fall back on<lb/>
SHORT-SLEEVE SHIRT<lb/>
Pretend it's Hawaii and<lb/>
you'll keep warm<lb/>
SIX-PACK<lb/>
When the thirst-aid kit runs dry<lb/>
Serve chilled<lb/>
SNOWBALL MOLD<lb/>
For size "D" snowballs<lb/>
WIENIE-WARMER<lb/>
Wnat's a hot dog without a wienie<lb/>
REAR VIEW<lb/>
MIRROR<lb/>
In case you want to<lb/>
ski backwards<lb/>
ALTIMETER<lb/>
lb teH how h?jh you are<lb/>
CAST<lb/>
Personalty autographed by<lb/>
Jean Claude Kriey's<lb/>
mother's plumber<lb/>
? ? ? ? ME wRkJwwSlm<lb/>
AN EDWATO S fBJJMAN PrOOUXrr<lb/>
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GET THE ANSWERS FRIDAY JANUARY 13th AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU<lb/>
wr<lb/>
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tpi?iin?m-r'<lb/>
? ? ? ?i ?m?iMi? ntygm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0004"/><lb/>
3H?e iEaat (Earnlinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Hi NTFR FlSHFR,  i iifnjiiin<lb/>
Darryi Brown,  nhnrtm<lb/>
If NNH I K JENDRASIAK, . ,? ?v J.T. PlETRZAK. Urn,A<lb/>
riNA Mari ac hk.  &amp;? mike McPartland, ??. m??<lb/>
I IZANNI l! NMSus s,w,iy,fo, TOM NORTON, rrd,f m???<lb/>
Gordon Ipock, &amp;?????? Kathy Fuerst. wut ????<lb/>
I Nickj as so e Mike Mayo. ru &amp;???<lb/>
fanuan 12. 18'<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
SAT Scores<lb/>
?C? Mws Step Lfc Recruitment<lb/>
Once again the average Scholastic<lb/>
ptitude Test score for entering<lb/>
I CU students was among the bot-<lb/>
tom half in the UNC system, rank-<lb/>
ing ninth out of 16, in a state that is<lb/>
among the bottom quarter in the na-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The state's ranking is not actually<lb/>
hard to explain as the<lb/>
university's, for states have dif-<lb/>
ferent ways of distrubuting and<lb/>
tabulating the scores. Vice<lb/>
i hancellor Volpe is right in advising<lb/>
that one take Nomi Carolina's spot<lb/>
in the bottom 10 with a grain of salt,<lb/>
because the many mo of high school<lb/>
students take the SAT in North<lb/>
rolina, than in some other states<lb/>
onl top, college-bound students<lb/>
rake it, thus coming out with a<lb/>
higher average, but from a much<lb/>
smaller sample of the population.<lb/>
the university's ranking<lb/>
among ! INC schools that should be<lb/>
? en more seriously, for the<lb/>
sons are more subtle, and the<lb/>
university needs to recognize them.<lb/>
I CU ranks behind eight schools in<lb/>
the state: Chapel Hill, State,<lb/>
Greensboro, Charlotte, Asheville,<lb/>
mington. School of the Arts and<lb/>
Appalachian. Granted, many of the<lb/>
averages are close: ECU has an<lb/>
average of 856, while UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington's is 862. But whether<lb/>
you like it or not, the SAT scores of<lb/>
entering freshmen are one indica-<lb/>
tion of a university's quality, and<lb/>
the low ranking reflects on both the<lb/>
perception and reality of ECU's<lb/>
quality.<lb/>
r its flaws, the SAT is a<lb/>
rough estimate of a student's abili-<lb/>
ty, especially when used in conjunc-<lb/>
tion with other criteria. ECU's pro-<lb/>
blem lies in recruitment methods by<lb/>
the administration, coupled with<lb/>
special difficulties recruiters have in<lb/>
presenting ECU to prospective<lb/>
students. ECU certainly has more to<lb/>
offer than many high school<lb/>
students are apparently realizing.<lb/>
There are probably reasons other<lb/>
than academic that attract students<lb/>
to other schools in the state. UNC<lb/>
and State justly pull in good<lb/>
students for their high quality<lb/>
academic programs, but when a<lb/>
studentis looking for another col-<lb/>
lege, many may head for Ap-<lb/>
palachian or UNC-Asheville as<lb/>
much for the scenery and skiing as<lb/>
the scholastic opportunities. Others<lb/>
may go to Wilmington for "UNC<lb/>
by the sea" surf and sand, and ur-<lb/>
ban areas such as Greensboro and<lb/>
Charlotte have attractions to many<lb/>
that rural small towns do not. Not<lb/>
to say that these schools don't offer<lb/>
good programs, but aside from the<lb/>
fine points of academia, many beat<lb/>
out rural Pitt County's offer of<lb/>
tobacco fields as far as the eye can<lb/>
see.<lb/>
It adds up to the need for stronger<lb/>
recruitment by the ECU administra-<lb/>
tion. Programs such as Scholars<lb/>
Weekend, at which ECU rolls out<lb/>
the red carpet for top high school<lb/>
juniors (selected, among other<lb/>
ways, by SAT scores), are ideal but<lb/>
too little, too infrequently. In years<lb/>
past there has been little follow-up<lb/>
on the students in their senior year,<lb/>
when they actually make their col-<lb/>
lege choice. And there is a need for<lb/>
a much expanded, much more ac-<lb/>
tive effort taking more represen-<lb/>
tatives into high schools, increasing<lb/>
published recruitment materials,<lb/>
following up interested students and<lb/>
parents and just making ECU's<lb/>
assets known. ECU has the state's<lb/>
only accredited art school, one of its<lb/>
best music schools, and last year the<lb/>
medical school had the highest<lb/>
board scores in the North Carolina.<lb/>
ECU can attract top students, but it<lb/>
takes extra work at a university<lb/>
without ski slopes, city life or surf<lb/>
and with a reputation as a party<lb/>
school. Administrative recruitment<lb/>
efforts needed to be greatly stepped<lb/>
up, probably requiring additional<lb/>
funding, staffing and volunteer ef-<lb/>
forts bv ECU students.<lb/>
I OUST GOT LAIP OFF FROM WPMV PLAHEL,<lb/>
THE V 5AIP THB WAS A dOB FOR JESSE rACKSON,<lb/>
Republicans Can Blow It, Too<lb/>
By DARR I BROWN<lb/>
If Ronald Reagan has proven nothing<lb/>
else in his first term in office, he has<lb/>
proven that Republicans are no better<lb/>
at balancing the budget than<lb/>
Democrats. In his first three years,<lb/>
Reagan has increased the national debt<lb/>
by half. When he took office in 1980,<lb/>
the deficit stood at a hefty $940 billion.<lb/>
Three years later, $475 billion has been<lb/>
added.<lb/>
It is almost beyond belief that this<lb/>
was brought about by the same man<lb/>
who campaigned for office promising a<lb/>
balanced budget and who earlier in his<lb/>
administration endorsed the idea of a<lb/>
constitutional amendment requiring a<lb/>
balanced federal budget. (He doesn't<lb/>
mention it much these days.) He'd be<lb/>
breaking the law he asked for.<lb/>
What happened? Was Reagan really<lb/>
so unaware of the realities of national<lb/>
economics that he thought he could in-<lb/>
crease the biggest budget item, defense,<lb/>
then cut taxes and off-set it with cuts in<lb/>
social programs? Or was he just lying<lb/>
through his teeth back in campaign '80,<lb/>
knowing it could never be done? It<lb/>
seems it must be one or the other, or a<lb/>
combination of the two.<lb/>
Generalizations are always at least a<lb/>
little inaccurate, but the stereotype has<lb/>
been that Democrats are the good-<lb/>
hearted party and Republicans are the<lb/>
partyof good sense. After the conser-<lb/>
vative "landslide" of 1980, many<lb/>
Democrats were forced to reconsider<lb/>
their big-bucks-for-good-causes<lb/>
philosophy. As one prominant<lb/>
Democrat concluded, people recognize<lb/>
Democrats as the party for health care,<lb/>
social security, the environment, educa-<lb/>
tion, the arts and public service, but<lb/>
they have lost faith in them for one im-<lb/>
portant task ? balancing their<lb/>
checkbook.<lb/>
Reagan may have ruined for<lb/>
Republicans the best preconception<lb/>
they had going for their party, namely,<lb/>
that they are fiscally conservative and<lb/>
responsible, the better businessmen<lb/>
with the nation's budget. Reagan has<lb/>
proved the most conservative<lb/>
Republican can get the nation in more<lb/>
red ink than the biggest spending<lb/>
Democrat.<lb/>
One can understand a politician up<lb/>
for re-election this year not wanting to<lb/>
increase taxes. One can also understand<lb/>
him not dwelling on a horrendous na-<lb/>
tional debt in public. But he must con-<lb/>
front the problem, and his fiscal plans<lb/>
for next year should reflect it. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, they do not. In Reagan's new<lb/>
budget submissions to Congress he calls<lb/>
for more of the same: yet more in-<lb/>
creases in defence, yet more cuts in<lb/>
social programs, and no tax increases.<lb/>
Again projections for the deficit are<lb/>
growing.<lb/>
Politicians not up for re-eiection can<lb/>
be more realistic and ensible. Sen<lb/>
Howard Baker, R-Tenn , Senate ma-<lb/>
jority leader, has expressed discontent<lb/>
with the skyrocketing deficit and the<lb/>
lack of initiatives to control it. One of<lb/>
the president's own economic advisors,<lb/>
Martin Feldstein, repeatedly casts<lb/>
omens about the potentially<lb/>
catastrophic results of the evergrowing<lb/>
debt. He is repeatedly ignored by the<lb/>
administration, and repeatedly agreed<lb/>
with by most economists.<lb/>
So, voting Republican has been<lb/>
redefined by Reagan. It is no longer a<lb/>
choice of big social programs and debt<lb/>
vs. a lean federal government and fiscal<lb/>
sensibility. It is now a choice of going<lb/>
broke through huge military expen-<lb/>
ditures or going broke through<lb/>
overabundant social programs If<lb/>
Democrats have learned anything from<lb/>
the last three years, as they claim they<lb/>
have, they may not let the second choice<lb/>
happen. But will sensible Republicans<lb/>
get a chance to prove they can eliminate<lb/>
the first before Reagan ruins their<lb/>
reputation and credibility, and mavbe<lb/>
the national economy?<lb/>
I Never Thought I Would Hear That<lb/>
Here are some of the things I doubt<lb/>
you'll hear said in 1984.<lb/>
