<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057644_0001"/>
V<lb/>
?ht<lb/>
(ftarulmtan<lb/>
Vol.58 o.?J 0<lb/>
(ireenville. N.C.<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community smce 1925<lb/>
Tuesda, Mm 15. 1984<lb/>
 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10.000<lb/>
More Than 2,550 Receive Diplomas May 5<lb/>
Graduates Are Symbols<lb/>
Of Society's Standards,<lb/>
Speaker Tells Audience<lb/>
ECU Ne?s Bureau<lb/>
ind suff reponi<lb/>
ed in the traditional academic pro-<lb/>
cession for the morning<lb/>
ceremonies in Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Judge Arnold, who is chairman<lb/>
Unverv 0 i?IdEaSlCar0lina of the NC Judi Standards<lb/>
if aduates at ECU's Commission, urged the graduates<lb/>
theviehnrT' Vhat t0 guardians of ethics, the pnn-<lb/>
ine are smhni? rf rh? ctn4n ?, . ' r.<lb/>
Court of Appeals Judge S.<lb/>
they are symbols of the standards<lb/>
and ethics of American society.<lb/>
'This ceremony vou see, in-<lb/>
deed, symbolizes a great hope, a<lb/>
hope shared by manv said Ar-<lb/>
nold, a distinguished" ECU aJum-<lb/>
nus and president of the ECU<lb/>
Alumni Association. "It svm-<lb/>
ciples and standards of conduct<lb/>
which govern a person, society or<lb/>
institution.<lb/>
"You are members of a society<lb/>
to which you owe duties no less<lb/>
than to yourselves he said.<lb/>
Instead of telling graduates that<lb/>
they must go out into "a world<lb/>
h0H7AC  nrant ? " ? . uicj uium go out into "a work<lb/>
tha rh?,8 i ? ? m?rai h?Pe t0r " t0rn b' dissent d raked by Pro<lb/>
ilia! tnlS I ntvprcifv ?,  li  . J K<lb/>
that this University represents,<lb/>
and for the heritage and culture<lb/>
that we share in this land.<lb/>
"As university men and univer-<lb/>
sity women you now have become<lb/>
symbols he said. "In the long<lb/>
struggle of mankind to reach out<lb/>
from darkness you svmbolize<lb/>
another step toward ' relative<lb/>
civilization, in the high hope that<lb/>
the clash of war, the cruelty, the<lb/>
hatred and envy and violence and<lb/>
pestilence that have plagued<lb/>
humanity can be abolished<lb/>
More than 2,550 graduated in-<lb/>
cluding 39 new MDs in the School<lb/>
of Medicine and nearly 900 ad-<lb/>
vanced degree candidates march-<lb/>
blems of unprecedented difficul-<lb/>
ty Arnold said "I believe I<lb/>
would see in your future, and in<lb/>
mine, the opportunity of a new<lb/>
renaissance in the humanities<lb/>
which would parallel the tremen-<lb/>
dous advancement we see in our<lb/>
technology<lb/>
"I would prefer not to pro-<lb/>
phesy, however, but simply to in-<lb/>
spire you toward ethical<lb/>
conduct Arnold said. He<lb/>
observed that East Carolina<lb/>
University "has rapidly moved<lb/>
forward to become a leading in-<lb/>
stitution of higher learning.<lb/>
"In large part that has happen-<lb/>
ed because the faculty, ad-<lb/>
OARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Cheers<lb/>
A scene fron, ,he May 5 graduation ceremony. When ECl gr.doa.es ce.ebe. ,h,y do . in style<lb/>
Stradivarius<lb/>
Resolution Approved<lb/>
ministration and alumni of this<lb/>
university have embraced ethical<lb/>
principles and they have answered<lb/>
the bugle call for our motto ? to<lb/>
serve.<lb/>
"They are ideals which have<lb/>
given eloquence to the orator and<lb/>
inspiration to the poet he saiid<lb/>
"Take away the concept of service<lb/>
and the ideal of ethics and your<lb/>
education becomes as meaningless<lb/>
as a beautiful<lb/>
without a violinist.<lb/>
He called on the graduates to<lb/>
move on "to the destiny of un-<lb/>
finished work that is yours, and<lb/>
like men and women, and not like<lb/>
children, do what you are trained<lb/>
to do, what your service requires<lb/>
you to do, and always what your<lb/>
ethics and common sense direct<lb/>
you to do<lb/>
An ECU university awards pro-<lb/>
gram sponsored by the alumni<lb/>
association was introduced<lb/>
Rebecca F. Little and Ernest Con-<lb/>
ner were honored for their<lb/>
achievements.<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, vice chancellor<lb/>
for academic affairs and William<lb/>
Laupus, dean of the School of<lb/>
Medicine presented the candidates<lb/>
for degrees.<lb/>
Med School<lb/>
Graduates 39<lb/>
In 4th Class<lb/>
FCL NanBarew<lb/>
Thirty-nine students received<lb/>
their medical degree from the<lb/>
ECU School of Medicine during<lb/>
commencement ceremonies Ma<lb/>
5.<lb/>
The class was the fourth class of<lb/>
students to graduate from the<lb/>
school since the four-year medical<lb/>
education program was initiated<lb/>
in 197"?. The total number of<lb/>
medical school graduates no<lb/>
stands at 144.<lb/>
Dr. William E. Thornton.<lb/>
North Carolina's first man in<lb/>
space was the principal speaker<lb/>
at a May 4 convocation in honor<lb/>
of the class. Other speakers in-<lb/>
cluded ECU Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell, C. Ralph Kinse. chair-<lb/>
man of the ECU Board of<lb/>
Trustees, and Dr. William<lb/>
Laupus. vice chancellor and dean<lb/>
of the School of Medicine<lb/>
Thornton, at 55 the oldest<lb/>
astronaut in the space program<lb/>
was aboard the Space Shuttle<lb/>
Challenger during its six-day mis-<lb/>
sion in August and September of<lb/>
last year. A physician. Thornton<lb/>
investigated the adaptation of the<lb/>
human body to weightlessness<lb/>
during the flight. He is scheduled<lb/>
to make his second space flight<lb/>
aboard the Challenger on Nov.<lb/>
Classroom Smoking Banned<lb/>
B JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Ne?? hdllor<lb/>
A recent resolution by the ECU<lb/>
Faculty Senate proposing that<lb/>
smoking be prohibited in ECU<lb/>
classrooms and meeting rooms<lb/>
has been partially approved by<lb/>
ECU Chancellor John Howell.<lb/>
"I have approved the first part<lb/>
of that recommendation; namely,<lb/>
'Smoking shall be prohibited in all<lb/>
ECU classrooms I have deferred<lb/>
a decision on the second part pen-<lb/>
ding further study. My first reac-<lb/>
tion to the provision as it relates<lb/>
to meeting rooms is that the per-<lb/>
sonnel of meetings are so varied<lb/>
that each group might make its<lb/>
own rule on smoking stated a<lb/>
memo sent by Howell to all facul-<lb/>
t members.<lb/>
As far as enforcement of the<lb/>
rule is concerned, "people do res-<lb/>
pond to rules with different levels<lb/>
of alacrity Howell said. "If a<lb/>
faculty member disregards the<lb/>
rule, a non-smoking student<lb/>
might complain<lb/>
"We'll leave it (the enforce-<lb/>
ment) to the faculty, that general-<lb/>
ly works Howell said. "We cer-<lb/>
tainly don't plan to put a<lb/>
policeman in every classroom<lb/>
Howell said there has not been<lb/>
any type of prohibition of<lb/>
classroom smoking in the recent<lb/>
past and the decision has always<lb/>
been left to the discretion of in-<lb/>
dividual professors.<lb/>
The resolution was originally<lb/>
proposed by Dr. David<lb/>
Chenoweth, associate professor<lb/>
of Health Education, who said<lb/>
smoking in classrooms is an oc-<lb/>
cupational hazard for orofessors.<lb/>
Book Exchange System<lb/>
Gets Limited Response,<lb/>
More Input Is Needed<lb/>
Howell<lb/>
Individual groups will be able<lb/>
to ban smoking at meetings if<lb/>
their members so desire. The<lb/>
By MARY CASHIO<lb/>
?MTVMka<lb/>
According to David Brown,<lb/>
SGA welfare committee chair-<lb/>
man, ECU student response to the<lb/>
trial operation of the textbook ex-<lb/>
c00?i? c . J ? ?"  vciaiiun or me textoook ex<lb/>
smotl TJ?? S"P ??- offer as a poss,<lb/>
smoking in its meetings for some<lb/>
time, Howell said.<lb/>
Mondale, Hunt, Helms Win Primaries<lb/>
By DARRVL BROWN<lb/>
Manigini Editor<lb/>
Primary election results in Pitt<lb/>
County last week paralleled state-<lb/>
wide results with Rufus Edmisten<lb/>
coming out on top in the gover-<lb/>
nor's race but facing a June 5 run-<lb/>
off with No. 2 finisher Eddie<lb/>
Knox. Sen. Jesse Helms and Gov<lb/>
presidential race.<lb/>
In the First Congressional<lb/>
District race, 18-year incumbent<lb/>
Walter B. Jones held on to the<lb/>
Democratic nomination, beating<lb/>
state Rep. John Gillam in the<lb/>
district and winning 11,434 to<lb/>
5,772 in Pitt County.<lb/>
Republican Herbert W. Lee will<lb/>
Jam B. Hunt Jr. soundly won challenge Jones in November<lb/>
nominations for the U.S. Rep. James MarTin over<lb/>
1,521 to 121. Martin will face the<lb/>
winner of the Knox-Edmisten run-<lb/>
off.<lb/>
Edmisten beat Knox by more<lb/>
than two to one in Pitt County,<lb/>
6,685 votes to 3,327, and won all<lb/>
nine Greenville precincts.<lb/>
D.MLauch" Faircloth came in<lb/>
third with 2,991 ballots.<lb/>
Hunt pulled in 11,515 votes to<lb/>
for the Republican nomination<lb/>
His only competitor,<lb/>
Wimbish, got 187 votes.<lb/>
Mondale received 5,721 votes in<lb/>
Pitt County to win the<lb/>
Democratic presidential nomina-<lb/>
tion, while Hart took 5,047<lb/>
ballots. Jackson pulled in 4,398<lb/>
votes in the county. Though Hart<lb/>
won four of the nine Greenville<lb/>
ble alternative to the current book<lb/>
purchasing situation was not as<lb/>
great as had been hoped for.<lb/>
Although the program was<lb/>
available from the end of April<lb/>
through May 3, only 25 cards<lb/>
were filled out by students hoping<lb/>
to sell books.<lb/>
"More student input is needed<lb/>
oeorge and so is a location to expand the<lb/>
system in the fall Brown said<lb/>
"The SGA needs to regulate such ?it? in? Appalachian<lb/>
a large-scale nro.?, IX ?"? Unive? y.a rental program<lb/>
Supply Store were two<lb/>
possibilities mentioned for a more<lb/>
expanded program.<lb/>
According to a recent Student<lb/>
Welfare Committee survey, on the<lb/>
average a student at ECU spends<lb/>
$130 on textbooks each semester.<lb/>
Spending this amount of money<lb/>
imposes a hardship on the<lb/>
students, Brown said, adding that<lb/>
they could benefit from a book<lb/>
rental system.<lb/>
A book rental system would im-<lb/>
pose a mandatory fee of approx-<lb/>
imately $50, allowing the student<lb/>
to rent either four or eight books<lb/>
per semester. Such a system would<lb/>
significantly lower cost for<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Brown said at Appalachian<lb/>
a large-scale program, which<lb/>
would still be on a trial basis He<lb/>
added that a list of books which<lb/>
profesrs will be using fall<lb/>
semester is needed, one similar to<lb/>
the list currently used by the Stu-<lb/>
ayswSSS riHiS SSrSST? SW2SS5S IFt<lb/>
?. for a v,ct0ry ,? ,he pac,?e ZZtiZTSSTtoZ. ttSSS&amp;ISEZ Sr?22 fflSSVXftW.<lb/>
" bulletin board in The Student<lb/>
is in use and it is run by the<lb/>
bookstore. One question raised is<lb/>
whether or not it would succeed at<lb/>
ECU. Another issue is whether<lb/>
the program would be carried out<lb/>
by the students (represented by<lb/>
the SGA) or operated by the<lb/>
bookstore. "We don't want to put<lb/>
the bookstore out of business "<lb/>
Brown stressed.<lb/>
n II Survey Elicits Positive Response;<lb/>
Students Rate Instructors Highly<lb/>
And He's Off ??humtcu<lb/>
Clieckbook in one hand, tuition bUl in the other, this student b racing the registration clock.<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
New, Editor<lb/>
Fifty-two percent of the<lb/>
students questioned during a re-<lb/>
cent survey of students' opinions<lb/>
of instruction at ECU looked for-<lb/>
ward to attending their classes,<lb/>
while an extremely high percen-<lb/>
tage rated their instructors and<lb/>
courses positively in all aspects.<lb/>
The survey, which was ad-<lb/>
ministered March 19-24, is used<lb/>
by individual instructors to pro- -<lb/>
vide feedback on their teaching<lb/>
performance and also by depart-<lb/>
ments for studying the teaching<lb/>
effectiveness of their faculty as it<lb/>
is perceived by the students, said<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Academic Af-<lb/>
fairs Angelo Volpe. "The<lb/>
predominant benefit is for the in-<lb/>
dividual faculty members he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
There were 38,656 question-<lb/>
naires submitted for processing.<lb/>
For almost every question on the<lb/>
survey, approximately 80 to 90<lb/>
percent of the responses were<lb/>
positive. For example, close to 90<lb/>
percent of the students agreed that<lb/>
overall course content was good.<lb/>
A similar survey was taken in<lb/>
the fall of 1982 and while it also<lb/>
