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<pb facs="00057617_0001"/>
5foe fzaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 N0vM ,<lb/>
Tuesday, January 24,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
. vwa<lb/>
Female Professors<lb/>
Earn Less Than<lb/>
Male Counterparts<lb/>
Who Are The Good Guys?<lb/>
NKIL JOMMSOM ? KCU Photc Lab<lb/>
Police officers are often the subject of much criticism for their part taking a crash course in breaking and entering. To find out whether<lb/>
in tnforcing the law. These two officers, however, seem to be thev are controlling crime or contributing to it, see POLICE, page 3.<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
ManactBg Mttor<lb/>
A survey of faculty salaries<lb/>
published last week by The<lb/>
Chronicle of Higher Education<lb/>
shows women earned 19 percent<lb/>
less nationwide than men in the<lb/>
top three college professorship<lb/>
ranks during the 1982-83<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
The survey of 2,700 colleges<lb/>
and universities by the National<lb/>
Center for Education Statistics<lb/>
revealed that the average salary<lb/>
for women professors, associate<lb/>
professors and assistant pro-<lb/>
fessors was $23,487 compared to<lb/>
$29,001 for men in the same posi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Within North Carolina, UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill paid the highest<lb/>
salaries to faculty members of all<lb/>
colleges published in the survey,<lb/>
with the average salary for a male<lb/>
full professor set at $43,000. com-<lb/>
pared to $36,400 for female full<lb/>
professors.<lb/>
Only two colleges in the state.<lb/>
Wake Forest University and<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, showed higher<lb/>
average salaries for women than<lb/>
men in full professorships.<lb/>
ECU pays an average of<lb/>
$30,500 to male full professors,<lb/>
accoruing to the survey, and<lb/>
$29,600 to women in comparable<lb/>
positions, a difference of 2.95 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
(The Department of Institu-<lb/>
tional Research at ECU, however,<lb/>
put the salaries slightly higher, at<lb/>
$32,548 for male full professors<lb/>
and $29,749 for female full pro-<lb/>
fessors, a difference of 8.6 per-<lb/>
cent. The figures are for 1982-83<lb/>
and do not include the School of<lb/>
Medicine.)<lb/>
North Carolina was ranked<lb/>
fifth lowest in the nation in<lb/>
statewide average salaries for the<lb/>
top three professorship ranks.<lb/>
Only Alabama, West Virginia,<lb/>
South Dakota and Utah had lower<lb/>
average salaries said the NCFS.<lb/>
North Carolina was, however,<lb/>
tied for fourth place in com-<lb/>
parison of male and female<lb/>
salaries, according to the study.<lb/>
Along with five other states.<lb/>
North Carolina's average salaries<lb/>
for women were 84 perceni those<lb/>
of men at the same rank. Alaska<lb/>
paid closest to equal salaries for<lb/>
men and women, with women<lb/>
paid 88 percent of the average<lb/>
male salary. Nevada and the<lb/>
District of Columbia were second<lb/>
and third, respectively.<lb/>
Lanier To Receive<lb/>
1984 Immorth Award<lb/>
ECl<lb/>
The 1984 John Phillip Immroth<lb/>
Memorial Award for Intellectual<lb/>
Freedom will be presented this<lb/>
summer in Dallas, Texas to Dr.<lb/>
Gene D. Lanier of the ECU<lb/>
library science faculty.<lb/>
The award consists of a citation<lb/>
and a cash prize and is presented<lb/>
annually during the annual con-<lb/>
ference of the American Library<lb/>
Association by the Intellectual<lb/>
Freedom Round Table.<lb/>
The award, named for immorth<lb/>
who was an author, teacher<lb/>
scholar, advocate ana defender of<lb/>
First Amendment rights, honors<lb/>
the courage, dedication and con-<lb/>
tribution of living individuals who<lb/>
have been exemplary in defending<lb/>
and furthering principles of in-<lb/>
tellectual freedom. The coveted<lb/>
award was established in 1976.<lb/>
Lanier follows author and colum-<lb/>
nist Nat Hentoff who received the<lb/>
award in 1983.<lb/>
As chairman of the Intellectual<lb/>
Freedom Committee of the North<lb/>
Carolina Library Association<lb/>
since 1980 Lanier has presented<lb/>
more than 75 papers at con-<lb/>
ferences, professional and civic<lb/>
meetings in the Southeast concer-<lb/>
ning the threat of library censor-<lb/>
ship and the individual's right to<lb/>
read, view and listen.<lb/>
A former president of NCLA,<lb/>
he was appointed by Gov. James<lb/>
B. Hunt Jr. to serve on the State<lb/>
Library committee and by the<lb/>
N.C. Speaker of the House to the<lb/>
Study Committee on Obscenity<lb/>
Laws.<lb/>
Dr. Lanier is a native of Con-<lb/>
way, North Carolina and holds<lb/>
degrees from ECU and the<lb/>
Universitv of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill.<lb/>
During his tenure he also has<lb/>
received the Hugh M. Hefner<lb/>
First Amendment Award in<lb/>
education, presented to him last<lb/>
year by the Playboy Foundation,<lb/>
and the Mary Peacock Douglas<lb/>
Award by the N.C. Association of<lb/>
School Librarians for his efforts.<lb/>
Lanier's career has also includ-<lb/>
ed high school teaching, a term as<lb/>
counterintelligence specialist in<lb/>
Western Europe, several universi-<lb/>
ty library posts as well as visiting<lb/>
Discussion On Faculty Salaries Increases<lb/>
Professors Not Satisfied<lb/>
Gene Lanier<lb/>
professor at UNC-Chapel Hill.<lb/>
He was chairman of the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Library Science at ECU<lb/>
from 1966 to 1981 and has served<lb/>
as consultant to over 50 libraries<lb/>
across the state.<lb/>
He currently is also serving on<lb/>
the Intellectual Freedom Commit-<lb/>
tee of the Southeastern Library<lb/>
Association, as parliamentarian<lb/>
and member of the Research<lb/>
Grants Committee of the N.C.<lb/>
Advisory Council of People for<lb/>
the American Way. He also co-<lb/>
taught an honors seminar in the<lb/>
ECU Honors Program last year<lb/>
on literary censorship.<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
?MVSMtai<lb/>
iiccause ot a resolution passed<lb/>
by the Board of Trustees at<lb/>
N.C.State Uuniversity concerning<lb/>
faculty salary inequities in the<lb/>
UNC System, discussion of the<lb/>
topic has increased, particularly at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The resolution passed by the<lb/>
NCSU board deplored the ap-<lb/>
parent structural inequality in the<lb/>
salary system, which pays UNC-<lb/>
CH professors an avearage of<lb/>
seven percent more than NCSU<lb/>
professors, although both schools<lb/>
are ranked as equal by the<lb/>
American Association of Univer-<lb/>
sity Professors (AAUP) as<lb/>
doctorate-level institutions.<lb/>
The UNC system uses AAUP<lb/>
standards to set salaries. The<lb/>
AAUP divides universities in<lb/>
North Carolina into six<lb/>
catergories, with UNC-CH and<lb/>
NCSU in the highest category and<lb/>
ECU in the second division.<lb/>
Many ECU professors are<lb/>
dissatisfied because they claim<lb/>
they are paid salaries no higher<lb/>
than faculty in schools of a lower<lb/>
category. "There is a vast institu-<lb/>
tional discrimination said<lb/>
former ECU Faculty Senate<lb/>
Chairman Henry Ferrell of the<lb/>
Department of History, "which<lb/>
allows some schools sucl as UNC-<lb/>
Asheville, which doesn't even<lb/>
have masters programs, to<lb/>
grant salaries that are nearly<lb/>
that of ours He added, "Friday<lb/>
(President of the UNC system)<lb/>
and the Board of Governors want<lb/>
Carolina to be the flagship of the<lb/>
fleet, which is fine, but we should<lb/>
be paid according to our stan-<lb/>
dards<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, ECU vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs,<lb/>
also voiced concern. "Over the<lb/>
past few years, when we had<lb/>
double-digit inflation, salary in-<lb/>
creases simply didn't keep up<lb/>
Volpe said.<lb/>
The topic is expected to be<lb/>
discussed at today's meeting of<lb/>
the Faculty Senate, which will be<lb/>
held in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center room 244 at 2:15 p.m.<lb/>
Night Transit Service To Resume<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Co-New tAllot<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Style10<lb/>
Sports13<lb/>
Classifieds16<lb/>
? Terry Long talks of plans<lb/>
to finish school before joining<lb/>
the National Football League.<lb/>
See page 11.<lb/>
? Black playwright's tale of<lb/>
social injustice in North<lb/>
Carolina is chronicled in his<lb/>
play Home, page 8.<lb/>
? See the new Mick LaSaile<lb/>
advice column on page 10.<lb/>
? The Lady Pirates rallied to<lb/>
defeat ASU 63-51. See page 11<lb/>
for more details.<lb/>
? The Kevex Corporation of<lb/>
California donates state-of-<lb/>
the-art technology to the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine. See story,<lb/>
pageS.<lb/>
? The latest recording ef-<lb/>
forts by Cyndi Lauper and<lb/>
The Pretenders are reviewed in<lb/>
a special feature la the Enter-<lb/>
tainment Section. See page 9.<lb/>
Naso Claims UNC-ASG<lb/>
Shares Ideas, Problems<lb/>
The University of North<lb/>
Carolina Association of Student<lb/>
Governments is the strongest it<lb/>
has ever been, said SGA President<lb/>
Paul Naso after attending a<lb/>
meeting at UNC-Asheville Friday<lb/>
through Sunday.<lb/>
The UNCASG consists of stu-<lb/>
dent government presidents from<lb/>
each of the sixteen universities in<lb/>
the UNC system.<lb/>
It usually meets once a month<lb/>
to discuss policy and to "share<lb/>
ideas, struggles, dreams and<lb/>
goals according to Naso.<lb/>
Nine presidents attended the<lb/>
meeting and 11 schools were<lb/>
represented. Together, these<lb/>
presidents represent over 100,000<lb/>
students. "It sort of overwhelms<lb/>
you when you think you're<lb/>
representing so many students and<lb/>
their concerns Naso said.<lb/>
A new computer network has<lb/>
made communication between the<lb/>
schools easier. "Our biggest pro-<lb/>
blem is communication, both on<lb/>
the state level and between the<lb/>
president and constituents Naso<lb/>
said. The network should make<lb/>
communication more efficient he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The presidents are working to<lb/>
promote attendance at meetings<lb/>
The SGA Night Transit bus ser-<lb/>
vice will resume operation again<lb/>
this week with funds provided by<lb/>
the SGA. During Monday night's<lb/>
SGA meeting, $1,900 was ap-<lb/>
propriated to fund the service<lb/>
which had recently gone<lb/>
bankrupt.<lb/>
Initial funding for the Night<lb/>
Transit service came from the<lb/>
SGA Refrigerator Rental Fund.<lb/>
However, when that fund was ex-<lb/>
hausted, the bus service discon-<lb/>
tinued operations. Service will<lb/>
resume again Friday, but on a<lb/>
limited basis.<lb/>
According to SGA Transit<lb/>
Manager Bill Hilliard, there will<lb/>
only be one bus operating and it<lb/>
will only run on Friday and Satur-<lb/>
day nights between 10 p.m. and 1<lb/>
a.m. The bus will stop at College<lb/>
Hill, Cannon Court, Eastbrook,<lb/>
River Bluff, Kings Row, and<lb/>
Village Green.<lb/>
One of the largest costs<lb/>
associated with operating the<lb/>
Night Transit Service is the cost of<lb/>
security for the buses. Director of<lb/>
Security Joseph Calder said the<lb/>
Department of Public Safety will<lb/>
cover the cost of security for the<lb/>
remainder of the semester.<lb/>
A bill proposing an increase in<lb/>
student fees of $1 per student was<lb/>
presented by SGA President Paul<lb/>
Naso. The increase would be used<lb/>
to fund the Night Transit Service<lb/>
in the future and any surplus<lb/>
would be used to help fund a pro-<lb/>
posed computerization of the<lb/>
SGA. The bill was sent to the Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare and Appropriations<lb/>
Committee for further study.<lb/>
Naso also presented a report on<lb/>
the meeting of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina Association of<lb/>
Student Governments he recently<lb/>
attended (see story this page).<lb/>
Also at the SGA meeting Monday<lb/>
night, Kirk Shelley was elected<lb/>
Speaker of the House to replace<lb/>
Chris Townsend who resigned last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Paul Naso<lb/>
and increase student awareness of<lb/>
the organization. Naso is chair-<lb/>
man of the Publicity and<lb/>
Awareness Committee.<lb/>
The UNCASG is currently in<lb/>
the process of expanding to in-<lb/>
clude a legislative assembly. This<lb/>
should give students a more viable<lb/>
voice, Naso said.<lb/>
Also attending the meeting were<lb/>
Mark Niewald, president of the<lb/>
Student Residence Association;<lb/>
David Whitley and Musette Steck<lb/>
from WZMB; Jimmie Hackett,<lb/>
president of SOULS; Sarah<lb/>
Coburn, SGA secretary; and Jim<lb/>
Ensor, an SGA legislator.<lb/>
MBIL JOHNSON ? BCU<lb/>
Robert G. Crounce works with ECU'S new Ultra-trace 0600. The equipment was donated to the<lb/>
Medical School hy Kevex Corp. See EQUIPMENT oa pate 3.<lb/>
 <lb/>
 ? a- -J?- m<lb/>
???. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
unct ?<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday during the academic<lb/>
vear and every Wednesday dur<lb/>
? ng the summer<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the of<lb/>
f'ciai newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned,<lb/>
operated and published tor and<lb/>
by me students of East Carolina<lb/>
University<lb/>
subscription Rate M yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices<lb/>
are located in the OM South<lb/>
Building on the campus of ECU,<lb/>
Oreenvllte, NX<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address<lb/>
changes to The East Carolinian.<lb/>
Ola South Building, ECU Green<lb/>
Vlllt NC 2734<lb/>
Telephone '57-43. M7, 30?<lb/>
TURN USON<lb/>
The Tenms Shoe Talk show air<lb/>
each Tuesday and Thursday at 2 30<lb/>
and 5 30 p m on FM ?1 3 This show<lb/>
features participants interviews and<lb/>
s designed to keep the intramural<lb/>
participant up to date on the latest In<lb/>
intramural action Remember, Turn<lb/>
os gn The Tennis Shoe Talk Show<lb/>
COMPUTERS<lb/>
The East Carolina Microcomputer<lb/>
I sers Group (ECMUGi win hold a<lb/>
specai meeting fo elect new officers<lb/>
on Thursday Jan 26 at 7 30 p m in<lb/>
room 248 Menaenhall Student<lb/>
Center AH members m good standing<lb/>
are urgeo to attend<lb/>
PHI BETA SIGMA<lb/>
The Brothers of the Xi Nu Chapter<lb/>
-t the Phi Beta Sigma Fraternity inc<lb/>
sre having their formal Smoker on<lb/>
esoav January 24. at I 00 p m In<lb/>
fenoenhaM Student Center room<lb/>
221 We invite all young men who<lb/>
?vant to be acquainted the new<lb/>
jeoera'ion to be there<lb/>
HYPNOSIS<lb/>
Do you really know what it Is?<lb/>
Came firto out on Feb 1 at 7 30 p m In<lb/>
Speight 129 Dr Daugherty gives an<lb/>
teresting and exciting talk Who<lb/>
r?ows he might even hypnotize you!<lb/>
p? Chi Rush Did you miss it last<lb/>
? n ' ve'l don t let it pass you by<lb/>
semester To qualify you must<lb/>
iave completed 8 hours in psychology<lb/>
. ? dose o the spring semester if<lb/>
. ou are a sophomore you must have<lb/>
Si east a 2 70. a junior 2 70 and a<lb/>
senior 2 93 So, if you qualify, pick<lb/>
jp our application in the Psi Chi<lb/>
brary ana loin the National Honor<lb/>
Society in Psychology<lb/>
es Chi Scholarships art now<lb/>
?vaiacie To qualify tor the Wray<lb/>
?no Prevett Scholarships, in order of<lb/>
-importance are You must be a<lb/>
?nem&amp;er of Ps Chi You must be con<lb/>
tinumg at ECU for at least the follow<lb/>
ng semester Preference goes to<lb/>
Psychology maior or a graduate stu<lb/>
jerri n Psychology You must be an<lb/>
active Tjmmr of Psi Chi and<lb/>
aemonstrate a financial need<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE<lb/>
ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are naedad from those<lb/>
persons who are interested In becom<lb/>
'ng Paraonal Care Attendants to<lb/>
wheelchair students We are par<lb/>
tlcularly Interested In anyone who<lb/>
has a background of assisting in<lb/>
dlvlduals wm their activities of dally<lb/>
living<lb/>
For further details, contact Office<lb/>
of Handicapped Student Services. 212<lb/>
Whlchard Building, Phone 757 A7V9<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
Approximately 115 lobs are<lb/>
available in this program Pay is<lb/>
13 73hr for full time positions<lb/>
Beginning June 1 August 10. 1994<lb/>
Students must have finished tnelr<lb/>
sophomore year and have a 3 5 GPA<lb/>
Graduate students are also eligible to<lb/>
apply Application deadline Is<lb/>
February 7 Interested students<lb/>
should contact the Coop office, 313<lb/>
Raw' Bldg . If Interested Details<lb/>
about this program will be presented<lb/>
at our regular Coop seminars<lb/>
scheduled for January 11 from 13<lb/>
noon to 1 PnA and January 12 from 4 5<lb/>
PM In 306 Rawl Bldg<lb/>
ROLLER HOCKEY<lb/>
Reglstrsation for intramural roller<lb/>
hockey will be held January 23 and 24<lb/>
This activity utilizes 3 men and 3<lb/>
women Play will begin January 30 at<lb/>
Sportsworld Registration for roller<lb/>
hockey Jan 23 and 24. Memorial Gym<lb/>
room 204<lb/>
WORKSHOP<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service In the Bloxton House Is<lb/>
offering these one hour sessions to aid<lb/>
you In developing better Interviewing<lb/>
for use in your lob search A film and<lb/>
discussion of how to interview<lb/>
through this service win be shared<lb/>
Each session win be held in the<lb/>
Career Planning Room at 3 p m<lb/>
Come on any of the following dates<lb/>
Jan 17, 23, or 31<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
Feb 14 Dance Factory. Short Novel<lb/>
Masterpieces and Conversational<lb/>
German. Feb 31 Camera and<lb/>
Guitar Contact Continuing Educa<lb/>
tion. Erwin Hall<lb/>
MICROWAVE OVEN<lb/>
TESTING AVAILABLE<lb/>
The ECU Student National En<lb/>
vironmentai Health Association<lb/>
(SNEHA) is providing a microwave<lb/>
oven testing service to the residents<lb/>
of Greenville and surrounding areas<lb/>
if you art concerned about the safety<lb/>
of your oven or are merely cur.ouS<lb/>
call to set up an appointment anct a<lb/>
representative will come out. check<lb/>
your oven for microwave leaks and<lb/>
answer any questions you might<lb/>
have Appointments can be made by<lb/>
calling the ECU Department of En<lb/>
vironmentai Health office at 757 6961<lb/>
ext 237 between I 00 am and 5 00<lb/>
p m Monday through Friday A 13 00<lb/>
donation is requested to help support<lb/>
this ana other SNEHA service ac<lb/>
tlvlties<lb/>
ILLUMINA<lb/>
The Student Union and the Art Ex<lb/>
hlbltlon Committee Invites all ECU<lb/>
Students to enter the 19?4 lllumlna<lb/>
Art Competition Works will be ac<lb/>
cepted from 12 6 p m on Friday.<lb/>
February 3, 19U4 In Room 34 of<lb/>
Mendenha Student Center The en<lb/>
tries are $3 00 per piece with a limit of<lb/>
three entries per artist Awards con<lb/>
sist of Best In Show 1300 00. First<lb/>
Place S300 00. Second Place $150 00,<lb/>
