<?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="00057649_0001"/>
Bhe<lb/>
darolmiatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.S8Nor<lb/>
Wednesday June 13,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
UNC Board Of Governors<lb/>
Changes Consulting Policy;<lb/>
Guidelines To Be Tightened<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRAS1AK<lb/>
NmHto<lb/>
The UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
recently changed its policy on con-<lb/>
sulting done by faculty members,<lb/>
but the effects on ECU should be<lb/>
minimal, according to ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell.<lb/>
The changes, to be put into ef-<lb/>
fect by September, are aimed at<lb/>
preventing possible conflicts of in-<lb/>
terest in consulting work which<lb/>
faculty members perform. Howell<lb/>
said the ECU has always asked<lb/>
faculty members to identify the<lb/>
companies for which they do con-<lb/>
sulting work. They will now also<lb/>
be required to disclose whether<lb/>
the company is funding research<lb/>
they are performing at the univer-<lb/>
sity and whether they are<lb/>
stockholders in the company.<lb/>
"At ECU, for the most part,<lb/>
our faculty members are con-<lb/>
sulting for government agencies<lb/>
or educational institutions<lb/>
Howell said. "They do less con-<lb/>
sulting in industry<lb/>
"One loophole is that a faculty<lb/>
member might do consulting work<lb/>
for an outside agency which is<lb/>
funding work in his department,<lb/>
or for an agency in which he is a<lb/>
stockholder or official Howell<lb/>
said. He added that "as the<lb/>
primary employer" the university<lb/>
is drawn into a conflict such as<lb/>
this.<lb/>
Questions concerning these<lb/>
areas will now be asked and if a<lb/>
problem is discovered, the school<lb/>
will be able to determine whether<lb/>
a conflict of interest exists, prior<lb/>
to the initiation of the consulting<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The new policy will have the<lb/>
greatest effect on UNC-Chapel<lb/>
Hill and N.C. State University,<lb/>
since these are the schools with the<lb/>
most faculty members doing con-<lb/>
sulting work, Howell said. "A lot<lb/>
of their work is done through the<lb/>
Research Triangle he said,<lb/>
See CONSULTING, Page 2<lb/>
?RYAN HUMIERT ? ECU rteto Lab<lb/>
So, you came to college to get an education. And what exactly are you learning? At least it promotes<lb/>
physical fitness.<lb/>
Freshmen Exposed To College Life Through S.O.S. Program<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
News Editor<lb/>
Think back to the beginning of<lb/>
your freshman year in college.<lb/>
Chances are the first week was<lb/>
more than slightly confusing. Ad-<lb/>
justing to a new campus, new liv-<lb/>
ing arrangements and a different<lb/>
academic atmosphere is difficult,<lb/>
to say the least. Freshmen orienta-<lb/>
tion is geared towards making the<lb/>
transition easier.<lb/>
Freshman orientation begins to-<lb/>
day and lasts until July 12. It con-<lb/>
sists of five three-day sessions for<lb/>
regular freshman and two shorter<lb/>
sessions for special studies and<lb/>
transfer students.<lb/>
Between 2,200 and 2,300 in-<lb/>
coming freshman arc scheduled to<lb/>
attend the sessions this yearQAp-<lb/>
proximately 95 percent of new<lb/>
freshmen go through orientation,<lb/>
said James Mallory, dean of<lb/>
orientation and judiciary.<lb/>
Mallory coordinates the pro-<lb/>
gram, aided by Residence Hall<lb/>
Directors Vanessa Higdon and<lb/>
Don Joyner.<lb/>
"The program is basically and<lb/>
primarily an academic orienta-<lb/>
tion Mallory said. Placement<lb/>
testing and preregistration are<lb/>
among the program's scheduled<lb/>
activities.<lb/>
The student orientation staff,<lb/>
known as the S.O.S is responsi-<lb/>
ble for coordinating activities and<lb/>
answering questions. The staff<lb/>
consists of 14 upperclass and<lb/>
graduate students, chosen because<lb/>
"they are familiar with residence<lb/>
?RYAN HUMBERT ? ECU Photo Lob<lb/>
It's summer and the bees and the sun are out in full force.<lb/>
Friday Hosts Show;<lb/>
Howell Featured Guest<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
ECU, its progress and<lb/>
achievements, was the subject<lb/>
of the television show North<lb/>
Carolina People, a program<lb/>
hosted by UNC President<lb/>
William Friday and sponsored<lb/>
by the UNC Center for Public<lb/>
Television network. ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell was<lb/>
the featured guest.<lb/>
The show aired Monday<lb/>
night on Channel 25 and will be<lb/>
shown again Sunday, June 17<lb/>
at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
An overview of ECU was<lb/>
provided, with subjects discuss-<lb/>
ed ranging from enrollment<lb/>
growth to the medical school to<lb/>
the athletic program.<lb/>
Friday praised Howell for<lb/>
serving "with distinction and<lb/>
total dedication" during his 27<lb/>
years at ECU.<lb/>
"I've seen a lot of it (ECU's<lb/>
development), because a lot of<lb/>
it happened in the last third of<lb/>
its history Howell said.<lb/>
ECU's enrollment growth in<lb/>
the last 20 years has been<lb/>
"phenomenal Friday said.<lb/>
See FUTURE, Page 2<lb/>
hall living, have a high scholastic<lb/>
average and are well-rounded<lb/>
according to Mallory. "They<lb/>
work, eat and live with the<lb/>
students he added.<lb/>
Staff members are chosen from<lb/>
all majors, Mallory said, in order<lb/>
to provide more variety. "It's an<lb/>
enjoyable job he said "and the<lb/>
student staff has done an outstan-<lb/>
ding job for a number of years<lb/>
An important aspect of orienta-<lb/>
tion is the opportunity to take<lb/>
placement tests. Mallory said all<lb/>
students are required to take tests<lb/>
in math and chemistry, while<lb/>
language and English tests are op-<lb/>
tional. "One selling point of the<lb/>
program he said, "is the idea<lb/>
that you can come and earn col-<lb/>
lege credit, free, putting you<lb/>
ahead of the game<lb/>
Students can earn up to 12<lb/>
hours of credit in a language, six<lb/>
hours in mathematics and three<lb/>
hours in English. The English<lb/>
placement test is also given for<lb/>
placement into an honors section<lb/>
of English.<lb/>
Between 65 and 70 percent of<lb/>
the incoming freshmen will also<lb/>
preregister in the general college<lb/>
while they are here. Others will be<lb/>
able to preregister in the technical<lb/>
schools, such as nursing.<lb/>
Having the new freshman<lb/>
preregister while they are here is a<lb/>
necessity, Mallory said, since it<lb/>
takes from mid-July until classes<lb/>
begin in August to process the<lb/>
schedules.<lb/>
Several information<lb/>
sessions<lb/>
are also scheduled. One session<lb/>
will deal with residence hall living<lb/>
and another will deal with campus<lb/>
activities. During the activities<lb/>
session, groups such as the Mar-<lb/>
ching Pirates, Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement and the SGA will<lb/>
be allotted five minutes to present<lb/>
the students with information<lb/>
about the services they offer. In<lb/>
addition, Greenville Mayor Janice<lb/>
Buck will welcome them.<lb/>
There will also be academic in-<lb/>
formation sessions. These sessions<lb/>
are designed to familiarize<lb/>
students with the offerings and re-<lb/>
quirements of specific depart-<lb/>
ments. "It gives them (the<lb/>
freshmen) a chance to get their<lb/>
feet wet Mallory said. "It is<lb/>
especially good for those in<lb/>
general college ? it might help<lb/>
them make up their minds<lb/>
Parents are not neglected in this<lb/>
process. A special parents' orien-<lb/>
tation is held the first day of each<lb/>
of the first five sessions, t lasts<lb/>
between two and three hours,<lb/>
Mallory said, depending on the<lb/>
number of parents attending, and<lb/>
the number of questions aked.<lb/>
They are shown a 15-minute<lb/>
slide presentation about life at<lb/>
ECU and given an opportunity to<lb/>
talk to different people from the<lb/>
Division of Student Life. They are<lb/>
also given a packet which includes<lb/>
maps information about fees and<lb/>
information about eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. "The parents enjoy<lb/>
this Mallory said.<lb/>
Infractions Are Result<lb/>
Students Unaware Of Regulations<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
N?w? Editor<lb/>
One major problem en-<lb/>
countered by the ECU Honor<lb/>
Board, according to 1984-85<lb/>
Honor Board Chairman Tom<lb/>
Buonocore, is that "people don't<lb/>
realize that we are there until they<lb/>
come before us<lb/>
The Honor Board consists of<lb/>
ten students: a chairman, seven<lb/>
voting members and two alter-<lb/>
nates. "The board has original<lb/>
jurisdiction in all cases where the<lb/>
student is in direct violation of<lb/>
university policy Buonocore<lb/>
said. He added that it is "respon-<lb/>
sible for ensuring that students<lb/>
adhere to the university's code of<lb/>
conduct<lb/>
Unfortunately, Buonocore<lb/>
said, many students are un-<lb/>
familiar with the rules governing<lb/>
conduct on the ECU campus. "It<lb/>
is the student's responsibility to be<lb/>
aware of these rules he said.<lb/>
"The best way to prevent an in-<lb/>
fraction is to know what is right<lb/>
and what is not<lb/>
According to Buonocore, a list<lb/>
of offenses and possible<lb/>
punishments is published in the<lb/>
Student Handbook. He said<lb/>
students, especially incoming<lb/>
freshman, should read the hand-<lb/>
book so they are aware of the<lb/>
types of behavior considered<lb/>
violations of the code.<lb/>
The Honor Board handles bet-<lb/>
ween four and six cases a week<lb/>
during the year, although it is not<lb/>
active during the summer,<lb/>
Buonocore said. Before a case is<lb/>
brought before the board,<lb/>
preliminary hearings are held to<lb/>
determine whether the infraction<lb/>
is serious enough to merit a board<lb/>
hearing. If it is, the board hears<lb/>
the case and determines a punish-<lb/>
ment. In cases such as cheating, it<lb/>
has the power to suspend a stu-<lb/>
dent from school.<lb/>
One student was recently<lb/>
suspended for cheating on a final<lb/>
examination. The one-year<lb/>
suspension, Buonocore said,<lb/>
means that not only is the student<lb/>
unable to attend ECU, but he is<lb/>
also unable to attend most other<lb/>
colleges or universities.<lb/>
In general, the number of<lb/>
cheating and plagiarism cases is<lb/>
small. Buonocore said alcohol-<lb/>
related offenses are the most com-<lb/>
mon. Vandalism or residence hall<lb/>
destruction is usually involved.<lb/>
"Cases of vandalism are usually<lb/>
alcohol-related he said.<lb/>
Book thefts also account for a<lb/>
large number of cases apj:earing<lb/>
before the board. "Peopk don't<lb/>
realize that if you see a book lying<lb/>
around, you can't just take it and<lb/>
sell it because there is no on e there<lb/>
to claim it Buonocore sa;d.<lb/>
Both the University Book Ex-<lb/>
change and the Student Supply<lb/>
Store have systems to track down<lb/>
students who sell stolen books.<lb/>
This is how the Honor Board gets<lb/>
most of the cases. "Book stealing<lb/>
is dealt with very strictly<lb/>
Buonocore said, "as is vandalism<lb/>
against the university<lb/>
"One person got a $250 fine foi<lb/>
maliciously setting off a fire<lb/>
alarm he added.<lb/>
Rental Program Not Feasible<lb/>
Book Exchange System To Expand<lb/>
ByMARYCASHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
When the SGA Student Welfare<lb/>
Committee conducted student<lb/>
surveys last year, one concern fre-<lb/>
quently cited by students was the<lb/>
high cost of textbooks. As a<lb/>
response to this concern, a tex-<lb/>
tbook exchange program was<lb/>
developed on a trial basis and<lb/>
book rental programs were<lb/>
discussed.<lb/>
At present a book exchange<lb/>
program is still in operation on a<lb/>
small scale at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store, according to SGA Presi-<lb/>
dent John Rainey.<lb/>
Rainey said attempts are now<lb/>
being made to establish com-<lb/>
munication between ECU<lb/>
students and administration con-<lb/>
cerning the problem of book<lb/>
costs. A meeting between SGA of-<lb/>
ficers and the Faculty Senate was<lb/>
held recently to propose longer<lb/>
use of textbooks. One problem<lb/>
students experience is that,<lb/>
whenever a new edition of a book<lb/>
is received by the bookstore, the<lb/>
store is unable to repurchase older<lb/>
editions.<lb/>
Rainey has suggested that, in-<lb/>
stead of this method, editions of<lb/>
textbooks should be used for a<lb/>
longer period of time, at least two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Rainey added that a book rental<lb/>
system is not feasible at this time.<lb/>
He said he does not feel it could<lb/>
be managed the way it is at other<lb/>
schools. Making students pay a<lb/>
set fee for differing numbers of<lb/>
books would not be fair, he said.<lb/>
The SGA, particularly the Stu-<lb/>
dent Welfare Committee, will<lb/>
continue to work on the problem<lb/>
over the summer and, according<lb/>
to Student Welfare Committee<lb/>
Chairman David Brown, hopes to<lb/>
expand the book exchange pro-<lb/>
gram in the fall.<lb/>
Crimes Include Indecent Exposure<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
r Writer<lb/>
An indecent exposure incident,<lb/>
three summonses for worthless<lb/>
checks and two assaults were<lb/>
among the crimes reported to the<lb/>
ECU Department of Public Safety<lb/>
during the past week.<lb/>
Reported crimes for June 5 ?<lb/>
10 included:<lb/>
June 5, 6:35 p.m. ? Sandra L.<lb/>
Hall of Wilmington was served a<lb/>
summons for a worthless check by<lb/>
Ptl. Dail.<lb/>
June 7, 12:10 a.m. ?<lb/>
Christopher C. Wood of 122 Jar-<lb/>
vis Residence Hall reported pro-<lb/>
perty stolen from dorm room.<lb/>
11:55 a.m. ? James Arthur Cran-<lb/>
dol of Ayden was issued a state<lb/>
citation for a stop sign violation at<lb/>
Brody Building by Ptl. Brew-<lb/>
ington. 2:35 p.m. ? Joan Elaine<lb/>
Tomer of 343 Rawl Building<lb/>
reported an indecent exposure in-<lb/>
cident in her office. 2:38 p.m. ?<lb/>
Harriette Griffin of the payroll<lb/>
office reported an assault on a<lb/>
female at the east end of Rawl An-<lb/>
nex.<lb/>
June<lb/>
8, 12:22 a.m. ? Lisa<lb/>
Gatlin of 114 Slay Residence Hall<lb/>
reported a suspicious person out-<lb/>
side her room knocking on the<lb/>
door and window. 4:20 a.m. ?<lb/>
Jennifer Layne Dunn of 27<lb/>
Langston Pak Apartments was<lb/>
taken into protective custody by<lb/>
Cpl. Watson. 6:00 a.m. ? Ken-<lb/>
dall Diane Carrigan of Raleigh<lb/>
was served two summonses for<lb/>
worthless checks. 8:40 p.m. ?<lb/>
Sgt. Lawler reported the hydraulic<lb/>
door stop on the level C stairwell<lb/>
?;l?CnuStadium was ?roken<lb/>
and the door could not be<lb/>
secured.<lb/>
June 9, 12:40 a.m. -A female<lb/>
student reported being assaulted<lb/>
by a black male south of the am-<lb/>
phitheatre. The suspect was not<lb/>
found.<lb/>
June 10, 12:36 a.m. ? Monica<lb/>
Loh of 804 Greene Residence Hafl<lb/>
was transported to Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital by Sgt. I awler<lb/>
for a medical emergency. 10:32<lb/>
a.m. ? Frank Rabey report the<lb/>
telephones and airconditionmg<lb/>
were malfunctioninf in the Allied<lb/>
Health Building.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0002"/><lb/>
2THgEAST CAROLlNlANjjjNjEl 3, 1984<lb/>
Simon Appointed Political Science Chair<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Maurice D. Simon,<lb/>
associate professor of political<lb/>
science and former director of the<lb/>
Master of Public Affairs program<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina at Greensboro, will<lb/>
become professor and chair of the<lb/>
Department of Political Science at<lb/>
East Carolina University effective<lb/>
July 20.<lb/>
Dr. Marie Farr, assistant dean<lb/>
of the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences, made the announcement<lb/>
following confirmation of the ap-<lb/>
pointment by the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors Friday in Wilmington.<lb/>
"I am pleased to announce the<lb/>
appointment of Dr. Maurice D.<lb/>
Simon as professor and chair of<lb/>
the Department of Political<lb/>
Science Dr. Farr said. "Dr.<lb/>
Simon, formerly graduate direc-<lb/>
tor of the MPA program, UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro, has published widely<lb/>
on international topics and receiv-<lb/>
ed many fellowships and grants in<lb/>
support of international research.<lb/>
"He has been invited to attend<lb/>
an international conference this<lb/>
summer in Poland<lb/>
"Dr. Eugene Ryan, dean of the<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences, ex-<lb/>
pects Dr. Simon's international<lb/>
expertise and administrative<lb/>
abilities to be valuable additions<lb/>
to international programs, the<lb/>
department and the College. Dr.<lb/>
Ryan and I both look forward to<lb/>
working closely with Dr. Simon<lb/>
when his appointment begins July<lb/>
20 she said.<lb/>
Dr. Simon holds the PhD in<lb/>
political science from Stanford<lb/>
University and is internationally<lb/>
known as an authority on Poland.<lb/>
He received the BA degree with<lb/>
highest honors in political science<lb/>
from the University of California<lb/>
at Berkely in 1962 and the MA in<lb/>
public law and government from<lb/>
Columbia University in 1964.<lb/>
He has been a member of the<lb/>
political science faculty at UNC-G<lb/>
since 1973 and was granted<lb/>
research leave in 1976-77 and in<lb/>
the fall of 1980. He became<lb/>
graduate director of the MPA<lb/>
program in 1981 and served until<lb/>
June, 1983.<lb/>
In 1972 and 1973, he par-<lb/>
ticipated in the research exchange<lb/>
program of the International<lb/>
Research and Exchanges Board<lb/>
and also held a fellowship from<lb/>
the American Council of Learned<lb/>
Societies-Social Science Research<lb/>
Council. In 1969 through 1972, he<lb/>
was a lecturer and assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor of political science at<lb/>
Williams College.<lb/>
Dr. Simon was the recipient of<lb/>
the Stanford University Wilson<lb/>
Fellowship in 1967-68. In addi-<lb/>
tion, he has received several<lb/>
grants and fellowships, primarily<lb/>
in the area of in 1976-77 , he par-<lb/>
ticipated in the exchange program<lb/>
of the National Academy of<lb/>
Sciences Commission on Interna-<lb/>
tional Relations, section on the<lb/>
USSR and Eastern Europe, dur-<lb/>
ing which he studied at the Polish<lb/>
Academy of Sciences in Warsaw.<lb/>
A search for a new chair for the<lb/>
political science department at<lb/>
ECU began last September when<lb/>
Dr. Tinsley E. Yarbrough an-<lb/>
nounced he would resign the<lb/>
chairmanship in order to devote<lb/>
more time to research and writing.<lb/>
Yarbrough, a member of the ECU<lb/>
faculty since 1967 and political<lb/>
science chairman for the past four<lb/>
years, served on the search com-<lb/>
mittee which recommended Dr.<lb/>
Simon for the position.<lb/>
In announcing that he would<lb/>
resign as chair when a successor<lb/>
was named, Yarbrough said, "It's<lb/>
time to do other things<lb/>
Graduates Entering Improved Job Market<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
This year's college graduate is<lb/>
entering a job market which "is<lb/>
10 times better than it has been in<lb/>
recent years" but still very com-<lb/>
petitive, according to ECU's<lb/>
director of Career Planning and<lb/>
Placement.<lb/>
Getting a good job is highly<lb/>
compet'tive because of the sheer<lb/>
numbers of new college graduates<lb/>
entering the market, says Furney<lb/>
James. He estimates that North<lb/>
Carolina colleges and universities<lb/>
awarded approximately 30.000<lb/>
baccalaureate degrees this spring.<lb/>
"Jobs are out there ? lots of<lb/>
them ? and a lot of 1984 college<lb/>
graduates already have found<lb/>
jobs James says. "Quality col-<lb/>
lege graduates will find jobs<lb/>
Based on past experience,<lb/>
James estimates that 70 to 75 per-<lb/>
cent of ECU's placement ap-<lb/>
plicants will have jobs by<lb/>
September following their gradua-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
"There are good people out<lb/>
there who won't have jobs by<lb/>
then, but as they keep searching<lb/>
most of them eventually will find<lb/>
suitable work James said. Fac-<lb/>
tors such as geographic considera-<lb/>
tions, relocation, family ties and<lb/>
