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<pb facs="00057645_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(Earnlmtatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 HoMfrj<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Thursday, May 17,1984<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 10,000<lb/>
Longer Fall Break<lb/>
Proposed, Vetoed<lb/>
By Faculty Senate<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Parental Investigation<lb/>
"Harriet, Look at the map. I know we dropped her off somewhere around here. What's the name of that dorm again?"<lb/>
ECU Nwj Bureau<lb/>
and staff reports<lb/>
It looked fairly routine ? a<lb/>
report of the Calendar Committee<lb/>
recommending approval of the<lb/>
University calendar and examina-<lb/>
tion schedules for the 1986-87<lb/>
academic year. It was five pages<lb/>
long.<lb/>
But there, halfway down the<lb/>
first page, was October 12-19<lb/>
(Sunday to Sunday) for the fall<lb/>
break in 1986.<lb/>
It slowly dawned on the Faculty<lb/>
Senate that this was something<lb/>
new ? unprecedented ? for ECU<lb/>
which has had a fall break only<lb/>
for the past two years. It began by<lb/>
administrative order for a two-<lb/>
day fall break in 1982. They notic-<lb/>
ed, too, that the opening date for<lb/>
the 1986 fall semester ? August<lb/>
18 ? seemed to be earlier than<lb/>
usual. What, faculty senators<lb/>
began to ask, is going on?<lb/>
With floor discussion indicating<lb/>
a feeling that a full week's fall<lb/>
break probably wasn't a good<lb/>
idea, the Senate approved without<lb/>
dissent a motion by Malcolm<lb/>
South (English) to send the calen-<lb/>
dar back to committee for further<lb/>
consideration.<lb/>
But Ruth Jones (Business) mak-<lb/>
ing the presentation for the calen-<lb/>
dar committee had come<lb/>
prepared. She had, she said, an<lb/>
alternate calendar prepared "just<lb/>
in case<lb/>
Jones said the committee "had<lb/>
heard" that other universities<lb/>
were taking week-long fall breaks<lb/>
and that "some favored it In<lb/>
addition, she said, "some faculty<lb/>
had requested it The committee<lb/>
was aware, she added, that it was<lb/>
"a new and different kind of<lb/>
thing" to propose for ECU.<lb/>
Also, she said, there was a<lb/>
"feeling that it was not likely to<lb/>
be accepted. The mood that day<lb/>
was very definitely against the<lb/>
week-long fall break So she had<lb/>
brought another calendar pro-<lb/>
viding for a two-day fall break.<lb/>
The alternate also provided for<lb/>
three days ? Wednesday, Thurs-<lb/>
day and Friday ? for Thanksgi<lb/>
ing and a semester-opening date<lb/>
of August 20.<lb/>
South said he felt it would be<lb/>
unwise to "try to make a calendar<lb/>
on the floor" although it ap-<lb/>
peared that the alternate proposal<lb/>
was more suitable to the Senate.<lb/>
Faculty chair James LeRoy<lb/>
See PROPOSED. Page 3<lb/>
McDonald House Will Benefit Many<lb/>
By GEORGETTE HEDR1CK<lb/>
MI Medkal Rotrw Editor<lb/>
Sylvia Morris is a parent who<lb/>
knows the anxiety, fear and<lb/>
loneliness of being hours away<lb/>
from home with a seriouslv ill<lb/>
child.<lb/>
Nearly five years have passed<lb/>
since her son Jason had surgery at<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital to<lb/>
remove a malignant tumor in his<lb/>
jaw, but the memories of lonely<lb/>
bedside vigils while he was<lb/>
hospitalized and long trips to<lb/>
Greenville for chemotherapy still<lb/>
easily bring back the tears that<lb/>
were once so frequent.<lb/>
Today Jason is a healthy<lb/>
13-year-old who visits the ECU<lb/>
pediatric oncology clinic only<lb/>
twice a year for a check-up. But<lb/>
because of her family's painful ex-<lb/>
perience, Sylvia Morris plans to<lb/>
be an active volunteer for Green-<lb/>
ville's new Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House, a facility she calls a<lb/>
"wonderful idea that would have<lb/>
meant so much to us<lb/>
"A Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
would have meant a lot to us back<lb/>
then says Mrs. Morris.<lb/>
"Although it would have eased<lb/>
the financial burden, I think the<lb/>
biggest benfit would have come<lb/>
from the opportunity to share our<lb/>
feelings and experience with other<lb/>
families who were going through<lb/>
similar situations. Having a home<lb/>
away from home like that would<lb/>
have been wonderful<lb/>
That's just about the way sup-<lb/>
porters of a Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House describe the facility: a tem-<lb/>
porary home for choronically ill<lb/>
children and their families. Of-<lb/>
ficials fo the McDonald's Corp.<lb/>
and the ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
announced in February tht Green-<lb/>
ville would become the site of a<lb/>
new house for Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
McDonald's has approved the<lb/>
use of the Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House trademark for the building<lb/>
and will contribute $200,000<lb/>
toward its construction. Plans are<lb/>
to build the house off Move<lb/>
Bouldevard near r reenillle Villa<lb/>
Nursing Home on a two-acre tract<lb/>
owned by Pitt County. The coun-<lb/>
ty has agreed to lease the land for<lb/>
the house at a cost of one dollar<lb/>
per year.<lb/>
The house is expected to<lb/>
welcome its first guests in late<lb/>
1985, said Dr. C. Tate Holbrook,<lb/>
director of pediatric<lb/>
hematologyoncology at the<lb/>
medical school.<lb/>
The first Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House ? frequently described as<lb/>
"the house that love built" ? was<lb/>
established in Philadelphia in the<lb/>
early 1970s. There are now more<lb/>
than 50 houses throughout the<lb/>
United States and several foreign<lb/>
countries. The international net-<lb/>
work serves more than 200,000<lb/>
people a year.<lb/>
The houses provide a warm,<lb/>
homey environment for the<lb/>
relatives treatment for chronic il-<lb/>
lnesses such as cancer, heart<lb/>
disease, cystic fibroses, kidney<lb/>
Faculty Senate Elects<lb/>
1984-85 Officers; Smith<lb/>
Will Serve As Chair<lb/>
disease or prematurity. Patients<lb/>
with such illnesses often have to<lb/>
travel long distances to major<lb/>
medical centers for treatment that<lb/>
can be extensive and time-<lb/>
consuming.<lb/>
"The Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
provides the sick child's family a<lb/>
place to stay with the atmosphere<lb/>
of a home and not a motel room<lb/>
or patient room Holbrook said.<lb/>
"Children receiving out-patient<lb/>
treatment, such as chemotherapy,<lb/>
may also stay at the house and<lb/>
meet other patients thier age who<lb/>
may have similar conditions.<lb/>
For a modest fee ? about $5 a<lb/>
night ? the house provides<lb/>
families with a bedroom and ac-<lb/>
cess to a community kitchen, a<lb/>
family room and other areas of<lb/>
mutual enjoyment. The guest fee<lb/>
can be reduced or waived in hard-<lb/>
ship cases.<lb/>
The Ronald McDonald House<lb/>
will be supervised by a full-time,<lb/>
live-in house manager, Holbrook<lb/>
said. Operations will be governed<lb/>
by Children's Services of Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Inc a private,<lb/>
non-profit corporation whose<lb/>
board of directors is made up of<lb/>
parents, medical center represen-<lb/>
tatives and McDonald's officials.<lb/>
Because the cost of the house is<lb/>
estimated to be as high as<lb/>
$500,000, Holbrook said addi-<lb/>
tional funds will be needed from<lb/>
sources in the region. He expects<lb/>
the stongest effort will come from<lb/>
parents like Sylvia Morris and<lb/>
friends of children who have<lb/>
undergone extended medical<lb/>
treatment. He said these people<lb/>
have a special understanding of<lb/>
what an asset a Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House will be to Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
The volunteer group, which<lb/>
now has more than 150 members,<lb/>
is led by Mrs. Mary Ann Harris of<lb/>
Tarboro, the mother of a young<lb/>
cancer victim. The group has ap-<lb/>
plied for a $25,000 grant from<lb/>
Ray A. Kroc Children's Fund,<lb/>
which was established by Kroc,<lb/>
McDonald's founder, to provide<lb/>
money for start-up expenses for a<lb/>
Ronald McDonald program.<lb/>
In addition. McDonald's will<lb/>
provide ongoing financial supper:<lb/>
from franchise and companv-<lb/>
owned McDonald's restaurant s<lb/>
across the state.<lb/>
The recent expansion of<lb/>
pediatric services at the School of<lb/>
Medicine and Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital has made<lb/>
Greenville an ideal location for a<lb/>
Roanld McDonald House, said<lb/>
Holbrook. At the medical school<lb/>
the extensive services available for<lb/>
pediatric cancer patients will be<lb/>
enhanced this summer with the<lb/>
opening of the new radiation<lb/>
therapy center.<lb/>
Durham is presently the only<lb/>
North Carolina city with a Ronald<lb/>
McDonald House, although<lb/>
McDonald's has made com-<lb/>
mitments to Chapel Hill and<lb/>
Winston-Salem to support houses<lb/>
in those cities.<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
James LeRoy Smith<lb/>
(Philosophy) and Stella Daugher-<lb/>
ty (Mathematics) won re-election<lb/>
as the chair and vice chair respec-<lb/>
tively of the Faculty Senate at the<lb/>
1984-85 organizational meeting.<lb/>
The secretary, Martha Engelke<lb/>
(Nursing)chose not to be a can-<lb/>
didate for re-election. She was<lb/>
succeeded by Nancy K. Mayberry<lb/>
(Foreign Languages, who won<lb/>
election over John Conner<lb/>
Atkeson (History) 32 to 20.<lb/>
Smith, recently elected<lb/>
chairperson of the UNC Faculty<lb/>
Assembly for 1984-85, spoke of<lb/>
the importance of faculty com-<lb/>
munication through the system-<lb/>
wide Faculty Assembly during a<lb/>
three-minute address to the Facul-<lb/>
ty Senate prior to voting. The two<lb/>
candidates nominated for faculty<lb/>
chair made three minute talks.<lb/>
By secret ballot, Smith won<lb/>
over John D. Longhill (Business)<lb/>
42 to 11. Daugherty won over Bea<lb/>
Chauncey (Music) 39 to 14. There<lb/>
are 56 voting members of the<lb/>
Faculty Senate including five ex-<lb/>
officio officials who hold voting<lb/>
privileges.<lb/>
In other elections for committee<lb/>
posts, two of the three persons<lb/>
nominated from the floor won<lb/>
seats on the Faculty Affairs Com-<lb/>
mittee, which is embroiled in an<lb/>
effort to recommend a university<lb/>
policy on the status of non-<lb/>
tenured facuulty in fixed-term<lb/>
positions. The two floor nominees<lb/>
who won seats, Carl Adler<lb/>
(Physics) and Walter Pories<lb/>
(Medicine) have been active in<lb/>
discussions and debate of the con-<lb/>
tinuing issue.<lb/>
A third vacancy on the FAC<lb/>
was filled by re-election of Mar-<lb/>
sha Ironsmith (Psychology) for a<lb/>
three-year term. Pories was<lb/>
elected to replace Rosalie Haritun<lb/>
(Music) as an alternate.<lb/>
Belinda Lee (Nursing), Madge<lb/>
McGrath (Allied Health) and<lb/>
William Bloodworth (English)<lb/>
won the three three-year terms<lb/>
open on the Teaching Effec-<lb/>
tiveness Committee in a field of<lb/>
four. Lee was nominated from the<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Five nominees selected by the<lb/>
Committee on Committees won<lb/>
nomination in a field of six for<lb/>
three-year terms on the Cur-<lb/>
riculum Committee. Paul Topper<lb/>
(Music) was elected to a term en-<lb/>
ding in 1986 replacing Robert<lb/>
Holt (Philosophy) who is resign-<lb/>
ing from the committee.<lb/>
Olympics In Jeopardy,<lb/>
Team Official Predicts<lb/>
?KYAN HUMIIRT ? ICO<lb/>
"Now look, I am rare this is all just some big misunderstanding. I just<lb/>
look like the driver of that car. Hey, you look lost like that macho cop<lb/>
on 'Hill Street Blocs<lb/>
ECU Newi Bureau<lb/>
With sports powerhouses<lb/>
Russia and East Germany out of<lb/>
the Summer Olympics and some<lb/>
other communist countries ex-<lb/>
pected to follow suit, the level of<lb/>
competition won't be the same<lb/>
and may jeopardize the future of<lb/>
the games, says an Olympic sport<lb/>
official from ECU.<lb/>
Dr. Wayne Edwards, an Olym-<lb/>
pic administrator for the U.S.<lb/>
Team Handball team, says the<lb/>
survival of the Olympics is in<lb/>
danger. "Maybe not immediately<lb/>
but when you look a few years in<lb/>
the future, this kind of thing is<lb/>
setting a course that is changing<lb/>
the concept of the Olympics as we<lb/>
know it and will perhaps eliminate<lb/>
the whole thing he said.<lb/>
In discussions this week with a<lb/>
representative of the U.S. Olym-<lb/>
pic Committee about the status of<lb/>
teams selected for play in team<lb/>
handball, Edwards said he was<lb/>
told that if Russia and other com-<lb/>
munist nations follow through<lb/>
with their announced boycott of<lb/>
the summer games in Los<lb/>
Angeles, alternate teams would be<lb/>
selected to play in their places.<lb/>
The selection of these alternates<lb/>
would come after a June 2<lb/>
deadline that has been set for<lb/>
countries to accept their invita-<lb/>
tions for participation.<lb/>
In women's team handball a<lb/>
total of six teams have been in-<lb/>
vited to play in the games. The<lb/>
include the U.S Russia, East<lb/>
Germany, Hungary, Yugoslavia<lb/>