From John McEnroe: Sir, my ball<lb/>
was out, and you called it in. Jimmy<lb/>
Connors deserves the point<lb/>
From Jesse Jackson: "I have no in-<lb/>
tention of making waves in the<lb/>
Democratic Party. The system as it now<lb/>
operates is fair to all the candidates<lb/>
President Ronald Reagan: "I receiv-<lb/>
ed a touching letter from a little gir! in<lb/>
Madison, Wisconsin, but I have no<lb/>
desire to read it to you<lb/>
Secretary of Defense Caspar<lb/>
Weinberger: "We overestimated our<lb/>
defense needs, and we're asking Con-<lb/>
gress to cut our budget in half<lb/>
John DeLorean: "I believe we have<lb/>
the finest Drug Enforcement Agency in<lb/>
the world<lb/>
Henry Kissinger: "I have no com-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Secretary of State George Shultz:<lb/>
"Sec that the press gets a copy of<lb/>
everything we discussed here today<lb/>
Rev. Jerry FaJwell: "If there is a<lb/>
God, and I'm not saying there is<lb/>
Fritze Mondale: "If I am elected I<lb/>
will continue the policies and<lb/>
philosophy of President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter<lb/>
The editor of Pravda: "When we're<lb/>
wrong we're wrong, and we should ad-<lb/>
mit it. The Soviets overreacted when the<lb/>
United States placed Pershing 2 missiles<lb/>
in Europe. They're not the threat to the<lb/>
Warsaw Pact nations that we thought<lb/>
they would be, and we would like to<lb/>
return to Geneva as quickly as<lb/>
possible<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
Johnny Carson: "I believe a wife<lb/>
deserves every penny she can get when<lb/>
she feels she's been wronged<lb/>
A power company executive: "We<lb/>
have just discovered that our new<lb/>
nuclear plant was built with cheap<lb/>
materials and shoddy labor. This is no<lb/>
fault of our customers and therefore we<lb/>
intend to pay for our mistakes without<lb/>
passing on any cost to the consumer<lb/>
The Japanese Minister of Commerce:<lb/>
"Japan can no longer export more than<lb/>
it imports without upsetting other na-<lb/>
tions' balance of trade We are<lb/>
therefore lifting all restrictions on<lb/>
foreign goods, so other countries mav<lb/>
compete fairly in the marketplace<lb/>
A Big Ten football coach: "I don't<lb/>
care if he's Ail-American material. If<lb/>
the kid can't keep his grades up I don't<lb/>
want him on my team<lb/>
Fidel Castro: "I've been shaving with<lb/>
this Remington electric for months. I<lb/>
liked it so much I bought the<lb/>
company<lb/>
Howard Cosell: "I'd rather not give<lb/>
my opinion on that because I don't<lb/>
know anything about it<lb/>
Prince Andrew: "I'm sorry, dear.<lb/>
I'm third in line for the throne, and it<lb/>
would not be right for me to get into a<lb/>
hot tub with you<lb/>
Ayatollah Khomeini: "In the name<lb/>
of Allah, and I'm not saying there is<lb/>
one<lb/>
Loa<lb/>
iJS)? The progr<lb/>
'hat allowc icnts<lb/>
consolidate all<lb/>
school k <lb/>
out the payment time<lb/>
them "has g<lb/>
of blue suede shoes"<lb/>
the moment, aid offi<lb/>
in Washington re<lb/>
The Senate re<lb/>
November wit ha<lb/>
ng a bill tha mid I<lb/>
continued the<lb/>
through the<lb/>
? ear, and p<lb/>
deration<lb/>
stop<lb/>
pa<lb/>
reconvene<lb/>
says Den.<lb/>
Studer<lb/>
lrr,<lb/>
Indian r<lb/>
Topic of<lb/>
B TIN MX ROM H<lb/>
In an efl<lb/>
familiarize<lb/>
and stud:<lb/>
cult<lb/>
m our societ. Be<lb/>
edine Ma<lb/>
of I<lb/>
N C Der .<lb/>
Public Ir<lb/>
con j<lb/>
tions on Ir<lb/>
next Tues:<lb/>
A. ? Dea<lb/>
Charles R (<lb/>
"the talks are pa:<lb/>
Multicultural Ej<lb/>
Comm<lb/>
-eae<lb/>
comm.<lb/>
rod 1 ethn :<lb/>
COMPLET AITOMOT1 SERVICE 10 Gre?" vile B v 7i6 3023 ? 24 Hi<lb/>
PLAZ<lb/>
24 hour Towim<lb/>
l-Haui Renii<lb/>
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QUIXOT<lb/>
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Ski intergreen Pi<lb/>
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including lodging<lb/>
Cruise - Spring Brt<lb/>
March 5 -5-day<lb/>
included all tips, poj<lb/>
e're saving a pia<lb/>
vv<lb/>
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ClassRing<lb/>
Gold &amp; !<lb/>
Silv<lb/>
WEBU1 &amp;<lb/>
T.V's, stereo's, cal<lb/>
ovens, bicycles, atcl<lb/>
portable AM FM<lb/>
good furniture, china<lb/>
OFt5AI<lb/>
400 EVANS,<lb/>
Downtoi<lb/>
75;<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 12, 1984<lb/>
4,<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
e cuts in<lb/>
j tax increases,<lb/>
e deficit are<lb/>
re-election can<lb/>
sensible. Sen.<lb/>
i Senate ma-<lb/>
Iressed discontent<lb/>
and the<lb/>
mtrol it. One f<lb/>
I :isors,<lb/>
I- atedly casts<lb/>
p o t e n t i a 11 y<lb/>
he evergrowing<lb/>
gnored by the<lb/>
I itedly agreed<lb/>
 n has been<lb/>
:lt is no longer a<lb/>
jograms and debt<lb/>
Irnment and fiscal<lb/>
nee of going<lb/>
military expen-<lb/>
uoke through<lb/>
11 programs. If<lb/>
ea anything from<lb/>
is they claim they<lb/>
the second choice<lb/>
sible Republicans<lb/>
they can eliminate<lb/>
fagan ruins their<lb/>
lity, and maybe<lb/>
at<lb/>
mistakes without<lb/>
? the consumer<lb/>
jster of Commerce.<lb/>
r export more than<lb/>
?nmg other na-<lb/>
ide. We are<lb/>
restrictions on<lb/>
her countries may<lb/>
marketplace<lb/>
coach: "I don't<lb/>
lencan material. If<lb/>
s grades up 1 don't<lb/>
m<lb/>
been shaving with<lb/>
trie for months. I<lb/>
1 bought the<lb/>
'd rather not give<lb/>
lit because 1 don't<lb/>
it it<lb/>
I'm sorry, dear,<lb/>
the throne, and it<lb/>
for me to get into a<lb/>
fcini: "In the name<lb/>
not saying there is<lb/>
Loan Consolidation Program May Be Cut<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.t<lb/>
(CPS) ?The program<lb/>
that allowed students to<lb/>
consolidate all their<lb/>
school loans and stretch<lb/>
out the payment times for<lb/>
them "has gone the way<lb/>
of blue suede shoes" for<lb/>
the moment, aid officials<lb/>
in Washington report.<lb/>
The Senate recessed in<lb/>
November without pass-<lb/>
ing a bill that would have<lb/>
continued the program<lb/>
through the next three<lb/>
ears, and political con-<lb/>
siderations probably will<lb/>
stop the Senate from<lb/>
passing it when it<lb/>
reconvenes in January,<lb/>
says Dennis Martin of the<lb/>
National Association of<lb/>
Student Financial Aid<lb/>
Administrators<lb/>
Students who already<lb/>
have lumped their school<lb/>
loans together under the<lb/>
Student Loan Marketing<lb/>
Association (usually call-<lb/>
ed Sallie Mae) program<lb/>
won't be affected by the<lb/>
program's ending.<lb/>
But Martin says no<lb/>
more students will be able<lb/>
to consolidate their loans<lb/>
with Sallie Mae until<lb/>
Congress comes up with<lb/>
some kind of replacement<lb/>
in the future.<lb/>
The bill that failed<lb/>
wasn't as generous to<lb/>
students as previous loan<lb/>
consolidation programs<lb/>
had been.<lb/>
Under the new bill,<lb/>
students would have had<lb/>
to pay nine or 10 percent<lb/>
interest on their loans.<lb/>
compared to the seven<lb/>
percent they now pay.<lb/>
Moreover, they would<lb/>
have to pay the loans<lb/>
back over 15 years in-<lb/>
stead of the 20 year<lb/>
period they now have.<lb/>
In addition, the new<lb/>
bill would have pro-<lb/>
hibited state loan agen-<lb/>
cies from making con-<lb/>
solidation loans to<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Bill sponsor Rep. Paul<lb/>
Simon, D-Ill excluded<lb/>
the state agencies to try to<lb/>
increase the federal<lb/>
government's tax<lb/>
revenues.<lb/>
Under the old system,<lb/>
states got money to lend<lb/>
to students by selling tax<lb/>
exempt bonds to their<lb/>
citizens. The U.S.<lb/>
Treasury consequently<lb/>
couldn't collect taxes on<lb/>
the money used to buy<lb/>
the bonds.<lb/>
But excluding state<lb/>
agencies ws the major<lb/>
reason the Sallie Mae bill<lb/>
staggered in the Senate<lb/>
after being passed by the<lb/>
House.<lb/>
"There are some real<lb/>
differences of opinion (in<lb/>
the Senate) over allowing<lb/>
state agencies to par-<lb/>
ticipate (in making con-<lb/>
solidation loans) Mar-<lb/>
tin says. "It probably<lb/>
won't pass this time<lb/>
In that event, "The<lb/>
people already in the pro-<lb/>
gram will continue in it,<lb/>
but (the program) won't<lb/>
be available for any new<lb/>
people" after it expired in<lb/>
November.<lb/>
But Martin is "hopeful<lb/>
the program will be pass-<lb/>
ed as part of the (new)<lb/>
Higher Education<lb/>
Reauthorization Act<lb/>
which may not come to a<lb/>
vote until late 1984 or<lb/>
earlv 1985.<lb/>
SA T Ranking Validity Disputed<lb/>
Indian Education<lb/>
Topic of Lecture<lb/>
B TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
In an effort to<lb/>
familiarize ECU faculty<lb/>
and students with the<lb/>
cultural diversity present<lb/>
in our society, Betty Ox<lb/>
edine Mangum, director<lb/>
of Indian Education for<lb/>
the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Public Instruction, will<lb/>
conduct two presenta-<lb/>
tions on Indian education<lb/>
next Tuesday.<lb/>
Acting Dean of the<lb/>
School of Fducation<lb/>
Charles R. Coble said,<lb/>
"the talks are part of the<lb/>
Multicultural Education<lb/>
Committee's efforts to<lb/>
increase campus and<lb/>
community awareness of,<lb/>
and respect for, the<lb/>
ethnic diversity of<lb/>
American life<lb/>
Mangum's talks will be<lb/>
the second multi-cultural<lb/>
awareness program<lb/>
presented this academic<lb/>
year. "The Multicultural<lb/>
Education committee en-<lb/>
courages consideration of<lb/>
the implications of such<lb/>
ethnic diversity upon ef-<lb/>
fective teaching Coble<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The ECU School of<lb/>
Education will sponsor<lb/>
Mangum's visit as a part<lb/>
