<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057647_0001"/>
?he ?aat (Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 NojW? 3<lb/>
Wednesday May 30,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
 Chances Good' For<lb/>
New Class Building<lb/>
ere5S?8<lb/>
"Chances are good" that the<lb/>
General Assembly will ap-<lb/>
propriate funding for a new<lb/>
classroom building at ECU when<lb/>
it begins work on the state budget<lb/>
next week, according to state Sen.<lb/>
Vernon White, D-Winterville.<lb/>
Included in the proposed<lb/>
budget is $14.6 million for a new<lb/>
classroom building at ECU, a pro-<lb/>
ject proposed two years ago by the<lb/>
university. The building is one of<lb/>
several appropriations for capital<lb/>
expenditures in the UNC System.<lb/>
White, who represents the<lb/>
Greenville area, serves on the<lb/>
Legislature's Appropriations<lb/>
Committee, a joint House and<lb/>
Senate group which will review<lb/>
the proposed budget. White said<lb/>
the Pitt County delegation is<lb/>
behind the project "100 percent<lb/>
and chances of its approval are<lb/>
good, though the overall budget<lb/>
will have to be cut slightly to<lb/>
match revenue figures.<lb/>
White is working in Raleigh this<lb/>
week with other legislators to<lb/>
review the budget. Official<lb/>
deliberations will begin next week.<lb/>
About $265,000 was ap-<lb/>
propriated two years ago for<lb/>
design and preliminary planning<lb/>
of the building. The building is a<lb/>
project of the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors, according to Vice<lb/>
Chancellor of Business Affairs<lb/>
C.G. Moore, who said chances<lb/>
for the building's funding are<lb/>
"excellent<lb/>
The proposal caused controver-<lb/>
sy on campus last year when a<lb/>
coalition of students and faculty<lb/>
members opposed the location of<lb/>
the facility, set to be constructed<lb/>
behind the Rawl building. Op-<lb/>
ponents claimed it would destroy<lb/>
one of the few natural wooded<lb/>
areas left on campus and would<lb/>
concentrate traffic too heavily on<lb/>
the east end of campus.<lb/>
The new building will be the<lb/>
largest on campus with 60<lb/>
classrooms and 180 faculty of-<lb/>
fices. It is set to house the English,<lb/>
foreign language and business<lb/>
education deparments, along with<lb/>
the School of Business and<lb/>
language labs.<lb/>
ftiiS<lb/>
???<lb/>
? ?f9i-f.mmmj(ftfkr;i . ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Above is an architect's model of the proposed classroom building to be<lb/>
by the General Assembly this summer, construction could begin on the<lb/>
next year.<lb/>
constructed at<lb/>
60-classroom,<lb/>
PtWtp By Th? Daily KftCtar<lb/>
ECU. If approved<lb/>
180-office facility<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina To Experience Solar Eclipse Today<lb/>
By CLINT WERNER<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
A solar eclipse will take place<lb/>
today over the United States and<lb/>
part of Mexico. The eclipse will<lb/>
begin at approximately 11 a.m.<lb/>
and will last until 1:30 p.m EST.<lb/>
In the Greenville area, about 94<lb/>
percent of the disc of the sun will<lb/>
be covered, according to Dr.<lb/>
James Gaiser of the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Physics.<lb/>
During a solar eclipse, the<lb/>
moon passes between the earth<lb/>
and the sun, blotting out part or<lb/>
all of the light from the sun. The<lb/>
peak phase of this particular<lb/>
eclipse will occur from 12:40 to 1<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
This is an annular eclipse mean-<lb/>
ing a small circle of light will be<lb/>
visible around the circle of<lb/>
darkness. This ring of light will be<lb/>
narrow ? between five and six<lb/>
kilometers, Gaiser said ? and<lb/>
may be broken by lunar moun-<lb/>
tains, producing an effect known<lb/>
as Bailey's Beads because beads of<lb/>
light surround the obscured disc.<lb/>
The annular eclipse will be visible<lb/>
in a band stretching from New<lb/>
Orleans through Atlanta and<lb/>
Greensboro and up to Petersburg,<lb/>
Va.<lb/>
Two groups of ECU students<lb/>
will be viewing the eclipse, one in<lb/>
Petersburg and one in Charlotte.<lb/>
Both groups will be timing the<lb/>
phases of the eclipse and the ap-<lb/>
pearances of Bailey's Beads. The<lb/>
Petersburg group will also be<lb/>
observing pressure waves caused<lb/>
by the phenomenon. Gaiser will<lb/>
lead the Charlotte group while Dr.<lb/>
Edward Seykora, also from the<lb/>
ECU physics department, will<lb/>
lead the Petersburg group.<lb/>
The eclipse will be visible in<lb/>
Greenville as simply a partial<lb/>
eclipse, said Gaiser, who termed<lb/>
this eclipse as "so-so" adding that<lb/>
the last major eclipse visible in<lb/>
Greenville took place in 1970.<lb/>
At the height of the eclipse, the<lb/>
sky may take on a bizarre metallic<lb/>
hue. Venus should be visible along<lb/>
with a few bright stars. Bats will<lb/>
awaken and street lights il-<lb/>
luminate.<lb/>
The safest way to watch the<lb/>
eclipse is to project the sun's im-<lb/>
age onto a piece of white card-<lb/>
board using a pair of binoculars<lb/>
or a telescope. The sun's image<lb/>
can also be reproduced through a<lb/>
pinhole in a piece of cardboard on<lb/>
a sheet. If the eclipse is to be wat-<lb/>
ched directly a number 14<lb/>
welder's glass should be used for<lb/>
observation and staring should be<lb/>
avoided.<lb/>
It is also recommended that<lb/>
observers blink often and look<lb/>
away after a few seconds. Look-<lb/>
ing at the sun through ordinary<lb/>
sunglasses or film negatives can<lb/>
result in permanent eye damage<lb/>
If the eclipse is being observed in a<lb/>
wooded area and the sky is clear,<lb/>
the images formed on the ground<lb/>
by light patches created by<lb/>
overlapping leaves can be en-<lb/>
joyed.<lb/>
To make viewing easier for<lb/>
students, the physics department<lb/>
will have a telescope set up outside<lb/>
the Science Complex. The image<lb/>
of the eclipse will be projected on<lb/>
a screen to facilitate viewing by<lb/>
many, Gaiser said.<lb/>
SGA Executives Busy<lb/>
With Budget Revisions<lb/>
For '84-85 Activities<lb/>
?RYAN HUMIIHT ? ECU<lb/>
How to study and still support the tobacco industry. After a while, the pages seem wrapped in a smoky fog.<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
New. Ellor<lb/>
Although the SGA legislature is<lb/>
inactive during the summer, the<lb/>
student government association<lb/>
itself is not. During the summer<lb/>
months, the SGA is kept in opera-<lb/>
tion by the SGA executives ?<lb/>
President John Rainey, Vice<lb/>
President Mike McPartland,<lb/>
Treasurer Georgia Mooring and<lb/>
Secretary Lee Lane.<lb/>
Probably the most important<lb/>
problem before the executive<lb/>
committee in the summer con-<lb/>
cerns money. Because the fiscal<lb/>
year ends June 30, many ap-<lb/>
propriations need to be made.<lb/>
One item of business, according<lb/>
to Rainey, is budget revisions.<lb/>
When student organizations re-<lb/>
quest money, specific amounts are<lb/>
given to them for designated uses.<lb/>
Frequently the groups discover at<lb/>
the end of the fiscal year that<lb/>
there is too much money ap-<lb/>
propriated for one area and not<lb/>
enough appropriated for another.<lb/>
When this happens, the group<lb/>
goes before the legislature with a<lb/>
request for an on-line transfer,<lb/>
allowing the money to be allotted<lb/>
for another need. The SGA is<lb/>
charged with approval of this<lb/>
transfer.<lb/>
All money not used by student<lb/>
groups reverts to the general fund.<lb/>
Rainey said he expects to receive<lb/>
approximately $25,000 this year.<lb/>
This money is then appropriated<lb/>
to various organizations, adding<lb/>
to the amount appropriated by the<lb/>
legislature in the spring.<lb/>
Some of the money will be used<lb/>
by the SGA to print pamphlets<lb/>
and posters for students to use.<lb/>
In addition to dealing with<lb/>
finances, the executives also meet<lb/>
to determine plans for the coming<lb/>
year.<lb/>
One program planned by<lb/>
Rainey is a more elaborate book<lb/>
exchange program. A partial pro-<lb/>
gram was tested last semester, but<lb/>
"it was not what I envisioned<lb/>
Rainey said. He plans to speak<lb/>
with the director of the Student<lb/>
Supply Store and "see how we can<lb/>
study the high cost of books<lb/>
In dealing with a problem such<lb/>
as textbook costs, Rainey said,<lb/>
"communication is the first<lb/>
step<lb/>
Another goal cited by Rainey is<lb/>
more student involvement. He in-<lb/>
tends to speak to freshman involv-<lb/>
ed in the orientation program con-<lb/>
cerning the new freshman aides<lb/>
See Colleges, Page 2<lb/>
New Mandatory ID 9s<lb/>
Set To Replace Former<lb/>
Activity, Library Cards<lb/>
By MARY CASHIO<lb/>
Staff Wfttar<lb/>
Beginning this fall, all ECU<lb/>
students will be required to obtain<lb/>
new, multi-purpose ID cards, ac-<lb/>
cording to Rudolph Alexander,<lb/>
director of University Unions and<lb/>
associate dean of Student Affairs.<lb/>
Three cards will be combined into<lb/>
one to increase efficiency.<lb/>
At this summer's freshman<lb/>
orientation sessions, incoming<lb/>
freshman will be required to go<lb/>
through a prescribed procedure,<lb/>
as will other students returning in<lb/>
the fall. First, a receipt must be<lb/>
obtained after the fees are paid at<lb/>
the Cashier's office in Spilman<lb/>
Building. After having pictures<lb/>
taken in room 244 at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center, the students will<lb/>
attach their activity cards to the<lb/>
back of the new ID's. "Whenever<lb/>
a student needs to use the library,<lb/>
he goes there, and the library will<lb/>
affix the library card to the ID<lb/>
Alexander said.<lb/>
Meal tickets will still be<lb/>
separate from the ID cards since<lb/>
money for electronic readers is<lb/>
not available at present. Alex-<lb/>
ander said the cost would be pro-<lb/>
hibitive, but perhaps one day set-<lb/>
Applications Increase<lb/>
Enrollment To Remain Same<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
Alexander<lb/>
ting up such a system will feasible,<lb/>
although not in the near future.<lb/>
Lines for ID's are long at the<lb/>
best of times, but with all students<lb/>
being required to get new ID's,<lb/>
the problem will be compounded.<lb/>
Alexander said no system for ob-<lb/>
taining the cards in an orderly way<lb/>
has been set up, but students "will<lb/>
be given two weeks to obtain these<lb/>
cards<lb/>
Despite an increase in applica-<lb/>
tions to ECU this year, admis-<lb/>
sions officials do not expect<lb/>
enrollment at ECU to increase<lb/>
significantly or for the entering<lb/>
class to be very different from<lb/>
previous years.<lb/>
Admissions Director Charles<lb/>
Seeley also reported Tuesday that<lb/>
ECU applicants are following the<lb/>
national trend of applying to<lb/>
several schools and then choosing<lb/>
among those they are accepted to.<lb/>
Consequently, fewer students who<lb/>
are accepted to ECU this year are<lb/>
expected to enroll in August.<lb/>
"This is a peculiar year<lb/>
Seeley, said. "We had a lot more<lb/>
applications but a declining<lb/>
population. We had a lot of<lb/>
multiple-application students.<lb/>
When everything is settled, we'll<lb/>
have fewer enrollees from ac-<lb/>
cepted students<lb/>
Officials at N.C. State Univer-<lb/>
sity reported a similar situation<lb/>
Wednesday, with an increase in<lb/>
applications and acceptances but<lb/>
fewer students expected to enroll<lb/>
due to multiple applications.<lb/>
Time magazine reported last<lb/>
week that a decline in college-age<lb/>
Americans was creating stiffer<lb/>
competition among colleges to<lb/>
recruit good students. The<lb/>
magazine also reported an in-<lb/>
crease in multiple applications by<lb/>
students, making it more difficult<lb/>
for colleges to enroll all the<lb/>
students they accept each year.<lb/>
Seeley reported no change in<lb/>
recruitment techniques to attract<lb/>
students, and there has been no<lb/>
increase in non-need based<lb/>
academic scholarships to attract<lb/>
good students. Earlier this year,<lb/>
ECU administrators attributed<lb/>
the rise in applications to publicity<lb/>
from the Pirate football team and<lb/>
the university's role in excavating<lb/>
the Civil War ship Monitor.<lb/>
N.C. State officials said they<lb/>
had an "ever-growing" number<lb/>
of non-need based scholarships to<lb/>
attract good students, and they at-<lb/>
tributed the rise in applications<lb/>
partially to the career orientation<lb/>
of job-conscious students who are<lb/>
looking for training in such high-<lb/>
paying fields as engineering, for<lb/>
which N.C. State has traditionally<lb/>
had a strong reputation.<lb/>
See SGA, Page 3<lb/>
t<lb/>
I aMvAi<lb/>
? fe<lb/>
?,?<lb/>
i'4i??niii?m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 30. 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
Student Welfare Survey<lb/>
From Stiff Report<lb/>
The final results of a 1984 stu-<lb/>
dent welfare survey were recently<lb/>
presented to the SGA by Dr. Hav-<lb/>
va Altuner's ECU Marketing and<lb/>
Research class. The survey, con-<lb/>
ducted by members of Altuner's<lb/>
class was designed to profes-<lb/>
sionally test student opinions on a<lb/>
variety of campus issues, accor-<lb/>
ding to David Brown, chairman<lb/>
of the SGA student welfare com-<lb/>
mittee.<lb/>
The survey was aimed at<lb/>
discovering the needs and con-<lb/>
cerns of ECU students.<lb/>
Five sections comprised the somewhat dissatisfied with cur- system was supported by 45 per- with a two-day fall break. When with residence hall quaJitv rh<lb/>
irvey, each dealing with a dif- rent book purchasing options and cent of the respondents, and 43 asked to choose an alternative, 71 on-campus students. Seventy rT<lb/>
aspect of university - lf-  , . ,<lb/>
ferent aspect of university life.<lb/>
The student sample numbered<lb/>
745. The results obtained were<lb/>
"interesting Brown said.<lb/>
In the first section, dealing with<lb/>
the textbook purchasing situation<lb/>
on campus, 49 percent of the<lb/>
respondents said they would par-<lb/>
ticipate in a book exchange pro- satisfied with the fall and spring<lb/>
gram, while 35 percent would like operational hours. Dissatisfied<lb/>
to use a textbook rental system, students indicated (26 percent)<lb/>
Ten percent favored the current that Joyner should close later than<lb/>
textbook purchasing situation. In 6 p.m. on Saturdays and should<lb/>
addition, 62 percent of open earlier on Sundays. A<lb/>
respondents said thev were library-based typewriter rental<lb/>
76 percent indicated dissatisfac- percent felt they could utilize a percent chose an earlier class at-<lb/>
tion with current book selling vending area in the library. tendance in August, with holidays<lb/>
alternatives. Students indicated Campus media was the subject for Labor Day and for fall break,<lb/>
that they typically spend $136.75 of the third section. Eighty per- Seventy-six percent opted for both<lb/>
per semester on textbooks. cent of the students expressed holidays, with school lasting two<lb/>
Section two dealt with Joyner satisfaction with the campus year- more days in December.<lb/>
Library. Seventy-three percent of book, while 75 percent were The University profile compris-<lb/>
students surveyed said they were satisfied with WZMB, the campus ed section five. In this section 52<lb/>
radio station.<lb/>
ECU's current academic<lb/>
calender was a source of<lb/>
dissatisfaction for 51 percent of<lb/>
percent of the students were<lb/>
unhappy with the statewide<lb/>
academic reputation surrounding<lb/>
ECU. Fifty-one percent were<lb/>
cent of the respondents cm<lb/>
need for a required introductory<lb/>
basic computer science course for<lb/>
all students entering EC'l<lb/>
Results of the survey will be us-<lb/>
ed in the fall when the SGa<lb/>
legislature resumes meeting<lb/>
Brown said, adding that he j<lb/>
tended for the survey to he ,sefu:<lb/>
to many future student govern-<lb/>
ments.<lb/>
the respondents. The source of the satisfied with the quality of the<lb/>
dissatisfaction is a calender residence halls. More of the off-<lb/>
without a Labor Day break, but campus students were dissatisfied<lb/>
Medical Opportunity Program Developed<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
For any college student in-<lb/>
terested in a career in medicine,<lb/>
getting into medical school can<lb/>