provided positive results, ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell said he<lb/>
feels the results of the current<lb/>
survey are even better. "We've<lb/>
moved from very good to ex-<lb/>
cellent he said.<lb/>
"I'm very pleased by (the<lb/>
5EJ " Howell said.<lb/>
We like to have a situation<lb/>
where students feel they are learn-<lb/>
ing something and that their pro-<lb/>
fessors are helpful<lb/>
"ECU has tried to develop an<lb/>
atmosphere where the relationship<lb/>
between the faculty and the<lb/>
students is a good one Howell<lb/>
said, adding that he feels this goal<lb/>
is being attained.<lb/>
- T" vcry Phased to know our<lb/>
SSJL dvng Very wcU ir the<lb/>
classroom; it's something . trv<lb/>
to encourage said Ernest ynr<lb/>
dean of the School of Busing<lb/>
We have very good students and<lb/>
that makes it possible d<lb/>
"The student opinion survv <lb/>
an excellent idea said fiJl<lb/>
Farr, assistant dean of the rnj,<lb/>
of .Arts and Science -tT<lb/>
positive results just show ri. c<lb/>
J5 teaching th?<lb/>
byrs;tnr?-<lb/>
'?" Teaching &amp;???<lb/>
?ect recipient, If lven? to<lb/>
teaching 55?" lor<lb/>
Alumni Association " by ?<lb/>
P ? Jr. X<lb/>
?r miiftnafcuufi r - ? -<lb/>
f ??. mtm, ?<lb/>
Bl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0002"/><lb/>
MAY 13, 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
??<lb/>
5<lb/>
I<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Semng the campus community<lb/>
sutct 1923<lb/>
lllMi?ry Tueway .ml Thursday during<lb/>
oeU r?i Cf olini?n '? "? official rewspapr<lb/>
of East Carolina University owned n?7,<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Unsioned opinions on the editorial page, unless<lb/>
"? "otM. are the opinion of Thl<lb/>
"?wpaper, Mrty written by the managing<lb/>
Subscription Rate: M yea n y<lb/>
Jo ? C?ro,ini,n ?H'? ?r? kx.ted on the<lb/>
?cond floor of the Publications Building on the<lb/>
ecu campus. Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
Attention!The international Student Associa-<lb/>
tion will be having a meeting on Saturday. May 19<lb/>
at 6 00 p m at the International House. XM E 9th<lb/>
St We'll discuss activities for the Summer Ses<lb/>
sions such as a trip to King's Dominion Looking<lb/>
forward to seeing all of you marel<lb/>
Campuses Increasing Control Repel S<lb/>
AEROBIC FITNESS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services is offering classes in aerobic fitness for<lb/>
both sessions of summer school Registration<lb/>
begins May U and runs through May l? Come by<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym to register<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address changes to The<lb/>
east Carolinian. Publications Buildino ECU<lb/>
Greenville N C . 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 7S7-4M4, 4347 430<lb/>
LIFEGUARD MEETING<lb/>
A meeting will be held on Tuesday at 4:00 p.m.<lb/>
in room 105 B Memorial Gym for those people In<lb/>
terested in applying tor lifeguard employment<lb/>
with the Department of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services Lifeguard must hold a current Advanc-<lb/>
ed Lifesaving Certificate<lb/>
GYM HOURS<lb/>
; M-F 11:30 a.ml p.m.<lb/>
-Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Swimming Pool<lb/>
MEMORIAL: MWF 7 a.m. 8 am<lb/>
MINGES: M-F 4 p.m7 p.m Sat<lb/>
Weight Room:<lb/>
MEMORIAL: M Th. 8 am8 p.m Fri. 8 a.m5 p.m SatSun. 1 p m -4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
MINGES: M-Th 3 p.m. 7 p.m Fri Sat Sun. Closed<lb/>
MEMORIAL Gym Free Play:<lb/>
StSJl am'8 p m Fri" " am"5 P-m" Sat- Sun 1 P-m4 p.m<lb/>
MINGES (MG 115) Equipment Check-Out:<lb/>
M-Th n a.m8 p.m Fri. n a.m5 p.m Sat Sun. 1 p.m4 p.m<lb/>
Racquetball Reservations:<lb/>
M-F 11:30 a.m3 p.m. (in person): M-F 12 noon-3 p.m. (phone in).<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation: InformationRentals<lb/>
MF 1 p.m5 p.m TWTH 2 p.m4 p.m Fri. 9 a.m. 11 a.m.<lb/>
(CPS) ? Southwest Missouri<lb/>
State University senior Jim<lb/>
McWilliams got a big surprise<lb/>
several weeks ago when campus<lb/>
security officers abruptly cor-<lb/>
nered him, and announced they<lb/>
were charging him with a crime.<lb/>
The crime: he'd helped a friend<lb/>
"The Southwest Rag an offbeat<lb/>
paper the campus officials claim<lb/>
contined defamatory and obscene<lb/>
remarks about administrators and<lb/>
students.<lb/>
While the McWilliams case<lb/>
might be an extreme example of<lb/>
how administrators on many cam-<lb/>
puses are moving aggressively to<lb/>
control student behavior more<lb/>
closely than any time since the<lb/>
early 1960's, it is far from the only<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Last week, for instance, ad-<lb/>
ministrators at the nine-campus<lb/>
University of Florida system an-<lb/>
nounced they're considering<lb/>
toughening their student conduct<lb/>
code.<lb/>
In recent months, colleges have<lb/>
gone to court to try to reinforce<lb/>
their rights to punish and suspend<lb/>
students, invalidate diplomas,<lb/>
withhold transcripts and impose<lb/>
disciplinary penalties without pro-<lb/>
viding students with the same due<lb/>
process they'd get in public<lb/>
courts.<lb/>
Pennsylvania, Kent State and<lb/>
Michigan, among many others,<lb/>
are also reviewing and looking to<lb/>
toughen their student conduct<lb/>
codes in meetings this month.<lb/>
Notre Dame, Southern<lb/>
Methodist, Idaho, Baylor and<lb/>
Washington, to name just a few<lb/>
campuses, have banned or plan to<lb/>
ban all drinking as a way to help<lb/>
control student behavior.<lb/>
Over the last year, countless<lb/>
other schools have tightened rules<lb/>
on student drinking by requiring<lb/>
students to register and get ap-<lb/>
proval before throwing Darties.<lb/>
And this school year, "a surpris-<lb/>
ing number of colleges have begun<lb/>
handing out stiffer penalties to<lb/>
fraternities for a range of<lb/>
misdeeds, some of which used to<lb/>
be routinely dismissed with a<lb/>
"boys will be boys" attitude.<lb/>
Ohio State has become so strict<lb/>
in enforcing its student conduct<lb/>
code that the student judicial<lb/>
review board now has cases back-<lb/>
ed up into next summer.<lb/>
At Western Illinois, ad-<lb/>
ministrators last month banned<lb/>
overnight guests of the opposite<lb/>
sex from campus dorms.<lb/>
The crackdowns and rules, of<lb/>
course, are reminiscent of the<lb/>
days when colleges actively<lb/>
regulated all kinds of student<lb/>
oehavior, from sex to how they<lb/>
dressed.<lb/>
"There are still a lot of ad-<lb/>
ministrators who'd like to return<lb/>
to the days when they ruled cam-<lb/>
puses with an iron hand, and you<lb/>
didn't breathe without them<lb/>
knowing it says Bob Bingaman,<lb/>
field director of the United States<lb/>
Student Association.<lb/>
Administrators themselves say<lb/>
fear, not hunger for nower. is<lb/>
what's driving them to rein in<lb/>
their students.<lb/>
With more judges holding<lb/>
schools themselves liable for stu-<lb/>
dent drinking accidents, rapes and<lb/>
other crimes, many colleges are<lb/>
just trying to make sure thier<lb/>
students don't get them into legal<lb/>
trouble, says Tom Goodale, vice<lb/>
chancellor for student affairs at<lb/>
the University of Denver.<lb/>
A former student currently is<lb/>
suing Denver over an injury he<lb/>
received in an accident at a cam-<lb/>
pus fraternity house.<lb/>
"Schools are very scared by the<lb/>
cost of liablility, about pressure<lb/>
from the public Goodale ex-<lb/>
plains.<lb/>
"A lot of concern over student<lb/>
discipline is happening because ol<lb/>
efforts by students themselves<lb/>
Bingaman adds.<lb/>
"I think there is definitely a<lb/>
more conservative trend and more<lb/>
concern for students to be treated<lb/>
like adults and act like adults<lb/>
observes Mary Anne Bestebreurt-<lb/>
je, who is overseeing Florida's<lb/>
conduct code review.<lb/>
But regulating students'<lb/>
behavior in their rooms, recrea-<lb/>
tions and even reading matter<lb/>
isn't often confused with being<lb/>
treated like adults, and some ad-<lb/>
ministrators worry prospective<lb/>
students might be offended by it.<lb/>
"There's real conflict in clamp-<lb/>
ing down on discipline and mak-<lb/>
ing the campus as attractive as<lb/>
possible for students Goodale<lb/>
says. "But the problem (of liabili-<lb/>
ty) is progressing, and schools<lb/>
can't ignore it<lb/>
Students shouldn't ignore the<lb/>
impact the national crackdown<lb/>
could have on their constitutional<lb/>
rights, adds Alan Levine, co-<lb/>
author of the American Civil<lb/>
Liberties Union's "Handbook on<lb/>
the Rights of Students<lb/>
Levine, however, doesn't see all<lb/>
the efforts to control student<lb/>
behavior as a return to n loco<lb/>
parentis the legal doctrine the<lb/>
gave colleges the right to ad "in<lb/>
the place of the parent" through<lb/>
the 1960's.<lb/>
Paper Sues To Attend Hearings<lb/>
(CPS) ? The University of<lb/>
Maryland's student paper plans to<lb/>
sue the university for the right to<lb/>
report about student disciplinary<lb/>
hearings.<lb/>
Maryland's "judicial system<lb/>
provides the equivalent of a clos-<lb/>
ed, secret trial" that conflicts with<lb/>
the First Amendment, explains<lb/>
Gary Gately, editor of The<lb/>
Diamondback.<lb/>
The secrecy "places a direct<lb/>
constraint on the press<lb/>
In March, the state attorney<lb/>
general had recommended keep-<lb/>
ing Diamondback reporters out of<lb/>
judicial board hearings because it<lb/>
would violate the Buckley<lb/>
Collards<lb/>
Subjects<lb/>
For Poets<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Collards, that nutritious green<lb/>
vegetable celebrated each year at<lb/>
the Ayden, N.C. Collard Festival,<lb/>
usually inspire strong feelings<lb/>
among Southerners. You either<lb/>
love them or hate them; few per-<lb/>
sons can truthfully claim to be im-<lb/>
partial on the subject of collards.<lb/>
This year, North Carolina's<lb/>
love-hate relationship with col-<lb/>
lards will be celebrated in poetry;<lb/>
the town of Ayden is sponsoring a<lb/>
Collard Poetry Contest, in<lb/>
cooperation with the East<lb/>
Carolina University Department<lb/>
of English.<lb/>
The contest, open to poets of all<lb/>
ages, will be part of Ayden's tenth<lb/>
annual Collard Festival. Poems of<lb/>
all forms are welcome ?<lb/>
limericks, haiku, sonnets, sestinas<lb/>
or free verse and an anthology of<lb/>
contest entries will be published.<lb/>
Contest judges and anthology<lb/>
editors will be Luke Whisnant,<lb/>
who says he loves collards, and<lb/>
Alex Albright, who won't touch<lb/>
them. Both are lecturers in<lb/>
English at ECU and writers<lb/>
themselves. Albright recently<lb/>
edited a book of prison poetry,<lb/>
"Dreaming the Blues: Poems<lb/>
from Martin County Prison<lb/>
"The Collard Festival has<lb/>
become a tradition here in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, and we see this as<lb/>
an exciting way to encourage<lb/>
regional creative writing Whis-<lb/>
nant said. The contest and an-<lb/>
thology will be "something dif-<lb/>
ferent to commemorate ten years<lb/>
of collard celebrations he ex-<lb/>
plained.<lb/>
"Everyone has a collard poem<lb/>
deep down within, just bursting to<lb/>
get out added Albright.<lb/>
Poems in two categories will be<lb/>
accepted ? one for adults, with a<lb/>
$1 entry fee, and one for K-12<lb/>
pupils in North Carolina schools,<lb/>
with no entry fee. Several prizes<lb/>
will be awarded.<lb/>
Contest deadline is July 20.<lb/>
Further information about the<lb/>
Col ard Poetry Contest is<lb/>
available from Albright or Whis-<lb/>
nant. Inquiries may be addressed<lb/>
to Editors, Collard Poems,<lb/>
Department of English ECIJ<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834T '<lb/>
Amendment to the Family Educa-<lb/>
tion Rights and Privacy Act of<lb/>
1974.<lb/>
The law guarantees the con-<lb/>
fidentiality of student records.<lb/>
"The student's right to privacy<lb/>
is greater than the Diamondbacks<lb/>
right to know adds Michael<lb/>
Bishop, assistant to Maryland's<lb/>
director of judicial programs.<lb/>
"We see no evidence that the<lb/>
Buckley Amendment applies to<lb/>
(judicial board) hearings<lb/>
counters Lee Levine, lawyer for<lb/>
Maryland Media, the independent<lb/>
organization that owns The<lb/>
Diamondback and four other stu-<lb/>
dent publications.<lb/>
The case could influence how<lb/>
readily papers on other campuses<lb/>
get to report on student<lb/>
disciplinary cases. The issue has<lb/>
