<?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="00057650_0001"/>
Bhe<lb/>
(Euroimlun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.58 No.$3 c<lb/>
Thursday June 21,1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Mallory Retires After 30 Years<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Mallory<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
After 3 years<lb/>
During his 31 years at ECU,<lb/>
he's been head baseball coach<lb/>
assistant football coach, an<lb/>
associate professor, dean of men<lb/>
and associate dean of orientation<lb/>
and judiciary. When Dean James<lb/>
Mallory retires June 30, ECU will<lb/>
be losing a part of its history.<lb/>
Mallory, a Virginia native and<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill graduate first<lb/>
came to ECU Sept. 1, 1953. He<lb/>
was hired as the head baseball<lb/>
coach, assistant football coach<lb/>
and an associate professor in the<lb/>
Department of Health and<lb/>
Physical Education. He was made<lb/>
Dean of Men in the fall of 1958,<lb/>
but continued in his capacities as<lb/>
coach and teacher.<lb/>
Mallory continued to coach<lb/>
baseball through the 1962 season.<lb/>
In 1961, he led the team to the<lb/>
NAIA national championship.<lb/>
"After the '62 season he recall-<lb/>
ed, "my duties were becoming so<lb/>
heavy that I stopped coaching<lb/>
baseball<lb/>
During his 26 years as a dean,<lb/>
Mallory has seen a lot of change<lb/>
on the ECU campus. "When I<lb/>
first went into administration, the<lb/>
only two men's dormitories were<lb/>
Umstead and Slay he said.<lb/>
"Back in those days, the worst<lb/>
punishment you could give a man<lb/>
was to remove him from the dor-<lb/>
mitory, because there was no<lb/>
place in Greenville where you<lb/>
could stay there were only two<lb/>
apartment complexes<lb/>
The university has grown from<lb/>
approximately 2,500 students to<lb/>
13,500 during Mallory's tenure.<lb/>
However, he doesn't feel there has<lb/>
been much change in the student<lb/>
population itself. "Times never<lb/>
change he said. "There are just<lb/>
more people now<lb/>
One of Mallory's primary<lb/>
responsibilites as dean of men and<lb/>
as dean of orientation and<lb/>
judiciary has been the enforce-<lb/>
ment of rules. In the '50s and ear-<lb/>
ly '60s, regulations were much<lb/>
more strict, he said. "Women<lb/>
couldn't even go riding in an<lb/>
automobile back then unless they<lb/>
had special permission. And no<lb/>
co-ed could be seen on this cam-<lb/>
pus in shorts if they wore shorts<lb/>
they had to wear a raincoat over<lb/>
them.<lb/>
"Those were the days of in loco<lb/>
parentis Mallory said. "During<lb/>
the late '60s and early '70s, the<lb/>
courts gradually ruled that col-<lb/>
leges shouldn't stand in loco<lb/>
parentis as a surrogate mother or<lb/>
a surrogate father Mallory said,<lb/>
adding that this trend made his<lb/>
job much easier.<lb/>
At one point, Mallory said, if a<lb/>
student was arrested and went to<lb/>
jail, he had to go with them. "I<lb/>
spent as much time down at the<lb/>
jail as I did at home. I can never<lb/>
remember of a Sunday morning,<lb/>
for years, that I didn't go to the<lb/>
jail and many, many times I<lb/>
would eat lunch right there in<lb/>
jail he said.<lb/>
Drinking has always been a part<lb/>
of college life. "I don't think kids<lb/>
drink anymore today than they<lb/>
did before Mallory said. "It's<lb/>
just that today more kids drink<lb/>
The first place in Greenville to<lb/>
sell beer was the Rathskeller and<lb/>
that happened only after the city<lb/>
council debated intensively.<lb/>
Before that, Mallory said, the on-<lb/>
Manager<lb/>
l2 - w<lb/>
? u.<lb/>
ly place to drink beer was a place<lb/>
called Dora's on 264 Bypass.<lb/>
"She had a little drive-in place<lb/>
that sold beer, and she had a big<lb/>
pavilion. In the afternoons, the<lb/>
college kids would go over there<lb/>
and park their cars and play music<lb/>