the like enter the job search pro-<lb/>
cess and often make it more dif-<lb/>
ficult.<lb/>
For the first time, James said he<lb/>
is seeing concern among ECU<lb/>
nursing school graduates this year<lb/>
? not about Retting jobs, but<lb/>
about getting jobs where they<lb/>
want to live and work.<lb/>
James says he believes "the<lb/>
days are gone when the big pro-<lb/>
blem facing a graduate was simply<lb/>
deciding which job offer to ac-<lb/>
cept<lb/>
Now, James said "the job<lb/>
market is 10 times better than it<lb/>
has been in recent years when jobs<lb/>
were scarce. But it is still com-<lb/>
petitive The Bureau of Labor<lb/>
Statistics forecasts that the job<lb/>
market will be competitive for<lb/>
many years to come, he said.<lb/>
There is strong demand for<lb/>
graduates in certain areas or pro-<lb/>
fessions. This is heightened by<lb/>
shortages of people trained in cer-<lb/>
tain fields, such as secondary<lb/>
mathematics teachers and in some<lb/>
Future Looks Good<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
Howell said that when he came to<lb/>
ECU in 1957, the enrollment was<lb/>
between 3,000 and 4,000. It now<lb/>
stands at approximately 13,500.<lb/>
"We have moved qualitatively<lb/>
as we've done this rapid<lb/>
growing Howell said.<lb/>
Howell said that, although<lb/>
ECU was started as a teachers'<lb/>
college, "in a very short time, it<lb/>
was taking a very strong role in<lb/>
the development of teacher educa-<lb/>
tion in this state and soon<lb/>
became a full-blown comprehen-<lb/>
sive university.<lb/>
Consulting<lb/>
Regulations<lb/>
Revamped<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
while the amount of consulting<lb/>
done by ECU faculty is "not quite<lb/>
as high<lb/>
ECU faculty members do con-<lb/>
sulting work through campus<lb/>
facilities such as the Regional<lb/>
Development Institute and the<lb/>
Center for Applied Technology,<lb/>
but many also do consulting on<lb/>
their own.<lb/>
"I've urged it (consulting) very<lb/>
much Howell said. He said the<lb/>
school's major concern is that the<lb/>
professor fulfill his contractual<lb/>
obligations to them. However, he<lb/>
added, he feels it is possible for a<lb/>
faculty member to spend as much<lb/>
as one day a week consulting and<lb/>
still fulfill his obligations.<lb/>
The new policy was proposed in<lb/>
order to assure that problems<lb/>
didn't develop, Howell said.<lb/>
"We've really not had any pro-<lb/>
blem with our consulting<lb/>
It is now "the largest industry<lb/>
around" in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina. In fact, Howell said, the<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville Chamber of Com-<lb/>
merce was originally organized<lb/>
for the purpose of having ECU set<lb/>
in Greenville.<lb/>
Howell said ECU's community<lb/>
involvement is shown through<lb/>
several programs such as the<lb/>
disaster as evidence of the need<lb/>
for the ECU School of Medicine.<lb/>
"I'm proud of the quick way our<lb/>
hospital people responded to<lb/>
that he said.<lb/>
The medical school, Howell<lb/>
said "is not just an institution that<lb/>
graduates a certain number of<lb/>
MD's ? it does a great deal more<lb/>
than that<lb/>
Concerning ECU's future, "the<lb/>
? j -? ? "? "??"Ciimig eau s iuture, th<lb/>
Rural Education Institute and a future looks very good in educa<lb/>
program with Elizabeth City State tion Howell said. "I think we're<lb/>
designed to aid economic develop- going into another boom in<lb/>
ment m northeastern North education. The public sees that<lb/>
Carolina. we're needed to solve some of the<lb/>
Friday cited the recent tornado technical problems of society<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
Ladv Members Free<lb/>
With Don Vickers Playing Th?<lb/>
Be?t Of Top 40 &amp; B?ach<lb/>
Pitchers Of Margaritas<lb/>
&amp; 2 Shots Of Tequila $10.00<lb/>
$2.00 Pitchers Of Beer<lb/>
Free Wine 9 To 11<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
"s<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
n.ilts ?<lb/>
Every Saturday Night<lb/>
&amp;k STEVE HARDY'S ORIGINAL ;<lb/>
sM BEACH PARTY m<lb/>
FREE BEER FROM 8 9:30 PM<lb/>
SHOW STARTS AT 9:30 PM<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 5:00 PM<lb/>
Every Tuesday Night<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
Shag Lessons sum In, I9ih<lb/>
Tuesday Thru Saturday<lb/>
Specials Every Night<lb/>
SI 00 Highb.lls<lb/>
S2 00 Pitchers of Beer<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Every Wednesday<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
Pitchers Of Margarita<lb/>
&amp; 2 Shot Of Tequila1 0 00<lb/>
Every Friday Night<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
Pitcher Of Margaritas<lb/>
&amp; 2 Shot Of Tequila $10 00<lb/>
St 00 Highball<lb/>
$2 00 Pitcher Of Beer<lb/>
Memberships available at the door,<lb/>
guests welcome<lb/>
756-6401<lb/>
il??ri ?trolin i ast C enli<lb/>
S2 SO Iced Tea<lb/>
51 75 Margarita<lb/>
52 OO Pin. Colada<lb/>
51 OO Screwdriver<lb/>
52 OO Toasted Almond<lb/>
S2 OO Singapore Sling<lb/>
51 2S Vodka Collins<lb/>
52 OO White Russian<lb/>
S2 SO Daiquiris<lb/>
SI 2S Tom C<lb/>
SI OO Lady<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
$ 1.00 Membership<lb/>
at door with coupon<lb/>
Offer good June 1216. 1984<lb/>
utter good June 1216. 1984 ?<lb/>
a Coupon EX-<lb/>
Beaus is a private club for members ?T<lb/>
guests only. All ABC Permits.<lb/>
X WJLitMMimXililkUJJillViUli guests only. All AUl Permits. t<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
SANOWICH SMOf<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
Hto2or4to7<lb/>
Join us for Lunch or Dinner!<lb/>
The choice is yours<lb/>
no. 1 Ham &amp; Cheese<lb/>
no.5 Ham &amp; Cheese &amp; Turkey<lb/>
no. 10 Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
no. 15 Ham &amp; Bologna &amp; Cheese<lb/>
For<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
All sandwiches include lettuce, tomatoes, onions, salt, pepper, oregano, oil, and vinegar.<lb/>
Also choice of: Potatoe, Macaroni Salad or Cole Slaw and your choice of 12 oz. soft<lb/>
drink<lb/>
Bring this ad and receive chips of your choice in store promotion only<lb/>
other teaching disciplines. And<lb/>
there is a brisk demand for<lb/>
employees in three basic<lb/>
categories ? production of goods<lb/>
and services, sales and finance,<lb/>
James said.<lb/>
"I suggest to students that they<lb/>
use unique, imaginative ways of<lb/>
looking for jobs James says. "I<lb/>
tell them to take the initiative ?<lb/>
don't just respond to an ad ? to<lb/>
know something about the firm,<lb/>
or the field, about its products<lb/>
and services and to go after the<lb/>
particular job in a knowledgeable<lb/>
way<lb/>
Also, James says, "I have the<lb/>
impression that we're going to<lb/>
have fewer levels of<lb/>
management or training<lb/>
periods, being offered by<lb/>
employers. "Employers are going<lb/>
to hire a person to do a specific<lb/>
job<lb/>
Within a short time after ECU's<lb/>
annual commencement last<lb/>
month, some typical ECU job<lb/>
placements included a manage-<lb/>
ment trainee for Burlington In-<lb/>
dustries; a manufacturing cost ac-<lb/>
countant for Ray-O-Vac in<lb/>
Kinston; a sales and manufactur-<lb/>
ing manager for Millikin &amp; Co<lb/>
Spartanburg; a speech pathologist<lb/>
at O'Berry Center, Goldsboro; a<lb/>
shopping mall manager in<lb/>
Raleigh; accountants with some<lb/>
leading accounting firms; a<lb/>
management trainee at Duke<lb/>
University; management trainees,<lb/>
loan officers, credit analysts and<lb/>
operations officers for banks and<lb/>
other financial institutions, posi-<lb/>
tions with department stores in<lb/>
Richmond, Va positions in inter-<lb/>
national marketing for tobacco<lb/>
companies; position; with major<lb/>
utilities firms, retailers, fast food<lb/>
firms and processors and in-<lb/>
dustrial equipment firms.<lb/>
A large percentage of ECU<lb/>
graduates find jobs with relatively<lb/>
small industries or companies<lb/>
with fewer than 100 employees.<lb/>
But some others go with giants<lb/>
such as Ford Motor Co which<lb/>
hired an ECU grad as an owner<lb/>
relations analyst, or Pitney Bowes<lb/>
which hired an ECU graduate as a<lb/>
salesman.<lb/>
SGA<lb/>
Transit Manager Needed<lb/>
Apply in SGA office, Room 228,<lb/>
Mendenholl, before June 21.<lb/>
Wty&amp;w<lb/>
-l<lb/>
Featuring Factory<lb/>
Trained Technicians<lb/>
And First Quality<lb/>
Replacement Parts<lb/>
Air Conditioning :M<lb/>
We Specialize In<lb/>
Air Conditioning<lb/>
Tune-Ups<lb/>
Brake Siervice<lb/>
Exhaust Systems<lb/>
2616 E.TENTH ST758-7676<lb/>
Pirates Landing &amp; Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
Invite you to open house at Pirates Landing.<lb/>
Thursday, June 14 from 11:30 til 2:00<lb/>
Drop by and see one of our units and have delicious pizza<lb/>
from P.T.A. for lunch<lb/>
P.O. Box 6026<lb/>
GreenviUe, NC 27834<lb/>
9197586061<lb/>
?tofsttronoily Monogakd v<lb/>
remco<lb/>
east,<lb/>
inc.<lb/>
?? at tkiail MSMOIMINI<lb/>
Welcome Bock Student<lb/>
Special Summer Rales<lb/>
12 OFF<lb/>
June, July &amp; August Rental Rates<lb/>
For 1 year leases only<lb/>
WWwYour ReMnration For Tim Summer And IW FU1.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
?ervl'T ' campu: conmuntr<lb/>
Since 1925<lb/>
 ?? Tjesday ard Thursdav dLnrJ<lb/>
?cademK year and even, Wednesday dun'r !he 1<lb/>
roer<lb/>
The East Carolinian u the official newspape, c<lb/>
Carolina University o?ned. cperaied. and Dub<lb/>
lor and by the students of East Carolina I ner<lb/>
Lnsigned jpimom on the editorial pafe unless<lb/>
MM noted, are the opinion of the ne.rspaper i<lb/>
written by the managing editor<lb/>
?aeripooa Rate SJ0 tear!)<lb/>
TW East Carettataa offices an locate) oa tfet<lb/>
Woo of tae "HMkatkra. MUdiit, aa Ik K I <lb/>
Gnea.it VC<lb/>
POSTMASTER Send address ranges to T?<lb/>
Carolinian. Publications Building, ECi<lb/>
N C . 27834<lb/>
TaWa?e 757-4344 4J?? ajaa<lb/>
EXHIBITIONS<lb/>
Four new exhibitions will open June<lb/>
works gallery in Salisbury. NC Featured will be<lb/>
Allen W Erdmann. Joyce Biunk Herb Pan<lb/>
Wayne Wrights The new er.hibr.ions will run fr<lb/>
3-July 23. 1984<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDAV<lb/>
Applications are requested fro-n ttoat pc<lb/>
interested in becoming PERSON CARE <lb/>
DANTS :o wheelchair students Fat Fii. ?<lb/>
We are particularly interested la a - .<lb/>
background of assisting T,dn<lb/>
daily living.<lb/>
For further details contact Office o' Hindicapp<lb/>
dent Services, 212 W'hicharj -<lb/>
University, Phone "5-r'99<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The Department of ln;rimu-L Recreational So<lb/>
offering physical fitnes masses for second<lb/>
Registration for aerobics. Ua?lIlllii I ani <lb/>
defense beganj Wednesia<lb/>
22 Come by Room 20 Memorial<lb/>
57-638-<lb/>
ADMINTSTRATTVF PI ANNIM<lb/>
Exam:r.e and analyze planning Bad<lb/>
seaside community Full tirrr ? maj<lb/>
nominal cost Contact Co-op office<lb/>
WOODWORKING DESIGNE!<lb/>
Opportunity to design and COcntniCt ? -<lb/>
action firm located at Eme-aic<lb/>
.?iiiabie at nominal cost Contact Co op<lb/>
Blcg<lb/>
BEACH JOBn<lb/>
Retail, grocery and fast food positions ?<lb/>
Head. Kill Devil Hills and Myrtle Bea <lb/>
-omodation assistance Contact C<lb/>
Bldg<lb/>
NTE ? C<lb/>
A special administration of the N<lb/>
3 (Professional Knowledge) an i<lb/>
Saturday, July 14, 1984, in Spe .<lb/>
sional Knowledge Test begins a! 9:<lb/>
p.m. Closing date for reg ;rra<lb/>
For iust<lb/>
The East Ca<lb/>
are the be:<lb/>
sell advert.<lb/>
Keep y(<lb/>
on life a<lb/>
with a su<lb/>
The Ea<lb/>
MAR<lb/>
Re:<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Dishes and Pastries<lb/>
We Serv<lb/>
752-0326<lb/>
CallU<lb/>
11<lb/>
WE<lb/>
c<lb/>
Class Rings<lb/>
GoldAf<lb/>
m<lb/>
? 3T<lb/>
WE<lb/>
T.Vs, stereo's,<lb/>
bicycles, watches,<lb/>
AM-FM, cassette,<lb/>
crystal, typewriters,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AFWLJ2J<lb/>
r<lb/>
rch for a new chair for the<lb/>
science department at<lb/>
fsan last September when<lb/>
isley E. Yarbrough an-<lb/>
he would resign the<lb/>
nship in order to devote<lb/>
: to research and writing,<lb/>
jugh, a member of the ECU<lb/>
since 1967 and political<lb/>
J chairman for the past four<lb/>
served on the search com-<lb/>
which recommended Dr.<lb/>
tor the position.<lb/>
inouncing that he would<lb/>
cts chair when a successor<lb/>
ned, Yarbrough said, "It's<lb/>
do other things<lb/>
ket<lb/>
fleers, credit analysts and<lb/>
t ons officers for banks and<lb/>
financial institutions, posi-<lb/>
-vith department stores in<lb/>
ond. Va positions in inter -<lb/>
i marketing for tobacco<lb/>
tarries; positions with major<lb/>
i. firms, retailers, fast food<lb/>
and processors and in-<lb/>
Jial equipment firms.<lb/>
arge percentage of ECU<lb/>
ites find jobs with relatively<lb/>
I industries or companies<lb/>
fewer than 100 employees.<lb/>
isome others go with giants<lb/>
as Ford Motor Co which<lb/>
an ECU grad as an owner<lb/>
ions analyst, or Pitney Bowes<lb/>
h hired an ECU graduate as a<lb/>
man.<lb/>
eeded<lb/>
228,<lb/>
21.<lb/>
wmmrnitiitiiiitiiMi<lb/>
LTT<lb/>
mmtowy<lb/>
<lb/>
sit Authority<lb/>
es Landing.<lb/>
til 2:00<lb/>
tve delicious pizza<lb/>
Studnts!<lb/>
mnwr Rates<lb/>
OFF<lb/>
ugnst Rental Rates<lb/>
only<lb/>
N?rtFall.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the campus community<lb/>
since 192)<lb/>
Published every Tuesday and Thursday during the<lb/>
academic year and every Wednesday during the sum-<lb/>
mer<lb/>
T" East Carolinian is the official newspaper of East<lb/>
Carolina University, owned, operated, and published<lb/>
for and by the students of East Carolina University.<lb/>
Unsigned opinions on the editorial page, unless other-<lb/>
wise noted, are the opinion of the newspaper, usually<lb/>
written by the managing editor.<lb/>
Sebecrlpdoa Rale: SM yearly<lb/>
The Eail CaroHatea offices are located o? the secoad<lb/>
floor of tke PaMcattoa Balidlag oa Ike ECU campus,<lb/>
GreeavUe. N.C.<lb/>
POSTMASTER: Send address changes to The East<lb/>
Carolinian. Publications Building. ECU. Greenville.<lb/>
N.C. 27834.<lb/>
TsJaaljaat: 7S7-4M. 6367, 639<lb/>
EXHIBITIONS<lb/>
Four new exhibitions will open June 3 at the Water-<lb/>
works gallery in Salisbury, NC Featured will be works by<lb/>
Allen W Erdmann. Joyce Blunk, Herb Parker, and<lb/>
Wayne Wrights. The new exhibitions will run from June<lb/>
3-July 23, 1984<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are requested from those persons who are<lb/>
interested in becoming PERSONAL CARE ATTEN-<lb/>
DANTS to wheelchair students for Fall Semester. 1984.<lb/>
We are particularly interested in anyone who has a<lb/>
background of assisting individuals with their activities of<lb/>
daily living<lb/>
For further details contact: Office of Handicapped Stu-<lb/>
dent Services. 212 Whichard Building, East Carolina<lb/>
University Pnone 757-6799.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural Recreational Services is<lb/>
offering physical fitness classes for second session.<lb/>
Registration for aerobics, aquarobics and personal<lb/>
defense begins Wednesday, June 20 and ends Friday. June<lb/>
22. Come by Room 204 Memorial Gym to register or call<lb/>
757-6387<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING<lb/>
Examine and analyze planning and zoning ordinances in<lb/>
seaside community. Full time, housing available at<lb/>
nominal cost Contact Co-op office.<lb/>
WOODWORKING DESIGNER<lb/>
Opportunity to design and construct a wood shop for<lb/>
construction firm located at Emerald Isle. Housing<lb/>
available at nominal cost Contact Co-op office, 313 Rawl<lb/>
Bldg<lb/>
BEACH JOBS<lb/>
Retail, grocery and fast food positions available at Nags<lb/>
Head. Kill Devi! Hills and Myrtle Beach. Some with ac-<lb/>
comodation assistance Contact Co-op office, 313 Rawl<lb/>
Bldg.<lb/>
t LASSIFIED ADS<lb/>
r k i.v um tne form at right or<lb/>
usi a separate SIMS of paper If<lb/>
r x, nead mor. Haas. Thar ara 33<lb/>
units par line. Each hvttar, punc-<lb/>
tuation mark and word tpaca<lb/>
counts as ona unit Capttalttaand<lb/>
hyphenate woros properly. Leave<lb/>
space at and w Una It word<lb/>
doesn-f tit. No ads will be ac-<lb/>
cepted over the phone. We<lb/>
reserve the rloht to rate -1 any ad.<lb/>
AH ads must he ?repaid. Enclose<lb/>
7)c per line or frscooo of a line<lb/>
Please print legibly! Use capital sad<lb/>
lower case letters<lb/>
Reran la THE CAST CAJHHJNIAN<lb/>
attic ? ):W Tecsda? before<lb/>
?safest)<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
Address.<lb/>
CityState.<lb/>
NjpuJincs.<lb/>
.Zip.<lb/>
. at 730 I<lb/>
life i.<lb/>
.No.<lb/>
PLANTERGROWER<lb/>
Positions available in Emerald Isle to assist in growing<lb/>
and planting flowers and shrubs for landscaping. Full<lb/>
time, housing available at nominal cost. Contact Co-op<lb/>
office. 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
Classifieds.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
AUDITOR INTERN<lb/>
Audit under supervision of senior accountant; auditing<lb/>
courses required. Position available in accounting firm<lb/>
located in Morehead City. Contact Co-op Office 313 Raw!<lb/>
Bldg.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Black and White TV 12 inches 120 00 Call<lb/>
Kim at 732-9957.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1972 VEOA. excellent condition! $300. Call<lb/>
758-0893. After 3:30. <lb/>
FOR SALE: Bed, full size. Call Jim 752-1419.<lb/>
1 OB 3 ROOMMATES wanted to share 3 bdna apt. I<lb/>
block from campus. E. 11th Street. CaH WMgf.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES I or 3<lb/>
East 5th St. CaU 758-4799.<lb/>
SECRETARY<lb/>
Needed for position in Washington, DC. Good shor-<lb/>
thand, transcription and typing skills required. Contact<lb/>
Co-op office, 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union has dutch dinners every<lb/>
Tuesday Evening at 5:30. Join us at the BSU Center on<lb/>
511 East Tenth Street every week. Programs follow.<lb/>
SAILING CLUB<lb/>
ECU Sailing Club Organizational meeting, Wednesday,<lb/>
June 13th, 7:00 p.m. at rm. 142 Minges. All interested per-<lb/>
sons welcomed. The planning of our summer sailing ac-<lb/>
tivity will be discussed. For more information call Don at<lb/>
7521-6424.<lb/>
OUTDOOR REC<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation Center located in 113<lb/>
Memorial Gym is offering a white water canoeing 'Adven-<lb/>
ture Trip' June 16. The registration deadline is June 12.<lb/>
On July 11 a local canoeing trip will be offered with ad-<lb/>
vanced registration ending July 9. For more information<lb/>
call 757-6911 or come by room 113 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
FINE ART<lb/>
Greenville Jaycees cordially invites you to attend an Ex-<lb/>
hibit and Auction of Fine Art Saturday Evening, June 16,<lb/>
1984 to be held at the Sheraton Greenville Inn. Admission<lb/>
is free.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to snare 3 bdrooai<lb/>
apt. Eastbrook. H uttttJes, for 2nd isaalori and faU. Cal<lb/>
Cindy 435-3S74 Jacksonville.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
(Hire East (Earolmtan<lb/>
SUBCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
Name:<lb/>
Address<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Individual<lb/>
Amount Paid $<lb/>
Date Paid<lb/>
Students wanting to have their parents receive<lb/>
The East Carolinian can fill out the form<lb/>
above and drop it by The East Carolinian of-<lb/>
fices on the second floor of the Publications<lb/>
building, across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Rates are $30 for one year and $20 for<lb/>
six months.<lb/>
HAPPY BIRTHDAY Ruben Ingram, general manager<lb/>
of the Ebony Herald. You have just made it through<lb/>
another year. Best of luck with your inovations for the<lb/>
"new" Ebony Herald. C.H.F.<lb/>
M3: "Irregardlen" of what the test results are, you score<lb/>
well above "87 percent" in all subjects with mel Here's<lb/>
to wishing you an early Happy Birthday and a "good"<lb/>
time hiking ? enjoy them both! Love yal M3<lb/>
mmn<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
NTE ? CORE BATTERY 3<lb/>
A special administration of the National Teacher Examinations ? Core Battery no.<lb/>
3 (Professional Knowledge) and the Specialty Area Examinations ? will be held on<lb/>