and the People's Republic of<lb/>
China. Russia, Hungary and East<lb/>
Germany have already announced<lb/>
their withdrawal. Yugoslavia has<lb/>
not accepted its invitation but is<lb/>
expected to atttend. China has<lb/>
already accepted its invitation.<lb/>
In the men's competition, there<lb/>
are 12 teams invited to play. They<lb/>
include Russia, Poland, Romania,<lb/>
Czechoslovakia, Cuba, Algeria,<lb/>
Yugoslavia, Denmark, East Ger-<lb/>
many, Hungary, Japan and the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
"In the women's competition<lb/>
we have a realistic chance against<lb/>
China Edwards says, "but<lb/>
that's really about it. We're better<lb/>
than we have ever been but we are<lb/>
a long ways away from what some<lb/>
of these powers are he said,<lb/>
noting that the women have only<lb/>
played the sport for a little less<lb/>
than ten years and have never ap-<lb/>
peared in Olympic competition.<lb/>
One of the top players on the<lb/>
See COMPETITION, rage 2<lb/>
00 ??"??' I 'V l! ? ? ?"?" <lb/>
ymmmm<lb/>
??ll ?? <lb/>
" ? t <lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 17, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Enrollment Increases Slightly<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Newi Editor<lb/>
Although enrollment figures<lb/>
for the first session of summer<lb/>
school have not yet been finalized,<lb/>
the number of students enrolled is<lb/>
a few students ahead of last sum-<lb/>
mer, according to ECU Registrar<lb/>
Gilbert Moore.<lb/>
Moore said he expects the<lb/>
number to be slightly higher than<lb/>
last year when the new figures are<lb/>
released. Some special courses<lb/>
have not yet started, so it is dif-<lb/>
ficult to determine the exact<lb/>
enrollment, he said.<lb/>
The number of ECU students<lb/>
living in residence halls on-<lb/>
campus, has also increased slight-<lb/>
ly, said Director of Housing<lb/>
Operations Dan Wooten. "As of<lb/>
yesterday afternoon, we had 681<lb/>
(students living in residence halls),<lb/>
compared to 661 last summer<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
The number of students living<lb/>
in the residence halls during the<lb/>
summer dropped sharply approx-<lb/>
imately three years ago, but has<lb/>
leveled off since then, Wooten<lb/>
said. The lack of air-conditioning<lb/>
is often a reason for students op-<lb/>
ting to live off-campus.<lb/>
"I think a lot of them leave to<lb/>
find air-conditioning Wooten<lb/>
said. Of the four residence halls<lb/>
open this summer (Garrett,<lb/>
Greene, Jarvis, and part of Slay)<lb/>
only Jarvis is air-conditioned.<lb/>
Air-conditioning will be installed<lb/>
in Fleming this summer.<lb/>
Associate Dean of University<lb/>
Unions Rudy Alexander said that,<lb/>
from his perspective, a larger<lb/>
number of summer school<lb/>
students is better. "It makes it<lb/>
more enjoyable to have a larger<lb/>
number of people to work with<lb/>
he said, adding that it contributes<lb/>
to the success of events.<lb/>
The Student Union sponsors<lb/>
events such as Bingo and Ice<lb/>
Cream nights, movies and con-<lb/>
certs on the mall. Tuesday's Bingo<lb/>
and Ice Cream night was so suc-<lb/>
cessful, Alexander said, that peo-<lb/>
ple had to be turned away.<lb/>
Alexander also said that events<lb/>
are also planned to coincide with<lb/>
the freshman orientation pro-<lb/>
grams, which will be held later<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Due Process Rights Limited<lb/>
(CPS) ? Striking down a lower<lb/>
court decision that would have<lb/>
resulted in sweeping changes in<lb/>
the ways colleges discipline their<lb/>
students, the New York Supreme<lb/>
Court Appellate Division recently<lb/>
ruled that students' constitutional<lb/>
rights to due process don't always<lb/>
apply to disciplinary procedures.<lb/>
The court said a State Universi-<lb/>
ty of New York at Cortland stu-<lb/>
dent didn't have a right to an at-<lb/>
torney to represent her or to a<lb/>
review of written transcripts of<lb/>
the universitys decision to sus-<lb/>
pend her for a semester.<lb/>
SUNY officials accused her of<lb/>
cheating twice.<lb/>
But whether or not she had<lb/>
cheated was never the real issue.<lb/>
"The student admitted the first<lb/>
time she was caught cheating that<lb/>
she had plagiarized an essay<lb/>
savs SUNY lawver Peter Crarv.<lb/>
The issue instead was how<lb/>
closely the disciplinary pro-<lb/>
ceedings she went through had to<lb/>
resemble courtroom procedures.<lb/>
At SUNY's campuses, the col-<lb/>
leges must give students written<lb/>
notice of the charges against<lb/>
them, provide an open hearing in<lb/>
which the student can call one<lb/>
witness, and provide students with<lb/>
a notice of what final penalties, if<lb/>
any, are imposed on them.<lb/>
This student, Marguerite<lb/>
Moresco, asserted she was entitled<lb/>
to the same professional represen-<lb/>
tation and review of the written<lb/>
proceedings she would have in<lb/>
protecting herself in a civil or<lb/>
criminal court.<lb/>
New York's state Supreme<lb/>
Court ? which is not the state's<lb/>
highest court ? agreed with the<lb/>
student.<lb/>
But now the appellate court has<lb/>
sided with SUNY, saying the stu-<lb/>
dent's rights in "a collegial at-<lb/>
mosphere" were "best served by a<lb/>
nonadversarial setting" without<lb/>
dueling lawyers and transcripts.<lb/>
Richard Shay, the student's at-<lb/>
torney, could not be reached for<lb/>
comment.<lb/>
SUNY, however, is "quite<lb/>
satisfied" by the decision, Crary<lb/>
says.<lb/>
He says letting a student take a<lb/>
lawyer into disciplinary hearings<lb/>
and providing transcripts of the<lb/>
6,000 to 7,000 disciplinary hear-<lb/>
ings a hear on the SUNY campus<lb/>
would place "an absolutely in-<lb/>
tolerable burden on the universi-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
"Due process does not require a<lb/>
full adversarial hearing Crary<lb/>
contends. "The student had the<lb/>
right to confront witnesses, be<lb/>
represented by someone in the col-<lb/>
lege community and receive com-<lb/>
plete written charges against her<lb/>
Yet in many school discipline<lb/>
situations, the legal cards are<lb/>
already stacked against students,<lb/>
the authors of a new book about<lb/>
school discipline argue.<lb/>
"School systems rarely have<lb/>
discipline cases that wind up in<lb/>
court says Ellen Jane Holl-<lb/>
ingsworth, co-author of School<lb/>
Discipline which was published in<lb/>
January.<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
Sex Discrimination Is<lb/>
Marring Many Classes<lb/>
(CPS) ? Even at the college<lb/>
and university levels, classrooms<lb/>
are marred by subtle and not-so-<lb/>
subtle forms of sex discrimination<lb/>
that may inhibit women students'<lb/>
learning, a recent report by two<lb/>
American University researchers<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"One out or every three<lb/>
classrooms are segregated by<lb/>
sex says David Sadker, who<lb/>
heads the Mid-Atlantic Center for<lb/>
Sex Equity.<lb/>
The Sadkers have conducted<lb/>
numerous studies of sex bias in<lb/>
education at both secondary and<lb/>
post-secondary institutions.<lb/>
Although much of the sexism<lb/>
and segregation in colleges is "an<lb/>
artifact of the students deciding<lb/>
on their own where they will sit or<lb/>
how they interact Sadker says,<lb/>
many teachers serve as co-<lb/>
conspirators in gender discrimina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"We found a sizable difference<lb/>
in teachers' responses (the dif-<lb/>
ferent sexes), although this was<lb/>
less significant at the college level<lb/>
than at elementary and post-<lb/>
secondary levels<lb/>
College instructors also<lb/>
disproportionately favor male<lb/>
Olympic<lb/>
Competition<lb/>
Threatened<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
women's team is Leora "Sam"<lb/>
Jones of Mount Olive. Jones, an<lb/>
ECU student and a former basket-<lb/>
ball star, is undergoing training<lb/>
with the team in Colorado.<lb/>
The U.S. men's team has a bet-<lb/>
ter chance jf making a good<lb/>
showing in light of the boycott.<lb/>
"We have a very good chance of<lb/>
beating Japian says Edwards.<lb/>
He also noted that the U.S. team<lb/>
bet the number one seeded<lb/>
Yugoslavian team two years ago<lb/>
ind tied the Cubans at the Pan<lb/>
American Games in January.<lb/>
"The boycott is going to make<lb/>
our competition easier but that is<lb/>
certainly not what we are looking<lb/>
for he said.<lb/>
He added that meetings are tak-<lb/>
ing place with Russia this week in<lb/>
hopes of getting the Soviets to<lb/>
reconsider their plan to boycott<lb/>
the Olympics. "I think there is<lb/>
still hope for the Russians and<lb/>
other boycotting nations to be in<lb/>
Los Angeles when the games<lb/>
begin on July 28 Edwards said.<lb/>
students in choosing teaching<lb/>
assistants, research assistants and<lb/>
making other student appoint-<lb/>
ments, the Sadkers found.<lb/>
Many of the classroom dif-<lb/>
ferences, however, are<lb/>
perpetuated by the students<lb/>
themselves, Sadker says.<lb/>
Indeed, another study released<lb/>
recently found that students at<lb/>
five Maryland colleges voluntarily<lb/>
segregated themselves by race and<lb/>
color when choosing their seats in<lb/>
class.<lb/>
Sadker was unaware of the<lb/>
Maryland study, but said it was<lb/>
reminiscent of the unconscious<lb/>
ways classrooms become uncom-<lb/>
fortable for women.<lb/>
Self-deprecating remarks in-<lb/>
clude prefacing classroom com-<lb/>
ments with qualifying phrases likej<lb/>
"Well, I many not be right,<lb/>
but or "This is just my ownl<lb/>
opinion, but Sadker explains.<lb/>
Male students, on the other!<lb/>
hand, tend to be more assertivel<lb/>
and forthright in their classroom f<lb/>
participation, and are much more<lb/>
likely to be called upon and listen-<lb/>
ed to by their instructors, the<lb/>
Sadkers' study found<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sfmg the campus community<lb/>
sine 1925<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and Thursday during<lb/>
the academic year and every Wednesday during<lb/>
the summer.<lb/>
The East Carolinian is the official newspaper<lb/>
of East Carolina University, owned, operated,<lb/>
and published for and by the students of East<lb/>
Carolina University<lb/>
Unsigned opinions on the editorial page, unless<lb/>
otherwise noted, are the opinion of the<lb/>
newspaper, usually written Dy the managing<lb/>
editor<lb/>
Subscription Rate: S30 yearly<lb/>
The East Carolinian offices ?r? located on the<lb/>
second floor of the Publications Building on the<lb/>
ECU campus, Greenville. N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The<lb/>
East Carolinian, Publications Building, ECU,<lb/>
Greenville, N C , 27834<lb/>
Telephone 75? ?3?? 637 not<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
AttentionlThe international Student Assoc a<lb/>
tion will be having a meeting on Saturday, May 19<lb/>
at 600 p m at the international House. 306 E 9th<lb/>
St We'll discuss activities for the Summer Sev<lb/>
sions such as a trip to King's Dominion Looking<lb/>
forward to seeing all of you there!<lb/>
AEROBIC FITNESS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services is offen(g aerobic fitness classes during<lb/>
both sessions of summer schootl Registration<lb/>
ends this Friday. May II Come be Room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym to register. A small fee Is required<lb/>
for both students and staff.<lb/>
OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
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We're Still Celebrating Our Opening<lb/>
Get Ready For Summer Days Ahead,<lb/>
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OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
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 ???<lb/>
Job<lb/>
CPS, - This .<lb/>
graduates can looi<lb/>
job market that i<lb/>
cd" compared<lb/>
gioorm employmer<lb/>
merit experts repot<lb/>
nowhere near the<lb/>
of the late seer.<lb/>
eighties<lb/>
"There's a .<lb/>
in the mare-<lb/>
to continue for a ?<lb/>
Victor L<lb/>
director at N <lb/>
sity and author<lb/>
Report on<lb/>
ment trends <lb/>
"It's kind<lb/>
through so ma<lb/>
of tailing actn<lb/>
coming ba<lb/>
Indeed, the nu<lb/>
fers made<lb/>
million students wni<lb/>
with bachelor's deg<lb/>
is up abou- "?!<lb/>
sas Linda Pe .<lb/>
iege Pla Coi<lb/>
"It's a b <lb/>
last ear, ' t n<lb/>
"Much.<lb/>
1983 concurs Ja;<lb/>
emen: :<lb/>
Univers tyand<lb/>
a<lb/>
"We're sec <lb/>
coming<lb/>
quotas are r<lb/>
about five<lb/>
fers arc be<lb/>
Genera. M<lb/>
"are rea ? if<lb/>
we're Sc ? .<lb/>
engineering i: . :<lb/>
majors. Walr"<lb/>
college ' men)<lb/>
Likewise. IBM<lb/>
grads thai is<lb/>
spokesman Les Sat<lb/>
To fill the c 1<lb/>
openings<lb/>
are visiting e: ;l<lb/>
search o: grads<lb/>
skills, busme-<lb/>
some liberal a:<lb/>
say<lb/>
AT&amp;T, in the wal<lb/>
d:estiture. w:K <lb/>
same" number o:<lb/>
year, and expects<lb/>
job openings ill<lb/>
1985. officials inert<lb/>
Facult<lb/>
Change<lb/>
(CPS) ? Fa<lb/>
up again this e<lb/>
rapidly as in the<lb/>
survey of the cc. <lb/>
fession has four<lb/>
The aerage<lb/>
gone up 5.7 r<lb/>
1982-83 scl 1<lb/>