of their efforts to gain<lb/>
reaccreditation.<lb/>
The faculty workshop<lb/>
will be held at 4 p.m<lb/>
followed by a lecture to<lb/>
Teacher Education<lb/>
Students at 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theater.<lb/>
News Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Students interested in reporting and<lb/>
writing news for The East Carolinian<lb/>
can come by the offices on the second<lb/>
floor of the Publications building,<lb/>
across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Mondays and Wednesdays<lb/>
are best.<lb/>
- continued from page 1<lb/>
The school was ranked ninth out<lb/>
of the 16 schools in the UNC<lb/>
system. UNC-Chapel Hill was<lb/>
first with average scores of 1056,<lb/>
while Elizabeth City State College<lb/>
was 16th with 584.<lb/>
Another point of contention<lb/>
concerning SATs has been the<lb/>
amount of emphasis placed on the<lb/>
scores by college admission of-<lb/>
ficials. Seeley said SAT scores are<lb/>
an important factor in admission<lb/>
to ECU, but not the most impor-<lb/>
tant factor.<lb/>
The applicant's SAT score is us-<lb/>
ed in a formula with their class<lb/>
rank or high school grade point<lb/>
average in order to determine a<lb/>
predicted GPA for their freshman<lb/>
year at ECU. The predicted GPA<lb/>
is the determining factor in admis-<lb/>
sions, Seeley said.<lb/>
Volpe said he thought the SAT<lb/>
scores were needed to a certain ex-<lb/>
tent. "You need to have some in-<lb/>
dication of how well a student is<lb/>
doing he said. However, he also<lb/>
stated that he felt that high school<lb/>
performance was of greater im-<lb/>
portance. "There's no doubt in<lb/>
my mind that the student's four-<lb/>
year performance should carry<lb/>
more weight than how the student<lb/>
does on an exam Volpe said.<lb/>
"Most schools probably use it<lb/>
(the SAT), but it does not carry as<lb/>
much weight as performance<lb/>
said Seeley. "I think we need to<lb/>
keep the data in perspective and<lb/>
weight it properly Volpe said.<lb/>
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THE EAST C AROL1NJAN<lb/>
Black Conservatives Support Helms<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
OOHOON IPOCK ? ?cu<lb/>
'Reagan and Helms 1984'<lb/>
Dwight Simpson attends a dinner held at the Moose Lodge in honor of Jesse Helms. Simpson Is founder<lb/>
and president of U.N.I.T.E.D, an organization based on the economic advancement for blacks.<lb/>
"We've rode this horse too<lb/>
long says Willie Simpson speak-<lb/>
ing of the black community's<lb/>
reliance on liberal social pro-<lb/>
grams. According to Simpson,<lb/>
social-assistance programs are the<lb/>
source ? not the solution ? of<lb/>
black economic problems.<lb/>
"Liberal programs have<lb/>
destroyed our first line of defense<lb/>
which is the family unit says<lb/>
Simpson. "And because of that,<lb/>
these programs haven't worked.<lb/>
They have created and perpetuate<lb/>
an underclass of people<lb/>
Simpson, age 26, is a founder<lb/>
and president of U.N.I.T.E.D.<lb/>
(United Network Investing<lb/>
Toward Economic<lb/>
Developement), an organization<lb/>
whose goals are economic ad-<lb/>
vancement primarily for blacks.<lb/>
The organization is also open to<lb/>
other minorities and whites as<lb/>
well.<lb/>
"Presently, we're active only in<lb/>
Craven County, but in the future<lb/>
we hope to have a charter in all<lb/>
North Carolina counties says<lb/>
Simpson. "We feel that it's going<lb/>
to be needed to help people<lb/>
become self-sufficient. That's our<lb/>
philosophy. Because in the long<lb/>
run, if you're vulnerable to be<lb/>
fed, you're also vulnerable to be<lb/>
misled<lb/>
Simpson and his fellow<lb/>
U.N.I.T.E.D. members definitely<lb/>
feel that blacks are being misled<lb/>
with a great deal of misinforma-<lb/>
tion, not only by the press, but<lb/>
also from political organizations<lb/>
that claim to support black in-<lb/>
terests. Simpson frequently uses<lb/>
the term "demagogues" when<lb/>
speaking of these leaders.<lb/>
"It's all politics and power he<lb/>
explains. "There are many leaders<lb/>
who are more interested in mak-<lb/>
ing black people dependent on<lb/>
them than in making black people<lb/>
free<lb/>
The irony in all this is that<lb/>
Simpson and his associates'<lb/>
beliefs have led them directly to<lb/>
the Republican Party. At a recent<lb/>
political rally and dinner in<lb/>
Greenville that honored North<lb/>
Carolina's senior senator Jesse<lb/>
Helms and included fellow<lb/>
Republican senator John East,<lb/>
Simpson along with his brother<lb/>
Dwight and friend Jeff Swindell<lb/>
were the only blacks among a<lb/>
crowd of several hundred whites.<lb/>
Sporting "Reagan and Helms in<lb/>
'84" lapel buttons the three young<lb/>
men mingled freely in the crowd<lb/>
chatting and shaking hands after<lb/>
the speeches ? including the hand<lb/>
of Helms himself.<lb/>
"We've had our eye on Helms<lb/>
for sometime said Simpson.<lb/>
"All we really know about him is<lb/>
what we see on TV and read in the<lb/>
papers; but then there's so much<lb/>
misinformation and sensa-<lb/>
tionalism about him that you<lb/>
can't really believe what you hear.<lb/>
So we heard about Helms being<lb/>
here in Greenville tonight and<lb/>
thought we'd hear him in person.<lb/>
And we've also talked to Claude<lb/>
Allen a good deal about him<lb/>
Allen is Helms' young black<lb/>
press secretary. I asked Simpson<lb/>
if he felt Allen was a token black<lb/>
on the Helms staff.<lb/>
"A token is a person set up in a<lb/>
position who can't think or walk<lb/>
or talk on his own said Simp-<lb/>
son. "Now I think Claude Allen<lb/>
has shown that he has a mind of<lb/>
his own and can think for<lb/>
himself<lb/>
"It's not so much the<lb/>
Republican Party; it's their<lb/>
philosophy ? a conservative<lb/>
philsophy says Simpson.<lb/>
"That's what we believe in, the<lb/>
free enterprise system. And it just<lb/>
so happens that that's what<lb/>
Reagan and Helms and the<lb/>
Republicans stand for<lb/>
Simpson admitted the social<lb/>
programs of the past 20 years had<lb/>
helped blacks some, but added<lb/>
they are dead-end programs and<lb/>
would never lead blacks to<lb/>
economic prosperity. Instead,<lb/>
Simpson says U.N.I.T.E.D.<lb/>
believes if blacks are allowed to<lb/>
operate freely and fairly under the<lb/>
free-enterprise system, they can<lb/>
achieve economic parity.<lb/>
"Blacks don't support black<lb/>
businesses the way they used to<lb/>
said Simpson. "Back in the days<lb/>
of Jim Crow, blacks stuck<lb/>
together because they had to. For<lb/>
example, in New Bern 20 years<lb/>
ago, black businesses were thriv-<lb/>
ing. Now instead of shopping<lb/>
local and neighborhood mer-<lb/>
chants, blacks are shopping out at<lb/>
the malls, and the small<lb/>
businessman has lost out to the<lb/>
corporate merchants Simpson<lb/>
admitted, however, that this<lb/>
decline in small business was not<lb/>
just a black problem. Local white<lb/>
merchants are losing in the battle<lb/>
with the corporate giants as well.<lb/>
"But the Reagan administra-<lb/>
tion is trying to cut through the<lb/>
red tape and give small<lb/>
businessmen a break by rewriting<lb/>
the business and tax rules<lb/>
claims Simpson.<lb/>
And what about racism. Wasn't<lb/>
See Simpson, Page 8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL I MAN<lb/>
Get The Sc<lb/>
Michael Ja<lb/>
Young superstar<lb/>
Michael Jackson is un-<lb/>
doubtedly the entertain-<lb/>
ment sensation of the<lb/>
year His album<lb/>
"Thriller" has sold more<lb/>
than five million copies<lb/>
worldwide and given<lb/>
birth to a record six hit<lb/>
singles. From the cover o:<lb/>
People Magazine to the<lb/>
top of the MTV chai<lb/>
is clear that Michael<lb/>
Jackson is the rock stor<lb/>
of the '805<lb/>
Yet behind the glil<lb/>
there is a differer<lb/>
storythe inside stof<lb/>
this top male vocalist<lb/>
Nelson George, the fc<lb/>
music editor at Billboard<lb/>
magazine, has wntter.<lb/>
The Michael Jacksc<lb/>
Story ($2 95), the I<lb/>
book to give the real<lb/>
scoop on M<lb/>
Jackson. Former I<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
'Curse Of Lono' Delivers Pages Of Insanity<lb/>
ST<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Hunter S. Thompson, deep in the hearts of<lb/>
modern day connoisseurs of the new journalism his<lb/>
name is synonmous with fear and loathing. Yet, this<lb/>
fear and loathing is no garden variety fear and<lb/>
loathing. It is not ordinary. It is not trite. No, in-<lb/>
deed ? it is profound!<lb/>
BOOK REVIEW<lb/>
Yes, it is an existential fear and loathing. For<lb/>
Hunter S. Thompson has generally concerned<lb/>
himself with the aspects of contemporary American<lb/>
life that are beyond bizarre, eccentric, or weird.<lb/>
They are, in fact, conscientiously vulgar; even<lb/>
obscene. This is because Thompson has always ex-<lb/>
ercised a keen eye for those events that bring to light<lb/>
some facet of the social psyche which was previous-<lb/>
Binge and Purge<lb/>
ly ignored or obscured in the prevalent national<lb/>
consciousness. More to the point ? these facets<lb/>
were ignored with good reason ? because they<lb/>
were, and are, too ugly to be confronted.<lb/>
As a consequence, when Thompson writes a book<lb/>
about a national presidential election and includes a<lb/>
passage on the Super Bowl in which the competing<lb/>
football teams are described as coming together<lb/>
under a brown California sky howling and<lb/>
clawing at each other like wild beasts in heat one<lb/>
cannot help but seize upon the sense of irony that he<lb/>
intends to convey.<lb/>
A presidential election and Super Bowl Sunday;<lb/>
two forms of quintessential American catharsis.<lb/>