Saturday, July 14, 1984, in Speight Building, at East Carolina University. The Profes-<lb/>
sional Knowledge Test begins at 9:00 a.m. and the Specialty Area Tests begin at 1:30<lb/>
p.m. Closing date for registration is MONDAY, JUNE 25, 1984.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST IBM typewriter, full time<lb/>
typing at home. CaU 736-3660.<lb/>
COLOR CO-ORDINATE yourself for the summer! Free<lb/>
make-up and color analysis by Professional consultant.<lb/>
Classic Reflections. 756-264 after 4 PM.<lb/>
BABYSITTERS NEEDED: occasional nights A<lb/>
weekends. Must be good with children and have car.<lb/>
756-2684.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: Worn leather key case with LAM written on<lb/>
front. Please call Martha at 738-1193.<lb/>
For just 75 cents a line,<lb/>
The East Carolinian Classifieds<lb/>
are the best way in town to<lb/>
sell, advertise, send messages<lb/>
Keep up<lb/>
to date with<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
in The East Carolinian<lb/>
iiiiiiHiiniiiiHiiiicniii<lb/>
ATTENTION INCOMING FRESHMEN<lb/>
The Student Union will be presenting:<lb/>
BRICE STREET<lb/>
<lb/>
Admission is Free!<lb/>
<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
8:30-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
The concert will be held in front of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
OOODKMCmXMjL<lb/>
K<lb/>
nmnmn!<lb/>
????-?<lb/>
Keep your parents up<lb/>
on life at East Carolina<lb/>
with a subscription to<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
MARATHON<lb/>
Restuarants<lb/>
Greek<lb/>
Dishes and Pastries<lb/>
Sandwiches<lb/>
Subs.<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
We Serve Daily Specials<lb/>
752-0326 560 Evans St<lb/>
ail UsFast Delivery<lb/>
Looking for a place to live this fall?<lb/>
RINGCOLD TOWERS<lb/>
Campus ?East Carolina University<lb/>
Student Condos<lb/>
SALE AND RENTAL UNITS AVAILABLE<lb/>
ECU students will have a special place to live this fall ? nexc to<lb/>
campus in their own private, secure, fully-furnished sad<lb/>
carpeted, air-conditioned condominium units. Surrounded on<lb/>
three sides by ECU property, Ringgold Towers is closet to<lb/>
classrooms than some on-campus dormitories. Downtown<lb/>
Greenville is one block away.<lb/>
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 security<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 r pe<lb/>
property advantageous for both investors and parents of<lb/>
students. Prices begin at S27.900 with up to 959F financing<lb/>
available. We'd like to show you how Ringgold Towers can<lb/>
provide a special place for ECU students to live. For purchase<lb/>
or rental information, contact us for free 17-page booklet on<lb/>
Ringgold Towers. 1-800-672-8229 (NC), 1-800-334-1135 (GA,<lb/>
SC. VA, MD, WV, DL, TN), (919) 355-2698 (collect) frm<lb/>
other states.<lb/>
RINGGOLD DEVELOPMENT CO INC.<lb/>
105 Commerce Street<lb/>
P.O. Drawer 568<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 355-2698<lb/>
m<lb/>
WE PAY<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Class Rings Diamond Rings<lb/>
Gold A Silver Jewerly<lb/>
SilverCoins<lb/>
j<lb/>
WE BUY &amp; SELL<lb/>
T.V's. stereo's, cameras, video, microwave ovens,<lb/>
bicycles, watches, binoculars, walkmans portable<lb/>
AM-FM, cassette, heaters, good furniture, china 4<lb/>
crystal, typewriters, etc.<lb/>
INDEX TO BUILDINGS<lb/>
1. Afro American Cultural Center<lb/>
2. Amphitheater<lb/>
V Auxin Building<lb/>
4 Arnica Residence Hill<lb/>
V Bel Residence Hall<lb/>
6 Belle Building- School of Allied Heskh and Sucial Profession.<lb/>
7 Bluicon House<lb/>
1 Brcwstcr Building<lb/>
9 Cafeteria Building<lb/>
10. Chancellor i House<lb/>
11. Qiriitanbury Memorial Ofm<lb/>
12 Clemem Residence Hill<lb/>
IV Cotten Residence Hall<lb/>
14 Cruaian Building<lb/>
IV Drams Building<lb/>
16 ErvinHslI<lb/>
17 Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
15 Flanagan Building?School of Technology<lb/>
19. Fleming Residence Hall<lb/>
20 Fletcher Residence Hill<lb/>
21 Fletcher Musk Center?School of 1<lb/>
22 Garage<lb/>
2 V Garten Residence Hall<lb/>
24. Green Residence Hall<lb/>
2V Graham Building<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
RISCGOLDTOVVERS<lb/>
26 Harrington Field<lb/>
2?<lb/>
2S<lb/>
29<lb/>
W<lb/>
II<lb/>
2<lb/>
R<lb/>
M<lb/>
1<lb/>
He-inna Plant<lb/>
Home Economics Suildina?Sctv.J if Home Economics<lb/>
Infirmary i Student Health Service)<lb/>
International House<lb/>
Irons Building<lb/>
. arvis Residence Hall<lb/>
enkins Alumni Building<lb/>
enkins Fine Arts Center?School of Art<lb/>
ones Residence Hall<lb/>
McGmnis Auditorium<lb/>
Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Nursing Building?School of Nursn<lb/>
Parks. Recreation andConservation<lb/>
PaVaHJitnsi lrUpsftfueMv<lb/>
EVANS,<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
7524K6<lb/>
17. MaintenanceBuilding. Central Wanhnie. Central Supply<lb/>
IS Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
?<lb/>
m<lb/>
41.<lb/>
42.<lb/>
ft<lb/>
44.<lb/>
4V<lb/>
46.<lb/>
47<lb/>
4R<lb/>
49<lb/>
V0.<lb/>
VI.<lb/>
VI<lb/>
H<lb/>
u<lb/>
?.<lb/>
V6<lb/>
V7.<lb/>
a<lb/>
i<lb/>
6ft<lb/>
61.<lb/>
62<lb/>
61<lb/>
64.<lb/>
6V<lb/>
Folia. Traffic sad Information Center<lb/>
Ragsdale Hall?School of Medacins<lb/>
Rail Building Srnool of Business<lb/>
Rawl Annas<lb/>
Regional Development Institute<lb/>
Scata Field House<lb/>
Scott Residence Hall<lb/>
SUy Residence Hall<lb/>
Speech ? Hearing Building<lb/>
Speight Buikiing-Sthi.J d Educai.m<lb/>
Sports swdictne Building<lb/>
Steam Daiishasiusi Cetner<lb/>
Tyler Residence Hall<lb/>
iVlssiJ ttuidsnti Hall<lb/>
Whichard sfctildina.<lb/>
White Residence Hall<lb/>
Wright Annas<lb/>
Wright Building<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0004"/><lb/>
Stye Caat QTarnlfntan<lb/>
Servmg the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, g<lb/>
Darryl Brown. Managint Edilor<lb/>
JENNIFER JENI?AS1AK. v? , T PmjRZAK <lb/>
RANDY MEWS. ANTHONY Martjn a<lb/>
TINA MAROSCHAK. ?, ??? ToM NoRTON <lb/>
Greg R.deout. mm, ,m ? KATHy FUERST fnMm Mgnager<lb/>
BILL AUSTIN, omm Mmt LlNDA VlZENA. MK I.<lb/>
June 13, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Drunk Driving<lb/>
online ?r A<lb/>
a5 ex?A IM UiSTbRV.<lb/>
IkWBotTtoi ANY"<lb/>
?fesTs GtAiNQ UP ?<lb/>
Congress' Solution Bad<lb/>
The House of Representatives<lb/>
vote last week to deny federal<lb/>
highway funds to states that allow<lb/>
people under 21 years of age to<lb/>
drink was an unimaginative,<lb/>
bullyish answer to a legimate ques-<lb/>
tion. Yes, preventing wrecks and<lb/>
deaths by people driving while<lb/>
drunk is a proper concern of the<lb/>
nation's lawmakers, but this is not<lb/>
the way to do it. Besides the<lb/>
wrongness inherent in raising the<lb/>
age, the tactics planned by the<lb/>
Congress are plainly unfair.<lb/>
The bill has virtually no op-<lb/>
ponents. Seems the politicians do<lb/>
not want to offend vocal groups<lb/>
like Mothers Against Drunk Driv-<lb/>
ing (MADD) during an election<lb/>
year. Everyone is for it without<lb/>
even pausing to think of the<lb/>
arguments against why raising the<lb/>
age is unfair and denying the<lb/>
monies is mean.<lb/>
The argument against making 21<lb/>
years of age the nationwide drink-<lb/>
ing age is an old but valid one; it is<lb/>
a simple extension of the old-<lb/>
enough-to-die old-enough-to-vote<lb/>
logic. If a man or woman of 18 can<lb/>
be killed in the name of his country<lb/>
and choose his nation's leaders,<lb/>
then why can't he have a drink?<lb/>
Why deny this privilege to those<lb/>
between 18 and 21 by making them<lb/>
the scapegoat for a crusade on<lb/>
drunk driving?<lb/>
Last year our state made con-<lb/>
sumption of beer illegal to those<lb/>
under 19. The East Carolinian and<lb/>
ECU students fought against it,<lb/>
but alas our power was not<lb/>
enough. The same is happening<lb/>
now in the Senate and House. Very<lb/>
few will voice the concerns of those<lb/>
under 21. We do not have enough<lb/>
pull; we are not a big enough<lb/>
voting bloc.<lb/>
Once again we are about to be<lb/>
walked on, but this time with a<lb/>
twist. Our state and a number of<lb/>
others would be forced to raise<lb/>
their drinking age to 21 or face a<lb/>
cut-off of federal highway funds.<lb/>
The first year five percent goes and<lb/>
the second ten percent. States<lb/>
would be foolish not to hike legal<lb/>
drinking ages in the face of such a<lb/>
large loss of money. A little<lb/>
bullyish, eh?<lb/>
The worst part about the legisla-<lb/>
tion is the hastiness involved in<lb/>
passing it. The politicians want to<lb/>
appear to be doing something<lb/>
about the national "drunk driving<lb/>
epidemic They have grasped on<lb/>
to a quick fix at the expense of<lb/>
states' rights and people under the<lb/>
age of 21. This is not the answer.<lb/>
The problem is too complex, it<lb/>
must be studied carefully before<lb/>
such drastic steps are taken.<lb/>
So, once again our represen-<lb/>
tatives are acting more like politi-<lb/>
cians than leaders. Maybe when<lb/>
November rolls around we ought<lb/>
to get some new ones.<lb/>
A in t Easy<lb/>
Thank You<lb/>
The East Carolinian wishes to<lb/>
congratulate those members of the<lb/>
administration who restructured<lb/>
the ID-card process. Although at<lb/>
first there may be some confusion<lb/>
getting accustomed to the new pro-<lb/>
cedure, the benefits definitely<lb/>
outweigh any minor incon-<lb/>
vienences.<lb/>
Having a library card, activity<lb/>
card and identification all in one<lb/>
will make using all three a lot<lb/>
easier. No longer will students be<lb/>
frustrated when they forget one<lb/>
part of the ensemble at football<lb/>
games or the checkout desk. We<lb/>
and the students appreciate the ef-<lb/>
fort.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
ID Procedures Change<lb/>
The May 30 issue of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian had an article on the front page<lb/>
concerning the new ID cards. There<lb/>
were some errors in the article, and I<lb/>
think it would be a good idea to correct<lb/>
them for the record. I shall appreciate it<lb/>
if you will use following information to<lb/>
correct the mistakes. Thank you very<lb/>
much.<lb/>
For many years, ECU students have<lb/>
found it necessary to carry a photo ID<lb/>
card, an activity card and a library<lb/>
card. A new multi-purpose ID card<lb/>
which will combine all of these cards in-<lb/>
to one will replace the present system<lb/>
beginning Fall Semester 1984.<lb/>
Combining the photo ID card, activi-<lb/>
ty card, and library card will involve the<lb/>
following process: The photo ID card<lb/>
will be made in Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center, the activity card will be received<lb/>
with the receipt for payment of fees and<lb/>
the library card will be obtained from<lb/>
the library when the student uses the<lb/>
library card for the first time during<lb/>
Fall Semester. The following steps<lb/>
should be followed by the student: take<lb/>
either the class schedule or receipt for<lb/>
payment of fees to Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center and have the photo ID card<lb/>
made. Next, peel the gum label back of<lb/>
the photo ID card and the activity card<lb/>
tab to the front of the card beneath the<lb/>
individual's picture. The final step is to<lb/>
get the library card. This is to be done<lb/>
the first time the student goes to the<lb/>
library. A library staff member will af-<lb/>
fix a coded bar to the lower portion of<lb/>
the front of the photo ID card. After all<lb/>
of these steps have been taken, the<lb/>
multi-purpose ID card will be complete.<lb/>
Thereafter, each semester the ID card<lb/>
will be updated by the student removing<lb/>
the new activity card and tab from the<lb/>
receipt for payment of fees and affixing<lb/>
the activity card and tab to the ID card<lb/>
on top of the old activity card and tab.<lb/>
With more thant 13,000 students ex-<lb/>
pected Fall Semester, considerable time<lb/>
will be required to make that many<lb/>
photo ID cards. Freshmen and transfer<lb/>
students who attend the summer orien-<lb/>
tation sessions will have their photo ID<lb/>
cards made during the summer. Return-<lb/>
ing students will have the first two<lb/>
weeks of Fall Semester in which to have<lb/>
their photo ID cards made. ID cards<lb/>
will be made in Room 244 in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center according<lb/>
to the schedule listed below:<lb/>
Mon. Aug. 20, 9am-5pm<lb/>
Tues.Aug. 21, 9am-5pm<lb/>
Wed. Aug. 22, 9am-5pm<lb/>
Thur. Aug. 23,12pm-5pm<lb/>
Fri. Aug. 24,12pm-5pm<lb/>
Mon. Aug. 27,12pm-5pm<lb/>
Tues. Aug. 28, 12pm-5pm<lb/>
Wed. Aug. 29,12pm-5pm<lb/>
Thur. Aug. 30,12pm-5pm<lb/>
Fri. Aug. 31,12pm-5pm<lb/>
The cost will be $2.50 for each ID<lb/>
card.<lb/>
The making of photo ID cards will<lb/>
involve the use of two ID card cameras.<lb/>
Each camera has the capacity to make<lb/>
at least 100 photo ID cards per hour.<lb/>
With two weeks set aside for ID cards<lb/>
to be made, there is no need for<lb/>
students to wait in long lines to get then-<lb/>
ID cards made.<lb/>
Rudolph Alexander<lb/>
Director of University Unions and<lb/>
Associate Dean ? Student Activities<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
The Democrats staggered across the<lb/>
finish line last week, all three exhausted<lb/>
and dazed. And, as political writers like<lb/>
to say, Mondale "limped" by the<lb/>
checkered flag first. Now phase II is<lb/>
upon us. We pundits now get to see how<lb/>
wrong we were about the primary fights<lb/>
and begin our next series of predictions<lb/>
during the lull before the convention.<lb/>
We are dazed from our earlier mistakes<lb/>
but not down for the count. So, with the<lb/>
valiant courage and conviction of a<lb/>
handful of wet spaghetti, the following<lb/>
words of wisdom are set to print.<lb/>
First, my credentials. I have a lifetime<lb/>
membership to Pundit Weekly, a card<lb/>
and decoder ring and I once touched Bill<lb/>
Moyers' lips at a press conference. (It's<lb/>
okay, I only lost one tooth.)<lb/>
First, I predict Walter Mondale will<lb/>
not wear Jim Palmer underwear just to<lb/>
get the Gary Han vote. Instead, he will<lb/>
choose Hart as his VP specifically for<lb/>
donning bikini briefs and other assorted<lb/>
non-Norwegian apparel. Hart will ac-<lb/>
cept the vice presidential, stripped low-<lb/>
risers despite his calling Mondale a<lb/>
"strictly white boxer kind of guy<lb/>
Mondale will, though, court the<lb/>
"tough guy" vote. He and the Secret<lb/>
Service agents assigned to him will run<lb/>
three marathons and a triathalon, arm<lb/>
ViewPoint<lb/>
wrestle an alligator and Mr. T and go to<lb/>
a bar mitzvah dressed as Arabs. After<lb/>
being released from the hospital, sym-<lb/>
pathy will shoot him up in the polls.<lb/>
Jesse Jackson will demand and receive<lb/>
from the party leadership an all-expense<lb/>
paid vacation for two to wonderful Tel<lb/>
Aviv, Israel. That's right, Jesse, you and<lb/>
a lucky someone who is somebody will<lb/>
be flown first class to rescue the hostage<lb/>
of your choice. Jesse will deliver the vote<lb/>
in exchange for this favor.<lb/>
Mondale, Hart and Jacksor will unify<lb/>
and make their first appearance together<lb/>
on 'Family Feud They will bi: introduc-<lb/>
ed by Richard Dawson as the "Mohack<lb/>
family" and will match wits ;igainst the<lb/>
Regbushes, a rich and powerful family<lb/>
from somewhere near Virginia. The<lb/>
Mohacks will disagree and not yell,<lb/>
"good answer, good answer" and be<lb/>
thrown off the show.<lb/>
Ronald Reagan will agree to debate<lb/>
Mondale in the fall, but will lose when<lb/>
he says how he discussed nuclear<lb/>
weapons with the White Hoi.ise kitchen<lb/>
help. He will also suffer a memory lapse<lb/>
during a news conference and say Jane<lb/>
Wyman is the president of E! Salvador.<lb/>
And, my last prediction. Whar you've<lb/>
all been waiting for ? my pick for the<lb/>
next head honcho of the fee world.<lb/>
Well, urn ? eeny, meeny, mim, moe -<lb/>
er, I pick Reagan by a nose ;n Illinois.<lb/>
Of course, he'll decline the offer to write<lb/>
his memoirs and star in a TV movie<lb/>
about his life. C'est la vie.<lb/>
TRB<lb/>
Tht Ntw KtpubUe<lb/>
They aren't lining up outside Studio<lb/>
54 anymore, and down here in<lb/>
Policyland they aren't talking much<lb/>
about the "window of vulnerability<lb/>
Those were fads of the 1970s. Geez,<lb/>
where have you been? But let's take a<lb/>
trip down memory lane. It's instructive.<lb/>
In the mid-to-late 1970s, conservative<lb/>
defense intellectuals began promoting<lb/>
the idea that the United States would<lb/>
face a period in the early-to mid-1980s<lb/>
? a "window of vulnerability" ? when<lb/>
our nuclear defenses would be inade-<lb/>
quate, unless drastic and immediate<lb/>
steps were taken. Specifically, the<lb/>
Soviets' nuclear buildup would have<lb/>
reached the point where they could wipe<lb/>
out our land-based nuclear missies and<lb/>
bombers in a surprise attack, with nukes<lb/>
to spare. After such an attack, we would<lb/>
still have our submarine-launched<lb/>
missiles. But, pending improvements<lb/>
due in the 1990s, these are only accurate<lb/>
enough to be useful against the general<lb/>
population ? unlike land-based<lb/>
missiles, which can hit specific military<lb/>
targets. The United States would thus<lb/>
face the choice of escalating to certain<lb/>
mutual holocaust, or surrender. Logic<lb/>
would dictate surrender.<lb/>
Reasoning backward, in the manner<lb/>
of nuclear strategy, "window" theorists<lb/>
argued that ? despite the uncertainties<lb/>
about whether the Soviets would or<lb/>
could do such a thing and what our ac-<lb/>
tual response might be ? the mere<lb/>
awareness of such a possibility would<lb/>
weigh heavily on the world's actors,<lb/>
leading to increased Soviet boldness and<lb/>
new depths of appeasement by our<lb/>
allies. The 1980 Republican platform<lb/>
predicted "geopolitical paralysis" for<lb/>
America unless the window was closed.<lb/>
The "window" theory is a fine exam-<lb/>
ple of the neoconservative dictum that<lb/>
"ideas have consequences It played a<lb/>
real role in stimulating a general appetite<lb/>
for defense spending among politicians<lb/>
and "opinion leaders What gave this<lb/>
idea power, however, was its specificity.<lb/>
Chicken Little had a detailed scenario of<lb/>
why the sky v, as falling, when, and what<lb/>
to do about it. "Our nuclear deterrent<lb/>
forces must be made survivable as rapid-<lb/>
ly as possible to close the window of<lb/>
vulnerability said candidate Ronald<lb/>
Reagan in 1980, for our own security<lb/>
and for the political perceptions of our<lb/>
adversaries, our allies and Third World<lb/>
Countries<lb/>
It is now 1984, the early-to-mid 1980s.<lb/>
Do you know where your "window of<lb/>
vulnerability" is? Last Dec. 14, Presi-<lb/>
dent Reagan said, "I think we have clos-<lb/>
ed largely that window of<lb/>
vulnerability Then on Feb. 15 he said<lb/>
"we've gone a long way toward" closing<lb/>
it, "but we still haven't done" it. On<lb/>
Feb. 22 he referred to "the window of<lb/>
vulnerability that we're trying to close<lb/>
But then on March 29 he said that the<lb/>
United States is now more secure than<lb/>
"earlier when our defenses were so lax<lb/>
that there was a window of vulnerabili-<lb/>
ty Come on, man, it's your metaphor.<lb/>
Get it straight!<lb/>
The truth is that absolutely nothing<lb/>
has been done to close the alleged win-<lb/>
dow of vulnerability. There are only two<lb/>
possibilities: either it never existed, or it<lb/>
is wide open. Both are inadmissible for<lb/>
Reagan.<lb/>
President Carter proposed to close the<lb/>
window by shuttling MX missiles<lb/>
around vast areas of the American West.<lb/>
The idea was that the Soviets wouldn't<lb/>
be able to find and hit all of these targets<lb/>
with the number of missiles they were<lb/>
allowed to have under SALT II. His first<lb/>
solution was "defense pack" ? planting<lb/>
MX missiles so close together that in-<lb/>
coming Soviet missiles would knock one<lb/>
another off target. After this and other<lb/>
schemes (MXs strapped to airplanes,<lb/>
MXs hidden in Good Humor trucks <lb/>
and so on) met with skepticism, Reagan<lb/>
appointed the Scowcroft Commission to<lb/>
think it all through again.<lb/>
To the naked eye, the Scowcroft<lb/>
Report of April 1983 seems to say that<lb/>
there is no window of vulnerability. "In<lb/>