become more important over the<lb/>
last six months as colleges have in-<lb/>
tensified their efforts to control<lb/>
student misbehavior.<lb/>
The paper argues the judicial<lb/>
board hears criminal cases that<lb/>
would ordinarily be open to the<lb/>
press if the crimes had occured<lb/>
just off campus.<lb/>
"They try rape, and wouldn't<lb/>
report it to the authorities unless<lb/>
they think the defendant is in<lb/>
danger Gately contends.<lb/>
Reporter Erik Nelson recalls<lb/>
Q<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
(?<lb/>
WHERE WASHING IS FUN9'<lb/>
that last fall a star basketball<lb/>
player secretly was brought before<lb/>
the board. "At first, all the word<lb/>
we had was that there was a dorm<lb/>
rule violation. Then we found out<lb/>
that there was a question of sexual<lb/>
assault. This is something that<lb/>
should be known<lb/>
Nelson argues criminal charges<lb/>
are not part of a student's record,<lb/>
and therefore shouldn't be<lb/>
covered by the Privacy Act.<lb/>
College Park, he adds, has<lb/>
40,000 students and all the crimes<lb/>
that happen in a small city. "We<lb/>
have robberies and assaults. If it<lb/>
happened off campus, anybody<lb/>
could attend the trial<lb/>
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-<lb/>
(CPS) ? Are colJege campuseJ<lb/>
ready for a wave of jokes about<lb/>
har to do after the big od<lb/>
drops'1 j<lb/>
Kit Kiefer, anyway, is be<lb/>
they are. His recentlv-publ:<lb/>
"Post-Nuclear Collegian"<lb/>
dresses "the important question<lb/>
how will you as a collegian be abl<lb/>
to have a good time after nuc t<lb/>
war?"<lb/>
First, Kiefer notes, you<lb/>
surie. his book offers ins<lb/>
tions for building shelters out<lb/>
the beer cans and discarded piz<lb/>
boxes scattered around 1<lb/>
dorm rooms, for the more<lb/>
bitious. there's the shelter ma<lb/>
out of beer kegs.<lb/>
Failing that. Kiefer shows hov<lb/>
you can try to repel oncoming<lb/>
Soviet missiles by creating d<lb/>
sourd waves. His recommend<lb/>
Aparth<lb/>
(CPS) ? Organizers sav<lb/>
coordinated nai -<lb/>
demonstrations calling for more<lb/>
universities to sell eff<lb/>
holdings in companies that<lb/>
business in segregationist Sout<lb/>
Africa were "the<lb/>
apartheid mobilization n s<lb/>
years<lb/>
The actual pace 0: campus ad<lb/>
ministrators divesting their poi<lb/>
folios of shares in the I<lb/>
fallen off in the last few year<lb/>
however.<lb/>
Called "Two Wee- ? An<lb/>
Apartheid Action the protest!<lb/>
organized by the .American Cot.<lb/>
mittee on Africa, stretched act<lb/>
scores of campuses from the la<lb/>
week of March through the Ir<lb/>
weeks of April.<lb/>
Demonstrations took riace j<lb/>
Florida State, Duke, the Univers<lb/>
ty of the District of Colura j<lb/>
Columbia, Harvard, Ka 1<lb/>
College, Oregon and Soul<lb/>
Cal, among manv other rlace-<lb/>
Number Of<lb/>
Women Exec:<lb/>
Increases<lb/>
(CPS) ? the number of womei<lb/>
college presidents has jumped<lb/>
"0 percent ? from 148 m 1975 t<lb/>
254 in 1984 ? in the last eigr<lb/>
years, according to a new study b<lb/>
the American Council on Educaj<lb/>
tion's Office of Women In HigheJ<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
"I think the increase is real<lb/>
significant says AC<lb/>
spokeswoman Judy Touchtonj<lb/>
"It coincides with a lot oi attenj<lb/>
tion that's been given to the status<lb/>
of women not just in education<lb/>
but in other areas such as politic<lb/>
and business<lb/>
Women were seldom even conj<lb/>
sidered for college presidencies!<lb/>
let alone appointed to such post<lb/>
prior to the enactment of Title C<lb/>
of the 1972 Education Amenc<lb/>
ments, which forbid schools frot<lb/>
discriminating on the basis<lb/>
gender, she points out.<lb/>
In 1975, "women accounted ioj<lb/>
scarcely five percent of all collegj<lb/>
presidents Touchton notes<lb/>
"And for the next several year!<lb/>
the changes were minimal<lb/>
But by 1977 "there started to bl<lb/>
some noticeable increases" in thV<lb/>
number of women serving as chiej<lb/>
executive officers of their col<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
Since then, she says, "there h.<lb/>
been a net gain of about<lb/>
(women) a year" appointed<lb/>
college presidents.<lb/>
But a 70 percent increase ovel<lb/>
eight years "isn't nearly as signifi<lb/>
cant when we started with such<lb/>
low figure to begin with stress<lb/>
Mary Boyette, spokeswoman<lb/>
the American Association <lb/>
University Women.<lb/>
"It's great that (the number<lb/>
women presidents) increased,<lb/>
Boyette admits, "but it's cle<lb/>
women still hold only a handful<lb/>
the presidencies. The number<lb/>
women presidents is still smj<lb/>
when compared to the whole<lb/>
"And what about the salarw<lb/>
of those women and how thej<lb/>
compare to men's she wonders<lb/>
explaining that studies still shev<lb/>
"discrepancies on salaries be<lb/>
ween men and women at<lb/>
levels" of the college hierarchy.<lb/>
Even so, Touchton looks<lb/>
women's achievements in bight<lb/>
education in a positive light.<lb/>
"Every time i woman mov<lb/>
into a visible leadership role sue<lb/>
as a college presidency, or a stad<lb/>
governor, or mayor, it lets peopj<lb/>
know women can fill that role j 1<lb/>
u well she says.<lb/>
-?<lb/>
1<lb/>
&amp; -<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0003"/><lb/>
ntrol<lb/>
native trend and more<lb/>
students to be treated<lb/>
. v and act like adults<lb/>
M Anne Bestebreurt-<lb/>
s overseeing Florida's<lb/>
? . w<lb/>
rig students'<lb/>
rooms, recrea-<lb/>
reading matter<lb/>
used with being<lb/>
and some ad-<lb/>
prospective<lb/>
:fended by it.<lb/>
conflict in clamp-<lb/>
i pline and mak-<lb/>
ius as attractive as<lb/>
Goodale<lb/>
- Mem (of liabili-<lb/>
- and schools<lb/>
dn't ignore the<lb/>
'ackdown<lb/>
constitutional<lb/>
Vlan Levine, co-<lb/>
 nerican Civil<lb/>
"Handbook on<lb/>
esn'l ee all<lb/>
student<lb/>
to "in loco<lb/>
a doctrine the<lb/>
to act "in<lb/>
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MAY 15.<lb/>
Missiles<lb/>
?PS Are col,e8e campuses<lb/>
ready for a wave of jokes about<lb/>
hat to do after the big one<lb/>
drops?<lb/>
Kit Kiefer, anyway, is betting<lb/>
they are. His recentlv-published<lb/>
"Post-Nuclear Collegian" ad-<lb/>
dresses "the important question-<lb/>
how will you as a collegian be able<lb/>
to have a good time after nuclear<lb/>
war<lb/>
-?'<lb/>
First, Kiefer notes, you must<lb/>
survive, his book offers instruc-<lb/>
tions for building shelters out of<lb/>
the beer cans and discarded pizza<lb/>
boxes scattered around most<lb/>
dorm rooms, for the more am-<lb/>
bitious, there's the shelter made<lb/>
out of beer kegs.<lb/>
Failing that, Kiefer shows how<lb/>
you can try to repel oncoming<lb/>
Soviet missiles by creating dense<lb/>
sound waves. His recommended<lb/>
method: playing Def Leppard at<lb/>
High volume.<lb/>
He addresses the questions of<lb/>
what to wear, what clases to take,<lb/>
what extracurricular activities to<lb/>
pursue and what lines to use to ap-<lb/>
proach members of the opposite<lb/>
S5X ('??- "Have you ever thought<lb/>
that our job now is to perpetuate<lb/>
the species?" or "Don't worry.<lb/>
The radiation made me sterile)<lb/>
Nuclear war may not seem like<lb/>
obvious fodder for comedy to<lb/>
most people, but when Kiefer got<lb/>
the idea for his book, "it was like<lb/>
the holy citv opening up he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Ahead of him he could visualize<lb/>
immediate publication, wealth ("I<lb/>
didn't write it not to make<lb/>
mont ") and fame ? maybe even<lb/>
an appearance on The David Let-<lb/>
terman Show.<lb/>
There were, alas, obstacles,<lb/>
even for the self-proclaimed<lb/>
"foremost college humorist in<lb/>
America<lb/>
Kiefer knew there was room on<lb/>
the planet for only one look at<lb/>
campus life after a nuclear<lb/>
holocaust. And he is warped<lb/>
enough to believe someone else<lb/>
might come up with the same<lb/>
idea. So he made a hasty "mar-<lb/>
riage of convenience" with the<lb/>
tiny Halfcourt Press of his<lb/>
hometown of Wausau, Wis.<lb/>
Distribution of the book isn't<lb/>
what it might be. If the book isn't<lb/>
available at your campus<lb/>
bookstore, Kiefer suggests order-<lb/>
ing it by mail or to "give us time<lb/>
and we'll be there. The upper<lb/>
Midwest is about as far as our cars<lb/>
will take us. We need about 20<lb/>
more gallons of gas<lb/>
Effi<lb/>
There were also problems fin-<lb/>
ding someone to illustrate the<lb/>
book.<lb/>
In some of Kiefer's previous<lb/>
work as a freelancer fo? the ii-30<lb/>
Corp which publishes slick<lb/>
publications like "America" and<lb/>
"Nutshell he had worked with<lb/>
Berke Breathed, the creator of<lb/>
Bloom County. But Breathed's<lb/>
success put him out of Kiefer's<lb/>
price range, so Kiefer approached<lb/>
an engineering illustrator he<lb/>
knew.<lb/>
The illustrator missed all his<lb/>
deadlines.<lb/>
Kiefer, who says he realized<lb/>
early in life he was not cut out to<lb/>
be an artist, decided to try it<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
He locked himself in his room<lb/>
with a triangle, an engineering<lb/>
scale and a Pilot razor point pen,<lb/>
eventually emerging with illustra-<lb/>
tions that fail to be surprisingly<lb/>
good.<lb/>
Despite all that, a year and a<lb/>
half after Kiefer's original flash,<lb/>
the book is now out and the<lb/>
25-year-old author is waiting for<lb/>
the procession of the world to his<lb/>
door.<lb/>
He's confident the first run of<lb/>
1,000 books will sell out quickly,<lb/>
and optimistic that a major<lb/>
publisher will pick up later edi-<lb/>
tions. His engineering illustrator<lb/>
friend has assured him he won't<lb/>
miss anymore deadlines. And<lb/>
Kiefer is preparing a tape to send<lb/>
to David Letterman.<lb/>
He exhibits all the self<lb/>
assurance of a man who believes<lb/>
he has an idea whose time has<lb/>
come.<lb/>
"We're selling t-shirts with the<lb/>
'fall-in shelter symbol (three<lb/>
Doritos on a paper plate arranged<lb/>
to look like the Civil Defense sym-<lb/>
bol.) and frisbees. And caps.<lb/>
There are all kinds of marketing<lb/>
possibilities<lb/>
Which is not to say everyone<lb/>
likes them.<lb/>
In his promotional treks, Kiefer<lb/>
discovered his vision of post-<lb/>
nuclear college life is not well-<lb/>
received by members of another<lb/>
campus group ? the nuclear<lb/>
freeze advocates.<lb/>
He doesn't have anything<lb/>
against the nuclear freeze move<lb/>
ment to and of itself.<lb/>
t "It's a good idea in theory, but<lb/>
it s unworkable in practice " he<lb/>
contends. He also notes its' pro-<lb/>
ponents tend to take themselves<lb/>
very seriously.<lb/>
(CPS) ? Organizers say recent<lb/>
coordinated nationwide<lb/>
demonstrations calling for more<lb/>
universities to sell off their<lb/>
holdings in companies that do<lb/>
business in segregationist South<lb/>
Africa were "the largest anti-<lb/>
apartheid mobilization in several<lb/>
years<lb/>
The actual pace of campus ad-<lb/>
ministrators divesting their port-<lb/>
folios of shares in the firms has<lb/>
fallen off in the last few vears,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
Called "Two Weeks of Anti-<lb/>
Apartheid Action the protests,<lb/>
organized by the American Com-<lb/>
mittee on Africa, stretched across<lb/>
scores of campuses from the last<lb/>
week of March through the first<lb/>
weeks of April.<lb/>
Demonstrations took place at<lb/>
Florida State, Duke, the Universi-<lb/>
ty of the District of Columbia,<lb/>
Columbia, Harvard, Kalamazoo<lb/>
College, Oregon and Southern<lb/>
Cal, among manv other places,<lb/>
reports Joshua Nesses, who coor-<lb/>
dinates campus activities from the<lb/>
ACOA office in New York City.<lb/>
Nessen estimates the events in-<lb/>
volved thousands" of students.<lb/>
They "sent a strong message of<lb/>
opposition to U.S. investment in<lb/>
South Africa he says.<lb/>
The demonstrations "put our<lb/>
administration and other universi-<lb/>
ty administrators on notice that<lb/>
the divestment movement is<lb/>
broad-based and permanent "<lb/>
says Brooke Baldwin of the Yale<lb/>
Coalition Against Apartheid.<lb/>
Judging just how this spring's<lb/>
protests measure against those of<lb/>
the past is difficult because the<lb/>
ACOA has lumped efforts with<lb/>
those of the nuclear freeze move-<lb/>
ment in 1982 and 1983.<lb/>
But protests, while usuallv not<lb/>
as large as those surrounding<lb/>