Both are events filled with pomp and ostentatious<lb/>
hype, yet both inevitably degenerate into a seamy<lb/>
spectacle of ludicrous philistanism. Yes ? an ugly<lb/>
spectacle. And Dr. Gonzo is running loose and<lb/>
weird again. He is running in the streets. And he's<lb/>
running right at you in The Curse of Lono.<lb/>
"Dear Ralph,<lb/>
I think we have a live one this time old sport.<lb/>
Some dingbat named Perry up in Oregon wants to<lb/>
give us a month in Hawaii for Christmas and all we<lb/>
have to do is cover the Honolulu Marathon for his<lb/>
magazine, a thing called Running<lb/>
So begins Hunter S. Thompson's newest book.<lb/>
The Honolulu Marathon serves as the backdrop for<lb/>
a demented odyssey that includes big game sport<lb/>
fishing, wild drug orgies, and snatches from the<lb/>
macabre legend of Captain James Cook, ostensibly<lb/>
the first European to discover Hawaii. The book is<lb/>
an indictment, a paen, a raving epithet.<lb/>
"The Curse Of Lono is purely a com-<lb/>
mercial venture designed to keep Hunter 5.<lb/>
Thompson in drugs for another three<lb/>
years.<lb/>
In many respects it is reminescent of<lb/>
Thompson'searlier work, Fear and Loathing In Las<lb/>
Vegas. Once again Ralph Steadman illustrates the<lb/>
doctor's tale superbly ? this time "profusely" and<lb/>
in "blazing" color. Once again the story is almost<lb/>
hebephrenic, rambling unpredictably from one<lb/>
deranged episode to the next with no obvious<lb/>
philosophical point to be made unless it is that when<lb/>
one is confronted with mass insanity the only ap-<lb/>
propriate reaction is to respond in kind.<lb/>
In the latest work, however, Dr. Gonzo is after<lb/>
something different from what he was after in Fear<lb/>
and Loathing In Las Vegas.<lb/>
"You mean drugs?' Ralph said finally.<lb/>
'Of course I mean drugs Skinner screamed.<lb/>
'You think I came here to talk about art?"<lb/>
Indeed, and there lies the bone of the matter. The<lb/>
Curse of Lono, priced at $9.95 a copy, is a purely<lb/>
commercial venture, designed to keep Hunter S.<lb/>
Thompson in drugs for another three years. It does<lb/>
not hold together, even by Gonzo Standards. It<lb/>
lacks the edge and bite of Thompson's earlier work.<lb/>
In short, it borders on being a piece of self in-<lb/>
dulgent memorabilia produced strictly for con-<lb/>
sumption by the Gonzo cult and I, for one, am not<lb/>
sanguine about it.<lb/>
The word is folks ? Hunter S. Thompson has<lb/>
either huffed too much ether or he's hit male<lb/>
menapause. Either way The Curse of Lono doesn't<lb/>
quite make the nut. Save yourself ten bucks.<lb/>
Bulimia: The Secret Disease<lb/>
By SUSANNA GOCKE<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
"I wish so badly I could eat like<lb/>
a normal person. No one will ever<lb/>
understand how I can eat so<lb/>
much, yet stay so thin. I do have a<lb/>
secret, one which has caused some<lb/>
of the biggest problems in my<lb/>
life said a 20-year-old<lb/>
sophomore at ECU.<lb/>
Mary (not her real name), is one<lb/>
of an increasing number of college<lb/>
girls who suffers from what<lb/>
psychologist call the "binge and<lb/>
purge" syndrome.<lb/>
In September 1979, Glamour<lb/>
magazine published "Full<lb/>
Stomachs and Empty Lives an<lb/>
article which brought national at-<lb/>
tention to an eating disorder<lb/>
known as bulimia.<lb/>
Many females who suffer from<lb/>
bulimia were surprised to know<lb/>
that there is a name for this ab-<lb/>
surd thing they practiced, in some<lb/>
cases several times a day.<lb/>
Bulimia is defined as the rapid<lb/>
consumption of large amounts of<lb/>
high-caloric foods within a short<lb/>
time period, followed immediate-<lb/>
ly by self-induced vomiting.<lb/>
Ninety-eight percent of the vic-<lb/>
tims are women between the ages<lb/>
of 16 and 25. These women suffer<lb/>
from similiar feelings of low self-<lb/>
esteem, paranoia about ap-<lb/>
pearance, and obsession with<lb/>
food and dieting.<lb/>
Dr. Mathis, a psychiatrist at the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine,<lb/>
describes bulimia as ox eating. He<lb/>
also refers to bulimia as "khon-<lb/>
drosphobia a Greek term mean-<lb/>
ing fear of being fat.<lb/>
'I have studied bulimia for 23<lb/>
years and I probably know all<lb/>
there is to about this disorder, but<lb/>
I still don't understand it said<lb/>
Dr. Mathis. He explained that this<lb/>
type of behavior has been around<lb/>
for several thousand years.<lb/>
Case studies first reported the<lb/>
Romans and Egyptians par-<lb/>
ticipating in the "binge and<lb/>
purge" syndrome after a large<lb/>
feast. During that time, this type<lb/>
of behavior was accepted; today<lb/>
bulimia is considered a serious<lb/>
eating disorder.<lb/>
Statistics predict that one out of<lb/>
every 10 college females will<lb/>
become a victim of bulimia in<lb/>
some form, Mathis noted.<lb/>
"I have treated several different<lb/>
patients with bulimia, and I have<lb/>
yet to find one single cause for the<lb/>
disorder stated Mathis. "My<lb/>
patients can vary from one ex-<lb/>
treme to another<lb/>
According to statistics that deal<lb/>
with eating disorders, the largest<lb/>
known number of calories con-<lb/>
sumed by a bulimic within a<lb/>
24-hour period was 55,000<lb/>
calories.<lb/>
Characteristics which are com-<lb/>
mon to bulimics include: in-<lb/>
conspicuous eating, consumption<lb/>
of high-caloric foods, repeated at-<lb/>
tempts to lose weight, recurrent<lb/>
episodes of binge eating and self-<lb/>
induced vomiting.<lb/>
Bulimics usually come from<lb/>
middle to upper-class families and<lb/>
are rarely found among the poor.<lb/>
They tend to alternate between<lb/>
hinging and dieting to maintain<lb/>
their normal weight.<lb/>
Considerable research has been<lb/>
done on the dangers involved in<lb/>
self-induced vomiting. Fatalities<lb/>
occur when such vomiting creates<lb/>
an imbalance of electrolytes which<lb/>
upsets the body chemistry.<lb/>
Another effect of constant<lb/>
vomiting is tooth decay. This hap-<lb/>
pens when hydrochloric acid pro-<lb/>
duced by the stomach reaches the<lb/>
teeth and initiates decay. The con-<lb/>
stant Dinging and purging may<lb/>
also upset the potassium level<lb/>
which can lead to heart failure.<lb/>
Experts believe that the idea<lb/>
"to be thin is to be in" has a<lb/>
growing impact on the nation at<lb/>
large. Researchers at Michael<lb/>
Reese Hospital in Chicago found<lb/>
that women pictured in magazines<lb/>
have gotten significantly thinner<lb/>
in the last 10 years.<lb/>
"I often wonder if the popular<lb/>
skinny model Twiggy, back in the<lb/>
sixties, created the image that to<lb/>
be skinny is to be beautiful said<lb/>
Dr. Mathis.<lb/>
In order to cure a bulimic, dif-<lb/>
ferent methods are used for dif-<lb/>
ferent cases. In some cases, con-<lb/>
tinued psychotherapy has proved<lb/>
successful and in some of the ex-<lb/>
treme cases, anti-depressant drugs<lb/>
are used.<lb/>
According to Dr. Mathis, the<lb/>
first step in curing the patient is to<lb/>
decondition the behavior.<lb/>
However, because the majority of<lb/>
victims occupy 50 percent of their<lb/>
thoughts around food, it can be a<lb/>
long process. Doctors continue to<lb/>
research new methods to cure<lb/>
bulimics, but because of the varie-<lb/>
ty of victims, it becomes difficult<lb/>
to find one specific cure.<lb/>
Support groups have formed<lb/>
throughout the United States,<lb/>
particularly on college campuses,<lb/>
to help those who suffer from<lb/>
bulimia. One famous nationwide<lb/>
groups is call BASH (Bulimia<lb/>
Anorexia Self Help).<lb/>
These groups attract over 300<lb/>
victims a month and have a very<lb/>
high success rate. Most bulimics<lb/>
feel they are the only ones who<lb/>
suffer from this bizarre disorder<lb/>
and are often afraid to seek help<lb/>
or even admit they have a pro-<lb/>
blem.<lb/>
In Greenville, a group entitled<lb/>
"Eating Disorders" meets once a<lb/>
week at 4 p.m. on Tuesdays in the<lb/>
Outpatient Center of the Brody<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
The group is designed to help<lb/>
those victims cope with their pro-<lb/>
blem and to realize that they are<lb/>
not alone. For additional infor-<lb/>
mation, contact Dr. Carol<lb/>
Richardson 757-4100, extension<lb/>
689.<lb/>
 Ffaaa, a<lb/>
coatrifevtor for<lb/>
those extra<lb/>
tea<lb/>
1<lb/>
i<lb/>
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Now S<lb/>
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Homemade<lb/>
with th<lb/>
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Call in advath<lb/>
752-<lb/>
2711 F<lb/>
(Colonial Height I<lb/>
Green<lb/>
NO'<lb/>
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PIZZA INNI<lb/>
all that We<lb/>
pizi<lb/>
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and<lb/>
CALL 7!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ??? i?i m m-mi-4Fm u n? i mm m? <lb/>
mini<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 12, 1984<lb/>
S<lb/>
nuch the<lb/>
their<lb/>
onservative<lb/>
Simpson.<lb/>
eve in. the<lb/>
And it just<lb/>
uhat<lb/>
diui the<lb/>
the social<lb/>
20 years had<lb/>
but added<lb/>
arris and<lb/>
blacks to<lb/>
v Instead,<lb/>
NIT.ED.<lb/>
e allowed to<lb/>
ander the<lb/>
m, they can<lb/>
pport black<lb/>
.ised to<lb/>
k in the days<lb/>
-tuck<lb/>
had to. For<lb/>
 20 vears<lb/>
; were thriv-<lb/>
)f shopping<lb/>
hood mer-<lb/>
: rmg out at<lb/>
the small<lb/>
to the<lb/>
 Simpson<lb/>
that this<lb/>
(siness was not<lb/>
Local white<lb/>
in the battle<lb/>
ants a well,<lb/>
iinistra-<lb/>
ugh the<lb/>
ei e -mail<lb/>
cwnting<lb/>
tax rules<lb/>
icssm Wasn't<lb/>
age 8<lb/>
I<lb/>
f 1<lb/>
is it is that when<lb/>
iiy the on ap-<lb/>
ind.<lb/>