the judgment of the Commission, the<lb/>
vulnerability of (missile) silos in the near<lb/>
term, viewed in isolation, is not a suffi-<lb/>
ciently dominant part of the overall pro-<lb/>
blem to do anything about it. Did<lb/>
Reagan denounce General Scowcroft<lb/>
and his commission for trying to hand us<lb/>
over to the Russians on the platter? Not<lb/>
at all. That's because the report recom-<lb/>
mends building the MX anyway. What<lb/>
for? A a bargaining ch.p. as a<lb/>
demonstration of national will, and as a<lb/>
potential first-strike weapon :n defense<lb/>
of Europe. But if Congress approves<lb/>
(the long twilight struggle continues),<lb/>
the new missile will go in the same old<lb/>
vulnerable silos, so its arrival aon't ad-<lb/>
dress the need Reagan said was so<lb/>
urgent. And the other strategic weapons<lb/>
Reagan has asked for won't be available<lb/>
before the end of the decade.<lb/>
The Scowcroft Report was the official<lb/>
signal that the "window of vulnerabili-<lb/>
ty" was out of fashion. Paul Nitze, for<lb/>
example, said last week that he has never<lb/>
used the term. (I cannot prove him<lb/>
wrong.) Nevertheless, Nitze was a<lb/>
founder of the Committee on the Pre-<lb/>
sent Danger and probably is more<lb/>
responsible than any other person for<lb/>
promoting the idea that our hind-based<lb/>
missiles were becoming vulnerable, with<lb/>
perilous strategic and geopolitical conse-<lb/>
quences ("an increase in the orospects<lb/>
for general Soviet hegemony was his<lb/>
warning in 1974). Have adequate steps<lb/>
been taken to avert the danger he<lb/>
predicted? No, he acknowledges. Does<lb/>
he see signs of the Soviet Union taking<lb/>
advantage of our strategic vulnerability?<lb/>
Eugene Rostow was another early<lb/>
'window" buff and later Reajian's first<lb/>
arms control director. Rostow does not<lb/>
bend with fashion. He reads the<lb/>
Scowcroft Report as triumphantly affir-<lb/>
ming the "window" theory, which is his<lb/>
privilege. He forthrightly believes we<lb/>
nave now entered a period where his<lb/>
prediction of 1979 - that we would "be<lb/>
vulnerable to nuclear war or nuclear<lb/>
r?1?11" and would "face a condition<lb/>
ot diplomatic impotence and be totally<lb/>
unable to use our conventional forces"<lb/>
? nas come true.<lb/>
f HI<lb/>
ASimpjyVlJ<lb/>
Drei<lb/>
By BRIAN RANCH <lb/>
If you had happenend to b<lb/>
Ohio ten years ago, you may h<lb/>
heard a whisper emerging h<lb/>
the industrial rhythms, a tan<lb/>
familiar melody straining to<lb/>
neard above the popular song<lb/>
the billion radios, tape decks,<lb/>
record players.<lb/>
These melodic wisps wen<lb/>
first chords of The Marvells, i<lb/>
the familiar notes were the soj<lb/>
of the 50s and the 60s. Bat<lb/>
new group wasn't just ano:<lb/>
group cashing in on the nostai<lb/>
craze of the mid-Os: 1<lb/>
Robert Green, Mark Rosenbei<lb/>
Earl Peaks, and Ken Posey o<lb/>
Marvells had added a Marvels<lb/>
new twist to their music.<lb/>
"We put visual presentation!<lb/>
it says Ed Zap, one of<lb/>
9-member group's three rem<lb/>
ing original members "us<lb/>
choreography, custumes. pn<lb/>
and we tried to make<lb/>
theatrical as possible<lb/>
'Vulnerability' Vulnerable I The F,?<lb/>
5 D VIUULDi v rg-x<lb/>
By KIMBERU COX<lb/>
M?ff ? rlu-r<lb/>
The Flower Basket, Iocs I<lb/>
3002 East 10th Street in Gref<lb/>
ville, is quite a florist. The s:<lb/>
shop opened three years ago<lb/>
has done surprisingh well,<lb/>
business is owned by Greg<lb/>
Tina Lee. Each of their fami<lb/>
help with the business during h<lb/>
day seasons. Greg and Tina<lb/>
most of the work as<lb/>
manage the establishment.<lb/>
The Art<lb/>
By MAR1 CASHIO<lb/>
M?f f ? mer<lb/>
While leafing throuv:<lb/>
March. 1984 issue of USAl<lb/>
magazine given to me by a friej<lb/>
I came upon an article ab<lb/>
m i<lb/>
i<lb/>
$i<lb/>
til<lb/>
. <lb/>
.HeaMeUPTV)BUCKS5H0BTCMH?Sllu Mm<lb/>
Grawfba, or the "poor man'<lb/>
Louisiana lifestyle.<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0005"/><lb/>
 CPS<lb/>
asy<lb/>
rice. Jesse will deliver the vote<lb/>
ige for this favor.<lb/>
laie. Hart and Jackson will unify<lb/>
e their first appearance together<lb/>
li Feud. The will be introduc-<lb/>
chard Daw son as the "Mohack<lb/>
: will match wits against the<lb/>
es, a rich and powerful family<lb/>
newhere near Virginia. The<lb/>
will disagree and not yell,<lb/>
swer, good answer" and be<lb/>
ff the show.<lb/>
. Reagan will agree to debate<lb/>
in the fall, but will lose when<lb/>
how he discussed nuclear<lb/>
with the White House kitchen<lb/>
will also suffer a memory lapse<lb/>
ws conference and say Jane<lb/>
is the president of El Salvador.<lb/>
my last prediction. What you've<lb/>
waiting for ? my pick for the<lb/>
id honcho of the free world.<lb/>
? eeny, meeny, miny, moe ?<lb/>
k Reagan by a nose in Illinois.<lb/>
 he'll decline the offer to write<lb/>
and star in a TV movie<lb/>
is life. C'est la vie.<lb/>
a bargaining chip, as a<lb/>
-anon of national will, and as a<lb/>
first-strike weapon in defense<lb/>
oe. But if Congress approves<lb/>
ig twilight struggle continues),<lb/>
missile will go in the same old<lb/>
Ible silos, so its arrival won't ad-<lb/>
he need Reagan said was so<lb/>
And the other strategic weapons<lb/>
has asked for won't be available<lb/>
the end of the decade.<lb/>
rowcrofl Report was the official<lb/>
;hat the "window of vulnerabili-<lb/>
out oi fashion. Paul Nitze, for<lb/>
le, said last week that he has never<lb/>
(he term. (I cannot prove him<lb/>
) Nevertheless, Nitze was a<lb/>
pr of the Committee on the Pre-<lb/>
anger and probably is more<lb/>
Isibie than any other person for<lb/>
ting the idea that our land-based<lb/>
p were becoming vulnerable, with<lb/>
strategic and geopolitical conse-<lb/>
ts ("an increase in the prospects<lb/>
neral Soviet hegemony was his<lb/>
ig in 1974). Have adequate steps<lb/>
j taken to avert the danger he<lb/>
ted? No, he acknowledges. Does<lb/>
signs of the Soviet Union taking<lb/>
Itage of our strategic vulnerability?<lb/>
ene Rostow was another early<lb/>
ow" buff and later Reagan's first<lb/>
control director. Rostow does not<lb/>
with fashion. He reads the<lb/>
croft Report as triumphantly affir-<lb/>
the "window" theory, which is his<lb/>
ege. He forthrightly believes we<lb/>
now entered a period where his<lb/>
ion of 1979 ? that we would "be<lb/>
rable to nuclear war or nuclear<lb/>
mail" and would "face a condition<lb/>
plomatic impotence and be totally<lb/>
to use our conventional forces"<lb/>
s come true.<lb/>
let<lb/>
le<lb/>
ill<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CARCH INI AN<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 13, 1S84<lb/>
Page 5<lb/>
A Simply Marvell-ous Group<lb/>
Dressing Up To The Music<lb/>
By BRIAN RANGELEY<lb/>
"l?ff Writer<lb/>
If you had happenend to be in<lb/>
Ohio ten years ago, you may have<lb/>
heard a whisper emerging from<lb/>
the industrial rhythms, a faintly<lb/>
familiar melody straining to be<lb/>
heard above the popular songs of<lb/>
the billion radios, tape decks, and<lb/>
record players.<lb/>
These melodic wisps were the<lb/>
first chords of The Marvells, and<lb/>
the familiar notes were the sounds<lb/>
of the 50s and the 60s. But this<lb/>
new group wasn't just another<lb/>
group cashing in on the nostalgia<lb/>
craze of the mid-70s; The<lb/>
The Marvells, now hailing from<lb/>
Nashville, premiered at the<lb/>
Carolina Opry House last week.<lb/>
Last Wednesday night the band<lb/>
played three one-hour sets. That<lb/>
night the first set was the most<lb/>
theatrical and featured much of<lb/>
the oldest material.<lb/>
Each member dressed like a 50s<lb/>
character. A street hood, a motor-<lb/>
cycle gang member (leather jacket<lb/>
and spiked collar included), a<lb/>
preppie guy, and even a real-life<lb/>
nerd, adorned the stage.<lb/>
Drummer Freeman Brown was<lb/>
pounding out that 50s beat, when<lb/>
who should appear on stage, but<lb/>
her around the stage.<lb/>
Hours of preparation go into<lb/>
each minute of presentation.<lb/>
Usually, one of the members<lb/>
selects a song that he or she would<lb/>
like to do. The whole group<lb/>
discusses who will sing the song,<lb/>
who plays the various in-<lb/>
struments, and who stands up<lb/>
front. Most of the members can<lb/>
play at least two instruments.<lb/>
The group then arranges the<lb/>
music, the vocals, and the<lb/>
choreography. Choreography<lb/>
takes the most time.<lb/>
All of that time is well-invested.<lb/>
The Marvells have played the<lb/>
1<lb/>
?rSe?pSreen,HM;rk 5osenber8er.up?d Lord, Ed Zap, Freeman Brown, Myron Stillman, Tony Ko<lb/>
Earl Peaks, and Ken Posey compris. ihe original Marvells. ' y '<lb/>
Marvells had added a Marvell-ous<lb/>
new twist to their music.<lb/>
"We put visual presentations to<lb/>
it says Ed Zap, one of the<lb/>
9-member group's three remain-<lb/>
ing original members, "using<lb/>
choreography, custumes, props,<lb/>
and we tried to make it as<lb/>
theatrical as possible<lb/>
? Buddy Holly! ? or at least a<lb/>
close copy, the customed Mark<lb/>
Rosenberger. Rosenberger danced<lb/>
around the stage in the true Buddy<lb/>
Holly tradition.<lb/>
The crowd enjoyed visual com-<lb/>
edy to the music of "Lion Sleeps<lb/>
Tonight Wendy Lord played a<lb/>
damsel in distress as a lion chased<lb/>
Grand Old Opry, warmed up for<lb/>
Lerry Lee Lewis, and toured the<lb/>
South from Chattanooga to<lb/>
Hylton Head. Currently, The<lb/>
Marvells has two shows on the<lb/>
Nashville Cable Network.<lb/>
Ed Zap says that the group is<lb/>
breaking into the large country<lb/>
music clubs; apparently, the au-<lb/>
uiences also have a taste for the<lb/>
oldies.<lb/>
And the oldies are what The<lb/>
Marvells does best. The second set<lb/>
began rockin' to the beat of<lb/>
"Locomotion" and the people<lb/>
began to jump. The dance floor<lb/>
filled with flashdancers,<lb/>
breakdancers, bumping beer<lb/>
bellies, and even one mother-son<lb/>
combination.<lb/>
After a quick costume change,<lb/>
Wendy Lord entered the<lb/>
stagefront in a black evening<lb/>
gown. The pace slowed as she<lb/>
began singing Streisand's "People<lb/>
Who Need People but the<lb/>
crowd was as earnest in slow dan-<lb/>
cing as they were in boppin<lb/>
The band beautifully recreated<lb/>
the hamonies of the Beach Boys in<lb/>
a medley of Beach Boy tunes.<lb/>
Then Wendy re-emerged as Con-<lb/>
nie Francis, and Ken Posey<lb/>
followed up as the "Killer a<lb/>
convincing Jerry Lee Lewis.<lb/>
The excitement skyrocketed as<lb/>
the band belted out hits by Bill<lb/>
Hailey and the Comets, James<lb/>
Brown, Sam &amp; Dave, and<lb/>
Rosenberger again as Chuck<lb/>
Berry. Wendy broke the pace once<lb/>
again, this time to satisfy the<lb/>
country music fans' appetite with<lb/>
Pasty cline's "I Fall to Pieces<lb/>
The shows seemed to move<lb/>
smoothly; the crowd readily ac-<lb/>
cepted the costume changes and<lb/>
different music styles.<lb/>
Occasionally, however, confu-<lb/>
sion sets in. Mark Rosenberger,<lb/>
who does Chuck Berry in the se-<lb/>
cond set, also does Buddy Holly<lb/>
in the first set.<lb/>
"There was this one time said<lb/>
Tony Kaz, "when we were doing<lb/>
both in the same set. At this point<lb/>
in time, when he went off to<lb/>
change, we were playing his Bud-<lb/>
dy Holly intro. Well, he comes<lb/>
out and he's half white and half<lb/>
black, waving his arms saying,<lb/>
'no,no He was wearing half of<lb/>
his Chuck Berry suit. We were<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT - ECU Photo Lat<lb/>
The Marvells<lb/>
Last week The Marvells mesmerized fans with their tulent and unique<lb/>
choreography at The Carolina Opry House.<lb/>
totally lost. Someone else in the<lb/>
band had to do the Buddy Holly<lb/>
song at the last minute<lb/>
During the band's last break,<lb/>
the crowd thinned and the noise<lb/>
decreased. But anticipation<lb/>
permeated the air as people sensed<lb/>
the last hurrah coming.<lb/>
Bartenders passed out fresh cans<lb/>
of beer.<lb/>
The Marvells came onto the<lb/>
stage and Boom-shak a-lak-a-la-<lb/>
ed right into a medley of Sly and<lb/>
the Family Stone hits. For a few-<lb/>
minutes, the crowd sat back and<lb/>
sipped their beverages, but they<lb/>
couldn't resist those inviting<lb/>
rhythms. Little time passed before<lb/>
they again put on their boogie<lb/>
shoes and hit the floor.<lb/>
Sly Stone perfectly led into the<lb/>
Motown Medley, featuring the<lb/>
best of Smokey Robinson and the<lb/>
Miracles, The Temptations, The<lb/>
Four Tops, and the Supremes.<lb/>
The Supremes act was the most in-<lb/>
teresting; Wendy Lord sang the<lb/>
Diana Ross par.s while three of<lb/>
the guys ? Tony Kaz, Robert<lb/>
Green, and Ed Zap ? backed her.<lb/>
Quite effective.<lb/>
Robert Green and Earl Peaks<lb/>
later teamed up for a remarkable<lb/>
rendition of the Righteous<lb/>
Brothers' "Levin Feeling<lb/>
However, the bind didn't do as<lb/>
well with the Jackson Five's A-B<lb/>
C. The song seemed to lack some<lb/>
of the characteristic tightness,<lb/>
that Jackson punch. The Marvells<lb/>
ended the night v.ith Bob Seeger's<lb/>
"Old Time Rock 'N' Roll" while<lb/>
the crowd danced its last Tango.<lb/>
By the time th?<lb/>
the musicians ha<lb/>
Said Kaz, "We'r<lb/>
pie educated as tc<lb/>
probably quite ;<lb/>
from what peoj<lb/>
here. The peopl<lb/>
you know, whei<lb/>
clap<lb/>
And clap the<lb/>
night was over,<lb/>
won the crowd<lb/>
: getting the peo-<lb/>
: what we do. It's<lb/>
 different twit<lb/>
)le are used to<lb/>
: have to learn.<lb/>
e they're gonna<lb/>
people did.<lb/>
erable I The F,?wer Basket: An Exquisite Shop For All Seasons<lb/>
By KIMBERLY COX<lb/>
Sttff Writer<lb/>
The Flower Basket, located at<lb/>
3002 East 10th Street in Green-<lb/>
ville, is quite a florist. The small<lb/>
shop opened three years ago and<lb/>
has done surprisingly well. The<lb/>
business is owned by Greg and<lb/>
Tina Lee. Each of their families<lb/>
help with the business during holi-<lb/>
day seasons. Greg and Tina do<lb/>
most of the work as well as<lb/>
manage the establishment.<lb/>
The works of the Flower Basket<lb/>
are what makes it the most<lb/>
outstanding florist in the Green-<lb/>
ville area. The Flower Basket uses<lb/>
the freshest flowers, creative<lb/>
talents, and over all, puts more<lb/>
time and effort into each piece.<lb/>
Their aim is to listen attentively to<lb/>
what each customer desires and to<lb/>
suggest helpful ideas based on<lb/>
their knowledge so they create a<lb/>
perfect arrangement that will<lb/>
satisfy their customer and the oc-<lb/>
casion.<lb/>
The true beauty of this business<lb/>
is the arranging and creating of<lb/>
the flowers. Greg and Tina truly<lb/>
enjoy their work, and it shows.<lb/>
Each boutonniere, corsage, bou-<lb/>
quet, and centerpiece is special<lb/>
and is looked at as an individual<lb/>
art piece. More time and creative<lb/>
thought are put into their works<lb/>
of art. Their prices are also lower<lb/>
than area competitors. Greg and<lb/>
Tina are sincerely proud of each<lb/>
article they complete.<lb/>
Because of their dedication to<lb/>
make their work art, one can<lb/>
definitely tell the flowers which<lb/>
come from the Flower Basket.<lb/>
Their flowers are set apart from<lb/>
other florists due to their secure<lb/>
arranging and fresh creativeness.<lb/>
The Lee's strive to let the flowers<lb/>
they arrange represent the Flower<lb/>
Basket. One of the keys to their<lb/>
success is their friendliness to their<lb/>
patrons. Greg and Tina have not<lb/>
lost touch with their customers as other countries. If the order is<lb/>
ot Th,Ssts hpv e, a ? made prior lo 12 noon- delivery?<lb/>
The Flower Basket does offer a usually made he same dav<lb/>
delivery service which extends 3 Holidays, of course, are an excep-<lb/>
miles past the city limits. If you tion.<lb/>
The Art Of Eating Crawfish Louisiana Style<lb/>
By MARY CASHIO<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
'mudbugs Usually, the name<lb/>
conjures up an image of crawly<lb/>
While leafing through the yucky creatures. Nothing could be<lb/>
MarQh, 1984 issue of USA, a further from the truth Crawly<lb/>
magazine given to me by a friend, they may be, but definitely not<lb/>
I came upon an article about yucky.<lb/>
Crawfish, or the "poor man's lobster is an important part of the<lb/>
Louisiana lifestyle.<lb/>
Indeed the little critters, a<lb/>
delicacy in Louisiana, are a sym-<lb/>
bol of the laid-back, easygoing<lb/>
lifestyle of southern Louisiana.<lb/>
Like clambakes, crawfish boils<lb/>
are festive occasions of revelry.<lb/>
There is a certain mystique to sit-<lb/>
ting in front of a pan of crawfish,<lb/>
with other devotees, pealing the<lb/>
tails and taking an occational sip<lb/>
of Dixie beer. Even a stranger can<lb/>
get caught up in this ritual, the<lb/>
origin of which lies in the customs<lb/>
of the French-speaking Cajuns of<lb/>
Southern Lousiana, descendants<lb/>
of the Acadians who were expell-<lb/>
ed from Nova Scotia by the<lb/>
British in 1763.<lb/>
Crawfish(by the way, Louisia-<lb/>
nians never, under any cir-<lb/>
cumstances, say "crawfish") are<lb/>
often called the poor man's<lb/>
lobster, a label which is<lb/>
misleading, because while the two<lb/>
creatures resemble each other,<lb/>
they come under two entirely dif-<lb/>
ferent catagories. Both are crusta-<lb/>
ceans, though.<lb/>
According to the article men-<lb/>
tioned above, mudbug eating has<lb/>
just become a craze. On the<lb/>
average, in 1982, people in Loui-<lb/>
siana consumed over 34 million<lb/>
pounds of them. This puzzles<lb/>
Hubert Melencon, a retired<lb/>
crawfisherman, who said that<lb/>
people just didn't eat that many in<lb/>
the old days. The only edible part<lb/>
of the critters is the meat inside<lb/>
the tail.<lb/>
They usually are served in three<lb/>
ways: boiled; in an etouffee,<lb/>
whereby the crawfish meat is<lb/>
cooked in a thick sauce and served<lb/>
over rice; or as a bisque, whereby<lb/>
empty crawfish shells are stuffed<lb/>
with crawfish stuffing.<lb/>
Here is a recipe for boiling<lb/>
crawfish, which is an art. It is not<lb/>
enough merely to have a pile of<lb/>
live crawfish and a pot of water.<lb/>
One has to blend ingredients<lb/>
skillfully. Twenty-five pounds of<lb/>
crawfish will serve five people.<lb/>
4 gallons water<lb/>
1 one-lb. box salt<lb/>
1 pint cayenne pepper<lb/>
3 lemons, sectioned<lb/>
15 whole, peeled onions<lb/>
20 small, unpeeled Irish<lb/>
potatoes<lb/>
1 box crab boil<lb/>
25 lbs. live crawfish<lb/>
According to the article, "put<lb/>
four gallons of water, salt,<lb/>
cayenne, lemons, onions,<lb/>
potatoes, and crab boil in a<lb/>
10-gallon pot. Cover and bring to<lb/>
a boil. Add crawfish, cover and<lb/>
bring back to a boil. Simmer for<lb/>
10 minutes, then leave in water for<lb/>
another ten minutes. Drain and<lb/>
serve with condiments on the<lb/>
side<lb/>
Right now, they may still be in<lb/>
season, which usually lasts from<lb/>
about mid-March through mid-<lb/>
May. However, since<lb/>
crawfishermen started cultivating<lb/>
crawfish ponds, the season has ex-<lb/>
tended. It now may begin as early<lb/>
as January and end as late as<lb/>
August.<lb/>
Part of this extended season<lb/>
comes at the same time as the<lb/>
Louisiana World's Fair, which is<lb/>
attracting people from all over the<lb/>
world with its exhibit of priceless<lb/>
treasures from Versailles and the<lb/>
Vatican.<lb/>
Now is as good a time as any to<lb/>
visit the World's Fair and get a<lb/>
taste of crawfish in Cajun County<lb/>
of South Louisiana. As they say in<lb/>
the Pelican state, let the good<lb/>
times roll.<lb/>
mm. w BRYAN HUMBEHT ? ECU Photo ik<lb/>
The Lees proudly display their shop. The Flower Basket.<lb/>
purchase something that is $15 or<lb/>
more, there is no delivery charge;<lb/>
$10 or more, there is a delivery fee<lb/>
of $1.50; and for purchases under<lb/>
$10, there is a delivery fee of $2.<lb/>
The Flower Basket will deliver<lb/>
anywhere in Pitt County for a<lb/>
higher fee based on mileage. Ac-<lb/>
cording to Tina, "A large percent<lb/>
of their sales are done cash and<lb/>
carry, where the customer pays<lb/>
for the article and takes it with<lb/>
him<lb/>
Teleflora services are also of-<lb/>
fered. For only $2.50 one may<lb/>
select and choose flowers to be<lb/>
sent anywhere in the United<lb/>
States, Canada, Mexico, and<lb/>
In addition to" fresh flowers,<lb/>
they also carrybrass and gold<lb/>
items, silk and dried flower ar-<lb/>
rangements, Japanese pottery,<lb/>