American Associatj<lb/>
sity Profe-<lb/>
preliminary j I<lb/>
nual study of howl<lb/>
teachers make.<lb/>
But facult) saiar,<lb/>
percent in 19S2- -<lb/>
cent m 1981-82<lb/>
AAUP spoke:<lb/>
Molotsk attnbui<lb/>
rate of increases I<lb/>
amounts of I<lb/>
legislatures gie<lb/>
When academic f<lb/>
"There's a tenden<lb/>
sums across the<lb/>
members, she potntj<lb/>
tice, that would m<lb/>
of a salary differen<lb/>
and associate profi<lb/>
Over the las:<lb/>
however, admm.<lb/>
the major reason :hj<lb/>
tuition much faster<lb/>
tion rate is because<lb/>
faculty members mj<lb/>
A recent Colleg<lb/>
contended faculty b<lb/>
now less than it w<lb/>
Asked to explaii<lb/>
tuition is being raisj<lb/>
pay faculty member<lb/>
faculty salary<lb/>
down, Molotsky sa<lb/>
Faculty members<lb/>
leges did slightly<lb/>
at;<lb/>
:vf<lb/>
S ?? Wit<lb/>
Smith remind<lb/>
had already v<lb/>
ly, without<lb/>
the calendar for f <lb/>
tee consideration<lb/>
the afternoon's<lb/>
lenfthy one.<lb/>
So back it<lb/>
with the<lb/>
ECU'i Faculty<lb/>
ad to accept ?<lb/>
?W&amp;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
may i7, nm<lb/>
up<lb/>
Volina<lb/>
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Job Market Imp<lb/>
(CPS) ? This spring's college<lb/>
graduates can look forward to a<lb/>
job market that is "very improv-<lb/>
ed compared to last year's<lb/>
gloomy employment scene, place-<lb/>
ment experts report, but it's still<lb/>
nowhere near the booming market<lb/>
of the late seventies and early<lb/>
eighties.<lb/>
"There's a decided turnaround<lb/>
in the market and think it's going<lb/>
to continue for a while observes<lb/>
Victor Lindquist, placement<lb/>
director at Northwestern Univer-<lb/>
sity and author of the Endicott<lb/>
Report on nationwide employ-<lb/>
ment trends for college grads.<lb/>
"It's kind of nice after going<lb/>
through so many successive years<lb/>
of tailing activity to see job offers<lb/>
coming back in he adds.<lb/>
Indeed, the number of job of-<lb/>
fers made to the nearly one<lb/>
million students who will graduate<lb/>
with bachelor's degrees this spring<lb/>
is up about 33 percent nationally,<lb/>
says Linda Pengillywith the Col-<lb/>
lege Placement Council (CPC).<lb/>
"It's a big improvement over<lb/>
last year, " she notes.<lb/>
"Much, much better than<lb/>
1983 concurs Jack Shingleton,<lb/>
placement chief at Michigan State<lb/>
University and director of another<lb/>
nationwide job market study.<lb/>
"We're seeing more employers<lb/>
coming in to interview, hiring<lb/>
quotas are up for all companies<lb/>
about five percent, and more of-<lb/>
fers are being made, "he reports.<lb/>
General Motors' hiring needs<lb/>
"are really up for graduates and<lb/>
we're looking primarily for<lb/>
engineering and computer science<lb/>
majors says Walt Rolm, GM's<lb/>
college recruitment director.<lb/>
Likewise, IBM will hire more<lb/>
grads than last year, says<lb/>
spokesman Les Sabor.<lb/>
To fill the company's 10,000<lb/>
openings this year, IBM recruiters<lb/>
are visiting over 350 campuses in<lb/>
search of grads with technical<lb/>
skills, business majors, and even<lb/>
some liberal arts graduates, he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
AT&amp;T, in the wake of its recent<lb/>
divestiture, will hire "about the<lb/>
same" number of grads as last<lb/>
year, and expects to increase its<lb/>
job openings dramatically by<lb/>
1985, officials there report.<lb/>
The change will be welcomed.<lb/>
Last year's market "was the<lb/>
worst in recent history recalls<lb/>
the CPC's Pengilly. "Offers and<lb/>
salaries hit rock bottom<lb/>
Following the record-breaking<lb/>
markets of the late seventies,<lb/>
when many graduates were getting<lb/>
multiple job offers and starting<lb/>
salaries were increasing at 9-to-13<lb/>
percent a year, in the last two<lb/>
years employers have cancelled<lb/>
campus interviews, cut back on<lb/>
the number of job offers, and<lb/>
given little, if any, increases in<lb/>
starting salaries, she explains.<lb/>
"Now the '84 grad has a much<lb/>
more optimistic market to go<lb/>
into Pengilly says. "Things are<lb/>
still restrained, but there's a sub-<lb/>
dued optimism that things will<lb/>
keep improving<lb/>
The economic upturn, coupled<lb/>
with the fact that many employers<lb/>
have deferred new hirings for the<lb/>
last two years, means there are<lb/>
more openings for this year's job<lb/>
seekers, MSU's Singleton says.<lb/>
The starting salaries being of-<lb/>
fered to this spring's grads,<lb/>
however, aren't improving much.<lb/>
Salary offers are running only<lb/>
l-to-4 percent over last year's<lb/>
stagnated levels, experts report.<lb/>
Even for hot majors like<lb/>
engineering and computer science,<lb/>
salary increases are limping along<lb/>
at two or three percent, according<lb/>
to Pat Sheridan, executive direc-<lb/>
tor for the Engineering Manpower<lb/>
Commission (EMC).<lb/>
"There may be a turnaround,<lb/>
but salary increases are nowhere<lb/>
near what we saw in earlier<lb/>
years he says. In fact, "they're<lb/>
no better than what we were see-<lb/>
ing last year<lb/>
"It's still an employers' market<lb/>
and the employers realize it says<lb/>
Pengilly. "A lot of employers are<lb/>
telling us they're finding a much<lb/>
more competitive attitude among<lb/>
graduates and they're coming to<lb/>
campuses with full interview<lb/>
schedules<lb/>
Another reason for the virtual<lb/>
freeze on salary increases is that<lb/>
employers aren't anxious to<lb/>
repeat the sins of several years<lb/>
ago, when many graduates got<lb/>
starting salaries that often were<lb/>
higher than salaries paid to other<lb/>
employees.<lb/>
"That so-called 'internal salary<lb/>
compression' hurt many<lb/>
employers and caused a lot of<lb/>
dissatisfaction among their<lb/>
established employees Pengilly<lb/>
explains. "So employers are really<lb/>
working to hold the line. Unless<lb/>
the economy takes a significant<lb/>
and unexpected upswing or the<lb/>
money supply tightens, we don't<lb/>
expect starting salaries to change<lb/>
much<lb/>
Engineering majors, of course,<lb/>
are still the choice grads in this<lb/>
year's market, enjoying $24,000<lb/>
to $34,000 starting salaries,<lb/>
Pengilly reports.<lb/>
Of the over 74,000 four-year<lb/>
engineering grads this year, the<lb/>
electrical engineering majors re-<lb/>
main the crown princes in terms<lb/>
of demand and starting salaries,<lb/>
says EMC's Sheridan, followed<lb/>
by mechanical, civil, and chemical<lb/>
engineers.<lb/>
Computer science and business<lb/>
majors also continue to be in<lb/>
strong demand and are comman-<lb/>
ding $20,000-plus salaries, says<lb/>
Northwstern's Lindquist.<lb/>
And liberal arts and humanities<lb/>
majors continue to struggle along<lb/>
with the fewest job offers and<lb/>
lowest starting salaries.<lb/>
Slowly<lb/>
Starting wages for them are<lb/>
averaging a pale $16,000, Pengilly<lb/>
reports, actually a three percent<lb/>
decrease from last year's salary<lb/>
offers.<lb/>
I don't think opportunities are<lb/>
diminishing for liberal arts<lb/>
grads, ' she says, "but for the last<lb/>
tew years, as we were in a reces-<lb/>
sion, many employers were cut-<lb/>
ting costs by hiring liberal arts<lb/>
people to do some of the jobs<lb/>
previously held by technical ma-<lb/>
jors<lb/>
Now, with the improved<lb/>
economy and a ready supply of<lb/>
eager technical grads, those<lb/>
employers are once again bypass-<lb/>
ing liberal arts majors.<lb/>
Indeed, much of the recent talk<lb/>
about companies hiring more<lb/>
liberal arts graduates "is nothing<lb/>
but talk says MSU's<lb/>
Shingleton.<lb/>
"I've sat and listened to many a<lb/>
chairman of the board talk about<lb/>
the need for bringing liberal arts<lb/>
People into the company he<lb/>
points out. "But invariably, their<lb/>
corporate recruiters come back to<lb/>
campus and hire nothing but<lb/>
engineers and computer science<lb/>
majors. It's all a lot of talk at the<lb/>
top without any follow through<lb/>
Faculty Salaries Increase;<lb/>
Change Is Still Sluggish<lb/>
(CPS) ? Faculty salaries went<lb/>
up again this year, but not as<lb/>
rapidly as in the past, a new<lb/>
survey of the college teaching pro-<lb/>
fession has found.<lb/>
The average faculty salary has<lb/>
gone up 5.7 percent since the<lb/>
1982-83 school year, the<lb/>
American Association of Univer-<lb/>
sity Professors found in<lb/>
preliminary results from its an-<lb/>
nual study of how much college<lb/>
teachers make.<lb/>
But faculty salaries went up 7.9<lb/>
percent in 1982 13, and 9.9 per-<lb/>
cent in 1981-82.<lb/>
AAUP spokeswoman Iris<lb/>
Molotsky attributes the slowing<lb/>
rate of increases to the declining<lb/>
amounts of money state<lb/>
legislatures give to colleges.<lb/>
When academic funds are tight,<lb/>
"There's a tendency to give flat<lb/>
sums across the board" to faculty<lb/>
members, she points out. In prac-<lb/>
tice, that would mean there's less<lb/>
of a salary difference between full<lb/>
and associate professors.<lb/>
Over the last two years,<lb/>
however, administrators have said<lb/>
the major reason they had to raise<lb/>
tuition much faster than the infla-<lb/>
tion rate is because they must pay<lb/>
faculty members more.<lb/>
A recent College Board study<lb/>
contended faculty buying power is<lb/>
now less than it was in 1972.<lb/>
Asked to explain why student<lb/>
tuition is being raised in order to<lb/>
pay faculty members more even as<lb/>
faculty salary increases slow<lb/>
down, Molotsky says, "I can't<lb/>
Faculty members at private col-<lb/>
leges did slightly better than those<lb/>
campuses, the survey<lb/>
at public<lb/>
found.<lb/>
Independent college teachers<lb/>
got average raises of 7.6 percent.<lb/>
Their colleagues on public cam-<lb/>
puses got average five percent in-<lb/>
creases.<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Beer<lb/>
ingredient<lb/>
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31 Hawaiian<lb/>
wreath<lb/>
32 Make lace<lb/>
33 Shouted<lb/>
37 Montana s<lb/>
capital<lb/>
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hearing<lb/>
4 i Employ<lb/>
42 Layers<lb/>
45 Feel indig-<lb/>
nant at<lb/>
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products<lb/>
50 Cushion<lb/>
52 Woody plant<lb/>
53 Great Lake<lb/>
54 Cloth<lb/>
measure<lb/>
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56 Care for<lb/>
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58 Soaks<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Shaded walk<lb/>
2 Name for<lb/>
Athena<lb/>
3 Defeat<lb/>
4 Dog s chain<lb/>
5 Unmarried<lb/>
ladies<lb/>
6 Exist<lb/>
7 Improve<lb/>
8 Descendants<lb/>
9 Young<lb/>
salmon<lb/>
10 Preposition<lb/>
11 Negate<lb/>
19 Goal<lb/>
21 Garden tool<lb/>
24 Crafty<lb/>
25 Tiny<lb/>
26 Lubricate<lb/>
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ern Indian<lb/>
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30 Greek letter<lb/>
34 Rented<lb/>
35 Dine<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
36 Arranged in<lb/>
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51 Moham-<lb/>
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Use the<lb/>
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And don't forget<lb/>
The Classifieds<lb/>
At just 75 cents per line,<lb/>
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Watch Yourself at Mr Galti's.<lb/>
Instant<lb/>
Replay.<lb/>
wiHtSUftnGurr<lb/>
Coatiaued From rage 1<lb/>
Smith reminded the Senate that it<lb/>
had already voted, "unanimous-<lb/>
ly, without dissent to re-refer<lb/>
the calendar for further commit-<lb/>
tee consideration. Also, he said,<lb/>
the afternoon's agenda was a<lb/>
lengthy one.<lb/>
So back it went, apparently<lb/>
with the ?Up that as yet<lb/>
ECU'S Faculty Senate isn't inclin-<lb/>
ed to accept a full week's fall<lb/>
break.<lb/>
At Mr. Gatti's your big event<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057645_0004"/><lb/>
(Sift iEaat (Kawltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, General Manager<lb/>
DARRYL BROWN, Managmg Editor<lb/>
J. T. PlETRZAX, D,rtc,or of Adrtatnt JENNIFER JENDRASIAK, mm Editor<lb/>
Anthony Martin, bus Manager Tina Maroschak, Features td,?r<lb/>
Tom Norton, emu Manager Allen Guy, cartoon<lb/>
Bill Austin, cm Manager Randy Mews, .?-?<lb/>
Michael Mayo, Advening r-? Kathy Fuerst, product? Manager<lb/>
May 17, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Access Bill<lb/>
Chance For Compromise Missed<lb/>
The defeat by the House Tuesday<lb/>
of a bill to permit student religious<lb/>
groups to meet after hours on<lb/>
school property probably did the<lb/>
school prayer movement some<lb/>
good, and the protection of in-<lb/>
dividual rights some harm.<lb/>
The bill was a good compromise<lb/>
to the school prayer issue, and even<lb/>
without consideration of the school<lb/>
prayer issue the bill makes good<lb/>
sense. It would have permitted stu-<lb/>
dent religious groups the same right<lb/>
to meet on school property as other<lb/>
student groups; it had nothing to<lb/>
do with bringing religion into the<lb/>
classroom, or even organized<lb/>
religious events during regular<lb/>
school hours.<lb/>
The bill's defeat allows school<lb/>
prayer supporters and religious ac-<lb/>
tivists to make a case of the federal<lb/>