Third Place 1100 00, and Honorable<lb/>
Mentions $35 00 lllumlna Come ex<lb/>
perlence It<lb/>
MARKETING MAJORS<lb/>
The American Marketing Associa<lb/>
tion will hold Its first meeting of the<lb/>
spring semester Tues , Jan 34 at 3:00<lb/>
p m In 130 Rawl Dr Edward<lb/>
Wheatley will speak on "Marketing<lb/>
Yourself " All recently accepted<lb/>
Business malors and present<lb/>
members are urged to attend Come<lb/>
out and be a part of your organize<lb/>
tion<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
The East Carolina Mens Rugby<lb/>
Team will have its first team meeting<lb/>
Tues , Jan 34th to discuss spring<lb/>
schedule and Ft Lauderdale Tourna<lb/>
ment The meeting will be in the base<lb/>
ment of Memorial Gym at 6 00 p m<lb/>
Anyone wishing to play this season is<lb/>
urged to attend Newcomers are<lb/>
welcome Call Wayne 752 80-41 or Bob<lb/>
by 752 8716 tor more info Practice<lb/>
starts Feb 7<lb/>
INTERN PROGRAM<lb/>
The NC institute of Government<lb/>
Summer Internf rogram 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/>
tact the Coop office, 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building to apply<lb/>
ECONOMICS<lb/>
The School of Home Economics Is<lb/>
initiating a weekly seminar on<lb/>
Wednesdays 4 00 5 00 p m Room<lb/>
248 Home Economics Building We ;n<lb/>
vite you to attend and participate<lb/>
The Series will be kicked off by Dr<lb/>
Carolyn Lackey North Carolina<lb/>
State University She will discuss<lb/>
-esearch on Pica Behavior of Preg<lb/>
lant Women Dr Lackey prepared<lb/>
this material for a National Academy<lb/>
of Scences Committee on Alternative<lb/>
Dietary Practices and Nuturional<lb/>
Abuses in Pregnancy<lb/>
Other scheduled seminars include<lb/>
Feb 8 Victorian Houses in Dunn.<lb/>
North Carolina. Dr Patricia Rice<lb/>
Clothing and Housing Feb 15<lb/>
Children and Divorce. Dr Jane<lb/>
Teleki. Child Development ana Farm<lb/>
ly Relation Fat) 22 Experimental<lb/>
Techniques in Fish Nutr:tion. Dr<lb/>
Margie Gallagher Food. Nutrition<lb/>
and institution Management. Mar 4<lb/>
Gastric By Pass. Dr Evelyn Settle<lb/>
Food Nutrition and Institution<lb/>
Management Mar 21 To be an<lb/>
nounced Dr Vicki Berger Cloth ng<lb/>
and Housing Mar 28, Liquid Reduc<lb/>
totg Diets, Ms Janet Bryan. Food.<lb/>
Nutrition and Institution Manage<lb/>
ment<lb/>
EVENTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee will meet on Tuesday.<lb/>
Jan 24, at 5 15 p.m In the Coffehouse<lb/>
of Mendenhall Student Center. All<lb/>
members and Interested students are<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Place<lb/>
ment Service In the Bloxton House is<lb/>
offering one hour sessions to help you<lb/>
prepare your own resume Few<lb/>
graduates get ubs without some<lb/>
preparation Many employers re<lb/>
quest resume showing your educa<lb/>
tion and experience. Sessions to help<lb/>
will be held In the Career Planning<lb/>
Room at 3 p.m. Come on any of me<lb/>
following dates January 16, 34, or 30<lb/>
CAN YOU MEET THE<lb/>
CHALLENGE<lb/>
We have received the Federal Sum<lb/>
mer Job Booklet in our office if you<lb/>
art interested, please come to the Co<lb/>
op office, 313 Rawl Bldg as soon as<lb/>
possible Many of the deadlines are In<lb/>
lr very near future Students with<lb/>
less than a 35 GPA have only a<lb/>
slim" chance of being chosen We<lb/>
will be happy to help yov complete<lb/>
and mail required forms<lb/>
PARKS &amp; RECREATION<lb/>
NC Parks and Recreation offers<lb/>
employment opportunities for<lb/>
seasonal employees for the period of<lb/>
approximately June 1 through Labor<lb/>
Day Applicants must agree to report<lb/>
back to duty for the Labor Day<lb/>
weekend to be considered This Is a<lb/>
condition of employment A variety of<lb/>
positions are available Application<lb/>
deadline is March 15. 1984 Apply at<lb/>
the Coop office. 313 Rawl Building<lb/>
SUMMER CAMP<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT<lb/>
its surnmer 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 n<lb/>
terested m 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, rlflery,<lb/>
nature lore horseback riding, sports<lb/>
and other areas<lb/>
These positions will provide<lb/>
valuable work, experience and salary<lb/>
Some jobs i involve working with<lb/>
handicapped campers<lb/>
Job information is available in the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office. 313<lb/>
Rawl Bldg<lb/>
Summer Camp Employment Day is<lb/>
sponsored by the following offices<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Cooperative Education Counseling<lb/>
Center Handicapped Student Ser<lb/>
vices Program for Hearing imparied<lb/>
Students, and Parks, Recreation and<lb/>
Conservation<lb/>
Contact the Cooperative Education<lb/>
Office, 313 Rawl Bldg Telephone<lb/>
757 6979 or 757 6375 immediately to<lb/>
arrange interviews<lb/>
AED<lb/>
Alpha Epsllon Delta, ECU prm<lb/>
medical society, will meat on Tues<lb/>
day, Jan 34 at 7 30 p.m In Flanagan<lb/>
307 Or Frank Thomas, Dept of<lb/>
Surgery at ECU Medical School, will<lb/>
speak about Transplants There will<lb/>
be a meeting for all pledges at 7:15<lb/>
p m on January 34 to discuss impor<lb/>
tant Information. All members and<lb/>
Interested guests are encouraged to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
BACKPACKING<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation is sponsoring a<lb/>
backpacking workshop on Wednes<lb/>
day Jan. 35, at 7 00 8 00 p m. The<lb/>
meeting will be in Memorial Gym<lb/>
Room 102 The topic will be "How to<lb/>
pack a pack" and will cover selecting<lb/>
a pack, equipment needed, weight<lb/>
distribution and much more Both<lb/>
cold and warm weather camping will<lb/>
be covered This presentation Is ex<lb/>
cellent for beginning and In<lb/>
termediate campers For further in<lb/>
formation call John Sauage at<lb/>
757 6911 Mon &amp; Frl 15, Tues 8.<lb/>
Thurs. 3-4.<lb/>
SNCAE<lb/>
The Student North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Educators will meet<lb/>
Tuesday. Jan 24, at 4 p m In Speight<lb/>
129 Mr wolford Thomas, Regional<lb/>
Representative of NCAE, will ad<lb/>
dress the benefits of SNCAE<lb/>
membership, Membership appllca<lb/>
tions will be available AH members<lb/>
and Interested students are encourag<lb/>
ed to attend<lb/>
OUTDOOR EQUIPMENT<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
To All Backpackers, campers.<lb/>
Rock Climbers, Sailors, canoers,<lb/>
Rapellors and outdoor enthusiasts<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center m 113<lb/>
Memorial Gym is now providing a<lb/>
sen and swap board This is an ex<lb/>
cellent opportunity for you to bty<lb/>
more equipment To find out more<lb/>
stop by 113 or call John Sauage at<lb/>
757 6911 between 1 5 on Mon &amp; Frl<lb/>
Tues &amp; Thurs 2 4<lb/>
DON'T BE LEFT BEHIND<lb/>
use the CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
LmimimmimiWiimiWiH<lb/>
Hiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiitiniiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiuiiiiiiiiiniiiiii'<lb/>
Art- you concerned with "lift iftei th assi<lb/>
it and get involved: Complete this form . . .today!<lb/>
? ? wit!<lb/>
a Art Exhibition<lb/>
? Coffeehouse<lb/>
a Special Events<lb/>
Committee Choices<lb/>
?ilm<lb/>
a Major Attracti<lb/>
a I ravel<lb/>
a Minority Art<lb/>
Spei : i<lb/>
STUDENT UNION APPLICATION FOR COMMITTEE MEMBER<lb/>
Vou should be notified by the chairperson in about a month If you are not notified in 30 days pleas? inquire All applications should be<lb/>
turned into Room 234 in Mendenhall Student Canter Committee choices ara listed above<lb/>
?. , ? <lb/>
Local Address<lb/>
Class  Grade Point Average Maior<lb/>
Local Phone<lb/>
1 What committeersi are you applying for?<lb/>
2 What previous work lit any have you had in the field of entertainment?<lb/>
3 Have you lad any eipenence m advertising &amp; publicity' If so explain<lb/>
4 Why are you seeking this position?<lb/>
5 What time will you most likely be reached (if you have a phonel'<lb/>
6 Are there any other statements that you would like to make that might be relevant to your seeking committee membership'<lb/>
Rush Tonight<lb/>
Sigma<lb/>
Phi<lb/>
Epsilon<lb/>
Tues. 24th Casino Night 8:00 - 11:00<lb/>
Wed. 25th Informal Smoker 8:00 - 11:00<lb/>
505 East Fifth Street<lb/>
Across Art Building &amp; Garrett Dorm<lb/>
For Information or Ride<lb/>
Qll 752-2941 or 752-6502<lb/>
CATCH THE RUSH BUS!<lb/>
RUSH PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
The Brothers and Little Sisters of<lb/>
PI kappa Phi Fraternity would like to<lb/>
Invite all interested men to our house<lb/>
all this week for RUSH Monday night<lb/>
we have "Game Room and Pliia<lb/>
Night Tuesday night "Pig Picking<lb/>
and Bon Fire Night" and Wednesday<lb/>
night Is "Casino Night " Come by the<lb/>
house with me lake on Hooked Road<lb/>
and see why you should RUSH Pi<lb/>
Kapp All parties begin at 8 00 p m<lb/>
Buses will run from I 1 p m if you<lb/>
miss the bus call the house for a ride<lb/>
(754 153) Come out and meet the Pi<lb/>
Kapps.<lb/>
WRESTLING<lb/>
Intramural Arm Wrestling sign up<lb/>
begins on Monday, Jan 30 31 Co<lb/>
sponsered by Budweiser, this activity<lb/>
will be held in the lobby of Memorial<lb/>
Gym T shirts will be given to eacn<lb/>
participant Sign up by weight<lb/>
classification Remember registra<lb/>
tion for Arm Wrestling will be Jan<lb/>
30-31<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student union AM E?hioition<lb/>
Committee will meet on Tuesdar<lb/>
Jan 24. at 4 p m in room 241 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center All<lb/>
Members and interested students are<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
EPISCOPAL WORSHIP<lb/>
A student Episcopal service of Holy<lb/>
Communion win be celebrated on<lb/>
Tuesday evening, Jan 24 in the<lb/>
chapel of St Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church, 406 4th St (one block from<lb/>
Garrett Dormi The service will be at<lb/>
5 30 p m with the Episcopal<lb/>
Chaplain, the Rev B'll Hadoen.<lb/>
Celebrating<lb/>
ORIENTATION<lb/>
The Office of the Assoc ate Dean<lb/>
Orien'atlon and Jud'Oary ocated m<lb/>
Whichard Budding, room 210, is now<lb/>
taking applications for the Summer<lb/>
Program of New Student Or .entat on<lb/>
PRC<lb/>
Hey all you PRC club memoers<lb/>
come out to our first meeting of the<lb/>
semester Tuesday, Jan 24. at 7 30<lb/>
pm In room 24 Mendenhall WewiH<lb/>
be taking orders tor T shirts setting<lb/>
up new committees hav ng a mini<lb/>
workshop and refreshments See rou<lb/>
there<lb/>
INTER VARSITY<lb/>
At Infer varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship Wednesday night, we w II<lb/>
hear someone speak on Winning the<lb/>
Battle With Temptation " Come to<lb/>
Jenkins Auditorium at 6 30 c m so<lb/>
you can learn how to win four pat<lb/>
tiesl<lb/>
BIBLE DISCUSSIONS<lb/>
Let's get back to te Bible1 Coed<lb/>
Group Bible Discussions Mendenhall<lb/>
212. Tuesday. 7 X p m Everyone<lb/>
Welcome<lb/>
MAJOR ATTRACTIONS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Maior At"sc<lb/>
tions Comm-ttee win meet on<lb/>
Wednesday Ja 25 a1 5 15 p W n<lb/>
room 212 of MenoenhaM Student<lb/>
Center All memoers and "itrn'tc<lb/>
students are encoc-ager' to attend<lb/>
SCUBA DIVING<lb/>
Dive the Bahamas jnrj the uma<lb/>
is.ands seven days on the 65' dive<lb/>
boat "Bottom Time includes 3<lb/>
mea's. lodgmg ano d'vmg Ply from<lb/>
Ft Lauderdale to Nassau For<lb/>
registration ana informs'on ca" Ra?<lb/>
Scharf. Director of Aquatics at<lb/>
757 6441 or 756 9339 Total cost J66C DC<lb/>
includes a $100 00 non reundabie<lb/>
leoosit<lb/>
CONCERTS COMMITTEE<lb/>
-he - on SpecialConcarti<lb/>
Con? ftaa meal an jtvra,<lb/>
Jan 24 a' 5 30 p m n 'oom 347 o<lb/>
Mendenhai Student Center A<lb/>
member anc nltrested student! era<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
MINI SERIES<lb/>
A two part mmi series offeree a'<lb/>
NO COST by the Counseling Center<lb/>
How to succeed in college and tttl<lb/>
have tun, Monday, Jan 30 from 4 5<lb/>
p m and 'How to avO'd test<lb/>
anxiety, Tuesday, Jan 31 Iron ?<lb/>
p m Both sessions win be conouctec<lb/>
n 305 Wright Anne 75' 666<lb/>
Advance Registration Necessar<lb/>
KAPPA DELTA<lb/>
kappa Delta Sorority .n. ?es a<lb/>
ECU women interested In G'e?? H<lb/>
to attend a S more rush pe<lb/>
Tuesday Jan 31. from Up-<lb/>
ndes or more information ca<lb/>
75 33S6<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There win 0 a meeting of the Ca"<lb/>
Pus Alcohol " Drug P'ogran-<lb/>
26 at 3 00 p m ,n Erw ?- Ma<lb/>
' a ' ng Of counselors " Creg -<lb/>
All interested person 8'e nvlted ??<lb/>
attend<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of NAACP <lb/>
hold its first meeting or yveonesda.<lb/>
January 25, at 5 00 p m -<lb/>
feehouse of Menaenna<lb/>
Center Everyone 'S we  - ?<lb/>
tend'<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
If you or your orgar- r?-<lb/>
would like to hav an 'en-<lb/>
printed the announce? ?-?<lb/>
column, please type t on an a<lb/>
nouncement torn ann wnrj ? ?<lb/>
The East Carolm a- - . -<lb/>
the produc?,on manage'<lb/>
Announrei-ne Forms art<lb/>
available a' the EaV 1<lb/>
oft ce n the Put<lb/>
B d ng F .e's ac ha ? -<lb/>
ten copv or, 00c s ted paper ;a-<lb/>
no? be iz;eptec<lb/>
" ha dead ne<lb/>
hOuncen-en'l 1 3 pm<lb/>
or the Tuesday cape'<lb/>
: m Aednesdar lor -if -<lb/>
ay paper<lb/>
DEADLINE: January 27, 1984<lb/>
J?'rJ ?'?' ' M111M111M H M MIMIM1M M MIM11M M i 1H M M M M n 11M i M M M MIU M M11U U U11M11H11 i i M M 1 i 111M r iM M M M11 11 i M ff If U1111 i 1! i IU! 11; M E n: M111M M MI)! 1111! fT<lb/>
CLASSIFIED ADS j<lb/>
You rnay use the form at right i<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 i<lb/>
ana work space counts as one i<lb/>
unit Capitalize ano hyphenate <lb/>
words properly Leave space i<lb/>
at end of line it word doesn't fit<lb/>
No ads will be accepted over <lb/>
the phone We reserve the right i<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 pm the day <lb/>
before publication j<lb/>
Name<lb/>
Address<lb/>
'it State<lb/>
No. Lines.<lb/>
.Za.<lb/>
Bfaaae<lb/>
? m pa baa I.<lb/>
.No<lb/>
d<lb/>
4???ii?i1- ? ?f? ?.<lb/>
? ? ???f?????i???<lb/>
 l?XL?i.<lb/>
' f t I t ' 1 1 t I 1<lb/>
it ' ! ' j I t<lb/>
t? t, "??-??1?I??j?t?4 ? 1<lb/>
??<lb/>
II I 1 i ! i I<lb/>
J1-1f "1fJ"T1 1 j?"?r-1<lb/>
?I11j111j1hj i ?'<lb/>
?H?i 14H?1 t t<lb/>
1?i?1?I?i?l?1?i?11ii1I1tiltLJ<lb/>
?-i???1?'?t.??1? 4 f<lb/>
? ? r tIff <lb/>
"H<lb/>
44<lb/>
Lowest TV Rental<lb/>
Prices In Town!<lb/>
Now Selling Telephone Equipment<lb/>
WEDNESDAY<lb/>
 SPECIAL<lb/>
FOUR (4) Tacos<lb/>
for iust M.39<lb/>
Not Good With Any Other Special<lb/>
?? 2.2i for a Pitcher of Beer -<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
fC0<lb/>
?10<lb/>
Feista Time<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
5:00 until<lb/>
Something That You Will<lb/>
Always Treasure!<lb/>
JCT8.<lb/>
Your Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
Date: J?n. 24&amp; 25 Time: 9:00-4:00pm<lb/>
Place; Student Supply Store - Wright Building<lb/>
HERFF JONES<lb/>
WmkWm O CaViaf0A c?<lb/>
sJt ?" "V   '<lb/>
flf i?- a ?<lb/>
 s f "<lb/>
? JafHwi?<lb/>
Equ<lb/>
?<lb/>
A Westoast mai<lb/>
sophisticated ek<lb/>
ment has donated om<lb/>
units to the EC<lb/>
Medicine so rese<lb/>
plore additional apt<lb/>
this technology to<lb/>
biomedicai resea-<lb/>
The device,<lb/>
ice 0600. wai d ?<lb/>
Corp. o- tcr<lb/>
<lb/>
the market valu?<lb/>
range '<lb/>
The Ultra<lb/>
cess know<lb/>
Police Bi<lb/>
C<lb/>
B TINA MAR'<lb/>
Repor<lb/>
ment<lb/>
rime at EC I<lb/>
lA(<lb/>
rep<lb/>
Edding<lb/>
?<lb/>
: . ?<lb/>
Ke<lb/>
m. ? 1<lb/>
a<lb/>
Jan. t<lb/>
wa<lb/>
'mitor-<lb/>
Had-<lb/>
10<lb/>
cheel<lb/>
Jar "<lb/>
ident .?<lb/>
reported re.<lb/>
phone calls. 15<lb/>
cle at VChne dorr<lb/>
12 30 a.m. ? Levi I<lb/>
Leroy Harris. va.s<lb/>
felonious entrv and I<lb/>
f<lb/>
TheEi<lb/>
<lb/>
Avar<lb/>
- <lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24. 1984<lb/>
MINI SERIES<lb/>
1 v M w'eeo at<lb/>
-?? HH COWftM g Cente<lb/>
?H -v aio JMI<lb/>
V . . ? 4 -<lb/>
1 low ? ? W<lb/>
?. a  from 3 4<lb/>
I w?s ons wtli Cm ? -<lb/>
APPA DELTA<lb/>
- - i ??? r<lb/>
tti oa'tv<lb/>
? - - Foi<lb/>
 .?<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
?eg -<lb/>
? . PO ro<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
s<lb/>
" Co<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
ISOL. ,CEMENTS<lb/>
ttnc<lb/>
I art<lb/>
?<lb/>
? tm - ?<lb/>
-?? - can<lb/>
Md ? ?<lb/>
.woe. cac arte 3<lb/>
fttt<lb/>
,Pkm?.<lb/>
? <lb/>
??<lb/>
?-<lb/>
?f?H<lb/>
Id ay<lb/>
AL<lb/>
Tacos<lb/>
$1.39<lb/>
ier Special<lb/>
ista Time<lb/>
Everyday<lb/>
:00 until<lb/>
ure!<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
a'<lb/>
lg<lb/>
<lb/>
Equipment Donated To ECU Med School<lb/>
ECVNr-i<lb/>
A West Coast manufacturer of<lb/>
sophisticated electronic equip-<lb/>
ment has donated one of its major<lb/>
units to the ECU School of<lb/>
Medicine so researchers may ex-<lb/>
plore additional applications of<lb/>
this technology to medicine and<lb/>
biomedical research.<lb/>
The device, called an Ultra-<lb/>
trace 0600, was donated by Kevex<lb/>
Corp. of Forter City, Calif.<lb/>
Medical school officials e timate<lb/>
the market value of the unit in the<lb/>
range of $130,000.<lb/>
The Ultra-trace 0600 uses a pro-<lb/>
cess known as X-ray fluorescence<lb/>
Police Blotter<lb/>
spectroscopy to analyze the<lb/>
elemental composition of virtually<lb/>
any material. The technique has<lb/>
been used for a number of years in<lb/>
such fields as geology and<lb/>
metallurgy, where bulk samples<lb/>
are analyzed to identify the com-<lb/>
ponents of, for instance, mining<lb/>
ore.<lb/>
"We're planning to explore the<lb/>
application of this kind of<lb/>
analytic technology to the<lb/>
biomedical sciences said<lb/>
medical school spokesman Dr.<lb/>
Robert G. Crcunse. He added<lb/>
that the studies will represent "a<lb/>
new area" of research.<lb/>
In turn, the scientists will report<lb/>
on their experience with the Ultra-<lb/>
trace 0600 to the Kevex Corpora-<lb/>
tion, providing feedback the com-<lb/>
pany will use in product develop-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
Crounse called the donation<lb/>
"an excellent example of co-<lb/>
operation between industry and<lb/>
academic medicine<lb/>
"This was only the second in-<lb/>
strument donated by Kevex to an<lb/>
institution related to biomedicine<lb/>
in the United States, so we're ex-<lb/>
tremely fortunate Crounse said.<lb/>
The donation was arranged<lb/>
through Dr. Selig R. Gellert of<lb/>
Kevex by Crounse and Dr. John<lb/>
R. Bray, director of the medical<lb/>
Campus Crime Low<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Co-Nrwi Editor<lb/>
Reports from the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Public Safety reveal that<lb/>
crime at ECU is about average so<lb/>
far this year. Francis Eddings,<lb/>
assistant director for police ser-<lb/>
vices, said the number of campus<lb/>
crimes varies from week to week.<lb/>