Gonzo is after<lb/>
is after in Fear<lb/>
naJly<lb/>
it creamed.<lb/>
j- t art?"<lb/>
ie matter. The<lb/>
is a purely<lb/>
Ikeer Hunter S.<lb/>
ree ears. It does<lb/>
o Standards. It<lb/>
in's earlier work,<lb/>
nece of self in-<lb/>
 :ly for Con-<lb/>
or one. am not<lb/>
Thompson has<lb/>
he's hit male<lb/>
of Lono doesn't<lb/>
ten bucks<lb/>
caa be ? major<lb/>
Get The Scoop On<lb/>
Michael Jackson<lb/>
Young superstar<lb/>
Michael Jackson is un-<lb/>
doubtedly the entertain-<lb/>
ment sensation of the<lb/>
vear. His album<lb/>
"Thriller" has sold more<lb/>
than five million copies<lb/>
worldwide and given<lb/>
birth to a record six hit<lb/>
singles. ?. rom the cover of<lb/>
People Magazine to the<lb/>
top of the MTV charts, it<lb/>
is clear that Michael<lb/>
Jackson is the rock story<lb/>
of the '80s.<lb/>
Yet behind the glitter<lb/>
there is a different<lb/>
storythe inside story of<lb/>
this top male vocalist.<lb/>
Nelson George, the black<lb/>
music editor at Billboard<lb/>
magazine, has written<lb/>
The Michael Jackson<lb/>
Story ($2.95), the first<lb/>
book to give the real<lb/>
scoop on Michael<lb/>
Jackson. Formerly a<lb/>
music critic at Record<lb/>
World magazine and the<lb/>
Amsterdam Mews, as well<lb/>
as a columnist at Musi-<lb/>
cian magazine, George<lb/>
has a long history of<lb/>
covering the top names in<lb/>
entertainment. He has<lb/>
written articles for Roll-<lb/>
ing Stone, Essence, Black<lb/>
Enterprise and En-<lb/>
cyclopedia. In The<lb/>
Michael Jackson Story he<lb/>
gives millions of fans a<lb/>
glimpse of the never-<lb/>
before-seen private side<lb/>
of this highly public<lb/>
entertainer. George's<lb/>
biography is packed full<lb/>
of 16 pages of black and<lb/>
white photographs and<lb/>
includes observations by<lb/>
Jackson's prominent<lb/>
friends; Diana Ross, Jane<lb/>
Fonda, Quincy Jones and<lb/>
the Jackson family, plus<lb/>
much more.<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
RIBS!<lb/>
Every Monday between 5:00-10:00 Darryl's 1907, Green-<lb/>
ville is having an ALL YOU CAN EAT FEAST of our tender,<lb/>
juicy beef ribs for the unbelievable price of $7.95.<lb/>
'Flashdance'<lb/>
Jennifer Seals stars in Flashdance, a hit which<lb/>
originated Break Dancing and cut-off sweatshirts.<lb/>
The show appears January 12,13. and 14 at 7 and 9<lb/>
p.m. in MendenhalPs Hendrix Theatre. I.D. and Ac-<lb/>
tivity Card or MSC Membership is required for ad-<lb/>
mission.<lb/>
SO . . . COME AND GET A TASTE OF<lb/>
KICK WE<lb/>
The Michael Jackson Story' is available now.<lb/>
ILlNG<lb/>
ANDWICH<lb/>
Now Serving:<lb/>
Homemade Chili and<lb/>
Homemade Soup along<lb/>
with the many<lb/>
great sandwiches.<lb/>
Call in advance for take-out.<lb/>
752-4297<lb/>
2711 E. 10th St.<lb/>
(Colonial Height Shopping Center)<lb/>
Don'settle for<lb/>
a lunch that was<lb/>
made right after<lb/>
breakfast r ' :orPd<lb/>
in a shrofoam box. Enpy<lb/>
a fresh sandwich or salad from<lb/>
Subway, made to your order from<lb/>
choice sliced meats and cheese, garden fresh leqetabtes.<lb/>
Alaskan King Crab, zest hot meatballs and sausage<lb/>
and freshly baked fool-long rolls. So kick the burner habit.<lb/>
and we'll px you a special bonus if you go "Cold Turkey'<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
e<lb/>
?submjj<lb/>
Vh 5ettc$Mdtioe<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
Pizza ion<lb/>
Greenville's Best Pizzas<lb/>
Now Being Delivered<lb/>
Most delivery piiias lack in<lb/>
true quality and have 'hidden'<lb/>
delivery costs in the price-<lb/>
Pi ZZ A INN has changed<lb/>
all that We Seii our delivery<lb/>
pizzas at Menu Prices!<lb/>
No Surcharge. We also<lb/>
give FREE Drinks with<lb/>
our large and giant<lb/>
pizzas. TRY US TODAY!<lb/>
Daily Buffet 7 days a week<lb/>
andMon Tue Wed. nights<lb/>
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I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
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I<lb/>
 $loff any Large ar<lb/>
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M4KE TRACKS F0fl THE<lb/>
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The next time you stop by for the Best EatinY bring<lb/>
along this money-savin1 coupon.<lb/>
i IsffiklTfiWmcunIko<lb/>
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STEAK i E6G BISCUIT MUD<lb/>
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Please present this coupon before ordering One coupon per customer per<lb/>
visit, please Customer must pay any sales tax due This coupon not good Ki<lb/>
combination with any other oHers Otter flood during regular breaMast hours<lb/>
only at participating Hardee s Restaurants g f<lb/>
through May 31 1984<lb/>
I<lb/>
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he 1983 Hardee s Food Systems c ? ??,BFBW,a?aB??l<lb/>
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Please present this coupon before ordering One coupon per customer per<lb/>
visit, please Customer must pay any sales ta due This eoupon not good m<lb/>
combination with any other otters Otter good after 10 30 AM only at<lb/>
participating Hardee s Restaurants through<lb/>
May 31. 1984 ? ? ? 9<lb/>
c '983 Hardens Food Systems Inc<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
A 'A<lb/>
OUR NURSING<lb/>
SCHOLARSHIPS WILL HELP<lb/>
YOUR MEDICAL PLANS.<lb/>
It high tuition cot<lb/>
arc peopanfaang sour fu-<lb/>
ture in medicine Armv<lb/>
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An Armv ROTC<lb/>
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ROTC rccenth et<lb/>
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Each one cm ers<lb/>
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J.<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 12, 1984<lb/>
-r .?<lb/>
?<lb/>
li<lb/>
Simpson Promotes<lb/>
Cont'd from Page 6<lb/>
that still a factor for<lb/>
blacks in an open, free<lb/>
enterprise system?<lb/>
"Yes, it's still there,<lb/>
but usually in more subtle<lb/>
forms said Simpson.<lb/>
"If they don't want you,<lb/>
they'll even tell you're<lb/>
overqualified or make up<lb/>
some other excuse not to<lb/>
hire you Simpson add-<lb/>
ed that he felt racism<lb/>
would never be entirely<lb/>
eliminated.<lb/>
But surely courting the<lb/>
likes of Reagan and<lb/>
Helms supporters is flir-<lb/>
ting with racists?<lb/>
"Most Republicans are<lb/>
really friendly. They're<lb/>
surprised at first to see<lb/>
us said Simpson, "but<lb/>
they're always glad we're<lb/>
there Indeed they<lb/>
should be. Polls show<lb/>
blacks overwhelmingly<lb/>
against a Reagan re-<lb/>
election, as high as 90<lb/>
percent committed to any<lb/>
Democratic opponent.<lb/>
Rlack opposition to<lb/>
iwlms is almost<lb/>
unanimous, especially<lb/>
after his controversial<lb/>
stand against the Martin<lb/>
Luther King national<lb/>
holiday. I asked Simpson<lb/>
if he felt Helms' position<lb/>
on the King holiday was<lb/>
motivated by racism.<lb/>
Simpson said he didn't<lb/>
know all the facts, and<lb/>
that he didn't trust the<lb/>
press anyway, agreeing<lb/>
with charges made by<lb/>
East that the press was<lb/>
strongly slanted with a<lb/>
liberal bias. "If he did act<lb/>
out of racism, it's<lb/>
something only he and<lb/>
God can know, and he'll<lb/>
be held accountable for<lb/>
it said Simpson. "But<lb/>
it did hurt him a great<lb/>
deal in the black com-<lb/>
munity<lb/>
Simpson said that<lb/>
despite the King affair, he<lb/>
still likes Helms for his<lb/>
conservative and moral<lb/>
beliefs. "Whatever<lb/>
religious beliefs Jesse<lb/>
Helms has, I can only say<lb/>
that's good, because this<lb/>
world is so full of<lb/>
destructive people. When<lb/>
you sec a man that's<lb/>
good, you don't throw<lb/>
stones at him, you ap-<lb/>
plaud him Still it's dif-<lb/>
ficult to sell other blacks<lb/>
on Helms and Reagan.<lb/>
"They listen only because<lb/>
they know and they trust<lb/>
me says Simpson.<lb/>
But what about Jesse<lb/>
Jackson? I asked Simp-<lb/>
son if he would vote for<lb/>
Jackson if he recieved the<lb/>
Democratic nomination.<lb/>
"Yes, I could support<lb/>
him for trying to be<lb/>
responsive to the needs of<lb/>
the black community<lb/>
said Simpson. "But when<lb/>
I look back over the<lb/>
Reagan record, I'd have<lb/>
to vote Republican<lb/>
Simpson believes,<lb/>
however, that the time is<lb/>
ripe for blacks to return<lb/>
to the party of Linclon.<lb/>
"Blacks adopted the<lb/>
Democratic Party with<lb/>
F.D.R. because it offered<lb/>
them something: jobs<lb/>
programs and more<lb/>
equality. But now the<lb/>
Republican Party is<lb/>
where the opportunity is<lb/>
at says Simpson. "It's<lb/>
like fishing. Why should 1<lb/>
stay home and hope my<lb/>
neighbor will bring me<lb/>
back a fish when I can go<lb/>
and catch all I want. The<lb/>
Republican party is open<lb/>
to any young person with<lb/>
an open mind, black or<lb/>
white, and it's a perfect<lb/>
opportunity for blacks to<lb/>
get in on the ground<lb/>
floor<lb/>
It's doubtful that many<lb/>
blacks are ready to buy<lb/>
what Simpson,<lb/>
U.N.I.T.E.D. or Ronald<lb/>
Regan and the<lb/>
Republican Party have to<lb/>
sell. But as larger<lb/>
numbers of blacks<lb/>
achieve middle and<lb/>
upper-middle class status,<lb/>
more are certain to even-<lb/>
tually drift into the<lb/>
Republican camp. And<lb/>
with grass-roots<lb/>
movements like<lb/>
U.N.I.T.E.D. preaching<lb/>
an alternative, that solid<lb/>
block of black votes may<lb/>
erode much sooner than<lb/>
the Democratic leader-<lb/>
ship would like.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
75 MAVERICK, A.C auto, 4 dr naw<lb/>
radlalt, AMFM 1115.00<lb/>
'74 PINTO waaon, auto, air, radial<lb/>
tlra and '74 Ford pickup truck, waak<lb/>
angina ists.09 7S2-1401<lb/>
NEW STEEL ballad Radlalt.<lb/>