government's hostility toward<lb/>
religion. Students may voluntarily<lb/>
meet for gun clubs, chess tour-<lb/>
naments and foreign language<lb/>
groups, but if they plan to talk<lb/>
about a Bible or Koran, they'll<lb/>
have to do it elsewhere.<lb/>
From at least two points of view<lb/>
the bill should have passed. The<lb/>
first is less noble but more<lb/>
pragmatic: to pacify some school<lb/>
prayer supporters and prove the<lb/>
government doesn't discriminate<lb/>
against religion but is protecting<lb/>
the religious freedom of all. That<lb/>
case is harder to make with the<lb/>
defeat of the freedom of access bill.<lb/>
The second is good sense: it is de<lb/>
facto discrimination against<lb/>
religion to permit everything but<lb/>
religious groups to meet on school<lb/>
property, which is now the case. As<lb/>
Rep. James Martin, R-N.C, ques-<lb/>
tioned, "In a day when we are<lb/>
pushing for equal rights for all<lb/>
Americans should we deny the<lb/>
right of assembly to voluntary-<lb/>
organized student religious<lb/>
groups?"<lb/>
There were ludicrous agruments<lb/>
in the House that the bill would not<lb/>
only allow such mainstream groups<lb/>
as Bible clubs and Christian athlete<lb/>
organizations but also<lb/>
"demonologists (who) worship the<lb/>
anti-Christ" and "animal<lb/>
sacrifices (who would) slaughter a<lb/>
pig in the classroom Those ex-<lb/>
amples as a justification for oppos-<lb/>
ing the bill are so farfetched they<lb/>
speak for themselves. Interestingly<lb/>
enough, in a neat twist of logic op-<lb/>
ponents using this agrument imply<lb/>
that defeating the bill thus helps<lb/>
preserve the morality or social stan-<lb/>
dards of the children to some<lb/>
degree, because now those godless<lb/>
devil worshippers can't meet after<lb/>
school and corrupt young minds.<lb/>
Too, they aren't opposed to the ac-<lb/>
cess bill to protect religious<lb/>
freedom but to keep out some<lb/>
groups they dislike. Yet only<lb/>
religious groups are prohibited<lb/>
from meeting, not all groups; thus<lb/>
in theory junior Nazis and the teen-<lb/>
KKK, not the mention the Young<lb/>
Communists, presently have as<lb/>
much access to school meeting<lb/>
rooms as the student government<lb/>
or the ceramics club. The fact that<lb/>
schools aren't filled with little<lb/>
Hitlers, junior Marxists-Leninists<lb/>
or 14-year-old Grand Dragons<lb/>
wearing white sheets is some indica-<lb/>
tion that neither will there be an<lb/>
overabundance of devil worship-<lb/>
pers and pig sacrifices.<lb/>
The opponents' position can be<lb/>
appreciated, but is probably based<lb/>
more on pre-conceived political<lb/>
convictions than clear-thinking<lb/>
consideration of the present case.<lb/>
They may well have just fueled the<lb/>
fires of their opponents without<lb/>
serving a good purpose; neither<lb/>
religious freedom and tolerance nor<lb/>
individual rights are furthered by<lb/>
the bill's defeat.<lb/>
Excuse Me, Sir, But Why<lb/>
Mine The Chesapeake Bay?<lb/>
?<lb/>
By ART BUCHWALD<lb/>
I was out sailing on the Chespeake Bay<lb/>
last weekend when I saw a fellow throwing<lb/>
a large round plastic ball over the side of<lb/>
his boat.<lb/>
"Hey, what are you doing?" I asked.<lb/>
"Mining for oysters he said.<lb/>
"Why mines?" I asked.<lb/>
"It's easier to find them if you can make<lb/>
a big explosion he replied.<lb/>
"Are you from the CIA?"<lb/>
"Let's just say I'm an oysterman, and<lb/>
let it go at that<lb/>
"Are you an overt oysterman or a<lb/>
covert oysterman?"<lb/>
"I'm a covert oysterman he said. "You<lb/>
don't think I'd by throwing mines over the<lb/>
side if I was overt<lb/>
"Are those things explosive?" I wanted<lb/>
to know.<lb/>
"I hope so. How else are we going tc<lb/>
shake up the oysters?"<lb/>
"But good heavens, man I cired,<lb/>
"some sailor could hit one with his boat<lb/>
and be sunk<lb/>
"Well, we have to practice<lb/>
somewhere he said. "Would you want<lb/>
us to drag for oysters with duds?"<lb/>
"No. But suppose you damaged a<lb/>
foreign ship? There would be hell to pay<lb/>
"We've informed all shipping nations<lb/>
we're mining for oysters in the Chespeake<lb/>
and they sail at their own risk<lb/>
"But why the Chesapeake?"<lb/>
"We might want to go after bigger<lb/>
shellfish off the coast of Central America,<lb/>
and we have to make sure our mines<lb/>
work<lb/>
While we were talking, two Latin<lb/>
Americans came on deck with plastic<lb/>
packages, and one said, "Senor, here are<lb/>
five more tortillas we assembled. They will<lb/>
explode as soon as they hear a sound<lb/>
?'Oysters don't make any sound I<lb/>
yelled.<lb/>
The skipper said, "Jose, Pedro, go<lb/>
below decks Then he turned to me and<lb/>
said "That is how much you know about<lb/>
fishing. Every time an oyster opens its<lb/>
mouth it emits a noise, and then we've got<lb/>
him<lb/>
"Do you know what I think? I don't<lb/>
believe you're looking for oysters at all. I<lb/>
believe you're testing mines for use in<lb/>
Nicaragua<lb/>
"You must be crazy. Why would an<lb/>
oysterman want to mine Nicaragua?"<lb/>
"Why would he want to mine the<lb/>
Chesapeake?"<lb/>
"I told you, its the easiest way to<lb/>
dredge. Jose and Pedro have large families<lb/>
to support<lb/>
"What you're doing is illegal and I'm<lb/>
going to report you to the authories<lb/>
"The authorities know what we're do-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
"What authorities?"<lb/>
"Suppose I told you the president of the<lb/>
United States knows?"<lb/>
"Then I would say you were crazy, or he<lb/>
was crazy<lb/>
"You better get going or I'll dump one<lb/>
of these mines on you boat<lb/>
"If you do I'll go to court and sue you<lb/>
"We don't recognize the courts, and<lb/>
don't write to your senators, because we<lb/>
don't recognize them either. If you're a<lb/>
loyal American who believes in your coun-<lb/>
try you'll forget you ever say me dropping<lb/>
mines off the side of the boat<lb/>
Pedor came back on deck. "Senor, Jose<lb/>
wants to know if we can come topside to<lb/>
see what happens when a boat hits one of<lb/>
our tortillas<lb/>
The skipper got red in the face. "I told<lb/>
everyone to stay below decks until we<lb/>
located an oyster bed<lb/>
Pedro grinned. "Excuse me, boss. I<lb/>
forgot where we were<lb/>
The captain said to me, "I've got to pull<lb/>
up anchor. Now get the hell out of here. If<lb/>
I don't bring back any oysters tonight the<lb/>
company will kill me<lb/>
(c) 1M4.1 x Angela Times Syndicate<lb/>
CONGRESSMAN, PONY WRRV ABOUT 5EIUN6 VOUR M.M1<lb/>
THINK OF ME AS ANOTHER POLITICAL ACTON COMMITTEE?,<lb/>
Details, Details: A Few Questions<lb/>
To See What Reaean ReallvTCnnw<lb/>
By TRB ? From Washington<lb/>
The New RcpaMk<lb/>
Vhat does President Reagan know<lb/>
and when does he know it? Howard<lb/>
Baker's old Watergate question ought to<lb/>
be refurbished for the fall campaign.<lb/>
Oh, not does he know who stole Jimmy<lb/>
Carter's briefing book, or when did he<lb/>
learn about the USIA "enemies list<lb/>
Rather, does he know, say, the name of<lb/>
the prime minister of Japan, even on a<lb/>
day when this gentleman is not expected<lb/>
to be popping up in the Rose Garden?<lb/>
An enterprising reporter for TV sta-<lb/>
tion WBZ in Boston, Andy Hiller,<lb/>
recently gave a little surprise quiz to the<lb/>
candidates competing for Paul<lb/>
Tsongas's Senate seat. Among other sur-<lb/>
prises, it turned out that two of the can-<lb/>
didates did not know which sides the<lb/>
United States is supporting in Nicaragua<lb/>
and El Salvador, and that Elliott<lb/>
Richardson thought the share of the<lb/>
federal budget taken up by defense is 7.5<lb/>
percent. (It's 28 percent.) Surely we have<lb/>
the seed of a new American political<lb/>
tradition here.<lb/>
The widespread view in what's called<lb/>
"the political community" is that<lb/>
Ronald Reagan is the most ignorant<lb/>
president anyone can recall, but that<lb/>
there's no prosperity in making an issue<lb/>
of this. Anecdotes abound.<lb/>
He didn't recognize his won secretary<lb/>
of housing and urban development at a<lb/>
White House reception. Asked his view<lb/>
on the Cyprus question, his answer<lb/>
made clear he not only had no views but<lb/>
had no idea what the question was.<lb/>
"Oh, I wish the secretary of state were<lb/>
here he remarked on that occasion.<lb/>
According to Steven Weisman of The<lb/>
New York Times, Reagan expressed sur-<lb/>
prise last fall at learning that the Soviets<lb/>
have most of their nuclear weapons on<lb/>
land-based missiles, while the United<lb/>
States has relatively few ? a basic fact<lb/>
of the nuclear age and, according to<lb/>
critics, the central flaw in his own<lb/>
START proposals for mutual reduction<lb/>
in land-based missiles.<lb/>
Judy Bachrach reported recently in<lb/>
Rolling Stone that Charles Z. Wick,<lb/>
Reagan's buddy who heads the USIA,<lb/>
once sent around a memo to his staff<lb/>
saying he and the boss were wondering:<lb/>
Is France a member of NATO? They<lb/>
needed the answer and didn't want the<lb/>
embarrassment of asking the State<lb/>
Department. Answer: France is a<lb/>
political but not a military member. A<lb/>
trick question, perhaps. But for the<lb/>
president?<lb/>
Despite all this, even Arthur Schles-<lb/>
inger Jr. wrote with grudging admira-<lb/>
tion in the April 20 Wall Street Journal:<lb/>
"If a president can point the country in<lb/>
a direction and convince the voters that<lb/>
it is the right one and if he can get<lb/>
reasonably competent people to figure<lb/>
out the details, it does no matter so<lb/>
much politically that he himself hardly<lb/>
knows what is going on<lb/>
Well, maybe it doesn't matter so<lb/>
much, but surely it matters. For one<lb/>
thing, what if some of those detail peo-<lb/>
ple ? like former National Security Ad-<lb/>
viser William Clark ? can't name the<lb/>
prime minister of Zimbabwe either? Of<lb/>
course there will be plenty of sub-aides<lb/>
and sub-sub-aides to pass along the odd<lb/>
fact as needed.<lb/>
The presidency is not a game of<lb/>
Trivial Pursuit. But a certain degree of<lb/>
abstraction from the facts raises<lb/>
legitimate doubts. Can a president this<lb/>
ignorant even decide what direction to<lb/>
point in? It's the actor question: Does he<lb/>
think for himself, or is he fed all his<lb/>
lines?<lb/>
Perhaps these stories that the presi-<lb/>
dent doesn't know Alaska from his<lb/>
elbow are inaccurate and unfair. If so,<lb/>
they pose a delicate public relations pro-<lb/>
blem. Bald denial could backfire, as it<lb/>
did for then-Sen. Willam Scott of<lb/>
Virginia, who secured his place in<lb/>
history by calling a press conference to<lb/>
deny a magazine's assertion that he was<lb/>
the dumbest member of the U.S. Senate.<lb/>
No, the only way Reagan can put the<lb/>
Ignoramus Issue to rest is by submitting<lb/>
to a White House Aptitude Test<lb/>
(WHAT). Of course the essence of a sur-<lb/>
prise quiz is that you don't know when<lb/>
it's coming. It might be Sam Donaldson<lb/>
at a press conference, or it might be Fritz<lb/>
Mondale at a debate this fall. But some<lb/>
time soon, someone should ask Reagan:<lb/>
Mr. President, sir, with all due respect:<lb/>
1. You have sent thousands of<lb/>
American troops to support Honduran<lb/>
democarcy. Can you name the presi-<lb/>
dent, the leading political party, or the<lb/>
date of the last election in Honduras0<lb/>
2. Within 10 percent, what is the<lb/>
poverty line for a family of four?<lb/>
3. Who is your secretary of energy11<lb/>
4. What are the freedoms guaranteed<lb/>
by the First Amendment?<lb/>
5. Who is the head of East Germanv0<lb/>
(Hint: It sounds like a Jewish holidays<lb/>
6. Of the following three social pro-<lb/>
grams ? WIC, CETA, student loans -<lb/>
which has been eliminated, which has<lb/>
shrunk, and which has grown during<lb/>
your administration? What are WIC and<lb/>
CETA anyway?<lb/>
7. In brief, what is the difference bet-<lb/>
ween Eden Pastora and Ruben Zamora0<lb/>
8. Within 1 point, what is the percen-<lb/>
tage of Hispanics in the U.S. popula-<lb/>
tion?<lb/>
9. Your administration believes tMl a<lb/>
600-ship Navy is vital to national securi-<lb/>
ty. How many ships do we have now?<lb/>
10. What is parity? Are you for it o:<lb/>
against it?<lb/>
Bonus question: What are the names<lb/>
of your grandchildren?<lb/>
Answers: (1.) President Roberto Cor-<lb/>
dova, Liberal Party, November, 1981<lb/>
(2.) $9,862. (3.) Donald Hodel. (4.)<lb/>
Religion, speech, press, assembly, peti-<lb/>
tion for redress of grievances. (5.) Panv<lb/>
chairman Erich Honecker. (6.) CETA<lb/>
(jobs) has been eliminated; student loans<lb/>
has shrunk; WIC (child nutrition) has<lb/>
grown. (7.) Eden Pastora is the social<lb/>
democratic rebel we support in<lb/>
Nicaragua; Ruben Zamora is the social<lb/>
democratic reble we oppose in El<lb/>
Salvador. (8.) 6.5 percent. (9.) 525. (10.)<lb/>
Parity is the absurd proposition that<lb/>
farm products should have the same<lb/>
value relative to non-farm products that<lb/>
they had in 1914-18. All politicians are<lb/>
for it. (Bonus) Cameron and Ashley<lb/>
Marie.<lb/>
How to interpret your score: 9-10:<lb/>
Congratulations. You are qualified to be<lb/>
president. 7-8: You can be a senator, but<lb/>
only on the intelligence commitee. 5-6:<lb/>