"According to the number of<lb/>
reports, we're running on<lb/>
schedule for what we've been do-<lb/>
ing for the past couple years<lb/>
Eddings said. The following blot-<lb/>
ter includes incidents reported<lb/>
from Jan. 15 to Jan. 23.<lb/>
Jan. 15, 2:25 a.m. ? Ronald<lb/>
rteid was arrested for assault dur-<lb/>
ing an affray at the Afro<lb/>
American Culture Center: 2:40<lb/>
a.m. ? Timothy Blackmore Kelly-<lb/>
was arrested for DWI.<lb/>
Jan. 16, 3:05 p.m. ? A bicycle<lb/>
was stolen from a rack at Green<lb/>
dormitory; 7 p.m. ? Joseph<lb/>
Hayden Tucker was served with a<lb/>
summons for a worthless check;<lb/>
10:30 p.m. ? Barry Rannhamby<lb/>
was arrested for writing a bad<lb/>
check.<lb/>
Jan. 17. 1.05 a.m. ? A female<lb/>
student in Fletcher dormitory-<lb/>
reported receiving harassing<lb/>
phone calls; 1:50 p.m. ? A bicy-<lb/>
cie at White dormitory' was stolen;<lb/>
12:30 a.m. ? Levi Johnson, alias<lb/>
Lcroy Harris, was arrested for<lb/>
felonious entry and larceny.<lb/>
Jan. 18, 1:40 a.m. ? Seth<lb/>
Thomas Sweeney was arrested for<lb/>
DWI and assault on a police of-<lb/>
ficer.<lb/>
Jan. 19, 1:14 a.m. ? A female<lb/>
in White dormitory reported<lb/>
receiving harassing phone calls;<lb/>
2:50 a.m. ? A fire extinguisher<lb/>
case on the third floor of Garrett<lb/>
hall was vandalized; 3 p.m. ? A<lb/>
female in Fletcher dormitory<lb/>
reported receiving harassing<lb/>
phone calls; 2:45 a.m. ? Police<lb/>
discovered that five state vehicles<lb/>
had been tampered with; 11:55<lb/>
a.m. ? A vehicle in the north<lb/>
parking lot at Minges was broken<lb/>
into and stolen; 5 p.m. ? A<lb/>
female in Jones dormitory<lb/>
reported receiving harassing<lb/>
phone calls.<lb/>
Jan. 20, 1:30 a.m. ? Joseph<lb/>
James Abney was arrested for<lb/>
DWI. 2:50 a.m ? Thomas<lb/>
Steven Clancy was arrested for<lb/>
DWI; 4 p.m. ? Joseph Stevens<lb/>
Haick was presented with a sum-<lb/>
mons for a worthless check; 4:15<lb/>
p.m. ? Gary Marder was<lb/>
presented with a summons for<lb/>
writing three bad checks; 2:05<lb/>
p.m. ? A hit and run accident in-<lb/>
volving a pedestrian was reported<lb/>
east of Cotton dorm; 6 p.m. ?<lb/>
Karen Suzanne Townsend was<lb/>
presented with a summons for<lb/>
writing a bad check; 6:15 p.m. ?<lb/>
Kevin Michael Fox was presented<lb/>
with a summons for writing a<lb/>
worthless check; 6:30 p.m. <lb/>
Alan Smith was presented with a<lb/>
summons for writing a bad check.<lb/>
Jan. 22, 1:30 a.m. ? Jeffrey K.<lb/>
Pegues was arrested for disorderly<lb/>
conduct and threatening a police<lb/>
officer at the Afro American<lb/>
Culture Center. 2:15 a.m ? The<lb/>
lobby door of Bclk Hall was van-<lb/>
dalized; 8:30 p.m. ? An affray<lb/>
and vandalism occurred on the<lb/>
fifth floor breezeway of Scott<lb/>
Hall; 8:30 p.m. ? A female's<lb/>
vehicle was vandalized behind<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
Jan. 23, 12:06 a.m. ? A female<lb/>
from Greene Hall was threatened;<lb/>
6 a.m. ? Officers discovered that<lb/>
a vending machine in Fletcher<lb/>
Hall was vandalized and its con-<lb/>
tents were stolen. The same crime<lb/>
occurred at 6:30 a.m. in Umstead<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
With The<lb/>
ian<lb/>
The East Carolina Playhouse<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Studio Theatre of<lb/>
the Messick Theatre Arts Center<lb/>
January 25-28, 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Tickets: $2.00 ? Call: 757-6390<lb/>
Awards:<lb/>
COME EXPERIENCE<lb/>
THE 198A ILLUMINA<lb/>
COMPETITION OF ART<lb/>
Sponsored by the Student Union<lb/>
Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
Entries will be accepted at the<lb/>
Student Union - 12:00 - 6:00 - February 3, 1984<lb/>
The Opening Reception is at 7:00 P.M.<lb/>
And Will be held on Sunday, February 5, 1984<lb/>
Best in Show - $300.00<lb/>
1st Place - $200.00<lb/>
2nd Place - $150.00<lb/>
3th Place - $100.00<lb/>
Honorahle Mentions $25.00, Purchase Awards<lb/>
Call 757-6611, ext. 210 for more information<lb/>
school's Trace Element<lb/>
Laboratory. Crounse said the<lb/>
device will be housed in a new<lb/>
shared instrument facility at the<lb/>
medical school for broad use by<lb/>
many departments rather than to<lb/>
support the work of one or two in-<lb/>
dividual scientists.<lb/>
The Ultra-trace 0600 will allow<lb/>
biomedical scientists to determine<lb/>
the elemental composition of the<lb/>
tiniest samples of organic matter<lb/>
such as a single human hair or a<lb/>
drop of blood serum by determin-<lb/>
ing the distribution of minerals,<lb/>
metals and trace elements in such<lb/>
samples. They may then be able to<lb/>
delineate imbalances having<lb/>
medical implications.<lb/>
Scientists have been able to<lb/>
make such determinations in the<lb/>
past using other sophisticated<lb/>
methods, but Crounse said the<lb/>
Ultra-trace 0600 improves upon<lb/>
those methodsin a number of<lb/>
ways. The new unit can use much<lb/>
smaller samples, the samples are<lb/>
more easily prepared, and the<lb/>
device can measure the amounts<lb/>
of many elements simultaneously<lb/>
rather than one at a time.<lb/>
The ability to analyze smaller<lb/>
samples can be extremely<lb/>
beneficial when large samples are<lb/>
difficult to obtain, Crounse<lb/>
noted, as in the case of a liver<lb/>
biopsy or an analysis of blood<lb/>
serum from a premature infant.<lb/>
Crounse stressed, however, that<lb/>
at this point the device is being us-<lb/>
ed only on a developmental basis<lb/>
and not for routine patient<lb/>
laboratory work.<lb/>
Once that Crounse and Bray are<lb/>
comfortable operating the new<lb/>
equipment they will be inviting<lb/>
colleagues from the medical<lb/>
school and from the main ECU<lb/>
campus to take advantage of it in<lb/>
their research. Already the Trace<lb/>
Element Lab is "backed up" with<lb/>
requests from potential users of<lb/>
the new machine, Crounse.<lb/>
Say something loving on February 14.<lb/>
Valentine's Day Cards<lb/>
Creative excellence is an American tradition.<lb/>
Central Book &amp; News<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 9:30 till 9:30 7 Days a week<lb/>
THE KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
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SPRING RUSH WEEK 1984<lb/>
January 23 rd - 25 th<lb/>
A T<lb/>
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Monday: Letter Night<lb/>
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?<lb/>
?te Eaat (Earnlimatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C.Hunter Fisher. .v?.??r,<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ?.???,?,?,<lb/>
J.T. PlETRZAK, rector of Advertising<lb/>
JENNIFER JENDRASIAK. CW? ?? MARK BARKER. o?Wn Wfl<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. cm. &amp;, mike McPartland. m. a,<lb/>
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Ed Nicklas ? wmm Mike Mayo, mm a?.<lb/>
January 24. 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Civil Rights<lb/>
Government Action Still Needed<lb/>
A letter in today's Campus<lb/>
Forum questions the justification<lb/>
for affirmative action programs,<lb/>
which were recently denounced by<lb/>
the new Civil Rights Commission.<lb/>
While there are disadvatages to the<lb/>
programs, they are by and large ef-<lb/>
fective and currently necessary, and<lb/>
the letter fails to explore the real<lb/>
need for or purpose behind the pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Affirmative action does not judge<lb/>
people on the basis on skin color, as<lb/>
the letter says. It simply sets quotas<lb/>
to counteract racially<lb/>
discriminatory practices. Judgment<lb/>
is not involved; a realistic reaction<lb/>
to all-too-prevalent racial attitudes<lb/>
in this nation is. The policy makes<lb/>
sure those who have been<lb/>
discriminated against have a<lb/>
recourse.<lb/>
As the letter says, the ideal is<lb/>
when one is judged on the basis of<lb/>
qualifications alone, with no con-<lb/>
sideration of race or sex. But unfor-<lb/>
tunately that is not yet the case. Our<lb/>
society is getting closer to that ideal,<lb/>
but many minorities can still tell<lb/>
first-hand stories of discrimination<lb/>
that significantly affects their lives.<lb/>
One's distinctions or qualifica-<lb/>
tions are not diminished if a job is<lb/>
obtained through affirmative action<lb/>
provided one shows himself<lb/>
qualified. Only if that person proves<lb/>
to be less than capable are his or her<lb/>
qualifications questioned.<lb/>
Discrimination is illegal, of<lb/>
course, but equally obvious is the<lb/>
fact that its practice continues.<lb/>
Marijuana smoking is illegal too,<lb/>
but that doesn't stop most people.<lb/>
Subtle discrimination continues<lb/>
despite the law, and enforcement is<lb/>
difficult. Affirmative action is to<lb/>
make up not only for past in-<lb/>
justices, of which there are myriad<lb/>
instances, but also current racism,<lb/>
which is less overt but sometimes<lb/>
just as effective today.<lb/>
Probably the basic flaw in the<lb/>
writer's argument is an honorable<lb/>
one, the belief that racism is essen-<lb/>
tially gone in this society, and pre-<lb/>
judice in the workplace no longer<lb/>
harms anyone. A noble and ad-<lb/>
mirable idea, but simply not yet the<lb/>
case. In that just society, where<lb/>
there is no need for affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion, all candidates have equal<lb/>
chances for training and employ-<lb/>
ment, so a fair percentage of jobs<lb/>
will be filled by minorities and<lb/>
women. Quotas will be filled de fac-<lb/>
to, because if blacks are 20 percent<lb/>
of the population and have an equal<lb/>
chance, they'll fill 20 percent of the<lb/>
jobs. But that is not true today,<lb/>
which can mean only one thing:<lb/>
discrimination keeps minorities<lb/>
from training and employment, in<lb/>
which case affirmative action is<lb/>
needed and justified. Quotas are no<lb/>
burden, then, on a just society and<lb/>
an unbiased employer, and are<lb/>
necessary for unjust ones.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is printing<lb/>
today the results of Honor Board<lb/>
cases and a summation of campus<lb/>
crime reports for the week. The tv.o<lb/>
stories essentially show students do-<lb/>
ing things wrong and getting<lb/>
caught, but the purpose is not to<lb/>
embarrass or start a juicy gossip col-<lb/>
umn. Campus police believe, as<lb/>
seems logical, that reports of weekly<lb/>
crime actually may deter a few<lb/>
crimes, and the board's actions are<lb/>
printed to increase awareness of<lb/>
that panel's jurisdiction and power.<lb/>
We hope it is informative and<lb/>
helpful.<lb/>
Callers Ought To Name<lb/>
Costello As The Best Man<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
The campus radio station, WZMB, is<lb/>
conducting a call-in telephone poll for the<lb/>
Major Attractions Committee. The pur-<lb/>
pose is to check the pulse of student<lb/>
musical tastes. After losing thousands of<lb/>
dollars over the past couple of years, the<lb/>
committee has thick-headedly realized that<lb/>
Charlie Daniels Band is no longer popular<lb/>
at ECU. So who is popular? The committe<lb/>
doesn't know. But wisely they've come up<lb/>
with an alternative (the radio poll) to aug-<lb/>
ment their usual hit-or-miss method.<lb/>
WZMB stresses that the results of the poll<lb/>
will not be an indication of their own tastes<lb/>
and opinions.<lb/>
Nobody asked the East Carolinian to<lb/>
conduct a poll, and nobody asked the<lb/>
entertainment editor his opinion. I<lb/>
wouldn't want the headache of conducting<lb/>
a poll, but 1 will give my opinion for<lb/>
what it's worth. If you have an opinion,<lb/>
you can spill your guts in the Campus<lb/>
Forum on the editorial page. It needs some<lb/>
input.<lb/>
John Cougar Metlencamp: This man and<lb/>
his music are strictly a junior-high act: "a<lb/>
little ditty 'bout Jack and Diane And the<lb/>
man is hopelessly confused. In an attempt<lb/>
to look androgynous (he probably read<lb/>
that word m the critics' praise of Bowie or<lb/>
Jagger), the guy just looks stupid. One<lb/>
minute he's Mr. Macho the bad-ass biker,<lb/>
the next he's tossing locks of hair out of his<lb/>
eyes like a Vogue model in a photo session<lb/>
and pouting into the video camera. This<lb/>
guy is enough to make the average college<lb/>
student switch the channel from MTV to<lb/>
the Macneil Lehrer News Report.<lb/>
Billy Idol: a great act for the Paddock<lb/>
Club, but don't bring this fruit to Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. ? . . ?<lb/>
Heart: a throwback to 70s rock, boring<lb/>
and predictable as a TofJmLi<lb/>
make a quantum leap from CDB to the 80s<lb/>
and skip this kind of retrograde rock and<lb/>
foil. , <lb/>
Elvis Costello Fat chance of this guy<lb/>
coming to Greenville, but Costello is<lb/>
definitely the best of the lot. He's a proven<lb/>
innovator, a knowledgeable musician who<lb/>
understands rock music's roots. He takes<lb/>
the past and shapes it into the future.<lb/>
Costello is a class act for most university<lb/>
campuses, the thinking person's rocker.<lb/>
Only problem is many students won't be<lb/>
able to appreciate his talent because they're<lb/>
put off by his wimpy looks. Rick Spr-<lb/>
ingfield he ain't ? thank God.<lb/>
Big Country: probably the most exciting<lb/>
new band of the past year. Just when we<lb/>
thought guitar-dominated rock was dead,<lb/>
these guys come up with a new wrinkle.<lb/>
Fresh, but not bizarre, Big Country is the<lb/>
band that should prove the biggest draw<lb/>
for ECU students.<lb/>
The Fixx: "One Thing Leads to Another"<lb/>
is being played by every geek lounge act in<lb/>
the country, and the Ramada Inn circuit is<lb/>
probably where this band whipped their act<lb/>
together. Why bring anything this common<lb/>
to Minges?<lb/>
Stray Cats: Some insiders at Newsweek and<lb/>
Time got together and decided to play a<lb/>
joke on the public, namely the Stray Cats.<lb/>
The media hype has run out, their second<lb/>
album has bombed and this gang of runts,<lb/>
like the old cars they wallow on, is headed<lb/>
back to the scrapyard of the past. We don't<lb/>
need a rock-and-roll footnote playing this<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
There are only two real choices here,<lb/>
Elvis Costello and Big Country. The latter<lb/>
is fresh and exciting, but should still appeal<lb/>
to the mainline rock crowd which con-<lb/>
stitutes the largest segment of ECU<lb/>
students. Although currently not the rage<lb/>
that Big Country is, Costello has more than<lb/>
their one album under his belt. This guy<lb/>
has proven himself over time. Either band<lb/>
suits me, but if forced to pick one over the<lb/>
other, I've got to go with Costello. His<lb/>
large and varied repertoire of music should<lb/>
make for the better concert. Whoever the<lb/>
committee selects, I hope they will consider<lb/>
the tastes of the students when making a<lb/>
decision rather than what appeals to the<lb/>
locals.<lb/>
King's Legacy Unclear Today<lb/>
By ROBERT WEISBROT<lb/>
The Nh Republic<lb/>
Although Martin Luther King's<lb/>
vaunted place in civil rights history is<lb/>
assured, the meaning of his leadership<lb/>
to Americans today is less clear.<lb/>
Last year's march on Washington,<lb/>
organized by the King family, attemp-<lb/>
ted to revive his reform vision, sym-<lb/>
bolized by his inspirational cry at the<lb/>
first march 20 years ago, "I have a<lb/>
dream today Yet while the event at-<lb/>
tracted a wider range of groups than the<lb/>
1963 march (including contingents of<lb/>
Hispanics, gays and women), no<lb/>
cohesive social movement was in<lb/>
evidence.<lb/>
The original march was notable for<lb/>
the way its chief organizer, Bayard<lb/>
Rustin, fused its many participating<lb/>
groups into a disciplined lobby for two<lb/>
overriding goals: enactment of the civil<lb/>
rights bill pending in Congress and,<lb/>
secondarily, a federal jobs program.<lb/>
By contrast, the quality of diversity<lb/>
was strained at the recent march, in<lb/>
which a host of otherwise disparate<lb/>
placards and speeches all exalted "the<lb/>
dream" more as a substitute than as<lb/>
shorthand for a set of political<lb/>
priorities. King's name was continuous-<lb/>
ly invoked, and one speaker imitated<lb/>
his manner in a recital aptly called<lb/>
"Echoes of Martin Luther King<lb/>
The tributes were fitting, yet in the<lb/>
absence of a clear political agenda, they<lb/>
underscored that the dominant mood at<lb/>
this gathering for bold reform was<lb/>
nostalgia.<lb/>
Campus Forum ?<lb/>
In what direction, then does King's<lb/>
legacy point for the current generation<lb/>
of Americans who have enshrined his<lb/>
name? Admittedly the question of what<lb/>
King might have done ? as with any<lb/>
figure capable of dramatic growth,<lb/>
from the Kennedys to Malcolm X ?<lb/>
must remain a matter for speculation.<lb/>
It is clear, though, that civil rights<lb/>
laws did not nearly exhaust King's in-<lb/>
terest in social change. The flaring of<lb/>
ghetto riots persuaded him that the<lb/>
non-violent protest movement had to<lb/>
shift its focus to aid the mass of ghetto<lb/>
blacks who still lived in economic<lb/>
misery.<lb/>
His increasing activity in the northern<lb/>
ghettos after 1965 also accompanied<lb/>
growing doubts about the social conse-<lb/>
quences of capitalism. Although he<lb/>
continued to reject communism because<lb/>
it denied individual liberty, King also<lb/>
criticized capitalist economies which he<lb/>
felt "Often left a gulf between<lb/>
superfluous wealth and abject<lb/>
poverty Increasingly, therefore, he<lb/>
came to view the reforms of the early<lb/>
'60's as only a first step toward curbing<lb/>
disparities of wealth and opportunity in<lb/>
a society still ridden by caste distinc-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Though King by no means resolved<lb/>
the complex technical disputes over<lb/>
how government programs could best<lb/>
aid the poor, he contributed a lucid<lb/>
moral viewpoint in asserting that this<lb/>
cause should command the nation's<lb/>
highest priority. Lamenting the<lb/>
"fragmentary and spasmodic" reforms<lb/>
that "have failed to reach down to 1<lb/>
profoundest needs of the poor he in-<lb/>
sisted that the federal governim<lb/>
either ensure full employment or pro<lb/>
vide guaranteed incomes peg : the<lb/>
median income of society, not at the<lb/>
lowest levels<lb/>
King also believed that the<lb/>
could attract an interracial coalition,<lb/>
ince two-thirds of the nation's poor<lb/>
were white. Finals, he termed the<lb/>
elimination of poverty a moral na c<lb/>
"if democracy is to have bread<lb/>
meaning<lb/>
By such efforts to tempt<lb/>
with conciliation. King advanced the<lb/>
cause of the poor, not only a a <lb/>
who had a dream, but as one who ;<lb/>
then go tell it on the mountain<lb/>
American democratic mvth<lb/>
In all, the nation first com menu<lb/>
tion of King's life invites not onlv<lb/>
celebration but also sober cerebration<lb/>
over his ? and the country's ? un-<lb/>
finished tasks. These remain as for-<lb/>