other causes, have been almost<lb/>
constant.<lb/>
Since last spring's major cam-<lb/>
pus push, for example, students at<lb/>
the State University of New York-<lb/>
Binghamton boycotted a Ray<lb/>
Charles concert because Charles<lb/>
had recently performed in South<lb/>
Africa.<lb/>
A Northern Illinois University<lb/>
student effort to mount a boycott<lb/>
of the university's alumni fund,<lb/>
which holds stock in firms that do<lb/>
business in South Africa, failed<lb/>
last fall when Operation PUSH,<lb/>
Jesse Jackson's organization in<lb/>
Chicago, refused to endorse the<lb/>
boycott.<lb/>
Iowa State's student govern-<lb/>
ment asked its governors to sell<lb/>
$700,000 worth of shares in cer-<lb/>
tain companies, while minority<lb/>
faculty at Michigan State petition-<lb/>
ed to erase the name of John<lb/>
McGoff, a Michigan publisher on<lb/>
the South African pyaroll, from a<lb/>
campus stage.<lb/>
Most of the efforts, however,<lb/>
have fallen on deaf ears.<lb/>
While scores of colleges and<lb/>
universities divested themselves of<lb/>
their interests in South Africa<lb/>
from 1978 through 1982, very few<lb/>
schools have done so in recent<lb/>
years.<lb/>
most prominently, Minnesota<lb/>
toughened its South Africa policy<lb/>
in January, prohibiting university<lb/>
investments in firms that don't en-<lb/>
dorse the Sullivan Principles, a list<lb/>
of 14 civil rights for South<lb/>
African workers in American-<lb/>
controlled comDanies.<lb/>
In February, Wesleyan Univer-<lb/>
sity sold its shares in Newmont<lb/>
Mining when Newmont refused to<lb/>
sign an agreement to observe the<lb/>
Sullivan Principles.<lb/>
No other campus administra-<lb/>
tions have sold off shares this<lb/>
school year, however.<lb/>
Ferris State College and the<lb/>
University of Michigan,<lb/>
moreover, are now challenging in<lb/>
court a 1982 state law that re-<lb/>
quires all state agencies to sell off<lb/>
their South African interests.<lb/>
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Number Of<lb/>
Women Execs<lb/>
Increases<lb/>
(CPS) ? the number of women<lb/>
college presidents has jumped to<lb/>
"0 percent ? from 148 in 1975 to<lb/>
254 in 1984 ? in the last eight<lb/>
years, according to a new study by<lb/>
the American Council on Educa-<lb/>
tion's Office of Women In Higher<lb/>
Education.<lb/>
"I think the increase is reallv<lb/>
significant says ACE<lb/>
spokeswoman Judy Touchton.<lb/>
"It coincides with a lot of atten-<lb/>
tion that's been given to the status<lb/>
of women not just in education,<lb/>
but in other areas such as politics<lb/>
and business<lb/>
Women were seldom even con-<lb/>
sidered for college presidencies,<lb/>
let alone appointed to such posts,<lb/>
prior to the enactment of Title IX<lb/>
of the 1972 Education Amend-<lb/>
ments, which forbid schools from<lb/>
discriminating on the basis of<lb/>
gender, she points out.<lb/>
In 1975, "women accounted for<lb/>
scarcely five percent of all college<lb/>
presidents Touchton notes.<lb/>
"And for the next several years<lb/>
the changes were minimal<lb/>
But by 1977 "there started to be<lb/>
some noticeable increases" in the<lb/>
number of women serving as chief<lb/>
executive officers of their col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
Since then, she says, "there has<lb/>
been a net gain of about 14<lb/>
(women) a year" appointed as<lb/>
college presidents.<lb/>
But a 70 percent increase over<lb/>
eight years "isn't nearly as signifi-<lb/>
cant when we started with such a<lb/>
low figure to begin with stresses<lb/>
Mary Boyette, spokeswoman for<lb/>
the American Association of<lb/>
University Women.<lb/>
"It's great that (the number of<lb/>
women presidents) increased<lb/>
Boyette admits, "but it's clear<lb/>
women still hold only a handful of<lb/>
the presidencies. The number of<lb/>
women presidents is still small<lb/>
when compared to the whole<lb/>
"And what about the salaries<lb/>
of those women and how they<lb/>
compare to men's she wonders,<lb/>
explaining that studies still show<lb/>
"discrepancies on salaries bet-<lb/>
ween men and women at all<lb/>
levels" of the college hierarchy.<lb/>
Even so, Touchton looks at<lb/>
women's achievements in higher<lb/>
education in a positive light.<lb/>
"Every time a woman moves<lb/>
into a visible leadership role such<lb/>
as a college presidency, or a state<lb/>
governor, or mayor, it lets people<lb/>
know women can fill that role just<lb/>
as well she says.<lb/>
Campus groups get half off when they<lb/>
Advertise with The East Carolinian<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057644_0004"/><lb/>
JHEJASTCAROL1N1AN<lb/>
MAY 15, 1984<lb/>
?te iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, mm,<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ???,?,&amp;?,<lb/>
JENN.FER JENDRASIAK. v,?,??? J.T. PlETRZAXi ft<lb/>
Randy Mews. ?, Anthony Martin. ? ?.<lb/>
TINA MAROSCHAK. ,?, ,?? ToM NORTON. Q? M.<lb/>
Allen Guy. q? k FuEKTt -fc<lb/>
Mark Barker, ok? ?, MlKE Mayo <lb/>
May 15, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Federal Aid<lb/>
Private Funds Stretched To Limit<lb/>
Leading education groups<lb/>
calculate the Reagan Administra-<lb/>
tion's 1985 budget request for<lb/>
education is ? after inflation ?<lb/>
$5.7 billion below the 1980 budget,<lb/>
with the deepest cuts coming from<lb/>
financial aid for higher educa-<lb/>
tion. Even the Office of Budget<lb/>
and Management, calculating dif-<lb/>
ferently the effects of inflation, see<lb/>
a 3 percent funding decline in the<lb/>
same period.<lb/>
That is a strange prescription for<lb/>
the much lamented "rising tide of<lb/>
mediocrity" in the nation's<lb/>
schools. The same issue of The<lb/>
Chronicle of Higher Education<lb/>
that reports the groups' (such as<lb/>
the National Education Associa-<lb/>
tion) funding complaints also<lb/>
reveals other important trends in<lb/>
college finances. Private gifts and<lb/>
donations to colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities have increased dramatically<lb/>
in recent years, and educational in-<lb/>
stitutions are coming up with<lb/>
unusual methods of helping<lb/>
students with money problems ?<lb/>
aid funded by everything from<lb/>
drink machine and photo copier<lb/>
revenues to university endowment<lb/>
funds. But despite dramatically in-<lb/>
creased help from the private sec-<lb/>
tor and new creative funding<lb/>
sources, colleges and students are<lb/>
still struggling. And federal funds<lb/>
are not meeting the need.<lb/>
State budgets fund th? buhVof<lb/>
education, but that goes mostly to<lb/>
capital improvements and<lb/>
operating expenses; traditionally<lb/>
the federal government's role has<lb/>
been to fund financial aid and<lb/>
special programs such as adult<lb/>
education. But that is exactly what<lb/>
is being cut back in the current<lb/>
budget request, and exactly what is<lb/>
needed. The NEA's contention is<lb/>
that some programs are cut<lb/>
outright and others are eaten away<lb/>
by inflation. The government<lb/>
should at least maintain spending<lb/>
levels in the vital areas in a time of<lb/>
educational renovation.<lb/>
The administration has asked<lb/>
for cuts in vocational and adult<lb/>
education, in various student<lb/>
loans, and in Pell Grants, increas-<lb/>
ing (but not nearly as much as the<lb/>
other cuts) only work-study pro-<lb/>
grams. Some educators hold the<lb/>
dubious idea that work-study is in-<lb/>
feasible today because college is so<lb/>
much more competitive now that<lb/>
students don't have time to work;<lb/>
that is an inaccurate and silly<lb/>
claim. But the fact remains that<lb/>
loan, grant and other programs are<lb/>
cut nine times more than the work-<lb/>
study funds were increased, when<lb/>
comparing 1980 to the current<lb/>
budget request after inflation.<lb/>
Private and institutional funding<lb/>
is stretched almost to its limit; the<lb/>
federal government has the duty,<lb/>
and should see the need, to at least<lb/>
maintain current'funding in times'<lb/>
of such need.<lb/>
Summer And Smoke<lb/>
The Faculty Senate's recent ap-<lb/>
proval of a ban on classroom<lb/>
smoking is a welcome move, and<lb/>
its approval by Chancellor John<lb/>
M. How ell is a policy well made.<lb/>
ECU currently has no smoking<lb/>
regulations governing classrooms<lb/>
? neither printed in the school<lb/>
catalogue nor in the recollection of<lb/>
senior faculty. Some campus<lb/>
classrooms are plagued with<lb/>
cigarette smoke from students and<lb/>
faculty because of poor ventilation<lb/>
and air circulation. Most campus<lb/>
classrooms simply are not ade-<lb/>
quately ventilated to permit smok-<lb/>
ing for some and still allow clean<lb/>
air for all.<lb/>
Whether or not it is a health<lb/>
hazard, cigarette smoke is annoy-<lb/>
ing to some students and can thus<lb/>
hamper concentration and perfor-<lb/>
mance in class. For this reason<lb/>
alone the smoking ban is war-<lb/>
ranted ? the university should<lb/>
make every effort to provide an<lb/>
optimum classroom enivironment<lb/>
for ECU students.<lb/>
It is not clear how the ruling can<lb/>
be enforced. Students may report<lb/>
or complain about a violation, but<lb/>
who will actually talk to the of-<lb/>
fenders is uncertain. Punishment<lb/>
need not be much (probably not<lb/>
anything except for repeat of-<lb/>
fenders), but one would hope there<lb/>
would be a policy for dealing with<lb/>
violations.<lb/>
In any case, the policy is not a<lb/>
watershed in the university's<lb/>
history, but in Down East tobacco<lb/>
land Howell and the Senate should<lb/>
be commended for keeping cigaret-<lb/>
tes out of the classroom.<lb/>
&amp;?&amp;&amp;'MY CL w $KW3 PEMWT REAGAN ?,<lb/>
wniSKF ?'S N0T ABIWN(J BY 7HS COURTS<lb/>
PtCISION FOR TWO YEARS<lb/>
N.M. Indian Tribe To Attend Olympics<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
NAVANJEMA, N.M. ? The Native<lb/>
American Indian nation of Navanjema,<lb/>
situated on the high mesa 50 miles west<lb/>
Fill'er Up, N.M announced today it<lb/>
will attend the Los Angeles Olympics<lb/>
this summer, becoming the second na-<lb/>
tion besides the United States to attend<lb/>
the world-wide sporting event.<lb/>
"Frankly, me think we got'um heap<lb/>
good chance for gold medal said<lb/>
Winsum-Losesum, head of the<lb/>
37-member Navajo-Negumi reservation.<lb/>
"We gonna send the whole tribe<lb/>
One-hundred-and-thirty-two nations<lb/>
have already pulled out of the<lb/>
U.Ssponsored Olympics. The Soviet<lb/>
Union and several other nations cited<lb/>
lack of security and over-commercialism<lb/>
as reasons for boycotting the games.<lb/>
Several NATO nations cited the Texas<lb/>
chili served at last year's U.Ssponsored<lb/>
economic summit conference in<lb/>
Williamsburg, Va as a health hazard to<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Winsum-Losesum said his athletes did<lb/>
not feel endangered by lack of security.<lb/>
"What you think we got tomahawk for,<lb/>
chopping liver?"<lb/>
El Salvador is the only other nation<lb/>
planning to attend the Olympic games.<lb/>
"Weel, senor, we feegure our atletes<lb/>
weel be safer een L.A. than hangeeng<lb/>
around heere said government<lb/>
spokesman Juan Sanchez Pedro Mar-<lb/>
tinez Gonzola. "After dee death squads<lb/>
and dee leftist rebels, dee Oleempics iss<lb/>
luuking like a peeneec to us<lb/>
Martinez Gonzola said his team was<lb/>
looking forward to medals in shooting<lb/>
competitions and javlin throwing. "Wee<lb/>
geet a lot of practeece at dat kind of<lb/>
stuff down heere he said.<lb/>
Winsum-Losesum said he was not<lb/>
sure yet what events his tribe would<lb/>
enter. "There must be something we<lb/>
could win he said. "We got quauv<lb/>
who can carry four or five papoose at<lb/>
once. We just try all the stuff Jim<lb/>
Thorpe used to do<lb/>
L.A. Olympic Organizing Committee<lb/>
Chairman Peter Ueberroth expressed<lb/>
confidence that the games would be ex-<lb/>
citing despite only three tearm com-<lb/>
peting. "We're looking at a grea situa-<lb/>
tion for tourists Ueberroth saic. "No<lb/>
traffic, plenty of housing, fron row<lb/>
seats<lb/>
Uebberoth said spectators wou d even<lb/>
be allowed to compete against athletes<lb/>
the games, for a small fee, since extra<lb/>
slots will be open in everv event. "Where<lb/>
else can you compete against such a<lb/>
group of athletes as this for rock bottom<lb/>
prices?" he asked. "Not in Moscow,<lb/>
that's for sure<lb/>
.4SVW PfyyZ?V&amp;iiy AjeO&amp;r-<lb/>
?<lb/>