U5xl3 142.00 Incl. bal, mounting<lb/>
FET-otnar alia. raa? nidi uaad<lb/>
Oraanvllla Tira, Pactolyi H'way<lb/>
752 1402.<lb/>
ART SUPPLIES tor aala 752-257.<lb/>
NOROICA SKI Boot. Hie 10. A ataal<lb/>
at $40.00. 752 1541 attar 4:00.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
PHI TAV'S, NO B?.r No Balltlll<lb/>
SUSAN FREEMAN It'j tima to par<lb/>
tyl Happy 21itl Lova Ginger<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Good location. Call 752 24u attar JO<lb/>
pm.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: nan-<lb/>
tmofcar, sariout atudant. t Mock<lb/>
from campus, prtvata room, W rant<lb/>
and utilittaa, rant ?1 .aa. dapoalt 100.00,<lb/>
naad bedroom (urnltura. Call 7?4-a147<lb/>
evening.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED.<lb/>
Wilton Acraa Apt Call Dabbla<lb/>
7S0-lt00 or Linda 75-S47.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Wilton<lb/>
Acrat, Vt utiutlat. rant ttf.a! mo.<lb/>
Nonsmoking temala. Ptaata call<lb/>
752 504.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE needed:<lb/>
f7.S0mo ptut W utilitlea. Carpeted<lb/>
bedroom and kitchen privileges. Call<lb/>
75-04t ask tor Lisa.<lb/>
NON-SMOKINO ROOMATE wanted:<lb/>
half block from campus, hilly tur-<lb/>
nithed 3 bedroom house, AC<lb/>
5125mon and V? of utilities.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsibta person to<lb/>
pick up children from school 3 or 4<lb/>
days a week. Call 754-407 attar 4pm.<lb/>
WANTED: Rasponslbto party to<lb/>
atsuma small monthly payments on<lb/>
spinatconsole piano. Can be seen<lb/>
locally. Writs: (Includa phana<lb/>
number) Credit Manager, P.O. box<lb/>
$11, Reckemeyer, IL 4211.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Wilton<lb/>
Acras i45.00mo , half utilities, ph.<lb/>
752-0753<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: neat, mala,<lb/>
non-smokar to shara fully furnished<lb/>
mobile home-Call Sonny at 7S0-M10.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: 2<lb/>
blocks off campus. Matura, clean par-<lb/>
son. Call Kyia (4-7 pm only) 754-470<lb/>
NEED FEMALE ROOMMATE te<lb/>
shara nlc 2 bedroom townhousa.<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
WE ARE ELECTRONICS tachnl<lb/>
clans. At "audio techs" we don't<lb/>
charge for repair estimates. Call us<lb/>
at tha TECH SHOP 757-10.<lb/>
WANTED: Responsible person to<lb/>
pick up children from school 3 or 4<lb/>
days a week. Call 7S4-4M7 attar 4 pm.<lb/>
stop 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/>
-?c- . Weight If You Follow The 5-Day Plan.<lb/>
 Directed by Allen F. Bowyer, CWef of Cardiology, ECU, in cooperation with Pitt County<lb/>
Health Agencies. For information call, 757-4651, 756-5543. It is not necessary to pre-regtster.<lb/>
Stop Smoking Week. Jan. 16-20, 7.Q0PAA<lb/>
?TpjfpJLO<lb/>
xxx<lb/>
lizst:<lb/>
PAPA KATZ<lb/>
; i<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
Open<lb/>
Tues. - Sun.<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/>
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/>
?.<lb/>
k<lb/>
Where the Night comes to Life<lb/>
Papa Kau is A Private Club<lb/>
F Of Members 4 Guests<lb/>
We Hava All ABC Permits<lb/>
10th St. Ext<lb/>
At Riverbluff Rd.<lb/>
Sunday Nite<lb/>
25C Draft<lb/>
6:00 - 8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Greenville Athletic Club<lb/>
Why Settle For Less When<lb/>
You Can Have It All<lb/>
Steam &amp; Sauna<lb/>
Indoor Track<lb/>
Swimming Pool<lb/>
Hot Tub<lb/>
Racquetball<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
Free Weights<lb/>
Exercise Classes<lb/>
Big Savings with the<lb/>
Semester Rate, $120.00<lb/>
For January - May<lb/>
(Figures out to $24.00<lb/>
per month)<lb/>
Also have monthly rates which start at $45.00<lb/>
Don V Be Left Out. Enjoy The Finest<lb/>
Fitness Facility In Town.<lb/>
Open 7 Days A Week<lb/>
140 Oakmont Drive 756-9175<lb/>
NOW OPEN AT CAROUNA EAST CENTER.<lb/>
WHATS AMORE?<lb/>
EXPECT THE BEST WEIL 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/>
<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 witn any daily special<lb/>
wmmm<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
SPAGHETTI DINNER<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Cente-<lb/>
next to<lb/>
Carolina East Main<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
Expires Marcrt I 1984<lb/>
i ? ?? ;c) ir a la sp?d<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL<lb/>
GET ONE FREE<lb/>
(11 00 AM to20OPM)<lb/>
aVa.a?<lb/>
r?? <lb/>
$2.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
LARGE PIZZA PIE OR<lb/>
$1.00 OFF ANY<lb/>
MEDIUM PIZZA PIE<lb/>
ft: 756-9550<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
(next to<lb/>
Carolina East Mall)<lb/>
GreenviHe. NC<lb/>
Expires March 1 1964<lb/>
Cannot be used with any dMy special<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
Jean Keating. Cinch Nei<lb/>
freestvle rela Saturday<lb/>
Peartn<lb/>
Felt T<lb/>
By ED MCK1 AS<lb/>
Bruce Peartree tried<lb/>
them. He said his leg asj<lb/>
ing right, thai il uas aff<lb/>
game. The physicians saiu<lb/>
was wrong. The coaches<lb/>
The fans couldn't under su<lb/>
he wasn't scoring as mud<lb/>
Peartree was in a real d<lb/>
"I kept telling everyonj<lb/>
was injured, but no one<lb/>
me, so I kept on p .<lb/>
Peartree, who damages<lb/>
at the beginning of Last sa<lb/>
nevertheless continued<lb/>
after seeing doctors.<lb/>
"I didn't want to let<lb/>
down he continued ' I<lb/>
reason I was out<lb/>
because of desire<lb/>
Peartree began a rehabil<lb/>
program last summf<lb/>
ameliorate the handicap<lb/>
process, he lost four to f<lb/>
of muscle in his leg.<lb/>
In September, he finallyj<lb/>
operation he had been aski<lb/>
Surgeons removed f<lb/>
fragments in his knee<lb/>
Since then, Peartree has<lb/>
remarkable reco er. even<lb/>
he really didn't start pr<lb/>
until ECU had alreadv sti<lb/>
season. Against INC-O<lb/>
on Jan. 3, the junior gui<lb/>
nothing but net for 16 poinl<lb/>
Yates<lb/>
Unethi<lb/>
By ED N1CKLAS<lb/>
If the answer to the q<lb/>
"Why was Carlos Yates'<lb/>
lion lifted in view of an imj<lb/>
EC AC contest?" was<lb/>
doubt, George Mason cos<lb/>
Harrington certainly made<lb/>
Cinctly clear after Monday<lb/>
ballgame.<lb/>
"I suspended him for<lb/>
reason and brought him be<lb/>
? team reason Hamngtc<lb/>
you have it.<lb/>
Does the fact that Hi<lb/>
dropped Yates' two game<lb/>
?ton raise a question of eth<lb/>
Il it just sour grapes on the<lb/>
PCU? Or both?<lb/>
Whatever the case mij<lb/>
ates' entry came at a<lb/>
t in the ballgame, wit!<lb/>
by only six points<lb/>
t guard Tony Robing<lb/>
bench with three fouls.<lb/>
The impact of Yates reij<lb/>
t can be exaggerated, ti<lb/>
triot guard John N<lb/>
an exceptional<lb/>
Ricky Wilson and<lb/>
Said ECU<lb/>
Peartree of Niehoff J<lb/>
to be the<lb/>
?am?'m<lb/>
mmw "? wir<lb/>
- mi nail, Haw?<lb/>
ainUi?I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0009"/><lb/>
<lb/>
ib<lb/>
Vhen<lb/>
11<lb/>
tail<lb/>
Ights<lb/>
lasses<lb/>
30<lb/>
45.00<lb/>
est<lb/>
E?<lb/>
A<lb/>
REST!<lb/>
ICHES.<lb/>
R DINNER<lb/>
DINNER<lb/>
EE<lb/>
569550<lb/>
NY<lb/>
PIE OR<lb/>
Y<lb/>
iZA PIE<lb/>
1756-9550<lb/>
jroiina East Center<lb/>
next to<lb/>
Ima East Main<lb/>
Greenville. NC<lb/>
?Dres March l 1984<lb/>
THE EASTCAROi INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 12, 1984 9<lb/>
Swimmers Set Freshman Record<lb/>
Jean Keating,<lb/>
freestyle relay<lb/>
Cindy Newman<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
M?IL XM4NSON ? ICU ? L?fc<lb/>
Scotia Miller and Cavcee Poust broke the freshman record in the 400 meter<lb/>
Peartree: Treated Wrong;<lb/>
Felt The Injury Was Hidden<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
SporU TMtor<lb/>
Bruce Peartree tried to tell<lb/>
:hem. He said his leg wasn't feel-<lb/>
ing right, that it was affecting his<lb/>
game. The physicians said nothing<lb/>
was wrong. The coaches agreed.<lb/>
The fans couldn't understand why<lb/>
te wasn't scoring as much. Bruce<lb/>
Peartree was in a real dilemma.<lb/>
"I kept telling everyone that I<lb/>
was injured, but no one believed<lb/>
me, so I kept on playing said<lb/>
Peartree, who damaged his knee<lb/>
at the beginning of last season but<lb/>
nevertheless continued to play-<lb/>
after seeing doctors.<lb/>
"I didn't want to let my parents<lb/>
down he continued. "The only<lb/>
reason I was out there was<lb/>
because of desire<lb/>
Peartree began a rehabilitation<lb/>
program last summer to<lb/>
ameliorate the handicap. In the<lb/>
process, he lost four to five inches<lb/>
of muscle in his leg.<lb/>
In September, he finally got the<lb/>
operation he had been asking for.<lb/>
Surgeons removed floating<lb/>
fragments in his knee.<lb/>
Since then, Peartree has made a<lb/>
remarkable recovery, even though<lb/>
he really didn't start practicing<lb/>
until ECU had already started its<lb/>
season. Against UNC-Charlotte<lb/>
on Jan. 3, the junior guard hit<lb/>
nothing but net for 16 points. Five<lb/>
days later, he ignited for 17<lb/>
against a strong Northeastern<lb/>
team<lb/>
Although his basketball game is<lb/>
looking better and better,<lb/>
frustrating memories still lurk in<lb/>
the back of Bruce Peartree's<lb/>
mind. "I don't think I was treated<lb/>
right from a medical standpoint<lb/>
and a coaching standpoint he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"At the beginning, they (the<lb/>
doctors) told me nothing was<lb/>
wrong Peartree continued.<lb/>
"They said I had 'jumper's knee<lb/>
But I knew something was wrong<lb/>
with my leg<lb/>
Peartree also experienced pro-<lb/>
blems with the coaches. "The<lb/>
coach (Harrison) couldn't unders-<lb/>
tand why I couldn't perform he<lb/>
said. "At the end of the season 1<lb/>