midable as in his lifetime, though it was<lb/>
a mark of King's leadership to discern<lb/>
possibilities for reform equal to everv<lb/>
test.<lb/>
Unsparing in his criticism of the<lb/>
country, he nonetheless believed that<lb/>
"America, the richest and most power-<lb/>
ful of nations, can well lead the wa" to<lb/>
a "revolution if values" that would en-<lb/>
sure a decent life for all people. In that<lb/>
faith, he shared his dream of a just<lb/>
society while realizing that this ideal<lb/>
still existed, to a challenging degree, on<lb/>
ly in the realm of his imagination.<lb/>
Civil Rights Commission Defended<lb/>
I noticed an editorial in The East<lb/>
Carolinian saying Reagan was against<lb/>
civil rights because of the rearrange-<lb/>
ment of the Civil Rights Commission.<lb/>
The subject should be analyzed deeper<lb/>
for its effectiveness. In the spirit of Dr.<lb/>
Martin Luther King, Jr we should<lb/>
judge a person by his or her abilities<lb/>
and the content of his or her character,<lb/>
not by skin pigment. Affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion and racial quotas judge a person<lb/>
by their skin pigment. This is not in the<lb/>
King spirit; everyone obviously should<lb/>
agree.<lb/>
The main reason I have heard in<lb/>
defense of racial quotas and affir-<lb/>
mative action is that they will make up<lb/>
for past injustices. We cannot change<lb/>
the past, yet we can plan for the future.<lb/>
People applying for college next year<lb/>
were born after the passage of the Civil<lb/>
Rights Act. Should the burden of past<lb/>
injustices be placed on these in-<lb/>
dividuals? Should we wipe out one<lb/>
form of discrimination by replacing it<lb/>
with another? Or is this the freedom,<lb/>
justice, and equality King dreamed<lb/>
about?<lb/>
I have a dream in which a person's<lb/>
resume or application for school or<lb/>
work is judged solely on the<lb/>
individual's record without a checkbox<lb/>
stating the person's race. I have a<lb/>
dream in which a person is judged by<lb/>
his record and not be his race. Does a<lb/>
person have the ability to succeed just<lb/>
because the law says one must be ac-<lb/>
cepted for a job or school because of<lb/>
his color? If the law has to guarantee a<lb/>
place for someone based on race, does<lb/>
that not take distinction away from his<lb/>
or her successes?<lb/>
I don't believe there is anyone in any<lb/>
minority who will tell me that they<lb/>
have to have quotas or Affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion to succeed because their abilities<lb/>
are inadequate. Let's follow our Presi-<lb/>
dent in his forward move to realize<lb/>
King's dream. Remember discrimina-<lb/>
tion is illegal in job placement and<lb/>
school applications, so affirmative ac-<lb/>
tion is unnecessary. How would<lb/>
minorities fed if the government<lb/>
decreed that they must hire a certain<lb/>
percentage of whites in their<lb/>
businesses? I think they would react as<lb/>
our president has, and say it's un-<lb/>
constitutional and against the King<lb/>
spirit. We should remember this: the<lb/>
national holiday was made to represent<lb/>
freedom for all and not subsidize suc-<lb/>
cess for a few.<lb/>
Edwin M. Hardy<lb/>
Sophomore, General College<lb/>
Stand By ECU<lb/>
Recently I'm haunted by a ghost of<lb/>
Christmas past: Echo-ey voices from<lb/>
blurred eggnog parties saying things<lb/>
like "EZU recollections of smug<lb/>
faces atop Carolina blue sweaters. I<lb/>
returned here with the notion that there<lb/>
were an alarming number of folks that I<lb/>
could have ? maybe should have ?<lb/>
told to Like a hike. Like Ebenezer<lb/>
Scrooge it's time we wake up, throw<lb/>
open the shutters and shout "hey<lb/>
everybody, we've got a great school<lb/>
here<lb/>
The way out from under the dark<lb/>
cloud of our undeserved reputaiton<lb/>
begins with a healthy belief in ourselves<lb/>
as a school that not only plays hard, but<lb/>
works hard too. If you need help with<lb/>
that idea, take a look at the medical<lb/>
school, or the men and women making<lb/>
and preserving national history by rais-<lb/>
ing the Union warship Monitor. Read<lb/>
up on Ed Emory, his personal trials and<lb/>
accomplishments or the nationally<lb/>
rated football team he coaches. Find<lb/>
out about former chancellor Leo<lb/>
Jenkins or Senator John East. Go to<lb/>
one of the exhibits at the art school. Ex-<lb/>
cellence blooms in virtually every facet<lb/>
of the university, and one need only<lb/>
reach out to find it.<lb/>
Any prescription to purge our school<lb/>
of its invalid labels should include a<lb/>
massive dose of positive talking up of<lb/>
ourselves and perhaps a dash of<lb/>
righteous indignation at those who<lb/>
don't. The list of good things to say<lb/>
about ECU is incredibly long, and we<lb/>
have the right to say every bit of it. As<lb/>
for those few within the university who<lb/>
deride it, someone should politely show<lb/>
them the door.<lb/>
As surely as there are classes here that<lb/>
one can glide through, (and what school<lb/>
can say otherwise), there are also<lb/>
courses that challenge the brightest<lb/>
minds, taught by professors who ex-<lb/>
emplify, demand and receive the verv<lb/>
best. And as surely as there are students<lb/>
who avoid the tough courses, there are<lb/>
students here who eagerly seek them<lb/>
out.<lb/>
So, however ECU came about its par-<lb/>
ty school image, it's time the sins of the<lb/>
past were no longer visited upon the<lb/>
undergrads. There was a time when lv<lb/>
league schools thumbed their noses at a<lb/>
place called Chapel Hill, and there will<lb/>
come a time when everyone will know<lb/>
about schools that little light shines on<lb/>
now. ECU should be one of them.<lb/>
Perhaps with only the faith of a<lb/>
mustard seed to begin with, we can<lb/>
move the mountainous reputation of<lb/>
our neighbors to the west over, to<lb/>
make room for the new kid: East<lb/>
Carolina University.<lb/>
Dave Johnston<lb/>
Senior, Computer Science<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Old<lb/>
South Building, across from Jovner<lb/>
Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the authorfs). Letters<lb/>
are limited to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
double-spaced or neatly printed. All<lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
ty, obscenity and libel, and no personal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students,<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
page are reminded that they are limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
Student C<lb/>
HaJlowgi<lb/>
Manning<lb/>
ph<lb/>
752-31<lb/>
fosset<lb/>
Gn<lb/>
Most<lb/>
true<lb/>
dehvi<lb/>
PIZZ,<lb/>
all thi<lb/>
CA<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
i ??? - ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 19M<lb/>
fl<lb/>
h down to the<lb/>
i he poor he in-<lb/>
Ideral government<lb/>
tpioyment or pro-<lb/>
nes "pegged to the<lb/>
lociety, not at the<lb/>
that the issue<lb/>
I rraciai coalition,<lb/>
nation's poor<lb/>
he termed the<lb/>
 a moral necessity<lb/>
breadth of<lb/>
protest<lb/>
I id anced the<lb/>
as a man<lb/>
- ? ho could<lb/>
intain of<lb/>
tin<lb/>
first commemora-<lb/>
invites not only<lb/>
sober cerebration<lb/>
country's ? un-<lb/>
se temun as for-<lb/>
rtime, though it was<lb/>
adership to discern<lb/>
:m equal to every<lb/>
m of the<lb/>
 believed that<lb/>
l And most power-<lb/>
1 lead the way" to<lb/>
ies" that would en-<lb/>
all people. In that<lb/>
is dream of a just<lb/>
jing that this ideal<lb/>
lienging degree, on-<lb/>
lmagination.<lb/>
ed<lb/>
the university who<lb/>
ould politely show<lb/>
re classes here that<lb/>
, (and what school<lb/>
there are also<lb/>
ige the brightest<lb/>
rofessor. who ex-<lb/>
receive the very<lb/>
there are students<lb/>
courses, there are<lb/>
:agerl seek them<lb/>
barne about its par-<lb/>
time the sins of the<lb/>
visited upon the<lb/>
a time when Ivy<lb/>
?d their noses at a<lb/>
lill, and there will<lb/>
eryone will know<lb/>
Jttle light shines on<lb/>
be one of them,<lb/>
the faith of a<lb/>
tin with, we can<lb/>
?us reputation of<lb/>
le west over, to<lb/>
e new kid: East<lb/>
Dave Johnston<lb/>
iComputer Science<lb/>
Rules<lb/>
in welcomes letters<lb/>
of view. Mail or<lb/>
vffice in the Old<lb/>
ross from Joyner<lb/>
mfication, all let-<lb/>
name, major and<lb/>
phone number<lb/>
authorfs). Letters<lb/>
typewritten pages,<lb/>
Uly printed. All<lb/>
editing for brevi-<lb/>
?, and no personal<lb/>
rmitted. Students,<lb/>
ting letters for this<lb/>
it they are limited<lb/>
MR<lb/>
Student Oninion<lb/>
Is Death Penalty Just ?<lb/>
James W. Hutchins received a stay<lb/>
of execution from the N.C. Supreme<lb/>
Court after conviction for slaying three<lb/>
police officers. Students expressed opi-<lb/>
nions on this this issue.<lb/>
Martin Halloway, Computer<lb/>
Science, Senior ? "Well, he will even-<lb/>
tually have to die. They shouldn't have<lb/>
prolonged it if he is going to die<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
Elizabeth Manning, Business,<lb/>
Sophomore ? "I believe in capital<lb/>
punishment. If he was sentenced they<lb/>
shouldn't prolong it. I didn't hear<lb/>
much about everything that went on<lb/>
Randy Mews, Broadcasting,<lb/>
Hattoway<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
'I don't think he<lb/>
Manning<lb/>
should have been given the opportunity<lb/>
to make an appeal. Anyone who kills<lb/>
three people in cold blood should be<lb/>
executed on the spot<lb/>
Cindy Lee, Special Education,<lb/>
Sophomore ? "He should have been<lb/>
excuted. He should get what he<lb/>
deserves. He should pay for what he<lb/>
did<lb/>
Most Aid Provided By Government<lb/>
ByOUIDAHORTON<lb/>
ran<lb/>
Lee<lb/>
?????????p<lb/>
The federal govern-<lb/>
ment has become the<lb/>
largest contributor to stu-<lb/>
dent aid according to a<lb/>
recent survey published<lb/>
by The College Board.<lb/>
The study reveals trends<lb/>
in student aid over the<lb/>
past twenty years.<lb/>
Eighty percent of total<lb/>
assistance is provided by<lb/>
the federal government as<lb/>
compared sixty percent in<lb/>
the early 1960's. Prior to<lb/>
1960, aid was mainly in<lb/>
the form of scholarships<lb/>
given by individual col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
Pell Grants, formerly<lb/>
BEOG, and Guaranteed<lb/>
Student Loans are the<lb/>
two largest programs pro-<lb/>
viding federal student<lb/>
aid, according to reports<lb/>
available from the ECU<lb/>
Financial Aid Office.<lb/>
The amount of aid<lb/>
given in grants has<lb/>
decreased since the early<lb/>
1970s. During the period<lb/>
between 1970-1976, 66 to<lb/>
80 percent of total aid<lb/>
was awarded in the form<lb/>
of grants. Currently,<lb/>
grants make up 48 per-<lb/>
cent of total student aid,<lb/>
the College Board survey<lb/>
said.<lb/>
in contrast, the percen-<lb/>
tage of student loans has<lb/>
increased since the early<lb/>
1970s. Forty-eight per-<lb/>
cent of total aid is in the<lb/>
form of loans. Only<lb/>
seventeen to twenty-nine<lb/>
percent of aid was award-<lb/>
ed in loans from<lb/>
1970-1976.<lb/>
According to the study,<lb/>
the amount of aid<lb/>
available per student has<lb/>
increased bv 378 percent<lb/>
since 1963. However, the<lb/>
amount of aid available<lb/>
for the current year has<lb/>
dropped twenty-three<lb/>
percent from last year.<lb/>
Prior to 1980, increas-<lb/>
ed income and student<lb/>
aid made it easier for<lb/>
families to afford the<lb/>
costs of college.<lb/>
However, in the 1980's,<lb/>
income and student aid<lb/>
have not risen in propor-<lb/>
tion to the costs of col-<lb/>
lege, making it tougher<lb/>
for families who have<lb/>
children in college.<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The<lb/>
I Classifieds<lb/>
Honor Board Action<lb/>
Defendant<lb/>
Charge<lb/>
Plea<lb/>
Decision<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
stealing or attempting<lb/>
to steal; book stealing<lb/>
and re-selling.<lb/>
guilty<lb/>
The East Carolinian begins today reporting the results of<lb/>
Honor Board meetings from the previous week. Decisions<lb/>
will be printed in an effort to make students xiware of the<lb/>
board's actions, jurisidiction and penalties.<lb/>
restitution $12.50<lb/>
one-year probation<lb/>
60 hours of voluntary<lb/>
work<lb/>
$50 fine<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057617_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
College Students Victims Of Eligibility Rules<lb/>
WIMLmiNGTON,<lb/>
Del. (CPS) ? When their<lb/>
voter registration drive<lb/>
netted over 1,856<lb/>
signatures in early<lb/>
November ? 356 more<lb/>
than their projected goal<lb/>
of 1,500 ? the College<lb/>
Democrats at the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Delaware basked<lb/>
in success and optimism.<lb/>
Two weeks later, the<lb/>
local election board in-<lb/>
formed them that all<lb/>
1,856 signatures had been<lb/>
rejected because the<lb/>
group failed to prove the<lb/>
signers were permanent<lb/>
residents of state.<lb/>
At about the same<lb/>
time, 3,000 Rutgers<lb/>
students learned they<lb/>
wouldn't be able to vote<lb/>
locally because they<lb/>
hadn't completed pre-<lb/>
registration forms mailed<lb/>
to them over the summer.<lb/>
In October, a New<lb/>
York election judge<lb/>
denied State University of<lb/>
New York College-<lb/>
Purchase students the<lb/>
right to vote locally<lb/>
because campus dor-<lb/>
mitory addresses cannot<lb/>
be considered permanent<lb/>
residences.<lb/>
It's happened at cam-<lb/>
pus after campus: the<lb/>
best-laid plans of am-<lb/>
bitious student voter<lb/>
registraiton drives broke<lb/>
up on the shoals of<lb/>
peculiar local eligibility<lb/>
rules, locking students<lb/>
out of the electoral pro-<lb/>
Photographer<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
at The East Carolinian<lb/>
Experience with 35mm<lb/>
preferred. Must lie free<lb/>
Mondays and Wednesdays<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
And it promises to hap-<lb/>
pen with increasing fre-<lb/>
quency in the coming<lb/>
weeks as a variety of<lb/>
groups and candidates ?<lb/>
the College Democrats,<lb/>
College Republicans,<lb/>
Public Interest Research<lb/>
Groups (PIRGs), Na-<lb/>
tional Association for the<lb/>
Advancement of Colored<lb/>
People (NAACP), United<lb/>
States Student Associa-<lb/>
tion (USSA), the Hart<lb/>
and Jackson campaigns,<lb/>
among others ? all try to<lb/>
keep promises to help<lb/>
masses of students<lb/>
register to vote during the<lb/>
1984 primary and general<lb/>
presidential elections.<lb/>
Many of them are fin-<lb/>
ding, however, that the<lb/>
inconsistant and<lb/>
seemingly-whimsical<lb/>
voting requirement of<lb/>
local election officials is a<lb/>
much bigger problem<lb/>
than student apathy.<lb/>
"It really is a big<lb/>
mess laments Kathy<lb/>
Downey, who just com-<lb/>
pleted an in-depth study<lb/>
of student voter registra-<lb/>
tion problems for the Na-<lb/>
tional Student Educa-<lb/>
tional Fund (NSEF).<lb/>
"It's really discrmina-<lb/>
tion against students by<lb/>
the local election of-<lb/>
ficials she asserts.<lb/>
"When local powers get<lb/>
nervous about the student<lb/>
vote ? the fact that in<lb/>
many places students<lb/>
could actually change the<lb/>
results of an election ?<lb/>
they put as much in the<lb/>
way (of students register-<lb/>
ing) as possible<lb/>
"In some states you<lb/>
can just mail in post cards<lb/>
and you're registered<lb/>
notes Gwen McKinney,<lb/>
director of the USSA's<lb/>
voter registration drive.<lb/>
"In other states you<lb/>
have to be deputized and<lb/>
live in the county to be<lb/>
certified to register peo-<lb/>
ple she continues.<lb/>
"The key to avoiding<lb/>
problems is to provide<lb/>
project participants with<lb/>
extensive training and in-<lb/>
formation on local elec-<lb/>
tion laws<lb/>
McKinney<lb/>
acknowledges "there will<lb/>
be some problems" with<lb/>
regional election commis-<lb/>
sions, but adds "we'll be<lb/>
working directly with the<lb/>
ACLU (American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union) to pro-<lb/>
vide legal backup" when<lb/>
such conflicts occur.<lb/>
Students have had<lb/>
clashes with local election<lb/>
boards ever since 18-year-<lb/>
olds received the right to<lb/>
vote in 1972.<lb/>
One of the first, and<lb/>
perhaps the most notable<lb/>
confrontations between<lb/>
college students and local<lb/>
election board occurred<lb/>
in 1976, when Texas of-<lb/>
ficials disqualified over<lb/>
500 Prairie View A&amp;M<lb/>
students from voting<lb/>
locally.<lb/>
Election officials said<lb/>
students had to own pro-<lb/>
perty, have family, work,<lb/>
or pay taxes locally to<lb/>
vote.<lb/>
Texas law, however<lb/>
defined "resident" only<lb/>
as a "fixed place of<lb/>
habitation and the U.S.<lb/>
Supreme Court ruled in<lb/>
1979 the Texas officials<lb/>
had unfairly placed an ex-<lb/>
tra burden on students<lb/>
that it did not impose on<lb/>
non-students.<lb/>
Although most student<lb/>
activists hailed the Texas<lb/>
Student Legislature<lb/>
To Sponsor Drive<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Co-Newt Editor<lb/>
A voter registration<lb/>
drive will be held Jan.<lb/>
25-27 at the Student Sup-<lb/>
ply Store. The ECU<lb/>
chapter of the North<lb/>
Carolina Student<lb/>
Legislature (NCSL) is<lb/>
sponsoring the drive at<lb/>
ECU in hopes of getting<lb/>
more people on campus,<lb/>
said Lisa Maness, NCSL<lb/>
vice delegate chairperson<lb/>
for the organization.<lb/>
Maness said that the<lb/>
drive will be open to all<lb/>
Pitt County residents.<lb/>
"Even though many<lb/>
students can't register<lb/>
here, at least they can<lb/>
learn what to do when<lb/>
they do register Maness<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Registrars from the<lb/>
board of elections will be<lb/>
available for those who<lb/>
have any questions,<lb/>
Maness said.<lb/>
decision as a precedent-<lb/>
setting case which would<lb/>
end future discrimination<lb/>
against student voters, it<lb/>
hasn't stopped the cur-<lb/>
rent conflict at the<lb/>
University of Delaware<lb/>
and other places.<lb/>
"It's really blown up<lb/>
now says Ken Weins-<lb/>
tein, head of the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Delaware College<lb/>
Democrats. "The state<lb/>
attorney general is suing<lb/>
the local department of<lb/>
elections on behalf of the<lb/>
students, and the ACLU<lb/>
and AFL-CIO have also<lb/>
jumped in on our side<lb/>
"Getting students<lb/>
registered is a big pro-<lb/>
blem everywhere<lb/>
observes Bill Morton,<lb/>
staff and voter registra-<lb/>
tion director for the Col-<lb/>
lege Democrats national<lb/>
chapter in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. "It's particularly a<lb/>
problem when you're<lb/>
dealing with a high<lb/>
percentage of minorities<lb/>
in southern states<lb/>
Morton hopes .o<lb/>
minimize hassles with<lb/>
local election officials by<lb/>
making sure student<lb/>
workers and volunteers<lb/>
are briefed thoroughly on<lb/>