household plants, and attractive<lb/>
stuffed animals, all of which may-<lb/>
be incorporated with ar-<lb/>
rangements.<lb/>
The Flower Basket is everyones<lb/>
florist. They have a wide selection<lb/>
of flowers, and offer everyone<lb/>
something for their price range<lb/>
whether it is 50 cents or 50 dollars.<lb/>
When you need flowers for that<lb/>
special someone or occasion, the<lb/>
Flower Basket and Greg and Tina<lb/>
are where you neec to be. They<lb/>
are open MonSat.<lb/>
?f? Br?e??M,i PBS ?? ?"??? ? ?" WVSP Benefit<lb/>
Concert tonight at 9:30 at the Attfc. ?"?ni<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0006"/><lb/>
.6 THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 13, 1984<lb/>
Patrick O'Neill Relying On Faith, Support<lb/>
u. A41 k- r u a urn j i . . .   .<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Sttff Writer<lb/>
Below is a continuation of last<lb/>
week's telephone interview with<lb/>
former East Carolinian news<lb/>
editor and writer, Patrick O'Neill.<lb/>
Patrick, a member of the Per-<lb/>
shing Plowshares, was arrested<lb/>
Easter Sunday for breaking into<lb/>
the Martin Marietta plant in<lb/>
Orlando, Florida and damaging<lb/>
Pershing missile components.<lb/>
EC:Have you received support<lb/>
from people around the country?<lb/>
PO: Yeah. Well, most of the sup-<lb/>
port, of course, has been from<lb/>
New York and North Carolina<lb/>
and Florida, except for people in<lb/>
the peace movement up in New<lb/>
England. I think that the real<lb/>
value of these actions is the im-<lb/>
pact that they have on the real<lb/>
local community. I think what<lb/>
we've done is sufficiently brought<lb/>
the reality of Martin Marietta to<lb/>
these people. Hey, in the land of<lb/>
Disneyland we've got a stark reali-<lb/>
ty called Pershing II; it might be<lb/>
the thing that ends the world, and<lb/>
1 feel that's been well com-<lb/>
municated.<lb/>
From the visits I get from local<lb/>
eucharistic ministers, they've said<lb/>
we really accomplished a lot. I got<lb/>
a letter from Dirk Sprite and this<lb/>
is a real beautiful quote that he<lb/>
said. "In the hands of the<lb/>
Blacksmith, we hope that your<lb/>
basic metal is of sufficient quality,<lb/>
and when he's through with this<lb/>
conditioning you'll be stronger,<lb/>
wiser, more effective discipline,<lb/>
better prepared for your next<lb/>
assignment. Your witness is to so<lb/>
many of who are more timid, less<lb/>
honest, unprepared Dirk is a<lb/>
medical doctor in Chapel Hill who<lb/>
was fired from the clinic he work-<lb/>
ed at because he was involved in a<lb/>
tax day protest against the arms<lb/>
race. After he was firedhe decided<lb/>
that this was a sign to him as a<lb/>
Quaker that he should work full-<lb/>
time for peace. He's working full-<lb/>
time on disarmament. My jour-<lb/>
nalism professor at North<lb/>
Carolina Central gave me an A ?<lb/>
you know I missed the last half of<lb/>
the semester ? and sent me a let-<lb/>
ter saying, "I admire you for your<lb/>
passion and compassion; for your<lb/>
concern and love of humanity; for<lb/>
your conviction and courage<lb/>
Melinda Newell wrote, "I can't<lb/>
get you out of my mind, you and<lb/>
the gallant peacemakers who are<lb/>
confined with you. The profundi-<lb/>
ty of your course of action is<lb/>
monumental. I have held back for<lb/>
so long. That's been a theme<lb/>
throughout the letters. They're<lb/>
almost like personal admissions of<lb/>
a need to do more.<lb/>
Some of the local people in<lb/>
Florida said, "Your actions give<lb/>
me strength. At a time when I<lb/>
need an example of courage, I<lb/>
thank you for providing it. Your<lb/>
witness is an inspiration to us<lb/>
all From another Florida resi-<lb/>
dent, "Dear Patrick, Lift high<lb/>
your banner of love<lb/>
A friend of mine in New York<lb/>
wrote to me, "Although you are<lb/>
paying mightely for your so-called<lb/>
crime, what is legal is not always<lb/>
just. You did what you believed<lb/>
was right, which very few men<lb/>
would do. You are a man of iron<lb/>
and I am proud to call you a<lb/>
friend of mine Sister Happy<lb/>
quoted from Thomas Merton:<lb/>
"The duty of the Christian is to<lb/>
do the one task which God has im<lb/>
posed on us today. That task is to<lb/>
work for the total abolition of<lb/>
war Happy writes, "You and<lb/>
the others have taken the one step,<lb/>
a big one Later she writes, "I'll<lb/>
be praying for you and I'm sure<lb/>
you'll be praying that I and many<lb/>
others will have courage to work<lb/>
for peace. I know that my pro-<lb/>
blem is that I have too much to<lb/>
lose. I guess the main thing I want<lb/>
you to know is that I'm very<lb/>
grateful that you have taken the<lb/>
faith. It is just too hard to explain<lb/>
to people what it's like. Most peo-<lb/>
ple I know wouldn't want to deal<lb/>
with this for thirty minutes, what<lb/>
I've been locked into for 40<lb/>
daysthirty minutes at max.<lb/>
There's no segregation of in-<lb/>
mates at all. A guy who just got<lb/>
put in here for blowing<lb/>
somebody's head away is right<lb/>
near my cell. The guy's a Vietnam<lb/>
veteran. The guy's permanently<lb/>
disabled; he's obviously mentally<lb/>
ill. He just killed somebody ?<lb/>
prophetic stand you have taken, he's right here in the next cell with<lb/>
and I do think you are right to do people in here for bullshit crimes<lb/>
it. I pray that you'U be led by the like driving under the influence,<lb/>
spint in<lb/>
way<lb/>
all the steps along the<lb/>
Almost every day I get one of<lb/>
those kinds of letters that makes<lb/>
me want to cry. Quite honestly, I<lb/>
just cry every day. I cry for a lot<lb/>
of different reasons. I cry because<lb/>
I'm overwhelmed by the enormity<lb/>
of the support from every single<lb/>
person in my life who means<lb/>
anything to me. They all support<lb/>
what I've done, and yet, I'm sit-<lb/>
ting in a prison cell facing the<lb/>
possibility of years in prison. I<lb/>
just cry because the actions of the <lb/>
peacemakers are so badly do something to help youper-<lb/>
understood. It's so essential that sonally or contribute to the ending<lb/>
we respond to this filthy rotten of the arms race, what would you<lb/>
driving with suspended sentence;<lb/>
these people are in the same cell.<lb/>
What can I say? The guy could<lb/>
have a flashback in the middle of<lb/>
the night and start choking people<lb/>
to death. I don't know. I'm on my<lb/>
toes all the time. You've got to<lb/>
assert yourself, and you've got to<lb/>
have faith. That's the whole<lb/>
point. I've got to believe that God<lb/>
is taking care of me. If I don't<lb/>
believe that, Mike, I might as well<lb/>
just hang myself.<lb/>
EC: For students and faculty who<lb/>
are sympathetic and would like to<lb/>
war. They have to be as dedicated<lb/>
to the achievement of non-violent<lb/>
cause as they are to the attainment<lb/>
of a world with violence ? the<lb/>
status quo.<lb/>
People have to be willing to<lb/>
make the commitment, as Merton<lb/>
said, to totally abolish war. It's<lb/>
quite clear that war is obsolete,<lb/>
but we've got to abolish it. I hate<lb/>
to offend people. People who<lb/>
want to write off the Pershing<lb/>
Plowshares as just a radical<lb/>
groupI just want to say to them:<lb/>
what stage are we at with this<lb/>
arms race? We've seen The Day<lb/>
After and we've heard people teU<lb/>
us that nuclear was is inevitable ?<lb/>
we've got to stop it.<lb/>
I see all my friends taking col-<lb/>
lege courses and preparing for<lb/>
graduate school, making all these<lb/>
grandiose plans, and they treat the<lb/>
issue of nuclear war and justice<lb/>
for the oppressed like a hobby.<lb/>
"Well, PI try to make the<lb/>
meeting if I can, I'm really busy,<lb/>
I'm working on this, I'm working<lb/>
on that It's just absolutely in-<lb/>
comprehensible to me that the<lb/>
building can be burning all<lb/>
around us and we're going to keep<lb/>
fiddling. I don't understand it. I<lb/>
can't see anybody not working to<lb/>
prevent this thing. It's just so<lb/>
clear and so obvious that nuclear<lb/>
war is inevitable if there isn't<lb/>
some incredible changes in the<lb/>
way the world is working now.<lb/>
I guess I'm in a state of shock.<lb/>
It's not just the 18 and 20-year-old<lb/>
students who attend the wealth of<lb/>
universities in this country ? it's<lb/>
the professorsit's the people<lb/>
who are in a position where they<lb/>
have a responsibility to train peo-<lb/>
ple ? and they're sending a bunch<lb/>
of ill-prepared people out into the<lb/>
world who think they have the<lb/>
same opportunities that their<lb/>
mothers and fathers did. The<lb/>
signs of the times are there ?<lb/>
we're in the last stages of a<lb/>
nuclear age. Our sisters and<lb/>
brothers are dropping like flies,<lb/>
and we're worried about nailing<lb/>
down our nice little niche ? our<lb/>
nice little job where we make<lb/>
$20,000 a year and give our five<lb/>
bucks in the collection plate on<lb/>
Sunday ? and we feel that we've<lb/>
done our duty. I just refuse to ac-<lb/>
cept thestatus quo that people dy-<lb/>
ing of starvation is acceptable.<lb/>
World hunger is a preventable<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
I gave a couple of Jxtures at<lb/>
ECU and at Georgetov n Univer-<lb/>
sity in Washington, and I said to<lb/>
the people, "Compassion isn't<lb/>
something I can give you. I can't<lb/>
take compassion or passion and<lb/>
jam it down your throat. Either<lb/>
the fact that 50,000 people dying<lb/>
each day causes you a lump in<lb/>
your throat or it doesn't. Either<lb/>
these are real people or they're<lb/>
just statistics. Or you really feel<lb/>
that in you gut. That's the pro-<lb/>
blem ? that we're just a nation<lb/>
without compassion. We really<lb/>
just view the suffering of the poor<lb/>
as a fact of life, and it's just<lb/>
abominable.<lb/>
I mentioned to you when I went<lb/>
to Haiti and I saw little babies<lb/>
starving in the streets ? you<lb/>
know, laying in mud ind their<lb/>
own defacation. Here's a country<lb/>
that's only 45 minutes by air from<lb/>
Miami. It's just a gross, gross<lb/>
thing.<lb/>
system, from a position of love<lb/>
and trust, and I guess people just<lb/>
don't understand it. I, for one,<lb/>
don't understand it.<lb/>
EC: Can you get books to read?<lb/>
PO.Yeah, I can get books. I don't<lb/>
want any books. I don't know<lb/>
whether they'd let me have them<lb/>
or not.<lb/>
EC: Are you still giving Bible<lb/>
classes?<lb/>
PO: They're not really Bible<lb/>
classes. We get some guys<lb/>
together and do some scripture<lb/>
study. We had a memorial service<lb/>
when the first black in over 20<lb/>
years was executed in Florida. At<lb/>
the exact moment he was being ex-<lb/>
ecuted, we had a service and talk-<lb/>
ed about capital punishment and<lb/>
that whole issue<lb/>
suggest?<lb/>
PO: Well, I don't think that atten-<lb/>
tion should be placed on the Per-<lb/>
shing Plowshares. What I'm hop-<lb/>
ing is that our action as a witness<lb/>
will enpower others to take action<lb/>
of a similar nature. That is, work-<lb/>
ing for peace. As Helen Caldicott<lb/>
says, "We've got six months to<lb/>
save the earth. We hold it in the<lb/>
palm of our hands. We are the<lb/>
curators of God's creation I<lb/>
think we have to be willing to be<lb/>
heard; we have to be willing to<lb/>
take a risk for peace; we've got to<lb/>
be willing to stick our necks out.<lb/>
The fact is, we've got a limited<lb/>
amount of time to deal with this<lb/>
problem and if we don't, we're<lb/>
going to have a nuclear war and<lb/>
the whole third world con-<lb/>
Theresa new fashion place in<lb/>
town with thename irandbxjou<lb/>
want at prices yan can ajbrd<lb/>
CalvinKci<lb/>
 ?????? iojuv ??.??? nunu ,KJU-<lb/>
It's hard, Mike. I can't tell you sc,?usness. If people are going to<lb/>
how screwed upit isit's just do something, they have to treat<lb/>
amazing. Stuck in this roomI non-violence and the prevention<lb/>
swear, the only thing I've got is o war witn a moral equivalent of<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
looiiiifC logs<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
Located Grimcsland Hwy 33 in Old School House<lb/>
10 munutes from Greenville<lb/>
WE'VE GOT A GIFT<lb/>
THAT WOULD PLEASE<lb/>
DAD.<lb/>
w? inn, i iiiiiii. nmmmmtmmmmmmtmmmmmmmmmmmmmm<lb/>
:?<lb/>
consolidated<lb/>
Theatres<lb/>
jMans<lb/>
Wm<lb/>
756 3307<lb/>
PAMfcY<lb/>
USTAUtANTS<lb/>
Combination Special<lb/>
Trout, Shrimp<lb/>
and Deviled Crab<lb/>
105 Airport Rd.<lb/>
Grwwllle, NC 27134<lb/>
(919) 758-0327<lb/>
204 FAST 5th S'<lb/>
PHONE 7JH4J7<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27134<lb/>
Albums &amp; Cassettes<lb/>
$8.98 List- Safe $5.99<lb/>
Newest releases by:<lb/>
Steve Perry<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Bruce Springsteen<lb/>
Billy Idol<lb/>
Cyndi Lemper<lb/>
English Beat<lb/>
R.E.M.<lb/>
Roger Water<lb/>
Lou Reed<lb/>
Huey Lewis and the News<lb/>
H,J,A,J-<lb/>
(Hagar, Schon, Aaronson, 4 Shrieve)<lb/>
Scorpkms<lb/>
The Cars<lb/>
Psychedelic Furs<lb/>
sa<lb/>
12:30-2:45<lb/>
5:00-7:15-9:30<lb/>
? NOW ?<lb/>
.RATED -PG-<lb/>
LATE<lb/>
SHOW<lb/>
Fri. &amp;<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
HARRISON<lb/>
FORD<lb/>
INDIANA JONES<lb/>
and the Temple<lb/>
of Doom<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
txP?<lb/>
THE SUPERNATURAL COMEDY:<lb/>
fOLDENpMi<lb/>
THE MOST<lb/>
BEAUTIFUL<lb/>
GIRLS IN<lb/>
THE<lb/>
WORLD<lb/>
WELCOME STUDENTS<lb/>
PLITT<lb/>
CAR0LHU EAST CENTER<lb/>
756-1449<lb/>
A PARAMOUNT<lb/>
PICTURE<lb/>
2:00-2:50-5:00-7:10-9:20<lb/>
JOIN THE SEARCH.<lb/>
S1ARTRGKJE<lb/>
THE SEARCH<lb/>
FOR SPOCK<lb/>
A PARAMOUNT M<lb/>
picture urtrl<lb/>
12:40-2:50-5:00-7:10-9:20<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
TfckcU Froa CENTRAL TICKET OFFICE at<lb/>
TCCIAL<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
From the first laugh,<lb/>
youTJ be booked!<lb/>
v<lb/>
12:50-2:55-7:05-9:10<lb/>
MPARTOCKV;<lb/>
PART "STAR WARS<lb/>
?Gene Stofcaf, AT THE MOVES<lb/>
ROBERT<lb/>
REDFORD<lb/>
NATUEAL<lb/>
2:00-4:30-7:00-9:30<lb/>
JUST BRING THIS AD AND<lb/>
XS?11 CAROLINA<lb/>
STUDENT I.D. CARD AND<lb/>
GET A10 DISCOUNT OFF<lb/>
YOUR PURCHASE<lb/>
OfFEROTanJNE3?.ANDDOISN0rAPPLYTOSAxXMIBraijWDISi<lb/>
LEISURE WEAR SHOP <lb/>
LOCATED INSIDE<lb/>
SUPE<lb/>
SAVING<lb/>
CENTER .<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN j.<lb/>
History Of T<lb/>
Me<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
SufTWrlle<lb/>
The first version of The Va<lb/>
birds, formed m London durf<lb/>
1963, included Keith R.<lb/>
(vocals), Chris Dreja (guitar), Ji<lb/>
McCarty (drums), Paul Sam<lb/>
Smith (bass), and Ei<lb/>
"Slowhand" Clapton (he pUy,<lb/>
so fast he looked slow . They wt<lb/>
called the most blueswailing mc<lb/>
Yarmirizing Yardbirds, and wh<lb/>
they rocked songs like "T<lb/>
Much Monkey Business"<lb/>
knew why.<lb/>
The first hint of success car<lb/>
from replacing rhe Rolling Ston<lb/>
as house band at the Crawdad<lb/>
Club in Richmond. England<lb/>
1965 the title song from For o,<lb/>
Love by Graham Gouldman, latj<lb/>
of lOcc. became their first U.S.<lb/>
at number six. After playing<lb/>
four cuts for the Having 4 Rax<lb/>
Up Ip, Clapton left to play bla<lb/>
Another guitar wiz, Jef Bee<lb/>
replaced him. Number n:n<lb/>
"Heart Full of Soul" follow<lb/>
and the English hit "Evil-Hear<lb/>
You" preceeded their final I<lb/>
top 20 U S. singles "Shape<lb/>
Things" and "Over Un<lb/>
Sideways Down" in 1966.<lb/>
Samwell-Smith left to becci<lb/>
producer, and session-man Jim<lb/>
Page entered after working w<lb/>
The Who ("I Can't Explain. <lb/>
Generation). He then worked wi<lb/>
Van Morrison ("G-L-O-R-l-A<lb/>
Baby Please Don't Go), T<lb/>
Kinks, Tom Jones ("It's N<lb/>
Unusual"), and others. The grc<lb/>
then appeared in the mov<lb/>
Blowup. With Beck's long illne.<lb/>
the band fell apart in 196.5 aft<lb/>
one last number 50 "Happenir<lb/>
10 Years Ago Dreja became<lb/>
photographer, and Rel: ar.d N<lb/>
Cany formed a series oi iins<lb/>
cessful bands before Rel el<lb/>
tricuted himself with his euitar<lb/>
May 14. 196.While the oth<lb/>
faded away. Jimmy Page w<lb/>
ready to break loose.<lb/>
Jimmy, being the only Yardb:<lb/>
left to fulfill contracts, formed t<lb/>
New Yardbirds with Robert Pla<lb/>
(vocals), John Bonham (drum<lb/>
and John Paul Jones (bass). Jo.<lb/>
wa?anoth?-veteran session pla<lb/>
fo acts like The RoIIi<lb/>
Stones,Herman's Hermits, etc<lb/>
Soon becoming Led Zepp<lb/>
(Keith Moon of The Who s<lb/>
they'd go over "like a le<lb/>
balloon"), the toured the U.<lb/>
opening for Vanilla Fudge<lb/>
1969, while their initial Ip L<lb/>
Zeppelin went to ten and "Gc<lb/>
Times Bad Times "Communi<lb/>
tions Breakdown" became<lb/>
double-sided hit.<lb/>
 DELIGHTS<lb/>
Balloons for all Occa-<lb/>
sions Room<lb/>
Decorating, Balloons<lb/>
in a Box, Gifts, Bir-<lb/>
thdays<lb/>
Shem Y. Smith<lb/>
(919) 355-2961<lb/>
LA2A<lb/>
HELLLSI<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 Greenville BKd<lb/>
T9-jai3- U Hk-<lb/>
hour Towing Service<lb/>
LHaal Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
f<lb/>
;<lb/>
a<lb/>
??<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
STARTS MAY 5<lb/>
Summer Hours Monc<lb/>
Saiur<lb/>
CIO<lb/>
Located in the Dowi<lb/>
Next to The Aerobic!<lb/>
FORADDITH<lb/>
W<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0007"/><lb/>
ort<lb/>
duty. I just refuse to ac-<lb/>
Itatus quo that people dy-<lb/>
Itarvation is acceptable.<lb/>
hunger is a preventable<lb/>
a couple of lectures at<lb/>
at Georgetown Univer-<lb/>
ashington, and I said to<lb/>
le, "Compassion isn't<lb/>
Ig 1 can give you. I can't<lb/>
lipassion or passion and<lb/>
pn your throat. Either<lb/>
that 50.000 people dying<lb/>
:auses you a lump in<lb/>
Ml or it doesn't. Either<lb/>
real people or they're<lb/>
Istics. Or you really feel<lb/>
fou gut. That's the pro-<lb/>
thai we're just a nation<lb/>
t ompassion. We really<lb/>
trie suffering of the poor<lb/>
:i of life, and it's just<lb/>
Ible.<lb/>
ioned to you when I went<lb/>
and 1 saw little babies<lb/>
n the streets ? you<lb/>
ng in mud and their<lb/>
ication. Here's a country<lb/>
lv 45 minutes by air from<lb/>
I t's just a gross, gross<lb/>
tn<lb/>
fou<lb/>
ord<lb/>
Klein<lb/>
m<lb/>
fQtO<lb/>
aknfe<lb/>
Union<lb/>
rantkr<lb/>
vfon<lb/>
IIS AD AND<lb/>
MOLINA<lb/>
CARD AND<lb/>
:OUNT OFF<lb/>
MERCHANDISE<lb/>
" SUPER<lb/>
SAVING<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
IREENV1LLEBLVD.<lb/>
IHEEASTAROUNlAN 7<lb/>
History Of The Yardbirds<lb/>
Members Move<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
The first version of The Yard-<lb/>
birds, formed in London during<lb/>
1963, included Keith Relf<lb/>
(vocals), Chris Dreja (guitar), Jim<lb/>
McCarty (drums), Paul Sam well-<lb/>
Smith (bass), and Eric<lb/>
"Slowhand" Clapton (he played<lb/>
so fast he looked slow). They were<lb/>
called the most blueswailing, most<lb/>
Yarmirizing Yardbirds, and when<lb/>
they rocked songs like "Too<lb/>
Much Monkey Business you<lb/>
knew why.<lb/>
The first hint of success came<lb/>
from replacing the Rolling Stones<lb/>
as house band at the Crawdaddy<lb/>
Club in Richmond, England. In<lb/>
1965 the title song from For Your<lb/>
Love by Graham Gouldman, later<lb/>
of lOcc, became their first U.S. hit<lb/>
at number six. After playing on<lb/>
four cuts for the Having A Rave-<lb/>
Up lp, Clapton left to play blues.<lb/>
Another guitar wiz, Jeff Beck,<lb/>
replaced him. Number nine,<lb/>
"Heart Full of Soul" followed,<lb/>
and the English hit "Evil-Hearted<lb/>
You" preceeded their final two<lb/>
top 20 U.S. singles "Shape of<lb/>
Things" and "Over Under<lb/>
Sideways Down" in 1966.<lb/>
Samwell-Smith left to become<lb/>
producer, and session-man Jimmy<lb/>
Page entered after working with<lb/>
The Who ("I Can't Explain My<lb/>
Generation). He then worked with<lb/>
Van Morrison ("G-L-O-R-I-A<lb/>
Baby Please Don't Go), The<lb/>
Kinks, Tom Jones ("It's Not<lb/>
Unusual"), and others. The group<lb/>
then appeared in the movie<lb/>
Blowup. With Beck's long illness,<lb/>
the band fell apart in 1968 after<lb/>
one last number 30 "Happenings<lb/>
10 Years Ago Dreja became a<lb/>
photographer, and Relf and Mc-<lb/>
Carty formed a series of unsuc-<lb/>
cessful bands before Relf elec-<lb/>
tricuted himself with his guitar on<lb/>
May 14, 1976.While the others<lb/>
faded away, Jimmy Page was<lb/>
ready to break loose.<lb/>
Jimmy, being the only Yardbird<lb/>