really wasn't on their good side. I<lb/>
felt 1 was treated wrong because I<lb/>
played the whole season injured<lb/>
and nobody even mentioned it. I<lb/>
feel it was all hidden<lb/>
"They (the fans) made it out<lb/>
that I was a bad guy because I<lb/>
wasn't playing<lb/>
Peartree said he and Harrison<lb/>
eventually discussed the matter<lb/>
and reached an agreement. He<lb/>
also said Harrison apologized,<lb/>
regretting what had happened.<lb/>
Harrison is now pleased with<lb/>
Peartree's performance this<lb/>
season. "He has really sur-<lb/>
prised me with his attitude he<lb/>
said. "He doesn't have the lateral<lb/>
quickness on defense, but we put<lb/>
him in when we need the jump-<lb/>
shot<lb/>
"My jumpshot is coming back,<lb/>
but it is not what it used to be<lb/>
Peartree said. "I'm getting<lb/>
quicker and quicker and playing<lb/>
better 4D<lb/>
Things are looking much better<lb/>
nowadays, even though Peartree<lb/>
is only playing half a game. "I've<lb/>
got to be a leader and get the<lb/>
young guys up he said. "If you<lb/>
aren't ready, you are going to get<lb/>
your butt kicked<lb/>
Yates Comes Off The Bench<lb/>
Unethical Or Sour Grapes?<lb/>
By ED NICKLAS<lb/>
S?ort? mior<lb/>
If the answer to the question,<lb/>
"Why was Carlos Yates' suspen-<lb/>
sion lifted in view of an important<lb/>
EC AC contest?" was ever in<lb/>
doubt, George Mason coach Joe<lb/>
Harrington certainly made it suc-<lb/>
cinctly clear after Monday night's<lb/>
hall game.<lb/>
"I suspended him for a team<lb/>
reason and brought him back for<lb/>
a team reason Harrington said.<lb/>
There you have it.<lb/>
Does the fact that Harrington<lb/>
dropped Yates' two game suspen-<lb/>
sion raise a question of ethics? Or<lb/>
is it just sour grapes on the part of<lb/>
ECU? Or both?<lb/>
Whatever the case might be,<lb/>
Yates' entry came at a crucial<lb/>
point in the ballgame, with ECU<lb/>
down by only six points and its<lb/>
point guard Tony Robinson on<lb/>
the bench with three fouls.<lb/>
The impact of Yates' reinstate-<lb/>
ment can be exaggerated, though.<lb/>
Patriot guard John Niehoff<lb/>
played an exceptional game, as<lb/>
did Ricky Wilson and Rob<lb/>
JNieberlein. Said ECU guard<lb/>
Bruce Peartree of NiehoffHe's<lb/>
got to be the most improved<lb/>
player in the conference<lb/>
The Pirates were also lacking<lb/>
the tenacity that Harrison is trying<lb/>
so hard to ingrain in the team.<lb/>
"Our kids have got to start being<lb/>
agressive Harrison said.<lb/>
"George Mason is a good basket-<lb/>
ball team; they pressed us from<lb/>
the start and kept pressing to the<lb/>
end.<lb/>
"You win with agressive, hard-<lb/>
nosed basketball, and we're just<lb/>
not playing that way right now.<lb/>
I'm an agressive person, but I'm<lb/>
having to be patient because the<lb/>
number of young players on the<lb/>
team<lb/>
"You have got to have heart<lb/>
Peartree said. "1 don't think the<lb/>
younger players have that yet.<lb/>
Last night (Monday) was good ex-<lb/>
ample<lb/>
At any rate, the Pirates keep<lb/>
slipping as they set a school record<lb/>
of nine consecutive losses. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Peartree, one win could be<lb/>
instrumental in turning the season<lb/>
around. "What we need most is a<lb/>
win he said. "We are going to<lb/>
take one game at a time; we will<lb/>
turn things around.<lb/>
"It (the losing streak) isn't the<lb/>
coaches fault. We are prepared<lb/>
well. All he wants us to do is play<lb/>
hard.<lb/>
"Everyone still hasn't found his<lb/>
role yet. I think the togetherness<lb/>
has to be better before we turn<lb/>
around. Otherwise, it wil be a<lb/>
long year<lb/>
mmsmahsmmm<lb/>
Utgue Overall<lb/>
George Mai 10<lb/>
?<lb/>
10-1<lb/>
Ww<lb/>
By SCOTI POWERS<lb/>
Staff Wfttar<lb/>
It's not often that a group of<lb/>
freshman girls can make a major<lb/>
impact on a varsity sport at a top-<lb/>
notch university, but that is just<lb/>
what some new freshmen have<lb/>
done for the ECU women's swim<lb/>
team this year, according to head<lb/>
swim coach Rick Kobe.<lb/>
Heading into this season, Kobe<lb/>
really didn't know what to expect<lb/>
from a women's swim team that<lb/>
had lost many top performers<lb/>
from a team that had finished<lb/>
23rd in the NCAA Division II Na-<lb/>
tionals last year, but now he is<lb/>
more than enthusiastic. He feels<lb/>
that this year's team has a chance<lb/>
to finish higher than last year's<lb/>
and admits that this is the best<lb/>
team in the six-year history of the<lb/>
sport at ECU. He also feels that a<lb/>
lot of the credit goes to the<lb/>
freshmen that have been added to<lb/>
the roster since last year.<lb/>
The top six scorers on the team<lb/>
are freshmen. Four of these, Jean<lb/>
Keating, Cindy Newman, Scotia<lb/>
Miller and Caycee Poust, recently<lb/>
broke a freshman record in the<lb/>
400 meter freestyle relay, that had<lb/>
stood for over three years, with a<lb/>
time of 3:43.7. This is just off the<lb/>
national qualifying time in that<lb/>
event.<lb/>
While all of the freshmen look<lb/>
promising, the best right now ap-<lb/>
pears to be Poust. She was a<lb/>
member of the winning 400 meter<lb/>
medley relay team in the National<lb/>
Junior Olympics last summer.<lb/>
"She's the best recruit ever in the<lb/>
backstroke to attend ECU says<lb/>
Kobe. Her times in the 100 and<lb/>
200 meter backstroke are better<lb/>
than the ECU record. She swam<lb/>
the anchor leg of the relay team<lb/>
that set the record.<lb/>
Keating, who swims in the 50<lb/>
and 100 meter freestyle events as<lb/>
well as relays, has only lost in one<lb/>
individual event this year. She was<lb/>
the only true freestyler on the<lb/>
relay team that set the record.<lb/>
Kobe feels that she has yet to<lb/>
reach her peak and that she will<lb/>
probably qualify for the nationals<lb/>
in her events.<lb/>
Newman, as well as swimming<lb/>
with the freshman relay team, also<lb/>
swam with the 400 meter relay<lb/>
team that qualified for the Na-<lb/>
tionals with Keating, sophomore<lb/>
Jessica Feinberg and Lori Liv-<lb/>
ingston, who is also an outstan-<lb/>
ding freshman. She also swims in<lb/>
butterfly events and her best time<lb/>
is the 100 meter butterfly is only<lb/>
three-tenths of a second off the<lb/>
ECU record.<lb/>
A former backstroker, Miller<lb/>
converted to the 500 and 1000<lb/>
meter free styles. She has been<lb/>
astrong performer thus far and<lb/>
looks for greater success as she<lb/>
becomes more adjusted to the<lb/>
change.<lb/>
These and the other freshmen<lb/>
really have Kobe excited with their<lb/>
enthusiasm and ability. "Not only<lb/>
are they good swimmers, they are<lb/>
all around good kids. They are<lb/>
fun to be around and to coach<lb/>
say Kobe.<lb/>
The girls feel that the closeness<lb/>
of the team and the coaches has<lb/>
attributed to their success. Says<lb/>
Miller, "We all like each other,<lb/>
and when someone swims good, it<lb/>
just makes the rest of us try<lb/>
harder<lb/>
They also like and respect coach<lb/>
Kobe. "He allows us to be<lb/>
students as well as athletes. If we<lb/>
have conflicts, he will let us make<lb/>
up workouts says Keating.<lb/>
The whole team is aiming for<lb/>
their meet against Duke at the<lb/>
beginning of February. "I feel<lb/>
that we will have a lot of girls<lb/>
qualifying for the nationals at that<lb/>
meet. That's what we're shooting<lb/>
for said Kobe.<lb/>
The team is now 4-2 against<lb/>
mainly Division I competition,<lb/>
and the way things look now, a lot<lb/>
of ECU records could fall before<lb/>
the end of the season, and coach<lb/>
Kobe's aspirations for a high<lb/>
finish in the nationals could<lb/>
become reality. One thing's for<lb/>
sure, things are definitely looking<lb/>
up for the ECU women's swimm-<lb/>
ing program, thanks to a lot of<lb/>
talented and hard-working<lb/>
freshmen.<lb/>
"I<lb/>
Phillips A Masterpiece<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Ajatetaat Sporti VMtot<lb/>
Making the transition from a<lb/>
junior college to Division I<lb/>
athletics is something most people<lb/>
never dream of, but in the case of<lb/>
Annette Phillips, the move was<lb/>
well worth her while.<lb/>
Phillips has become a mainstay<lb/>
in the ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team starting lineup, and has<lb/>
played more minutes then anyone<lb/>
else on the team.<lb/>
"Annette is doing a super job<lb/>
head coach Cathy Andruzzi said.<lb/>
"She learned our system in a very<lb/>
short amount of time, and she's<lb/>
an extremely hard worker<lb/>
Phillips is currently averaging<lb/>
8.0 points and and 5.8 rebounds<lb/>
per game, but according to An-<lb/>
druzzi, it's her hard-nose style of<lb/>
play that has earned her a starting<lb/>
spot on the team. "Annette's<lb/>
presence is felt on the court<lb/>
because I always know she's going<lb/>
to give a 110 per cent Andruzzi<lb/>
said.<lb/>
At Louisburg, Phillips was just<lb/>
as hard-nosed in the classroom,<lb/>
receiving Phi Beta Kappa honors<lb/>
with a 3.7 grade point average.<lb/>
"It was hard playing basketball<lb/>
and keeping my grades up at the<lb/>
same time Phillips said, "but I<lb/>
just disciplined myself and tried<lb/>
not to waste any time<lb/>
Now at ECU, Phillips is major-<lb/>
ing in art and says she has even<lb/>
less time then ever before. "I<lb/>
never have time to go out and I<lb/>
have to deny myself a lot of<lb/>
things, but I know it will all be<lb/>
worth while in the future<lb/>
Andruzzi calls Phillips the<lb/>
epitomy of a student athlete.<lb/>
"Annette is extremely responsible<lb/>
and is very dedicated to academics<lb/>
as well as athletics<lb/>
At Louisburg, Phillips guided<lb/>
her team to the National Juinor<lb/>