local election laws and re-<lb/>
quirements beforehand<lb/>
Similarly, the national<lb/>
PIRG campaign to<lb/>
register students "will<lb/>
place a real big emphasis<lb/>
on going through the<lb/>
right channels to get peo<lb/>
pie registered says Beth<lb/>
Pardo, a member of the<lb/>
Massachusetts PIR<lb/>
which is coordination the<lb/>
national voter registra<lb/>
tion drive.<lb/>
To drill student<lb/>
volunteers on such<lb/>
"basic" information,<lb/>
PIRG coordinators are<lb/>
planning a national con<lb/>
vention and training<lb/>
seminar in early<lb/>
February, Pardo says.<lb/>
Not all student groups<lb/>
are concerned.<lb/>
"It's a problem from<lb/>
time to time, but certainly<lb/>
not a major one shrugs<lb/>
Jack Abramoff, presi<lb/>
dent of the College<lb/>
Republicans National<lb/>
Committee, which plans<lb/>
to register over one<lb/>
million voters by this fall<lb/>
"Most Republican<lb/>
students go out to register<lb/>
themselves he says, and<lb/>
are usually familiar with<lb/>
their local registration re<lb/>
quirements.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
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WASHING<lb/>
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probab a<lb/>
much imp<lb/>
here a<lb/>
drinking and<lb/>
ties has been u<lb/>
over the la<lb/>
years, ofl<lb/>
"1 don't cr.<lb/>
blem at the a<lb/>
as severe<lb/>
Bauer<lb/>
the Der<lb/>
Edu. n<lb/>
chairman<lb/>
dent's VA .<lb/>
School D,<lb/>
Re sear<lb/>
ByARl S rHt t <lb/>
<lb/>
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CRO<lb/>
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The Graeaviiie<lb/>
wili sponsor the 2j<lb/>
Walk to raise mone<lb/>
March 25<lb/>
The 20-kilometer<lb/>
proximately $4,000<lb/>
peered to raise SIT ? ?<lb/>
ding to Helen Sh. <lb/>
of the uaJk. Twee<lb/>
money raised r<lb/>
hunger ir . Cr<lb/>
United. S<lb/>
Ministries L I<lb/>
churche- . .<lb/>
poor<lb/>
Classi<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
1 PIECE FUR .?? Sc-?<lb/>
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mm<lb/>
lUUIUIUl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0007"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 24, 1984 7<lb/>
lies<lb/>
icnts beforehand<lb/>
lidriv, the national<lb/>
campaign to<lb/>
students "will<lb/>
a real big emphasis<lb/>
)ing through the<lb/>
channels to get peo<lb/>
iistered says Beth<lb/>
a member of the<lb/>
Uchusetts PIRi-<lb/>
is coordination the<lb/>
lal oter registra<lb/>
Inve<lb/>
drill student<lb/>
teers on such<lb/>
information,<lb/>
coordinators are<lb/>
lg a national con-<lb/>
l and training<lb/>
ar in early<lb/>
Pardo says.<lb/>
ail student groups<lb/>
r erned.<lb/>
a problem from<lb/>
tme. but certainlv<lb/>
 r one shrugs<lb/>
bramoff. presi<lb/>
the College<lb/>
is National<lb/>
nee. which plan.<lb/>
istei ovci on<lb/>
 this fall<lb/>
R e p u b 1 i c a<lb/>
 Out to register<lb/>
' he says, and<lb/>
.all familiar with<lb/>
ip a registration re<lb/>
mts<lb/>
? - -<lb/>
w<lb/>
A ? ' 1<lb/>
aj<lb/>
25th,<lb/>
S BEGIN<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
AT<lb/>
PM<lb/>
RE INFO<lb/>
IDES CALL<lb/>
-3540<lb/>
Colleges Unaffected By Stricter Discipline<lb/>
WASHINGTON, DC.<lb/>
(CPS) ? The Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration's recent<lb/>
release of suggestions to<lb/>
toughen school discipline<lb/>
probably won't have<lb/>
much impact on colleges,<lb/>
where a crackdown on<lb/>
drinking and student par-<lb/>
ties has been in the works<lb/>
over the last several<lb/>
years, officials say.<lb/>
"1 don't think the pro-<lb/>
blem at the college level is<lb/>
as severe says Gary<lb/>
Bauer, undersecretary in<lb/>
the Department of<lb/>
Education. Bauer is<lb/>
chairman of the Presi-<lb/>
dent's Working Group on<lb/>
School Discipline, which<lb/>
recently completed a<lb/>
report emphasizing the<lb/>
rights of attentive<lb/>
students over those who<lb/>
misbehave.<lb/>
"The report found that<lb/>
it (discipline) is such a<lb/>
significant problem that<lb/>
it is having an extremely<lb/>
negative effect on perfor-<lb/>
mance in high school<lb/>
Bauer says.<lb/>
The study, titled<lb/>
"Disorder in Our<lb/>
Schools proposes the<lb/>
departments of justice<lb/>
and education join local<lb/>
school districts to curtail<lb/>
the legal options students<lb/>
have when suspended.<lb/>
Reagan will use the report<lb/>
to focus national atten-<lb/>
tion on an issue that<lb/>
needs solving at state and<lb/>
local levels, Bauer notes.<lb/>
Bauer concedes the<lb/>
possibility that some high<lb/>
school students may carry<lb/>
discipline problems into<lb/>
college, or lose their col-<lb/>
lege opportunity because<lb/>
of bad behavior.<lb/>
"But a student's own<lb/>
self-interest mitigates<lb/>
against too many severe<lb/>
problems" in college, he<lb/>
suggests.<lb/>
"Students don't have<lb/>
to be here agrees Dr!<lb/>
Roland Vuck, assistant<lb/>
vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent services at the<lb/>
University of Missouri.<lb/>
Most of MU's<lb/>
disciplinary problems are<lb/>
handled informally with<lb/>
an administrator, and<lb/>
rarely before a formal<lb/>
studentfaculty judicial<lb/>
board, he says.<lb/>
"The trend in universi-<lb/>
ty discipline is for<lb/>
students involved in con-<lb/>
duct cases to have more<lb/>
administrative hearings<lb/>
says Dr. Scott Rickard,<lb/>
vice chancellor for stu-<lb/>
dent affairs at the Univer-<lb/>
sity fo Maryland and the<lb/>
author of a 1981 study on<lb/>
college discipline.<lb/>
Students are choosing<lb/>
to go to administrators<lb/>
rather than to peer panels<lb/>
for two reasons, Rickard<lb/>
surmised.<lb/>
"I think they have<lb/>
more trust in the system<lb/>
now. Students feel they<lb/>
get more<lb/>
confidentiality In deal-<lb/>
ing with administrators,<lb/>
students "know what the<lb/>
consequences are<lb/>
Before their peers, "sanc-<lb/>
tions are tougher than<lb/>
they used to be<lb/>
But Rickard sees no in-<lb/>
crease in the number of<lb/>
disciplinary problems on<lb/>
campuses nationwide. "I<lb/>
think there's been some<lb/>
leveling off<lb/>
Rickard previously<lb/>
found in a 1980 study<lb/>
that schools were suspen-<lb/>
ding students at a faster<lb/>
clip, increasing form an<lb/>
average 5.5 per campus in<lb/>
1979-80 to 7.8 in 1980-81.<lb/>
Since then, scores of<lb/>
schools have banned<lb/>
alcohol as a means of<lb/>
controlling behavior on<lb/>
their campuses. Arizona.<lb/>
Michigan State and<lb/>
Virginia, among many<lb/>
others, have imposed<lb/>
strict new rules to govern<lb/>
student parties.<lb/>
Research Skills Taught At Writing Center<lb/>
By CARLYN EBERT<lb/>
StafT Writer<lb/>
An innovative<lb/>
workshop program<lb/>
covering research skills<lb/>
from "Finding a Topic"<lb/>
to "Revising" begins<lb/>
next Monday in the<lb/>
English department's<lb/>
Writing Center.<lb/>
Although the week-<lb/>
long, hourlv workshops<lb/>
are aimed primarily at<lb/>
English 1200 classes,<lb/>
Writing Center Director<lb/>
Patrick Bizzaro said<lb/>
they're open to any in-<lb/>
terested students or staff.<lb/>
"It's to be more a sup-<lb/>
plement than anything<lb/>
else, though if people are<lb/>
sending their students<lb/>
from whatever course to<lb/>
get those kinds of skills in<lb/>
the Writing Center, then<lb/>
it seems they wouldn't<lb/>
need to teach that stuff in<lb/>
the classroom Bizzaro<lb/>
said last week. "And<lb/>
hopefully, the kinds of<lb/>
research skills we're go-<lb/>
ing to talk about here ap-<lb/>
ply to classes other than<lb/>
just 1200<lb/>
Each of the four topics<lb/>
will run a full week, Mon-<lb/>
day through Friday, with<lb/>
identical presentations<lb/>
going on each hour, on<lb/>
the hour, at the scheduled<lb/>
times.<lb/>
For the week of Jan.<lb/>
30, the theme is "Finding<lb/>
a Suitable Topic The<lb/>
following week, beginn-<lb/>
ing Feb. 6, will cover<lb/>
"Paraphrasing, Sum-<lb/>
ing and for the final<lb/>
week, beginning Feb. 20,<lb/>
the workshop will cover<lb/>
"Revising<lb/>
English<lb/>
1200 students may attend<lb/>
at any time on the day<lb/>
their class meets except<lb/>
their regular class hour.<lb/>
The Writing Center is<lb/>
located in Austin 308 and<lb/>
marizing and Plagiariz- 309.<lb/>
Indian Education Is Topic Of Lectures<lb/>
By OL IDA HORTON<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
As a continuing effort<lb/>
to create awareness of<lb/>
ethnic diversity, the<lb/>
School of Education<lb/>
sponsored a program on<lb/>
Indian education last<lb/>
Tuesday. Betty Oxedine<lb/>
Mangum, director of In-<lb/>
dian Education for the<lb/>
N.C. Department of<lb/>
Public Instruction.<lb/>
presented a seminar on<lb/>
the American Indian in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
The program was the<lb/>
second in a series of lec-<lb/>
tures on multicultural<lb/>
awareness. The seminars<lb/>
are being presented as<lb/>
part of the School of<lb/>
Education's effort to gain<lb/>
reaccreditation.<lb/>
Mangum, a native<lb/>
I umbee Indian, spoke<lb/>
firsthand about the<lb/>
public's unawareness of<lb/>
American Indians living<lb/>
in North Carolina. Ac-<lb/>
cording to the 1980 Cen-<lb/>
sus, there are 64,635 In-<lb/>
dians residing in the state.<lb/>
In 1977, A. Craig<lb/>
Phillips, superintendent<lb/>
of public schools in<lb/>
North Carolina, decided<lb/>
there should be a Division<lb/>
of Indian Education in<lb/>
the N.C. Department of<lb/>
Public Instruction.<lb/>
CROP Walk Planned<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
SUf Writer<lb/>
The Greenville Hunger Coaiiuoa<lb/>
will sponsor the 12th annual CROP<lb/>
Walk to raise money for the hungry on<lb/>
March 25.<lb/>
The 20-kilometer walk raised ap-<lb/>
proximately $4,000 last year and is ex-<lb/>
pected to raise $12,000 this year, accor-<lb/>
ding to Helen Shondell, a coordinator<lb/>
of the walk. Twenty-five percent of the<lb/>
money raised will be used to fight local<lb/>
hunger through Chruch Ministries<lb/>
United, Shondell said. Church<lb/>
Ministries United is a group of local<lb/>
churches working fogether to serve the<lb/>
poor.<lb/>
The other 75 percent, Shondell said,<lb/>
will go to aid international hunger<lb/>
relief. Chancellor John M. HoweU's<lb/>
wife. Okadyt. is expected to be the 1984<lb/>
chairwoman of the walk, Shondell<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Anyone interested can participate in<lb/>
the walk. Shondell said the Greenville<lb/>
Hunger Coalition is urging any on-<lb/>
campus organization, including frater-<lb/>
nities and sororities, to get involved.<lb/>
Coordinators for the walk ask that all<lb/>
groups wishing to participate have a<lb/>
representative contact the Newman<lb/>
Center for more information. Other in-<lb/>
terested persons can also contact the<lb/>
center for information.<lb/>
Mangum said, "One of<lb/>
the reasons for creating<lb/>
this division was to bring<lb/>
about more awareness of<lb/>
the American Indian<lb/>
tribes living here in the<lb/>
state<lb/>
The division promotes<lb/>
and supports better<lb/>
academic performance of<lb/>
the American Indian stu-<lb/>
dent. To explain the need<lb/>
for such a division,<lb/>
Mangum said,<lb/>
"Historically in our state,<lb/>
the American Indian stu-<lb/>
dent has not tested ex-<lb/>
tremely well, and our tex-<lb/>
tbooks do not support a<lb/>
lot of their history<lb/>
Under the Title IV In-<lb/>
dian Education Act,<lb/>
twenty-five public<lb/>
schools in North Carolina<lb/>
receive federal funds for<lb/>
each American Indian<lb/>
student enrolled in their<lb/>
school. Aproximately<lb/>
$1.7 million is allocated<lb/>
to 16,000 Indian students<lb/>
in North Carolina. In<lb/>
order to receive federal<lb/>
funds, schools must have<lb/>
at least ten Indian<lb/>
students enrolled.<lb/>
Mangum stressed that<lb/>
teachers should educate<lb/>
their students about the<lb/>
North Carolina American<lb/>
Indian.<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Kind of latch<lb/>
5 Stalk<lb/>
9 Greek letter<lb/>
12 Sandarac<lb/>
tree<lb/>
13 Carry<lb/>
14 Male sheep<lb/>
15 Sarcasm<lb/>
17 Conjunction<lb/>
18 High<lb/>
mountain<lb/>
19 Post<lb/>
21 Surfeits<lb/>
23 Stretched<lb/>
27 Pronoun<lb/>
28 Warms<lb/>
29 Obtain<lb/>
31 Bambi's<lb/>
mother<lb/>
34 Babylonian<lb/>
deity<lb/>
35 Weirdest<lb/>
38 Mrs. Kettle<lb/>
39 Arid<lb/>
41 Cry<lb/>
42 Downy duck<lb/>
44 Printer's<lb/>
measure<lb/>
46 Ink<lb/>
absorbers<lb/>
48 Spoor<lb/>
51 Direction<lb/>
52 Possessive<lb/>
pronoun<lb/>
53 Preposition<lb/>
55 Sowed<lb/>
59 Writing<lb/>
implement<lb/>
60 Transaction<lb/>
62 Girl's name<lb/>
63 Worm<lb/>
64 Goddess of<lb/>
discord<lb/>
65 Appear<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Possesses<lb/>
2 Macaw<lb/>
3 Posed for<lb/>
portrait<lb/>
4 Archbishop<lb/>
5 Beer mug<lb/>
6 Infinitive<lb/>
indicator<lb/>
7 Greek letter<lb/>
8 Army meal<lb/>
9 Boxed<lb/>
10 Healthy<lb/>
11 Demons<lb/>
16 Lifts<lb/>
20 Easy to read<lb/>
22 Part of<lb/>
"to be<lb/>
23 Lean-to<lb/>
24 Rip<lb/>
25 Sun god<lb/>
26 River in<lb/>
Scotland<lb/>
30 Sleeping<lb/>
sickness fly<lb/>
32 Hebrew<lb/>
measure<lb/>
33 Auricles<lb/>
36 Take<lb/>
unlawfully<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
37 Snickers<lb/>
40 Longs for<lb/>
43 Prefix: down<lb/>
45 Note of scale<lb/>
47 Fertile spots<lb/>
in desert<lb/>
48 Drink heavily<lb/>
49 Regrets<lb/>
50 Be defeated<lb/>
54 Distant<lb/>
56 Expire<lb/>
57 Paris season<lb/>
58 Obstruct<lb/>
61 Chinese<lb/>
distance<lb/>
measure<lb/>
12341567891011<lb/>
121314<lb/>
15iff1718<lb/>
i r2012122<lb/>
26?27<lb/>
28?2930I 313233<lb/>
34? 35n38<lb/>
3414243<lb/>
4647 I<lb/>
P1<lb/>
521551 56 1 57 I 58 1<lb/>
59&amp;)61 1 62 III<lb/>
63641 I65! 1 1<lb/>
1983 United Feature Syndicate. Inc<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
3 PIECE FUP.N ??1 Sofa. ItvitNt<lb/>
and chair. Vary good con UH Call<lb/>
Boo64o Iryw at JMlWt.<lb/>
Ipersonal<lb/>
TO CEO In A BIO COUNTRY:<lb/>
Baby. I miss you The Beav<lb/>
DEAR ALL rW. US lbs. giraffes<lb/>
you'll never gat a data until you gat<lb/>
your skinny roar back to ? tncsn<lb/>
continent Signad Ed "Tha<lb/>
Zoofceeper<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
WANTED:<lb/>
room mat<lb/>
nonsmoking, responsible<lb/>
ralaiad atmosphere, two<lb/>
bocks from campus. Private room.<lb/>
Rent $U5 mo. ?i utilities. Call<lb/>
7SM114.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATES wanted, tilt<lb/>
per month Includes utilities, phone<lb/>
and TV with HBO. Showtime and<lb/>
MTV. Close fo campus. Call 7Sa-740.<lb/>
WANTED: Musicians needed:<lb/>
keyboard, guitar, drummeer, horns,<lb/>
etc. con temporary religiousgospel<lb/>
music format. Call: Life and Peace<lb/>
Ministry, 7S1-74M or 7S-14fI Linda<lb/>
Wilder<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES needed:<lb/>
?7.Mmo olus half utilities. 1 Mock<lb/>
from campus, S blocks from<lb/>
downtown. Call 7S?-M4?. Ask for Lisa.<lb/>
DRUMMER NEEDED lor<lb/>
Rockabilly-Blues Band. Call 122-S5M.<lb/>
PART-TIME EMPLOYEES wanted<lb/>
to put up posters on campus now and<lb/>
throughout itM 2 19 hrsmonth,<lb/>
M.SAhr. Send name, address, phone<lb/>
no class year, etc. to Ms. Maury,<lb/>
3414 Peachtree St N.E Atlanta, OA<lb/>
1314<lb/>
MISC.<lb/>
TIRED OF COLD nasty weather T<lb/>
Well get ready for spring BREAK<lb/>
?4 at Dayton Beach. Round trip<lb/>
trans, with kegs. 7 nights accom.<lb/>
Ocoanfront at the Kings Inn. 3<lb/>
pootsMe keg parties, bands, contests<lb/>
plus lots morel 11 All far only SlfB.gg<lb/>
For mere Info, call Mike at ru 797<lb/>
after 4:30 p. m<lb/>
SPRING BREAK In the<lb/>
BAHAMAS" 7 nights on Paradise Is.<lb/>
Round trip let flight, party cruise,<lb/>
FREE BEER, Transfers, gambling,<lb/>
and more. SM Call Mitch at 7M-llet.<lb/>
MCAT: Tha Stanley H. Kaplan<lb/>
review course for the MCAT is of-<lb/>
fered at ECU. Course starts Feb. 1,<lb/>
it4 Deadline for registration Is Jan.<lb/>
30, l?B4. For more information call<lb/>
toll-tree i eoo-47i-jtit or 7SB-IS47.<lb/>
SERVICE IS ALL that we do at the<lb/>
TECH SHOF and our audio techni<lb/>
clans don't charge tor repair<lb/>
estimates. Call us at 7S7-lfM.<lb/>
? TKE little sisters<lb/>
Present<lb/>
rUDENT GOVERNMENT ASSOCIATION<lb/>
AND<lb/>
THE NORTH CAROLINA STUDENT<lb/>
LEGISLATURE OF THE<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA DELIGATION<lb/>
PRESENT A<lb/>
GUBERNATORIAL<lb/>
FORUM<lb/>
DRAFT NIGHT<lb/>
Wed. Jan. 25, 1984 8:30-1:00am<lb/>
Adm.$1.50 18yrs$1.00<lb/>
KHDraft All Night<lb/>
Come Eariy<lb/>
JANUARY 27, 1984<lb/>
2 p.m4 p.m. Candidate Forum<lb/>
A panel of students will question the<lb/>
candidates on the issues<lb/>
that relate to students and the<lb/>
Greenville community.<lb/>
4 p.m6 p.m. Candidate Reception<lb/>
A chance to meet with candidates and<lb/>
representatives. Hors d'oeuvres and<lb/>
beverages will be served.<lb/>
Take advantage of this unique opportunity to hear<lb/>
the Candidates for Governor<lb/>
speak at the first forum held in<lb/>
Our Region of Eastern North Carolina.<lb/>
Where: Jenkins Fine Arts Center Auditorium<lb/>
Open to Students and Public<lb/>
NO ADMISSION CHARGE<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
-?w "????<lb/>
'?-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0008"/><lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
One<lb/>
louse Presents<lb/>
Tl ?T A.<lb/>
ale Set<lb/>
If 11II3<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'itiiatt ulii 1at. but not<lb/>
evei ipproves of such fli tie is fr(im the<lb/>
Samm-Art Williams P!a<lb/>
life in North Carolina, staged th<lb/>
r<lb/>
ltfii<lb/>
Trading<lb/>
Places<lb/>
'To Be Or Not <lb/>
Movie Cra<lb/>
Face it: !<lb/>
.<lb/>
laughii<lb/>
In Mel B: To Be <lb/>
To He. it's Poland<lb/>
time Polish theatre<lb/>
their compart) deal -<lb/>
upation, n<lb/>
bad guys ai t<lb/>
tr. Sounds like load<lb/>
right?<lb/>
2<lb/>
?<lb/>
Eddie I1uiln<lb/>
Can a<lb/>
; ins! mil. a commoditu genius? V ill a<lb/>
wealth) blue blooded financial wizard res rime<lb/>
it he's stripped of his riches? Trading Places, a tale oi<lb/>
altered identies, tells this sidesplitting<lb/>
(and vice ersa) sti<lb/>
Directoi lohn Landis (Kentucky Fried Movie)<lb/>
unleashes the comedic talents ol two zany Saturday<lb/>
Sight I ie products. Dan Aykn yd a id Eddie Mur<lb/>
pin i he pan become unknowing guinea pigs in a<lb/>
bizarre experiment concocted by two bored<lb/>
billionaire brothers Ihiough trumped-up drug<lb/>
charges, they bump Aykroyd from Ins prestigious job<lb/>
and social standing ami ushei in a befuddled Murphy<lb/>
to take his place When the boys finally catch on to<lb/>
the scam, they plol to thwarl the eccentric twosome<lb/>
with a Wall Street swindle oi then own<lb/>
Newest king ol comedy, Eddie Murphy, tush.<lb/>
from his critically acclaimed peit.Min.iHvf in 4H<lb/>
HHS provides nonstop hilarity as beggai turned<lb/>
brokei A frenzied Aykroyd keeps pace as the slutted<lb/>
shirt forced to pound the pavement - superlative<lb/>
supporting cast includes Ralph Bellamy and Don<lb/>
Ameche as the two amusingly despicable con men.<lb/>
and Jamie I ee Curtis (Halloween) as the sumptuous<lb/>
streetwalker with a gold plated heart<lb/>