FRANKLY, (IrLIHEX GIRLS FROM MMACULA7F COHCEPTIM<lb/>
WEREN'T FAVOREPIH THE POLE VAULT MTIL M RUS5WNS<lb/>
MOPPED QW?,<lb/>
For Chrysler's Sake (And Ours), Stop Auto Import Quotas<lb/>
By TRB-From Washington<lb/>
The Nn RepaMIc<lb/>
OK, you're a voter. What would you<lb/>
say to a $5 billion tax increase to finance<lb/>
a welfare program for 600,000 people<lb/>
making between $25,000 and $1.4<lb/>
million a year? This works out to about<lb/>
$10,000 per welfare recipient. Not a<lb/>
great idea?<lb/>
Tell that to President Reagan, who<lb/>
imposed this tax in 1981; to Gary Hart,<lb/>
who wants to continue it; and to Walter<lb/>
Mondale, who actually wants to raise it.<lb/>
It's called the automobile import quota.<lb/>
For three years now, there have been<lb/>
limits, ostensibly "voluntary on the<lb/>
number of Japanses cars, these annual<lb/>
quotas have added more than $1,000 to<lb/>
the price of both. (Remember rebates?<lb/>
Well, forget them.)<lb/>
The purpose of the quotas was to give<lb/>
the American auto industry a chance to<lb/>
gear up for the new era of international<lb/>
competition. Lee Iacocca of Chrysler<lb/>
said he wanted just a couple years' pro-<lb/>
tection. After that, he swore, "free<lb/>
enterprise forever<lb/>
Now he wants permanent, more str-<lb/>
"8rKrCStnctions on Sports. Mondale<lb/>
?.in?aSS Tons want a "domestic<lb/>
Sn IJ"1 that would more or less<lb/>
Dan imports.<lb/>
of? a"l? ?.uota N a textbook example<lb/>
of the way temporary protectionism<lb/>
becomes permanent. It's about as tem-<lb/>
porary as it is voluntary. The domestic<lb/>
industry is not much better prepared for<lb/>
would competition now than it was three<lb/>
years ago. Meanwhile, though, it is feel-<lb/>
ing nice and cozy. Chrysler made more<lb/>
money in the first quarter of 1984 than<lb/>
in any previous entire year.<lb/>
This episode also illustrates the fallacy<lb/>
of justifying protectionism as a response<lb/>
to another country's protectionism.<lb/>
After all, Japan is never going to be a<lb/>
market for American cars.<lb/>
Sure, they ought to be letting in more<lb/>
of our farm products. But the auto in-<lb/>
dustry won't give up its demand for<lb/>
quotas when the Japanese change their<lb/>
minds about beef and oranges. It<lb/>
doesn't work like that. We're stuck with<lb/>
the auto quota until the political process<lb/>
recognizes that like almost all protec-<lb/>
tionism, it's a bad bargain.<lb/>
Its value in preserving auto industry<lb/>
jobs is less than its cost in higher car<lb/>
prices and in lost jobs elsewhere. People<lb/>
who spend $1,000 more for a car ?<lb/>
money that goes straight to Japan if the<lb/>
cars an import ? have $1,000 less to<lb/>
spend on other things.<lb/>
Among its other sins, the auto quota<lb/>
is responsible for the mirage that the<lb/>
Chrysler Corp. as "saved" at no cost to<lb/>
the citizenry. Mondale has made the<lb/>
Chrysler bailout a central issue in the<lb/>
Democratic presidential campaign. He<lb/>
supported it, Hart didn't.<lb/>
Chrylser may have paid back its<lb/>
federally guaranteed loans, but is has<lb/>
not paid the $l,000-a-car surcharge it<lb/>
was able to impose thanks to the quotas.<lb/>
For 1983, this would have been over $1<lb/>
billion ? considerably more than its<lb/>
$700 million profits.<lb/>
Furthermore, though Chrysler was<lb/>
saved as a corporate entity, it's not likely<lb/>
that any jobs were saved as a result.<lb/>
Almost half of Chrysler's 100,000 hour-<lb/>
ly workers were laid off in the process of<lb/>
its salvation. If Chrysler had gone<lb/>
under, its plants would not have<lb/>
vaporized. Whoever bought them might<lb/>
well have hired at least as many people<lb/>
as Chrysler now employs.<lb/>
The only job that was saved for sure<lb/>
by the Chrysler bailout was Lee<lb/>
Iacocca's. Iacocca has a preposterously<lb/>
swollen reputation as an industrial<lb/>
genius. In fact, his genius lies in two<lb/>
post-industrial skills: lobbying the<lb/>
government and public relations. For<lb/>
these he earned half a million dollars<lb/>
plus stock options last year.<lb/>
The coming auto industry labor<lb/>
negotiations are a crossroads for<lb/>
American industry, and also for<lb/>
American liberals. The United Auto<lb/>
Workers Union showed restraint during<lb/>
the recent troubled years. Now, eyeing<lb/>
record industry profits and ludicrous ex-<lb/>
ecutive salaries (over $1 million each for<lb/>
the chairman and president of Ford), the<lb/>
UAW wants a piece of the action,<lb/>
reasonably enough.<lb/>
Trouble is, an American auto worker<lb/>
still makes $8 an hour more than his<lb/>
Japanese rival. Worse, a mid-size car<lb/>
takes 135 worker-hours to build in<lb/>
America, compared to 90 worker hours<lb/>
in Japan. Labor costs are not the only<lb/>
reason for the auto industry's troubles;<lb/>
sluggish management and the over-<lb/>
valued dollar are also at fault. But<lb/>
without protectionism, the American in-<lb/>
dustry can't compete at present wage<lb/>
levels, let alone higher ones.<lb/>
Despite their recent "give backs<lb/>
American auto workers make 50 percent<lb/>
more than the average U.S. industrial<lb/>
wage. Auto executives are even more<lb/>
comfortable; at the top, they make 38<lb/>
times an assembly line worker's income,<lb/>
compared to only seven times in Japan.<lb/>
That's why protectionism makes no<lb/>
sense, even from the fairness point of<lb/>
view.<lb/>
The people who pay for government<lb/>
policies that protect income levels in the<lb/>
auto industry (through lost jobs or mere-<lb/>
ly through higher car prices are, on<lb/>
average, poorer than autoworkers. And<lb/>
it's income levels, not jobs, that are be-<lb/>
ing protected. How many more people<lb/>
could be employed if executives and<lb/>
workers cut their wages down to<lb/>
Japanese scale?<lb/>
During the golden years, the auto<lb/>
companies didn't really care how much<lb/>
they paid people, because each knew he<lb/>
unions would make its competitiors pav<lb/>
the same. With international compcti<lb/>
tion, there is no longer this comfort. The<lb/>
2J2S ?luestiori facing liberals is<lb/>
whether their vision of government in-<lb/>
cludes using it to preserve traditional ar-<lb/>
rangements in places like the auto in-<lb/>
dustry, through techniques like protc-<lb/>
tionism and bailouts.<lb/>
Obviously, I think the answer should<lb/>
oe no.<lb/>
These devices don't serve the cuase of<lb/>
equity, and they disserve the cause of<lb/>
prosperity. We can't get richer as a<lb/>
society by shutting off the borders and<lb/>
paying one another for everything we<lb/>
3-5-P? more the Deomcratic Party<lb/>
"fcntifies itself with such schemes, the<lb/>
more it illustrates what Kevin Phillips,<lb/>
 epubcan Phrasemaker, identified<lb/>
?J!??!? 23 Wasr?in?ton Post as a<lb/>
tir!? .?" of American politics: reac-<lb/>
tionary liberalism<lb/>
Reactionary liberalism uses goveri-<lb/>
E? kU Pr?tCCt currcnt arrangements<lb/>
EJST they m Just but Ju<lb/>
because they are there. Its tribune, of<lb/>
course, is Walter Mondale<lb/>
<lb/>
rut i a<lb/>
From Hohhvh<lb/>
A Br<lb/>
By JM<lb/>
?Ml I<lb/>
The other day my ten-vear-old s<lb/>
quick as he could get my'attent or<lb/>
question exploded from his mout.n<lb/>
Hey dad, what has a wooden fr<lb/>
French mailmen during the 18th cert<lb/>
modern day bicycle'1"<lb/>
"An old bicycle I answered<lb/>
Nope<lb/>
"An old mailcart "<lb/>
"Nope<lb/>
"An old scooter?"<lb/>
Velocifere<lb/>
"Nope. Give up?"<lb/>
Shaking my head to the negat e<lb/>
began searching my trivia closet :<lb/>
might save me from getting a sen.<lb/>
After five minutes of answers ai<lb/>
vious surrender and said, "I gie .<lb/>
A hobbyhorse he answered as<lb/>
to signify triumph<lb/>
Not doubting my son, mind yo<lb/>
know for certain, I reached forth<lb/>
My needs were not satisfied. All<lb/>
ECU Singers<lb/>
Travel To<lb/>
13 States<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The 39-member East Carolins<lb/>
University Concert Choir wil<lb/>
travel to the west coast and bad<lb/>
this month on a concert tour of 1<lb/>
states.<lb/>
The ensemble, accompanied b)<lb/>
conductor Brett Watson of th:<lb/>
ECU School of Music faculty. wilj<lb/>
perform at churches as far west<lb/>
California and as far north<lb/>
Oregon.<lb/>
Their concert tour program i<lb/>
eludes a variety of sacred at<lb/>
secular choral music: a Gregorij<lb/>
chant; a motet, "Ave Christe" b<lb/>
des Prez; a double choir motet b<lb/>
Victoria, sung from opposing<lb/>
aisles; a triple choral setting of<lb/>
Psalm by Schutz, with organ an<lb/>
brass; two contemporary h<lb/>
Samuel Barbet's "Twelftl<lb/>
Night and several English an<lb/>
American folk songs am<lb/>
spirituals<lb/>
The choir, ECU's select tourii<lb/>
chorus, tours several states ea<lb/>
spring. This year is the choir's s<lb/>
cond tour to the west coast. Ii<lb/>
previous seasons, the choir hi<lb/>
performed at the WashingtoJ<lb/>
Cathedral and at St. Patrick<lb/>
Cathedral and Rockefeller PU<lb/>
in New York. The choir's ren<lb/>
tion of traditional and conter<lb/>
porary Christmas music has<lb/>
recorded on an album, The<lb/>
Carolina Choir Sings<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
Dr. Watson is an ECU alumni<lb/>
with advanced degrees from tl<lb/>
Eastman School of Musii<lb/>
Rochester, N. Y. and the I mvej<lb/>
sity of Southern California.<lb/>
He was twice selected one of 2<lb/>
choral directors from NortJ<lb/>
America, Europe and Asia to cor<lb/>
duct at the International<lb/>
Academy in Stuttgart, West<lb/>
many.<lb/>
?? ?'?? m fVft<lb/>
?f ii ? i ii ???? ?<lb/>
i ,m m,? ,j? m ?? m, ??n .<lb/>
f4Dl?4<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0005"/><lb/>
<lb/>
'??<lb/>
??r -v<lb/>
SSSSV<lb/>
oX&amp;Vvvii<lb/>
mm<lb/>
VRT'S<lb/>
lympics<lb/>
vents his tribe would<lb/>
re must be something we<lb/>
"We got squaws<lb/>
?' five papoose at<lb/>
tr all the stuff Jim<lb/>
ipic Organizing Committee<lb/>
 Ueberroth expressed<lb/>
I the games would be ex-<lb/>
 only three teams com-<lb/>
- tig at a great situa-<lb/>
leberroth said. "No<lb/>
housing, front row<lb/>
Features<lb/>
MAY IS. MM PageS<lb/>
From Hobbyhorses To Dirt Bikes<lb/>
Brief Synopsis Of The Bicycle s History<lb/>
Rv UUrCDrm ?<lb/>
as<lb/>
trivia<lb/>
By JAMES REID<lb/>
?MMMh<lb/>
qu?.io? explod.dom'hfs ?S  ? nOTel- ? ?<lb/>
-?U?,2?2 ?? u?d by<lb/>
modern day bicycle?" i"ury, and u the forerunner of the<lb/>
Anold bicycle I answered.<lb/>
"An old mailcart "<lb/>
"Nope<lb/>
"An old scooter?"<lb/>
?!?? tW2L5qft ?c cncycIoP? could offer no dues as to its<lb/>
origin. Intrigued, and desperate for an answer. I saddled unin mv<lb/>
Toyota and rode to the library with my so? wSo watgota, akmg Tor<lb/>
the ultimate gloating celebration. <lb/>
.hr'ItSS ?1 ?? W outn c?? catalogues and leafing<lb/>
J .???' VT k- "nation was in a book ?Z<lb/>
The Boy Own Book of Groat Inventions by Floyd Lavern Dutow<lb/>
neur de Sivrac dunng the mid-1700s. The wooden horse, with a wheel<lb/>
fh??it0 " ?f J' IT" ? velocifCT- TbTridTmounS<lb/>
the wooden animal and pushed with his feet against the groundunS<lb/>
he gained enough speed to balance himself and coast for .SSe<lb/>
The French post office, in an attempt to promote effeciency, issued<lb/>
wooden frame, pivoted, front fork, handle bars, hand brakes, and a<lb/>
seat. Everything except the frame and seat was made of metal. It was<lb/>
named the draisine and later was called the velocipede. The only thing<lb/>
lacking was a better mode of propulsion. 8<lb/>
TWflhappened in 1840 when a British inventor named MacmiUen<lb/>
SJSJjrt? ?.f thc,veloc,Pede y connecting driving rods to the<lb/>
rear wneei. MacmiUen also received the distinction for being the first<lb/>
person on a vehicle (other than a horse) to get a traffic ticket<lb/>
At the end of a 40-mile exhibition, Macmillen's exhuberance caused<lb/>
him to fly across the finish line, where he knocked down a small child<lb/>
He was fined five shillings.<lb/>
to 1860 Ernest Michaux, a French inventor, improved the design bv<lb/>
placing pedals of the front wheels. After Michaux's concept succeed-<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
:tators would even<lb/>
against athletes in<lb/>
tee, since extra<lb/>
n every event. "Where<lb/>
ete against such a<lb/>
his for rock bottom<lb/>
iked. "Not in Moscow,<lb/>
'??&amp;&amp;?<lb/>
s<lb/>
WEftlOH<lb/>
F RUSSIANS<lb/>
Quotas<lb/>
iployed if executives and<lb/>
their wages down to<lb/>
golden years, the auto<lb/>