seem like a faraway, even unat-<lb/>
tainable dream. It doesn't help if<lb/>
you happen to be black, from a<lb/>
family with few advantages and<lb/>
with few role models to look up<lb/>
to.<lb/>
It doesn't have to be that way,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
A new program developed by<lb/>
the East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine's Center for<lb/>
Student Opportunities is working<lb/>
to eliminate the perception of<lb/>
medical school as a foreign, for-<lb/>
bidding experience beyond the<lb/>
reach of most minority college<lb/>
students.<lb/>
During two sessions this spring,<lb/>
the CSO brought in groups of<lb/>
minority students from North<lb/>
Colleges Give<lb/>
More Aid To<lb/>
Woo Students<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Time magazine also reported an<lb/>
increase in the use of academic<lb/>
scholarships and grants for good<lb/>
students without financial need to<lb/>
woo them into enrolling at certain<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
A spokesman for<lb/>
undergraduate admissions at<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, however, said<lb/>
his school was seeing "no iden-<lb/>
tifiable trend" toward multiple<lb/>
applications, and UNC has never<lb/>
placed much emphasis on giving<lb/>
academic scholarships without<lb/>
regard to financial need. He also<lb/>
noted applications were down to<lb/>
UNC this year,but predicted that<lb/>
was because of a new application<lb/>
form requiring a written essay. He<lb/>
said the form seemed to be bring-<lb/>
ing a higher quality applicant to<lb/>
the school and UNC was thus<lb/>
"accepting a larger number of<lb/>
those who've applied<lb/>
Carolina campuses to spend 2 12 applying to medical school in the<lb/>
days getting a feel for what next one or two years said Jac-<lb/>
medical school is really like. By all queline Hawkins, the CSO official<lb/>
accounts, the students learned who coordinated the program.<lb/>
The program's final two days<lb/>
were devoted to a first-hand en<lb/>
counter with the medical schoo<lb/>
experience. The minority student?<lb/>
that although medical school may Typically, many of these students spent one day attending regulai<lb/>
be demanding, it can oe ncn, may aspire to a career<lb/>
rewarding and, most important, medicine, but as the application<lb/>
possible. deadline nears, their confidence<lb/>
The Medical Center Opportuni- flags.<lb/>
ty Program funding with a $4,200 "We encourage them to con-<lb/>
grant from the Z. Smith Reynolds tinuc their interest in medicine<lb/>
Foundation, involved 32 students and to go through with the ap-<lb/>
and six advisors, many of them plication process Hawkins said,<lb/>
from the state's predominantly The participants spent their<lb/>
black universities, but also from tint afternoon with medical<lb/>
ECU and UNC-CH. The students school officials learning about ad-<lb/>
were juniors and seniors majoring missions requirements and pro-<lb/>
in pre-medical studies, with an eye cedures, sources of financial aid<lb/>
toward careers in health care. and the undergraduate medical<lb/>
"We were actually trying to program offered at the ECU<lb/>
reach the students who would be School of Medicine.<lb/>
basic science classes paired wit!<lb/>
first-year medical students, whc<lb/>
during breaks shared their owr<lb/>
feelings about medical school.<lb/>
The program participants speni<lb/>
their last day in rotations through<lb/>
clinical Departments of Emergen-<lb/>
cy Medicine, Pediatrics,<lb/>
ObstetricsGynecology, Surgery,<lb/>
and Family Medicine. In the com-<lb/>
pany of third- and fourth-year<lb/>
medical students, residents in<lb/>
training and faculty physicians,<lb/>
they witnessed real-life situations<lb/>
encountered every day by health<lb/>
care professionals at a major<lb/>
medical center.<lb/>
These experiences helped<lb/>
demonstrate to the minority<lb/>
students that, desp'te the myths<lb/>
about medical school, the people<lb/>
who study and teach there are ac-<lb/>
tually not unlike themselves.<lb/>
"We wanted them to get an<lb/>
honest feel for what a day in the<lb/>
life of a medical student is like<lb/>
riawKins said. "By doing that at<lb/>
were able to assure them<lb/>
do have the ability and the) cam<lb/>
handle work, that medica<lb/>
is not out of their reach<lb/>
Hawkins said the prog: in wj<lb/>
be repeated next spring<lb/>
students and their advisors<lb/>
offered to raise the monev for the<lb/>
program themsehe-<lb/>
Twenty Receive Honor Scholarships<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
New Kdtlor<lb/>
The 20 recipients of the Alumni<lb/>
Honor Scholarship were announc-<lb/>
ed Monday by Charles Seeley,<lb/>
ECU director of admissions. The<lb/>
awards are presented annually to<lb/>
the 20 incoming freshmen presen-<lb/>
ting the highest combination of<lb/>
academic achievement, Scholastic<lb/>
Aptitude Test scores and extracur-<lb/>
ricular activities.<lb/>
Scholarships are funded by<lb/>
ECU alumni and are renewable<lb/>
for up to eight semesters provided<lb/>
an overall 3.0 grade point average<lb/>
is maintained. This is the sixth<lb/>
presentation of these awards. All<lb/>
the winners except two are<lb/>
residents of North Carolina.<lb/>
Recipients are: Camille Barden,<lb/>
Goldsboro; Wendy Barkhurst,<lb/>
Dudley; Jennifer Bennett,<lb/>
Bridgeton; Krista Burnette,<lb/>
Louisburg; Dhedra Cross, Creed-<lb/>
moor; Maryann Gurganus, Rockv<lb/>
Mount; Brian Hall, Snow Hill;<lb/>
John Mansfield, Hertford; Edna<lb/>
McLawhorn, Greenville; Joseph<lb/>
Meigs, Cullowhee.<lb/>
Also: Kimberly Mitts, Miami,<lb/>
Fla Noelle Nock, Salisbury,<lb/>
Md Melanie Robinson, Green-<lb/>
ville; George Rothermel, Jackson-<lb/>
ville; Shawn Schwarz, Havelock;<lb/>
Karen Seagraves, Greensboro;<lb/>
Timothy Simmons, Kinston;<lb/>
Brenda Summers, Cherryville;<lb/>
Alana Tinkham, Greenville; and<lb/>
Leo Venters, Ayden.<lb/>
THIS WEEK SPECIAL<lb/>
WHOLE SUBS<lb/>
Subs No. 13 Salami, Cheese, Pepperon<lb/>
&amp; Cheese<lb/>
No. 18 Bologna, Ham, Cheese 8<lb/>
Cappicoi'a<lb/>
For Only $2.79<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
j<lb/>
?PHONE AHEAD FOR FASTER SERVICE-<lb/>
Expires Sunday June 3rd<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
EXHIBITIONS<lb/>
Four new exhibitions will open June 3 at the<lb/>
Waterworks gallery in Salisbury, NC Featured<lb/>
will be works by Allen W Erdmann, Joyce Blunk.<lb/>
Herb Parker, and Wayne Wrights The new ex<lb/>
hibitions will run from June 3-July 23, 19M<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are requested from those persons<lb/>
who arc interested in becoming PERSONAL<lb/>
CARE ATTENDANTS to wheelchair students for<lb/>
Fall Semester, 1984. We are particularly In<lb/>
terested in anyone who has a background of<lb/>
assisting individuals with their activities of daily<lb/>
living<lb/>
For further details contact: Office of Handicap<lb/>
ped Student Services, 212 Whlchard Building,<lb/>
East Carolina University, Phone 757 6799<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
Attention! Those people who are going to King's<lb/>
Dominion on Sat , June 2nd must turn in your<lb/>
money by Thurs of this week We will leave at<lb/>
6:00 am from the International House if you are<lb/>
not there we will leave without you ? so be on<lb/>
time! Turn the money to Mildred or to Nana at the<lb/>
InH. House. ($9.95)<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services Is offering physical fitness classes for se<lb/>
cond session. Registration begins Wednesday,<lb/>
June 20 and ends Friday, June 22. Classes begin<lb/>
on the 20th. Come by Room 204 Memorial Gym to<lb/>
register or call 757 6387<lb/>
BEFORE YOU RENT ELSEWHERE COMPARE!<lb/>
Greenville's Newest and Finest Student-Oriented<lb/>
Condominium Village!<lb/>
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KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Util<lb/>
(CPS) - On-cai<lb/>
are rising from foul<lb/>
cent, next school<lb/>
largely to utilit<lb/>
housing officers arc<lb/>
try report<lb/>
"Most schools arl<lb/>
increases fairh<lb/>
Paul Jahr, housi<lb/>
Kearney State<lb/>
Nebraska and heai<lb/>
for the Association<lb/>
University Housing<lb/>
Jahr says the id<lb/>
f ? Via, I<lb/>
Crime Rat<lb/>
Eri<lb/>
B ERNKM K<lb/>
- ??? - i<lb/>
The smaller numl<lb/>
on campus is the j<lb/>
recent decrease I<lb/>
campus crime<lb/>
enrollment re?L<lb/>
crimes on campu<lb/>
Joseph Calder. I<lb/>
Safety. "A dec! I<lb/>
usually very regularl<lb/>
of year Ca <lb/>
a rise in student<lb/>
freshman onen-<lb/>
mer "Wit H<lb/>
Schol<lb/>
The East Cai 1<lb/>
School of Mr<lb/>
ed the establishrr<lb/>
Scholar Program<lb/>
major nev. pre g j<lb/>
recognize scholar<lb/>
medical education<lb/>
The announce j<lb/>
by Dr. William E.<lb/>
chancellor and dc.<lb/>
The program is na<lb/>
Brody Farmh<lb/>
Greenville, long;<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
The Brody Schoia<lb/>
Medicine will<lb/>
?<lb/>
6 Pa"<lb/>
' "ock<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
t8 Perl<lb/>
20 G<lb/>
22 Yc<lb/>
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-<lb/>
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?1 Ma<lb/>
ntc-<lb/>
42 Ser<lb/>
arch<lb/>
44 v<lb/>
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?7 -encash<lb/>
organic<lb/>
subst a<lb/>
49 Transg ass<lb/>
50 Mine '<lb/>
antranoa<lb/>
Narva<lb/>
net ? <lb/>
5 -i A ? ? .<lb/>
abbr<lb/>
55 Pa"<lb/>
<lb/>
59 Shco<lb/>
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60 Scrapec<lb/>
toge<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Writing<lb/>
Gr<lb/>
doi<lb/>
Doill<lb/>
: include<lb/>
I We Serve Hoi<lb/>
For<lb/>
L<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0003"/><lb/>
resting'<lb/>
with residence hall quality th<lb/>
pus students. Seventy 2?<lb/>
he respondents cited<lb/>
equired introduce<lb/>
??"ler science course 2<lb/>
entering ECU.<lb/>
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aid adding that he ?<lb/>
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0??<lb/>
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assure them that they<lb/>
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their advisors even<lb/>
&amp;e the money for the<lb/>
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SPECIAL<lb/>
L SUBS<lb/>
eese, Pepperoni<lb/>
am, Cheese &amp;.<lb/>
v $2.79<lb/>
183<lb/>
ER SERVICE-<lb/>
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udent-()riented<lb/>
riium Village!<lb/>
4<lb/>
f<lb/>
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?TIESYEARROUND!<lb/>
se Arrangements<lb/>
Iht Away!<lb/>
?N<lb/>
m<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 30, 1984<lb/>
Utility Costs To Force Dorm Fee<lb/>
(CPS) ? On-campus dorm fees<lb/>
are rising from four to seven per-<lb/>
cent next school year, thanks<lb/>
largely to utility costs, college<lb/>
nousmg officers around the coun-<lb/>
try report.<lb/>
"Most schools are keeping their<lb/>
increases fairly low observes<lb/>
raul Jahr, housing chief at<lb/>
Kearney State College in<lb/>
Nebraska and head of research<lb/>
for the Association of College and<lb/>
University Housing Officers.<lb/>
Jahr says the lower increases<lb/>
Crime Rate Drops<lb/>
"reflect the past, changes in<lb/>
philosophy and changes in opera-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
There are indicators, however,<lb/>
that student demand for dorm<lb/>
rooms may be slackening on some<lb/>
campuses, a phenomenon that<lb/>
would help keep prices low.<lb/>
A number of schools have stop-<lb/>
ped having to resort to room lot-<lb/>
teries to process all the students<lb/>
wanting rooms on campus, while<lb/>
some Michigan schools are now<lb/>
offering free trips to Florida or<lb/>
cable tv to convince students to<lb/>
live in dorms.<lb/>
While such schemes may still be<lb/>
exceptional, most schools are<lb/>
limiting their dorm fee increases<lb/>
for next fall to reflect only their<lb/>
own rise in expenses.<lb/>
"The utilities are the largest<lb/>
factors (in the fee increases) ex-<lb/>
plains Marianne Hall, Eastern<lb/>
Washington University's residen-<lb/>
tial life director. "If utilities went<lb/>
down, fees could<lb/>
Electrical costs at Hall's school<lb/>
Enrollment Causes Decline<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The smaller number of students<lb/>
on campus is the cause cited for a<lb/>
recent decrease in the amount of<lb/>
campus crime. A decrease in<lb/>
enrollment results in a decline in<lb/>
crimes on campus according to<lb/>
Joseph Calder, Director of Public<lb/>
Safety. "A decline in crimes is<lb/>
usually very regular for this time<lb/>
of year Calder said. He expects<lb/>
a rise in student crimes during<lb/>
freshman orientation this sum-<lb/>
mer. "With the arrival of rising<lb/>
freshmen usually comes an in-<lb/>
crease in small, petty crimes<lb/>
Calder said.<lb/>
Crimes reported to the ECU<lb/>
Public Safety Department for<lb/>
May 21st thru May 28th were:<lb/>
May 21, 2:05 a.m. ? Henry<lb/>
Wayne Murphy of 301-C Azalea<lb/>
Gardens, was arrested for DWI<lb/>
on Fa ulty Drive.<lb/>
May 23, 3:15 a.m. ? Lisa Jan<lb/>
Atwater of 209 N. Elm, was ar-<lb/>
rested for DWI on Mall Drive.<lb/>
May 25, 1:20 a.m. ? Randall<lb/>
Bryan Pickwell of LaGrange, NC<lb/>
was issued a state citation for<lb/>
driving with no operator's license<lb/>
May 28, 9:35 a.m. ? Nancy j<lb/>
Ludwig of 409-C Eastbrook Apts<lb/>
reported larceny of her bicycle<lb/>
from the bike shed north of Belk<lb/>
Hall; 6:45 p.m. ? Belta Pacheco<lb/>
of 326 Slay Dorm, was<lb/>
transported to the emergency<lb/>
room of the Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital by Ptl. Dail<lb/>
after sustaining a cut on her foot<lb/>
while in her dorm room; 8:10<lb/>
p.m. ? Robert G. Boney of 124<lb/>
Jarvis Hall was served a criminal<lb/>
summons by Ptl. Dail for a wor-<lb/>
thless check.<lb/>
Scholar Program Established<lb/>
rose 25 percent in the last year,<lb/>
thanks largely to the financial<lb/>
worries of the regional utility<lb/>
company.<lb/>
Similarly, the fiscal woes of the<lb/>
troubled Seabrook nuclear power<lb/>
plant in New Hampshire helped<lb/>
push regional power costs up<lb/>
enough to force New England<lb/>
College to raise housing costs by<lb/>
seven percent for next year.<lb/>
"Telephone service is causing<lb/>
havoc" with dorm fees now, adds<lb/>
Annette Smith, ACUHO's cur-<lb/>
rent president.<lb/>
"Instead of coming to school<lb/>
with a coffee pot and a hot plate,<lb/>
students now come with a<lb/>
telephone and a computer she<lb/>
says. "Rewiring (for the new<lb/>
machines) will be quite an ex-<lb/>
pense<lb/>
"The AT&amp;T breakup is respon-<lb/>
sible in part for our increase<lb/>
confirms Donald Arnt, Penn<lb/>
State's director of housing.<lb/>
Nationwide figures for how<lb/>
much dorm fees are going up<lb/>
won't be compiled until later in<lb/>
1984, but individual schools<lb/>
already are announcing their<lb/>
hikes.<lb/>
Cornell, Florida, Knox College,<lb/>
Illinois, Eastern Washington, Cal-<lb/>
Davis, West Virginia, Colorado,<lb/>
and Penn State, amony many<lb/>
others, have announced increases<lb/>
ranging from three to seven per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Smith estimates the average na-<lb/>
tionwide hike will be six percent.<lb/>
Some schools will be raising<lb/>
dorm rents even though they may<lb/>
have some trouble filling their<lb/>
dorms for the first time in many<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Slackening demand has let both<lb/>
Penn State and the University of<lb/>
New Hampshire drop their lottery<lb/>
system for assigning dorm rooms<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
Knox College in Illinois plans to<lb/>
change some six-student rooms in-<lb/>
to four-person rooms.<lb/>
"The Midwest has experienced<lb/>
some vacancies Smith adds.<lb/>
Many housing officers<lb/>
predicted nationwide vacancies by<lb/>
1984, as enrollments dropped.<lb/>
The National Center for Educa-<lb/>
tion Statistics originally predicted<lb/>
a precipitous drop in fall, 1981.<lb/>
The drop-off, however, never oc-<lb/>
cured at many campuses.<lb/>
Nevertheless, some schools<lb/>
delayed building new dorms to<lb/>
relieve overcrowding for fear that,<lb/>
once the dorms were built, they<lb/>
wouldn't have enough students to<lb/>
put in them.<lb/>
Schools that built new dorms<lb/>
"didn't look at the end of the<lb/>
baby boom Smith says. "Now<lb/>
there's a question about what to<lb/>
do with the buildings. Those<lb/>