Trading Places is a frantic romp into the prince<lb/>
and the pauper genre, a box office bustei thai takes<lb/>
cheering audiences along tor the ride as it pokes fun<lb/>
at the world of finance and the supei rich<lb/>
Mick<lb/>
I aSalle<lb/>
Actually, this plot has ?<lb/>
done before The 198? I H,<lb/>
ot To He. starring Brooks<lb/>
Anne Bancroft, is actuall<lb/>
remake of the 1942 To He Or Sot<lb/>
To He, which starred Jack Benin<lb/>
and Carole I ombard The<lb/>
original movie was gn right<lb/>
up there in Mick I aSalh ? I<lb/>
time Ten Best Flicks. But the new<lb/>
version Hops not only in .<lb/>
panson. but on its own terms<lb/>
This To HeOr Xoi Io He is<lb/>
slapstick here, serious di<lb/>
there, and farce in between Ai no<lb/>
point do you ever believe anything<lb/>
bad can happen to the mam<lb/>
characters - so there's little<lb/>
drama. Yet you have long sen<lb/>
timental stretches with the violins<lb/>
up to tell us how to react where<lb/>
there are no laughs at all.<lb/>
The picture crawls No mattei<lb/>
when you walk in, you walk out<lb/>
needing a shave Things thai<lb/>
should take live minutes take ten<lb/>
Details the audience needs to hear<lb/>
once are told over and over again<lb/>
as if the audience is made up ol<lb/>
the usual morons that like Mel<lb/>
Brooks' movtes<lb/>
The typical Mel Brooks touches<lb/>
are all there homosexual jokes,<lb/>
boring dance routines and guvs in<lb/>
-<lb/>
To Ht I Hi<lb/>
a<lb/>
necessary f<lb/>
with x<lb/>
being a beautifi was one<lb/>
the<lb/>
history ol the movies Bui the<lb/>
origina i n a<lb/>
brilliant s(<lb/>
twists in it tha S ? ano<lb/>
the direction ol 1 ins: i ubitsch, a<lb/>
pioneer in sophis<lb/>
comedy<lb/>
PaS he remake and catch<lb/>
the original on the 1 ate Show<lb/>
Even forgeti . , better version.<lb/>
Mel Brooks' To He Or 'ot To He<lb/>
is not worth seeii .<lb/>
?<lb/>
? s<lb/>
SALEtS<lb/>
<lb/>
rl ?" ' T<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST C AROl INIAN<lb/>
AM AHY24 19?4<lb/>
-<lb/>
???<lb/>
fh<lb/>
???r?<lb/>
?-<lb/>
;5<lb/>
?fc<lb/>
?ooo? ?oot ? ecu ????oo Lb<lb/>
a tale of a ounjj black man's<lb/>
eek b the ECl Plahouse.<lb/>
To Be'<lb/>
Crawls<lb/>
tg. ties don't fit ?<lb/>
and I wouldn't like Them anyway.<lb/>
if me, but I've never<lb/>
understood h a gu dressed as a<lb/>
 oman is anything to bust a gut<lb/>
er.<lb/>
Still, there's something likeable<lb/>
about Mel Brooks as an actor.<lb/>
Earlv m this picture Brooks does a<lb/>
funny shtick as Hitler which is an<lb/>
mside joke for anybody who's<lb/>
ever een Chaplin's The Great<lb/>
Dictator Brooks doesn't imitate<lb/>
Hitler He imitates Chaplin's im-<lb/>
itation Elsewhere, Brooks does a<lb/>
decent job of keeping up with a<lb/>
enplay that changes its tone<lb/>
every 15 minutes.<lb/>
V for Anne Bancroft: I like<lb/>
this lady, really But she's a good<lb/>
20 years too old for the part she<lb/>
plays The director knew it too.<lb/>
That's why every close-up of her<lb/>
is done in soft focus. But the<lb/>
camera can only lie so much. Tim<lb/>
Matheson, her ardent young<lb/>
lover, seems less ardent than mer-<lb/>
ll ? and crazy There are so<lb/>
many actresses between 30 and 35<lb/>
that need work. One of them<lb/>
should've gotten Bancroft's part.<lb/>
The 1942 To Be Or ot To Be<lb/>
somehow managed the combina-<lb/>
tion of comedy and drama. Part<lb/>
of the reason was the casting.<lb/>
Jack Benny had the subtlety<lb/>
necessary for a comedy dealing<lb/>
with such a sensitive subject. And<lb/>
Carole Lombard, in addition to<lb/>
being a beautiful woman, was one<lb/>
of the best comediennes in the<lb/>
history of the movies. But the<lb/>
original also benefited from a<lb/>
brilliant script that had more<lb/>
twists in it than Snake Hill, and<lb/>
the direction of Ernst Lubitsch, a<lb/>
pioneer in sophisticated screen<lb/>
comedy.<lb/>
Pass up the remake and catch<lb/>
the original on the Late Show.<lb/>
Even forgetting the better version,<lb/>
Mel Brooks' To Be Or ot To Be<lb/>
is not worth seeing.<lb/>
One Hot, One Cool: Female Stars Pace 80s<lb/>
By CARL V N EBERT<lb/>
IMMMka<lb/>
 And then there's Cyndi Lauper, surely the<lb/>
owner of one of the most distinctive voices in rock 'n'<lb/>
roll, with a hit-bound first LP called She's So<lb/>
Unusual. She is unusual, too; she plays her powerful,<lb/>
New-York-Martian meets Betty Boop vocals off a<lb/>
delicious selection of cover and original tunes with<lb/>
feeling, pathos and aplomb.<lb/>
Cyndi Lauper<lb/>
Lauper, best known to MTV audiences for the<lb/>
LP's hit single, a cover of Robert Hazard's "Girls<lb/>
Just Want To Have Fun pushes her resonant voice<lb/>
up and down the scales, trilling and hiccuping, bopp-<lb/>
ing and rolling. She belies the cartoon-character<lb/>
cuteness of her phrasing on "Girls" and on "He's So<lb/>
Unusual with gutsy, polished delivery on the<lb/>
superb version of The Brains "Money Changes<lb/>
Everything" that opens the album, her own "Time<lb/>
after Time and "Yeah Yeah a closing rocker that<lb/>
shows she really knows how to project more than<lb/>
strangeness.<lb/>
Side one's cover version of Prince's "When You<lb/>
Were Mine" should have Mitch Ryder clasping his<lb/>
hands in despair; there's more passion in Lauper's<lb/>
version than in anything but the meaty beaty jiggle of<lb/>
a go-go dancer in the Ryder video. When Lauper<lb/>
sings, "When u were mineYou were kindasorta my<lb/>
best friend the innocent urgency of that voice<lb/>
packs more heartwrenching pathos than a kid ex-<lb/>
plaining how he didn't mean to break Mommy's<lb/>
vase. And on "He's So Unusual a 1929 number by<lb/>
Al Lewis, Al Sherman and Abner Silver, Laupcr calls<lb/>
up that crazy babydoll voice again. On an MTV New<lb/>
Year's Eve special, she accompanied herself on this<lb/>
one with an old ukelele, giving it up halfway because<lb/>
she forgot the chords and decided she'd rather climb<lb/>
the scaffolding and dance her wild dances in the au-<lb/>
dience instead.<lb/>
But it would be a shame to focus only on the<lb/>
engaging power of Lauper's singing on "She's So<lb/>
Unusual" without mentioning that this is a really<lb/>
danceab'e, happy, lift-you-outta-your seat bit of<lb/>
New York Rock 4n' roll, aptly carried by Lauper's<lb/>
backup band, which sounded a mite dizzy and out of<lb/>
tune live, but are in fine shape on this album. Heady<lb/>
synthesizer, crisply trebled guitars and a boatload of<lb/>
percussion instruments ? plus the occasional sax<lb/>
break ? make She's So Unusual an invigorating and<lb/>
utterly promising album from Cyndi Lauper. It's just<lb/>
too bad Portrait Records couldn't enclose a<lb/>
hologram of Lauper singing and dancing in her black<lb/>
taffeta-and-net-strapless gown as well.<lb/>
With Learning to Crawl, their third full LP, The<lb/>
Pretenders offer a dark, harsh, but satisfying slice of<lb/>
life on the chain gang ? the everyday world. The<lb/>
album closely mirrors the lack of glamour in getting<lb/>
older, the trend toward complacent, middle-of-the-<lb/>
road lifestyles, and the ease with which a life taken<lb/>
for granted slips beyond our control.<lb/>
Kicking it off with "Middle of the Road their<lb/>
current MTV-pumped "concert" video, Chrissie<lb/>
Hynde sings of the forces of time, the little falsities of<lb/>
life, the uninvolved attitudes of Americans, and<lb/>
perhaps even about safe, "middle-of-the-road" rock<lb/>
'n' roll as well. This is a tune purposesly sung, in<lb/>
quiet resignation to the powers that be: "When you<lb/>
own a chunk of the bloody third worldThe babies<lb/>
just come with the scenery barks vocalist rhythm<lb/>
guitarist Hynde, who writes all the band's songs.<lb/>
Hynde, known for her tough-girl stance and well-<lb/>
fuckem lyrics, is softening up (in her way) as she ad<lb/>
mits defeat to the aggravations of stardom: "The<lb/>
middle of the roadIs my private cul-de-sac1 don't<lb/>
rehearseOr can't you tellI'm goin' homeI'm tired<lb/>
as hellI'm not the kind I used to beI've got a kid,<lb/>
I'm 33<lb/>
The Pretenders<lb/>
"Back on the Chain Gang with its easy rolling<lb/>
beat and countrified rhythm guitar flashes, is the<lb/>
oldest of the singles included on Learning To Crawl.<lb/>
Hynde, drummer Martin Chambers and ex-Rockpile<lb/>
guitarist Billy Bremner recorded and released "Chain<lb/>
Gang"over a year ago and dedicated it to James<lb/>
Honeyman-Scott, the Pretenders guitarist keyboard<lb/>
man who died of a drug overdose in June of '82. Ex-<lb/>
cept on one track, the new album contains no<lb/>
keyboards. In "Chain Gang Hynde rails against<lb/>
the intrusions of media and of fate that separated<lb/>
them, hinting at a possible love affair.<lb/>
Perhaps Learning To Crawl has been so long<lb/>
delayed (Pretenders II came out in the summer of<lb/>
1981) because of the sad events that led to the bands<lb/>
restructuring. Pete Farndon, the original bassist who<lb/>
quit just before Honeyman-Scott's death, died last<lb/>
April. On Crawl, Robbie Mclntosh takes over guitar<lb/>
duties and Malcolm Foster fills in the Pretenders' un-<lb/>
dulating, beat-heavy bassline and as on the previous<lb/>
albums and EPs, the bass carries Hynde's voice and<lb/>
ties the LP together.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
410 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
7$6-3023 ? 24 HRS.<lb/>
The wistful sadness of "Chain Gang" lifts with the<lb/>
upbeat "Watching the Clothes the Chrissie Hynde<lb/>
version of Donna Summer's "She Works Hard For<lb/>
the Money As the song's speaker, a woman resign-<lb/>
ed to spending another Saturday night at the laun-<lb/>
dromat, muses "I been kissin' assTryin' to keep it<lb/>
cleanServin' the middle classIt's a clean routine<lb/>
Mclntosh runs wild with some brighter-than-bright<lb/>
lead guitar that makes you wonder how he gets that<lb/>
axe to sound like a small horn section. Hynde ? who<lb/>
does an endearing working-girl portrait on their<lb/>
"Brass In Pocket" video as a waitress in a burned-<lb/>
out diner ? can sing the daylights out of this kind of<lb/>
bitterly humorous raveup, and I wish they'd chosen<lb/>
"Watching the Clothes" for the big MTV push<lb/>
rather than "Middle of the Road<lb/>
On "Show Me Hynde recalls the guitar line and<lb/>
feeling of the first album's "Kid and on "Time the<lb/>
Avenger returns to the album's theme of human<lb/>
helplessness against the passing of time: "Nothing's<lb/>
permanentEverything's on loan hereEven your<lb/>
wife and kidsCould be gone next year<lb/>
"Thumbelina an odd lullaby sung to a child on a<lb/>
cross-country train ride, pairs a country beat with<lb/>
unadorned, Dave Edmunds-style twanging rockabilly<lb/>
strings. It perhaps owes its poignance to Hynde's giv-<lb/>
ing birth to a daughter by Kinks leader Ray Davies<lb/>
last January.<lb/>
The second side's showpiece for Hynde's angst-<lb/>
ridden vocals, Foster's luscious bass and Chambers'<lb/>
crisp, spare drumming is "My City Was Gone the<lb/>
song I swore had to be on the new album or I'd eat<lb/>
my copy oiConcerts for Kampuchea. An FM hit<lb/>
since summer, "My City Was Gone" relates Hynde's<lb/>
odyssey back to her home town of Akron, Ohio,<lb/>
where she was born in 1952; but instead of family<lb/>
and familiarity, she finds concrete replacing<lb/>
greenery, emptiness replacing love, shopping malls<lb/>
and Muzak replacing the roar of the downtown she<lb/>
remembers so well: "I went back to OhioBut my<lb/>
pretty countrysideHad been paved down the mid-<lb/>
dleBy a government that had no pride Billy<lb/>
Bremner echoes the chunky bass hook on lead guitar<lb/>
on this track, and it's hard to sit still to.<lb/>
And as a final twist on the second side, Crawl in-<lb/>
cludes a single non-Hynde composition: a stand-out,<lb/>
old-fashioned slowdance R&amp;B number that Hynde<lb/>
wraps her voice around like Marvin Gaye in drag.<lb/>
Fully backed by harmony from the band and<lb/>
Bremner, Andrew Bodner and Paul Carrack, "Thin<lb/>
I ine Between Love and Hate" is a perfect vehicle for<lb/>
The Pretenders' weary, cynical stance on the in-<lb/>
evitable erosion of perfect love in an imperfect<lb/>
world.<lb/>
Records provided by Record Bar, Pitt Plaza.<lb/>
Cyndi Lauper's hit-bound first LP. She's S,<lb/>
Unusual, showcases her broad vocal talents. Sharp<lb/>
and energetic, the album is a delight.<lb/>
The Pretenders' third L.P learning to Crawl, has a<lb/>
more mature theme than previous albums, but the<lb/>
power and drive are still there in this superb collec-<lb/>
tion of songs.<lb/>
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LIMITED EDITION &amp; ORIGINAL PRINTS<lb/>
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TRADITIONAL &amp; BAMBOO FURNITURE<lb/>
SPODE CHRISTMAS CHINA<lb/>
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LOOK FOR THE GREEN TAG &amp; SAVE 50<lb/>
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INTEHIOKS. ACCESSOKIES. SPECIALTY GIFT SHOPPE<lb/>
MON -SAT 10 A.M P.M.<lb/>
items ana Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
January 28 1984<lb/>
J?L.LLi<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
POLIO<lb/>
fca?-f o' mese aover<lb/>
f'sed 'f?ms 13 re<lb/>
qui'ed to be 'eady<lb/>
a?a aDe or sa e n<lb/>
eacn K'oge' Sav on<lb/>
ecepr as spec.<lb/>
? - - -<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
N.C. Journalist Records 50 Years<lb/>
By CARLA BAGLEY<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C.<lb/>
(UP1) ? Former Wall<lb/>
Street Journal Editor<lb/>
Vermont Connecticut<lb/>
Royster has retired, but<lb/>
he hasn't stopped work-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Royster has rubbed<lb/>
elbows with the famous,<lb/>
reported on history in the<lb/>
making for the past 50<lb/>
years and held some of<lb/>
the top posts and honors<lb/>
in the world of jour-<lb/>
nalism.<lb/>
But when he dies,<lb/>
Royster would like the<lb/>
simple word "newsman"<lb/>
engraved on his tomb-<lb/>
stone. Just don't plan to<lb/>
do it anytime soon.<lb/>
The Pulitzer-Prize win-<lb/>
ning editor has retired to<lb/>
Chapel Hill, N.C, but he<lb/>
hasn't stopped writing.<lb/>
He has a regular column<lb/>
for the Journal and has<lb/>
written several books, in-<lb/>
cluding his recently com-<lb/>
pleted autobiography.<lb/>
My Own, My Country's<lb/>
Time, released in October<lb/>
and now in its third prin-<lb/>
ting.<lb/>
The book's title is an<lb/>
appropriate one. In his<lb/>
nearly 70 years, Royster<lb/>
has watched and reported<lb/>
on some of the nation's<lb/>
swiftest, most intense and<lb/>
traumatic changes.<lb/>
The young man who<lb/>
majored in classical<lb/>
languages at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill in the<lb/>
mid-1930s never dreamed<lb/>
he would live through<lb/>
four wars, the greatest<lb/>
depression in history and<lb/>
the space race. That's one<lb/>
reason he advocates a<lb/>
"good, solid, general<lb/>
education" for future<lb/>
reporters.<lb/>
"A journalist<lb/>
graduating from college<lb/>
today has no idea of what<lb/>
he'll be covering 30 years<lb/>
from now says the<lb/>
genial Royster. "I<lb/>
graduated in 1935. It<lb/>
never occurred to me I<lb/>
would be writing about<lb/>
space flights and atomic<lb/>
energy<lb/>
It also probably didn't<lb/>
occur to him that by 1936<lb/>
he would have graduated<lb/>
from a job as a cafeteria<lb/>
busboy to covering his<lb/>
first presidential press<lb/>
conference ? the 295th<lb/>
such conference held by<lb/>
Franklin Roosevelt.<lb/>
Roosevelt was the first<lb/>
of nine presidents<lb/>
i Royster has known and<lb/>
interviewed. Other world<lb/>
leaders such as<lb/>
Khrushchev and Vice<lb/>
Premier Keng Piao of<lb/>
China followed. Those<lb/>
were heady dealings for a<lb/>
native of Raleigh, N.C,<lb/>
whose first bylined story<lb/>
in the Journal was at-<lb/>
tributed to "C.V.<lb/>
Royster<lb/>
The former president<lb/>
of the American Society<lb/>
of Newspaper Editors<lb/>
didn't set out to be a<lb/>
journalist.<lb/>
"If you are unqualified<lb/>
to do anything else, you<lb/>
become a<lb/>
newspaperman he says.<lb/>
"I sort of drifted into it.<lb/>
After I got in it, I like it<lb/>
Royster is now a jour-<lb/>
nalism professor emeritus<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
He admits his rise in jour-<lb/>
nalism would be a little<lb/>
difficult to imitate today.<lb/>
In the 1930s when he<lb/>
went to work at the Jour-<lb/>
nal, the newspaper had a<lb/>
circulation of 35,000 and<lb/>
a tiny staff. Given a<lb/>
niche, a hard-working<lb/>
reporter with a dash of<lb/>
talent and a modicum of<lb/>
luck could quickly make<lb/>
a name for himself.<lb/>
Royster did, rising<lb/>
from "one cut above a<lb/>
copy boy" to become a<lb/>
senior vice president of<lb/>
the parent firm, Dow<lb/>
Jones and Co. Royster's<lb/>
first encounter with<lb/>
William Grimes, then<lb/>
managing editor of the<lb/>
Journal, left an impres<lb/>
sion on Grimes.<lb/>
"1 looked around the<lb/>
office, which was much<lb/>
cluttered with copy paper<lb/>
strewn around the floor,<lb/>
and replied, 'Well, if you<lb/>
will give me a broom, I'll<lb/>
sweep up this office<lb/>
Grimes hired that<lb/>
brash young man who<lb/>
took his name from two<lb/>
states ? and apparently<lb/>
was never sorry about his<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
Vermont Royster<lb/>
doesn't know exactly how<lb/>
long he'll continue to<lb/>
write, but he plans to do<lb/>
it until he has "trouble<lb/>
thinking about what to<lb/>
write or thinking what to<lb/>
think about<lb/>
Big Apple Trip Announced<lb/>
The Student Union<lb/>
Travel Committee is<lb/>
sponsoring a trip to New<lb/>
York City during Spring<lb/>
Break. The trip will be a<lb/>
fabulous repeat of the<lb/>
Thanksgiving Trip,<lb/>
however, there will be<lb/>
more fun and excitement<lb/>
becuase it will last a full<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Spend six full days in<lb/>
the "Big Apple Plan<lb/>
your own schedule of ac-<lb/>
tivities ? museums,<lb/>
galleries, Broadway<lb/>
shows. shopping,<lb/>
restaurants, etc. ? and<lb/>
enjoy the world's most<lb/>
exciting city at your own<lb/>
pace.<lb/>
The trip will depart<lb/>
from Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center (West parking lot)<lb/>
at 8 p.m. on Friday,<lb/>
March 2, 1984. Travel<lb/>
will be via a 46-passenger<lb/>
Trailways bus. After<lb/>
traveling all night, except<lb/>
for necessary rest stops,<lb/>
the destination of the trip<lb/>
(The Hotel Edison in<lb/>
New York City) will be<lb/>
reached at approximately<lb/>
7 a.m. Saturday, March<lb/>
3. The trip will depart<lb/>
from the Hotel Edison in<lb/>
New York City at 10a.m.<lb/>
on Friday, March 9, for<lb/>
the return trip to Green-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
The Price of the trip in-<lb/>
cludes roundtrip<lb/>
transportation, six<lb/>
nights' lodging at the<lb/>
Hotel Edison (located at<lb/>
Time Square) and bag-<lb/>
gage handling fees. Prices<lb/>
are as follows:<lb/>
$315.00 per person in<lb/>
single occupancy room.<lb/>
$210.00 per person in<lb/>
double or twin occupancy<lb/>
room.<lb/>
$190.00 per person<lb/>