Idn't really care how much<lb/>
fple, because each knew the<lb/>
make its competitors pay<lb/>
fith international competi-<lb/>
io longer this comfort. The<lb/>
tion facing liberals is<lb/>
vision of government in-<lb/>
t to preserve traditional ar-<lb/>
In places like the auto in-<lb/>
pgh techniques like protec-<lb/>
ailouts.<lb/>
I think the answer should<lb/>
:es don't serve the cuase of<lb/>
they disserve the cause of<lb/>
fce can't get richer as a<lb/>
lutting off the borders and<lb/>
inother for everything we<lb/>
uore the Deomcratic Party<lb/>
:lf with such schemes, the<lb/>
trates what Kevin Phillips,<lb/>
n phrasemaker, icfntifiesd<lb/>
23 Washington Post as a<lb/>
of American politics: reac-<lb/>
LJism<lb/>
liberalism uses govern-<lb/>
pect current arrangements<lb/>
they are just but just<lb/>
are there. Its tribune, of<lb/>
liter Mondale.<lb/>
I<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Velocifere<lb/>
"Nope. Give up?"<lb/>
Shaking my head to the negative and straightening up in my chair I<lb/>
S ? nElrZ tFT ClOSetf?r " "?? MoXt<lb/>
mignt save me from getting a senous case of ego-deflation<lb/>
After five minutes of answers and "Nope I lifted my arm in ob-<lb/>
vious surrender and said, "I give up. What is it?" X<lb/>
to tigltSump'h. " " hC $mirkcd ? Ufted W? ws<lb/>
Not doubting my son, mind you, but rather satisfying mv need to<lb/>
know for certain, I reached for the family encycloS<lb/>
My needs were not satisfied. Although, it gave some information<lb/>
ECU Singers<lb/>
Travel To<lb/>
13 States<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The 39-member East Carolina<lb/>
University Concert Choir will<lb/>
travel to the west coast and back<lb/>
this month on a concert tour of 13<lb/>
states.<lb/>
The ensemble, accompanied by<lb/>
conductor Brett Watson of the<lb/>
ECU School of Music faculty, will<lb/>
perform at churches as far west as<lb/>
California and as far north as<lb/>
Oregon.<lb/>
Their concert tour program in-<lb/>
cludes a variety of sacred and<lb/>
secular choral music: a Gregorian<lb/>
chant; a motet, "Ave Christe" by<lb/>
des Prez; a double choir motet by<lb/>
Victoria, sung from opposing<lb/>
aisles; a triple choral setting of a<lb/>
Psalm by Schutz, with organ and<lb/>
brass; two contemporary hymns;<lb/>
Samuel Barber's "Twelfth<lb/>
Night and several English and<lb/>
American folk songs and<lb/>
spirituals.<lb/>
The choir, ECU's select touring<lb/>
chorus, tours several states each<lb/>
spring. This year is the choir's se-<lb/>
cond tour to the west coast. In<lb/>
previous seasons, the choir has<lb/>
performed at the Washington<lb/>
Cathedral and at St. Patrick's<lb/>
Cathedral and Rockefeller Plaza<lb/>
in New York. The choir's rendi-<lb/>
tion of traditional and contem-<lb/>
porary Christmas music has been<lb/>
recorded on an album, The East<lb/>
Carolina Choir Sings at<lb/>
Christmas.<lb/>
Dr. Watson is an ECU alumnus<lb/>
with advanced degrees from the<lb/>
Eastman School of Music,<lb/>
Rochester, N. Y. and the Univer-<lb/>
sity of Southern California.<lb/>
He was twice selected one of 24<lb/>
choral directors from North<lb/>
America, Europe and Asia to con-<lb/>
duct at the International Bach<lb/>
Academy in Stuttgart, West Ger-<lb/>
many.<lb/>
Draisine<lb/>
MacmiUan<lb/>
the velociferes to its carriers. But because of the laughter and ridicule<lb/>
it caused, the idea was aborted.<lb/>
Given time, though, the people of Paris became fascinated with the<lb/>
velociferes and soon kids, as well as adults, were riding them. The idea<lb/>
spread throughout France and then to London where theywere called<lb/>
hobbyhorses. Hobbyhorse races were soon established and<lb/>
fashionable ladies could be seen cheering the riders on to victory.<lb/>
As the new idea spread, new designs were developed. French inven-<lb/>
tors added saddles and pivoted, front forks. The animal's head was<lb/>
omitted along with the name "hobbyhorse Then, in 1818, a German<lb/>
inventor. Baron Von Draise, built a two-wheeled vehicle with a<lb/>
Flicks<lb/>
Date<lb/>
May 14<lb/>
May 16<lb/>
May 21<lb/>
May 23<lb/>
May 28<lb/>
May 30<lb/>
Juno 4<lb/>
Juno 4<lb/>
Juno a<lb/>
Juno 13<lb/>
June 18<lb/>
Jim 20<lb/>
June 25<lb/>
June 27<lb/>
Jufy2<lb/>
July 9<lb/>
July"<lb/>
Aft<lb/>
JmfyU<lb/>
July 23<lb/>
July 25<lb/>
Movie<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Easy Monty<lb/>
200U A Space Odyssey<lb/>
S.O.B.<lb/>
Dial M For Murder<lb/>
Easy Rider<lb/>
American Graffiti<lb/>
WBm<lb/>
The Good, The Bad, and The Ugly<lb/>
Logan's Run<lb/>
The Blues Brothers<lb/>
Fast Tones at Ridgemont High<lb/>
A Night at the Opera<lb/>
Carrie<lb/>
A Shot in the Dark<lb/>
An American Werewolf In Lon-<lb/>
Turn Bandits<lb/>
Mr, Mom<lb/>
The Secret of NIMH<lb/>
The Kmg of Comedy<lb/>
MASH<lb/>
900<lb/>
800<lb/>
900<lb/>
800<lb/>
800<lb/>
900<lb/>
800<lb/>
800<lb/>
800<lb/>
800<lb/>
800<lb/>
-<lb/>
90<lb/>
Mkhaux<lb/>
ed, several new designs arrived on the scene, the first being the<lb/>
boneshaker. With this design, the rider was seated above the front<lb/>
wheel which was about five times larger than the rear wheel.<lb/>
With the increasing popularity, bicycle races became great public at-<lb/>
tractions, and before long, bicycle magazines were being sold at<lb/>
newstands.<lb/>
The closest rendition to our present day bicycle appeared in 1877<lb/>
when Rousseau, a Marseilles mechanic, designed a bicycle with two<lb/>
sprockets and a chain. A few years later spoked wheels and pneumatic<lb/>
tires were designed, and you and I, without doing library research<lb/>
know the rest of the story.<lb/>
FourShows<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre has secured the rights to<lb/>
produce four large-scale Broad-<lb/>
way musicals for its 1984 season.<lb/>
The Tony Award winning<lb/>
musical Annie is scheduled to<lb/>
open the season on July 2 and run<lb/>
through July 7. Based on the ail-<lb/>
American comic strip "Little Or-<lb/>
phan Annie this is a grand and<lb/>
glorious musical adventure with<lb/>
Sandy, Daddy Warbucks, Miss<lb/>
Harrigan and dozens of<lb/>
mischievous orphans. After<lb/>
receiving unanimous acclaim in<lb/>
New York, Annie was produced<lb/>
by Joe Layton as a major motion<lb/>
picture in 1983, featuring ECU<lb/>
Theatre Arts faculty member<lb/>
Mavis Ray, who also serves as<lb/>
choreographer for the summer<lb/>
theatre.<lb/>
The second offering of the<lb/>
musical season will be another in-<lb/>
ternationally known success<lb/>
Chicago, July 9 ? 14. Chicago h a<lb/>
razzle-dazzle, roaring twenties<lb/>
musical romp through a succes-<lb/>
sion of vaudeville acts that New<lb/>
York critics called "A knock-cm<lb/>
m-the-aisles block buster "<lb/>
ppening on Jury 16 and conti-<lb/>
nuing through Jury 21 will be the<lb/>
current Broadway bit, ?J2<lb/>
urmiimoat. A product of Tim<lb/>
Rice and Andrew Lloyd Wehhi?<lb/>
authors of Cat v wcbber,<lb/>
"SatinsiT1 is?<lb/>
Teata?entJJJhe Old<lb/>
and roll. P" ? rock<lb/>
l? era when teii?<lb/>
M P musk i5? fictK?<lb/>
????lWI mil amm<lb/>
mmmmmmm<lb/>
?'  mnmmt0m m m f ? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0006"/><lb/>
<lb/>
ff<lb/>
'The Bounty' Falls Short Of Excellence<lb/>
ByTOMSTROUD<lb/>
We are probably too far remov-<lb/>
ed from the ways and means of<lb/>
1787 and the British colonial em-<lb/>
pire to fairly judge anymore the<lb/>
that the crewmen dance 20<lb/>
minutes a day to relieve tension<lb/>
promoting any ill feeling. It is<lb/>
precisely that sort of<lb/>
misunderstanding of the crew's<lb/>
the HMAV "Bounty Long one seems to ultimately bring abou<lb/>
of history's more  triguing and Bligh's demise, however<lb/>
rH ?C ?f B?Un- M thc vova?e continues. Bligh<lb/>
wfcBrr" 21?1byasutcdbutun?p<lb/>
?;S Z has ?ccome so ure to circumnavigate the<lb/>
steeped in romance and made so globe, decides to sail around Cane<lb/>
distant by time that each retelling Horn - a region off the tin of<lb/>
surely adds more shadow than South AmericI which i home to<lb/>
subttance to an aJready obscured some of the most violent storms<lb/>
Z' on Earth. For 31 days the Bountv<lb/>
The newest version of this fabl- tried to pass the Horn, but: Ch<lb/>
ed legend is the Dino DeLaurentiis subsequently tells a boaTd of in<lb/>
EtEfai K?? ?tarT- quiry-made onlv 85 ss<lb/>
ing Mel Gibson as Mr. Christian At last the captain agrees to<lb/>
KSftE 2KSL" ??? tUm about' - e shipS on<lb/>
S;eStT-VCOmb!nCS IUlh Tahiti ,itt,e fucr inci sets out for the Caribbean an,<lb/>
TiTSSSf d?t?W fo' the fact that Bligh possibly, may have sailed off "mo<lb/>
Mj a SOfltetiaes effective, appoints Christian as his first anonynmity had Bligh not opted<lb/>
SS IT scrint X alHS rtC' KrCm0Ving fr?m that P?si" t0 try Ca Horn and tiov<lb/>
witn a script that alternately tion the snide and thoroughly circumnavigation again His deei<lb/>
waxes melodramatic and dislikeable John Tryer. 8 sion to do so, howgaJvanhS<lb/>
Upon arnval in Tahiti the ship the lovesick Christian and others<lb/>
is greeted by outrigger after against him, leading to the mutiny<lb/>
outrigger filled with bare-breasted<lb/>
and astoundingly friendly Polyne-<lb/>
sian lovelies. This sight,<lb/>
moral outrage.<lb/>
For his part, Christian falls in<lb/>
love with a Tahitian princess who<lb/>
has not quite mastered the fine art<lb/>
of playing hard to get. They have<lb/>
an idyllic time of it while waiting<lb/>
for the breadfruit plants to ripen,<lb/>
with Fletcher getting a native<lb/>
body tattoo and his cohort,<lb/>
Mauatua. getting pregnant.<lb/>
Obviously Christian, and many<lb/>
other crewmen, become rather at-<lb/>
tached to the island ways and<lb/>
women and fall out of their<lb/>
rigorous seafaring postures.<lb/>
- ?fc "JWl u'?u Morms When three men desert the ship<lb/>
?n kartn. For 31 days the Bounty completely in favor of the island<lb/>
tried to nass the Hom k.? b however. Bligh decides to crack<lb/>
the whip and orders ail the crew<lb/>
back onto the Bounty.<lb/>
Amid grumbling and broken<lb/>
hearts the breadfruit-laden vessel<lb/>
sets out for the Caribbean, and<lb/>
philosphical. The combination<lb/>
produces a visually beautiful,<lb/>
relatively entertaining film, but<lb/>
one that falls short of excellence<lb/>
because we already know the en<lb/>
Waiting For The Sun<lb/>
Bands Still Remain<lb/>
Loyal To The Doors<lb/>
 ?.?? v ? t?- 9iBii iovei<lb/>
m?it TZl T1' ?2 !n?U,gh backdr?PP?i by an island of<lb/>
meat to make toe ones of the plot equally stunning beauty, seems to<lb/>
come out looking any different. arouse the noble or at leas?p? y<lb/>
History tells us the Bounty good, savage in everyone except<lb/>
traveled to Tahiti in search of the eternal? civil Bligh and a few<lb/>
others.<lb/>
If any of your basic white-<lb/>
oriented beach flicks flaunted this<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Staff W Hlef<lb/>
The Doors formed in 1966 with<lb/>
Jim Morrison (vocals), Robbie<lb/>
Krieger (guitar), Ray Manzarek<lb/>
(bass, keyboards), and John<lb/>
Densmore (drums). Named for a<lb/>
quote from Aldous Huxley's<lb/>
Doors of Perception, "There are<lb/>
things that are known and things<lb/>
that are unknown; in between are<lb/>
the doors they burst onto the<lb/>
music scene with the release of<lb/>
their first album The Doors. Fun-<lb/>
neled by the FM success of the<lb/>
seven minute epic "Light My<lb/>
Fire then the edited number one<lb/>
gold single version on AM, the<lb/>
album rose to number two in June<lb/>
1967 and went gold.<lb/>
Outrageous, often obscene<lb/>
behavior by Morrison gained<lb/>
much notoriety for the group. A<lb/>
series of top-forty singles follow-<lb/>
ed: "People Are Strange No. 12<lb/>
and "Love Me Two Times, No.<lb/>
25 0967); "Hello, I Love You<lb/>
gold (1968); "Touch Me No 3<lb/>
(1969); "Love Her Madly" and<lb/>
Summer<lb/>
Musicals<lb/>
Planned<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
Chattanooga-choo-choo" and<lb/>
"Boogie-Woogie Bugle Boy<lb/>
both of which are in the show. It<lb/>
offers an exhilarating time of<lb/>
singing, dancing, funny commer-<lb/>
cials about Sal Hepatica, Nash<lb/>
cars and big bands on stage.<lb/>
Summer Theatre producer<lb/>
Edgar Loessin said, "This is the<lb/>
most demanding season we have<lb/>
had in some time. Each of the<lb/>
musicals has a large cast of singers<lb/>
and dancers, very lavish scenery,<lb/>
costumes and special effects He<lb/>
went on to say that last year the<lb/>
summer theatre company<lb/>
numbered well over KX) members<lb/>