You can be a congressman from an<lb/>
obscure district in a large state. 3-4:<lb/>
You're lucky to be a state legislator. 0-2:<lb/>
You are pig-ignorant. Stick to jour-<lb/>
nalism.<lb/>
.??'<lb/>
?fcs<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
Cablr<lb/>
Alb<lb/>
Bv BRI<lb/>
Tired of<lb/>
Then go L'r<lb/>
In aim<lb/>
Undergrow<lb/>
most originl<lb/>
only did hef<lb/>
basement i<lb/>
supplied ai<lb/>
himself, wij<lb/>
Roland rhyi<lb/>
The resul<lb/>
eleven sonj<lb/>
strum ental<lb/>
highly pol<lb/>
previous all<lb/>
is a bit rougl<lb/>
the bass, anj<lb/>
Roland tool<lb/>
some songs <lb/>
comfortabi<lb/>
from the pi<lb/>
of studio r<lb/>
freer expr<lb/>
Granted<lb/>
from past r<lb/>
ing, supem<lb/>
speaking,<lb/>
the lead gui<lb/>
like Glenn<lb/>
tion Band<lb/>
ding perfoi<lb/>
? probabH<lb/>
HurwTf intel<lb/>
time that U<lb/>
Keaggy's<lb/>
his play,<lb/>
Keaggy's<lb/>
in giving<lb/>
fives his<lb/>
mem, inu<lb/>
Phil<lb/>
cdby<lb/>
is<lb/>
"ffH??-<lb/>
- ??? - - - f?<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0005"/><lb/>
wasr-<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
1<lb/>
?IT<lb/>
WM?m<lb/>
mtteL<lb/>
estions<lb/>
y Knows<lb/>
name the presi-<lb/>
ticaJ party, or the<lb/>
in Honduras?<lb/>
percent. hat is the<lb/>
imily of four?<lb/>
?:ar of energy?<lb/>
reedoms guaranteed<lb/>
East Germany?<lb/>
a Jewish holiday.)<lb/>
S three social p'ro-<lb/>
A, student loans ?<lb/>
natcd, which has<lb/>
grown during<lb/>
at are WIC and<lb/>
'erence bet-<lb/>
ter. Zamora?<lb/>
? 'he percen-<lb/>
S. popula-<lb/>
n believes tft&amp; a<lb/>
national seciiri-<lb/>
do we have now?<lb/>
Are -ou for it or<lb/>
the names<lb/>
Roberto Cor-<lb/>
ember, 1981.<lb/>
Hodel. (4.)<lb/>
assembly, peti-<lb/>
ces. (5Party<lb/>
? (6)CETA<lb/>
ed; student loans<lb/>
d nutrition) has<lb/>
Pastora is the social<lb/>
e support in<lb/>
Zamora is the social<lb/>
oppose in El<lb/>
cent (9.) 525. (10.)<lb/>
proposition that<lb/>
I should hae the same<lb/>
i non-farm products that<lb/>
I '14-16 Ail politicians are<lb/>
Cameron and Ashley<lb/>
ret your score: 9-10:<lb/>
u are qualified to be<lb/>
3u can be a senator, but<lb/>
gence commitee. 5-6:<lb/>
'?'e man from an<lb/>
I a large state. 3-4:<lb/>
I e a state legislator. 0-2:<lb/>
I int. Stick to jour-<lb/>
Features<lb/>
Antique Menagerie<lb/>
Unique To G-Ville<lb/>
By LIZANNE JENNINGS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Oriental rugs are the store's newest feature.<lb/>
Cable collects antiques within a 100-mile span of Greenville.<lb/>
"I've got a house full of junk; I<lb/>
like it. I've got a warehouse full of<lb/>
junk and a garage full of junk<lb/>
said Michael Cable, co-owner of<lb/>
Cable &amp; Craft, 818 Dickinson<lb/>
Ave.<lb/>
"My wife, Annie, started the<lb/>
business as a weaving store five<lb/>
years ago because there was no<lb/>
other place to buy the materials<lb/>
locally. Eventually I decided to<lb/>
put some junk in there ? some<lb/>
antiques. Of course when you get<lb/>
involved, you want to put a little<lb/>
of everything in there he added.<lb/>
When you walk into Cable &amp;<lb/>
Craft, it feels you may have ac-<lb/>
cidentally walked into your grand-<lb/>
parent's attic. Old, framed<lb/>
photographs of dignified men and<lb/>
women, and large bookcases that<lb/>
date back to 1890 line the walls.<lb/>
Collections of faded, hardback<lb/>
novels are randomly stuffed into<lb/>
dust-covered shelves. Looms,<lb/>
spinning wheels, yarn, hand-<lb/>
woven garments, trays of elegant<lb/>
glass, and beads are just a few of<lb/>
the possible purchases in this<lb/>
menagerie of relics. Cable's<lb/>
"junk" is perhaps the finest ac-<lb/>
cumulation of antiques in the<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"I like photographs; I have<lb/>
about 1500 and 400 pieces of pot-<lb/>
tery ? all types. I don't try to col-<lb/>
lect all the pieces of a whole set,<lb/>
just types said Cable.<lb/>
Cable's love for antiques began<lb/>
seventeen years ago, and he buys<lb/>
all of his antiques within one hun-<lb/>
dred miles from Greenville. Cable<lb/>
claims that in order to appreciate<lb/>
antiques, a knowledge of history,<lb/>
construction, and materials must<lb/>
be learned.<lb/>
The name Cable &amp; Craft may<lb/>
fool some customers because this<lb/>
is not a craft store. "There is a<lb/>
problem sometimes because we<lb/>
don't sell pom poms or doll<lb/>
heads; they think it's a craft<lb/>
store explained Cable.<lb/>
"We sell dye, chemicals, yarn<lb/>
that can be woven or crocheted.<lb/>
We've got antique linen and<lb/>
beads. This is the only place to get<lb/>
beads said Cable. '<lb/>
Many people have taken up the<lb/>
art of jewlry making with Cable's<lb/>
selection of beads. It does not<lb/>
take a very creative person, either.<lb/>
Instead of paying $50-75 for a<lb/>
beaded necklace in many stores,<lb/>
people are able to make a 16-inch<lb/>
necklace for about $8-10. Several<lb/>
pairs of earings can be con-<lb/>
structed for $5 or less.<lb/>
Cable's bead selection is not as<lb/>
extensive as he wishes it to be, but<lb/>
Presently he is researching the<lb/>
market for more beads with uni-<lb/>
que sizes, shapes and colors.<lb/>
If you thought spinning wheels<lb/>
and looms are just a thing of the<lb/>
past ? you're wrong. "We've go<lb/>
seven looms on the floor and eight<lb/>
spinning wheels which are made in<lb/>
caZea,and' and ran8e from<lb/>
$90-275, he said<lb/>
Cable recently delivered a loom<lb/>
to Jryon Palace in New Bern.<lb/>
able &amp; Craft offers free delivery<lb/>
and set up anywhere.<lb/>
Many of the handwoven<lb/>
garments are spun by Annie Cable<lb/>
and Susan Wyre-Rhodes,<lb/>
manager of Cable &amp; Craft. The<lb/>
yarns the women spin are natural:<lb/>
cotton, wool, rayon (which is a<lb/>
wood). Very few synthetics are us-<lb/>
ed and no ascetate or herculon.<lb/>
Other materials are delivered all<lb/>
the time: fleece, human hair,<lb/>
camel hair, yak, linen, raw silk<lb/>
and angora.<lb/>
Cable &amp; Craft devotes an entire<lb/>
room to their basket supplies.<lb/>
"My basket prices are about the<lb/>
best in the United States. We mail<lb/>
order a lot of the basket supplies<lb/>
in Ohio and Alabama said<lb/>
Cable. Basket materials consist of<lb/>
long strands of reed and cane, and<lb/>
Cable maintains that he sells the<lb/>
best quality of basket materials.<lb/>
A shipment of oriental rugs<lb/>
recently arrived. Although Cable<lb/>
has never sold oriental rugs<lb/>
before, he is confident about their<lb/>
beauty, quality and selling ability.<lb/>
"These rugs are one third less<lb/>
than you would find in a rug<lb/>
store he addded.<lb/>
Along with Cable's work in his<lb/>
shop, he also does appraisal work<lb/>
for insurance companies and in-<lb/>
dividuals. "A lot of dealers refer<lb/>
me for appraisal purposes, and I<lb/>
enjoy that said Cable.<lb/>
Cable is also a whiz when it<lb/>
comes to history, especially the<lb/>
evolution of weaving. "The<lb/>
Queen of England sits on a bag of<lb/>
wool which is placed on her<lb/>
throne. At one time wool was the<lb/>
seed of money ? in fact, people<lb/>
used to pay their taxes in wool.<lb/>
Wars were fought over sheep, and<lb/>
Some of the pictures and frames date back to 1890.<lb/>
weavers have rioted in the past.<lb/>
The history is there, and people<lb/>
don't realize that at one time you<lb/>
spent a lot of time worrying about<lb/>
your clothes with winter around<lb/>
the corner said Cable.<lb/>
"I could go on forever with lit-<lb/>
tle tidbits like this, but just<lb/>
remember, the Queen of England<lb/>
still sits on a bag of wool he ad-<lb/>
ded.<lb/>
Album Selections Offer Insnirafinn<lb/>
Wool is a popular product for Cable A Craft.<lb/>
Phil Keaggy's 'Underground' Deserving Of Attention<lb/>
'ARAT.F1FV ? ?<lb/>
By BRIAN RANGELEY<lb/>
Staff Wiftar<lb/>
Tired of mass-produced music?<lb/>
Then go Underground.<lb/>
In almost every way,<lb/>
Underground is Phil Keaggy's<lb/>
most original album to date. Not<lb/>
only did he write the songs in his<lb/>
basementhence, the title), he<lb/>
supplied all of the instrumentals<lb/>
himself, with some help from a<lb/>
Roland rhythm machine.<lb/>
The result is a collection of<lb/>
eleven songs, three of them in-<lb/>
strumental, that depart from the<lb/>
highly polished style of his<lb/>
previous albums. The production<lb/>
is a bit rough, sometimes heavy on<lb/>
the bass, and Keaggy relies on the<lb/>
Roland too much for fullness in<lb/>
some songs. Keaggy said that the<lb/>
comfortable home setting, away<lb/>
from the pressures and deadlines<lb/>
of studio recording, allowed him<lb/>
freer expression in his music.<lb/>
Granted. The music is different<lb/>
from past releases; lyrically speak-<lb/>
ing, superior in poetry; musically<lb/>
speaking, darker in tone. Often<lb/>
the lead guitar growls and groans<lb/>
like Glenn Kaiser's (Of Resurrec-<lb/>
tion Band fame). But the recor-<lb/>
ding performance lacks one thing<lb/>
? probably because the songs<lb/>
?rn 't intended for release at the<lb/>
time that they were recorded ?<lb/>
Keaggy's drive for perfection in<lb/>
his play.<lb/>
Keaggy's drive and persistence<lb/>
in giving his best performance<lb/>
gives his albums energy, excite-<lb/>
ment, intensity, and individuality.<lb/>
Phil Keaggy musk is characteriz-<lb/>
ed by excellent guitar work, which<lb/>
w surprising to people when they<lb/>
find out that he has no right ring<lb/>
finger. Even early in his career, in<lb/>
the late 60s, Keaggy was hailed as<lb/>
one of the top three rock guitarists<lb/>
in the nation, along with Jimi<lb/>
Hendrix and Eric Clapton.<lb/>
Keaggy stayed with his group,<lb/>
Glass Harp, for about a year after<lb/>
accepting Christ. In 1971 he left the<lb/>
group and Decca Records to<lb/>
follow the Lord's leading to begin<lb/>
a solo career. Fans of contem-<lb/>
porary Christian music, or "Jesus<lb/>
Rock as this new form of<lb/>
religious music was then termed,<lb/>
began buying Phil Keaggy<lb/>
albums. However, Keaggy's first<lb/>
major success didn't come until<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
The guidance of producer Buck<lb/>
Herring, the keyboard wizardry<lb/>
and string arrangements of<lb/>
Michael Omartian, and assistance<lb/>
from a number of other promi-<lb/>
nent Jesus musicians sculpted the<lb/>
album, Love Broke Thru, into<lb/>
one of Christian music's most im-<lb/>
portant works. The titlecut did<lb/>
very well on Gospel charts. <lb/>
Ironically, the song was one of <lb/>
only two on the album not written<lb/>
by Keaggy. "Time "Wild<lb/>
Horse and "Just the Same" are<lb/>
each songs highlighting Keaggy's<lb/>
dynamic guitar play. "Abraham"<lb/>
was a typical mellow Keaggy<lb/>
melody, simple, sung sweetly with<lb/>
classical guitar accompaniment.<lb/>
Keaggy's versatile tenor voice,<lb/>
coupled with his innovative and<lb/>
poetic lyrics, often nudged the<lb/>
listener into some kind of decisive<lb/>
action. Sometimes the words en-<lb/>
couraged: "So share the weight<lb/>
with others, and call upon His<lb/>
Working On Tie 'Umtergro<lb/>
name; Don't try to bear the load<lb/>
alone, 'cause Jesus took the<lb/>
blame<lb/>
As time passed, Keaggy con-<lb/>
tinued experimenting with his<lb/>
music, a rare practice in most<lb/>
Christian music, and stretching<lb/>
his talent. Emerging by the Phil<lb/>
Keaggy Band was moderately suc-<lb/>
cessful. Keaggy was beginning to<lb/>
incorporate the jazz technique of<lb/>
playing variations of a recurring<lb/>
theme into his music. He became<lb/>
known for his improvisation in his<lb/>
concert performances. How the<lb/>
West Was One is an excellent<lb/>
recording of a Phil Keaggy con-<lb/>
cert which beautifully showcases<lb/>
his talent (and the talents of the<lb/>
Second Chapter of Acts).<lb/>
Town to Townoncc again<lb/>
revealed Keaggy as a consistently<lb/>
good singer.songwriter. "Full<lb/>
Circle" and "What a Wonder<lb/>
You Are" have an easy, playful<lb/>
Paul McCartn-ish flavor. "Life<lb/>
Love and You" and "Let All Else<lb/>
Go" are two mellow tunes which<lb/>
show Keaggy's maturity; these<lb/>
songs, although produced simply,<lb/>
are not simple songs, like similar<lb/>
ones from Love Broke Thru. They<lb/>
possess the richness and fluidity<lb/>
that the earlier songs needed.<lb/>
Fluid is also a good word to<lb/>
describe Play Thru Me. Most of<lb/>
the songs flow easily, melodicallv<lb/>
from start to finish. The album<lb/>
contains 12 songs ? four more<lb/>
than the standard popular album<lb/>
? most of which are good.<lb/>
"Carefree" best describes the<lb/>
tone of this LP; it expresses the<lb/>
freedom from the weight of every-<lb/>
day cares that Jesus can provide a<lb/>
btliever.<lb/>
So be free go and run your race<lb/>
Don't be late<lb/>
Go and fight the good fight of<lb/>
faith<lb/>
And like a child be carefree<lb/>
It's a bright and joyful melody<lb/>
Play Thru Me gave Keaggy his<lb/>
last practice for home production.<lb/>
He co-produced the album with<lb/>
Bob Cotton and arranged the<lb/>
music. Later, he left Sparrow-<lb/>
Records and formed his own Nissi<lb/>
label. Then he went home.<lb/>
During the winter months of<lb/>
1982-83, Keaggy wrote a lot of<lb/>
songs. He recorded a number of<lb/>
them using a Teac 144 Porta-<lb/>
Studio and a four-track cassette<lb/>