schools are doing other things<lb/>
with that space: using it for<lb/>
hospices, for conference centers<lb/>
Yet many schools still want to<lb/>
build.<lb/>
IN 1983, 166 colleges applied<lb/>
for special low-interest housing<lb/>
loans to the U.S. Department Of<lb/>
Education, reports Sumner M.<lb/>
Bravman, acting director of the<lb/>
department's College Housing<lb/>
Loan Program.<lb/>
The schools asked for a total of<lb/>
some $411 million to build new<lb/>
dorms. The government loaned<lb/>
only about $40 million.<lb/>
Bravman believes more schools<lb/>
might have applied to build new<lb/>
dorms, but federal rules prohibit<lb/>
schools from applying more than<lb/>
once every four years.<lb/>
The University of Florida<lb/>
would build a new dorm, "but we<lb/>
can't finance one says Jim<lb/>
Graham, UF's housing director.<lb/>
It wants to build more dorms<lb/>
because its present facilities are<lb/>
still overcrowded.<lb/>
The University of Illinois, for<lb/>
example, this week quit accepting<lb/>
dorm applications for next year,<lb/>
says Gary North, the university's<lb/>
housing chief.<lb/>
"If I had an additional 1,000<lb/>
spaces, I could fill them adds<lb/>
Bill Palleen<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The East Carolina University<lb/>
School of Medicine has announc-<lb/>
ed the establishment of the Brody<lb/>
Scholar Program in Medicine, a<lb/>
major new program that will<lb/>
recognize scholastic excellence in<lb/>
medical education.<lb/>
The announcement was made<lb/>
by Dr. William E. Laupus, vice<lb/>
chancellor and dean of the school.<lb/>
The program is named for the<lb/>
Brody Family of Kinston and<lb/>
Greenville, longtime supporters of<lb/>
the school.<lb/>
The Brody Scholar Program in<lb/>
Medicine will recognize<lb/>
distinguished academic perfor-<lb/>
mance by providing substantial<lb/>
scholarships for five students<lb/>
throughout their four years of<lb/>
study at the medical school,<lb/>
Laupus said.<lb/>
"It is with a great deal of pride<lb/>
that we announce this new pro-<lb/>
gram, which will bestow honor<lb/>
and distinction upon recipients<lb/>
and their families he said.<lb/>
"When they complete their<lb/>
medical education, we believe<lb/>
these students will exemplify a<lb/>
standard of excellence in medical<lb/>
care and community leadership<lb/>
that others will follow<lb/>
Recipients of Brody scholar-<lb/>
ships will be selected on the basis<lb/>
of academic performance,<lb/>
motivation, leadership potential<lb/>
and personal stature. Preference<lb/>
will be given to residents of<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina and<lb/>
students who are interested in<lb/>
practicing primary care medicine<lb/>
in the state, preferably in the<lb/>
eastern region.<lb/>
Recipients will be named by the<lb/>
board of directors of the Brody<lb/>
foundation based on the recom-<lb/>
mendations of the school's<lb/>
scholarship committee. Five<lb/>
students will be selected each year.<lb/>
SGA Execs Planning For Fall<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
program. He also hopes to get<lb/>
more students to join university<lb/>
committees in the fall. "Next<lb/>
fall he said, "I hope to make a<lb/>
lot more students aware that these<lb/>
committees exist<lb/>
An organization conference to<lb/>
be held next year is also being<lb/>
planned. The conference will be<lb/>
held before the annual budgeting<lb/>
process begins and will involve all<lb/>
student organizations. The<lb/>
organizations will give the SGA<lb/>
information on how their<lb/>
previous appropriation was spent<lb/>
in order to aid in planning for new<lb/>
appropriations.<lb/>
In addition, the organization<lb/>
members will be informed on the<lb/>
budgeting process itself and will<lb/>
be told how to develop and submit<lb/>
a budget.<lb/>
Discussion concerning a pro-<lb/>
posed SGA information center is<lb/>
still going on. Rainey said a deci-<lb/>
sion needs to be made whether or<lb/>
not to purchase a computer for<lb/>
the SGA or share one with<lb/>
Mendenhall. He added that com-<lb/>
puterization of the transit and<lb/>
refrigerator rental systems will be<lb/>
delayed and that "the informa-<lb/>
tion center is something that<lb/>
should get first priority ? we<lb/>
want to go beyond being a referral<lb/>
service. We want to be an answer-<lb/>
ing service<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Danger<lb/>
6 Part of step<lb/>
11 Mock<lb/>
12 Wears away<lb/>
14 Preposition<lb/>
15 Unadorned<lb/>
17 Fiber plant<lb/>
18 Perform<lb/>
20 Go in<lb/>
22 Youngster<lb/>
23 Unit of Italian<lb/>
currency<lb/>
25 Dram<lb/>
27 French<lb/>
pronoun<lb/>
28 Strikes<lb/>
30 Swiftly<lb/>
32 Country of<lb/>
Asia<lb/>
34 Tardy<lb/>
35 Tram of<lb/>
attendants<lb/>
38 Bread<lb/>
ingredient<lb/>
4 1 Man's<lb/>
nickname<lb/>
42 Sweetheart:<lb/>
arch<lb/>
44 Wild plum<lb/>
45 Plunge<lb/>
47 Yellowish<lb/>
organic<lb/>
substance<lb/>
49 Transgress<lb/>
50 Mine<lb/>
entrance<lb/>
52 Nerve<lb/>
networks<lb/>
54 Army officer<lb/>
abbr<lb/>
55 Part of eye<lb/>
57 Habituates<lb/>
59 Shoulder<lb/>
covering<lb/>
60 Scraped<lb/>
together<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Writing<lb/>
implement<lb/>
2 Teutonic<lb/>
deity<lb/>
3 Tear<lb/>
4 Unemployed<lb/>
5 Inclines<lb/>
6 Restoration<lb/>
7 Negative<lb/>
prefix<lb/>
8 Soak up<lb/>
9 Redact<lb/>
10 Sell to<lb/>
consumer<lb/>
11 Watch faces<lb/>
13 Gloomily<lb/>
16 Roman road<lb/>
19 Character-<lb/>
istic<lb/>
21 Remunerate<lb/>
24 A month<lb/>
26 Ceremonies<lb/>
29 More rational<lb/>
31 Transactions<lb/>
33 Denoting<lb/>
number<lb/>
35 Detecting<lb/>
device<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
36 Slurs<lb/>
37 Comfort<lb/>
39 Dirtied<lb/>
40 Temporary<lb/>
shelters<lb/>
43 Potassium<lb/>
nitrate<lb/>
46 Substance<lb/>
48 One of<lb/>
Columbus's<lb/>
ships<lb/>
51 Aunt in<lb/>
Madrid<lb/>
53 Diving bird<lb/>
56 Compass<lb/>
point<lb/>
58 Note of<lb/>
scale<lb/>
I<lb/>
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RINGCOLD TOWERS<lb/>
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SALE AND RENTAL UNITS AVAILABLE<lb/>
ECU students will have a special place to live this fall ? next to<lb/>
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Completely furnished, each unit will be individually owned<lb/>
either by students and their parents or by investors renting to<lb/>
students. There will be on-site management with secunt<lb/>
personnel on duty at night These brand new units will be<lb/>
occupied for the first time fall semester<lb/>
Recent changes in tax laws make ownership of this type<lb/>
property advantageous for both investors and parents of<lb/>
students. Prices begin at $27,900 with up to 957 financing<lb/>
available We d like to show you how Ringgold Towers can<lb/>
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Ringgold Towers. 1 -800-672-8229 (NC), 1 -800- W4-11W (GA.<lb/>
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RINGGOLD DEVELOPMENT CO INC.<lb/>
105 Commerce Street<lb/>
P.O. Drawer 568<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27854<lb/>
-?? ?- v <lb/>
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? ?<lb/>
? m?I<lb/>
"??? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0004"/><lb/>
QUr ?aat (Earnlmiatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, ammaumm<lb/>
Darryl Brown, Managing m?<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mm &amp;?- J.T. Pietrzak, d.??,on,<lb/>
Randy Mews, ?? ?? Anthony Martin, h m?w<lb/>
Tina Marosc hak. mm ?? Tom Norton, mi mw<lb/>
Allen Guy, can i mi KathyFuerst. Manager<lb/>
Bll L AUSTIN, CMmWim Manager MlKE MAYO, Advertising Technician<lb/>
May 30, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Recruiting<lb/>
Academics Get Deserved Attention<lb/>
It's about time scholars got as<lb/>
much attention as linebackers.<lb/>
At last, recruitment of college<lb/>
students has been extended from the<lb/>
gridiron to the classroom. Time<lb/>
magazine reported last week that<lb/>
because of a decline in the number<lb/>
of 18-year-olds in the U.S colleges<lb/>
are having to recruit more ag-<lb/>
gressively to keep enrollments up<lb/>
without letting quality slide, and the<lb/>
chase for students at the top of their<lb/>
class is just about as fierce as<lb/>
recruitment of top athletes.<lb/>
For years college athletes have<lb/>
been actively pursued with attrac-<lb/>
tive packages to attend a certain col-<lb/>
lege, and seemingly lavish perks<lb/>
(some legal, some not so) ? in-<lb/>
cluding the best dorm rooms,<lb/>
private tutors and meal plans ?<lb/>
have accompanied the offers.<lb/>
Meanwhile, besides the occasional<lb/>
academic scholarship given to the<lb/>
top couple of students entering<lb/>
some colleges, students in academic<lb/>
fields were wooed mostly with<lb/>
words, not resources.<lb/>
One reason, of course, is that<lb/>
athletics can raise revenue, especial-<lb/>
ly through television contracts. Buy-<lb/>
ing good athletes can literally pay-<lb/>
off, and it does much for alumni<lb/>
support; signing up good math ma-<lb/>
jors usually doesn't.<lb/>
But recruitment of academic<lb/>
students is now being stepped up.<lb/>
Time reports that financial in-<lb/>
ducements to attract top students<lb/>
include such plans as a $1,000 tui-<lb/>
tion rebates at Antioch College,<lb/>
four years of free tuiton at SMU, or<lb/>
$20,000 to National Merit Scholars<lb/>
at Trinity. Schools are also offering<lb/>
valuable programs once in college;<lb/>
Duke throws in a summer in Europe<lb/>
with its top academic award, and<lb/>
Depauw offers an internship with a<lb/>
Fortune 500 company to manage-<lb/>
ment majors. Myriad other recruit-<lb/>
ment techniques are used to attract<lb/>
students: personal calls and visits<lb/>
upon acceptance, receptions in ma-<lb/>
jor cities for accepted students, and<lb/>
dinners or even weekends hosted by<lb/>
the school that include campus<lb/>
tours by top professors.<lb/>
Many college administrators<lb/>
debate the value and justification of<lb/>
academic scholarships unrelated to<lb/>
financial need. Should colleges allot<lb/>
limited resources to students who<lb/>
have no financial need, thereby<lb/>
perhaps taking away from students<lb/>
who must have aid to attend college<lb/>
at all? If no colleges offer no-need<lb/>
aid packages and woo students in-<lb/>
stead with symbolic, less costly<lb/>
awards plus attractive academic<lb/>
programs, then colleges can still<lb/>
recruit but perhaps on a more fair<lb/>
and accurate basis. Resources<lb/>
would then be available to those<lb/>
who really need them.<lb/>
But that will not happen without<lb/>
a law to make it so, and perhaps it<lb/>
should not. It's good to see<lb/>
resources going to those for whom<lb/>
higher education was designed:<lb/>
academically active and interested<lb/>
students. The practice surely<lb/>
shouldn't be curtailed until it is<lb/>
equally cut back in athletic recruit-<lb/>
ment. But administrators must be<lb/>
careful that the abuses that occurred<lb/>
in athletic departments of offering<lb/>
more than is legal or reasonable<lb/>
doesn't happen in the academic<lb/>
recruitment; and the baiting with<lb/>
big money should not pull signifi-<lb/>
cant amounts from students who re-<lb/>
quire it just to meet basic expenses.<lb/>
VW MEAN YOU GUYS ARE UNDERCOVER FBI A&amp;ENTS TOO ?<lb/>
Trials And Pains Of King Making<lb/>
By ROBERT KAUS<lb/>
Tto New Rrpublk<lb/>
The symbolic moment came one mor-<lb/>
ning about a month before the New<lb/>
Hampshire primary.<lb/>
This Week's Campaign Manager was<lb/>
holed up in his office. The national<lb/>
headquarters of Hollings for President<lb/>
was nearly deserted, more like a<lb/>
warehouse than a political campaign It<lb/>
had been that way for weeks. Staff had<lb/>
come and gone. Trips had been schedul-<lb/>
ed and canceled. But the dramatic<lb/>
groundswell of affection that we had<lb/>
hoped would propel Sen. Ernest Holl-<lb/>
ings into the White House had somehow<lb/>
failed to materialize. We were still drag-<lb/>
ging along at 1 percent or 2 percent in<lb/>
the polls.<lb/>
I was not some enthusiastic Clean-for-<lb/>
Gene college type; 1 was 32 years old. I<lb/>
was former politics editor of Harper's.<lb/>
My back ached. David Broder had a<lb/>
motel room. Pat Caddel, the alleged<lb/>
mastermind of Hart's surge, had a hotel<lb/>
room ? I had seen somebody carrying<lb/>
his suitcases at the Sheraton Wayfarer.<lb/>
My mistake was going to work for the<lb/>
Democratic candidate I though would<lb/>
make the best president. (Hart was my<lb/>
second choice. Really, Gary. Honest.<lb/>
The resume is in the mail.) I haven't<lb/>
changed my mind about Hollings, but I<lb/>
would probably not hold up our cam-<lb/>
paign as a model for others.<lb/>
Speech-writers are supposed to sit<lb/>
behind the scenes, carefully crafting the<lb/>
themes and imagery that "the<lb/>
candidate" will "communicate Cad-<lb/>
dell is said to play this role for Hart,<lb/>
although in fact Hart has been practic-<lb/>
ing his"generation" shtick for decades.<lb/>
Hollings is a different sort, as I find<lb/>
out when he throws one of my proudest<lb/>
efforts in the trash, claiming that I am<lb/>
trying to make him "sound like a girl<lb/>
(I had used the word "silliest) Good to<lb/>
be a candidate not captive to his staff.<lb/>
Less fun to be the staff. Luckily, The<lb/>
Candidate himself (T.C.) is a fount of<lb/>
ideas, which I quickly learned to recycle<lb/>
to him in printed form, a technique that<lb/>
increases the chances ? still slim ?<lb/>
that T.C. will actually read the text I<lb/>
have prepared.<lb/>
The low point of the campaign for our<lb/>
"advance" team comes in Boston,<lb/>
where T.C. tosses aside a carefully<lb/>
prepared anti-Mondale ("Fritz Mondale<lb/>
takes his orders from Lane Kirkland")<lb/>
because he thinks the Harvard audience<lb/>
would prefer to listen to his provocative<lb/>
analysis of the 1930 Smoot-Hawley<lb/>
tariff.<lb/>
New Hampshire: T.C. begins the day<lb/>
before the election with a tour of three<lb/>
diners in West Manchester. A profile of<lb/>
Hollings on CBS News had featured a<lb/>
voter who, failing to remember T.Cs<lb/>
name after shaking his hand, said, "I<lb/>
think he said his name was 'Rollins or<lb/>
something So the diner tour is im-<lb/>
mediately dubbed the Rolling Rollins<lb/>
Rally by cynical staffers.<lb/>
The most cynical staffers chant<lb/>
"Rollins! Rollins! He's our man as<lb/>
T.C. enters the diner to greet the one or<lb/>
two bemused breakfasters. The tour is a<lb/>
disaster. I go home early, depressed.<lb/>
One technique of vote-pulling is to<lb/>
give rides to the polls to your supporters.<lb/>
The Mondale camp has four-wheel-drive<lb/>
vehicles circling in the snow for this pui-<lb/>
pose. I have an old Volvo that ! have<lb/>
vacuumed for the occasion.<lb/>
Now, it's not sporting to make a voter<lb/>
promise to support your candidate<lb/>
before deciding whether to give her a<lb/>
ride or leave her stranded in the snow ?<lb/>
secret ballot and all that. But my faith in<lb/>
the Hollings vote canvassers is<lb/>
somewhat shaken when my puliee, a<lb/>
short, middle-aged housewife (with, I<lb/>
couldn't help noticing, two cars in her<lb/>
driveway), climbs into the passenger seat<lb/>
and asks, "Who is Hollings, now?"<lb/>
Perhaps a bracing earful of propagan-<lb/>
da will remind her. I carefully outline<lb/>
T.Cs strengths and his opponents<lb/>
weaknesses ? rather skillfully, I think. 1<lb/>
have learned something in the last two<lb/>
weeks, after all. I hold the door open for<lb/>
my guest and hold my umbrella over her<lb/>
head as she makes her way through the<lb/>
muck and sleet into the polling place.<lb/>
Joking with my competitors outside, I<lb/>
feel like a fellow professional. I have<lb/>
gotten one vote. I wait and wait. At last<lb/>
my convert emerges.<lb/>
"Hollings, Cranston ? I get them so<lb/>
mixed up. I'm not sure which one I<lb/>
voted for<lb/>
It takes all my commitment to<lb/>
democracy to repress the strong desire to<lb/>
ask her how she plans to get home.<lb/>
By the time I reach the Hollings vic-<lb/>
tory party, T.C. has already delivered<lb/>
his concession speech. We have 4 per-<lb/>
cent of the vote, better than Askew or<lb/>
Cranston, but not enough to go on.<lb/>
Hollings pulls out two days later and en-<lb/>
dorses Hart the next week.<lb/>
The Naso Papers: Man, Myth And Magic<lb/>
By DARRYL BROWN<lb/>
I'll never forget the first time I stepped<lb/>