left to fulfill contracts, formed the<lb/>
New Yardbirds with Robert Plant<lb/>
(vocals), John Bonham (drums),<lb/>
and John Paul Jones (bass). Jones<lb/>
ua$anotlJC?-veteran session player<lb/>
fot6 acts like The "Rolling<lb/>
Stones,Herman's Hermits, etc<lb/>
Soon becoming Led Zepplin<lb/>
(Keith Moon of The Who said<lb/>
they'd go over "like a lead<lb/>
balloon"), they toured the U.S.<lb/>
ooening for Vanilla Fudge in<lb/>
1969, while their initial lp Led<lb/>
Zeppelin went to ten and "Good<lb/>
Times Bad Times"Communica-<lb/>
tions Breakdown" became a<lb/>
double-sided hit.<lb/>
?<lb/>
? <lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
DELIGHTS I<lb/>
Balloons for all Occa-<lb/>
sions Room<lb/>
Decorating, Balloons<lb/>
in a Box, Gifts, ?ir-<lb/>
thdays<lb/>
Sherry Y. Smith<lb/>
(919) 355-2961<lb/>
? ???JHHHHHHHUHHHjHUUHHj<lb/>
(SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
154-3013 - 24 HKS<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
I -Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
.T<lb/>
ew ?<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
In 1970, included the number<lb/>
two classic, "Whole Lotta Love"<lb/>
bw "Livin Lovin' Maid the lp<lb/>
went to the top. got to first the<lb/>
same year. The single, "Im-<lb/>
migrant Song" hit 16th.<lb/>
In 1971, Runes included the<lb/>
classic "Stairway to Heaven<lb/>
which was never released as a<lb/>
single. A 1973 tour broke atten-<lb/>
dance records everywhere, in-<lb/>
cluding the Beatles' Tampa record<lb/>
(56,000), and three shows of<lb/>
25,000 each at Madison Square<lb/>
Gardens. Houses of the Holy<lb/>
became their third lp in a row to<lb/>
go to the top, with "D'Yer<lb/>
Mak'Er" and "Dancing Days<lb/>
By 1975's Physical Graffiti,<lb/>
they were the most popular band<lb/>
in the world. Top cuts were<lb/>
"Wanton Song "Trampled<lb/>
Underfoot "Kashmir and<lb/>
"Houses of the Holy In August<lb/>
of 1975 Plant was hurt in a car<lb/>
wreck and the touring slowed.<lb/>
Presence was the next smash, even<lb/>
though it's considered to be weak<lb/>
overall. It includes "Royal<lb/>
Orleans" and "Nobody's Fault<lb/>
But Mine Also in 1976, a con-<lb/>
cert movie, The Song Remains the<lb/>
Same, along with the soundtrack,<lb/>
were successful.<lb/>
The last "new" album came<lb/>
along in 1979 ? In Through The<lb/>
Out Door ? with "All My Love"<lb/>
and "Fool in the Rain John<lb/>
Bonham was asphyxiated in his<lb/>
own vomit while drunk in 1980,<lb/>
and the band dissolved.<lb/>
In 1982 Page did the Sound-<lb/>
track for Deathwish II, and an lp<lb/>
of old, unreleased songs came out<lb/>
(Coda).<lb/>
Robert Plant had immediate<lb/>
solo success with Pictures at<lb/>
Eleven, going top five, as did The<lb/>
Principle of Moments in 1983.<lb/>
Page played in a series of Ronnie<lb/>
Lane benefit concerts in the same<lb/>
year with numerous sixties<lb/>
rockers.<lb/>
After the Yardbird's Eric Clap-<lb/>
ton joined John Mayall's<lb/>
Bluebreakers, then recorded one<lb/>
lp with Mayall, Steve Winwood<lb/>
and Jack Bruce as Powerhouse.<lb/>
After playing on The Beatles'<lb/>
"While My Guitar Gently<lb/>
Weeps Clapton formed Cream<lb/>
with Bruce (ex-Manfred Mann)<lb/>
and Ginger Baker. Their first U.S.<lb/>
success came in 1967 with the<lb/>
number four lp, Fresh Cream.<lb/>
The double-album Wheels of Fire<lb/>
Live hit thetop in 1968. The same<lb/>
year, rare singles hits were "Sun-<lb/>
shine of Your Love" at fifth, and<lb/>
"White Room at sixth. In 1969,<lb/>
Goodbye rose to second, and<lb/>
"Crossroads" was their last top<lb/>
thirty single. Best was third in<lb/>
1969, and the final U.S. top twen-<lb/>
ty lp was Live in 1970. The double<lb/>
lp. Heavv Cream, is most<lb/>
2 Location<lb/>
ma e. wur.<lb/>
SOOWGroonrfHTdlvd.<lb/>
MonSat.<lb/>
Lunch Special<lb/>
11-3<lb/>
Salad and Fruit Bar $1.99<lb/>
without meal<lb/>
Baked Potato, Salad &amp;<lb/>
Fruit Bar $2.99<lb/>
Wed. &amp; Thur.<lb/>
Dinner Specials<lb/>
3 p.m10 p.m.<lb/>
Beef Tips $2.99<lb/>
Served with King Idaho<lb/>
Baked Potato &amp; Texas<lb/>
Toast.<lb/>
iNowreaturingfixi Yourseli Potato Bar<lb/>
Free with meal.<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
Any foot-Long Sub<lb/>
jwHfc purchase of ? MtdiMi DHj<lb/>
 797979<lb/>
Qmtwttm N.C.<lb/>
IF TOO MANY PEOPLE USE<lb/>
THIS COUPON, WE'LL LOSE MONEY<lb/>
SO USE IT ONLY IF YOU NEED TO<lb/>
All New Exercise<lb/>
Facility in Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
All Olympic weights and<lb/>
machines, nutritional<lb/>
programs and<lb/>
supervised workout<lb/>
programs available.<lb/>
STARTS MAY 5<lb/>
Summer Hours. Monday-Friday ? 12:00 a.m8:00 p.m.<lb/>
Saturday 2:00 p.m6:00 p.m.<lb/>
CLOSED SUNDAY<lb/>
Located in the Downtown Mall<lb/>
Next to The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
Monthly Memberships<lb/>
$30.00 per month<lb/>
Special Summer rates<lb/>
May August 30 (4 months) $Tj<lb/>
Air Conditioning<lb/>
All the time<lb/>
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL 758-4359<lb/>
representative.<lb/>
The group disbanded in 1969.<lb/>
Baker and Clapton, known as<lb/>
Blind Faith, recorded one million-<lb/>
selling, self-titled lp with Steve<lb/>
Winwood. Bruce went solo, then<lb/>
joined West, Bruce, and Laing.<lb/>
After Blind Faith, Baker formed<lb/>
Airforce, then the Baker-Guervitz<lb/>
Army.<lb/>
Clapton then played on John<lb/>
Lennon's Live Peace In Toronto<lb/>
and joined Delaney &amp; Bonnie<lb/>
("Never Ending Song of Love"<lb/>
and "Only You Know and I<lb/>
know"). His first self-titled solo<lb/>
lp, with Leon Russell and Steve<lb/>
Stills, included the hit, "After<lb/>
Midnight<lb/>
From there, Clapton formed<lb/>
Derek &amp; the Dominoes with<lb/>
Delaney and Bonnie and recorded<lb/>
Layla with Duane Allman. The<lb/>
single "Layla" failed initially, but<lb/>
when re-released in 1972, it went<lb/>
to top ten. Py then the band had<lb/>
broken up because of the lack of<lb/>
success and Duane Allman's<lb/>
death on October 29, 1971 in a<lb/>
motorcycle accident. A live lp was<lb/>
the only other release.<lb/>
Clapton played for George<lb/>
Harrison's All Things Must Pass,<lb/>
"Concert for Bangladesh and<lb/>
others. In the midst of heroin ad-<lb/>
diction in 1973, he recorded Rain-<lb/>
bow Concert with Pete<lb/>
Townshend of The Who. By<lb/>
1974's Ocean Boulevard, he was<lb/>
cured and began his most suc-<lb/>
cessful stage with the major<lb/>
number one hit, "I Shot the<lb/>
Sheriff and massive album sales<lb/>
with platinum Slowhand,<lb/>
Backless and others. The top<lb/>
singles "Lay Down Sally "Pro-<lb/>
mises and "I Can't Stand It<lb/>
followed. Other hits were: "Willie<lb/>
&amp; the Hand Jive "Hello Old<lb/>
Friend Wonderft. 1 Tonight<lb/>
"Watch Out For mcy and<lb/>
"Tulsa TimeCocaine In 1983<lb/>
he played in several benefit con-<lb/>
certs for Ronnie Lane.<lb/>
The other guitar wiz from The<lb/>
Yardbirds, Jeff Beck, also went<lb/>
on to fame on his own. After two<lb/>
solo English hits, he formed the<lb/>
Jeff Beck Group with Rod<lb/>
Stewart and Ron Wood. Beck was<lb/>
hurt in a wreck, and after Truth<lb/>
and Beck-Ola, Wood and Stewart<lb/>
left to formFaces. In 1971, a se-<lb/>
cond Jeff Beck Group recorded<lb/>
two lp's. Beck's solo, Blow By<lb/>
Blow was successful in 1975, and<lb/>
followed by a string of unsuc-<lb/>
cessful lp's, some with the Jan<lb/>
Hammer Group. The Jeff Beck<lb/>
Group backed Donovan on a top<lb/>
forty hit "Love is Hot" in 1969.<lb/>
Jeff also played in the Lane con-<lb/>
COME TO WHERE WASHING<lb/>
, IS FUN<lb/>
VIDEOS<lb/>
COLD BEER<lb/>
COLOR CABLE TV<lb/>
SNACKS<lb/>
and AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT<lb/>
DRYERS.25<lb/>
WASHERS.75<lb/>
y<lb/>
Vb<lb/>
<lb/>
Ff or 1 FREE<lb/>
?m when wm<lb/>
HOU<lb/>
? 514 E. 14th St.<lb/>
1 (Expires June 30ta)<lb/>
 A ? bat of<lb/>
?t THE WASH"<lb/>
758 - 6001<lb/>
514 E. 14th St.<lb/>
I<lb/>
ATTENTION E.C.U. STUDENTS <lb/>
You Get More Than Just An Empty j<lb/>
Apartment When You Rent<lb/>
KINGSTON!<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
Townhouse<lb/>
FURNITURE<lb/>
1 SofaSleeper<lb/>
2 ChairBeds<lb/>
2 End Tables<lb/>
1 Cocktail Table<lb/>
1 Bookcase<lb/>
160X30 Dining Table<lb/>
8 Brner Chain<lb/>
4 Bookcase Desks<lb/>
4 Chests<lb/>
2 Night stands<lb/>
2 Bonk Beds (Steel Mesh Spring Support System)<lb/>
4 Twin Mattress<lb/>
HOUSEWARES<lb/>
7 piece ironstone cook ware set<lb/>
7 piece Ekco cook ware set<lb/>
Service for four, 18 piece dinnerware service<lb/>
12 pieces glassware set<lb/>
Service for four, Oneida stainless steel flatware<lb/>
4 piece Regents Sheffield CuUey set<lb/>
3 piece Rubbermaid Serve and Saver set<lb/>
Ekco manual can opener<lb/>
Rubbermaid kitchen waste basket<lb/>
Dustpan<lb/>
Mop bucket<lb/>
1 power strip mop<lb/>
1 angle broom<lb/>
Cutteytray<lb/>
2 vanity waste baskets<lb/>
2 glass safety ashtrays<lb/>
4 Cannon bath towels<lb/>
4 Cannon hand towels g? la . -<lb/>
4 Cannon wash cloths rOT MOTO IllTOritiatiO<lb/>
4 Cannon thermal twin blankets<lb/>
4 Cannon twin fitted sheets<lb/>
4 Cannon twin flat sheets<lb/>
4 Cannon standard pfflow cases<lb/>
4 Dacron polyfill pillows<lb/>
4 twin mattress pads<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
a<lb/>
a<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
n<lb/>
1<lb/>
Garden Unit<lb/>
757-1971<lb/>
or Stop by Our Soles &amp; Rental Office<lb/>
2820 East Tenth Street<lb/>
Close TO Campus ??. Box 2579<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27836<lb/>
i i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 13, 1984<lb/>
Williams Takes Third In 200 Heat<lb/>
?????.spomf-h,? " the later heats when rh ri.nnrc ? ? .? . " ?? ?? K WW m<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
WM Sport fJJlOf<lb/>
Competing at the Nationals<lb/>
held in Eugene, Oregon, ECU<lb/>
trackster Henry Williams con-<lb/>
tinued the Pirate's surge to be one<lb/>
of the best track programs in the<lb/>
country.<lb/>
Running in a 200-meter qualify-<lb/>
ing heat, Williams beat out rivals<lb/>
Stanley Blaylock and Tony Dees<lb/>
of the Southeastern conference<lb/>
placing third with a time of 20.89<lb/>
seconds.<lb/>
'Henry placed sixteenth<lb/>
overall, he beat some really fine<lb/>
people said head coach Bill Car-<lb/>
son.<lb/>
With the combined men's and<lb/>
women's sports this year at the<lb/>
Nationals, the competition was<lb/>
reduced to the qualifying heat<lb/>
winners.<lb/>
In the 200 meters, only the six<lb/>
heat winners and the top two<lb/>
times were taken. Unfortunately,<lb/>
Williams' time was not one of the<lb/>
fastest so he was unable to com-<lb/>
pete.<lb/>
Coach Carson voted against the<lb/>
qualifying procedures used at the<lb/>
meet, but the rules were unchang-<lb/>
ed. "Henry had to win because he<lb/>
was running in one of the middle<lb/>
heats. The fastest times came in<lb/>
MaxweUShines<lb/>
the later heats when the runners<lb/>
knew what times they had to<lb/>
beat Carson said.<lb/>
Teammate Craig White who<lb/>
had qualified for the 110 high<lb/>
hurdles did not participate in the<lb/>
Nationals due to a death in his<lb/>
family, but still has the Olympic<lb/>
trials in L.A. to think about later<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
The men's track team has gain-<lb/>
ed great respect and considerable<lb/>
recognition this past season as<lb/>
they have shown what ECU is all<lb/>
about ? excellence.<lb/>
In preparation for next year,<lb/>
coach Carson has recruited<lb/>
several top athletes for the Pirate<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The recruits are:<lb/>
Julian Anderson, a high school<lb/>
All-America out of Louisa Coun-<lb/>
ty HS in Virginia. Has performed<lb/>
well running a 40.66 in the<lb/>
quarter, a 20.2 in the 200 meters<lb/>
and a 10.4 in the 100 meters.<lb/>
Lee Vernon McNeil, a high<lb/>
school All-America out of St.<lb/>
Pauls, NC. Participated in the 100<lb/>
and 200-meter dashes at the state<lb/>
meet and is ranked in the<lb/>
country's top ten.<lb/>
Ken Daughtry, of Mt. Saint<lb/>
Josephs HS in Baltimore. Ran a<lb/>
40.72 in the quarter mile and a<lb/>
20.12 in the 200 meters.<lb/>
John Lee of Marshall HS in<lb/>
Fairfax, Virginia.<lb/>
David Parker, of Patrick Henry<lb/>
HS in Roanoke, Virginia. Jumped<lb/>
40.88" in the triple jump and ran<lb/>
a 14.2 in the 110 high hurdles.<lb/>
Andre Fields, of Norcom HS in<lb/>
Portsmoth. Ran a 13.8 in the 110<lb/>
high hurdles, a 30.72 in the in-<lb/>
termediate hurdles, a 40.68 in the<lb/>
quarter mile and jumped 49.9 " in<lb/>
the triple jump. "Fields is a com-<lb/>
bination footballtrack recruit for<lb/>
ECU. He plays wide receiver and<lb/>
is a good piece of recruiting said<lb/>
Carson.<lb/>
In addition, sprinter Terry<lb/>
Brown who did not run on the<lb/>
track team last year will return for<lb/>
next year's team running in the<lb/>
100, 200 and 60 meters.<lb/>
"We'll have more depth for<lb/>
next season and we're going for<lb/>
it said Carson. "I boxed myself<lb/>
in, we'll only have one or two<lb/>
recruits at most next year.<lb/>
"The key is quality more than<lb/>
quantity. I could have limited it to<lb/>
three or four, but the athletes<lb/>
from last year and the recruiting<lb/>
this year will give us more top<lb/>
athletes for the individual events<lb/>
and relays<lb/>
MICHAEL SMr H - ECt Phcxc Ufc<lb/>
program for his team except he<lb/>
wants to score in two other events<lb/>
for next year ? the intermedite<lb/>
Carson plans to run the same hurdles and quarter mile. "We'll<lb/>
rtar, Williams pl.c?. sixteenth over.ll i? ,h, 200 me.ers  ,he Xrtoml, held in Eugene. Oregon<lb/>
attempt to score in the quarter at<lb/>
the IC4A's said Carson.<lb/>
Carson expects the ECU track<lb/>
program to grow over the next<lb/>
couple of years arid hopes the<lb/>
team will have nev facilities in<lb/>
order to advance th: program to<lb/>
national excellence.<lb/>
The Boston Celtics, behind<lb/>
Cedric Maxwell's 24 points, add-<lb/>
ed to their storied basketball<lb/>
tradition Tuesday night by<lb/>
defeating the Los Angeles Lakers<lb/>
111-102 in the seventh game of the<lb/>
finals to win the NBA champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
It was the 15th title for the<lb/>
Celtics. Their last championship<lb/>
came in 1981 when they defeated<lb/>
Moses Malone and Calvin Mur-<lb/>
phy of the Houston Rosckets.<lb/>
Boston also received 22 points<lb/>
from Dennis Johnson and 20<lb/>
from Larry Bird. Bird was named<lb/>
Most Valuable Player in the series<lb/>
although he was held below his<lb/>
average in the game and had just 4<lb/>
points in the fourth quarter.<lb/>
Police restrained fans<lb/>
underneath the Celtic basket in<lb/>
the waning seconds, as many in<lb/>
the crowd of 14,890 tried to storm<lb/>
the court. Hundreds of fans<lb/>
managed to rush the players at the<lb/>
buzzer, holding aloft green towels<lb/>
and Celtic banners in the heat of<lb/>
Boston Garden.<lb/>
The game remained even<lb/>
through the first period as the<lb/>
Lakers were unable to get their<lb/>
fast break into high gear, and the<lb/>
Celts shot poorly from the out-<lb/>
side.<lb/>
After a James Worthy slam<lb/>
made it 32-30 in the opening<lb/>
moments of the second period,<lb/>
Boston reeled off eight<lb/>
unanswered points and began to<lb/>
control the tempo of the game as<lb/>
they went to the lockerroom with<lb/>
a six point lead.<lb/>
The Lakers were never able to<lb/>
get into the flow of the game, and<lb/>
ultimately found themselves down<lb/>
A<lb/>
by ten points with less than five<lb/>
minutes remaing in the game.<lb/>
Los Angeles did cut it to three,<lb/>
but Dennis Johnson hit two free<lb/>
throws with 45 seconds left to give<lb/>
Boston a 107102 lead, putting the<lb/>
Celtics out of Danger.<lb/>
Boston scored just three field<lb/>
goals in the fourth quarter but<lb/>
had 14 points on free throws. Bird<lb/>
scored the Celtic's last 2 points on<lb/>
free throws with 10 seconds re-<lb/>
maining.<lb/>
The Lakers were unable to<lb/>
recover from Boston's 8-0 spurt at<lb/>
the end of the third quarter, which<lb/>
gave the Celtics a 13-point lead,<lb/>
their biggest of the game. Dennis<lb/>
Johnson scored 10 of Boston's 20<lb/>
fourth-quarter points ? 6 on free<lb/>
throws.<lb/>
Overtoil Appointed<lb/>
Football Goes<lb/>
Coach Gary Overton<lb/>
After working under five dif-<lb/>
ferent coaches and serving as an<lb/>
assistant for the last eight years,<lb/>
Gary Overton has been named as<lb/>
the new ECU baseball coach.<lb/>
Director of Athletics Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr made the announcement last<lb/>
Wednesday, less than a week after<lb/>
former head coach Hal Baird<lb/>
resigned in order to become head<lb/>
coach at Auburn University.<lb/>
"I'm happy for the opportunity<lb/>
and am looking forward to the<lb/>
challenge Overton said. "Very-<lb/>
few changes will be made with the<lb/>
program in order to continue the<lb/>
strong tradition we have had here<lb/>
over the years<lb/>
Although the Pirates concluded<lb/>
thier 1984 season with a 34-13<lb/>
record, an ECAC South Cham-<lb/>
pionship and a third place finish<lb/>
in the NCAA South I regionals,<lb/>
Overton is optimisric that the<lb/>
Pirates can have continued suc-<lb/>
cess in the future.<lb/>
"We lost five great seniors be<lb/>
said, "but with the plavers we<lb/>
have returning next -ear we have<lb/>
the nucleus for a good club and a<lb/>
possibility of winning the ECAC<lb/>
South championship "<lb/>
Overton came to ECU in 1969<lb/>
as an undergraduate, and served<lb/>
as the team's manager until 19"?<lb/>
In 1974 he served one vear as "a<lb/>
graduate assistant, before becom-<lb/>
ing a full-time assistant and facul-<lb/>
ty member in 1977.<lb/>
A native of Ahoshe, Overton<lb/>
played basketball, baseball, foot-<lb/>
ball and golf at Aiioskie High<lb/>
School. He recieved all-<lb/>
conference and ail-East honors ir.<lb/>
baseball and was named all-state<lb/>
in golf.<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Carolina head football Coach Ed Had the Bucs won more than a nf'SL ' mCnt,?n But Emory adds' "We're n<lb/>
Emory polished off a slab of goodly measure of raoectir,TL! ?3"T'i , goin? t0 sliP UP on n?ody no<lb/>
Shoney's hot fudge cake the other games tihV fooSif SS? It Everybody always thought I more, neither <lb/>
day pondering the Pirates' EfttSTW STTTT1" This season's schedule also will<lb/>
schedule for this fall and for falls ahead of schedule.here woSS Su mv'life nl'aT? e top-heavy with road games-<lb/>
I?me- u be bowl money to spend nadomd nLSi. d 0nJy four in Gr?"e and seven<lb/>
And even as he put away the exposure galore But it ?s moVe ?n 25 2? Y?U Take up away- "But l thin ? will be the<lb/>
last bite, Emory knew he couldn't is needed to delive The BucTto hJ11??? anloutlook on l?t year we'll have to do that<lb/>
have his cake and eat it, too. that loftv rani Zt cil ?e orld? you better havc a Pr?- Emory said "I think next vekr<lb/>
"They schedule 'em, , play XZStZ trXlt'ZT k WC'U ? JhSSJZ<lb/>
"a KhC Sat o c there is scheduling heavweghfs ??"??? wc ve ot ? ? and some years in the<lb/>
- Emory says he doesnH crinae tio??? h 5? Kna' future we'U s" at home and<lb/>
when Dr. Ken k eSu's -tom!ZZ?n thcKschcd.ul5- flveon the road The Pirates will<lb/>
athletic director, walks into h? of! gct ryleT butnf SS T T date t0 flU in 1985'<lb/>
get .arTy-cyed, but he (Karr) Another factor in the recent<lb/>
Penn State.<lb/>
Auburn. Miami.<lb/>
Pittsburgh. LSU.<lb/>
Money. Recognition. National<lb/>
exposure. Prestige. Membership<lb/>
in the College Football Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Big-name opposition and big-<lb/>
time football programs often go<lb/>
hand in hand, and when you're<lb/>
fice ? perhaps with yet another<lb/>
proposal to play a<lb/>
"big-time team ? because that's<lb/>
the way to the top.<lb/>
hasn't Boh-Hii -H "T' turner iacior in tne recent<lb/>
rTe backeofrfT 5" scheduIin8 splurge, Emory said,<lb/>
said HevJit ? ' ?at oVe was to enhance East Carolina's<lb/>
fie weC alhlyd?ing?2 P?sition with the CFA, which<lb/>
"I haven't hadmuch input into we've am tnlav th-tm k ?pe0?e voted last weekend to accept ECU<lb/>
scheduling for the last four and-a- money and SteJSSi "u? an ? football -<lb/>
not there yet, when you're still on half years Emory said. "Dr SSaMnK' ?? ?d tw? other universities into its<lb/>
the road an aspirant you have to Karr has done it, but on a couple 87? thfnkTLS VZSS?- ranks"<lb/>
dig the trenches before you can of occasions he has asked me pete withtW rJSnle C?m" Each scho?l necded ?? Prcent<lb/>