who came from some 25 states.<lb/>
"With the size and complexity of<lb/>
the 1984 season he continued,<lb/>
"I suspect the sizeof the company<lb/>
will increase and we will have to<lb/>
extend the length of our audition<lb/>
tour<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
"Riders On The Storm No. 14<lb/>
0971). Other LPs are: "Strange<lb/>
Days, No. 3 0967); "Waiting For<lb/>
the Sun No. 1 0968); "The Soft<lb/>
Parade, No. 6 (1969); "Morrison<lb/>
Hotel No. 4 and "Absolutely<lb/>
Live No. 8 0970); and "L. A<lb/>
Woman No. 9 0971).<lb/>
Jim Morrison then quit to<lb/>
recuperate, but died on July 3,<lb/>
1971 of a heart attack. The remain-<lb/>
ing members then recorded two<lb/>
fine albums Other Voives 0971)<lb/>
and Full Circle 0972) but without<lb/>
their flashy frontman they were<lb/>
poorly received and the group<lb/>
disbanded in 1973. Compilation '<lb/>
LPs include Weird Scenes Inside<lb/>
the Goldmine 0972), Best 0973)<lb/>
and Greatest Hits 0980). Because<lb/>
of the continuing interest in the<lb/>
Doors, new albums were released<lb/>
in 1979, An American Prayer and<lb/>
in 1983, AUve She Cried.<lb/>
After the breakup Manzarek<lb/>
went solo and Densmore and<lb/>
Krieger formed The Butts Band.<lb/>
Krieger later formed Robbie<lb/>
Krieger &amp; Friends.<lb/>
Groups such as The Back Doors<lb/>
continue to keep the memory<lb/>
fresh by playing solely Doors<lb/>
music.<lb/>
breadfruit plants, which were then<lb/>
to be taken to British plantations<lb/>
in the Caribean and used as food<lb/>
for slaves. (Before the voyage,<lb/>
Bligh notes to Christian that<lb/>
"bananas have become too expen-<lb/>
sivefor slave rations.) M ?u? B morc wnoIesome<lb/>
The trip proceeds smoothly at National Geographic-type feeline<lb/>
firswith only Bligh's insistence among censors, thus dXngtoei?<lb/>
and the setting adrift of Bligh and<lb/>
a few loyalists in an open boat.<lb/>
The Bounty, with Christian at<lb/>
the helm, then heads back to<lb/>
Tahiti, where Fletcher and<lb/>
Mauatua are reunited. Her chief-<lb/>
tain father is dismayed by the<lb/>
mutiny, though, and banishes the<lb/>
ship from the island, allowing<lb/>
Mauatua and a small number of<lb/>
other natives to go with the crew.<lb/>
wuivw mis w.wo ivy 5?j WIWI uic CTCW,<lb/>
many breasts, it would probably From there the ship makes for an<lb/>
he given a X-rating. For some uncharted dot off land in the<lb/>
reason though, brown breasts s?uh Pacific called Pitcairn's<lb/>
seem to evoke a more wholesome, Island, far from British shipping<lb/>
lanes. To this day descendants of<lb/>
the group live on Pitcairn,<lb/>
although, according to postscripts<lb/>
on the movie, no one knows ex-<lb/>
actly what became of Fletcher<lb/>
Christian.<lb/>
Meanwhile, back in the open<lb/>
boat, Bligh leads his hungry,<lb/>
thirsty, withered crew on an<lb/>
amazing two-month voyage ?<lb/>
without charts ? to a distant<lb/>
seaport. Exhibiting a seamanship<lb/>
and courage he seemed to lack on<lb/>
the bounty, he truly ends up as<lb/>
something of a hero ? far from<lb/>
the harsh, obsessive captain he<lb/>
was on the Bounty.<lb/>
Indeed, in Hopkins' portrayal<lb/>
of Bligh, the captain, while<lb/>
perhaps ill-equipped to handle his<lb/>
crew, is never unexplainedly<lb/>
sadistic, as he has been in previous<lb/>
renditions. His biggest flaw seems<lb/>
to be a belief that errant crewmen<lb/>
will better understand and ap-<lb/>
preciate civility and the English<lb/>
way if they are soundly beaten<lb/>
upon straying. But in his fortress<lb/>
of stiff upper lip, in his blind<lb/>
devotion to his own goals, in his<lb/>
perfect bigotry, he fails to see the<lb/>
humanity in those around him,<lb/>
and that is his undoing.<lb/>
Bigson's Christian is less com-<lb/>
plex than Bligh (maybe he was in<lb/>
real life as well); he is a likeable<lb/>
sport who, by virture of his ability<lb/>
to lose his civility, earns thc affec-<lb/>
tion of the crew and the love of a<lb/>
native girl. He is not, hewever,<lb/>
the Billy Budd innocent. He has<lb/>
flaws, he makes mistakes, ind, in<lb/>
his desire to reach Pitcairn, nearly<lb/>
faces a mutiny of his own.<lb/>
Features Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Apply at The East Carolinian on the second floor<lb/>
ot the Publications building across from the<lb/>
entrance of Joyner library.<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?? Gr?.iville BJvd<lb/>
754-3023-24 HRS<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
?4 hour Towing Service<lb/>
jU-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
BURGER CASTLE<lb/>
Welcome Back Students<lb/>
Stores located at:<lb/>
Plus our famous Salad Bar. Come See Us<lb/>
THIS WEEK SPECIAL<lb/>
Whole Subs<lb/>
 1.2.4 10<lb/>
For Onl<lb/>
$2.59<lb/>
FREE DELIVERY<lb/>
'52-2183<lb/>
PHOM AHEAD FOR I ?!( r ?i Ku I<lb/>
Send your message<lb/>
in the Classifieds<lb/>
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Creamery<lb/>
Family Restuarant<lb/>
o<lb/>
tf?<lb/>
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 i<lb/>
i<lb/>
OLD FASHIONED DIP<lb/>
ICE CREAM<lb/>
(Bring in this ad and recieve a free medium<lb/>
pepsi with your meal)<lb/>
Now Sevlng Fri. ? Sat. Nights<lb/>
UNTIL 2:30<lb/>
FAMILY<lb/>
RESTAURANTS<lb/>
AAL.0fM?AL<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
Trout, Shrimp<lb/>
and Deviled Crab<lb/>
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Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 758-0327<lb/>
BSSEBBSSESBM<lb/>
looikuff logs<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
Were Still Celebrating Our Opening<lb/>
Get Ready For Summer Days Ahead<lb/>
We Nou, Have Our: Hooded Tees With Pouch Pocket<lb/>
Muscle Shirts ? Flashdance ? Short Muscle Shirts<lb/>
With New Exciting Screen Prints<lb/>
Just For The Summer Fun At The Beach<lb/>
Reg. Price Up To $16<lb/>
Our Prices Are<lb/>
4.99 to$6.99 AsLon?A' <lb/>
Plain Short Muscle Shirt<lb/>
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NIW HOURSt WodFH<lb/>
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OR mi: Th Ramlngton 30 0 741 semi<lb/>
automatic 3x9 fasco scope. Call 73a-37tf. t?0 or<lb/>
bestoffar<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
Summer Schedule<lb/>
CAN YOU TVR?? THB CAST CAROLINIAN IS<lb/>
?N DESPERATE NEED OR TYRBSBTTBRS<lb/>
OR BOTH SUMMER SESSIONS CUBASE AR-<lb/>
1-V T TUB BAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
WEONEDSAY AFTER I R.M. <lb/>
FOR SOLUTIONS to your sound system problems<lb/>
call tha TECH SOP at 757 Nloataan Eighty "Our<lb/>
?udio technician don't chare for repair<lb/>
wwweiiek<lb/>
W??RTIIiSMlpli7<lb/>
rTri ?Yrn"m ?wlem? to work on North<lb/>
C?? ???? w?kiy newapeper at<lb/>
y???? BjBEW In edv.rtl.lnp. The<lb/>
Alamance Newt, Orphean. N c mSfj<lb/>
????. NonttQuest. 300 Union Ave, aids ? ?-<lb/>
bell, CA MOM ?"?? " camp-<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Thur. College Nite<lb/>
$1.00 Adm. wECU ID<lb/>
All cans 55C til 11:00 0Ctu 2:00am<lb/>
Fri. End of the Week Party<lb/>
All cans SOCtil 11:00pm<lb/>
Adm. $1.00 wECU ID.<lb/>
Sat. Bat in Dance Mask<lb/>
San. Ladles Nlte All Ladies (19 ftorer)<lb/>
Free plus SCDraft while it last<lb/>
Mon: Open During Orientation check<lb/>
for Bar Specials<lb/>
Open Each Nite 9:00 til 2:00am<lb/>
liyrs. Adm. $2.00<lb/>
PAPA LKATZ<lb/>
Your Adult Entertainment Center<lb/>
S?X" ?"??Ollmopovisalion<lb/>
y C) with professional &amp; amateur comedians<lb/>
11-11:30pm "Laugh-A-Draft"<lb/>
Tell a joke - get a laugh and<lb/>
a free draft!<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NITE<lb/>
Gro?nvillo's First S Still No. 1 Ladies Lock-Out<lb/>
Fro Draft A Wino 8:30 - 10:00<lb/>
At 10:00 For Mon One Free Keg Of Beer<lb/>
ii "tMOMUO n? - ? ?<lb/>
NCAA Boun<lb/>
Pir<lb/>
B RAD Mr Us<lb/>
After dropping a 4-1 deciv<lb/>
Georgetown in the tourr.<lb/>
opener, Winfred Johnson re<lb/>
ed himself Sunda afta<lb/>
pitching ECU past J<lb/>
Madison 9-5 to capture the I<lb/>
South Championship<lb/>
"With Winfred coining<lb/>
two days, I didn't know how k<lb/>
he couid go ECU coa<lb/>
Bairdsaid. "HenormalK<lb/>
three days, but the-e wd<lb/>
we would rather have with tl<lb/>
than W.nfred<lb/>
iteird also called<lb/>
"tough kid" and ;aid r<lb/>
have to pitch unde<lb/>
because the Pirates wet<lb/>
ing the bats well<lb/>
The Pirate<lb/>
fourth straight over the D<lb/>
season, although JMl r<lb/>
impressive 38-13 record<lb/>
year.<lb/>
rr<lb/>
<lb/>
S -<lb/>
David WeBs' powerful bai<lb/>
Henry W<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
ByPFTF. FERNAI D<lb/>
The ECU men's track<lb/>
ticipated in two meets in ear<lb/>
May, with sjpers:ar Hen<lb/>
Williams stealing the sho a:<lb/>
Cavalier Invitational.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0007"/><lb/>
Hence<lb/>
? to postscripts<lb/>
one knows e<lb/>
became of Fletcher<lb/>
l back in the open<lb/>
 s his hungrv<lb/>
crew on an<lb/>
th voyage ?<lb/>
a distant<lb/>
-eamanship<lb/>
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apiain he<lb/>
portrayal<lb/>
aptain, while<lb/>
die hi<lb/>
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previous<lb/>
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cewmen<lb/>
and ap-<lb/>
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beaten<lb/>
"rev<lb/>
) rid<lb/>
m h<lb/>
IS<lb/>
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likeable<lb/>
' his abilitv<lb/>
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?He has<lb/>
1and, in<lb/>
'arlv<lb/>
s ow<lb/>
M<lb/>
S2.59<lb/>
RY<lb/>
T OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
logs<lb/>
let<lb/>
Opening<lb/>
dd<lb/>
'<lb/>
1 -<lb/>
Prims<lb/>
rhe Beach<lb/>
99 ? As I dSI<lb/>
IOURS: WedFri.<lb/>
?5 Sot. 9:30-3<lb/>
:T OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
n<lb/>
H<lb/>
M<lb/>
M<lb/>
IHH AS! i AKOI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
ny n ivm<lb/>
H?jr J<lb/>
NCAA Bounrt <lb/>
Pirates Win ECAC Championship<lb/>
B RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Vorti Mi lor<lb/>
After dropping a 4-1 decision to<lb/>
Georgetown in the tourney<lb/>
opener. Winfred Johnson redeem-<lb/>
ed himself Sunday afternoon by<lb/>
pitching ECU past James<lb/>
Madison 9-5 to capture the ECAC<lb/>
South Championship.<lb/>
"With Winfred coming back in<lb/>
two days. I didn't know how long<lb/>
he could go ECU coach Hal<lb/>
Baud said. "He normally requires<lb/>
three days, but there was nobody<lb/>
we would rather have with the ball<lb/>
than Winfred<lb/>
Baud also called Johnson a<lb/>
"tough kid" and said he didn't<lb/>
hae to pitch under pressure<lb/>
because the Pirates weix "swing-<lb/>
ing the bats well<lb/>
The Pirates victory was their<lb/>
fourth straight over the Dukes this<lb/>
reason, although JMU holds an<lb/>
impressive 38-13 record on the<lb/>
vear.<lb/>
"Some people are calling it a<lb/>
jinx, but I don't believe that<lb/>
Baird said. "Good teams bring<lb/>
out the best in you. James<lb/>
Madison is an outstanding ball<lb/>
club and we've just been fortunate<lb/>
each time we've played them<lb/>
The Dukes opened the scoring<lb/>
in the top of the fourth when Cor-<lb/>
ey Nemeth sent one over the left<lb/>
field fence, establishing a new<lb/>
tournament record with five<lb/>
homeruns.<lb/>
JMU's lead didn't last long,<lb/>
however, as the Pirates pounded<lb/>
out four runs in the bottom half<lb/>
of the inning. Todd Evans led off<lb/>
with a walk, then moved to se-<lb/>
cond on a fielder's choice.<lb/>
Tourney MVP Mike Williams<lb/>
singled to score Evans, while a<lb/>
walk to Chris Bradberry and an<lb/>
infield hit by Steve Sides loaded<lb/>
the bases. Mark Shank singled to<lb/>
score Williams, while Bradberry<lb/>
quickly followed on the ensuing<lb/>
play as the Dukes shortstop made<lb/>
a wild throw. Sides was the last<lb/>
Pirate runner to score in the inn-<lb/>
ing as he came home on a Greg<lb/>
Hardison sacrifice.<lb/>
JMU narrowed the margin to<lb/>
4-3 on a Morant two run homer in<lb/>
the sixth, but ECU put it away<lb/>
with a five-run seventh inning.<lb/>
Hardison was walked, Wells<lb/>
followed with a bunt single, then<lb/>
Johnson was intentionallly walk-<lb/>
ed to load the bases with one out.<lb/>
Williams responded with a three<lb/>
run double on the next at bat,<lb/>
then Bradberry followed with a<lb/>
two run homer to close out ECU's<lb/>
scoring.<lb/>
The Dukes picked up two runs<lb/>
in the eighth, but ECU's lead was<lb/>
too big for any serious attempt at<lb/>
a comeback.<lb/>
In the tournament opener<lb/>