into the office. Shades pulled, desk empty,<lb/>
lights out, it looked in need of some work.<lb/>
But the work needed in the physical office<lb/>
was nothing compared to the job I had<lb/>
before me in overhauling the office I was<lb/>
just elected to ? SGA president. Still, it<lb/>
would be worth it. At last they were mine<lb/>
the reins of power. Head of the student<lb/>
body, a powerful voice to the administra-<lb/>
tion, a seat on the Board of Trustees,<lb/>
Media Board, City Council. It's all mine,<lb/>
and I'm going to run with it.<lb/>
Besides, it'll look great on the resume.<lb/>
And I'm pulling in a cool $200 a month.<lb/>
I sat down at the desk for the first time<lb/>
and buzzed my new secretary on the inter-<lb/>
com. "Millie, make some coffee. Let's get<lb/>
to work. "<lb/>
From the first paragraph you can't put<lb/>
the book down. It is as powerful a record<lb/>
of a public official's tenure in office as has<lb/>
been written in years. The long-awaited,<lb/>
much-ballyhooed memoirs of former SGA<lb/>
President Paul Naso are on the stands at<lb/>
last, and receiving nothing less than critical<lb/>
and popular acclaim. There's even talk<lb/>
about a movie version of the new opus,<lb/>
Pomp and Pasta: Memoirs of a one-year<lb/>
Monarchy.<lb/>
Naso reveals it all here: from the grueling<lb/>
campaign battle and his meteoric rise from<lb/>
a freshman SGA legislator, to taking over<lb/>
an office that he claims was out of touch<lb/>
with the student body; included is the long<lb/>
struggle to fulfill his campaign promise of a<lb/>
campus communications network. We<lb/>
have here nothing less than the daily life<lb/>
and the inner thoughts of a man at the top,<lb/>
along with an inside look at the wheels of<lb/>
power controlling ECU, and the figures<lb/>
who make those wheels go round.<lb/>
In clean, athletic prose Naso carries us<lb/>
from one scene to another throughout his<lb/>
administration, one filled with private deci-<lb/>
sions and public dilemmas. One excerpt<lb/>
from the chapter on the spring campaign:<lb/>
We were up late again, planning basic<lb/>
strategy. How to win the big one.<lb/>
"All right, Paul, the moustache is going<lb/>
to help with the women's vote. We'll keep<lb/>
it; but see if you can't thicken it up with<lb/>
some mascara or something, OK?"<lb/>
John, my right-hand man on the cam-<lb/>
paign. He pulled no punches.<lb/>
"And you've got that forum with the<lb/>
Greeks tomorrow, so we'll have to be sure<lb/>
you 've got some clean khaki slacks and an<lb/>
Izod shirt. Remember to yack it up about<lb/>
the frat boys' three B's: brotherhood, beer<lb/>
and broads. After that you 're meeting the<lb/>
art students' forum, so you'll have to make<lb/>
a quick change into dungarees and a t-shirt.<lb/>
Tim, see if you can get some paint splashed<lb/>
on one of Paul's shirts for this art students'<lb/>
thing. Naso, don't forget: Picasso, not<lb/>
Picasso, just like in Italian<lb/>
Naso is sensitive to the reader's desire to<lb/>
get to know the real Paul, the man behind<lb/>
the moustache. He reveals to his readers<lb/>
the intimate inner-workings of his Cabinet<lb/>
meetings, often held late into the night over<lb/>
Italian dinners. His subtle use of the din-<lb/>
ner's dishes becomes a metaphor for his<lb/>
own ethnic roots, as evidenced in the<lb/>
book's title. Pomp and Pasta comes to<lb/>
symbolize to the reader the divergent poles<lb/>
of Naso's personality while in office. Pasta<lb/>
is the private man, the fifth-generation<lb/>
Italian, lover of spaghetti and pizza, who<lb/>
confides to us his human side, with all its<lb/>
flaws and self-doubts (both of them).<lb/>
Pomp is the public man, the handsome<lb/>
figure always ready for the cameras, always<lb/>
reaching for a handshake, even with close<lb/>
friends. (In one humorous episode Naso<lb/>
tells how, after a long day campaigning, he<lb/>
met his girlfriend and instinctively shook<lb/>
her hand saying, "Hi, I'm Paul Naso.<lb/>
Good to see ya. Hope I can count on your<lb/>
vote She didn't speak to him for two<lb/>
days.)<lb/>
Naso also chronicles here his struggles<lb/>
with the campus media, and how he won<lb/>
the hearts first of the staffs, then the stu-<lb/>
dent body at large. Like a phoenix rising<lb/>
out of the ashes, Naso recalls how he gain-<lb/>
ed a favorable relationship with The East<lb/>
Carolinian, the paper that endorsed his op-<lb/>
ponent in the campaign then criticized his<lb/>
SGA leadership conference with the sar-<lb/>
donic, ill-conceived headline, "Naso's<lb/>
Plan: Possibilities Aren't Endless By the<lb/>
spring semester, he notes, "1 had them<lb/>
eating out of my hand. I could get my pic-<lb/>
ture on the front page almost at will. It<lb/>
didn't hurt when I dated the news editor,<lb/>
either Indeed, Naso's picture was on the<lb/>
front page at least five issues a month, and<lb/>
he regularly received cooperation from the<lb/>
press for almost any upcoming event.<lb/>
It's all here. Intimate stories about the<lb/>
giant figures that affect every ECU stu-<lb/>
dent's life. He recalls his first meeting with<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt and their subsequent<lb/>
close friendship. ("Jim's a wonderful man,<lb/>
great guy. And he plays a mean game of<lb/>
basketball You know, he used to be an<lb/>
SGA president too) He shows to us the<lb/>
other side of ECU's top brass: Chancellor<lb/>
Howell ("John throws a heck of a party"),<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Volpe ("Angelo makes the<lb/>
best provolone manicotti I've ever tasted")<lb/>
Vice Chancellor Meyer (There's no stopp-<lb/>
ing Elmer at a party once he has a lamp<lb/>
shade on his head").<lb/>
Pomp and Pasta has it all. Complete<lb/>
with an opinionated summary of the<lb/>
1983-84 SGA Legislature, as only Naso can<lb/>
do it ("Those guys know less about<lb/>
parliamentary procedure than I did when I<lb/>
was a legislator"). You won't want to miss<lb/>
some of the best reading of the summer.<lb/>
It's a must-read book about the man, the<lb/>
myth, the institution and all that it takes to<lb/>
gain and maintain power. Pick up a copy at<lb/>
the Student Supply Store today, and you<lb/>
too will agree with the comments of ECU's<lb/>
most powerful and controversial leaders:<lb/>
"Shocking, insightful, chock full of<lb/>
SGA gossip<lb/>
?Mendenhall Director Rudy Alexander<lb/>
"At last the truth is told. Naso's<lb/>
pen is more powerful writing prose<lb/>
than it is signing a veto<lb/>
?SGA Speaker Kirk Shelley<lb/>
"You'll love it or you'll hate it, but<lb/>
you won't put it down<lb/>
?Chancellor John Howell<lb/>
"A chronicle of power on the level<lb/>
of Haig's Caveat More revealing<lb/>
than the Watergate tapes<lb/>
?Attorney General Harry Dest<lb/>
"Raunchy, dirty, totally honest.<lb/>
From the first page I devoured it<lb/>
like a ham sandwich<lb/>
? WZMB Manager Jim Ensor<lb/>
Westeri<lb/>
B UNA MAI<lb/>
Feature I<lb/>
Picture yourself<lb/>
tie cottage surroui<lb/>
mountains that<lb/>
mist. Directly belt<lb/>
are clear, runnirtj<lb/>
plunge into notouj<lb/>
far as the eye can<lb/>
azaleas, rhododei<lb/>
Mountain<lb/>
Above is just one ol<lb/>
wildflower scenes pf<lb/>
the Blue Ridge Pari<lb/>
Great Smokie Moui<lb/>
Horn In T)<lb/>
To the right is the<lb/>
Hickory Kidfte Ffoi<lb/>
museum that is one<lb/>
attractions at "Hoi<lb/>
West<lb/>
Mexic<lb/>
Loungi<lb/>
Enhan<lb/>
ByKIMBl<lb/>
Chico's, the pit<lb/>
good Mexican food<lb/>
of Greenville, 1c<lb/>
Oeorgetownc Shops<lb/>
perience at Chico'<lb/>
than good food, foi<lb/>
like receiving an a<lb/>
Mexican culture,<lb/>
mospherc, music.<lb/>
M?<lb/>
vice all culminate<lb/>
festive dining ei<lb/>
Chico's has a loi<lb/>
the dining area,<lb/>
tion of drinks mciul<lb/>
from such exotic V<lb/>
drinks such as a Tec<lb/>
an Acapulco Coolei<lb/>
a large one offering<lb/>
of Mexican cuisine<lb/>
includes Appetizers<lb/>
guacamole; Saladl<lb/>
chicken, beef, or p<lb/>
all different!<lb/>
Especialidades; thej<lb/>
Chimichanga; and<lb/>
bunuelos, and Kali<lb/>
Their reknowned ch<lb/>
4'crisp flour tortillcj<lb/>
shredded beef, saut:<lb/>
bell pepper and tol<lb/>
topped with Spj<lb/>
melted cheese, soul<lb/>
guacamole It is<lb/>
mended for all patn<lb/>
The atmosphere<lb/>
?<lb/>
1 .<lb/>
- ?? .??.???.? <lb/>
MWWWfcwn "niimn iIpi mim<lb/>
mmmf-Mww-imi0mmmmm<lb/>
?mmr 4 ??. on ? ?i <lb/>
1 ?? ? Sii? ,?<lb/>
WidfrfV<lb/>
jH<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0005"/><lb/>
iENTS TOO f<lb/>
Making<lb/>
g m rhe snow for this pui-<lb/>
ld Volvo that ! have<lb/>
: occasion.<lb/>
ting to make a voter<lb/>
rt your candidate<lb/>
- whether to give her a<lb/>
her stranded in the snow ?<lb/>
all that. But my faith in<lb/>
vote canvassers is<lb/>
n wnen my pullee, a<lb/>
iged housewife (with, I<lb/>
icing, two cars in her<lb/>
:nto the passenger seat<lb/>
s Rollings, now?"<lb/>
- mg earful of propagan-<lb/>
er I carefully outline<lb/>
s and his opponents'<lb/>
rather skillfully, I think. 1<lb/>
something in the last two<lb/>
I: 1 hold the door open for<lb/>
I d my umbrella over her<lb/>
? K her way through the<lb/>
eel into the polling place.<lb/>
competitors outside, I<lb/>
? professional. I have<lb/>
Me. I wait and wait. At last<lb/>
?merges.<lb/>
Cranston ? I get them so<lb/>
m not sure which one I<lb/>
all my commitment to<lb/>
repress the strong desire to<lb/>
she plans to get home.<lb/>
.e 1 reach the Hollings vic-<lb/>
r.C. has already delivered<lb/>
n speech. We have 4 per-<lb/>
better than Askew or<lb/>
I not enough to go on.<lb/>
out two days later and en-<lb/>
:he next week.<lb/>
IC<lb/>
narchy<lb/>
By<lb/>
so<lb/>
I rtz0M:i<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
HH<lb/>
" ?&amp; .4 ? ???<lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
ggfcjNortMgarolliia Offers Much To All<lb/>
MAY 30. 1984 Page 5<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Feataret Mho.<lb/>
Picture yourself in a quaint lit-<lb/>
tle cottage surrounded by endless<lb/>
mountains that peak in purple<lb/>
mist. Directly below and around<lb/>
are clear, running streams that<lb/>
plunge into riotous waterfalls. As<lb/>
far as the eye can see, dogwoods,<lb/>
azaleas, rhododendron, laurel.<lb/>
Land Of The Sky' Perfect For<lb/>
SIS? n?Wuers bathe the mo?<lb/>
tainsides, enhancing the natural<lb/>
beauty and complimenting<lb/>
mother nature.<lb/>
s Jf!is often-called "Land of the<lb/>
ky which attracts skiiers in the<lb/>
winter and campers in the summer<lb/>
encompasses North Carolina's<lb/>
Blue R,dge Parkway and the<lb/>
jreat Smokie Mountains. The<lb/>
area sparks, in visitors and<lb/>
residents alike, a sort of inner<lb/>
peace that comes from the beauty<lb/>
and eloquence of the atmosphere<lb/>
and the relaxed aura that is<lb/>
prevclent amongst the mountain<lb/>
folk.<lb/>
Besides camping, summer<lb/>
visitors can hike, play golf or ten-<lb/>
nis, go horseback riding or visit<lb/>
one of the following sites:<lb/>
Waterfall Spectacular ? a<lb/>
region southwest of Asheville<lb/>
which embraces around 100<lb/>
waterfalls.<lb/>
Brevard Music Center ? one of<lb/>
the leading musical spots of the<lb/>
South. Concert, symphonic, and<lb/>
operatic performers entertain<lb/>
througout the summer.<lb/>
Beginning on June 24 until<lb/>
Mountain Scenery<lb/>
Above is just one of the many<lb/>
wildflower scenes prevelant along<lb/>
the Blue Ridge Parkway and The<lb/>
Grert Smokie Mountains.<lb/>
Horn In The West<lb/>
To the right is the 18th century<lb/>
Hickory Ridge Homestead, a live<lb/>
museum that is one of the<lb/>
attractions at "Horn In The<lb/>
West<lb/>
Biltmore House ? the 255<lb/>
room French Renaissance chateau<lb/>
of the late George W. Vanderbilt.<lb/>
Located on the estate is the Deer-<lb/>
park Restaurant.<lb/>
Botanical Gardens ? a moun-<lb/>
tain showcase of wild flowers,<lb/>
trees, ferns, mosses, and plants in<lb/>
the Southern Highlands.<lb/>
Blue Ridge Parkway ? the<lb/>
500-mile "backbone" of the<lb/>
scenic mountain region embracing<lb/>
the Southern portion of the Ap-<lb/>
palachian mountain range.<lb/>
Craggy Gardens ? a magnifi-<lb/>
cent display of rhododendron<lb/>
spread across Craggy Dome.<lb/>
Mount Mitchell ? the highest<lb/>
peak in eastern America contain-<lb/>
ing balsam forests, hiking and<lb/>
nature trails, and picnicking and<lb/>
camping spots. It lies north of<lb/>
Asheville.<lb/>
Linville Caverns ?<lb/>
underground caverns extending<lb/>
into the mountainside whereby<lb/>
the formations have developed in-<lb/>
to fascinating things like the<lb/>
Frozen Waterfall, the Natural<lb/>
Bridge, and the Franciscan Monk.<lb/>
Mineral Museums ? the Col-<lb/>
burn Mineral Museum in<lb/>
Asheville and the Museum of<lb/>
North Carolina Minerals on the<lb/>
Blue Ridge Parkway display<lb/>
rubies, emeralds, garnets, agate,<lb/>
aquamarines, and zircons.<lb/>
Grandfather Mountain ? the<lb/>
oldest mountain in the world, ac-<lb/>
cording to geologists, which is<lb/>
connected at the two peaks by a<lb/>
Mile High Swinging Bridge.<lb/>
Flat Rock Playhouse ? the<lb/>
state theatrelocated near Hender-<lb/>
sonville. A different play js<lb/>
presented each week by the Vaga-<lb/>
bond Players.<lb/>
Cherokee Indian Reservation<lb/>
? the home of 8,000 Eastern<lb/>
Cherokees that spans over 56,000<lb/>
acres. The historic drama "Unto<lb/>
these Hills" plays every night in<lb/>
the summer except Sundays.<lb/>
August 20 Kermit Hunter's<lb/>
"Horn in the West" will play in<lb/>
Boone, North Carolina. This<lb/>
drama explodes into action on<lb/>
three outdoor stages to revive the<lb/>
saga of the American Revolution<lb/>
as it occured in the Southern Ap-<lb/>
palachians. Other attractions at<lb/>
"Horn in the West" are the<lb/>
Hickory Ridge Homestead (an<lb/>
18th-century museum) and the<lb/>
Daniel Boone Native Gardens<lb/>
Popular spots such as The<lb/>
Blowing Rock, Tweetsie Railroad.<lb/>
and Mystery Hill should also be<lb/>
noted.<lb/>
So if you're yearning for an e<lb/>
citing spot to visit with an arra.<lb/>
things to do for entertainment<lb/>
Western North Carolina has m<lb/>
tODffer<lb/>
? <lb/>
Mexican Atmosphere,<lb/>
Lounge And Cuisine<lb/>
Enhance Chico's Image<lb/>
The Swinging Bridge stretches one mile across tne valky betwegn p-h Qf Grandfather Mountain<lb/>
Bachman- Turner- Overdrive Still Good<lb/>
IQ-T1 . i?c. r. . <lb/>
By K1MBERLV COX<lb/>
Staff Wifer<lb/>
Chico's, the place to go for<lb/>
good Mexican food, is in the heart<lb/>
of Greenville, located in the<lb/>
Oeorgetowne Shops. A dining ex-<lb/>
perience at Chico's is far more<lb/>
than good food, for in a way it is<lb/>
like receiving an actual taste of<lb/>
Mexican culture. The food, at-<lb/>
mosphere, music, mood, and ser-<lb/>
the restaurant is quaintly<lb/>
decorated, Mexican style. One<lb/>
portion of the wall in the lounge is<lb/>
surprisingly covered with clipp-<lb/>
mp from Mexican newspapers<lb/>
The other side of the wall, a bird<lb/>
niche, is painted with all sorts of<lb/>
extravagant birds in their natural<lb/>
environment and wildlife. There is<lb/>
also a fireplace and mantle in the<lb/>
lounge. The mantle is laidened<lb/>
vice all culminate to create a<lb/>
festive dining experience.<lb/>
Chico's his a lounge aside from<lb/>
the dining area. The large selec-<lb/>
tion of drinks includes everything<lb/>
from such exotic Mexican mixed<lb/>
drinks such as a Tequila sunrise to<lb/>
an Acapulco Cooler. The menu is<lb/>
a large one offering a wide variety<lb/>
of Mexican cuisine. Their menu<lb/>
includes Appetizers: nachos and<lb/>
guacamole; Salads; Tostadas:<lb/>
chicken, beef, or pork; Burritos:<lb/>
all different kinds;<lb/>
Especialidades; their reknowned<lb/>
Chimichanga; and desserts: flans,<lb/>
bunuelos, and Kaluha mousses.<lb/>
Their reknowned chimichanga is a<lb/>
"crisp flour tortilla stuffed with<lb/>
shredded beef, sauteeed in onion,<lb/>
bell pepper and tomatoes. It is<lb/>
topped with Spanish sauce,<lb/>
melted cheese, sour cream and<lb/>
guacamole It is highly recom-<lb/>
mended for all patrons.<lb/>
The atmosphere is unique ?<lb/>
with various pieces of MexicarJ<lb/>
souvenirs, small sculptures, anj<lb/>
hand made pottery.<lb/>
The Mexican music flowing in<lb/>
the background is exhilarating.<lb/>
While you dine, you may be taken<lb/>
away by it. The mood set by the<lb/>
environment, the dress of the<lb/>
staff, and the music combine to<lb/>
deliver each patron a relaxed and<lb/>
joyful meal.<lb/>
To taste Chico's for yourself,<lb/>
enjoy a meal or light drink durini<lb/>
lunch (M-F 11 a.m. to 3 p.m.). Tc<lb/>