 they had a jukebox and just<lb/>
mill around and drink beer<lb/>
Entertainment hasn't changed a<lb/>
lot for the college student of to-<lb/>
day, Mallory said. "Kids have all<lb/>
got cars now, that's one of the big<lb/>
things ? there's much nore mobili-<lb/>
ty on college campus,ts He said<lb/>
he felt they still enjoyed the same<lb/>
things he did while in school,<lb/>
"listening to records, dancing,<lb/>
having a few beers and taking part<lb/>
in recreational and athletic<lb/>
events<lb/>
Mallory said he lias seen a<lb/>
change in students' attitudes.<lb/>
' College kids today are not nearly<lb/>
as rebellious as they are in the<lb/>
'60s he said. However, he said<lb/>
he thought college students got a<lb/>
'bad press" in the '60s. "We<lb/>
didn't have a lot of problems (at<lb/>
See MALLORY, page 3<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Bill Hilliard, who has been the<lb/>
SGA transit manager for three<lb/>
years, recently announced his<lb/>
resignation effective June 30.<lb/>
Hilliard is leaving for another<lb/>
position.<lb/>
"Being the transit manager has<lb/>
been an excellent training oppor-<lb/>
tunity for me Hilliard said. "I<lb/>
enjoy it. It is like running a small<lb/>
business and we have a budget<lb/>
around $150,000 a year<lb/>
Hilliard has accepted a position<lb/>
at Thomas Built Buses in High<lb/>
Point starting July 1. He also<lb/>
plans to attend night school at<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro for his Masters<lb/>
in Business Administration.<lb/>
"A transit manager's job in-<lb/>
cludes being active in university<lb/>
affairs, SGA jobs and being on<lb/>
boards Hilliard said. He is a<lb/>
member of the Pitt County Tran-<lb/>
sit Committee, SGA President's<lb/>
Cabinet and a day student<lb/>
representative. He is also the<lb/>
employer for approximately 25<lb/>
bus drivers and five security<lb/>
guards and is responsible for a<lb/>
large fleet of buses.<lb/>
Hilliard has the responsibility<lb/>
for hiring and training all SGA<lb/>
bus drivers.To be a bus driver,<lb/>
one must have a B class drivers<lb/>
license from the state and then<lb/>
undergo interviews and training.<lb/>
Hilliard has made some changes<lb/>
and during the past three years.<lb/>
He assisted in purchasing new<lb/>
buses. He implemented a plan<lb/>
that will save $50,000 a year for<lb/>
the next four years in operation<lb/>
expenses such as gasoline, wages<lb/>
and maintenance costs. He has<lb/>
had two bus shelters built and<lb/>
another is in the planning stage.<lb/>
Hilliard has also rescheduled and<lb/>
improved routes, adding the<lb/>
brown route and the night transit<lb/>
service. In addition, he has<lb/>
designed a printed map and ex-<lb/>
panded the chartering service.<lb/>
"East Carolina has the only ful-<lb/>
ly student-run transit system in<lb/>
the state Hilliard said "Our<lb/>
system is bigger and handles more<lb/>
people than Greenville's city bus<lb/>
system<lb/>
"Sometimes the hours are long<lb/>
and I have problems with the<lb/>
employees or the buses but I feel<lb/>
grateful for the opportunity of be-<lb/>
ing the transit manager Hilliard<lb/>
commented. "I would like to per-<lb/>
sonally thank Dr. Meyer and<lb/>
Dean Alexander for their help<lb/>
Campus Vandalism Incidents Increase<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Larceny and vandalism in-<lb/>
cidents contributed to the crimes<lb/>
reported to the ECU Department<lb/>
of Public Safety during the past<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Vandalism incidents rose. In-<lb/>
cidents included reports of van-<lb/>
dalism to a vehicle, a drink<lb/>
machine and a residence hall<lb/>
door.<lb/>
Reported crimes for June 12-20<lb/>
included:<lb/>
June 12, 2:00p.m. ? Dr. Ennis<lb/>
Chestang of 228-A Brewster<lb/>
Building reported the larceny of<lb/>
seven maps from 212-D Brewster.<lb/>
June 13, 10:00 a.m. ? Connie<lb/>
Burgess, resident director of Jar-<lb/>
vis Residence Hall reported the<lb/>