Thursday aftenoon, Georgetown<lb/>
pitcher Eb Burke kept the Pirates'<lb/>
bats silent in allowing only one<lb/>
run, while ECU starter Johnson<lb/>
gave up nine hits ? four for extra<lb/>
STANLEY LEAKY - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Daid Wells' powerful bat was one of the reasons ECU scored nine runs against James Madison.<lb/>
Henry Williams Qualifies For<lb/>
NCAA Nationals With Ease<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
"Basically we didn't find a way<lb/>
to solve Burke until it was too<lb/>
late Baird said. "There were<lb/>
always one or two outs before we<lb/>
got things started and he kept us<lb/>
off strike really well<lb/>
Georgetown got all they needed<lb/>
in the third inning when Mark<lb/>
Tepnew led-off the inning with a<lb/>
double to right center. He advanc-<lb/>
ed to third on a Bill Pendley<lb/>
single, then came home on Steve<lb/>
Ianni's blast to right field.<lb/>
The Hoyas extended their lead<lb/>
to 3-0 when John O'Mally and<lb/>
Bob Ebner hit back-to-back<lb/>
homers in the sixth.<lb/>
The teams exchanged runs in<lb/>
the ninth to close out the scoring<lb/>
at 4-1.<lb/>
With their backs against the<lb/>
wall ECU responded with a<lb/>
decisive 5-0 victory over La Salle<lb/>
on Friday.<lb/>
Jim Peterson was magnificent<lb/>
from the mound as he retired the<lb/>
first 20 batters on his way to a<lb/>
three hitter.<lb/>
ECU got their first run in the<lb/>
second as Mike Sullivan doubled,<lb/>
then came home on a Greg Har-<lb/>
dison single.<lb/>
Sullivan cracked another dou-<lb/>
ble in the fourth, and this time<lb/>
was singled in by Jim Riley to<lb/>
boost ECU's lead to 2-0.<lb/>
The Pirates picked up two more<lb/>
runs in the sixth on a David Well's<lb/>
bases-loaded double, then got<lb/>
their final score when Johnson<lb/>
singled in Riley in the eighth.<lb/>
ECU was forced to play two<lb/>
games on Saturday since it was<lb/>
sent to the consolation bracket<lb/>
after losing its first game.<lb/>
The Pirates were once again pit-<lb/>
ted against Georgetown, but this<lb/>
time they were victorious as they<lb/>
rallied from a 6-1 deficit in the<lb/>
fifth inning to come out on top<lb/>
7-6.<lb/>
David Wells had an outstanding<lb/>
game at the plate as he ripped a<lb/>
pair of doubles and drove in two<lb/>
runs, but it was Mark Cockcell<lb/>
who lined a pinch hit double to<lb/>
left in the seventh inning to drive<lb/>
in Mike Williams for the winning<lb/>
run.<lb/>
In the Pirates second contest of<lb/>
the day, Mike Christopher threw<lb/>
his fust complete game since<lb/>
March 22 as the Pirates defeated<lb/>
James Madison 4-3.<lb/>
Christopher gave up nine hits,<lb/>
but didn't allow a walk as he pit-<lb/>
ched for the first time in three<lb/>
weeks.<lb/>
"We knew he was capable of<lb/>
it Baird said. "It was his best<lb/>
outing by far. Once the game got<lb/>
into a flow, I knew Mike had<lb/>
good stuff<lb/>
After trailing 1-0 through the<lb/>
early innings, ECU exploded for<lb/>
three runs in the fourth. Sides ac-<lb/>
counted for the first run as he<lb/>
singled in Bradberry from second,<lb/>
then Cockrell cleared the bases<lb/>
with a homerun.<lb/>
Each team picked up a run in<lb/>
the middle innings as Johnson and<lb/>
Reeves hit solo homers. It came<lb/>
down to the ninth, and after giv-<lb/>
ing up a homerun to Nemeth,<lb/>
Christopher retired the final three<lb/>
batters to preserve the victory.<lb/>
The Pirates receive an<lb/>
automatic bid to the NCAA<lb/>
Regional playoffs with the tour-<lb/>
nament championship, while<lb/>
finishing conference piay with a<lb/>
32-11 record.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson gave up five runs in the tournament champ ionshin<lb/>
but still came away with the victory.<lb/>
By PETE FERNALD<lb/>
NUfT Wrllrr<lb/>
The ECU men's track team par-<lb/>
ticipated in two meets in early<lb/>
May. with superstar Henry<lb/>
Williams stealing the show at the<lb/>
Cavalier Invitational.<lb/>
Williams qualified for the<lb/>
NCAA Nationals by winning the<lb/>
200-meter dash with a time of<lb/>
20.82 seconds.<lb/>
In the 100-meter dash Williams<lb/>
placed second to Harvey Glance,<lb/>
a two time Olympian, with a time<lb/>
of 10.45.<lb/>
 OAKY PATTERSON ? ICO Pttoto Life<lb/>
Henry Williams qualified for the NCAA Nationals in the 200 meters at<lb/>
the Cavalier Invitational.<lb/>
The 4x100 relay team consisting<lb/>
of Williams, Erskine Evans,<lb/>
Nathan McCorkle and Joe Dingle<lb/>
finished second behind Morgan<lb/>
State with a hand time of 39.9.<lb/>
The electronic timer was in-<lb/>
operable at the time of the race.<lb/>
Ruben Pierce contributed to the<lb/>
team by placing seventh in the<lb/>
open 400-meter dash with a time<lb/>
of 47.2<lb/>
High hurdler Craig White<lb/>
disappointingly placed seventh in<lb/>
the 110 high hurdles in 14.1<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
At the Jesse Owens Track<lb/>
Classic on May 6 the Pirates were<lb/>
led by the improving 4x100 relay<lb/>
team.<lb/>
The relay team placed second<lb/>
behind the Bud Light team with a<lb/>
time of 40.3. Both teams broke<lb/>
the stadium record in the 4x100<lb/>
event.<lb/>
Long jumper Chris Brooks<lb/>
placed third in the long jump with<lb/>
a distance of 24.75 feet. Unfor-<lb/>
tunately, Brooks sustained an in-<lb/>
jury in the event and was unable<lb/>
to run in a relay event.<lb/>
Erskine Evans placed sixth in<lb/>
the 100-meter dash with a time of<lb/>
10.6.<lb/>
Teammate Williams also placed<lb/>
sixth in the 200-meter dash with a<lb/>
time of 21.2.<lb/>
National and Olympic hopeful<lb/>
White surprisingly placed seventh<lb/>
in the 110 high hurdles with a time<lb/>
of 14.17, and according to head<lb/>
coach Bill Carson "is running<lb/>
poorly<lb/>
The next meet for the Pirates is<lb/>
the IC4A Championships held at<lb/>
Villanova in Philadelphia this<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
Unfortunately Coach Carson<lb/>
hasn't received the scouting report<lb/>
for the meet and has no idea how<lb/>
his team will stack-up against the<lb/>
other teams.<lb/>
Carson is pleased with his<lb/>
team's performance and is<lb/>
shooting for a top 10 spot at the<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
STANLEY LEAHY - ECL PHoto L.b<lb/>
JwUhXC ?im"S "  '?  '?P SCl,ed"lg nS SUC" " Autn-  ?<lb/>
Auburn In '85 And '86<lb/>
East Carolina University and<lb/>
Auburn University have agreed to<lb/>
a two-year football series that will<lb/>
be played in 1985 and 1986 at<lb/>
Auburn's Jordan-Hare Stadium.<lb/>
"This is just a continuation of<lb/>
our goal to schedule the best<lb/>
teams that we possibly can said<lb/>
Dr. Ken Karr, director of athletics<lb/>
at ECU. "I think it will be a<lb/>
positive thing for both East<lb/>
Carolina and Auburn and I have<lb/>
no doubt the games will be ex-<lb/>
citing ones<lb/>
The Tigers ended 1983 with an<lb/>
11-1 record after capturing the<lb/>
Southeastern and Sugar Bowl<lb/>
titles.<lb/>
Auburn will represent only the<lb/>
second SEC opponent East<lb/>
Carolina has ever faced; the<lb/>
Pirates met the University of<lb/>
Florida at Gainesville in 1983.<lb/>
"I think it is another point of<lb/>
progress for us said ECU foot-<lb/>
ball coach Ed Emory. "It shows<lb/>
we are going to schedule the top<lb/>
teams in the country. It should be<lb/>
an exciting thing to play the top<lb/>
team in the Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference'<lb/>
"This is just a<lb/>
continuation of<lb/>
our goal to<lb/>
schedule the best<lb/>
teams we possibly<lb/>
can<lb/>
?Dr. Ken Karr<lb/>
The Auburn series will also<lb/>
match the Pirates with former<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Pat Dye, who<lb/>
coached at East Carolina from<lb/>
1974 through 1979 before leaving<lb/>
for the University of Wyominfi<lb/>
then Auburn. 6<lb/>
"It is a positive thing for our<lb/>
program that we are going after<lb/>
the best schedule in the countrv ??<lb/>
Emory said. "Most schools are<lb/>
cutting back these days to trv and<lb/>
guarantee themselves seven or<lb/>
eight wins a year<lb/>
The addition of Auburn will<lb/>
give the Pirates a 19? Z ?<lb/>
that will include the two tU,C<lb/>
meeting in thc ? teams<lb/>
Classic in East Rutherford jf<lb/>
? Auburn and defw J<lb/>
tional champion M!lrn?n8 na'<lb/>
Thc 1985 season ?nI1or'da.<lb/>
ECU hottS?" have<lb/>
Carolina at Ficker,I d Sout<lb/>
theHucane;Stad,UniaJon?<lb/>
? rS? , " m-<lb/>
?"e " Florid, C??m<lb/>
?"? road contact ' aJ?ng<lb/>
Tulsa. lft carol,na and<lb/>
?  ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057644_0008"/><lb/>
M u ; NM<lb/>
Intramurals Set For<lb/>
Summer Session<lb/>
B Jennette Roth<lb/>
K I l?inm?<lb/>
Break out the T-shirts, shorts,<lb/>
sun-tan lotion, and catch "The<lb/>
Feer<lb/>
The Department of Intram<lb/>
Recreational Services is offering a<lb/>
summer program for both ses-<lb/>
sions of summer school.<lb/>
tacting Ihe Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center in room 113 Memorial<lb/>
Gym or call 757-6911.<lb/>
Get that body back into shape<lb/>
this summer through the In-<lb/>
tramural Department fitness<lb/>
classes. First session registration<lb/>
dates are Ma 14 and 15.<lb/>
Aerobic exercise, personal<lb/>
defense and aquarobics classes are<lb/>
being held with only a nominal<lb/>
charge for students and faculty.<lb/>
For more information, come to<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gvm or call<lb/>
757-6387.<lb/>
The Intramural Summer<lb/>
Recreation. Program promises to<lb/>
be a most enjoyable experience<lb/>
for all who participate. You're<lb/>
what makes the program work, so<lb/>
get involved and get fit through<lb/>
the Department oi Intramural<lb/>
Summer Recreation Program.<lb/>
Registration tor raquetball,<lb/>
slow-pitch Softball, tennis singles<lb/>
CoRec volleyball are being<lb/>
. this v.eek Monday through<lb/>
Wednesday. So gel the teams<lb/>
aether and come to room 2(M n<lb/>
Memorial Gym to sign up<lb/>
Play begins or Ma 21<lb/>
-een sports first session he<lb/>
summer program promises t be<lb/>
fun and ecc for all par-<lb/>
ticipants<lb/>
Be reaJ for e three<lb/>
basketball registrai - n M i 21-23<lb/>
'? dust vour clu<lb/>
Activity<lb/>
Racquetball Tournev<lb/>
Slow Pitch Softball'<lb/>
Tennis Singles<lb/>
CoRec Volleyball<lb/>
3-on-3 Basketball<lb/>
Putt-Putt Tourney<lb/>
Golf Classic<lb/>
utt-<lb/>
era! exciting<lb/>
i including<lb/>
Aj-<lb/>
 - sar<lb/>
 co;<lb/>
Begins<lb/>
May 21<lb/>
May 21<lb/>
May 21<lb/>
May 22<lb/>
May 29<lb/>
June 5<lb/>
June 13<lb/>
Entry Dates<lb/>
May 14-16<lb/>
May 14-16<lb/>
May 14-16<lb/>
May 14-16<lb/>
May 21-23<lb/>
June 4-5<lb/>
June 11-12<lb/>
Mark Cockrell drove in the winning run against Gerogetown on Saturday.<lb/>
GARY PATTERSON - ECU Photo L?B<lb/>
Knight Enjoying Olympics<lb/>
Das lime Location<lb/>
M-TH TBA<lb/>
M &amp; W 5:30-7:30 pm IM Fids.<lb/>
M-TH TBA<lb/>
T&amp; TH 5:3030 pm Mali<lb/>
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T Noon-11 pm Hyw. 33<lb/>
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Bl OOMINGTON. Ind. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Bobby Knight, known as a strict<lb/>
disciplinarian and hard to please,<lb/>
seems to be enjoying his ex-<lb/>
perience as coach of the U.S.<lb/>
Olympic men's basketball team.<lb/>
"We've had good workouts<lb/>
since Thurvda night said<lb/>
Knight during a nes conference<lb/>
Sunday at the midway point of his<lb/>
"mini-camp" for Olympic<lb/>
hopefuls. "We spent Thursday<lb/>
morning tring to structure some<lb/>
fhings, offensively and d ensie-<lb/>
Knight said the 20 hopefuls,<lb/>
survivors of last month's evalua-<lb/>
tion trials that included '2 of the<lb/>
nation's top amateurs, played a<lb/>
same Saturdav nieht that "was<lb/>
kind of ragged to start with<lb/>
On Sunday, after a morning<lb/>
workout, Knight trimmed the'<lb/>
team down to 16 by cutting for-<lb/>
ward Charles Barklev of Auburn,<lb/>
swingman Maurice Martin of St<lb/>
Joesph's, guard Terrry Porter of I<lb/>
Wisconson-Stevens Point and<lb/>
guard John Stockton.<lb/>
The Indiana University coach,<lb/>
who is seeking an Olympic gold<lb/>
medal to go with the two NCAA<lb/>
championships and a Pan<lb/>
American gold medal he has earn-<lb/>
ed as a coach, thought Sundav<lb/>
morning in practice" that the<lb/>
players were learning the stvle of<lb/>
basketball he'll be demanding this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057644_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>