discover true dining pleasure you<lb/>
should investigate their evening<lb/>
serving hours (M-Th 11 a.m. to IC<lb/>
p.m. and weekends 11 a.m. to 11<lb/>
p.m.). The lounge is open until 2<lb/>
a.m.<lb/>
For a good time in Greenville<lb/>
Chico's is the place.<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In 1958 Canadians Chad Allan,<lb/>
Jim Kale, Garry Peterson and<lb/>
Randy Bachman emerged as Chad<lb/>
Allan &amp; the Expressions. The year<lb/>
1965 saw the recording of a seem-<lb/>
ingly sure-fire hit, but the bias for<lb/>
American and British music so<lb/>
dominated the Canadian scene<lb/>
that "The Guess Who" was taped<lb/>
over their name on the 45 to con-<lb/>
fuse radio programmers with the<lb/>
just-emerging The Who; it must<lb/>
have worked because "Shakin'<lb/>
All Over" went to No. 22 and The<lb/>
Guess Who were born. Allan then<lb/>
left and was replaced as vocalist<lb/>
by Burton Cummings. Not until<lb/>
1969 did a follow-up succeed, but<lb/>
then the floodgates opened up and<lb/>
a tide of hits flowed through the<lb/>
mid-seventies, starting with<lb/>
"These Eyes" at No. 6. Double-<lb/>
sided "LaughingUndun"<lb/>
followed at 10th as their populari-<lb/>
ty increased. The momentum con-<lb/>
tinued with No. 5 "No Time<lb/>
then came the slamming guitar<lb/>
classic "American WomanNo<lb/>
Sugar Tonight" that went straight<lb/>
to No. 1 in March, 1970.<lb/>
Ironically, tension between the<lb/>
clean-cut Mormanism of<lb/>
Bachman and the group's lifestyle<lb/>
led him to quit then; the same year<lb/>
The Guess Who outsold the<lb/>
Beatles in singles according to<lb/>
Billboard. Greg Leskiw and Kurt<lb/>
Winter replaced Randy on guitar<lb/>
through 1972's Rockin lp.<lb/>
Leskiw and Kale departed and<lb/>
Don McDougal and Billy Wallace<lb/>
joined. After Road Food (1974)<lb/>
the shuffle continued as<lb/>
McDougal left; Dom Troiano<lb/>
(from post-Joe Walsh James<lb/>
Gang and Bush) came in. When<lb/>
Wallace departed in 1975 the<lb/>
group disbanded. Since then it's<lb/>
been reconstituted with various<lb/>
personnel.<lb/>
Other top forty songs were:<lb/>
"Hand Me Down World" and<lb/>
"Share the Land 1970; "Albert<lb/>
Flasher" and "Rain Dance<lb/>
.1971; "Star Baby "Clap For<lb/>
the Wolfman and "Dancin'<lb/>
Fool 1974. Top albums were<lb/>
American Woman, Share the<lb/>
Land, and Best of the Guess Who.<lb/>
Burton Cummings then saw<lb/>
success as a solo with "Stand<lb/>
Tall" in 1976 and "You Saved Mv<lb/>
Soul" in 1981.<lb/>
Meanwhile, after leaving The<lb/>
Guess Who in 1970, Randv<lb/>
Bachman soloed for two lp's<lb/>
before teaming with brother Rob-<lb/>
bie and Chad Allan to form Brave<lb/>
Belt. Brave Belt 1 hinted at a<lb/>
heavier sound; it picked up steam<lb/>
with Biave Belt 2 (later rereleased<lb/>
as Bachman-Turner-Bachman)<lb/>
and the<lb/>
addition of Fred Turner's vocals<lb/>
and bass. Tim Bachman's guitar<lb/>
joined for 1972's lp under the new<lb/>
name Bachman-Turner-Overdrive<lb/>
(from Trucker's Magazine). Upon<lb/>
its release in 1973 it made the U.S.<lb/>
charts as did the single "Blue Col-<lb/>
lar came out in late 1973 and<lb/>
went platinum, spawning two<lb/>
smash singles "Let It Ride" and<lb/>
"Takin' Care of Business The<lb/>
next album, Sot Fragile, rose to<lb/>
No. 1 and platinum also. "You<lb/>
Ain't Seen Nothing Yet" and<lb/>
"Roll On Down The Highwav"<lb/>
were the singles. 4 Wheel Drive<lb/>
(1975) shipped gold and included<lb/>
"Take It Like A Man No fur-<lb/>
ther top forty entries occurred<lb/>
Freeways (19) featured "M<lb/>
Wheels Won't Turn Before<lb/>
19"8's Street Action. Randv<lb/>
Bachman quit and was replaced<lb/>
by Jim Clench. Rock V Roll<lb/>
lights (1979) was archtypical<lb/>
BTO (legalities now prevent use of<lb/>
full name) and musically surpass-<lb/>
ed some earlier albums in even<lb/>
area but sales. "Jamaica" and<lb/>
"Amelia Earhart" did receive<lb/>
some airplay.<lb/>
Randy formed BTO soundalike<lb/>
Ironhorse after a short solo<lb/>
period. I highly recommend all<lb/>
BTO lp's. some of which can now<lb/>
be found in cutouts.<lb/>
Bachman-Turner-Overdrive, " an oldie bat<lb/>
?i<lb/>
mtmmjptmmmm . ???<lb/>
-??.? m<lb/>
0r"4t ? ?? ?? ??? -ffc.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 30, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Power Over Self, Not Others<lb/>
Mind Control Class Increases Mental Skills<lb/>
By BRIAN RANGFXEY<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Five-and-a-half million people<lb/>
around the world have learned the<lb/>
Sylva Mind Control technique.<lb/>
Some of those people are from<lb/>
Greenville; your next door<lb/>
neighbor may even be in that<lb/>
number.<lb/>
However, there is no cause for<lb/>
alarm. The mind that these people<lb/>
seek to control is not yours.<lb/>
"It's self-mind control, not to<lb/>
control your wife or your boss<lb/>
says Jenny Brooks, a community<lb/>
health major. She studied Sylva<lb/>
Mind Control in high school.<lb/>
"Mind control has to do with<lb/>
relaxation and visualization<lb/>
Miss Brooks will host a one-<lb/>
hour lecture about the Sylva Mind<lb/>
Control technique on Friday,<lb/>
June 1st at 7:30 p.m. in the Green-<lb/>
ville Chiropractic Clinic.<lb/>
Brooks says that many people<lb/>
are attracted to "mind control"<lb/>
lectures because they want to<lb/>
manipulate a boyfriend, relative,<lb/>
or some other person. However,<lb/>
the Sylva technique teaches you<lb/>
how to calm yourself, go to sleep<lb/>
if you have trouble, and increase<lb/>
memorization skill.<lb/>
The technique gets its name<lb/>
Carolina Theater<lb/>
from its inventor, Jose Sylva of<lb/>
Laredo, Texas. Mr. Sylva wanted<lb/>
to increase his childrens' I.Q.<lb/>
level, so he created a technique to<lb/>
teach them memorization and<lb/>
learning skills.<lb/>
Sylva's children did improve in<lb/>
school. But the training seemed to<lb/>
have an additional side effect.<lb/>
Tests indicated that Sylva's<lb/>
children had increased their in-<lb/>
tuitive skills. Their "hunches"<lb/>
seemed to follow through more<lb/>
often; their perceptive skills seem-<lb/>
ed to be heightened. In other<lb/>
words, the children were more<lb/>
successful with ESP.<lb/>
Sylva decided to research his<lb/>
new discovery by experimenting<lb/>
with 91 art students. He trained<lb/>
the art students to see if the<lb/>
techniques could increase their<lb/>
creativity. The results showed an<lb/>
increase in creativity, and again,<lb/>
success in ESP experiments.<lb/>
More than 22 years and five<lb/>
million people later, successful<lb/>
results still emerge. People report<lb/>
that, after training, they can<lb/>
manage stress, learn quickiy and<lb/>
remember well, go to sleep<lb/>
without using sleeping aids, and<lb/>
even improve their health.<lb/>
Research on the Sylva method<lb/>
has been quite extensive, and the<lb/>
training has become much more<lb/>
scientific. In his own study, Sylva<lb/>
found that four types of brain<lb/>
waves existed: alpha, beta, theta,<lb/>
and delta. Each type is iden-<lb/>
tifiable on an EEG machine.<lb/>
Sylva concentrated his training<lb/>
on the alpha waves, which occur<lb/>
during relaxation. Using his<lb/>
technique, a person could quiet<lb/>
his or her mind and body to the<lb/>
alpha state. When tn,s state is<lb/>
reached, the person can utilize the<lb/>
imagination to see him or herself<lb/>
as a quick learner, a healthier per-<lb/>
son, or being successful in<lb/>
business. It would appear that the<lb/>
imagination is the only limit to a<lb/>
person's success.<lb/>
The featured speaker at the<lb/>
June 1st lecture is Richard<lb/>
Bridges. He says that virtually<lb/>
anyone can learn the relaxation<lb/>
techniques. According to Bridges,<lb/>
"Everyone is able to reach (the<lb/>
alpha state of relaxation) in only<lb/>
three hours of training, so it's<lb/>
something that everyone in the<lb/>
world can greatly benefit from<lb/>
Bridges says that he has seen<lb/>
improvements in his own life since<lb/>
he began using the technique nine<lb/>
years ago. "I personally took the<lb/>
course after having been in the<lb/>
radio business for 18 years says<lb/>
Bridges. "I found that my<lb/>
problem-solving ability was great-<lb/>
ly heightened, I was able to relax<lb/>
in a matter of seconds, I was even<lb/>
able to take away eye glasses that I<lb/>
had been wearing for 29<lb/>
yearsI've never put them back<lb/>
on again. I've had my eyes tested<lb/>
and I have 20-20 and 20-15<lb/>
vision<lb/>
Bridges mentioned several<lb/>
outstanding examples of suc-<lb/>
cessful use of mind control. The<lb/>
1976 Superbowl champion Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh Steeler's famous Front<lb/>
Four attribute their success to the<lb/>
Sylva method. Bucky Dent of the<lb/>
New York Yankees, voted MVP<lb/>
in the 1978 World Series, also uses<lb/>
the technique.<lb/>
There are literally millions of<lb/>
less-well-known but equally real<lb/>
cases of improved lives resulting<lb/>
from using the technique.<lb/>
Documented cases of improved<lb/>
eyesight, hearing, reduction of in-<lb/>
sulin for diabetes, and disappear-<lb/>
ing scar tissue exist worldwide.<lb/>
Sylva Mind Control is taught in<lb/>
59 countries in 18 languages.<lb/>
Although the movement is grow-<lb/>
ing rapidly, it remains low in pro-<lb/>
file. "We don't buy full-page<lb/>
ads says Bridges. "The class<lb/>
spreads on the effectiveness of the<lb/>
graduates<lb/>
Bridges has been teaching the<lb/>
Sylva method for seven years in<lb/>
the south, primarily in Raleigh<lb/>
and Charlotte. The seminars take<lb/>
place over two consecutive<lb/>
weekends and cost $300. The price<lb/>
includes all materials needed. A<lb/>
special featureis that once the in-<lb/>
itial fee is paid, you can continue<lb/>
attending seminars under any in-<lb/>
structor, at any locations, at no<lb/>
additional cost. Seminars are held<lb/>
in all major cities in the United<lb/>
States.<lb/>
Many people do return for<lb/>
more. Bridges says that his<lb/>
seminars in Charlotte are almost<lb/>
always half filled with repeaters,<lb/>
and that people who repeat the<lb/>
class are very successful, both<lb/>
professionally and personally. If,<lb/>
however, you don't feel that you<lb/>
got your money's worth, you can<lb/>
get your money refunded. But of<lb/>
the five-and-a-half million people<lb/>
who have studied Sylva Mind<lb/>
Control, one one-half percent<lb/>
have asked for their money back.<lb/>
Using the techniques, people<lb/>
learn how to cope with pain or<lb/>
stress and even train their minds<lb/>
to wake up at a predetermined<lb/>
time. Some people learn weight<lb/>
control, stop smoking, or cut<lb/>
down on coffee drinking.<lb/>
Sometimes, these bad habits are<lb/>
replaced by good ones. For exam-<lb/>
ple, people often become addicted<lb/>
to the habit of smoking after a<lb/>
meal. The visualization techni-<lb/>
ques help the person sec him or<lb/>
herself eating a mint or drinking a<lb/>
cup of tea after meals, thus over-<lb/>
coming the desire to smoke the<lb/>
cigarette on a subliminal level.<lb/>
Biofeedback is sometimes used<lb/>
to help the client learn the mental<lb/>
disciplines. But always, the in-<lb/>
structors are there to guide you<lb/>
one step at a time through the<lb/>
training.<lb/>
Often, students take the course<lb/>
to learn better study habits and<lb/>
improve their grades. "There are<lb/>
step-by-step ways to study and<lb/>
take tests says Bridges. "I've<lb/>
taught children's classes on<lb/>
several occasions, and they've<lb/>
shown improved grades as a result<lb/>
of using the Sylva Mind Control<lb/>
method<lb/>
People of any age can benefit<lb/>
from uismg the techniques, and<lb/>
apparently many of Bridges'<lb/>
clients have taken full advantage<lb/>
of the opportunity that the Sylva<lb/>
method gives them.<lb/>
Baryshnikov Set To Perform In Raleigh June 20<lb/>
hp rarnlini DoMin .U  ? t .?  i? - . <lb/>
The Carolina Regional theatre<lb/>
is pleased to announce a special<lb/>
addition to their already spec-<lb/>
tacular season of blockbuster<lb/>
musicals ? Shenandoah, July<lb/>
19-22; and Westside Story<lb/>
September 6-9, 1984<lb/>
Mikhail Baryshnikov, ballet<lb/>
superstar, will dance with his<lb/>
company for one performance on<lb/>
Wednesday, June 20, 1984, at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Raleigh's Memorial<lb/>
Auditorium.<lb/>
Carolina Regional Theatre is<lb/>
offering a special bonus to our<lb/>
season members ? first oppor-<lb/>
tunity to purchase the limited<lb/>
number of tickets available for<lb/>
this unique evening.<lb/>
Tickets for season members<lb/>
may be ordered at the Civic<lb/>
Center Box Office. If you have<lb/>
not already purchased your<lb/>
membership, we encourage you to<lb/>
take advantage of the opportunity<lb/>
immediately to have first choice<lb/>
of tickets for this splendid perfor-<lb/>
mance.<lb/>
Ticket prices for the June 20th<lb/>
performance are as follows:<lb/>
Patrons, $150; Lower Orchestra,<lb/>
$50; Upper Orchestra, $40; Side<lb/>
Mezzanine, $35; and Balcony,<lb/>
Mail orders enclose your check<lb/>
and information as to number and<lb/>
price of tickets and mail to:<lb/>
Baryshnikov<lb/>
Raleigh Civic Center<lb/>
500 Fayetteville Street Mall<lb/>
Raleigh NC 27601<lb/>
To charge tickers bv phone call<lb/>
919-755-6014.<lb/>
This presentation is brought to<lb/>
vou jointly by The City of Raleigh<lb/>
and Carolina Regional Theatre.<lb/>
We urge vou to act now as<lb/>
response to the announcement of<lb/>
Baryshnikov's appearance has<lb/>
been overwhelming today.<lb/>
Why Water Your Body?<lb/>
I PRN) ? When we stop and think<lb/>
about all the things that are<lb/>
necessary for our good health,<lb/>
somewhere way down the list, we<lb/>
may mention water.<lb/>
The average adult's body is 50<lb/>
60 percent water, and every<lb/>
quart of it is necessary to keep us<lb/>
going. For instance, human blood<lb/>
plasma is about 92 percent water,<lb/>
muscle is 75 percent and bone is<lb/>
22 percent. Besides this, the body<lb/>
uses its water for a variety of<lb/>
functions ? digestion, circula-<lb/>
tion, nutrient transportation, and<lb/>
tissue building, to name a few.<lb/>
When we take a closer look at<lb/>
our body's need for water, it<lb/>
becomes easy to see why the ex-<lb/>
perts tell us to drink from six to<lb/>
eight 8-ounce glasses of it every<lb/>
day. But how many of us actually<lb/>
consume that much?<lb/>
It is good to know that besides<lb/>
what flows out of the kitchen tap,<lb/>
there are other good dietary<lb/>
sources of water. Raw vegetables<lb/>
and fruits are 70 to 95 percent<lb/>
water ? and they give us vitamins<lb/>
and other nutrients besides just<lb/>
the fluid. Meats are also high in<lb/>
water content, but because they<lb/>
must be cooked, most of the li-<lb/>
quid evaporates or drips away<lb/>
from the food.<lb/>
What about coffee, tea and cola<lb/>
drinks? Sure, they are mostly<lb/>
water in content, but they don't<lb/>
really help your body's need.<lb/>
Since all of these contain caffeine,<lb/>
they act as a mild diuretic, and ac-<lb/>
tually cause more water to be<lb/>
removed from the kidneys.<lb/>
Besides, these drinks contain very<lb/>
few, if any, nutrients.<lb/>
By far the best source of water<lb/>
in liquid form is milk. Milk is 87<lb/>
percent water and contains no<lb/>
harmful caffeine. What it does<lb/>
contain is a long list of necessary<lb/>
nutrients like protein, calcium,<lb/>
riboflavin, and much more.<lb/>
There is no doubt about it,<lb/>
water is vitally important to our<lb/>
health! For all of us, it should be a<lb/>
part of our daily diet.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Than A M<lb/>
Uaxx<lb/>
W arrior<lb/>
TWn mmmt<lb/>
Frwtg 11 m<lb/>
11 l<lb/>
Panic<lb/>
si<lb/>
E.C.I<lb/>
Coming June 7.8,9<lb/>
Mannekin<lb/>
AOVt?TISCD ITH PCH.tCY<lb/>
?cn o? tnes Mvermea item ? required to o readily<lb/>
avaiia?! for ute m eacn Kroger sjv-on except as loecif ?cai<lb/>
iv notw in tuts aa if we ao run out o? an item we in of<lb/>
fer you your choice of a comoaraoie item when avaiiaoie<lb/>
ref letting tne same savings or a raincnec wrticn win enti<lb/>
tie you to purcnase tne advertised item at tne advertised<lb/>
price witnln JO days Only one vendor coupon wiii be ac<lb/>
cepteo per item<lb/>
tern WOPnn<lb/>
Copvgnf ,9M<lb/>
troger SJ or<lb/>
CX-anttv tgnts ?eev?d<lb/>
ten sokj to oeate's<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
KROGER 2?o SKIM CHOCOLATE<lb/>
ACIDOPHILUS BUTTERMILK OR HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