about it. He did ask me about the "That's what? ?,??? v? ?f the membership votes to be ac-<lb/>
LSU game in 1985 because that'll want the bat the ?c, ?U c?Wed? and one of the conditions<lb/>
be in December, and I said, 'Well, thusiastic Whv rn? aroilnSLit ?f membership is for the school to<lb/>
that'll be good because we'll be 'E?Z5 2&amp; ctTS Jf <lb/>
going to a bowl game in 1985 can play in the maioT ll?,?i X ?.?,SFA members-<lb/>
anyhow. So go ahead and BrnwlLdTSSkhS 'We're not protected by a con-<lb/>
schedule it SfcSldC; JL2SJ S ference Emory said. "We have<lb/>
In addition to LSU in 1985, JSTteffllS l? ?lay 5 f" of ??r games<lb/>
East Carolina's other noted op- SStaKcSSui 2?S t ! SCh??ls- That<lb/>
ponents, including recent addi- ing. And that" ZloaMo com ??' negative thing for<lb/>
tions are Pitt, N.C. State and pete with the bat.<lb/>
South Carolina this season, "Penn State? They don't make<lb/>
JST'Slf ate.and Aubu?in me nervous, or LSU or Auburn.<lb/>
1985; Wat Virginia in 1986, We're not going to Auburn just to<lb/>
jump in, go to war, hold your<lb/>
own, overcome.<lb/>
So it is at East Carolina, home<lb/>
of the near-miracle workers of<lb/>
1983, a football team that came<lb/>
ever so close to perhaps the most<lb/>
extraordinary Cinderella story<lb/>
ever in collegiate football.<lb/>
The Pirates ? or Bucs as<lb/>
they're fondly called ? lost three<lb/>
games last season, all in Florida,<lb/>
all in dramatic fashion. They<lb/>
could have ? and according to<lb/>
Emory, should have ? won each<lb/>
SSS- B"1 ?V to Florid. EStoSS. 19 7. TSSSSSfSSSlSl<lb/>
State. Florid and eventual linois in 1987. . JguwjWW. We re ton down<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -  t i<lb/>
Tbe Plrata wiH have to ptffor-i Ufa they ?d i. test fall MkwMri t orer "mat two yaJTtf HfJH<lb/>
hag to do weU ?gainst such teams at Plttebarah. Pcaa state, Aubara, Mlaad, Florida State aad LSU.<lb/>
East Carolina about the CFA. A<lb/>
team like Wake Forest or Duke<lb/>
can play six, five conference<lb/>
teams, and then play six double-A<lb/>
teams and their conference pro-<lb/>
tects them<lb/>
Ya, Emory said, by scheduling<lb/>
such teams as Auburn, LSU, and<lb/>
Penn State, East Carolina also<lb/>
could count on a number of votes.<lb/>
"That was part of it Emory<lb/>
said. "The only thing we had<lb/>
negative was we weren't playing<lb/>
80 percent CFA members. So this<lb/>
 was one of those things. We had<lb/>
no alternative, and to get the<lb/>
1 votes, we had to play them.<lb/>
Florida State and Miami are in-<lb/>
dependent CFA members, and to<lb/>
get the Southeastern Conference<lb/>
voting for you, you get LSU and<lb/>
Auburn. And Penn State doesn't<lb/>
want to play a Division AA team.<lb/>
"I'm not saying that East<lb/>
Carolina campaigned for votes,<lb/>
but I think, in a way, you have to<lb/>
be<lb/>
"We want to play a national<lb/>
schedule. We want to win a na-<lb/>
tional championship Emory ad-<lb/>
ECU head football coach Ed Emorv aM (?tw ?- ? <lb/>
?em  retae.ee ,? fc ???, SSSSSl &amp;<lb/>
ded. "And the only way to win is<lb/>
to play them guys. Maybe we're<lb/>
gambling like heck, and that's<lb/>
why it's so tough to be a graduate<lb/>
of East Carolina and be the<lb/>
coach, because what's bat for the<lb/>
university sometimes isn't bat for<lb/>
the coach<lb/>
But, as Emory said, CFA<lb/>
membership wasn't the lone ob-<lb/>
jective in scheduling tougher op-<lb/>
ponents.<lb/>
"We wanted CFA membership,<lb/>
we wanted to play a national<lb/>
schedule, and we wanted an op-<lb/>
portunity for national exposure<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Emory is relentless in pursuit of<lb/>
excellence for the ECU program,<lb/>
and he said he believes the 1984<lb/>
season will be crucial to its goals.<lb/>
The team will be inexperienced<lb/>
at many positions, and the squad<lb/>
he hopes to field in 198! and 1986<lb/>
will be built on the record of 1984.<lb/>
"It's the year that's so impor-<lb/>
tant Emory said, "bxause we<lb/>
have to hang in. And I guarantee<lb/>
you, when we line up n 1985, I<lb/>
don't think there'll be a magazine<lb/>
m the country that won't say<lb/>
we've got the toughest schedule in<lb/>
college football<lb/>
That schedule includes Penn<lb/>
5f Auburn, N.C. State, and<lb/>
LSU on the road, and South<lb/>
Carolina, Tulsa and Miami at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
"We're trying to build an army<lb/>
of fans Emory said "We're<lb/>
????? to get everybady, 2.5<lb/>
million, 3 million peop e east of<lb/>
Interstate 95 to stay in the East<lb/>
? see football on Saturday<lb/>
afternoon "<lb/>
THE EAST CARPUS av<lb/>
Athlet<lb/>
GREENSBORO LPI<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Confer<lb/>
schools spent $7 miinc<lb/>
their athletic program,<lb/>
ago. Today, that figure wouk<lb/>
about cover the cost to<lb/>
Intramu<lb/>
Comes<lb/>
ByJEANNETTEROri<lb/>
The first session I<lb/>
program is coming to ar enc<lb/>
exciting finals ahead in so:<lb/>
three-on-three basketba.<lb/>
nis singles<lb/>
In softball action.<lb/>
between the two league<lb/>
played June 18. The I<lb/>
Powers, Bombed Ski -<lb/>
favored to win the leagje"<lb/>
pionship. Preliminarv<lb/>
wind up Wednesca Junt<lb/>
determining the semi-fir<lb/>
f 5AM 5LZ<lb/>
In three-on-three basKe<lb/>
tion. the Midnight Express<lb/>
by captain Kevin Banks<lb/>
favored to win the char<lb/>
tournament. Out to dera; :<lb/>
press are the No Names. V.1<lb/>
ing Crew, Sig Ep Raide-s. i<lb/>
Village Green TM's. 7<lb/>
pionship game is set for Tui<lb/>
June 14 at 7.00 p.m. in Mei<lb/>
Gym. Play promises I<lb/>
paced and exciting.<lb/>
Further Intramura. acne<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
WELCOME Ol<lb/>
Bring this, ad &amp; an wl<lb/>
OPEN 7 Days<lb/>
A Week<lb/>
8:30A.M. until<lb/>
2:30A.M.<lb/>
Pli.7S2.1294<lb/>
ALL-Y<lb/>
I<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PI<lb/>
INCUDES:<lb/>
A variety of Fillets,<lb/>
including Lousiana-<lb/>
Style Fish Fillets. Hush<lb/>
Puppies. French Fries,<lb/>
a choice of Hot V<lb/>
and our own Famous 5<lb/>
BE ORANI<lb/>
ENJOY FLI<lb/>
SHDNEti<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0009"/><lb/>
THE EAST CARtHlNIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Jl Nf 13. 1V84<lb/>
Williams Takes Third In 200 Heat<lb/>
?????? soon,MdA, the later heats whtn fh? rnnn?r -?n  ? ? " ?? ? ? w<lb/>
B PETE FERN AI D<lb/>
?tolMi Sport, Milor<lb/>
mpcting at the Nationals<lb/>
held in Eugene, Oregon, ECU<lb/>
ester Henry Williams con-<lb/>
tnued the Pirate's surge to be one<lb/>
rhe best track programs in the<lb/>
untry.<lb/>
Running in a 200-meter qualify-<lb/>
ing heat, Williams beat out rivals<lb/>
Stanley Biaylock and Tony Dees<lb/>
the Southeastern conference<lb/>
?lacing third with a time of 20.89<lb/>
onds.<lb/>
'Henry placed sixteenth<lb/>
averall, he beat some reallv fine<lb/>
Pie said head coach Bill Car-<lb/>
?n.<lb/>
With the combined men's and<lb/>
men's sports this year at the<lb/>
Nationals, the competition was<lb/>
luced to the qualifying heat<lb/>
nners.<lb/>
In the 200 meters, only the six<lb/>
heat winners and the top two<lb/>
limes were taken. Unfortunately,<lb/>
iiams' time was not one of the<lb/>
est so he was unable to com-<lb/>
Coach Carson voted against the<lb/>
tlifying procedures used at the<lb/>
meet, but the rules were unchang-<lb/>
ed. "Henry had to win because he<lb/>
was running in one of the middle<lb/>
heats. The fastest times came in<lb/>
Maxwell Shines<lb/>
the later heats when the runners<lb/>
knew what times they had to<lb/>
beat Carson said.<lb/>
Teammate Craig White who<lb/>
had qualified for the 110 high<lb/>
hurdles did not participate in the<lb/>
Nationals due to a death in his<lb/>
family, but still has the Olympic<lb/>
trials in L.A. to think about later<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
The men's track team has gain-<lb/>
ed great respect and considerable<lb/>
recognition this past season as<lb/>
they have shown what ECU is all<lb/>
about ? excellence.<lb/>
In preparation for next year,<lb/>
coach Carson has recruited<lb/>
several top athletes for the Pirate<lb/>
program.<lb/>
The recruits are:<lb/>
Julian Anderson, a high school<lb/>
All-America out of Louisa Coun-<lb/>
ty HS in Virginia. Has performed<lb/>
well running a 40.66 in the<lb/>
quarter, a 20.2 in the 200 meters<lb/>
and a 10.4 in the 100 meters.<lb/>
Lee Vernon McNeil, a high<lb/>
school All-America out of St.<lb/>
Pauls, NC. Participated in the 100<lb/>
and 200-meter dashes at the state<lb/>
meet and is ranked in the<lb/>
country's top ten.<lb/>
Ken Daughtry, of Mt. Saint<lb/>
Josephs HS in Baltimore. Ran a<lb/>
40.72 in the quarter mile and a<lb/>
20.12 in the 200 meters.<lb/>
John Lee of Marshall HS in<lb/>
Fairfax, Virginia.<lb/>
David Parker, of Patrick Henry<lb/>
HS in Roanoke, Virginia. Jumped<lb/>
40.88" in the triple jump and ran<lb/>
a 14.2 in the 110 high hurdles.<lb/>
Andre Fields, of Norcom HS in<lb/>
Portsmoth. Ran a 13.8 in the 110<lb/>
high hurdles, a 30.72 in the in-<lb/>
termediate hurdles, a 40.68 in the<lb/>
quarter mile and jumped 49.9 " in<lb/>
the triple jump. "Fields is a com-<lb/>
bination footballtrack recruit for<lb/>
ECU. He plays wide receiver and<lb/>
is a good piece of recruiting said<lb/>
Carson.<lb/>
In addition, sprinter Terry<lb/>
Brown who did not run on the<lb/>
track team last year will return for<lb/>
next year's team running in the<lb/>
100, 200 and 60 meters.<lb/>
"We'll have more depth for<lb/>
next season and we're going for<lb/>
it said Carson. "I boxed myself<lb/>
in, we'll only have one or two<lb/>
recruits at most next year.<lb/>
"The key is quality more than<lb/>
quantity. I could have limited it to<lb/>
three or four, but the athletes<lb/>
from last year and the recruiting<lb/>
this year will give us more top<lb/>
athletes for the individual events<lb/>
and relays<lb/>
Carson plans to run the same<lb/>
MICHAEL SMFTH - BC1 P<lb/>
Henry Williams placed sixteenth overall in the 200 meters at the Nationals held in Eugene. Oregon.<lb/>
program for his team except he attempt to score in the Quarter ?i ??u ?<lb/>
wants to score in two other events the IC4A's "said Carson P ??, uearS and hopc"<lb/>
for next year - the intermedite Carson expel s the FCT rrL T WlB ? ne facUitie<lb/>
hurdles and quarter mile. "We'll program" toTow 'he IM nal ??? <lb/>
The Boston Celtics, behind<lb/>
Cedric Maxwell's 24 points, add-<lb/>
to their storied basketball<lb/>
tradition Tuesday night by<lb/>
defeating the Los Angeles Lakers<lb/>
111-102 in the seventh game of the<lb/>
finals to win the NBA champion-<lb/>
ship.<lb/>
It was the 15th title for the<lb/>
Celtics. Their last championship<lb/>
came in 1981 when they defeated<lb/>
Moses Malone and Calvin Mur-<lb/>
phy of the Houston Rosckets.<lb/>
Boston also received 22 points<lb/>
from Dennis Johnson and 20<lb/>
from Larry Bird. Bird was named<lb/>
Most Valuable Player in the series<lb/>
although he was held below his<lb/>
average in the game and had just 4<lb/>
points in the fourth quarter.<lb/>
Police restrained fans<lb/>
jnderneath the Celtic basket in<lb/>
the waning seconds, as many in<lb/>
the crowd of 14,890 tried to storm<lb/>
the court. Hundreds of fans<lb/>
managed to rush the players at the<lb/>
buzzer, holding aloft green towels<lb/>
and Celtic banners in the heat of<lb/>
Boston Garden.<lb/>
The game remained even<lb/>
through the first period as the<lb/>
Lakers were unable to get their<lb/>
fast break into high gear, and the<lb/>
Celts shot poorly from the out-<lb/>
side.<lb/>
After a James Worthy slam<lb/>
made it 32-30 in the opening<lb/>
moments of the second period,<lb/>
Boston reeled off eight<lb/>
unanswered points and began to<lb/>
control the tempo of the game as<lb/>
they went to the lockerroom with<lb/>
a six point lead.<lb/>
The Lakers were never able to<lb/>
get into the flow of the game, and<lb/>
ultimately found themselves down<lb/>
A<lb/>
by ten points with less than five<lb/>
minutes remaing in the game.<lb/>
Los Angeles did cut it to three,<lb/>
but Dennis Johnson hit two free<lb/>
throws with 45 seconds left to give<lb/>
Boston a 107-102 lead, putting the<lb/>
Celtics out of Danger.<lb/>
Boston scored just three field<lb/>
goals in the fourth quarter but<lb/>
had 14 points on free throws Bird<lb/>
scored the Celtic's last 2 points on<lb/>
free throws with 10 seconds re-<lb/>
maining.<lb/>
The Lakers were unable to<lb/>
recover from Boston's 8-0 spurt at<lb/>
the end of the third quarter, which<lb/>
gave the Celtics a 13-point lead,<lb/>
their biggest of the game. Dennis<lb/>
Johnson scored 10 of Boston's 20<lb/>
fourth-quarter points ? 6 on free<lb/>
throws.<lb/>
Overtoil Appointed<lb/>
Coach Gary Overtoil<lb/>
Football Goes<lb/>
After working under five dif-<lb/>
ferent coaches and serving as an<lb/>
assistant for the last eight years,<lb/>
Gary Overton has been named as<lb/>
the new ECU baseball coach.<lb/>
Director of Athletics Dr. Ken<lb/>
Karr made the announcement last<lb/>
Wednesday, less than a week after<lb/>
former head coach Hal Baird<lb/>
resigned in order to become head<lb/>
coach at Auburn University.<lb/>
"I'm happy for the opportunitv<lb/>
and am looking forward to the<lb/>
challenge Overton said. "Very<lb/>
few changes will be made with the<lb/>
program in order to continue the<lb/>
strong tradition we have had here<lb/>
over the years<lb/>
Although the Pirates concluded<lb/>
thier 1984 season with a 34-13<lb/>
record, an ECAC South Cham-<lb/>
pionship and a third place finish<lb/>
in the NCAA South 1 regionals,<lb/>
Overton is optimistic that<lb/>
Pirates can have continued - .<lb/>
cess in the future.<lb/>
"We lost five great senior!<lb/>
said, "but with the players<lb/>
have returning next yeai w.<lb/>
the nucleus for a gocd club a<lb/>
possibility of winning the ECAC<lb/>
South championship<lb/>
Overton came to ECU<lb/>
as an undergraduate, and<lb/>
as the team's manager ,73<lb/>
In 1974 he served one year a<lb/>
graduate assistant, before be<lb/>
:ng a full-time a<lb/>
' member in 19<lb/>
A native of Ahoskie, Overt n<lb/>
played basketball, baebaii. f<lb/>
ball and golf at Ahoskie Hig<lb/>
School. He recieved all-<lb/>
conference and all-East her i<lb/>
baseball and wa- named a<lb/>
in golf.<lb/>
Durham. N.C. (UPI) ? East<lb/>
Carolina head football Coach Ed<lb/>
Emory polished off a slab of<lb/>
Shoney's hot fudge cake the other<lb/>
day pondering the Pirates'<lb/>
(schedule for this fall and for falls<lb/>
fto come.<lb/>
And even as he put away the<lb/>
(last bite, Emory knew he couldn't<lb/>
have his cake and eat it, too.<lb/>
'They schedule 'em, I play<lb/>
'em he said.<lb/>
Auburn. Miami. Penn State.<lb/>
Pittsburgh. LSU.<lb/>
Money. Recognition. National<lb/>
exposure. Prestige. Membership<lb/>
in the College Football Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Big-name opposition and big-<lb/>
time football programs often go<lb/>
hand in hand, and when you're<lb/>
not there yet, when you're still on<lb/>
the road, an aspirant, you have to<lb/>
dig the trenches before you can<lb/>
jump in, go to war, hold your<lb/>
own, overcome.<lb/>
So it is at East Carolina, home<lb/>
the near-miracle workers of<lb/>
1983, a football team that came<lb/>
ever so close to perhaps the most<lb/>
extraordinary Cinderella story<lb/>
ever in collegiate football.<lb/>
The Pirates ? or Bucs as<lb/>
they're fondly called ? lost three<lb/>
games last season, all in Florida,<lb/>
ail in dramatic fashion. They<lb/>
could have ? and according to<lb/>
Emory, should have ? won each<lb/>
game. But they lost, to Florida<lb/>
State, Florida, and eventual<lb/>
champion Miami.<lb/>
Had the Bucs won more than a<lb/>
goodly measure of respect in those<lb/>
games, the football program at<lb/>
East Carolina would have been<lb/>
ahead of schedule. There would<lb/>
Time<lb/>
Emory chuckles at the mention<lb/>
of "murder<lb/>
"Everybody always thought I<lb/>
was commiting suicide, anyhow<lb/>
he said. "I've taken the challenges<lb/>
all my life. God knows. And I<lb/>
be bowl money to spend, national guarantee you, when you wake ud<lb/>
fsXPnTeUded8to0rdHBUt T 2 m0re in the ?r? with 5 on<lb/>
hatloftv ra?i, S ,e BT t0 the WOrId' you "?? have a Pr?"<lb/>
f l?hv-y SCek' and ?ne ductive day- You better ?? it<lb/>
oi me tools they re using to get<lb/>
,hEmorvChsa?'t8 'l'aveits- ? ??. "en with four pasi nl<lb/>
? du?o, waits &amp;?ES ?, yZ fff SS<lb/>
Fice ? perhaps with yet another<lb/>
proposal to play a<lb/>
"big-time team ? because that's<lb/>
the way to the top.<lb/>
"I haven't had much input into<lb/>
scheduling for the last four-and-a-<lb/>
half years Emory said. "Dr<lb/>
Karr has done it, but on a couple but iI 53 wVbe ab To com-<lb/>
of occasions he has asked me pete with those people<lb/>
about it. He did ask me about the<lb/>
LSU game in 1985 because that'll<lb/>
be in December, and I said, 'Well,<lb/>
that'll be good because we'll be<lb/>
going to a bowl game in 1985<lb/>
anyhow. So go ahead and<lb/>
schedule it<lb/>
In addition to LSU in 1985,<lb/>
East Carolina's other noted op-<lb/>
ponents, including recent addi-<lb/>
tions, are Pitt, N.C. State and<lb/>
South Carolina this season,<lb/>
Miami, Penn State and Auburn in<lb/>
1985; West Virginia in 1986,<lb/>
Florida State again in 1987 and Il-<lb/>
linois in 1987.<lb/>
But Emory adds, "We're not<lb/>
going to slip up on nobody no<lb/>
more, neither<lb/>
This season's schedule also will<lb/>
be top-heavy with road games ?<lb/>
only four in Greenville and seven<lb/>
away. "But I think this will be the<lb/>
last year we'll have to do that<lb/>
Emory said. "I think next year<lb/>
we'll be five at home and six on<lb/>
KSSiJfS WC VC 80t the road ? s?? years in the<lb/>
future we'll be six at home and<lb/>
five on the road The Pirates will<lb/>
have one date to fill in 1985.<lb/>
Another factor in the recent<lb/>
scheduling splurge, Emory said,<lb/>
was to enhance East Carolina's<lb/>
position with the CFA, which<lb/>
voted last weekend to accept ECU<lb/>
? an independent in football ?<lb/>
and two other universities into its<lb/>
ranks.<lb/>
Each school needed 60 percent<lb/>
of the membership votes to be ac-<lb/>
cepted, and one of the conditions<lb/>
of membership is for the school to<lb/>
hasn't scheduled anything that<lb/>
I've backed off from, that I've<lb/>
said, 'Hey, what are you doing?' I<lb/>
think we've scheduled people<lb/>
we've got to play, that'll bring the<lb/>
money and the recruits. We're<lb/>
gambling that we'll be successful<lb/>
"That's what you want. You<lb/>
want the best, the most en-<lb/>
thusiastic. Why mess around play- nlav 80 Zl PS V SCh?0110<lb/>
ing in the minor leagues whenu MfTSI&amp;s" <lb/>
jWSLftS; . "We'renotTrotectedbyacon-<lb/>
wTcoUve coed'S ttmSZ 7t " "<lb/>
any football team America a?gam D vfs 7 SSLT<lb/>
defensively, offensively, and kick<lb/>
ing. And that's our goal, to com-<lb/>
pete with the best.<lb/>
"Penn State? They don't make<lb/>
me nervous, or LSU or Auburn.<lb/>
We're not going to Auburn just to<lb/>
get the payroll. We're going down<lb/>
there to win<lb/>
The Pirate will have to perform like they dW i. Mt fall Missouri favorer the mat two yearTlf 5??.<lb/>
pect to do well against such teams ? Plttabnirh. Penn SUte, Auburn, Miami, Florida State and LSU.<lb/>
was the only negative thing for<lb/>
East Carolina about the CFA. A<lb/>
team like Wake Forest or Duke<lb/>
can play six, five conference<lb/>
teams, and then play six double-A<lb/>
teams and their conference pro-<lb/>
tects them<lb/>
Yes, Emory said, by scheduling<lb/>
such teams as Auburn, LSU, and<lb/>
Penn State, East Carolina also<lb/>
could count on a number of votes.<lb/>
"That was part of it Emory<lb/>
said. "The only thing we had<lb/>
negative was we weren't playing<lb/>
80 percent CFA members. So this<lb/>
( was one of those things. We had<lb/>
no alternative, and to get the<lb/>
votes, we had to play them.<lb/>
Florida State and Miami are in-<lb/>
dependent CFA members, and to<lb/>
get the Southeastern Conference<lb/>
voting for you, you get LSU and<lb/>
Auburn. And Penn State doesn't<lb/>
want to play a Division AA team.<lb/>
"I'm not saying that East<lb/>
Carolina campaigned for votes,<lb/>
but I think, in a way, you have to<lb/>
be<lb/>
"We want to play a national<lb/>
schedule. We want to win a na-<lb/>
tional championship Emory ad-<lb/>
em, in reference to the Pirates extremely difficult schedule in 19W<lb/>
ded. "And the only way to win is<lb/>
to play them guys. Maybe we're<lb/>
gambling like heck, and that's<lb/>