triple occupancy room<lb/>
$165.00 per person<lb/>
quad occupancy room<lb/>
in<lb/>
in<lb/>
Time and space are<lb/>
limited. For further in-<lb/>
formation contact the<lb/>
Central Ticket Office at<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266, bet-<lb/>
ween the hours of 10 a.m.<lb/>
and 4 p.m. The sign-up<lb/>
deadline is Friday,<lb/>
February 17, 1984.<lb/>
'Tron' Lecture At Hendrix<lb/>
The East Carolina<lb/>
University Unions Lec-<lb/>
ture Series presents "The<lb/>
Computer World of<lb/>
Tron Tuesday, January<lb/>
24 at 8 p.m. in Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
Larry Elin is the direc-<lb/>
tor of computer special<lb/>
effects animation for<lb/>
MAGI, the computer<lb/>
company responsible for<lb/>
much of the electronic<lb/>
animation work for the<lb/>
futuristic Walt Disney<lb/>
film, Tron. Mr. Elin<lb/>
presents a fascinating lec-<lb/>
ture demonstration<lb/>
about the use of com-<lb/>
puter technology that<lb/>
could radically alter film-<lb/>
making and revolutionize<lb/>
the movie business. Tron<lb/>
represents an un-<lb/>
precedented orchestra-<lb/>
tion of the new<lb/>
technology of computer-<lb/>
generated imagery. It has<lb/>
opened up to the movies<lb/>
not only a new range of<lb/>
technology, but a whole<lb/>
new way ot seeing film<lb/>
ttiat no eye or camera has<lb/>
ever before beheld. Elin<lb/>
demonstrates these com-<lb/>
puter special effects and<lb/>
shows spectacular film<lb/>
clips from Tron.<lb/>
Tickets are available at<lb/>
the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center. Ticket prices are<lb/>
$1.50 for ECU students,<lb/>
$2.50 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff, and $3.50 for<lb/>
the public. All tickets at<lb/>
the door will be $3.50.<lb/>
Eh, Mick!<lb/>
Dear Mr. LaSalle,<lb/>
I am a 23-year-old, male virgin, a senior, major-<lb/>
ing in marketing. Normally, I would never con-<lb/>
sider writing to an advice column, but this is a<lb/>
private matter that I would rather not discuss with<lb/>
my friends. I was not sure if this advice column<lb/>
was a hoax, but I figure I will give it a try.<lb/>
I met my girlfriend a couple of months ago<lb/>
while at work. (I will refer to her as Clarisse.J<lb/>
Clarisse is only 17, so there is a slight age dif-<lb/>
ference. For the past month now, Clarisse and I<lb/>
have been all but inseparable.<lb/>
However, the problem is, Clarisse has been<lb/>
pressuring me to have sex with her. Of course, I<lb/>
am anxious for us to make love, but I am worried<lb/>
about the future. Clarisse is emotionally attached<lb/>
to me, and I am afraid that eventually I am going<lb/>
to hurt her.<lb/>
Before you go ahead and say, "Oh, do it<lb/>
anyway let me emphasize that I really care<lb/>
about Clarisse and that I want what is best for her.<lb/>
I am a lot more mature and intelligent than she is,<lb/>
so I know I am going to have to decide for the<lb/>
both of us. What do you think I should do?<lb/>
Signed: Undecided<lb/>
Dear Undecided:<lb/>
Hold it: You're 23, you never got laid, and<lb/>
you're not sure what you should do? What have<lb/>
you been doing for the past ten years anyway?<lb/>
You want to go to bed with this girl, right? Then<lb/>
go ahead. You don't want to hurt her, right? Then<lb/>
don't.<lb/>
Get over your guilt trip, pal. Mick LaSalle<lb/>
knows what's going down in this town. Ninety<lb/>
percent of the girls cruising McDonalds have been<lb/>
getting it since they were fourteen. Drop Suzy off<lb/>
at the East Carolinian, and I'll give her what's best<lb/>
for her.<lb/>
Got a problem? Write:<lb/>
Eh, Mick<lb/>
co The East Carolinian<lb/>
Publications Building, 2nd Floor<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
Or, drop your letters off in person, addressed to<lb/>
Features Desk.<lb/>
THE OLD 50UTI "<lb/>
KAPPA ALPHA<lb/>
Home of the Southern Gentlemen<lb/>
INVITES ALL MEN TO<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
January 23, and 24 8:00 Until<lb/>
In September of 1958, East<lb/>
Carolina's firat fraternity was founded.<lb/>
Those same southern ideals and tradi-<lb/>
tions that then made Kappa Alpha the<lb/>
school's most outstanding fraternity<lb/>
can still be found today.<lb/>
Kappa Alpha has enjoyed the en-<lb/>
viable position of being the pacesetter<lb/>
in virtually every facet of fraternity life<lb/>
year after year. The Brothers of KA<lb/>
strive to maintain the highest standards<lb/>
in scholarship, community service, in-<lb/>
tramural sports competition and social<lb/>
stature. Our belief in long standing<lb/>
traditions is the reason for our success.<lb/>
Most fratrnities will boast of what they<lb/>
won last year or the year before. But if<lb/>
heritage, success and tradition are<lb/>
what you're made of, you owe yourself<lb/>
a visit to the KA House.<lb/>
If you are considering pledging a<lb/>
fraternity this spring, we extend this<lb/>
personal invitation to you to visit our<lb/>
house and meet the brothers of KAP-<lb/>
PA ALPHA ORDER.<lb/>
It would be our pleasure to pick you<lb/>
up at your dorm room or apartment.<lb/>
Please call 758-9781 or 758-4808 for<lb/>
some southern hospitality.<lb/>
For more information call: Wayne<lb/>
Rouse 752-8041 or Jeff Parks<lb/>
758-9781.<lb/>
G<lb/>
ADVERTISED<lb/>
HEM POLICY<lb/>
Each o these advertised items is required to be read<lb/>
sale at or below the advertised price in each AAP Sto<lb/>
specifically noted m this ad<lb/>
iiy available tor <lb/>
re except as 1<lb/>
PRICES OFFERED THRU S?l J?n 28 AT AAP IN Cr?r.iil? M<lb/>
ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAIl ABLE TO OTHER RE .All DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS<lb/>
DOUBLE COUPONS<lb/>
Clip MFCs "Cents Oft Coupons from yuur mail, newspapers<lb/>
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FOR EVERY $10.00 YOU SPEND,<lb/>
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MANUFACTURER'S COUPONS<lb/>
EXAMPLE $10 PURCHASE 5 COUPONS<lb/>
S20 PURCHASE 10 COUPONS AND SO ON<lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN Greenville. NC<lb/>
Sfwn now sod j?n i&amp; mt ?? I 'ori ationi mn<lb/>
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vo Ott 900O 01 nt?oni maruf?ciuf?? cnts-ofi<lb/>
coupons only iFooo rlstf coupons not ?ccpiti<lb/>
Custom' must ptrchs coupon product .n spciftd<lb/>
??? Eip'rtd coupon will not bt ttonorMl On coupor<lb/>
p' customer pf itnt Ho coupons ooubtma 'o ?<lb/>
nwcfvjndM Otter oo - appty to AAP ex ? m stor<lb/>
coupons wrhwihwf mnufciur is mention) c not<lb/>
Wnn the vsfu O th coupon icd SO- Of In -t?<lb/>
o thw rlm this oft is limited to in rt?r. <lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
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10-12 lb avg.<lb/>
Cut Free Into<lb/>
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SAVE $1.00<lb/>
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SAVE 30 LB.<lb/>
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eat Groce?<lb/>
Savings j<lb/>
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SAVE 80<lb/>
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SAVE 10-<lb/>
Bounty Towels<lb/>
ASSORTED ? DESIGNER<lb/>
a 79c<lb/>
SAVE 14t<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
DIET COKE ? . JAB<lb/>
2 Liter Bottle $1.05<lb/>
GOOD ONLY IN ,Greenv,He.NC<lb/>
.???(jp j) A&amp;P coupor7V????-i<lb/>
Senior Citizens Discount<lb/>
5 Off Total Purchases<lb/>
On Wednesdays<lb/>
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WITH THIS COUPON AND ID<lb/>
MUST BE AGE 62 AND OVER<lb/>
C<lb/>
Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
703 Or?nville Blvd. Greenville, N c<lb/>
?<lb/>
ECX<lb/>
Falls!<lb/>
B hi) Ml Ki An<lb/>
Spurn td<lb/>
With 13:59 ??<lb/>
fight's game.<lb/>
Spiders converted ?:<lb/>
pla to take a "?- 24<lb/>
Ea ' ?<lb/>
ed like the<lb/>
Ec s<lb/>
Thi tim<lb/>
would be<lb/>
fcfused '<lb/>
bor <lb/>
pthougl the mc<lb/>
Sta:<lb/>
agg- v<lb/>
group<lb/>
poared<lb/>
deficit to w<lb/>
an EC ?AC<lb/>
place Spide;<lb/>
pam<lb/>
11 -gai<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
who ? . ' EC<lb/>
was<lb/>
?"1 : .<lb/>
he<lb/>
ing to la . -<lb/>
na: . :<lb/>
"Q . frank<lb/>
?uickei<lb/>
Ha:<lb/>
have pla v .<lb/>
be -? gai<lb/>
made a rui<lb/>
made<lb/>
Foi<lb/>
On foui<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
at tl e '<lb/>
made 2 : 28 v<lb/>
were onh nmc<lb/>
S o p h o m or<lb/>
Newman led a<lb/>
mend sc<lb/>
A Ta<lb/>
?<lb/>
(Tm h<lb/>
reflects<lb/>
come oi<lb/>
?<lb/>
IT '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0011"/><lb/>
I HI I M c K()l INIAN<lb/>
END<lb/>
ECU Rally<lb/>
Falls Short<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
H H) Ml kl AS<lb/>
<lb/>
 J sgto play, in Saturday<lb/>
game, the Richmond<lb/>
convt- J on a three-point<lb/>
take aJ8 24 lead over the<lb/>
r linaPirates li the seem<lb/>
the same old movie, as<lb/>
Charlie Harrison<lb/>
Wk- ? ?&amp;<lb/>
t howev ei, the movie<lb/>
edited 1 he Pirates<lb/>
iil thr igl . same<lb/>
depi essing flu k nd<lb/>
. the movie didn't w in an<lb/>
was definitely .? three<lb/>
 1 he show w as about an<lb/>
 moth .i<lb/>
? . layers, w ho nearl<lb/>
? Kk k from ihe 14 point<lb/>
to win, but ended up losing<lb/>
U hea vet to the first<lb/>
Spiders, 61 <lb/>
i r e 11 (<lb/>
a t seen that has an<lb/>
ak said<lb/>
:oach Dick rarrant,<lb/>
tj ? ECl played like it<lb/>
 t tournament<lb/>
d with intensity<lb/>
1 knew they, weren't go-<lb/>
the<lb/>
f ECl or Ha<lb/>
! I<lb/>
mkly,<lb/>
-<lb/>
it <lb/>
I<lb/>
ere a<lb/>
nk tl<lb/>
teai ild<lb/>
11 wa<lb/>
d <lb/>
 and<lb/>
.<lb/>
i connected<lb/>
d goals than<lb/>
rie difference was<lb/>
. spiders<lb/>
he Pirates<lb/>
points and seven of seven free<lb/>
throw shooting. Senior center Bill<lb/>
Rye had 11 points and sophomore<lb/>
forward John Davis added 10 and<lb/>
pulled down eight rebounds.<lb/>
ECU got 12 points from<lb/>
freshman guards William Grady<lb/>
and Keith Sledge. Curt<lb/>
Vanderhorst also contributed nine<lb/>
points for the Pirates, who at one<lb/>
time were playing four freshmen<lb/>
in the game.<lb/>
1 he Pirates wiere down by 10<lb/>
points with 7:47 left in the game<lb/>
when they made their move. Ap-<lb/>
plying hard-nosed, full court<lb/>
pressure, ECl' was able to cut in-<lb/>
to the Spider lead.<lb/>
The lead was trimmed to 44-37<lb/>
when ECl' forward Barry Wright<lb/>
stole the ball on Richmond's end<lb/>
of the court, then pushed the ball<lb/>
up to Vanderhorst ,who made a<lb/>
layup, was fouled and converted<lb/>
on the free throw.<lb/>
rhen, as Richmond was bring-<lb/>
ing the ball up court, Vanderhorst<lb/>
stripped the ball loose and went<lb/>
the distance again for a layup to<lb/>
close the margin to 44-39.<lb/>
With Minges Coliseum roaring<lb/>
after two straight steals, ECU<lb/>
center Leon Bass added to the ex-<lb/>
citement with a blocked shot, and<lb/>
seconds later teammate guard<lb/>
Tony Robinson was fouled and<lb/>
made both free throws. Suddenly,<lb/>
the lead was three.<lb/>
After Richmond opened a up a<lb/>
e point lead, 50-45, ECU<lb/>
freshman forward Derrick Battle<lb/>
connected on a baseline jumper<lb/>
and Grad) drove the baseline for<lb/>
a lav up to pull the Pirates within<lb/>
. point, 50-49.<lb/>
Continued<lb/>
See spiders, page 13<lb/>
Players Honored<lb/>
A t Dinner A wards<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
I rtlnl Syorti Ull?<lb/>
"Bowl participaion should be<lb/>
based on merit, not by whom<lb/>
television wants Those were the<lb/>
words of Chancellor Leo Jenkins<lb/>
at the ECU football banquet Fri-<lb/>
day as he called for the NCAA to<lb/>
regain full control of bowl games.<lb/>
Jenkins was the featured<lb/>
speaker at the King &amp; Queen<lb/>
North and payed tribute to the<lb/>
Pirates for thier successful 1983<lb/>
season. Jenkins took a large part<lb/>
in helping ECU make the move<lb/>
from small time athletics to the<lb/>
Division I level.<lb/>
All-America Terry Long carried<lb/>
home the most awards from the<lb/>
banquet, while teammates Mike<lb/>
Grant and Earnest Byner each<lb/>
received two major awards.<lb/>
Long, who is clebrated as the<lb/>
strongest football player in the<lb/>
world, recieved the most valuable<lb/>
award for offensive blocking, the<lb/>
most outstanding senior and most<lb/>
outstanding senior strength<lb/>
player.<lb/>
Grant, who was the highest<lb/>
Pirate choosen in the recent USFL<lb/>
draft, received the most valuable<lb/>
defensive player award and was<lb/>
named permanent defensive cap-<lb/>
tain.<lb/>
Senior fullback Byner, who led<lb/>
the irrepressable Pirate ground at-<lb/>
tack, was named the most<lb/>
outstanding offensive back and<lb/>
was named as permanent captain<lb/>
on offense.<lb/>
Jenkins went on to tell the au-<lb/>
dience that the universities belong<lb/>
to the people, and that a school's<lb/>
football future should be controll-<lb/>
ed by the universities' administra<lb/>
tions, not the whims of television<lb/>
networks.<lb/>
"Television is calling the shots<lb/>
more and more as to which teams<lb/>
play on T.V and when, and<lb/>
which teams play in the bowls<lb/>
show and it is the fault of all o? .<lb/>
because we all encourage it.<lb/>
"Being slaves of television i<lb/>
a school of the ability to be in<lb/>
charge of its own destiny. We<lb/>
must put dignity back into college<lb/>
sports. There is no dignity when a<lb/>
team accepts something that it<lb/>
hasn't earned<lb/>
Jenkins also expressed the tee.<lb/>
ing that a football playoff I -<lb/>
Division I-A is needed and should<lb/>
be further explored.<lb/>
Other players to earn major<lb/>
awards included seniors John<lb/>
Floyd and Hal Stephens They<lb/>
were recipients of the Swindell<lb/>
Memorial Award for dedication<lb/>
and leadership.<lb/>
The E.E. Rawl Memorial<lb/>
Award for character, scholarship<lb/>
and athletic ability was awarded<lb/>
See Pirates, page 14<lb/>
Lady Pirates Beat ASU<lb/>
V t v.<lb/>
?iuu Perns<lb/>
ECU guard Keith Sledge (24) and forward Barry Wright tigm tor it-<lb/>
bound while teammate Ion Bass (42) looks on. <lb/>
b, ??.<lb/>
SAVE 14c <lb/>
foca Cola<lb/>
ie 1 05<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
oases<lb/>
iNOl 0<lb/>
OVtR<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?pmg Center<lb/>
leenviile, N.C<lb/>
Gary P?t1tr?ofi ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
The ECU Lady Pirates rallied<lb/>
from an 18-4 deficit in the first<lb/>
half last night to beat Ap-<lb/>
palachian State 63-51.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates were down 14<lb/>
points with 12:40 left in the half,<lb/>
but, behind the shooting of Sylvia<lb/>
Bragg and Dal Mabry, they trim-<lb/>
med the margin to just three<lb/>
points before intermission.<lb/>
ECU was led by Bragg's 20<lb/>
points and Mabry's 16. The Lady<lb/>
Pirates shot a respectable 43 per-<lb/>
cent from the field and a<lb/>
phenomena 92 percent from the<lb/>
line.<lb/>
With the win, coach Andruzzi's<lb/>
team raised its record to 8-8. The<lb/>
team's next game is Saturday at<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
Long, Premier All-America<lb/>
"I'm honored to be picked It is a<lb/>
reflection on the type of people that<lb/>
come out of here ? jerry iong<lb/>
B EDMCKI AS<lb/>
sports rdHor<lb/>
Since becoming ECU'S first consensus first team<lb/>
All-America for his outstanding play at offensive<lb/>
guard this season, Terry I ong has been a busy man,<lb/>
competing in the Blue-Gray and Hula Bowl all-star<lb/>
games and partaking in various publicity endeavors.<lb/>
Although Long has already been drafted by the<lb/>
United States Football League and should be taken<lb/>
very high in the Sational Football League draft, he<lb/>
plans to stay in school through the spring semester to<lb/>
work toward his degree.<lb/>
EN: Which league would ou rather play in, the<lb/>
USFL or the NFL? Why?<lb/>
TL: The NFL. The benefits are a lot better because<lb/>
you have a pension after five years. Also, they have a<lb/>
lot of insurance policies that the new league doesn't<lb/>
have.<lb/>
It's more established and the players are a lot bet-<lb/>
ter. You don't have to worry about the team you are<lb/>
playing for; you know (in the USFL) in the next two<lb/>
or three years it might fold.<lb/>
EN: Who would you like to play for in the NFL?<lb/>
TL: Pittsburgh or Dallas. I like Dallas and I have<lb/>
always been a big fan of Pittsburgh. I think they (Pit-<lb/>
tsburgh) will take a chance on my height. They like<lb/>
physical type guys and they have a tendency to take<lb/>
guys with my height.<lb/>
EN: What round do you think you will go in? Why?<lb/>
TL: I was told that if I was two or three inches taller I<lb/>
would go in the first round, but some teams told me<lb/>
not to worry about it. I still might go pretty high. I'm<lb/>
hoping either the second or third-somewhere in<lb/>
I there.<lb/>
EN: How does it feel to be ECU'S first ever first team<lb/>
All-America?<lb/>
TL: I'm honored to be picked on the first team. I just<lb/>
think that it is a reflection on the type of people that<lb/>
P come out of here and the type of people it has<lb/>
recruited. In fact, we should have had more players<lb/>
selected first team or some kind of All-America.<lb/>
EN: With the pro scouts watching, how well did you<lb/>
think you performed in the all-star games?<lb/>
TL: Playing with those guys is not like playing with<lb/>
the guys from ECU because you're used to them be-<lb/>
ing at certain places and doing certain things.<lb/>
You have three or four days to get ready for it, so I<lb/>
guess it was a learning experience for me to show that<lb/>
I could adapt quicker than I thought I could.<lb/>
In the Blue-Gray game, 1 thought 1 had an average<lb/>
game. I didn't have the type of game I thought would<lb/>
boost my chances, so I went into the Hula Bowl<lb/>
thinking that I have to do it now or never. So I went<lb/>
in there, I quess you could say, a little "psyched up<lb/>
I knew I was going to play against (Rick) Bryant<lb/>
(of Oklahoma). He told me before the game started<lb/>
that he was going to line up over me, so right there I<lb/>
knew I was going to have to play a lot harder. He<lb/>
will definitely be a first-rounder.<lb/>
EN: What did you think of the Sports Illustrated ar-<lb/>
ticle that questioned your being chosen AP first team<lb/>
All-America over Nebraska's Dean Steinkuhler,<lb/>
arguing that the pre-season publicity poster of you<lb/>
was the difference?<lb/>
TL: I have heard a lot about it. I hadn't read it, but<lb/>
everyone was telling me about it everywhere I went.<lb/>
Their primary goal was to use it (the poster) to<lb/>
make me All-America. But no one said anything in<lb/>
the article about Nebraska. I mean, they have so<lb/>
much money and (Mike) Rozier was doing good.<lb/>
Automatically he is going to get a lot of publicity.<lb/>
No one said anything about the other guys that had<lb/>
posters out around the country. This linebacker from<lb/>
Alabama had a full-size of him standing with his<lb/>
arms folded, and no one said anything about that. I<lb/>
guess my poster got all of the attention. It doesn't<lb/>
bother me.<lb/>