PLITT THEATRES<lb/>
INDIANA JONES and<lb/>
the Temple of Doom<lb/>
If adventure has a<lb/>
name, it must be<lb/>
Indiana Jones.<lb/>
HARRISON<lb/>
FORD<lb/>
NO BARGAIN MATINEE<lb/>
whole<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
: Gai.<lb/>
cm<lb/>
&amp; v-<lb/>
?5BSS?<lb/>
Buns<lb/>
12 Ct.<lb/>
pkgs<lb/>
potato<lb/>
chips<lb/>
MILK<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
SWEET RED RIPE<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Watermelons<lb/>
$169<lb/>
Of.<lb/>
IN OUR DELI<lb/>
SANDY MAC<lb/>
Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
! 2:00-2:20-4:40-7:00-9:20 and<lb/>
11:30 FriSat.<lb/>
p"Ytcets<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
UMUMtMTCtan<lb/>
STARTS FRIDAY<lb/>
12:40-2:50-5:00-7:00-9:20<lb/>
and 11:15 FriSat.<lb/>
William Shatner<lb/>
DeForest Kelley<lb/>
TR(SKJE<lb/>
THE SEARCHl<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
LiMIl<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
jttfi-<lb/>
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Wieners<lb/>
Jpepsi free, diet<lb/>
PEPSI OR<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
cola<lb/>
fr<lb/>
12 02<lb/>
PKg.<lb/>
H li<lb/>
WltMIM<lb/>
J<lb/>
case sAija<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Big <lb/>
soft Drinks<lb/>
SUPER SUB Ea $3.99<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
Meister<lb/>
Brau<lb/>
6<lb/>
12 Oz.<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
ordu<lb/>
$169<lb/>
INCLUDES 12 oz<lb/>
potato salad and<lb/>
6 ROLLS<lb/>
wishbone<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
REGULAR OR UGHT<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
8<lb/>
PC.<lb/>
Bkt<lb/>
$4<lb/>
99<lb/>
12<lb/>
12 01.<lb/>
$489<lb/>
'Mi<lb/>
?i<lb/>
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i<lb/>
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fakwg The<lb/>
Wantd<lb/>
Leisur<lb/>
BvJ<lb/>
T. PI<lb/>
Saafl v<lb/>
Upon an i <lb/>
oe atternooa ia<lb/>
know uhar to J<lb/>
aced my firsi tesl<lb/>
seasonabh ?<lb/>
air with the aura<lb/>
grass, and pina coj<lb/>
tior. everywhere<lb/>
surps of energy<lb/>
I dktu'1 have to<lb/>
waRion if I could pi<lb/>
figure j<lb/>
only rake ao hours<lb/>
knock I<lb/>
before class ton j<lb/>
fcomething to do :<lb/>
I didr war<lb/>
though. I wanted<lb/>
know, do some! 1<lb/>
positive, bectei<lb/>
nis serve . i<lb/>
I thought. I was<lb/>
roommate<lb/>
around, but he was<lb/>
his vocabular witj<lb/>
puzzle.<lb/>
"How - <lb/>
work-out I madl<lb/>
gestion to m s<lb/>
other roommate. : I<lb/>
had and head.<lb/>
to get some Pa<lb/>
transcendental med)<lb/>
My spirit didr<lb/>
decided that I wouil<lb/>
to best utilize m e<lb/>
ing an education i<lb/>
it of being educai<lb/>
the library, at firi<lb/>
reat men of Install<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
$8.98 List<lb/>
Albums &amp;<lb/>
Newest releases<lb/>
Stexe Perry<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Talk Talk<lb/>
Psychedelic Fu<lb/>
Missing Persot<lb/>
Cyndi Lcuper<lb/>
Matthew Hiktt<lb/>
Queen<lb/>
Van Haien<lb/>
Go-Go's<lb/>
Huey Lewis A<lb/>
Orion the Huni<lb/>
TDK SAM<lb/>
101<lb/>
?iniia?wnwiwiawii ftuMH' ?????i??m<lb/>
? ???-<lb/>
"???'<lb/>
-?????: ? ??- <lb/>
5"<lb/>
'&amp;J <lb/>
X<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0007"/><lb/>
 Skills<lb/>
lown on coffee drinking.<lb/>
ometimes, these bad habits are<lb/>
?nlaced by good ones. For exam-<lb/>
le. people often become addicted<lb/>
the habit of smoking after a<lb/>
fecal. The visualization techni-<lb/>
ues help the person see him or<lb/>
;rself eating a mint or drinking a<lb/>
in of tea after meals, thus over-<lb/>
ming the desire to smoke the<lb/>
garette on a subliminal level.<lb/>
Biofeedback is sometimes used<lb/>
nelp the client learn the mental<lb/>
sciplines. But always, the in-<lb/>
ictors are there to guide you<lb/>
c step at a time through the<lb/>
:ning.<lb/>
Often, students take the course<lb/>
learn better study habits and<lb/>
iprove their grades. "There are<lb/>
-by-step ways to study and<lb/>
Ike tests says Bridges. "I've<lb/>
ught children's classes on<lb/>
ral occasions, and they've<lb/>
own improved grades as a result<lb/>
using the Svlva Mind Control<lb/>
'hod<lb/>
eopie of any age can benefit<lb/>
-Mng the techniques, and<lb/>
irently many of Bridges'<lb/>
ruts have taken full advantage<lb/>
It tie opportunity that the Sylva<lb/>
Rhod gives them.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
'axx<lb/>
 arrior<lb/>
r "ar I Mile<lb/>
f -mim<lb/>
si as<lb/>
l Madrau<lb/>
Panic<lb/>
SI M<lb/>
Coming June 7,8,9<lb/>
Mannekin<lb/>
?on<lb/>
Copvngnt 1984<lb/>
ro9r Sjv or<lb/>
Ouantirv Kgnn ??'vea<lb/>
None SOI0 To DJt?rs<lb/>
EVERYDAY<lb/>
Id - Greenville<lb/>
lOLATE<lb/>
.K OR HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
i Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
99?<lb/>
'EET RED RIPE<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
itermelons<lb/>
1<lb/>
69<lb/>
?N OUR DELI<lb/>
SANDY MAC<lb/>
Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
R SUB Ea $3.99<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
Meister<lb/>
Brau<lb/>
$69<lb/>
:CULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Coots<lb/>
$489<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 30. g?j<lb/>
Flick Lacks Content And Originality<lb/>
Making The Grade' Heading For The Shelf<lb/>
Making The Grade Is currently at the Buccaneer Theater.<lb/>
Take a quick ride back to high<lb/>
school and see Making the Grade,<lb/>
a Golan-Globus Production.<lb/>
Making the Grade means "getting<lb/>
the diploma The trick,<lb/>
however, is getting the diploma<lb/>
?vithout paying the dues.<lb/>
Judd Nelson plays Eddie<lb/>
Keaton, a lucky guy who finds<lb/>
himself at the right place at the<lb/>
right time. Judd swaps a year of<lb/>
his life and a large gambling debt<lb/>
in order to spend a year at Hoover<lb/>
Academy (prep school), taking<lb/>
the place of Palmer Woodrow III.<lb/>
(played by Dana Olsen). Judd<lb/>
ends up meeting a girl named<lb/>
Muffy (Jonna Lee).<lb/>
The film deals with the idea of<lb/>
manipulating resources to one's<lb/>
advantage while disregarding the<lb/>
usual restrictions imposed by life<lb/>
and lack of money. Eddie meets<lb/>
Palmer and together they decide<lb/>
on a way of bending the system in<lb/>
ways profitable to them. Palmer<lb/>
finally gets his degree, and Eddie<lb/>
gets his gambling debts paid off.<lb/>
A toothbrushing episode which<lb/>
makes little sense opens the<lb/>
movie. It then switches to<lb/>
Palmer's house. His father tells<lb/>
him that if he does not graduate,<lb/>
he will have not only "no trust<lb/>
fund, no allowance but he will<lb/>
"actually have to geta job<lb/>
After seven years of high school<lb/>
Palmer is still in no mood for<lb/>
school. Palmer looks around the<lb/>
age of someone who has been out<lb/>
of college several years.<lb/>
Back to Eddie. Two punks<lb/>
chase him through the city until he<lb/>
manages to evade them by climb-<lb/>
ing a fense over to Palmer's world<lb/>
? the golf course. Because his<lb/>
mind is on school, Palmer is hav-<lb/>
ing a rotten game. Later Palmer<lb/>
mentions to his apologetic friend<lb/>
that he wishes someone could go<lb/>
to school for him. This is where<lb/>
Eddie pops into the picture and<lb/>
volunteers.<lb/>
The rest of the movie is history.<lb/>
Witness the tormenting of caddies<lb/>
by overgrown high schoolers; an<lb/>
A-B-C in how to be preppy ? for<lb/>
Eddie's benefit ("preppy come<lb/>
lately, preppy come never"); the<lb/>
president's orientation to incom-<lb/>
ing new boys, and the coach's<lb/>
orientation for the caddies. Final-<lb/>
ly Muffy appears. At this point in<lb/>
the movie two-thirds of the au-<lb/>
dience (six kids) left.<lb/>
Once Eddie gets to school he<lb/>
changes. At first he seems<lb/>
unbearable to his peers. He does a<lb/>
break dance which distracts Muf-<lb/>
fy from her old boyfriend, Biff.<lb/>
Then Biff tries to get Eddie kicked<lb/>
out of school, but to no avail, for<lb/>
Eddiegets a father substitute to<lb/>
put in an appearance before the<lb/>
president, promising much needed,<lb/>
school funding. From that point,<lb/>
Eddie is an administrational hero<lb/>
and can do no wrong.<lb/>
Muffy and Eddie are very hap-<lb/>
py together. Unfortunately,<lb/>
however, Muffy notices the<lb/>
change come over Eddie. He does<lb/>
not appear to be as "real" as<lb/>
before. He acts differently. Not<lb/>
only does he act this way towa-ds<lb/>
her, but towards everyone in<lb/>
general. The problem is that he<lb/>
beats his peers at their own game.<lb/>
His is not only prep, he is<lb/>
dignified as well<lb/>
To make things worse, Muffy<lb/>
sees Eddie with the real Palmar's<lb/>
girlfriend. Muffy refuses to speak<lb/>
with Eddie. She does not realize<lb/>
that Eddie must placate the girl,<lb/>
telling her that Palmar is not<lb/>
around. Eddie sends her a bou-<lb/>
quet of roses. Muff starts seeing<lb/>
Eddie again, but once again the in two roe models ? prep and<lb/>
other girl reappears. street punk. Depending upon you<lb/>
There are some high points to orientation, you may absorb new<lb/>
this movie: Eddie's break dance information on your preferred<lb/>
and the ending. One may want to m?dd (that is, if you want one). It<lb/>
generalize one part of this movie was vguely refreshing to be<lb/>
as being equal with its other parts, alerted as to who the good guys<lb/>
Though the end was a long time in d ?d guys were by the younger<lb/>
coming, I must say that it was audience in the back<lb/>
I found this movie to be slightly<lb/>
amusing. Several times I con-<lb/>
templated walking out, mostly<lb/>
due to boredom. Your mind may<lb/>
wander during this movie, so buy<lb/>
worth the wait just to see it arrive.<lb/>
Eddie's gambling buddies final-<lb/>
ly catch up with his whereabouts.<lb/>
They give him 72 hours to get the<lb/>
cash. Eddie cannot get it until<lb/>
graduation. On top of this, Plenty of popcorn.<lb/>
Palmar returns from Paris to "? not sure whether this flick<lb/>
observe progress being made on was meant to be informative or<lb/>
his diploma. He is known around entertaining, and I'm still not sure<lb/>
campus as Eddie's cousin. wnat catagory it best fits in. Mak-<lb/>
When graduation rolls around, ? tfu Grade will probably end<lb/>
Eddie has some surprises for the UP on a sh?,f along with other<lb/>
audience (any more about this fimis of i's kind. Overall, as a<lb/>
would be telling). I was pleased to low-budget effort, this film is no<lb/>
find some honesty in the last morc or ,css of what it is supposed<lb/>
scene. to be. The main question to ask<lb/>
This film actually gives lessons yourself is can you sit through it?<lb/>
anted Immediately: Individuals With Unique<lb/>
eisure Habits And Special Characteristics<lb/>
D I T- QlrTJl' A V<lb/>
The East Carolinian classifieds<lb/>
The campus community's No. 1 marketplace<lb/>
WE PAY<lb/>
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Upon arriving home from class<lb/>
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j something to do today.<lb/>
I didn't want to waste time,<lb/>
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know, do something constructive,<lb/>
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I thought. I was going to ask my<lb/>
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jgestion to myself. I found my<lb/>
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transcendental meditation.<lb/>
My spirit didn't dwindle. I<lb/>
decided that I would find the way<lb/>
Ito best utilize my leisure time. Be-<lb/>
jing an education (at least in pur-<lb/>
suit of being educated) man I went<lb/>
to the library, at first to learn how<lb/>
great men of history utilized their<lb/>
free time. I was surprised to tina<lb/>
that many men before me have<lb/>
contemplated leisure time and a<lb/>
good number have written books<lb/>
on the subject, also. Books rang-<lb/>
ing from Money-Making Hobbies<lb/>
to The Sociology of Play and<lb/>
Recreation and Leisure Time all<lb/>
led thhis writer (reader) to con-<lb/>
clude that the ways one spends<lb/>
leisure time is closely related to<lb/>
the ways (quality) one spends<lb/>
workingstudying.<lb/>
In a thesis on leisure time,<lb/>
Marian M. Wyckoff said, "The<lb/>
worthy use of leisure time is at<lb/>
present considered as a significant<lb/>
aim at education In his thesis on<lb/>
hobbyists, George Emerson Davis<lb/>
said, "It appears that educators<lb/>
ought to know what the place of<lb/>
the school is in relation to the<lb/>
hobby interests of the school I<lb/>
say that it would make for an in-<lb/>
teresting column in The East<lb/>
Carolinian to profile some<lb/>
outstanding students with special<lb/>
respect given to their unique or in-<lb/>
triguing ways ofspending leisure<lb/>
time.<lb/>
(Editor's note: The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian will be running feature ar-<lb/>
ticles on unique individuals begin-<lb/>
ning June 6. Anyone who knows<lb/>
such a person is encouraged to<lb/>
contact the features editor or the<lb/>
author of this article at the<lb/>
newspaper office).<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057647_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 30, 1984 P?S? ?<lb/>
Pirates Conclude Season In Florida<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
The ECU baseball team went<lb/>
down to Tallahassee, Fla seeded<lb/>
last in the NCAA South Region,<lb/>
but they beat top-seeded South<lb/>
Alabama in the first round, 5-4,<lb/>
before meeting their doom against<lb/>
the Jaguars in Sunday's 18-2<lb/>
established a new NCAA single<lb/>
season record with 88 stolen<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson was the only<lb/>
bright spot for the Pirates as he<lb/>
blasted his third homer of the<lb/>
tournament in the sixth inning.<lb/>
Johnson batted .444 for the tour-<lb/>
nament, was named to the all-<lb/>
?afev ? '? - ?<lb/>
Winfred Johnson batted .444, was named to the all-tournament team,<lb/>
pitched a complete game and set school records In homeruns, RBI's<lb/>
and total bases over the weekend.<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
The Pirates were successful in<lb/>
keeping Jaguar superstar Lance<lb/>
Johnson off base in their first<lb/>
contest, but on Sunday afternoon<lb/>
Johnson let loose with three stolen<lb/>
bases, three runs and three RBI's<lb/>
to lead the USA attack. On<lb/>
Johnson's third steal of the day he<lb/>
tourney team and established new<lb/>
ECU records for career homers<lb/>
(29), single season RBI's (46) and<lb/>
total bases (115).<lb/>
ECU'S pitching was not up to<lb/>
par as the Jaguars pounded the<lb/>
Pirates for 19 hits, while capitaliz-<lb/>
ing on five errors and seven walks.<lb/>
"At this time of the tourna-<lb/>
ment, everyone is down to the<lb/>
bottom of their (pitching) staff<lb/>
ECU Coach Hal Baird said.<lb/>
"Robbie (McClanahan) should<lb/>
have been able to go farther than<lb/>
he did, but that set the tone of the<lb/>
day when he couldn't get anyone<lb/>
out<lb/>
McClanahan started on the<lb/>
mound for the Pirates, but only<lb/>
pitched one complete inning as he<lb/>
gave up three hits and four runs to<lb/>
sustain the loss.<lb/>
Play was delayed because of<lb/>
rain in the third inning, and the<lb/>
Pirates had to sit in misery as<lb/>
South Alabama's lead had by then<lb/>
balooned to 10-0.<lb/>
ECU got their first run in the<lb/>
bottom of the fourth as Mike<lb/>
Sullivan singled in Todd Evans,<lb/>
and got thier last run when<lb/>
Johnson closed out the Pirate<lb/>
scoring with his solo homer in the<lb/>
sixth.<lb/>
Baird said Sunday's loss "was a<lb/>
disappointing end to a good<lb/>
season. I'm just sorry it had to be<lb/>
such a one sided game he said.<lb/>
ECU ends their season with a<lb/>
34-13 record and as EC AC South<lb/>
Champions.<lb/>
Thursday: ECU 5, USA 4<lb/>
The Pirates escaped with a 5-4<lb/>
victory over South Alabama in<lb/>
their opening game as Johnson<lb/>
drove in Greg Hardison to score<lb/>
the winning run in the top of the<lb/>
ninth despite third base coach<lb/>
Gary Overton's attempt to get<lb/>
Hardison to stop at the bag.<lb/>
"Winfred told me going into<lb/>
the dugout that if I got on base,<lb/>
he'd get me in Hardison said.<lb/>
"I saw Coach 'O' all the way, but<lb/>
there was no way I was going to<lb/>
stop<lb/>
Johnson was once again the star<lb/>
for the Pirates as he went four-<lb/>
for-five from the plate, scored<lb/>