larceny of a chair from the<lb/>
residence hall lobby. 11:00 a.m.<lb/>
? female was transported to Pitt<lb/>
County Memorial Hospital from<lb/>
the Prop Shop at the Drama<lb/>
Building via Greenville Rescue<lb/>
Squad due tca medical emergen-<lb/>
cy. 2:00 p.m. ? Elizabeth M.<lb/>
Page of 802 Greene Residence<lb/>
Hall reported the larceny of a<lb/>
bicycle light generator from her<lb/>
bicycle parked north of Slay<lb/>
Dorm. 7:52p.m. Richard Edward<lb/>
Eggleton of 143 Jarvis Residence<lb/>
Hall reported vandalism to his<lb/>
door by person(s) unknown.<lb/>
June 14, 12:13 a.m. ? resident<lb/>
of Slay Residence Hall reported<lb/>
four or five people refused to<lb/>
leave the area outside her window<lb/>
at Slay Dorm.3:30 a.m. ? A con-<lb/>
fidential source reported the<lb/>
presence of a controlled substance<lb/>
in 413 Green Residence Hall. 8:30<lb/>
a.m. ? Sgt. Jackson reported<lb/>
discovering that the drink<lb/>
machine located in the Green<lb/>
Room of Messick Art was van-<lb/>
dalized by person(s) unknown.<lb/>
11:05 a.m. ? Alison King of 507<lb/>
East 11th Street reported her bicy-<lb/>
cle, parked at the steps of D-Wing<lb/>
Brewster Building, was stolen.<lb/>
2:45 p.m. ? Christopher C.<lb/>
Tyson of 1509 West 5th Street<lb/>
reported vandalism to his vehicle<lb/>
while parked east of the Print<lb/>
Shop. 2:00 p.m. ? Student<lb/>
Health Services requested that a<lb/>
sickinjured student be<lb/>
transported from Memorial Gym<lb/>
to infirmary. 5:43 p.m. ? Ptl.<lb/>
Dail reported that Helen Frye of<lb/>
202 N. Library Street had run a<lb/>
stop sigh at 11th and Charles Blvd<lb/>
and hit vehicle A-97. 7:00p.m. ?<lb/>
Cpl. Burrus reported finding a<lb/>
black male juvenile in possession<lb/>
of a bicycle which had been<lb/>
reported stolen on April 13, 1983.<lb/>
June 16, 5:52 p.m. ? Lola P.<lb/>
Rider of 408 Green Residence<lb/>
Hall reported the larceny of<lb/>
money from her room. 6:32 p.m.<lb/>
? female reported a disturbance<lb/>
on the first floor of Slay<lb/>
Residence Hall.<lb/>
June 17, 6:53 a.m. ? Mrs.<lb/>
Glenda Flowers of Thomasville<lb/>
requested that campus be checked<lb/>
in attempt to locate her vehicle.<lb/>
6:33 a.m. ? Deborah Murdock of<lb/>
110 Slay reported that Rebecca<lb/>
Thompson of 112 Slay needed to<lb/>
be transported to Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital emergency<lb/>
room.<lb/>
June 18, 3:30 p.m. ? Paul<lb/>
Bryan Sumrell of 72 Riverbluff<lb/>
Apartments was served with two<lb/>
criminal summons and three war-<lb/>
rants for worthless checks. 11:47<lb/>
p.m. ? Cpl. Watson observed<lb/>
several underage freshman orien-<lb/>
tation students in Aycock<lb/>
Residence Hall consuming beer.<lb/>
The beer was confiscated.<lb/>
June 19, 12:15 a.m. ? resident<lb/>
of Greene Residence Hall<lb/>
reported suspicious activity in the<lb/>
area of the library. 3:45 a.m.<lb/>
Sonya Hunsucker of 713 Tyler<lb/>
Residence Hall, freshman orienta-<lb/>
tion student, was transported to<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
emergency room for medical<lb/>
emergency. 4:45 a.m. ? Lucile<lb/>
M. Chamber of 704 Greene<lb/>
Residence Hall was transported to<lb/>
Pitt County Memorial Hospital<lb/>
due to medical emergency. 3:00<lb/>
p.m. ? John Thomas Pietrzak of<lb/>
the East Carolinian reported<lb/>
larceny of a typewriter from the<lb/>
East Carolinian Office by<lb/>
person(s) unknown. 5:43 p.m. ?<lb/>
Officer Roush reported that per-<lb/>
son) unknown had put some<lb/>
type of detergent in the fountain<lb/>
at Wright Circle. 7:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Robert Gene Boney of 124 Jarvis<lb/>
Residence Hall was arrested for<lb/>
failure to appear. 4:00 p.m. ?<lb/>
Barbara Heath advised dispatcher<lb/>
Parker of a partial power outage<lb/>
on main campus. 70:55 p.m. ?<lb/>
Fred Darby, technical director for<lb/>
Summer Theatre, reported obser-<lb/>
ving a suspicious male in the north<lb/>
parking lot of the Biology<lb/>