tape deck, then played them back<lb/>
to his wife and some of his friends<lb/>
to get an idea of which songs<lb/>
might be best for an album.<lb/>
Underground was born.<lb/>
The choices were good ones.<lb/>
My personal choice is "What A<lb/>
Love because it is a fun song.<lb/>
The music of "Deadline a song<lb/>
about workaholics who sacrifice<lb/>
their families for that all-<lb/>
important deadline, beautifully<lb/>
accents the lyrics, driving the<lb/>
message home. The rhythm moves<lb/>
boom-boom-boom-boom<lb/>
relentlessly onward through the<lb/>
song, while the melody and the<lb/>
vocals keep the song from soun-<lb/>
ding redundant.<lb/>
Phil Keaggy usually has a love<lb/>
song for his wife Bernadette<lb/>
somewhere on his albums; on this<lb/>
Continued On Page 6<lb/>
; i : .<lb/>
 -<lb/>
"HW im?Ill lion ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 17, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
'The Natural Wins Respect<lb/>
'Good Stuff<lb/>
By TOM STROUD<lb/>
Staff Wrimr<lb/>
The risks one faces when at-<lb/>
tempting to make a feature film<lb/>
involving a sport are myriad.<lb/>
Although there have been a<lb/>
number of fine sports films pro-<lb/>
duced in the past, a large majority<lb/>
of them have been plagued by at<lb/>
least one of the following: actors<lb/>
who are poor athletes; athletes<lb/>
who are poor actors; farcical story<lb/>
lines; predictable story lines; and<lb/>
or a sense of drama seemingly<lb/>
derived from a Budweiser com-<lb/>
mercial ("Bring out your best").<lb/>
It may be argued that The<lb/>
Natural, Robert Red ford's new<lb/>
film about a baseball phenom,<lb/>
deals a bit too much in cheap sen-<lb/>
timent and is in some ways too<lb/>
predictable, but those minor flaws<lb/>
can be easily overlooked to the<lb/>
better enjoyment of what is<lb/>
overall a very appealing and well-<lb/>
conceived production.<lb/>
The basic plot involves the shat-<lb/>
tered and then regained career of<lb/>
Roy Hobbs (Redford), a young<lb/>
man of Ruthian talents who is<lb/>
gunned down by a femme fatale<lb/>
(Barbara Hershey) the night<lb/>
before his tryout with the Chicago<lb/>
Cubs. His body broken, Hobbs is<lb/>
forced to abandon the game he<lb/>
loves for 16 years, but, driven to<lb/>
the top of their league with the<lb/>
booming of his homemade, nearly<lb/>
mythical bat, "Wonder Boy<lb/>
The problem is, one of the<lb/>
Knights' owners, the evil Judge,<lb/>
wants the club to fail so he can<lb/>
buy out his partner and team<lb/>
manager, Pop Fisher, thus leading<lb/>
to the attempted corruption of<lb/>
Hobbs.<lb/>
Along the way Roy meets his<lb/>
childhood sweetheart, Iris (Glenn<lb/>
Close) again, and through her he<lb/>
is able to glean some understan-<lb/>
ding of those 16 lost years he spent<lb/>
away from baseball ? the game<lb/>
that had once been his life. It is<lb/>
these scenes of Roy and Iris back<lb/>
together, older, wiser, different<lb/>
than as youths, that contain the<lb/>
soul of the movies, that tell us<lb/>
why baseball ? or any dream ?<lb/>
and life sometimes cannot exist as<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Early in the movie a young Roy<lb/>
is told by his father that he has a<lb/>
"gift" for the game, but the<lb/>
father warns that simply having<lb/>
the gift is not enough. Extending<lb/>
the gift into more than an<lb/>
ephemeral promise would take<lb/>
careful nurturing and wise steps, a<lb/>
lesson forgotten by Roy when he<lb/>
goes to meet the mysterious lady<lb/>
before his tryout with the Cubs.<lb/>
Years later a reflective Roy tells<lb/>
Iris thaf'there are some mistakes<lb/>
we never stop paying for Iris,<lb/>
played with grace and dismarming<lb/>
ease by Close, responds: "I<lb/>
believe we have two lives; the life<lb/>
we learn with, and the life we live<lb/>
with after that It's such a simple<lb/>
phrase, really, but it captures<lb/>
perfectly the failure and redemp-<lb/>
tion of Roy Hobbs. He had made<lb/>
mistakes and kept on making<lb/>
them, but the ember of the gift<lb/>
that was his glory smoldered on<lb/>
within until the day he realized<lb/>
that no matter what the risks, he<lb/>
had to try again.<lb/>
Although non-baseball fans<lb/>
may be a bit put off by the game's<lb/>
role in the film, I nevertheless<lb/>
highly recommend The Natural to<lb/>
anyone wanting to see two-and-a-<lb/>
half hours of good stuff. It is well-<lb/>
Redford<lb/>
acted throughout (particularly<lb/>
Wilford Brimley as Pop Fisher),<lb/>
very well paced, laced with<lb/>
humor, ups and downs, good guys<lb/>
and bad guys, staggering homes<lb/>
and windy whiffs ? all topped off<lb/>
by a wonderful ending and a Ran-<lb/>
dy Newman score. The<lb/>
cinematography is also excep-<lb/>
tional, particularly shots of the<lb/>
young, wide-eyed boys pulling so<lb/>
hard for their hero at the film's<lb/>
climax.<lb/>
Baseball, more than any other<lb/>
American game, is really a bond<lb/>
between fathers and sons, a sort<lb/>
of neutral turf of mutual interest<lb/>
where the relative merits of Joe<lb/>
DiMaggio can be debated against<lb/>
those of Henry Aaron or Ted<lb/>
Williams against Pete Rose or any<lb/>
of a thousand other players<lb/>
against any of a thousand others.<lb/>
The Natural looks at the perceived<lb/>
chasms of our society ? between<lb/>
fathers and sons, worshipful boys<lb/>
and cynical old men, man and<lb/>
woman, heroes and villains,<lb/>
dreams and reality ? and tells us<lb/>
a fine and reassuring way that<lb/>
most of the time, the distance bet-<lb/>
ween those things is a lot shorter<lb/>
than we have been led to believe.<lb/>
'83 Release Generates Excitement<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
one the song is "One in a<lb/>
Million This one has a heavy-<lb/>
metal bluesy flavor, but it doesn't<lb/>
drag you down. Again, on the<lb/>
subject of love, Keaggy pays<lb/>
tribute to a couple who have<lb/>
learned the secret of a godly mar-<lb/>
riage: "Because you love him,<lb/>
because you love her; An ever<lb/>
flowing stream of light comes<lb/>
from; The one who made you<lb/>
right for each other As usual,<lb/>
Keaggy skillfully accents the<lb/>
words with a stream of smooth-<lb/>
flowing music and gentle<lb/>
rhythms.<lb/>
Keaggy's blending of music and<lb/>
words are, without a doubt, most<lb/>
effective in "The Survivor The<lb/>
song is a first-person, present<lb/>
tense story of an unborn child<lb/>
who endures and survives a salt-<lb/>
solution abortion attempt.<lb/>
Keaggy's electric guitar weeps, the<lb/>
music mourns as the infant<lb/>
wonders what is happening:<lb/>
Am I safe, the water around me<lb/>
is<lb/>
changing, is it alright<lb/>
But I am burning, oh what are<lb/>
they doing<lb/>
They want to take away my life<lb/>
But as for me I trust in Thee oh<lb/>
Lord my<lb/>
times are in your hand<lb/>
You are my God, deliver me<lb/>
from the<lb/>
solution that they have planned<lb/>
The string arrangements and the<lb/>
vocals haunt the listener, as<lb/>
remorse begins to haunt the<lb/>
mother:<lb/>
Will you discard me, throw away<lb/>
or<lb/>
starve me and slowly drain away<lb/>
my life. . .<lb/>
Desperate hands reach out to<lb/>
embrace me<lb/>
At this point, the time shifts for-<lb/>
ward. There is no indication how<lb/>
far, but it's not important tothe<lb/>
song. The child lives.<lb/>
Now I am one apart from the<lb/>
millions<lb/>
fortunate to survive<lb/>
And though I bear in my body<lb/>
these old<lb/>
wounds, they didn't take away<lb/>
my life<lb/>
The musical intensity increases as<lb/>
the drama unfolds, engrossing the<lb/>
listener. "The Survivor" is the<lb/>
softer side of Keaggy at his best.<lb/>
Not recommended for Pro-Choice<lb/>
people.<lb/>
Unfortunately, Underground<lb/>
doesn't provide us with a sample<lb/>
of Keaggy's rockin best. "What<lb/>
A Love "Deadline" and<lb/>
"Follow Me On" will satisfy the<lb/>
rocker's appetite, but none of the<lb/>
songs are exceptional. As I said<lb/>
before, these songs lack that striv-<lb/>
ing for excellence; the songs are<lb/>
good, but not up to Keaggy's<lb/>
standards. Often, they are<lb/>
musically redundant, especially<lb/>
the instrumental. "Follow Me<lb/>
On" is one of the three instrumen-<lb/>
tal. Although it is slow paced, it<lb/>
is definitely rock. The music con-<lb/>
jures up images of thousands of<lb/>
people trudging through hard<lb/>
times to (hopefully) find a better<lb/>
life. I think that means the music<lb/>
works.<lb/>
As a whole, Underground is an<lb/>
album that deserves attention<lb/>
from Keaggy fans. Town to Town<lb/>
or Play Thru Me are better in-<lb/>
troductions to Phil Keaggy for<lb/>
those who have never heard him.<lb/>
Underground needs to be heard<lb/>
several times to be fully ap-<lb/>
preciated; it is one of those<lb/>
albums that grows on you.<lb/>
Underground is found at Chris-<lb/>
tian bookstores and the Record<lb/>
Bar.<lb/>
mm<lb/>
ii .i.iii<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
.AdultsS2.oo5? SJMSf"<lb/>
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Will she<lb/>
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Iro survive?<lb/>
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:20<lb/>
Stephen King s<lb/>
FIRESTARTER a<lb/>
A UNIVERSAL RELEASE<lb/>
LATE FPOTir OPEN<lb/>
SHOW EllV ? IV 11:00PM<lb/>
Z? sat. HOLIDAY grre<lb/>
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400 EVANS, "on the corner<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3866<lb/>
Firestarter<lb/>
It's Hot<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Fealart t4itor<lb/>
Stephen King, master of the<lb/>
macabre, chalked upon another<lb/>
thriller to his list of terrifying and<lb/>
intriguing works. Based on his<lb/>
novel Firestarter, the movie, also<lb/>
of the same name, combines the<lb/>
talent of three Academy Award<lb/>
winners George C. Scott, Art<lb/>
Carney and Louise Fletcher, and<lb/>
the acting ability of Martin Sheen,<lb/>
Drew Barrymore, David Keith,<lb/>
and Heather Locklear to yield one<lb/>
of King's most critically aclaimed<lb/>
and fascinating works.<lb/>
The old adage that children<lb/>
shouldn't play with matches<lb/>
doesn't apply in this case because<lb/>
Miss Barrymore, who plays the<lb/>
role of eight-year-old Charlie<lb/>
McGee, doesn't have to play with<lb/>
matches to start a fire. Charlie<lb/>
possesses a bizarre skill known to<lb/>
psychic researchers as a "wild<lb/>
talent" or pyrokenesis, which<lb/>
turns her fears and frustrations in-<lb/>
to a fiery weapon.<lb/>
"Charlie stood looking at<lb/>
them, and she was afraid. She was<lb/>
afraid because Daddy had told her<lb/>
again and again that she shouldn't<lb/>
do it . . . since earliest childhood it<lb/>
had been the Bad Thing. She<lb/>
might hurt herself, or someone<lb/>
else, or lots of people This ex-<lb/>
cerpt from King's novel describes<lb/>
the ongoing battle that Charlie ex-<lb/>
periences within herself<lb/>
throughout the entire story. Her<lb/>
deepest wish is to be a "normal<lb/>
little girl" that can attend school<lb/>
and play with others without the<lb/>
fear of becoming angry and set-<lb/>
ting someone or something on<lb/>
fire.<lb/>
The audience is inclined to sym-<lb/>
pathize with Charlie, however, for<lb/>
we know that she will never really<lb/>
be "normal Charlie is the pro-<lb/>
duct of two who participated in a<lb/>
psychology experiment while in<lb/>
college.<lb/>
Andy (Keith) and Vicky<lb/>
(Locklear) met in Dr. Wanless'<lb/>
"Lot Six" psychology experi-<lb/>
ment. At the time both needed<lb/>
some extra cash, so apprehensive-<lb/>
ly they agreed to be the<lb/>
psychology department's guinea<lb/>
pigs by letting Wanless and his<lb/>
graduate assistants observe their<lb/>
behavior to a certain drug for<lb/>
$200. The drug turned out to be<lb/>
something far more dangerous<lb/>
than intended, however, because<lb/>
eight of the ten participants even-<lb/>
tually died or committed suicide.<lb/>
The only two remaining were An-<lb/>
dy and Vicky, who both possessed<lb/>
telepathic powers. Unfortunately<lb/>
they married and had a child that<lb/>
possessed powers much more<lb/>
dangerous ? Charlie, their<lb/>
daughter, was born with the<lb/>
power to start fires when she so<lb/>
desired.<lb/>
Because of Charlie's powers the<lb/>
family had come under close<lb/>
scrutiny of "The Shop a covert<lb/>
government agency of the Depart<lb/>
ment of Scientific Intelligence.<lb/>
The plot revolves around Andy<lb/>
and Charlie's constant efforts to<lb/>
escape from members of "The<lb/>
Shop" in order to live a normal,<lb/>
hassel-free life. Sheen and Scott<lb/>
portray the vicious and shrewd<lb/>
manipulators at "The Shop" who<lb/>
seek to capture Charlie and use<lb/>
her for their own selfish purposes.<lb/>
VisuaJ effects in the movie are<lb/>
more than incredible ? they are<lb/>
brilliant. Flashing across the<lb/>
screen are cars exploding in mid-<lb/>
air and fireballs darting at objects<lb/>
and people. For those with a weak<lb/>
stomach the blood and goriness<lb/>
may be a bit much, but for the<lb/>
context of this story, the scenes<lb/>
are technically fascinating.<lb/>
Firestarter is now playing at the<lb/>
Buccaneer Movie Theatre.<lb/>
BURGER CASTLE<lb/>
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everybody's go<lb/>
Baird sa id<lb/>
Carolina, ninna<lb/>
Conference, reed<lb/>
bid as a host tej<lb/>