two runs and collected two RBI's.<lb/>
The Jaguars opened the scoring<lb/>
in the bottom of the second after<lb/>
Jim Filotei singled, and then came<lb/>
home on a two-run shot by Brian<lb/>
Simrnermacker over the right field<lb/>
fence.<lb/>
Johnson came back with a<lb/>
homer of his own in the fourth to<lb/>
narrow the margin to 2-1.<lb/>
The two teams exchanged runs<lb/>
in the fifth, and then ECU finally<lb/>
grabbed the lead in the seventh in-<lb/>
ning. Hardison doubled with one<lb/>
out, then scored on a Todd Evans<lb/>
single. Johnson's third hit of the<lb/>
game moved Evans to third, and<lb/>
then a throwing error to first base<lb/>
enabled Evans to easily score.<lb/>
USA tied it back up in the<lb/>
eighth, but Hardison's mad dash<lb/>
from second base in the top of the<lb/>
ninth enabled the Pirates to come<lb/>
away with the victory.<lb/>
Friday: ECU 7. FSU 4<lb/>
Johnson smashed a grand slam<lb/>
and pitched his third straight com-<lb/>
plete game in post season play to<lb/>
lead the Pirates to a 7-4 victory<lb/>
over Florida State in second<lb/>
round action.<lb/>
Johnson did a respectable job<lb/>
from the mound as he gave up<lb/>
eight hits, one walk, while striking<lb/>
out four. "Under the cir-<lb/>
cumstances, that's the best I've<lb/>
pitched in a while. I never really<lb/>
got tired till the eighth inning<lb/>
Johnson said. "I don't throw the<lb/>
ball that hard, so I have to rely on<lb/>
mixing up my pitches<lb/>
With the score tied at two in the<lb/>
top of the third, Hardison reached<lb/>
first on an error, Wells singled<lb/>
and Evans reached on another<lb/>
Seminole eiror to load the bases.<lb/>
Johnson came to the plate next,<lb/>
the result: ECU 6 FSU 2.<lb/>
The game remained relatively<lb/>
quiet until the eighth, but ECU's<lb/>
lead was too big to overcome as<lb/>
the Seminoles could only narrow<lb/>
the margin to three runs.<lb/>
Saturday: Miami 6, ECU 4<lb/>
Bob Davidson got his first start<lb/>
since April 25, but the Pirates<lb/>
couldn't help him out as they were<lb/>
handed their first defeat of the<lb/>
Boh Davidson started his first game in more then a month thai<lb/>
weekend in the NCAA playoffs.<lb/>
tournament against Miami.<lb/>
"I was disappointed that we<lb/>
made so many mistakes defensive-<lb/>
ly, we haven't been doing that so<lb/>
much this year Baird said. "We<lb/>
also had our chances to score<lb/>
more runs, but we just didn't do<lb/>
it<lb/>
After Darren Mandel smashed<lb/>
a homer in the first inning, the<lb/>
Pirates forged to a quick 3-1 lead<lb/>
in the top of the third. Miami,<lb/>
however, came back with three<lb/>
runs of their own in the fourth to<lb/>
take a 4-3 lead.<lb/>
The Pirate- were able to tie it<lb/>
back up in the fifth, but severai<lb/>
missed scoring opportunities<lb/>
enabled Miami to come away ?<lb/>
a hard fought 6-4 victory.<lb/>
Penn State Signed By Karr<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
SforUUllor<lb/>
FOOTBALL: ECU has signed a<lb/>
two-year contract with Penn State<lb/>
beginning in 1985, Director of<lb/>
Athletics Dr. Ken Karr announced<lb/>
late last week.<lb/>
"We are very excited about be-<lb/>
ing able to add another of the<lb/>
country's major independents<lb/>
Karr said. "We want to let the<lb/>
world know we want to schedule<lb/>
the major independents of the<lb/>
northeast<lb/>
Karr also added that the signing<lb/>
of PSU is "just another step in<lb/>
trying to schedule the best teams<lb/>
in college football<lb/>
The Pirates already have a 1985<lb/>
schedule that includes defending<lb/>
national champion Miami, Sugar<lb/>
Bowl champion Auburn, LSU,<lb/>
South Carolina, Tulsa and North<lb/>
Carolina State.<lb/>
ECU replaces Minnesota on<lb/>
Penn State's schedule after the<lb/>
Gophers and Nittany Lions could<lb/>
not reach a financial agreement.<lb/>
The announcement of the<lb/>
agreement with Penn State marks<lb/>
the third major schedule addition<lb/>
the Pirates have made in the last<lb/>
three weeks. Southeastern Con-<lb/>
ference powerhouses Auburn and<lb/>
LSU were both signed earlier in<lb/>
the month.<lb/>
The Pirates and Nittany Lions<lb/>
will meet Sept. 21, 1985 and Sept.<lb/>
27, 1986, with both games<lb/>
scheduled to be played in Penn<lb/>
State's Beaver Stadium.<lb/>
BASEBALL: ECU head coach<lb/>
Hal Baird, who just returned with<lb/>
his team from the NCAA regional<lb/>
playoffs, may not be around<lb/>
Greenville when it comes time for<lb/>
1985 baseball season.<lb/>
Sports Update<lb/>
Auburn Athletic Director Pat<lb/>
Dye, who also coaches the foot-<lb/>
ball team, has offered Baird full<lb/>
coaching responsibilities of the<lb/>
school's baseball team for next<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Dye, who coached the Pirate<lb/>
football team in the late 1970's, is<lb/>
reportedly good friends with<lb/>
Baird and is aware of his reputa-<lb/>
tion of being a winner.<lb/>
In five years at the Pirate helm,<lb/>
Baird has compiled a 145-66-1<lb/>
record, has made three ap-<lb/>
pearences in the NCAA playoffs,<lb/>
has won two out of a possible<lb/>
three ECAC South Champion-<lb/>
ships and has graduated ten<lb/>
players to the professional ranks.<lb/>
Baird has not made a decison<lb/>
on whether to accept Dye's offer,<lb/>
but said he would be willing to<lb/>
stay at ECU if two requests were<lb/>
met. First, he would like to be<lb/>
taken off the teaching staff and<lb/>
coach only. Secondly, he would<lb/>
like to see his budget doubled.<lb/>
When asked to rate his budget<lb/>
among the other 10 Division I<lb/>
schools in North Carolina, Baird<lb/>
said his was ninth at best.<lb/>
ECU Athletic Director Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr was reached by telephone<lb/>
while the team was still competing<lb/>
in the NCAA's, and was unaware<lb/>
of any requests made by Baird.<lb/>
When asked if he was prepared to<lb/>
meet Baird's requests, Karr said<lb/>
he would do "whatever is<lb/>
necessary to maintain a strong<lb/>
baseball program at ECU<lb/>
BASKETBALL: The ECAC<lb/>
South Conference has petitioned<lb/>
the NCAA rules committee for<lb/>
the use of a 45-second shot clock<lb/>
for all 1984-85 basketball games.<lb/>
The use of the shot clock was<lb/>
one of the items approved by<lb/>
ECAC South athletic directors<lb/>
during the league's spring meeting<lb/>
held at UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
The conference also confirmed<lb/>
that the 1985 post-season basket-<lb/>
ball tournament will be held<lb/>
March 7-9 on the William &amp; Mary<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
All league members: Rich-<lb/>
mond, James Madison, William &amp;<lb/>
Mary, George Mason, Navy,<lb/>
ECU, American and UNC-W,<lb/>
turned down the use of the three-<lb/>
point shot.<lb/>
A baseball format was also ap-<lb/>
proved which would pit each con-<lb/>
ference team, except Navy,<lb/>
against each other three times next<lb/>
season. This will lead to a post-<lb/>
season torunament to decide the<lb/>
automatic NCAA baseball bid.<lb/>
"We feel these meetings have<lb/>
been our most productive ever<lb/>
ECAC South President Dean<lb/>
Ehlers said.<lb/>
FOOTBALL: "That's just<lb/>
something the newspapers made<lb/>
up Pirate Coach Ed Emory said<lb/>
in reference to reports that he was<lb/>
mentioned as a possible successor<lb/>
to Miami coach Howard<lb/>
Schnellenberger who just recently<lb/>
accepted a coaching job in the<lb/>
United States Football League.<lb/>
Schnellenberger said he recom-<lb/>
mended Miami officials to hire<lb/>
defensive coordinator Tom<lb/>
Olivadotti, but Emory is reported-<lb/>
ly still in the running for the job<lb/>
along with Terry Donahue of<lb/>
UCLA and Dave McClain of<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Toay Baker will have the opportunity to play against such teams as<lb/>
Miami, Auburn, LSU and Penn State in 1985.<lb/>
Volleyball Team Adds Height To Roster<lb/>
Lita<lb/>
<lb/>
(right) was the<lb/>
she'U he aa assistant<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
Staff Witt<lb/>
The ECU women's volleyball<lb/>
team competed against a field of<lb/>
top Division 1 teams last fall<lb/>
resulting in a 3-23 record and their<lb/>
"worst season ever" according to<lb/>
head coach Imogene Turner.<lb/>
"Last year our greatest pro-<lb/>
blem was height Turner said.<lb/>
"Lida Lamas the team captain<lb/>
and our best hitter was only<lb/>
5'9?"<lb/>
Unfortunately, the lady pirates<lb/>
lost Lamas to graduation, but<lb/>
Lamas will return next fall to<lb/>
share her experience and<lb/>
knowledge with the team as an<lb/>
assistant volunteer under Turner.<lb/>
In preparation for next fall,<lb/>
Turner has recruited several taller<lb/>
players for the women's team.<lb/>
Sharon Shank, a 5'11" transfer<lb/>
out of Chowan College, is a<lb/>
"standout hitter" and will "pro-<lb/>
bably be the team leader said<lb/>
Turner.<lb/>
Shank graduated from Oviedo<lb/>
High School in Florida where she<lb/>
was an All-Conference player and<lb/>
named the "Best Defensive<lb/>
Volleyball Player for the Lady<lb/>
Braves in her freshman year<lb/>
Mary Barnum, a 53" transfer<lb/>
also out of Chowan, is a defensive<lb/>
specialist and was second in her<lb/>
conference for serve percentages.<lb/>
Barnum graduated from West<lb/>
Carteret High School where she<lb/>
was All-Conference. She went on<lb/>
to be named " Chowan's Best<lb/>
Defensive Player in each of her<lb/>
two years at Chowan and was the<lb/>
teams MVP this past season<lb/>
Traci Smith, a 6-foot hitter out<lb/>
of Ledford Senior High School,<lb/>
led her team to a state champion-<lb/>
ship last year. Smith was All-<lb/>
Conference in volleyball and the<lb/>
most valuable player for the Led-<lb/>
ford team.<lb/>
In addition, Smith graduated<lb/>
twelfth out of one hundred<lb/>
ninety-one seniors and received<lb/>
the outstanding senior award.<lb/>
Coach Turner is impressed with<lb/>
Smith and beleives she will be a<lb/>
valuable part of next year's team.<lb/>
"She's got a real good<lb/>
background Turner said.<lb/>
Dawn Langley, a 5 10"<lb/>
freshman out of Virginia Beach,<lb/>
will be a sophomore next fall and<lb/>
will also contribute to the '84<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Donna Zekonis, a 6-foot hitter,<lb/>
was to play last season but unfor-<lb/>
tunately was in an auto accident.<lb/>
Zekonis is a transfer out of the<lb/>
University of Delaware and<lb/>
should be an important factor to<lb/>
the team.<lb/>
Turner is planning to hold open<lb/>
tryouts in August to fill two more<lb/>
positions on the women's team.<lb/>
Last year, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
followed a rigorous schedule in<lb/>
which they faced the top teams on<lb/>
the east coast. "By the time we<lb/>
got started we were already<lb/>
dead Turner said. "This year<lb/>
we're coming back with more<lb/>
height and a better schedule.<lb/>
The '84 schedule has the Pirates<lb/>
matched against some smaller<lb/>
teams at first and then against top<lb/>
teams like UNC and Duke later in<lb/>
the season.<lb/>
"It will give us a little bit of<lb/>
time to participate with the<lb/>
others, learn to play together and<lb/>
build up our confidence before<lb/>
Playing the harder teams<lb/>
Turner said.<lb/>
Last year the Lady Pirates were<lb/>
an independent team, but this<lb/>
g? win be competing in the<lb/>
fcCAC conference and ECAC<lb/>
t?fSf?cnt in November.<lb/>
With the new players we'll be<lb/>
trcaUy improved, I hope we'U be<lb/>
able to compete at the conference<lb/>
championships Turner added.<lb/>
Co<lb/>
Ap,<lb/>
Sov,<lb/>
LAUSAN)<lb/>
(UPI) ? The<lb/>
Angeles Oil<lb/>
Committee aj<lb/>
a change of<lb/>
nations bo<lb/>
Games<lb/>
"The dea<lb/>
June 2. The<lb/>
said Peter L<lb/>
dent of the or<lb/>
before meet it<lb/>
tional O I<lb/>
ecutive B<lb/>
Led b) I<lb/>
comm .<lb/>
nounced I j<lb/>
to the Lov -j<lb/>
inadequi<lb/>
athlete j<lb/>
Olymr<lb/>
Spc"<lb/>
Salvador<lb/>
might be<lb/>
the Garr.tr<lb/>
$28,000 en:<lb/>
With.<lb/>
ticipar.<lb/>
from 1<lb/>
Garne<lb/>
Sovie'<lb/>
compe;<lb/>
Olymr<lb/>
Valer<lb/>
Ueben<lb/>
IOC Pre- -il<lb/>
Samaranch<lb/>
Soviet-<lb/>
Samaranch<lb/>
bas-i.<lb/>
becoming 1<lb/>
is to travel I<lb/>
for tall p<lb/>
"Il is verj<lb/>
and e d?r<lb/>
tion being s<lb/>
Ueberr<lb/>
somethir<lb/>
meeting in<lb/>
everyone<lb/>
Angeie-<lb/>
Uebe<lb/>
organizer- tl<lb/>
acceptance<lb/>
bettering th<lb/>
lineup foi<lb/>
pics.<lb/>
He was s<lb/>
confirmatio<lb/>
which brok<lb/>
Union by<lb/>
compete in<lb/>
Several A<lb/>
eluding Et<lb/>
replied, but<lb/>
the nation-<lb/>
boycott, h<lb/>
send a team<lb/>
Of the I<lb/>
committees<lb/>
they will<lb/>
Afghan<lb/>
Caechosiova<lb/>
many. Hung<lb/>
Poland, So<lb/>
and the<lb/>
Korea ren<lb/>
Iran an noun<lb/>
not send a I<lb/>
Ueberroth<lb/>
the IOC to<lb/>
ficials from<lb/>
tries from<lb/>
Angeie-<lb/>
"The ap<lb/>
rests with the<lb/>
tions he -a<lb/>
that these of<lb/>
secure in th<lb/>
Soviets sa<lb/>
the safetv of<lb/>
was one<lb/>
their nor<lb/>
Ueberroth<lb/>
delegation a<lb/>
Lausanne w;<lb/>
federation- tt<lb/>
because ma<lb/>
been stnppec<lb/>
Samaranch<lb/>
for Soviet p<lb/>
Chernenk<lb/>
boycott.<lb/>
"It is very<lb/>
Soviets to cJhl<lb/>
I will fight ui<lb/>
Samaranch sj<lb/>
ing an K<lb/>
meeting<lb/>
delegates.<lb/>
The talks c<lb/>
1988 Seoul<lb/>
received critij<lb/>
sports minisd<lb/>
meeting in Cj<lb/>
Montes<lb/>
Salvador's<lb/>
a news confer<lb/>
While Moi<lb/>
open for his<lb/>
tion, he addec<lb/>
national comi<lb/>
$28,000 entr<lb/>
June 2.<lb/>
The Inter<lb/>
Committee oi<lb/>
penses for<lb/>
Salvador, bi<lb/>
Salvador ans<lb/>
funds to sho<lb/>
must pay<lb/>
nation's yout<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
<lb/>
W0MM<lb/>
??-??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0009"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
orida<lb/>
m more then a month this<lb/>
I to a quick 3-1 lead<lb/>
the ihird. Miami,<lb/>
ack with three<lb/>
vn in the fourth to<lb/>
ad.<lb/>
ere able to tie it<lb/>
fifth, but several<lb/>
ring opportunities<lb/>
Miami to come away with<lb/>
'd fought 6-4 victory.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
P' against such teams as<lb/>
1985.<lb/>
o Roster<lb/>
coast. "By the time we<lb/>
parted e were already<lb/>
Turner said. "This year<lb/>
coming back with more<lb/>
V and a better schedule.<lb/>
e 84 schedule has the Pirates<lb/>
ped against some smaller<lb/>
at first and then against top<lb/>
ilke UNC and Duke later in<lb/>
tason.<lb/>
will give us a little bit of<lb/>
Participate with the<lb/>
learn to play together and<lb/>
up our confidence before<lb/>
H the harder teams<lb/>
pr said.<lb/>
it year the Lady Pirates were<lb/>
tidependent team, but this<lb/>
pey will be competing in the<lb/>
I conference and EC AC<lb/>
lent in November.<lb/>
ith the new players we'll be<lb/>
? improved, I hope we'll be<lb/>
o compete at the conference<lb/>
Jionships Turner added<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
Appeals To<lb/>
Soviets<lb/>
LAUSANNE, Switzerland<lb/>
(VI I) ? The president of the Los<lb/>
Angeles Olympic Organizing<lb/>
Committee appealed Monday for<lb/>
a change of heart by communist<lb/>
nations boycotting the Summer<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
"The deadline for entries is<lb/>
June 2. The door is still open "<lb/>
said Peter Ueberroth, the presi-<lb/>
dent of the organizing committee<lb/>
before meeting with the Interna-<lb/>
tional Olympic Committee Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Board in Lausanne.<lb/>
Led by the Soviet Union, 12<lb/>
communist countries have an-<lb/>
nounced they will not send teams<lb/>
to the Los Angeles Games, citing<lb/>
inadequate security for their<lb/>
athletes and U.S. violations of the<lb/>
Olympic charter.<lb/>
Sports officials from El<lb/>
Salvador said Monday the nation<lb/>
might be forced to withdraw from<lb/>
the Games unless it could raise the<lb/>
S28,000 entry fee by June 2.<lb/>
Without funds for the par-<lb/>
ticipants, "We will be absent<lb/>
from Los Angeles Olympic<lb/>
Games, sadly accompanying the<lb/>
Soviet Union boycott of the world<lb/>
competition said Salvadoran<lb/>
OKmpic committee president<lb/>
Valerio Montes.<lb/>
Ueberroth praised the efforts of<lb/>
IOC President Juan Antonio<lb/>
Samaranch to persuade the<lb/>
Soviets to rescind the boycott.<lb/>
Samaranch, who was Spain's am-<lb/>
bassador to Moscow before<lb/>
becoming IOC president in 1980,<lb/>
is to travel to Moscow Wednesday<lb/>
for talks with Soviet leaders.<lb/>