Building. 11:15 p.m. ? George<lb/>
Johnson Jr. reported the larceny<lb/>
of a wallet from the SGA transit<lb/>
van while parked at the bus stop<lb/>
west of Mendenhall.<lb/>
ECU Geology Department<lb/>
Sponsors July Workshop<lb/>
On Phosphate Potential<lb/>
ByMARYCASHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For these kids, life on<lb/>
Life's No Picnic<lb/>
a college campus is a picnic. Walt until they grow op.<lb/>
? ecu<lb/>
June 20, 1:20 a.m. ? Officer<lb/>
Whkaker reported that the fire<lb/>
alarm on the third floor, east wing<lb/>
of Garrett Residence Hall was set<lb/>
off by discharged smoke bombs.<lb/>
Central America and the Carri-<lb/>
bean Basin may actually be rich in<lb/>
natural resources, especially<lb/>
phosphates, according to Dr.<lb/>
Stanley Riggs of the ECU Depart-<lb/>
ment of Geology.<lb/>
July 8-13 Riggs will be a prin-<lb/>
cipal lecturer at a workshop held<lb/>
at ECU concerning phosphate<lb/>
potential in the region conducted<lb/>
by the U.S. Geological Survey and<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
The proposed workshop will br-<lb/>
ing together geologists from the<lb/>
major Carribean and Central<lb/>
American countries for training<lb/>
on setting up and carrying out an<lb/>
exploration program, Riggs said.<lb/>
Phosphate could improve<lb/>
agriculture in some Latin<lb/>
American regions because mineral<lb/>
resources such as phosphate can<lb/>
be used as fertilizer. "The food<lb/>
supply and agricultural export<lb/>
problems of the developing coun-<lb/>
tries of the world correlate with a<lb/>
low use of chemical fertilizers<lb/>
Riggs said.<lb/>
Low use causes bad soil fertili-<lb/>
ty, contributing to dietary pro-<lb/>
blems in the poorer countries.<lb/>
If these mostly agricultural<lb/>
countries find rich deposits of<lb/>
phosphate, they would be free<lb/>
from depending on imxrted fer-<lb/>
tilizers. Increases would be made<lb/>
in agricultural exports, but em-<lb/>
phasis would be using the food<lb/>
domestically, according to Riggs.<lb/>
The United States hoies to help<lb/>
these countries fulfill their poten-<lb/>
tial in these areas. In 1980, the<lb/>
U.S. produced 47 mill on metric<lb/>
tons of phosphate, accounting for<lb/>
approximately 35 percent of the<lb/>
1980 total world production.<lb/>
Phosphate deposits are concen-<lb/>
trated in Florida atid North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Thelnsktel<lb/>
Editorials<lb/>
Features <lb/>
sports ???????<lb/>
????????? <lb/>
4<lb/>
? ????????????????????a<lb/>
S<lb/>
????????? jf<lb/>
? For a review of the new<lb/>
movie Ghostbmters and<lb/>
story about the growth<lb/>
development of ECU,<lb/>
Features, page 5.<lb/>
J- - -m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0002"/><lb/>
-IHEEASTCAROUNIAN<lb/>
Development 1<lb/>
ecu New? Farmville, an active veteran of<lb/>
EmDlovees ar f3c r i economic development efforts in<lb/>
Unfc2St?? LJS ?r0ma ??? Carolina? was hied as the<lb/>
mentLtethne 225? Helmm" f<lb/>
&amp;" month to r8 ? ftCVAS<lb/>
me public service agencys twpn h?t ?- -? ? rl . "cw<lb/>
twi en besi ? luring new industries to<lb/>
tieth anniversary.<lb/>
Since the Institute's founding in<lb/>
1964, RDI specialists have had a<lb/>
hand in more than 2,000 com-<lb/>
munity development and business<lb/>
assistance projects ranging from<lb/>
sweeping regional plans to<lb/>
management suggestions for small<lb/>
business owners. Permits have<lb/>
been filed, studies conducted, and<lb/>
plans drawn for local govern-<lb/>
ments, industries, and individuals<lb/>
scattered across a 32-county ser-<lb/>
vice area that includes most of<lb/>
North Carolina east of Interstate<lb/>
"Because of RDI, people in this<lb/>
area have had access to economic<lb/>
opportunities that would other-<lb/>
wise have passed them by says<lb/>
Janice Faulkner, director of the<lb/>
Institute since 1982. "Through<lb/>
planning and other types of<lb/>