probably be al<lb/>
region.<lb/>
"If South C<lb/>
Foot<lb/>
Contracts haj<lb/>
with at least th:<lb/>
FM radio statioi<lb/>
Sports Network<lb/>
assuring East Q<lb/>
football coverj<lb/>
southern tip of<lb/>
the Myrtle Bead<lb/>
west to Raleigh<lb/>
WITN-FM,<lb/>
has signed a ne<lb/>
tract as the feed<lb/>
Pirate Sports Nj<lb/>
ing a relationship<lb/>
years through thj<lb/>
This feed contr<lb/>
football and all<lb/>
games to be orj<lb/>
the facilities of 1<lb/>
the strongest sij<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
WYBS-FMcoi<lb/>
Kinston to the)<lb/>
Beach to the<lb/>
beyond Fayetvil<lb/>
covers a vast majl<lb/>
parts of easier r<lb/>
and west beyond<lb/>
"We are veryf<lb/>
theae three very<lb/>
tkms for our n<lb/>
said Ken Smith,<lb/>
director for put<lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0007"/><lb/>
sHot<lb/>
red.<lb/>
valise of Charlie's powers the<lb/>
ih had come under close<lb/>
nj of 'The Shop a covert<lb/>
nmem agency of the Depart -<lb/>
Scientific Intelligence.<lb/>
revolves around Andy<lb/>
c harlie's constant efforts to<lb/>
from members of "The<lb/>
in order lo live a normal,<lb/>
: life Sheen and Scott<lb/>
the vicious and shrewd<lb/>
lators at "The Shop" who<lb/>
capture Charlie and use<lb/>
own selfish purposes.<lb/>
in the movie are<lb/>
lan incredible ? they are<lb/>
ng across the<lb/>
re cars exploding in mid-<lb/>
fireballs darting at objects<lb/>
pie Foi those with a weak<lb/>
blood and goriness<lb/>
b ? much, but for the<lb/>
? story, the scenes<lb/>
iscinating.<lb/>
Jjptorter is now playing at the<lb/>
io ie Theatre.<lb/>
5TLE<lb/>
dents<lb/>
&amp; I amed broiled<lb/>
ome See Us. I<lb/>
sday May 23<lb/>
DAILY AT<lb/>
4:40-7:00-9:20<lb/>
MPARE!<lb/>
i-Oriented<lb/>
Village!<lb/>
"V"<lb/>
J<lb/>
40tr- ???<lb/>
SEMESTER<lb/>
RROUND?<lb/>
?ngements<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 17, 1984<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
Men<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
s Track Team Doing It All<lb/>
White Aiming For Olympics; Williams, "Smurfs" And Brooks For National,<lb/>
100 meters Carson ?iW ok ,?K.i,fhar n,? ? J ! UUHA T Uf 1UlWnUlS<lb/>
With the 1984 track season<lb/>
coming to a close, star athletes<lb/>
Henry Williams and Craig White<lb/>
are preparing to run in their last<lb/>
meet before the NCAA National<lb/>
Championships.<lb/>
The meet, the IC4A's, will be<lb/>
held in Philadelphia this weekend<lb/>
and according to head coach Bill<lb/>
Carson, Gustin Young of N.C<lb/>
State and Williams will be the on-<lb/>
ly two 200-meter runners at the<lb/>
meet that have already qualified<lb/>
for the Nationals.<lb/>
Williams competed against<lb/>
Young in the 100 meters at the<lb/>
Cavalier Invitational last<lb/>
weekend. "He beat him bad in the<lb/>
100 meters Carson said.<lb/>
"Henry has been running well, he<lb/>
won the 200 meters at the Virginia<lb/>
meet by ten or so yards ahead of<lb/>
the other runners<lb/>
Coach Carson won't know<lb/>
what William's competition at the<lb/>
Nationals will be like until the<lb/>
results from the Conference<lb/>
Championships held all over the<lb/>
country this weekend are in. "So<lb/>
far twenty-five or thirty runners<lb/>
have qualified in the 200 for the<lb/>
NationalsCarson said.<lb/>
The qualifying time for the Na-<lb/>
tionals in the 200 is 20.88 seconds.<lb/>
Williams ran a 20.82 to qualify at<lb/>
the Cavalier meet.<lb/>
Although Williams has<lb/>
qualified for the Nationals, he still<lb/>
has the Olympic trials to think<lb/>
MICHAEL SMITH - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Henry Williams has already qualified for the Nationals and is setting<lb/>
his sights on the Olympic trials this summer.<lb/>
Pirates NCAA<lb/>
about. Coach Carson beleives that<lb/>
Williams won't qualify this<lb/>
weekend because "he'll be runn-<lb/>
ing four events each day<lb/>
Williams will be running the<lb/>
4x100 relay, 100 meters and 200<lb/>
meters in which there are qualify-<lb/>
ing heets and final rounds about<lb/>
every day.<lb/>
But, Carson believes that<lb/>
Williams has a chance to qualify<lb/>
for the Olympic trials at the Na-<lb/>
tionals. "What will determine it<lb/>
will be what lane Henry draws in<lb/>
the 200-meters Carson said.<lb/>
"Henry runs well in lanes three<lb/>
through six<lb/>
At the Cavalier meet, Williams<lb/>
ran in lane five in the 200 meters.<lb/>
It was a fast heet and he qualified<lb/>
for the Nationals.<lb/>
The qualifying time for the<lb/>
Olympic trials in the 200 is 20.74<lb/>
seconds. "It's not an easy time to<lb/>
hit Carson said. "I'm looking<lb/>
for Henry to run in the low<lb/>
20.70's<lb/>
However, one possible<lb/>
drawback might be that if the<lb/>
4x100 relay team qualifies for the<lb/>
Nationals at the IC4A's, Williams<lb/>
will have "double duties<lb/>
Carson plans to start running<lb/>
Williams faster in practice in<lb/>
preparation for the IC4A's and<lb/>
Nationals "I'll have Henry run<lb/>
some fast 150's and try to increase<lb/>
his tempo out of the curve in the<lb/>
200-meters Carson said.<lb/>
The 4x100 relay team, other-<lb/>
wise known as the "Smurfs is<lb/>
favored in the IC4A's and Carson<lb/>
plans to run the race "wide<lb/>
open<lb/>
"I think the 4x100 relay team<lb/>
will qualify if they can get their<lb/>
handoffs right Carson said.<lb/>
"We're sacrificing a possible<lb/>
good showing at the IC4A's in<lb/>
order to qualify the 4x100 relay<lb/>
team for the Nationals ? we can<lb/>
bust it<lb/>
The current runners on the<lb/>
4x100 relay team are Chris<lb/>
Brooks, Erskinc Evans, Nathan<lb/>
xtr?0rkle and anchorman Henry<lb/>
Williams. McCorkle has just<lb/>
returned to the 4x100 line-up after<lb/>
recovering from an injury.<lb/>
High hurdler Craig White<lb/>
substituted for McCorkle in a<lb/>
previous meet and did a pretty<lb/>
good job according to coach Car-<lb/>
son- "Craig has a little inex-<lb/>
perience in the 4x100 relay<lb/>
because he hasn't been running it<lb/>
much this year Carson said.<lb/>
White's strong point is the 110<lb/>
high hurdles in which he has<lb/>
qualified for the Nationals and<lb/>
Olympic trials.<lb/>
He qualified for both at the<lb/>
Penn Relays in late April with a<lb/>
time of 13.83 seconds, .5 seconds<lb/>
below the 13.88 standard qualify-<lb/>
ing time.<lb/>
But in the last couple of meets,<lb/>
White has not been running the<lb/>
high hurdles as well as he usally<lb/>
does. "Craig is racing the com-<lb/>
petition and not the hurdles<lb/>
Carson said. "He has to concen-<lb/>
trate on the hurdles, he's trying<lb/>
too hard. If he hurdles good he's<lb/>
got it at the IC4A's<lb/>
According to Carson, White is<lb/>
going to be in the top three at the<lb/>
Nationals. Some of the top com-<lb/>
petitors he will be facing are:<lb/>
Eugene Norman from Rutgers,<lb/>
Pendegraft from Seaton Hall and<lb/>
Holmes from Pitt.<lb/>
Carson feels that White's<lb/>
toughest opponent is Norman<lb/>
from Rutgers. "Norman has<lb/>
beaten Craig regularly and Craig<lb/>
has beaten Norman a couple of<lb/>
times. Craig has a tough road<lb/>
ahead of him, the high hurdles are<lb/>
a tough event if not the toughest<lb/>
at the IC4A's<lb/>
In preparation for the IC4A's,<lb/>
Carson plans to start "quick legg-<lb/>
ing" White in which he will prac-<lb/>
tice with hard short runs.<lb/>
Unfortunately, ECU doesn't<lb/>
have the proper track that White<lb/>
needs to practice on and accor-<lb/>
1<lb/>
MICHAEL SMITH - ECU Photo' L?e<lb/>
Chris Brooks is looking to qualify for the Nationals this weekend<lb/>
ding to Carson, "the lack of track<lb/>
is hurting him in his preparation<lb/>
for the Nationals<lb/>
In substitution, Carson plans to<lb/>
take White to a track in Wilson<lb/>
two times next week. The track<lb/>
has only 39-inch hurdles for high<lb/>
school athletes, so Carson is tak-<lb/>
ing a couple of 42-inch collegiate<lb/>
hurdles along.<lb/>
Long-jumper Chris Brooks is<lb/>
also competing in the IC4A's this<lb/>
weekend and Coach Carson<lb/>
thinks Brooks has a chance to win<lb/>
his event. "Chris has a good<lb/>
chance Carson said. "He'll be<lb/>
running in the 4x100 relay before<lb/>
the long jump and I think that will<lb/>
be a good warm-up for him<lb/>
The qualifying distance for the<lb/>
Nationals in the long jump is 25'<lb/>
7" feet. Carson feels that Brooks<lb/>
can win the event, but the qualify-<lb/>
ing distance is a hard jump for<lb/>
him.<lb/>
The Nationals take place the<lb/>
last week of May in Eugene,<lb/>
Oregon, while the Olympic trials<lb/>
will be held in Los Angeles on Ju-<lb/>
ly 16.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Sporta KdJtor<lb/>
ECU received an automatic<lb/>
berth into the NCAA baseball<lb/>
playoffs this weekend with a 9-5<lb/>
victory over James Madison in the<lb/>
ECAC South tournament cham-<lb/>
pionship, but they won't find out<lb/>
until next Monday where the<lb/>
NCAA will send them to play.<lb/>
ECU has made it to the<lb/>
regionals four out of the last five<lb/>
years, and Pirate head coach Hal<lb/>
Baird thinks his team has as good<lb/>
a chance as anybody to advance to<lb/>
the eight-team College World<lb/>
Series which begins June 1 in<lb/>
Omaha, Neb.<lb/>
"There are a lot of factors to<lb/>
consider Barid said, "but once<lb/>
you get to the point where there<lb/>
are only 36 teams left,<lb/>
everybody's good<lb/>
Baird said that if South<lb/>
Carolina, runner-up in the Metro<lb/>
Conference, received an at-large<lb/>
bid as a hust team, ECU would<lb/>
probably be assigned to that<lb/>
region.<lb/>
"If South Carolina is extended<lb/>
an invitation, we would expect to<lb/>
go there along with North<lb/>
Carolina and Appalachian<lb/>
State he said.<lb/>
The NCAA has already an-<lb/>
nounced five of the eight regions<lb/>
and their hosts:<lb/>
Central Region<lb/>
Austin, Texas<lb/>
Texas, 54-12, Southwest<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
Con-<lb/>
Southern Region<lb/>
Tallahasse, Florida<lb/>
Florida State, 53-26, Metro Con-<lb/>
ference.<lb/>
Midwest Region<lb/>
Stillwater, Oklahoma<lb/>
Oklahoma State, 51-11, Big Eight<lb/>
Conference.<lb/>
West I Region<lb/>
Fresno, California<lb/>
Fresno State, 53-10-2, Northern<lb/>
California Association.<lb/>
West II Region<lb/>
Tempe, Arizona<lb/>
Arizona State, 48-17, Pacific Ten<lb/>
North.<lb/>
In the event that South<lb/>
Carolina isn't extended a bid, the<lb/>
Pirates would most likely attend<lb/>
the Southern regional because it<lb/>
would then become the next<lb/>
closest site.<lb/>
None of the at-large selections<lb/>
have been announced at this time,<lb/>
however, the NCAA said it would<lb/>
make those selections along with<lb/>
the three remaining regional sites<lb/>
by May 21.<lb/>
Twelve other automatic<lb/>
qualifiers for the tournament are:<lb/>
Grambling State, 29-15,<lb/>
Southwestern Athletic Con-<lb/>
ference; North Carolina, 42-9,<lb/>
Atlantic Coast; Appalachian<lb/>
State, 35-5, Southern; Lamar,<lb/>
40-16, Southland; Rider, 20-17,<lb/>
East Coast; Temple, 33-12, Atlan-<lb/>
tic Ten; East Carolina, 32-11,<lb/>
ECAC No. 3; Harvard, 27-4,<lb/>
Eastern Intercollegiate; Seton<lb/>
Hall, 37-12, ECAC No. 2; Central<lb/>
Michigan, 34-12, Mid-American;<lb/>
South Alabama, 46-17, Sun Belt;<lb/>
and Cal State-Fullerton, 55-18,<lb/>
Southern California.<lb/>
GABY PATTERSON - ECU Phote L?6<lb/>
Football Gets Watts<lb/>
The Pirates better be wide<lb/>
Contracts have been signed<lb/>
with at least three 100,000 watt<lb/>
FM radio stations for the Pirate<lb/>
Sports Network for 1984, thus<lb/>
assuring East Carolina University<lb/>
football coverage from the<lb/>
southern tip of Virginia, south to<lb/>
the Myrtle Beach, SC, area, and<lb/>
west to Raleigh.<lb/>
WITN-FM, Washington, NC,<lb/>
has signed a new three-year con-<lb/>
tract as the feed station for the<lb/>
Pirate Sports Network, continu-<lb/>
ing a relationship of the last three<lb/>
years through the spring of 1988.<lb/>
This feed contract calls for all<lb/>
football and all men's basketball<lb/>
games to be originated through<lb/>
the facilities of WITN-FM, one of<lb/>
the strongest signal stations in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
WVBS-FM covers an area from<lb/>
Kinston to the north, Myrtle<lb/>
Beach to the south, and north<lb/>
beyond FayetviUe. WKTC-FM<lb/>
covers a vast majority of northern<lb/>
parts of eastern North Carolina<lb/>
and west beyond Raleigh.<lb/>
"We are very pleased to have<lb/>
these three very powerful FM sta-<lb/>
tions for our network in 1984<lb/>
said Ken Smith, assistant athletic<lb/>
director for public relations and<lb/>
executive producer of the net-<lb/>
work. "Our key alumni areas are<lb/>
now covered with just these three<lb/>
stations.<lb/>
"The new three-year commit-<lb/>
ment from WITN-FM as our<lb/>
flagship station is a trememdous<lb/>
continued asset for East Carolina<lb/>
and its network. Without the base<lb/>
originating station, it would be<lb/>
very difficult to do the things we<lb/>
have planned in our immediate<lb/>
future<lb/>
Other local radio stations will<lb/>
be announced in the near future as<lb/>
members of the Pirate Sports Net-<lb/>
work. It is expected 15-20 stations<lb/>
will carry football in 1984.<lb/>
"Our major objective for the<lb/>
Pirate Sports Network is to now<lb/>
move west into the<lb/>
GreensboroHigh<lb/>