College Championships. She<lb/>
averaged 12 points and 7.5 re-<lb/>
bounds per game in her<lb/>
sophomore season and was named<lb/>
the team's Most Valuable Player<lb/>
Upon graduating, Phillips was<lb/>
offered scholarships to Kent State<lb/>
and Western Kentucky, but chose<lb/>
ECU because of the art school's<lb/>
nation-wide reputation, and it was<lb/>
close to home-town Smithfield.<lb/>
When asked what she wants to<lb/>
get accomplished before she<lb/>
leaves ECU, Phillips replied,<lb/>
"I'm just going to concentrate on<lb/>
art and basketball, and when I<lb/>
leave, know that I've done my<lb/>
best<lb/>
Aaaette Phlttpe dearaetratea the<lb/>
year oa the PMrioa 1 lerct. Phifljp to alao aa hoaor ifrdeat mad eajoy taktaf art<lb/>
??'? mi?w nEMwyi<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0010"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
10 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 12, 1984<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
Weekend<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Sat. Jan. 14<lb/>
7:30pm<lb/>
Men's Basketball at William and<lb/>
Mary<lb/>
7:30<lb/>
Men's and Women's Swimming<lb/>
vs. UNC-Wilmington (Home)<lb/>
2pm<lb/>
Men's and Women's Indoor<lb/>
Track at George Mason<lb/>
Sun. Jan. 15<lb/>
3pm<lb/>
Women's Basketball vs.<lb/>
George Mason (Home)<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball team snapped a three-game losing streak<lb/>
over the weekend by defeating Fairleigh Dickinson 67-58. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates will be in action again this Sunday when they host George Mason<lb/>
at 3:00 pm. All ECU supporters are encouraged to come over to Minges<lb/>
and cheer the Pirates to victory. <lb/>
Garrett Leads In Chancellor<lb/>
Electronic Mania<lb/>
Asteroids, ghosts,<lb/>
spaceships and numerous<lb/>
creatures have invaded<lb/>
the IRS activity plan.<lb/>
Yes, video mania is com-<lb/>
ing into the world of in-<lb/>
tramurals. This can be<lb/>
your chance to prove that<lb/>
you are without doubt the<lb/>
"video expert<lb/>
Co-sponsored by Stu-<lb/>
dent Residence Associa-<lb/>
tion and the Aycock<lb/>
Game Room, A Video<lb/>
Games Tournament will<lb/>
be held on January 18.<lb/>
Registration for this way-<lb/>
out event will be held on<lb/>
January 16 through<lb/>
January 18. Participants<lb/>
will sign-up for a time<lb/>
slot to play each game.<lb/>
All people participating<lb/>
in this tournament will<lb/>
play 3 video games of<lb/>
their choice with a total<lb/>
score taken to determine<lb/>
eight finalists. Separate<lb/>
tournament brackets will<lb/>
be provided for both men<lb/>
and women.<lb/>
Get your game plan<lb/>
readv and come over <lb/>
ECU Intramurals<lb/>
Memorial Gym and sign<lb/>
up to participate in this<lb/>
new and exciting event.<lb/>
Remember, the first peo-<lb/>
ple to sign up will be<lb/>
choosing from the best<lb/>
times.<lb/>
A Slapshooting Affair<lb/>
Looking for some thrill<lb/>
and excitement on roller<lb/>
skates? Try the IRS Co-<lb/>
Ed sport of roller hockey.<lb/>
This activity utilizes 3<lb/>
men and 3 women<lb/>
clashing sticks in at-<lb/>
tempts of scoring goals.<lb/>
Competition will be held<lb/>
at Sportsworld. Registra-<lb/>
tion will be conducted in<lb/>
Memorial Gym on<lb/>
January 23 and 24. So,<lb/>
put those skates on and<lb/>
try Intramural Roller<lb/>
Hockey, where the gals<lb/>
can skate as hard as the<lb/>
guys.<lb/>
Basketball Fever Is<lb/>
Here<lb/>
Once again the time<lb/>
has come for the fierce<lb/>
sport of basketball. One<lb/>
of the most popular in-<lb/>
tramural activities is<lb/>
about to dribble into the<lb/>
spring semester. Entry<lb/>
dates are January 16 and<lb/>
January 17 with a man-<lb/>
datory team captain's<lb/>
meeting being held on<lb/>
January 19 at 7:00 p.m.<lb/>
in Biology building room<lb/>
103. Play will begin<lb/>
January 23 in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Remember, instant<lb/>
scheduling will be used so<lb/>
get those sharp shooting<lb/>
teams ready.<lb/>
Exercise With IRS<lb/>
Aerobicize: Spring<lb/>
semester Aerobic Fitness<lb/>
Classes will be offered in<lb/>
two-six week sessions.<lb/>
Registration for the first<lb/>
session will be held<lb/>
January 16-20 in<lb/>
Memorial Gym room<lb/>
204. Classes will begin on<lb/>
January 23 and end<lb/>
February 24. The cost for<lb/>
the class will be:<lb/>
Students, four dollars for<lb/>
one class-week and eight<lb/>
dollars for two classes-<lb/>
week. Faculty staff, five<lb/>
dollars for one class-week<lb/>
and ten dollars for two<lb/>
classes-week.<lb/>
Not only will the<lb/>
department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services offer aerobic<lb/>
fitness classes, but classes<lb/>
will also be offered in<lb/>
personal defense, weight<lb/>
training and aquarobics.<lb/>
The registration and cost<lb/>
will remain the same as<lb/>
the fitness classes. So<lb/>
what ever type of exercise<lb/>
fits your lifestyle, check<lb/>
out the IRS fitness<lb/>
schedule.<lb/>
A Chancellor Chase<lb/>
The race is on between<lb/>
Intramural teams com-<lb/>
petiting for the covented<lb/>
Chancellor's Trophy.<lb/>
Leaders include, the<lb/>
women's Independent<lb/>
team the Heart breakers;<lb/>
the women's Residence<lb/>
Hall team, Clement Hall<lb/>
and the Sorority leader,<lb/>
Alpha Phi. In the men's<lb/>
Residence Hall, the<lb/>
leader is Garrett Hall<lb/>
with Third Regiment in<lb/>
first place in the men's<lb/>
Independent division.<lb/>
Kappa Sigma is leading<lb/>
the Fraternity division.<lb/>
The race appears to be a<lb/>
close one, so pick your<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
WZMB A LIGHT I<lb/>
LADIES U NIGHT1<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
X-RAVES<lb/>
-FRI&amp;SAT-<lb/>
STORMZ<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
JUNIORS AND SENIORS<lb/>
EAPN OVER S1000.00 PER MONTH<lb/>
If you are a math, physics, chemistry or engineering major with d<lb/>
"P" average or better, ern over $1000.00 fer month through your<lb/>
junior and senior yearssummers included! The Navy's<lb/>
(Nuclear Propulsion Officer) Collegiate Program<lb/>
qualifier individuals. Other nenifits<lb/>
NUPOC<lb/>
is looking tor<lb/>
include:<lb/>
? $3000.00 cash bonus immediately upon acceptance into program<lb/>
 $22,000 starting salary - $40,000 after just four years<lb/>
<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
FABULOUS<lb/>
KNOBS<lb/>
MedicalDental care and many other TAX EREE benefits<lb/>
 30 days PAID annual vacation<lb/>
 1 year graduate level training<lb/>
 Immediate responsibility<lb/>
 Valuable engineering experience<lb/>
 Education benefits<lb/>
 Job security with fast promotions<lb/>
If you're interested in finding out more, see the f(avy<lb/>
Officer Programs Tan, they'll he on campus 17-10 January at the<lb/>
Placement Office. If you can't make it, send your resume or<lb/>
transcripts to:<lb/>
ROY SARVIS<lb/>
U.S. NAVY OFFICER PROGRAMS<lb/>
1001 Navaho Dr.<lb/>
Raleigh, MC 27609<lb/>
Or call 1-800-662-7231<lb/>
9am-3pm, MOW - THURS <lb/>
ionuory BlCYCl<lb/>
Tire&amp; P0S<lb/>
Tub<lb/>
Sole<lb/>
27 X1 14 Gumwall 4.95<lb/>
27 X118 Skinside 4.95<lb/>
27 X1 14 IRC 4.95<lb/>
Tubes 2.75<lb/>
Nautilus<lb/>
Fitness and Diet Control<lb/>
Center<lb/>
1984 Spring Semester Rates<lb/>
Individual-$100.00<lb/>
Group of 3 - 90.00 10discount<lb/>
Group of 5 - 85.00 15'idiscount<lb/>
THE<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
I00t EVANS STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C. I7?S4<lb/>
530 cotanche street<lb/>
Greenville, n c 27834<lb/>
757 3616<lb/>
Notice Female Students: take advantage of<lb/>
buying an individual membership and receive a<lb/>
second membership for 12 E"ce- XP- Jan- 20.<lb/>
-Call and ask about our affiliation wAerobic<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
-Our semester membership will expire May 20<lb/>
(Must bring in ad for discount)<lb/>
favorite team and follow<lb/>
the race to the end.<lb/>
Faculty and Staff, Join<lb/>
Now<lb/>
East Carolina Faculty-<lb/>
staff members are invited<lb/>
to participate in in-<lb/>
tramural activities.<lb/>
Teams for the various<lb/>
sports may consist of<lb/>
members of one depart-<lb/>
ment or other department<lb/>
members. Participation is<lb/>
limited to half time or<lb/>
more faculty or staff<lb/>
EPA-SPA employees.<lb/>
Graduate students will<lb/>
not be allowed to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the Faculty-<lb/>
Staff division.<lb/>
<lb/>
j??<lb/>
We Sell Bargains<lb/>
IN<lb/>
USED FURNITURE<lb/>
USED STEREO<lb/>
USEDT.Vs<lb/>
USED DORM REFRIG<lb/>
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Check With Us Before<lb/>
You Buy Anything<lb/>
rOitt &amp; R'NC man<lb/>
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Russell Hooded Sweatshirts<lb/>
Russell Hooded Sweatshirts<lb/>
(with E.C.U. screens)<lb/>
Long-sleeve t-shirts - $6.95 or (3 for $15)<lb/>
(with E.C.U. screens)<lb/>
Reg. $11.95 Sale $9.45<lb/>
$11.95<lb/>
SHOE-OF-THE-WEEK SPECIALS<lb/>
Asahi Men's Leather - Reg. $42.95 Sale $32.95<lb/>
Asahi Men's Canvas  25.95" 19.95<lb/>
Asahi Women's Leather- Reg $40.95 " 30.95<lb/>
Asahi Women's Canvas - " 24.95 " 18.95<lb/>
Look For Our "Shoe-of-the-week" display every week<lb/>
D.P. (Diversified Products) 110 lb. Combo.<lb/>
Dumbell &amp; barbell set (cast iron, with bar)- Reg. $79.95 Sale $69.95<lb/>
Tennis Racquets (conventional size, wooden &amp; aluminum frames) by<lb/>
Davis, Dunlop, Donnay, Spalding, Yamaha, &amp; Rossignal<lb/>
- All Racquets at cost with free cover &amp; nylon string ? also, free stringing<lb/>
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(<lb/>
<pb facs="00057614_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>