why it's so tough to be a graduate<lb/>
of East Carolina and be the<lb/>
coach, because what's best for the<lb/>
university sometimes isn't best for<lb/>
the coach<lb/>
But, as Emory said, CFA<lb/>
membership wasn't the lone ob-<lb/>
jective in scheduling tougher op-<lb/>
ponents.<lb/>
"We wanted CFA membership,<lb/>
we wanted to play a national<lb/>
schedule, and we wanted an op-<lb/>
portunity for national exposure<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Emory is relentless in pursuit of<lb/>
excellence for the ECU program,<lb/>
and he said he believes the 1984<lb/>
season will be crucial to its goals.<lb/>
The team will be inexperienced<lb/>
at many positions, and. the squad<lb/>
he hopes to field in 1985 and 1986<lb/>
will be built on the recorc of 1984.<lb/>
"Its the year that's so impor-<lb/>
tant Emory said, "because we<lb/>
have to hang in. And I guarantee<lb/>
you, when we line up in 1985, I<lb/>
don't think there'll be a nagazine<lb/>
in the country that won't sav<lb/>
we've got the toughest schedule in<lb/>
college football<lb/>
That schedule includes Penn<lb/>
State, Auburn, N.C. State, and<lb/>
LSU on the road, and South<lb/>
Carolina, Tulsa and Miami at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
"We're trying to build an armv<lb/>
ot fans Emory said. "We're<lb/>
trying to get everybody, 2 5<lb/>
million, 3 million people east of<lb/>
Interstate 95 to stay in ihe East<lb/>
and see football on Saturday<lb/>
afternoon<lb/>
THEEAJ<lb/>
Athlel<lb/>
GREENSBf- ,(<lb/>
Atlantic Coas:<lb/>
schools spent S7 mill<lb/>
their athletic program:<lb/>
ago. Today, rj<lb/>
about cover the co:<lb/>
Intramu<lb/>
Comes<lb/>
b jeans rn<lb/>
The firsl<lb/>
program is con g<lb/>
exciting finals<lb/>
three-on-r<lb/>
nis single-<lb/>
In softr.<lb/>
between the I<lb/>
played June<lb/>
Powers. B a<lb/>
favored I a<lb/>
pionship Pre<lb/>
wind up ?'<lb/>
determine<lb/>
In three-on<lb/>
tion, the M .<lb/>
by captain Kevin Ba<lb/>
favored to win the<lb/>
tournament. Oul<lb/>
press are the No Name<lb/>
ing Crew, Sig Ep Raid<lb/>
Village Green TM's<lb/>
pionship game<lb/>
June 14 at 7:00 p m<lb/>
Gym. Play prorr.isc<lb/>
paced and exciting<lb/>
Further Intra:<lb/>
SP0I<lb/>
WELCOME ()1<lb/>
Bring this ad &amp;amil<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
j L<lb/>
OPEN 7 Days<lb/>
A Week<lb/>
8:30A.M. until<lb/>
2:30A.M.<lb/>
Mi. 732-1294<lb/>
ALL-Yi<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
EVERY FRIDA1<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PI<lb/>
INCUDES:<lb/>
A vanetv of Fillets,<lb/>
including Lousiana-<lb/>
Stvle Fish Fillets. Hush<lb/>
Puppies. French Fries,<lb/>
a choice of Hoi Yeget<lb/>
and our own Famous<lb/>
BE "ORAN4<lb/>
ENJOY FLOR1DJ<lb/>
MONEY,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0010"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL1N1 AM<lb/>
JUNEJ3, 1984<lb/>
Heat<lb/>
MICHAEL SMITH - ECV Pfxxo Ub<lb/>
nonals held in Eugene. Oregon.<lb/>
.pie or years and hopes the<lb/>
team will have new facilities in<lb/>
order to advance the program to<lb/>
national excellence.<lb/>
ppointed<lb/>
Overton is optimistic that the<lb/>
Pirates can have continued suc-<lb/>
cess in the future.<lb/>
"We lost five great seniors he<lb/>
said, "but with the players we<lb/>
have returning next year we have<lb/>
the nucleus for a good club and a<lb/>
possibility of winning the ECAC<lb/>
South championship<lb/>
Overton came to ECU in 1969<lb/>
as an undergraduate, and served<lb/>
as the team's manager until 1973.<lb/>
In 9"4 he served one year as a<lb/>
graduate assistant, before becom-<lb/>
ing a full-time assistant and facul-<lb/>
ty member in 1977.<lb/>
A native of Ahoskie, Overton<lb/>
played basketball, baseball, foot-<lb/>
ball and golf at Ahoskie High<lb/>
School. He recieved all-<lb/>
conference and all-East honors in<lb/>
baseball and was named all-state<lb/>
in golf.<lb/>
Emory ?ald "they schedule em, I play<lb/>
tes extremely difficult schedule in 1984<lb/>
is<lb/>
re<lb/>
Mtt's<lb/>
late<lb/>
the<lb/>
the<lb/>
for<lb/>
:fa<lb/>
ob-<lb/>
op-<lb/>
ship,<lb/>
lonal<lb/>
op-<lb/>
re<lb/>
he hopes to field in 1985 and 1986<lb/>
will be built on the record of 1984.<lb/>
"It's the year that's so impor-<lb/>
tant Emory said, "because we<lb/>
have to hang in. And I guarantee<lb/>
you, when we line up in 1985, I<lb/>
don't think there'll be a magazine<lb/>
in the country that won't say<lb/>
we've got the toughest schedule in<lb/>
college football<lb/>
That schedule includes Penn<lb/>
State, Auburn, N.C. State, and<lb/>
LSU on the road, and South<lb/>
Carolina, Tulsa and Miami at<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
"We're trying to build an army<lb/>
of fans Emory said. "We're<lb/>
trying to get everybody, 2.5<lb/>
nullion, 3 million people east of<lb/>
Interstate 95 to stay in the East<lb/>
and see football on Saturday<lb/>
afternoon<lb/>
Athletic Expenditures Skyrocket In ACC<lb/>
GREENSBORO (UPI) ? Four<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
schools spent $7 million to run<lb/>
their athletic programs a decade<lb/>
ago. Today, that figure would just<lb/>
about cover the cost to run the<lb/>
program at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
Due to inflation, rising tuition<lb/>
fees and the addition of women's<lb/>
and other non-revenue sports,<lb/>
athletic department costs have<lb/>
Intramural Action<lb/>
Comes To A Close<lb/>
soared in the past 10 years. In<lb/>
1974, UNC invested $24,000 in its<lb/>
women's athletic program, a<lb/>
figure that has now reached $1<lb/>
million.<lb/>
North Carolina's athetic pro-<lb/>
gram finished fiscal 1982-83 with<lb/>
a net profit of more than $1<lb/>
million. In the period of<lb/>
1974-1976, the athletic depart-<lb/>
ment to post revenues of more<lb/>
than $4 million in fiscal 1982-83 as<lb/>
well as a net profit of more than<lb/>
$360,000.<lb/>
"We're in the black and we will<lb/>
stay in the black Athletic Direc-<lb/>
tor Willis Casey said.<lb/>
When Gene Hooks took over as<lb/>
athletic director at Wake Forest,<lb/>
the total athletic budget was<lb/>
ment experienced serious financial $600,000 and the department was<lb/>
difficulties, operating at a deficit more than $200,000 in debt<lb/>
Also, Hooks has agreed to<lb/>
switch this season's football game<lb/>
with Clemson to Death Valley for<lb/>
an estimated payoff of $250,000.<lb/>
Officials at Duke University<lb/>
declined to release specific infor-<lb/>
mation about specific areas of<lb/>
operation. According to Athletic<lb/>
Director Tom Butters and Univer-<lb/>
sity Comptroller Jack Adcock,<lb/>
the department's expenses for<lb/>
$6.5 million.<lb/>
The revenues for that same<lb/>
period, however, were $5 million.<lb/>
The $1.5 shor fall is covered by a<lb/>
subsidy from the university's<lb/>
general fund.<lb/>
Butter's said he would like to<lb/>
see the day when the athletic<lb/>
department could opetate without<lb/>
the subsidy, but he questions<lb/>
whether it should ever become ful-<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
The first session Intramural<lb/>
program is coming to an end with<lb/>
exciting finals ahead in softball,<lb/>
three-on-three basketball and ten-<lb/>
nis singles.<lb/>
In softball action, the finals<lb/>
between the two leagues will be<lb/>
played June 18. The Pirate<lb/>
Powers, Bombed Skaggs are<lb/>
favored to win the league cham-<lb/>
pionship. Preliminary play will<lb/>
wind up Wednesday June 13<lb/>
determining the semi-finalists.<lb/>
eludes the Tennis Singles finale.<lb/>
Semi-finalists include Randy<lb/>
Meetre, Hank Outclaw, Tom<lb/>
Kiehl, and Don Joyner. The top<lb/>
netter will be crowned by Friday<lb/>
June 15. Good luck netters<lb/>
The time has arrived to register<lb/>
for second session activities.<lb/>
Physical fitness classes are being<lb/>
offered again to all facultystaff<lb/>
and students. Aerobics,<lb/>
aquarobics, and personal defense<lb/>
classes begin June 20 and finish<lb/>
up July 24. An $8.00 fee for<lb/>
students and $10.00 fee for facul-<lb/>
ty is required. Registration begins<lb/>
June 20 and ends June 22. For<lb/>
more information come by room<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym. Shape-Up<lb/>
with Intramurals<lb/>
The Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Department invites everyone to<lb/>
of a half-million dollars<lb/>
"The cash reserves were totally<lb/>
depleted, which is a very scary<lb/>
siuation Athletic Director John<lb/>
Swofford said.<lb/>
During the last fiscal year, the<lb/>
Wake Forest athletic budget<lb/>
reached about $5 million.<lb/>
Although Hooks would not reveal<lb/>
exact figures, he said the program<lb/>
fiscal 1982-83 were approximately ly independent of the university.<lb/>
In 1977, Norht Carolina began finighed the year in the black. He<lb/>
'Tornlino C 4.1  ? - ?- JJI .1a  1<lb/>
its "Carolina Fever" promotion<lb/>
and sellouts became com-<lb/>
monplace at football games.<lb/>
Larger football revenues, an<lb/>
already succesful basketball pro-<lb/>
gram and an intense fund-raising<lb/>
effort, have resulted in a solid<lb/>
financial base on which UNC can<lb/>
field 26 sports, 13 each for men<lb/>
and women.<lb/>
North Carolina State operates a<lb/>
27-sport program, but on a<lb/>
budget half the size of UNC's.<lb/>
Until 1978, when the debt incur-<lb/>
added that the program has<lb/>
finished in the black the last 10<lb/>
years.<lb/>
Wake Forest fields 14 sports,<lb/>
eight for men. But under NCAA<lb/>
guidelines, the school must field<lb/>
at least eight women's sports to<lb/>
retain Division I status beginning<lb/>
in 1988.<lb/>
To keep the Demon Deacon<lb/>
athletic program out of debt,<lb/>
Hooks has made unpopular deci-<lb/>
sions. In 1982, he agreed to move<lb/>
Wake Forest's home football<lb/>
participate in exciting 'Adventure tmic?tne budget has grown steadi<lb/>
Trips' left during first session. If ty-<lb/>
red to build Carter-Finley game with Clemson to Tokyo for<lb/>
Stadium was retired, N.C. State<lb/>
operated without the benefit of<lb/>
football gate receipts. Since that<lb/>
RAM5U<lb/>
In three-on-three basketball ac-<lb/>
tion, the Midnight Express, lead<lb/>
by captain Kevin Banks, are<lb/>
favored to win the championship<lb/>
tournament. Out to derail the ex-<lb/>
press are the No Names, Wreck-<lb/>
ing Crew, Sig Ep Raiders, and the<lb/>
Village Green TM's. The cham-<lb/>
pionship game is set for Tuesday<lb/>
June 14 at 7:00 p.m. in Memorial<lb/>
Gym. Play promises to be fast<lb/>
paced and exciting.<lb/>
Further Intramural action in-<lb/>
you love the great outdoors,<lb/>
register for the next white water<lb/>
canoeing trip set for June 16. The<lb/>
registration deadline is Tues. June<lb/>
12. A local canoe trip is planned<lb/>
for July 11 with registration<lb/>
deadline July 9. Don't forget<lb/>
horseback riding at Jarmans<lb/>
Stables every Thursday at 4:00<lb/>
p.m. For more information con-<lb/>
cerning all outdoor recreation ac-<lb/>
tivities, come by the Outdoor<lb/>
Recreation Center in room 113<lb/>
Memorial Gym or call 757-6911.<lb/>
Intramurals ? Participate,<lb/>
don't just spectate! Join in the<lb/>
fun, shape up and get physical<lb/>
through summer recreation.<lb/>
The Wolfpack's 1983 national<lb/>
basketball championship netted<lb/>
a guarantee of almost a half-<lb/>
million dollars. That same year,<lb/>
he moved the majority of the<lb/>
basketball team's home games<lb/>
from 8,200-seat Memorial Coli-<lb/>
seun in Winston-Salem to the<lb/>
more spacious Greensboro Col-<lb/>
the school $300,000 after expenses iseum in order to generate more<lb/>
and allowed the athletic depart- revenue.<lb/>
Sports Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Apply at the East Carolinian offices on the second floor of the<lb/>
Publications building across from the entrance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
AEROBICS<lb/>
It Should Be So Much More ThaB 'Do ?f this, Do 8 of<lb/>
that" At The Aerobic Workshop it it!<lb/>
We Specialize In Aerobics<lb/>
THE<lb/>
Uf?<lb/>
k&amp;<lb/>
'WOMKSHOP<lb/>
"The Fun Way<lb/>
To Fitness"<lb/>
Phone 757-160S<lb/>
417 Evans St Mall<lb/>
Downtown (,i<lb/>
Little<lb/>
of Mexico<lb/>
Restaurante &amp; Cantina<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
WELCOME ORIENTATION STUDENTS<lb/>
Bring this ad &amp; anything showing that you are at ECU<lb/>
for Orientation and<lb/>
SKATE FREE Tonight<lb/>
June 13th.<lb/>
Open Sun. thru Thur.<lb/>
11 AM to 10 PM<lb/>
Frl. a Sat.<lb/>
11 AM to 11 PM<lb/>
Good Food Ftom South of the Border<lb/>
Introducing Our New<lb/>
"All You Can Eat"<lb/>
Taco Buffet For Only<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
264 By-pass near Memorial Dr<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
We have all ABC permits<lb/>
ECU students skate every Tuesday for IV.00<lb/>
IHSIC TELEVISION<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
BLUE MOON<lb/>
CAFE<lb/>
O P E N 7 Days Pitchers $1.50 anytime<lb/>
A Week<lb/>
8 30A M untiI 8 insubs lbfresh burcrs " anvtinse<lb/>
2:30A.M.<lb/>
lfc.7S2.1294 2051.3 St.<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!<lb/>
FISHERMAN'S<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PM<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
INCLUDES:<lb/>
A variety of Fillets,<lb/>
including Lousiana-<lb/>
Style Fish Fillets, Hush<lb/>
Puppies, French Fries,<lb/>
a choice of Hot Vegetables<lb/>
and our own Famous Seafood Chowder.<lb/>
BE "OBANGE YOU 9NABT" TODAY<lb/>
ENJOY FLORIDA OBANGE JUKE ANYTIME<lb/>
i a? $.???<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
Welcomes the Class of 1988 to ECU<lb/>
Bringing you the best in dance music &amp; rock n' roll for 15 years.<lb/>
Doors open 9:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m. each night<lb/>
East Carolina's Party Center<lb/>
417 Cotanche SU<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758-4591<lb/>
Wed: Orientation Party - $1.00 Adm. (18 yrs. Adm. $2.00)<lb/>
All cans.55 til 11:00 p.m. &amp;.80 til close<lb/>
Thur: College Nite - $1.00 Adm. (18 yrs. Adm. $2.00)<lb/>
All cans.55 til 11:00 p.m. &amp;.80 til close<lb/>
Sun: Ladies Nite - Free Adm. for ladies (18 yrs. Adm. $1.00)<lb/>
$ .05 draft while it lasts!<lb/>
Mon: Orientation Party - $1.00 Adm. (18 yrs. Adm. $2.0!))<lb/>
All cans.55 til 11:00 p.m. &amp;.80 cans til close<lb/>
COME EARL Ytl<lb/>
You mutt kt It to enter the dub. N.C. State Law prohibits persons under 19 to<lb/>
PMrchMsakholkb??ersaes. Atorn?tivebcvcnessjepit)?id?donthei<lb/>
Persons under 19 required to wear a wrist band while on the premises.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0011"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
JHEEASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
Ij<lb/>
Fishel Takes Out Revenge<lb/>
1MAHA, Neb. (UPI) Maior n - V r V' fJST f<lb/>
p baseball held its annual 22? IfEflS?J? ?? most outstanding oerfor? ?f V<lb/>
OMAHA, Neb. (UPI) - Major<lb/>
league baseball held its annual<lb/>
free-agent draft one week too ear-<lb/>
ly for Cal State-Fullerton out-<lb/>
fielder John Fishel and one week<lb/>
too late for the defending NCAA<lb/>
champion Texas Longhorns<lb/>
Inspired by his lowly selection<lb/>
in the 19th round by the Oakland<lb/>
As earlier in the week, Fishel<lb/>
SPS lSe I984 ornament field<lb/>
with his bat to carry Fullerton to<lb/>
its second NCAA title in six years<lb/>
under coach Augie Garrido.<lb/>
Fishel batted .520 with a tour<lb/>
nament record-tying 13 hits in 25<lb/>
at-bats as the Titans rebounded<lb/>
from a second-round 6-4 loss to<lb/>
Texas to eliminate traditional<lb/>
powers Miami, Arizona State and<lb/>
Oklahoma State in order before<lb/>
downing the Longhorns 3-1 in the<lb/>
title game Sunday night.<lb/>
Fishel knocked in four runs in<lb/>
the 10-2 victory over Oklahoma<lb/>
Mate and also collected two<lb/>
homers in Fullerton's six games in<lb/>
Omaha. He shared the tourna-<lb/>
ment lead in both runs (six) and<lb/>
RBFs (10) to earn acclaim as the<lb/>
 mx"? a w) iu earn acclaim as t<lb/>
Nominations Accepted<lb/>
SpSS hSS Sr?2 ?tS2 mi is ?P?ially interred in<lb/>
quaiified ?kMV.SSE VST ?f yCarS Pri?r '? the<lb/>
Ssesterf  " "d ?? ? ? ?- a<lb/>
To aualifv fnr sh f nomination should do so by June<lb/>
must CfUiteSSLS i5- CrPlete info"?ationyregar-<lb/>
recognition to thfL??Sd to fnrn' "SE? <lb/>
the University by the?r dTrecToar IhS I ?? should be in-<lb/>
ticipation in Fa. r!?.Rf ud alon wth tne current<lb/>
mailing address for the nominee.<lb/>
University intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics. A nominee must not<lb/>
have been connected with the<lb/>
University in the capacity to<lb/>
which the nominee is being elected<lb/>
for a minimum of five academic<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The Sports Hall of Fame Corn-<lb/>
All nominations should be<lb/>
mailed to:<lb/>
ECU Sports Hall of Fame<lb/>
co Ken Smith<lb/>
Scales Field House<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, N.C. 27834<lb/>
?m?th,?g to prove her. and we They w?re Joined by firs,<lb/>
FishdI hi, , eading .378 ZZX??Sft? t<lb/>
for the Titans this season with 16 cond baseman RanHv wtf<lb/>
1982 after turning down a bonus Barry Bonds and Sf<lb/>
. Fishe! though, he had substan- KSSwto'S SfcE<lb/>
natty unproved his market value the vol atAiano.ftton "<lb/>
SnSe'on'Ihe"81 25? "?Cft<lb/>
Fishe. was i to the au- K nelr bl" <lb/>
Support Alfred E. Neuman<lb/>
for President you could<lb/>
do a lot worse and you<lb/>
always have!<lb/>
Mail this official write-in ballot<lb/>
and Alfred will send you a<lb/>
free bumper sticker.<lb/>
? YESNO<lb/>
? WHO CARES<lb/>
VOTE MAD<lb/>
Mail to: Alfred For President, 2080 A Calumet St<lb/>
Clearwater, FL 33575<lb/>
NAME (PLEASE PRINT)<lb/>
ADDRESS<lb/>
CITY<lb/>
 STATE<lb/>
ZIP<lb/>
Sports Writers Needed<lb/>
for 2nd Summer Session<lb/>
Apply at East Carolinian<lb/>
offices on the second floor<lb/>
of the Publications building<lb/>
between 2-5 p.m. Tuesdays<lb/>
BuffetLovers, take your<lb/>
Pick of The Pi2zasa77aTGagY<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Wasn PilEi<lb/>
WVSP<lb/>
BENEFIT<lb/>
3 bands<lb/>
presents<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
LADIES LIGHT<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
THE<lb/>
PEDESTRIANS<lb/>
Ladies Free til 11.00<lb/>
Fri. &amp; Sat. PEGASUS Itocks"<lb/>
E.C.U. Students $1.00 ALL SUMMER<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
Live RemoteHappy Hour<lb/>
$.35 Draft &amp;$.65 cans<lb/>
3 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
Every Wednesday Afternoon<lb/>
Giveaways: T - shirts or Free Washes<lb/>
i?nCFeKXct0 thtEast 10th St- Pizza Hut<lb/>
&amp;W fc. 10th Street Greenville, NC 752 - 5222<lb/>
If you have to do your own laundry, do it in style at<lb/>
the WASH PUB!<lb/>
x-NN-ri<lb/>
Lunch Buffet - llam-2pm Daily<lb/>
(AU You Can Eat) $2.99<lb/>
farn ?.  ADVERTISE0 ITEM POllCV<lb/>
Dinner Buffet - 5-8pm<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Wed. $3.09<lb/>
Spaghetti - 5-8pm Thurs.<lb/>
(All You Can Eat) $2.65<lb/>
items anc Prices Copyngnt 1994<lb/>
Effective Thru sat "??? Vav on<lb/>
June 16 198a Ouantirv Bignts Bese'veo<lb/>
cne soio to Dealers<lb/>
Happy HoursDaily - 2 til 5pm<lb/>
&amp; 9pm til closing<lb/>
Video Games Big Screen TV<lb/>
The Best Pizza in Town. Corner of Cotanche 8, loth st<lb/>
Hon1 J'hone 758-6121<lb/>
 " iiiiiiiiinnriniiuijim<lb/>
The<lb/>
c 2 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
KROGER CHOCOLATE MILK. BUTTERMILK OR<lb/>
Homogenized ? 00<lb/>
Whole Milk  a ?1"<lb/>
?22!?alJpalace<lb/>
30 OFF "<lb/>
ALL FRAMES<lb/>
IN STOCK<lb/>
ft ALL FRAMES ?<lb/>
I IN STOCK J<lb/>
I ? . wi,r prescription lenses) ?<lb/>
 Must wsem ?,up?? lor im N?, good w?h o,he, Mse6 <lb/>
Ofl<lb/>
f expires 6 3084<lb/>
! AM 1<lb/>
I<lb/>
Mt<lb/>
SUNGLASSES<lb/>
off<lb/>
OFFER EXPIRES 6 3084<lb/>
CONTACTS<lb/>
$6900<lb/>
j Includes lenses &amp; care kit<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I? ?? With Coupon OnlyWMaij<lb/>
SENIOR CITIZKN<lb/>
DISCOUNTS<lb/>
W Can Arrange<lb/>
An Evf f ? jiti<lb/>
For You On<lb/>
Th Sam' Dav<lb/>
The<lb/>
OPTICAL II<lb/>
Phoru-<lb/>
756-4Z04<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
J<lb/>
RHINE. SANGRIA OR<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
Chabiis<lb/>
3Ltr.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
7M GfranvMIc BW. (Acrow Froa Pht P1aM, JUatt To ERA KmmlM<lb/>
<pb facs="00057649_0012"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>