PointWinston-Salem and<lb/>
Charlotte markets added<lb/>
Smith. "Work is underway to try<lb/>
and make this happen as soon as<lb/>
possible.<lb/>
"Also, continued expansion in<lb/>
the Tidewater Virginia area is a<lb/>
key for the future. We entered<lb/>
that area for the first time last<lb/>
season and hope to have coverage<lb/>
in the area again this year<lb/>
Sleeping?<lb/>
awake if they expect (o do well in the upcoming NCAA playoffs.<lb/>
First Seven-Footer In<lb/>
School History Signs<lb/>
East Carolina University has<lb/>
signed 7-foot, 235-pound center<lb/>
Peter Dam to a basketball letter-<lb/>
of-intent, Head Coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison announced Wednesday.<lb/>
As ECU football rises to new heights, so does its listening audience ?<lb/>
the Pirates will now be heard from the tip of Virginia to Myrtle Beach<lb/>
Dam, from Haaksbergen, The<lb/>
Netherlands, is a member of the<lb/>
Dutch Junior National Team and<lb/>
was recommended to East<lb/>
Carolina by Al Faber, who played<lb/>
for the Pirates from 1969-1973.<lb/>
Faber has been playing profes-<lb/>
sional basketball in The<lb/>
Netherlands for the last eight<lb/>
years and will be a member of the<lb/>
Dutch Olympic Team in 1984.<lb/>
"We're pleased to have him<lb/>
Harrison said. "He gives us more<lb/>
depth and experience up front<lb/>
because he has been playing<lb/>
against older and more experienc-<lb/>
ed players. He will be a great help.<lb/>
Our weakness last year was the in-<lb/>
side game and rebounding<lb/>
Dam visited three schools in the<lb/>
United States ? LSU, Southwest<lb/>
Louisiana and East Carolina ?<lb/>
before deciding on the Pirates.<lb/>
He has been playing organized<lb/>
basketball for the last three years<lb/>
in the Dutch club program. Dam<lb/>
should have three years of<lb/>
eligibility remaining as far as Har-<lb/>
rison and his staff can determine.<lb/>
However, ECU is awaiting a final<lb/>
ruling from the NCAA.<lb/>
Dam's signing brings the<lb/>
number to three that the Pirates<lb/>
have signed this spring. Harrison<lb/>
has already secured the signatures<lb/>
of 59" point guard Scott Hardy<lb/>
from Haggerstown Community<lb/>
College (Haggerstown, MD) and<lb/>
6'3" guard Herb Dixon of Hyde<lb/>
High School (Bath, ME).<lb/>
'???<lb/>
-?<lb/>
p?????-? -?.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057645_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 17, 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
Handball Authority Looking To Los Angeles<lb/>
By G.A. THREEWITTS<lb/>
ECDN?w?l<lb/>
Dr. Wayne Edwards of East<lb/>
Carolina University has a lot on<lb/>
his mind these days. He is think-<lb/>
ing about the Olympics and of go<lb/>
ing to Los Angeles in July, not as<lb/>
an athlete but as an official for a<lb/>
sport that offers the excitement of<lb/>
soccer and ice hockey but is<lb/>
seldom played or even known to<lb/>
Recreation Services<lb/>
Set For 1st Session<lb/>
ByJEANNETTEROTH<lb/>
?CU latnaarak<lb/>
Enjoy a swim, build your bod<lb/>
or just play around through the<lb/>
Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services. Informal<lb/>
recreation hours are as follows for<lb/>
both summer sessions:<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.Sun.<lb/>
8 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
8 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m. -4 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
MonThurs. 3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Fri.Sat.Sun. Closed<lb/>
Memorial Gym Free Play<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.Sun.<lb/>
11 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Training Room<lb/>
2 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Equipment Check Out<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
MonThurs.<lb/>
Fri.<lb/>
Sat.Sun.<lb/>
Swimming Pools<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
MonWed.Fri. 7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
MonFn. 11:30a.ml p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
11 a.m5 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Raquetball Reservation<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
11:30a.m3 p.m.<lb/>
noon-3 p.m.<lb/>
MonFn.<lb/>
Sat. Sun.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
4 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Weight Rooms<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
All equipment can be checked<lb/>
out through the equipment room<lb/>
115 in Memorial Gym, and don't<lb/>
forget those racquetball reserva-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
MULTI PERSON YARD SALE: 9am Sat . May<lb/>
19 106 B Jarvij next to water tower<lb/>
FOR SALE The Remington 30 06 rifle 3x9 scope<lb/>
?ustsell S2O0 or best oMer Call Willie at 757 2461<lb/>
o- "S6 3719 after 5 p.m. <lb/>
FOR SALE 750 Honda California frame. Kerker<lb/>
eaoers, Blue ana white trick paint job. must<lb/>
sell, sacrifice at SI 400 00 Call 757 2461 or 756 3719<lb/>
after 5pm Ask for Willie<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE WANTED; M7 50 rent one<lb/>
half utilities, l mile from campus Call Doug at<lb/>
752 1913 or 7S7 0187<lb/>
FOR RENT: upstairs erf large h?u? bedroom ana<lb/>
study with prvt bath, washerdryer, microwave,<lb/>
AC, avail both SS and posibly fall S140 month<lb/>
Call 752 3022<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
It Should Be So Much More Than "Do 8 of this, Do 8 of<lb/>
that" At The Aerobic Workshop it is!<lb/>
We Specialize In Aerobics<lb/>
a<lb/>
The Fun Way<lb/>
To Fitness<lb/>
Phone 757-1608<lb/>
417 Evan. St. Mall<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
?<lb/>
BLUE MOON<lb/>
CAFE<lb/>
Pitchers $1.50<lb/>
anytime<lb/>
Subs .99<lb/>
Hamburger .99<lb/>
Ph. 752-1294<lb/>
Meal Plan Weekly<lb/>
7 meals - $24.00<lb/>
15 meals - $40.00<lb/>
205 I. 5th St.<lb/>
WANTED Individuals seeking Physical<lb/>
Perfection through hard work.<lb/>
Please Reply tO. Nautilus of Eastern Carotin.<lb/>
 IA1 1002 Evans Street<lb/>
Get Results with: ??tsu-mm<lb/>
Our Newly Prospering Aerobic Program<lb/>
Superior Weight Lifting Equipment<lb/>
An Experienced Staff in Nutrition and Overall<lb/>
Fitness<lb/>
Our Ultra Tanning Booth &amp; Sauna<lb/>
OUR RATES ARE THE LOWEST IN THE CfTY!<lb/>
Ulus NAUTILUS<lb/>
OP<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA<lb/>
tOOl EVANS ST. ORIINVILLI, N.C.<lb/>
Bring this ad in for a free workout.<lb/>
10 FREE MEALS<lb/>
HOME COOKED<lb/>
WITH SEMESTER PLAN AT SAMMY'S<lb/>
Sign Up and Get 2 Free Meals<lb/>
?$2.50 PER PLATE<lb/>
? SUMMER SCHOOL$65.00for 27 plates<lb/>
Sammy's Specialists Sammy's has large plate with<lb/>
Fried Chicken BBQ Chicken All You Con lot Vegetables<lb/>
Country Style Steak Ribs<lb/>
Meat Loaf Pork chops and one order of meat -<lb/>
Fried Flounder Pork Tenderloin<lb/>
Chicken &amp; Pastry Turkey &amp;, Dressing<lb/>
Beef Tips Home Cooked<lb/>
Vegetable and Bread<lb/>
$4.07 Plus tax.<lb/>
S(MlTny'S Country Cooking<lb/>
512 E. 14 ST. Near Dorms<lb/>
Call for Take Outs - 752-0476<lb/>
QPEN7CaYSAWEEK 11:00am-8:00pm<lb/>
most Americans<lb/>
The game is team handball, and<lb/>
Edwards, the director of In-<lb/>
tramural and Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices at ECU, is one of the coun-<lb/>
try's leading authorities and pro<lb/>
the National Sports Festival and<lb/>
now to the Summer Olympic<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
Athlete Leora "Sam" Jones of<lb/>
Mount Olive, a former basketball<lb/>
star for ECU, made the switch to<lb/>
teamsthis is going to make our<lb/>
competition easier but that is cer-<lb/>
tainly not what we are looking<lb/>
for Edwards said.<lb/>
"The women's team is better<lb/>
than it has ever been but it is still a<lb/>
ordered by former Army Gen.<lb/>
William Westmoreland to teach<lb/>
the game to the 25,000 U.S.<lb/>
troops assigned to the 8th Infan-<lb/>
try. He said Westmoreland was<lb/>
convinced the game would be a<lb/>
motersof the sport. As an official team handball under the guidance long ways away from what some good way to keep the troops in<lb/>
of the U.S. Team Handball of Edwards.<lb/>
Federation, Edwards was recently She is now considered one of the<lb/>
JS5?lL thc US- 0,vmpic top players in the sport and will<lb/>
tne U.S. Team represent the United States on the<lb/>
Committee to<lb/>
Handball administrative staff<lb/>
His duties include timing and<lb/>
scorekecping, media liaision and<lb/>
statistical coordination duties.<lb/>
Now before you go off saying<lb/>
you already know what handball<lb/>
is, it's not what its name implies.<lb/>
The game doesn't even resemble<lb/>
its namesake which is played in a<lb/>
racquetball size area with a hard<lb/>
little ball that ricochets from wall<lb/>
to wall.<lb/>
Instead, team handball is<lb/>
played on a court that is about 30<lb/>
percent larger than a basketball<lb/>
court with a ball that is slightly<lb/>
smaller than a volleyball. Put<lb/>
simply, the game is played with<lb/>
two teams each comprising seven<lb/>
people who pass the ball back and<lb/>
forth to each other until someone<lb/>
gets the chance to fire the ball into<lb/>
one of the two "hockey type"<lb/>
goals at each end of the court.<lb/>
Simple, right? Well, it's about<lb/>
as simple as mountain climbing in<lb/>
an avalanche.<lb/>
The game is fast, extremely<lb/>
Women's Team Handball Olym-<lb/>
pic team. The amazing thing<lb/>
about her achievement, Edwards<lb/>
said, is that she began playing the<lb/>
sport two years ago. Jones is cur-<lb/>
rently in Colorado training for the<lb/>
Summer Olympics.<lb/>
The sport of team handball was<lb/>
organized in Denmark in the early<lb/>
1900's. It began as a way to keep<lb/>
soccer players in shape during the<lb/>
winter months but has since<lb/>
developed into one of the world's<lb/>
most popular sports. With its 4.2<lb/>
million participants in 88 coun<lb/>
tries it ranks second to soccer in<lb/>
popularity.<lb/>
Team Handball was accepted as<lb/>
an Olympic sport for men in 1972<lb/>
and for women in 1976. This year<lb/>
marks the first time that the U.S.<lb/>
Women's team has qualified to<lb/>
participate in Olympic competi-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Edwards says the U.S. Team<lb/>
Handball team's chances for a<lb/>
medal in the Olympics may be<lb/>
somewhat improved by the<lb/>
of the other powers are Ed-<lb/>
wards said. He noted that the<lb/>
women have been playing the<lb/>
sport for about ten years and have<lb/>
no Olympic competition ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
The men's team, he says, "has<lb/>
a better chance of making a good<lb/>
showing in thc Olympics He<lb/>
says the U.S. has a good chance of<lb/>
beating Japan and Algeria.<lb/>
Yugoslavia, which is seeded first,<lb/>
was beaten by the U.S. team two<lb/>
years ago. Among the other<lb/>
powers in team handball, Russia,<lb/>
East Germany and<lb/>
Czechoslovakia have elected to<lb/>
boycott while the status of<lb/>
Poland, Hungary, and Cuba are<lb/>
still in question. Edwards said the<lb/>
U.S. men's team should be com-<lb/>
petitive with the remaining teams<lb/>
and any of the teams selected to<lb/>
replace the boycotting nations.<lb/>
Edwards got his start in team<lb/>
handball while serving as an army<lb/>
special services officer for the 8th<lb/>
Infantry Division in Bad Kreuz-<lb/>
nach, West Germany. He was<lb/>
good physical condition and<lb/>
would help boost morale.<lb/>
Following his army service, Ed-<lb/>
wards introduced the sport at Ap-<lb/>
palachian State where he worked<lb/>
from 1972-1975, and then to<lb/>
students at ECU. This year, he<lb/>
says there v ere about 55 in-<lb/>
tramural teams playing team<lb/>
handball and a club sport team<lb/>
for men and women that com-<lb/>
peted with teams from other<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
"This has fostered our<lb/>
students' participation in the Na-<lb/>
tional Sports Festival and of<lb/>
course "Sam" Jones is going to<lb/>
the top in the Olympic games he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Edwards says he hopes thc<lb/>
Olympics will increase the inte-<lb/>
of Americans in team handbail. In<lb/>
the meantime he's planning -<lb/>
trip to Los Angeles and is an-<lb/>
ticipating the opening rounds of<lb/>
team handball competition tha:<lb/>
will begin July 31. Those ear<lb/>
rounds and the finals of compels<lb/>
tion are sellouts.<lb/>
fast. The reason for the speed is boycott of the games by the<lb/>
that no one wants to hold the ball<lb/>
for very long because there are<lb/>
seven other players who are dying<lb/>
to steal the ball and the best<lb/>
players have devised all kinds of<lb/>
devilish schemes to remove the<lb/>
ball from an opposing player. Few<lb/>
fouls are called. Slugging, tripp-<lb/>
ing and other unnecessary-<lb/>
roughness will get a player two<lb/>
minutes in the penalty box.<lb/>
Edwards, who joined the ECU<lb/>
staff in 1975, introduced team<lb/>
handball into ECU's intramural<lb/>
program in 1976. Over the past<lb/>
eight years, ECU has sent 14 of its<lb/>
players, both men and women, to<lb/>
Soviets and other communist na-<lb/>
tions. Because some of the abs-<lb/>
taining countries field powerful<lb/>
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