"It is very courageous of him,<lb/>
and we appreciate the determina-<lb/>
tion being shown by the IOC<lb/>
Ueberroth said. "I hope<lb/>
something will come ouyt of the<lb/>
meeting in Moscow. We want<lb/>
everyone to come to Los<lb/>
Angeles<lb/>
Ueberroth said the Los Angeles<lb/>
organizers have received written<lb/>
acceptances from 128 nations ?<lb/>
bettering the record 122-nation<lb/>
lineup for the 1972 Munich Olvm-<lb/>
pics.<lb/>
He was still awaiting written<lb/>
confirmation from Rumania,<lb/>
which broke with the Soviet<lb/>
Union ny announcing it would<lb/>
compete in Los Angeles.<lb/>
Several African countries, in-<lb/>
cluding Ethiopia, have not<lb/>
replied, but Mozambique, one of<lb/>
the nations expected to join the<lb/>
boycott, has confirmed it will<lb/>
send a team.<lb/>
Of the 154 national Olympic<lb/>
committees, the following said<lb/>
they will boycott the Games:<lb/>
Afghanistan, Bulgaria,<lb/>
Czechoslovakia, Cuba, East Ger-<lb/>
many, Hungary, Laos, Mongolia,<lb/>
Poland, South Yemen, Vietnam<lb/>
and the Soviet Union. North<lb/>
Korea remains uncertain, and<lb/>
ran announced last year it would<lb/>
not send a team.<lb/>
Ueberroth denied he had asked<lb/>
the IOC to bar judges and of-<lb/>
ficials from the boycotting coun-<lb/>
tries from officiating in Los<lb/>
Angeles.<lb/>
The appointment of judges<lb/>
rests with the international federa-<lb/>
tions he said. "I only suggested<lb/>
that these officials might feel in-<lb/>
secure in the light of what the<lb/>
Soviets said about their fears for<lb/>
the safety of their athletes, which<lb/>
as one of the reasons given for<lb/>
their non-attendance<lb/>
Ueberroth said the Los Angeles<lb/>
delegation also would meet in<lb/>
Lausanne with the international<lb/>
federations to rearrange programs<lb/>
because many entry lists have<lb/>
been stripped of competitors.<lb/>
Samaranch will carry a letter<lb/>
for Soviet president Konstantin<lb/>
Chernenko in an effort to list the<lb/>
boycott.<lb/>
"It is very difficult to get the<lb/>
Soviets to change their minds, but<lb/>
I will fight until the last minute<lb/>
Samaranch said Monday follow-<lb/>
ing an IOC executive board<lb/>
meeting with Los Angeles<lb/>
delegates.<lb/>
The talks could also involve the<lb/>
1988 Seoul Olympics, which<lb/>
received criticism from Socialist<lb/>
sports ministers at their May 24<lb/>
meeting in Czechoslovakia.<lb/>
Montes announced El<lb/>
Salvador's possible withdrawal in<lb/>
a news conference.<lb/>
While Montes left the door<lb/>
open for his country's participa-<lb/>
tion, he added it was doubtful his<lb/>
national committee could raise the<lb/>
$28,000 entry fee, which is due<lb/>
June 2.<lb/>
The International Olympic<lb/>
Committee offered to pay all ex-<lb/>
penses for six people from El<lb/>
Salvador, but Montes said the<lb/>
Salvadorans would refuse the<lb/>
funds to show the government it<lb/>
must pay more attention to the<lb/>
nation's youth and sports' pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN MAY 30 1MU 9<lb/>
It's Not Too Late<lb/>
For Intramurals<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
ECL'f?<lb/>
Th, four member cheeri?dtag ,? wu, re ,t?d?, nonU o? fell  nek sUdl?m!<lb/>
Cheerleaders Selected<lb/>
A 14-member cheerleading<lb/>
squad has been selected for East<lb/>
Carolina University athletics for<lb/>
the 1984-85 school year.<lb/>
Angela Amos, junior,<lb/>
Reidsville, NC, Reidsville Senior<lb/>
High School, daughter of Mr &amp;<lb/>
Mrs. David Glenn Amos.<lb/>
Pete Boffelli, sophomore,<lb/>
Havelock, NC, Havelock High<lb/>
School, son of Mr. &amp; Mrs Peter<lb/>
Boffelli.<lb/>
Leigh Brown, sophomore,<lb/>
Charlotte, NC, East Mecklenburg<lb/>
High School, daughter of Mr<lb/>
Lloyd Brown.<lb/>
Lisa Chandler, junior, Fayet-<lb/>
teville, NC, Douglas Byrd High<lb/>
School, daughter of Mr. &amp; Mrs<lb/>
Eugene Chandler.<lb/>
James Elkins, junior, Clarkton,<lb/>
NC, Clarkton High School, son<lb/>
of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Edwin Elkins.<lb/>
Karen Hall, junior, Burlington,<lb/>
NC, Graham High School<lb/>
daughter of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Dean<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
Patti Harrill, senior,<lb/>
Thomasville, NC, East Davidson<lb/>
High School, daughter of Mr. &amp;<lb/>
Mrs. Kenneth Harrill.<lb/>
Charles Ingle, senior, Newton,<lb/>
NC, Newton-Conover High<lb/>
School, son of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Roy<lb/>
Ingle.<lb/>
Tony Pearce, sophomore,<lb/>
Rocky Mount, NC, North<lb/>
Edgecombe High School, son of<lb/>
Mr. &amp; Mrs. Joseph Pearce.<lb/>
Scott Perry, senior, Greenville,<lb/>
NC, Greenville Christian<lb/>
Academy, son of Mr. &amp; Mrs. Ben-<lb/>
ny Perry.<lb/>
Nell Reaves, sophomore, Wilm-<lb/>
ington, NC, Hoggard High<lb/>
School, daughter of Mr. &amp; Mrs.<lb/>
Tom Reaves.<lb/>
Chris Shore, sophomore, Ad-<lb/>
vance, NC, Davie High School,<lb/>
son of Mr. &amp; Mrs. John Shore.<lb/>
Sam Whitehead, junior,<lb/>
Scotland Neck, NC, Hobgood<lb/>
Academy, son of Mr. Arthur<lb/>
Whitehead.<lb/>
Patti Williams, junior, Green-<lb/>
ville and formerly Macon, GA,<lb/>
Southwest High School, daughter<lb/>
of Mr. Cecil Williams.<lb/>
All members selected for the<lb/>
new squad have been members of<lb/>
either the varsity or junior varsity<lb/>
squad at East Carolina during the<lb/>
past year(s).<lb/>
Don't be discouraged just<lb/>
because you may have missed a<lb/>
few intramural activities, there are<lb/>
still some left to enjoy thanks to<lb/>
the Department of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services. On June<lb/>
4th and 5th, registration begins<lb/>
"FORTHEFUNOFIT The first<lb/>
of two Putt-Putt tournaments -<lb/>
one in each session - begins Tues-<lb/>
day, June 5th from noon until 11<lb/>
p.m. at Greenville's Putt-Putt<lb/>
Course on Highway 33. You can<lb/>
still become ECU's intramural<lb/>
Putt-Putt champ.<lb/>
Practice your putting expertise<lb/>
at putt-putt and put your game all<lb/>
together during the Intramural<lb/>
Golf Classic. Registration for play<lb/>
at the Ayden Country Club is<lb/>
June 11 and 12. Play is Wednes-<lb/>
day, June 13 from 9 a.m. to 4<lb/>
p.m. For more details on both<lb/>
events, come by Room 204,<lb/>
Memorial Gym and get registered.<lb/>
Kind of hooked on the out-<lb/>
doors? Trail riding at Jarman's<lb/>
Stables is offered every Thursday<lb/>
at 4 p.m. through the Intramural<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation Center. The<lb/>
cost is 5.00 per hour with<lb/>
transportation provided. There<lb/>
are still several "Adventure<lb/>
Trips" sponsored by the Outdoor<lb/>
Recreation Center including a<lb/>
local canoe trip May 30 and a<lb/>
windsurfing-sailing clinic June 2.<lb/>
Just call Memorial Gym,<lb/>
757-6911, for more details.<lb/>
The softball season is off to a<lb/>
running start with games continu-<lb/>
ing on Mondays and Wednesdays.<lb/>
The season will finish off with a<lb/>
championship tournament in<lb/>
June. With competitiveness set so<lb/>
high anyone could get the prize;<lb/>
so look out for the softball victor!<lb/>
Three-on-three basketball starts<lb/>
its season this week with games on<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday. Look for<lb/>
both the mens and womens cham-<lb/>
pions; alias "Court Masters" and<lb/>
"Court Misses The talent<lb/>
abounds on the court so don't<lb/>
miss the action.<lb/>
There is still time to relax and<lb/>
enjoy Intramural activities this<lb/>
first session. Just get up and sign<lb/>
up at Memorial Gym, Room 204<lb/>
Don't miss out on all the fun.<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!<lb/>
FISHERMAN'S<lb/>
m tP!?RIAL G0ym Free P,ay; MEMORIA?WF??7: a m - 8<lb/>
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a.m 5 p.m Sat Sun 1 p.m4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL (MG 115)<lb/>
Equipment Check-Out:<lb/>
M-Th 11 a.m 8 p.m Fri. 11<lb/>
a.m 5 p.m Sat Sun 1 p.m 4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
MINGES: M-F 4 p.m 7 p.m<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Weight Room:<lb/>
MEMORIAL: M-Th 8 a.m 8<lb/>
p.m Fri. 8 a.m 5 p.m Sat<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m4p?m.<lb/>
MINGES: M-Th 3 p.m 7 p.m<lb/>
Fri Sat Sun. Closed<lb/>
Racquetball Reservations:<lb/>
M-F 11:30 a.m 3 p.m.(in<lb/>
person); M-F 12 noon-3<lb/>
p.m.(phone in).<lb/>
Outdoor Recreation:<lb/>
Information-Rentals<lb/>
M-F 1 p.m 5 p.m TWTh 2<lb/>
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Lunch Buffet -13 am-2pm Daily<lb/>
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Dinner Buffet - 5-8pm<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Wed. $3.09<lb/>
Spaghetti - 5-8pm Thurs.<lb/>
(All You Can Eat) $2.65<lb/>
Happy HoursDaily - 2 til 5pm<lb/>
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Video Games Big Screen TV<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town. Corner of Cotanche &amp; 10th St<lb/>
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Looted Next to the East 10th St Pizza Hut<lb/>
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yguhave to do your own laundry, do it in style at the Wash Pub<lb/>
f<lb/>
<pb facs="00057647_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 30, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Pirate Mascot Named Pee Dee<lb/>
No longer is the Pirate of East<lb/>
Carolina University just the Pirate<lb/>
mascot.<lb/>
The Pirate is now known by the<lb/>
name of Powerful Pee Dee!<lb/>
During the halftime activities of<lb/>
the spring game the name Power-<lb/>
ful Pee Dee was given to the<lb/>
mascot. The name was suggested<lb/>
during a contest in area elemen-<lb/>
tary schools.<lb/>
The winning class with the<lb/>
name Powerful Pee Dee was Mrs.<lb/>
Merritt's fifth grade class at G.R.<lb/>
Whittfield School in Grimesland.<lb/>
"We had a tremendous time<lb/>
with our school visits in talking<lb/>
with the area students about<lb/>
names said Dave Hart, assistant<lb/>
athietic director for marketing.<lb/>
"Our Pirate was well received and<lb/>
I think we really developed some<lb/>
great public relations with the<lb/>
area schools.<lb/>
"Without question, our Pirate<lb/>
visits were a success. And we cer-<lb/>
tainly congratulate Mrs. Merritt's<lb/>
class for giving us the winning<lb/>
name<lb/>
So, in the future, it's Powerful<lb/>
Pee Dee the Pirate!<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?? Otm.ivttic Mvi.<lb/>
7S4-3023 ? 24HRS.<lb/>
PLAZA SHELL<lb/>
?4 hour Towing Service<lb/>
Ll-Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Mears Wins<lb/>
Indy 500<lb/>
Indianapolis (UP1) ? Rick Mears<lb/>
says it's sweeter the second time<lb/>
around He now belongs to an elite<lb/>
corps of men who have won the In-<lb/>
dianapolis 500-mile auto race more<lb/>
than once.<lb/>
The 32-year-old driver from<lb/>
Bakers field, Calif ran away from the<lb/>
fastest field in auto racing history Sun-<lb/>
day and won the 68th lndy classic with<lb/>
a speed record.<lb/>
This triumph is different, he said,<lb/>
from his 1979 victory here.<lb/>
"There vas a time a couple of years<lb/>
ago when some people said 1 was just<lb/>
lucky Mears said Monday morning<lb/>
as he vaited for the traditional<lb/>
winner's picture session. "But that's<lb/>
kind of come around a little bit. 1 don't<lb/>
ee or hear as much of that as I used<lb/>
to<lb/>
i think the record showed it just<lb/>
wasn't the way things were. That's<lb/>
kind of taken the lucky tag away.<lb/>
"It did bother me then, but I think<lb/>
I'm a more mature person now. And<lb/>
I'm enjoying this one (Indy victory)<lb/>
even more than the first one Mears<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He was officially declared the winner<lb/>
b race officials Monday, with Colom-<lb/>
bian rookie Roberto Guerrero, second<lb/>
and two-time winner Al Unser third.<lb/>
Rookie Al Holbert finished fourth,<lb/>
owed by fellow rookie Michael An-<lb/>
dretti, the son of former Indy winner<lb/>
Mario Andretti.<lb/>
Meanwhile. Pat Bedard, the writer-<lb/>
turned-racer involved in a terrifying<lb/>
.h Sunday, remained hospitalized in<lb/>
stable condition Monday with a frac-<lb/>
tured jaw and severe concussion.<lb/>
Gordon Johncock, another two-time<lb/>
Indy winner, was involved in another<lb/>
tsh Sunday and suffered a broken<lb/>
left ankle. He remained hospitalized in<lb/>
satisfactory condition Monday.<lb/>
Race officials made no change in the<lb/>
final position of the 33 cars that started<lb/>
the race from the unofficial standings<lb/>
announced Sunday.<lb/>
Guerrero, Unser, Holbert and An-<lb/>
dretti each had completed 198 of the<lb/>
e's 200 laps when Mears crossed the<lb/>
:sh line. The positions of the four<lb/>
drivers were thus determined by when<lb/>
they completed their 198th lap.<lb/>
"There is no official protest said<lb/>
chief steward Tom Binford.<lb/>
Mears was left unchallenged over the<lb/>
A 32 laps Sunday after defending<lb/>
champion and record-breaking pole-<lb/>
sitter Tom Sneva was forced out of the<lb/>
.r.petmon with a broken universal<lb/>
joint. Sneva, who had hoped to<lb/>
become only the fourth driver to win<lb/>
two in a row, was running a close se-<lb/>
cond.<lb/>
After Sneva dropped out, Mears<lb/>
cruised ? at 202 mph ? to his record<lb/>
of 163.621 mph, surpassing the<lb/>
162.962 set in 1972 by the late Mark<lb/>
Donohue.<lb/>
On Monday, Mears was awarded a<lb/>
record winner's share of $434,060 from<lb/>
the richest purse in auto racing history.<lb/>
The 32-year-old driver from<lb/>
Bakersfield, Calif became the sixth<lb/>
million-dollar career winner in Indy<lb/>
history.<lb/>
The awards were presented at the an-<lb/>
nual Victory Dinner at the Indianapolis<lb/>
Convention Center. Mears' prize for<lb/>
first place broke the former record of<lb/>
5385,886 set last year by Tom Sneva,<lb/>
who also went over the $1 million<lb/>
career mark with his 16th place show-<lb/>
ing in Sunday's race.<lb/>
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halt utilities. 1 mile from campus Call Doug at<lb/>
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ROOMS FOR RENT: Three available. ?130 per<lb/>
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ROOMS FOR RENT: in house close to campus. 2<lb/>
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$135 00month plus i utilities Located across<lb/>
from Overtons<lb/>
FURNISHED ROOM FOR RENT: in house,<lb/>
share to of utilities and phone Females prefer<lb/>
red. For summer sessions only. Phone: 753-314.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED. Half rent, half<lb/>
utilities Call 355-6933 <lb/>
VACATIOHIW?, ,<lb/>
Vm'II fte4 food Um's l? Hjajh<lb/>
0eu.CI?y,llt?iH4.VrUiUB.??,<lb/>
C.rolin. B.tet, ??? HfHto ???!<lb/>
USDA Choice Beef Round ? Whole<lb/>
10-12 Lbs. Average - Sliced FREE!<lb/>
FOOD LION<lb/>
These prices good thru<lb/>
Saturday, June 2, 1984<lb/>
NEW STORE HOURS:<lb/>
MonSat 8 a.m. til 10p.m.<lb/>
Sunday: 9 a.m. til 9p.m.<lb/>
USDA<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
Mfo reserve the rifht<lb/>
to limit quantities.<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Extra Lean Family Peek<lb/>
Cube<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USM Ck.ie. ?( tt,?i . 8H?<lb/>
Round Roast<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
USDA Cb.iee Beef Rated tfbele<lb/>
20-22 Lb. Aera.? - Sliced FREE!<lb/>
Bottom Round<lb/>
Fink D?il? ? 5 lb. P?tk Or M t, e<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
California<lb/>
Red Ripe<lb/>
California <lb/>
Strawberries ?<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
California<lb/>
? 'i<lb/>
??<lb/>
;<lb/>
Each<lb/>
large<lb/>
Peaches,<lb/>
Plums<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
Milwaukee<lb/>
Chock Oat<lb/>
WHOo<lb/>
m Duffle Bags!v<lb/>
See our store display of quality nylon travel bags<lb/>
offered to you at low, lour prises. In a variety of four<lb/>
different sizes, each bag is excellent for sport or<lb/>
travel. Priced from 2.99 - 6.99.<lb/>
2 Liter - Diet Petti Pioti Froo Diet Petti-Free<lb/>
Irw<lb/>
FABRIC<lb/>
49 Ounce<lb/>
Fab<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
Fu?Strenqth Determent<lb/>
97 Shetti ? 2 PI<lb/>
Viva<lb/>
Towels<lb/>
S&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
7<lb/>
S?<lb/>
rsi<lb/>
14 Oi. - Beef Trie Cbieken ft Liver<lb/>
Alfeo Don ,AlDO,<lb/>
Food lUPO<lb/>
6800 EVERYDAY LOW PRICES<lb/>
For Dogs<lb/>
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