No matter what poster you make, to make the<lb/>
Kodak and Walter Camp All-America teams it is not<lb/>
press-associated whatsoever. There is a selected<lb/>
group of coaches that vote on the film, and if they<lb/>
don't like it they won't vote for you.<lb/>
EN: Coach Ed Emory had been saying all year that<lb/>
he thought that you deserved the Outland Trophy.<lb/>
Do you think you should have gotten it instead of<lb/>
Steinkuhler?<lb/>
TL: As far as the Outland is concerned. 1 feel they<lb/>
gave it to the guy who deserved it. I don't think they<lb/>
would make a mistake and just give to anybody that<lb/>
didn't deserve it. I think the guy deserved it, but I<lb/>
hope they think I'm one of the top three.<lb/>
EN: How did you and Steinkuhler interact at the<lb/>
Hula Bowl?<lb/>
TL: There wasn't too much said. 1 think there was a<lb/>
little static in the air, and I think you could feel it. I<lb/>
was looking at him funny and he was looking at me<lb/>
funny. After a while things loosened up a little and<lb/>
we started talking to each other.<lb/>
EN: One of the rewards of being named AP All-<lb/>
America is that you were able to appear on the Bob<lb/>
Hope Christmas Special. Did you enjoy the jokes?<lb/>
TL: I talked to a lot of guys when we were getting<lb/>
dressed in the back. Me and (William) Perry from<lb/>
Clemson were having a good time. Bo Jackson and I<lb/>
were picking at Perry the whole time. We had a good<lb/>
time because he (Perry) is real big and has fat hang-<lb/>
ing off him.<lb/>
EN: As Hope said, do you really flatten more ends<lb/>
than a masseur at a fat farm?<lb/>
TL: I thought he had me mistaken for being a defen-<lb/>
sive player than an offensive player. I was a little<lb/>
upset about that, but I was honored to be on the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
EN: Did you watch the Orange Bowl? Do you feel<lb/>
ECU could have easily been there?<lb/>
TL: I saw the whole game. I thought we could have<lb/>
been there. Especially after we lost to Florida State, 1<lb/>
figured we were going to be pretty good for the re-<lb/>
mainder of the season because we played them that<lb/>
close.<lb/>
EN: Reflecting on the past season, what do feel were<lb/>
the high and low moments?<lb/>
TL: I think the high note was getting to know the<lb/>
players as well as I did, being part of the football<lb/>
team and playing with the guys. I think I'm going to<lb/>
miss that most of all.<lb/>
The low moments this year were in some games 1<lb/>
felt I should have done much better.<lb/>
EN: What about your career at ECU?<lb/>
TL: I think one of the high moments was when the<lb/>
powerlifting started everything rolling for me. My<lb/>
low moment was probably my freshman year when I<lb/>
didn't play as well as I wanted to.<lb/>
EN: What are you going to miss most about ECU<lb/>
besides football?<lb/>
TL: I like the friendships I made with the fans and<lb/>
the people that supported the Pirate organization. 1<lb/>
think I'm going to miss them a lot.<lb/>
.<lb/>
c<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0012"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24. 1984<lb/>
Lady Pirates<lb/>
Run In State<lb/>
Invitational<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU women's<lb/>
track team participated in<lb/>
the North Carolina State<lb/>
Invitational track meet in<lb/>
Chapel Hill this weekend<lb/>
Jamie Cathcart led the<lb/>
Lady Pirates, finishing<lb/>
second in the quarter mile<lb/>
with a time of 59 seconds.<lb/>
Teresa Hudson finish-<lb/>
ed fourth in the 60-yard<lb/>
dash in 7.3 seeconds, and<lb/>
was followed by team-<lb/>
mates Valerie Finley and<lb/>
Robin Cremedy who<lb/>
finished fifth and sixth<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Assistant coach Wayne<lb/>
Miller said the team per-<lb/>
formed as well as could<lb/>
be expected. "We took<lb/>
over the team in May<lb/>
after the recruiting season<lb/>
had ended, and we were<lb/>
left with no recruits for<lb/>
this year<lb/>
Other teams par-<lb/>
ticipating in the meet in-<lb/>
cluded North Carolina,<lb/>
N.C. State, Duke, Pem-<lb/>
broke State and Wake<lb/>
Forest. "Almost every<lb/>
team from the state of<lb/>
North Carolina was<lb/>
there said Miller.<lb/>
The next scheduled<lb/>
meet for the Lady<lb/>
tracksters is at the George<lb/>
Mason Invitational on<lb/>
Feb. 5.<lb/>
"TT<lb/>
Pirate Scott Eagle won the one meter diving event in<lb/>
last Thursday's meet.<lb/>
1111 LADES NIGHT AT<lb/>
FYi n o THE KING AND queen north<lb/>
O and Wed. Jan. 25<lb/>
Oueen<lb/>
NOR I II<lb/>
North Tower<lb/>
8-12<lb/>
All Dining costumers admitted free.<lb/>
Coming Feb. 1 st - The Rhondels<lb/>
College I.D. - FREE Admission<lb/>
Til 7:30<lb/>
Happv Hour 6-8<lb/>
Bui@er<lb/>
NOW OPEN<lb/>
Spide<lb/>
Are<lb/>
G?rv P?tt?r?on ECU Photo L?o<lb/>
The Pirate swimmers lost to North Carolina last Thursday, but don't tell Stan Williams. He was victorious in the 50 and 100-meter freestyle events.<lb/>
Swimmers Dunked By UNC<lb/>
By SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
"Well, what can I say.<lb/>
UNC is ranked third in<lb/>
the country said head<lb/>
swimming coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe as he watched his<lb/>
ECU swimmers fall to the<lb/>
highly-touted Tar Heels.<lb/>
The men lost by a score<lb/>
of 81-32 as their record<lb/>
fell to 5-3, and the<lb/>
women's record fell to<lb/>
4-4 with their 88-23 loss.<lb/>
There were some bright<lb/>
spots tor the men, in-<lb/>
cluding double winner<lb/>
Stan Williams. Williams<lb/>
won the 50 and 100 meter<lb/>
freestyle events with<lb/>
times of 21.8 and 47.5<lb/>
Other winners for the<lb/>
men were Scott Eagle in<lb/>
the 1 meter diving event<lb/>
with a score of 295.5, and<lb/>
Kevin Richards in the 200<lb/>
meter butterfly with a<lb/>
time of 1:57.6.<lb/>
The women had no<lb/>
wins in their meet as the<lb/>
UNC women proved to<lb/>
be too strong. The UNC<lb/>
women broke pcol<lb/>
records in the 200 meter<lb/>
backstroke and in 400<lb/>
meter medley relay.<lb/>
Top finishers for the<lb/>
Pirates were Scotia<lb/>
Miller, who finished se-<lb/>
cond in the 1000 meter<lb/>
freestyle, and Cindy<lb/>
Newman, who finished<lb/>
second in the 200 meter<lb/>
freestyle. Other second<lb/>
place Finishers for the<lb/>
Pirates were Lori Liv-<lb/>
ingston in the 400 meter<lb/>
freestyle and Jean<lb/>
Keating in the 50 meter<lb/>
freestyle.<lb/>
Kobe was<lb/>
disheartened by<lb/>
not<lb/>
ECU'S<lb/>
showing. "We swam with<lb/>
them and our kids did a<lb/>
nice job. Most of our<lb/>
people swam different<lb/>
events than they would<lb/>
normally said Kobe.<lb/>
The next meet for the<lb/>
ECU is today at Rich-<lb/>
mond, where the men will<lb/>
take on the Spiders and<lb/>
James Madison, and the<lb/>
women will attempt to<lb/>
splash the women quad<lb/>
of Richmond.<lb/>
OFF ON<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
PAIRSOF<lb/>
GLASSES<lb/>
WE PAY<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
PS<lb/>
II<lb/>
Class Rings Diamond Rings<lb/>
Gold &amp; Silver Jewerly<lb/>
Silver Coins<lb/>
I rWMtl -V. ? rUl ;<lb/>
0 SENIORCITIZEN<lb/>
O DISCOUNT<lb/>
OFFER GOOD THRU JAN 31 1984<lb/>
DISCOUNT NOT GOOD ON OTHER SALE ITEMS<lb/>
GREENVILLE STORE ONLY<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
315 Parkvww Common<lb/>
Across From Doctor Part<lb/>
Op?n Mon thru Fit 9 AM til 5 M P M<lb/>
B??cn?r K.lrtl?y-Dispensing Optician <lb/>
CAlc US FOB A<lb/>
EYt EXAMINATION<lb/>
WITH tmE 00CT0<lb/>
OF TOUK CHOICE<lb/>
WE BUY &amp; PAY CASH FOR<lb/>
T.V's, stereos, cameras, ideo. microwave<lb/>
ovens, bicvcies, waiche<lb/>
portable AM-FM, cassette, walkmans. beaters,<lb/>
good furniture, china &amp; crystal, tpeliters, etc.<lb/>
VV" of Ki SALES CO H V<lb/>
400 EVANS, "on the corner'<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Barn Wright plased an agjjresj<lb/>
ECL's loss Saturdas to Rlchrru<lb/>
Richmond<lb/>
William and V<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
James Madison<lb/>
Navy<lb/>
East Carolina<lb/>
xxv?v<lb/>
)?.t<lb/>
Flamed Broiled Burgers<lb/>
Seafood and chicken<lb/>
Famous Hotdogs &amp; Salad Bar<lb/>
Stuffed Baked Potatoes<lb/>
Opening Specials<lb/>
Trout Dinner $1.99<lb/>
ShrimD Dinner $2.49<lb/>
Salad Bowl .89<lb/>
14 King Burger $1.39<lb/>
Jr. King Burger .85<lb/>
Chicken Snack Pack1.69<lb/>
N. Green St.<lb/>
Opposite King &amp; Queen N. Drive Thru<lb/>
Featuring Top 40 &amp; Beach<lb/>
Tues. H.H. 5:00-9:00<lb/>
with Mark Wilson<lb/>
Weds. H.H. 5:00-9:00<lb/>
with Coart L.C. Johnson<lb/>
Thurs. Ladies Night with<lb/>
The Big "E"Eddy Hemingway<lb/>
H.H. 5:00-9:00<lb/>
Beauss a pnvate club for members and guest only.<lb/>
Apply now in Room 234 of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
to be on the day representative on the Student<lb/>
Board of Directors.<lb/>
The responsibilities of the members of the<lb/>
of Directors include:<lb/>
? Selecting the Student Union President<lb/>
? Approving committee chairpersons<lb/>
? Approving the Student Union Budget<lb/>
? Setting policy for the Student Union<lb/>
HAVING PROBLEM<lb/>
with<lb/>
DRUGS?- ALCOHOL? FAMILY?<lb/>
L?<lb/>
OPEN 10am-10pm<lb/>
WeCnnHelnU<lb/>
Students helping Students<lb/>
CAMPUS ALCOHOL Al<lb/>
7?7-?m<lb/>
"VN<lb/>
<lb/>
DEADLINE TO APPLY: Friday, January 2 1984<lb/>
r<lb/>
20) &amp; Delta Zeta<lb/>
i )Pj Present<lb/>
Dance Contest<lb/>
Tuesday, January 24, 1 984<lb/>
8:30-1:00 A.M.<lb/>
Admission $1.00 18 yr. S2.00<lb/>
Couples or Individuals,<lb/>
Any Music, Any Style!<lb/>
PRIZES:<lb/>
1st<lb/>
$25.00 Cash. Plus S25.00 gift certificate at<lb/>
The King &amp; Queen North<lb/>
2nd $10.OOCash. Plus S15.00 gift certificate to the<lb/>
Riverside Oyster Bar<lb/>
$5.00 Cash. Plus large 2 item pizza from P T A<lb/>
Com Early!<lb/>
3rd<lb/>
Sponsored by:<lb/>
H L Hodges<lb/>
Heart s Delight<lb/>
PTA<lb/>
Riverside Oyster Ba'<lb/>
Shirley s Cut &amp; Style<lb/>
Sub Station II<lb/>
Back Stage Studios<lb/>
Book Barn<lb/>
King &amp; Oueen North<lb/>
Jobbie s Gym<lb/>
, PLUS Drawing for Door Prizes Gifts For Everyone!<lb/>
"N<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
r<lb/>
i<lb/>
, W<lb/>
vi<lb/>
 '<lb/>
Lynn s Hailma-i-<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
D A Kedy s<lb/>
Great Expectations<lb/>
Marsn s Surf &amp; Sea<lb/>
Tapscott s<lb/>
UBE<lb/>
The Body Shopoe<lb/>
Snooty Fox<lb/>
out h<lb/>
pet<lb/>
iot<lb/>
.Comi<lb/>
Look01<lb/>
foe perfect<lb/>
218<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0013"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
pn<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
13<lb/>
I<lb/>
Spider's Foul Shots<lb/>
Are The Difference<lb/>
?ote L?6<lb/>
Kirijj<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
And, with the score<lb/>
51-49, Wright was fouled<lb/>
going up for a rebound,<lb/>
giving ECU a chance to<lb/>
tie the game for the first<lb/>
time since 4:08 of the<lb/>
opening half, as he went<lb/>
to the line to shoot the<lb/>
one-and-one. But Wright<lb/>
missed the front end of<lb/>
the one-and-one and the<lb/>
Spiders rebounded.<lb/>
After a Richmond free<lb/>
throw, ECU guard Keith<lb/>
Sledge hit a shot from the<lb/>
top of the key to bring the<lb/>
margin back to one point<lb/>
with 2:44 left, but the<lb/>
Spiders ran off eight<lb/>
straight points, with all<lb/>
but two coming from the<lb/>
free throw line. Leading<lb/>
59-51, the Spiders had<lb/>
put the game out of<lb/>
reach.<lb/>
In the first half, the<lb/>
lead changed hands seven<lb/>
times. Bass put in a<lb/>
jumper inside the key to<lb/>
even the score at 20-20,<lb/>
but Richmond pulled<lb/>
away to a 29-20 halftime<lb/>
advantage.<lb/>
? ry Panrton ECU Ptwto Lab<lb/>
Harry Wright played an aggressive defensive game and added a few baskets in<lb/>
EClTa loss Saturday to Richmond.<lb/>
H H)R<lb/>
.manv, heaters.<lb/>
corner<lb/>
i lie<lb/>
ECAC-South Stan<lb/>
League<lb/>
Richmond3-0<lb/>
v illiam and Mary1-0<lb/>
George Mason2-1<lb/>
James Madison1-1<lb/>
Navy0-2<lb/>
East Carolina0-3<lb/>
Overall<lb/>
10-5<lb/>
4-7<lb/>
8-7<lb/>
12-5<lb/>
2-12<lb/>
ECU freshman Keith<lb/>
Sledge has been named<lb/>
ECAC-South rookie of<lb/>
the week for his play in<lb/>
the Pirate's two games<lb/>
last week.<lb/>
The 6-3 guard-forward<lb/>
led the Pirates in scoring<lb/>
in both of their games,<lb/>
knocking in 10 points<lb/>
against Francis Marion<lb/>
and contributing 12<lb/>
points in Saturday's loss<lb/>
to Richmond.<lb/>
Sledge hit nine of 16 at-<lb/>
tempts from the field and<lb/>
was four-for-four from<lb/>
the line in the two games,<lb/>
and has led the Pirates in<lb/>
scoring in three of their<lb/>
last four games.<lb/>
His selection as rookie<lb/>
of the week was the first<lb/>
time all season an ECU<lb/>
player has been recogniz-<lb/>
ed by the ECAC.<lb/>
MAR <lb/>
t&amp;<lb/>
Sh ts&amp;ff<lb/>
? wear<lb/>
vu<lb/>
 yu<lb/>
-<lb/>
w<lb/>
A.<lb/>
t<lb/>
 <lb/>
cUest to&amp; m aGtea( idea. Sot gi<lb/>
vi<lb/>
VA C<lb/>
J&amp;<lb/>
JJisrVbSTiw<lb/>
t -?<lb/>
the pen1 lu ySr kif<lb/>
bonds<lb/>
218Ar?non<lb/>
Oi'cciwttc. nx.<lb/>
rlLNOOGCSCQ<lb/>
210 E. Fifth Street<lb/>
BOND'SrtL. HODGES CO.<lb/>
SPORTING GOODS<lb/>
a<lb/>
ECU Loses Big<lb/>
Oary PalHrtm - CCU "Iwte Lab<lb/>
Lisa Squireweil pumped in 12 points for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates, but ECU lost to UNC-CH Sunday, 65-39.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
AHtittrntSfrUfjittmi<lb/>
Candy Lucas poured in<lb/>
19 points and Sylvia<lb/>
Akers added 12 to lead<lb/>
UNC Charlotte to 65-39<lb/>
victory over the ECU<lb/>
women's basketball team<lb/>
on Sunday.<lb/>
Lisa Squireweil was the<lb/>
only Lady Pirate to score<lb/>
in double figures, as she<lb/>
knocked in twelve points.<lb/>
ECU only connected<lb/>
on 15 of 65 shots from<lb/>
the field for 23 percent,<lb/>
and was an even more<lb/>
miserable seven of 39<lb/>
from inside the lane.<lb/>
"Charlotte has really<lb/>
improved a lot since the<lb/>
first time we played<lb/>
ECU head coach Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi said. "They<lb/>
packed it in inside the<lb/>
lane. We did get inside<lb/>
shots, we just couldn't<lb/>
make them<lb/>
The Lady Pirates<lb/>
played Appalachian State<lb/>
in a late game last night.<lb/>
The two teams met in an<lb/>
earlier game this season,<lb/>
with ECU taking a 77-51<lb/>
decision in Minges Col-<lb/>
iseum.<lb/>
Karen Robinson is the<lb/>
leading scorer for the<lb/>
Lady Apps, hitting 13.0<lb/>
points per game. LuAnne<lb/>
Underhill is close behind<lb/>
averaging 12.6 an outing,<lb/>
while former starter<lb/>
Carolyn Cameron,<lb/>
averaging 7.4, is no<lb/>
longer on the squad.<lb/>
The Pirates travel to<lb/>
South Carolina on Jan.<lb/>
28, and then to William &amp;.<lb/>
Mary Feb. 1 before com-<lb/>
ing home to face East<lb/>
Tennessee State on Feb.<lb/>
4.<lb/>
Lisa Squireweil was<lb/>
named to the ECAC-<lb/>
South honor roll for her<lb/>
performances against<lb/>
George Mason and UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington in women's<lb/>
basketball action last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Squireweil scored 19<lb/>
points and pulled down<lb/>
21 rebounds in the Lady<lb/>
Pirate's victories, while<lb/>
shooting an extremely ac-<lb/>
curate 57 percent from<lb/>
the field.<lb/>
Founded in New York City in I 898. ZBT has a<lb/>
long and distinguished past, and is growing and vibrant<lb/>
organization. Here at ECU the Epsilon Kappa chapter<lb/>
has become established in a little over a vear. ZBT of-<lb/>
fers vou a chance to enter a fratemitv in its infancv.<lb/>
 e invite you to attend rush at Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
January 23.24. and 25 from 7 to 1 1pm.<lb/>
If vou have a question call 752-31 78.<lb/>
1895<lb/>
 a litHe<lb/>
cfyou<lb/>
Sigma Nu Fraternity<lb/>
Corner of Cotanche &amp; 13th<lb/>
Rush Monday thru Wednesday 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
'Wfc?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057617_0014"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLONIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 24, 1984<lb/>
Soccer Soon!<lb/>
By JOEL SCALES<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The ECU men's soccer<lb/>
team will host the second<lb/>
annual Budweiser Indoor<lb/>
Tournament in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum on Saturday,<lb/>
Jan. 28. The contest will<lb/>
begin at 8:30 a.m. and<lb/>
last until 6:00 p.m. Admi-<lb/>
sion is free.<lb/>
ECU will enter two<lb/>
teams, while ten other<lb/>
colleges are expected to<lb/>
compete. According to<lb/>
head coach Robbie<lb/>
Churchindoor Soc-<lb/>
cer is a very exciting and<lb/>
fast moving sport; fans<lb/>
will really enjoy the game<lb/>
because it is usually a<lb/>
high score affair<lb/>
There are a few dif-<lb/>
ferences between indoor<lb/>
and outdoor soccer, but<lb/>
the main contrast is the<lb/>
smaller, more compact<lb/>
playing area. Also, two<lb/>
10 minute halves are<lb/>
played.<lb/>
The men entered a<lb/>
similar contest this past<lb/>
weekend at Atlantic<lb/>
Christian College. ECU<lb/>
entered two teams and<lb/>
both faired well. The pur-<lb/>
ple team finished 2-1-1<lb/>
and the White team made<lb/>
the semi-finals, finishing<lb/>
4-2-1.<lb/>
"Both our goalies,<lb/>
Grant Pearson and<lb/>
George Pedgoamy, had<lb/>
great games com-<lb/>
mented Church. "Our<lb/>
team is still young, and<lb/>
we're playing a lot of<lb/>
freshman, but they're still<lb/>
carrying the load<lb/>
Following this Satur-<lb/>
day's contest, the Pirate<lb/>
booters will travel to<lb/>
N.C. Weslyan on<lb/>
February 4 to enter a<lb/>
similar tournament.<lb/>
Pirates Honored<lb/>
Continued from page 11<lb/>
to offensive tackle John<lb/>
Robertson and noseguard<lb/>
Gerry Rogers.<lb/>
The most valuable of-<lb/>
fensive player award was<lb/>
given to senior quarter-<lb/>
back Kevin Ingram, while<lb/>
the most improved offen-<lb/>
sive award went to tackle<lb/>
Tim Dumas and center<lb/>
Tim Mitchell. The most<lb/>
improved defensive<lb/>
awards went to Kenny<lb/>
Phillips, Murray Banks<lb/>
and Jeff Pegues.<lb/>
Darrell Speed and Gary-<lb/>
London were named the<lb/>
outstanding freshman;<lb/>
Randy Lowry and Scott<lb/>
Lewis, outstanding scout<lb/>
team players; Henry<lb/>
Williams, Jeff Bolch and<lb/>
Stuart Ward, outstanding<lb/>
specialty team players;<lb/>
Reggie Branch and Lloyd<lb/>
Black, special team cap-<lb/>
tains and Williams and<lb/>
Tyrone Johnson as<lb/>
outstanding newcomers.<lb/>
Other awards included<lb/>
academic acievement to<lb/>
Gerry Rogers and Chuck<lb/>
Northcut; clutch players<lb/>
award to Norwood Vann<lb/>
and Clint Harris; special<lb/>
coaches award to John<lb/>
Williams and strength<lb/>
awards to Pegues and<lb/>
Daniel Cole.<lb/>
ECU Sports Schedule<lb/>
Jan.24 Men's and Women's<lb/>
Swimming<lb/>
At Richmond 3pm<lb/>
Jan.25 Men's Basketball<lb/>
Home 7:30pm<lb/>
Jan.28 Women's Basketball<lb/>
At South Carolina 4pm<lb/>
Jan.28 Men's Basketball<lb/>
At James Madison 2pm<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057617_0015"/>
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