assistance, we have helped<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina to take<lb/>
the best and avoid the worst<lb/>
aspects of development<lb/>
The need for information<lb/>
gathering and planning for<lb/>
economic development on a<lb/>
regional basis led to the original<lb/>
proposal establishing RDI.<lb/>
Drafted by geography professor<lb/>
Robert Cramer and backed by<lb/>
former ECU president Leo W.<lb/>
Jenkins, the proposal described<lb/>
an agency that would make the<lb/>
knowledge of college faculty and<lb/>
staff available to solve problems<lb/>
affecting citizens of the region.<lb/>
The late Thomas W. Willis of<lb/>
me late inomas W. Willis of were lo<lb/>
Announcement<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
A study is being conducted at the ECU Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Clinic to determine the difficulty<lb/>
hearing impaired students may have In<lb/>
discriminating words in foreign languages. Hear-<lb/>
ing Impaired volunteers 18 to 28 years of age are<lb/>
needed for a simple hearing test and word<lb/>
discrimination tasks. No foreign language<lb/>
background is necessary. Please contact Mrs.<lb/>
AAeta Downes, Department of Speech-Language<lb/>
and Auditory pathology, 757-4961, ext. 270.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
The Department of Intramural Recreational<lb/>
Services Is offering physical fitness classes for se<lb/>
cond session. Registrafi for aerobics<lb/>
aouaroblcs and personal defense begins Wednes-<lb/>
day, June 20 and ends Friday, June 22. Come by<lb/>
Room 204 Memorial Gym to register or call<lb/>
757-6M7.<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Applications are requested from those persons<lb/>
who are Interested In becoming PERSONAL<lb/>
CARE ATTENDANTS to wheelchair students for<lb/>
Pall Semester, 1984. We are particularly interested<lb/>
in anyone who has a background of assisting In-<lb/>
dividuals with their activities of daily living<lb/>
For further details contact: Office of Handicap-<lb/>
ped Student Services, 212 Whlchard Building, East<lb/>
Carolina University, Phone 757-6799.<lb/>
EXHIBITIONS<lb/>
Four new exhibitions will open June 3 at the<lb/>
Waterworks gallery in Salisbury, NC. Featured<lb/>
will be works by Allen W. Erdmann, Joyce Blunk<lb/>
Herb Parker, and Wayne Wrights. The new ex-<lb/>
hibitions will run from June 3-July 23, 1984.<lb/>
BEACH JOBS<lb/>
Retail, grocery and fast food positions available<lb/>
at Nags Head, Kill Devil Hills and Myrtle Beach.<lb/>
Some with accomodation assistance. Contact Co-<lb/>
op office. 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
the area and helping existing<lb/>
businesses expand.<lb/>
"Tom brought two indispensi-<lb/>
ble qualities to RDI observes<lb/>
Faulkner. "He knew how to find<lb/>
federal funds and match them up<lb/>
with local projects and he knew<lb/>
how to attract industry. He was<lb/>
far ahead of his time in the<lb/>
development of an industrial data<lb/>
bank for Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
In 1967, years before most state<lb/>
or local governments began woo-<lb/>
ing industry on an organized<lb/>
basis, a newspaper story on RDI<lb/>
boasted that "2.5 million facts<lb/>
about North Carolina's Coastal<lb/>
Plain are being made available to<lb/>
businessmen and industralists<lb/>
through the computerization of<lb/>
regional information at RDI In<lb/>
addition to the data bank, a series<lb/>
of overlay amps, designed to show<lb/>
businessmen prospective plant<lb/>
sites at a glance, were produced by<lb/>
RDI employees.<lb/>
Other early projects included<lb/>
the location of plant sites for in-<lb/>
dustries requiring large amounts<lb/>
of water and the selection of other<lb/>
sites along navigable waterways<lb/>
that could accomodate barge<lb/>
docking facilities. Feasibility<lb/>
studies examined the potential<lb/>
market for dozens of businesses<lb/>
and services. Preliminary designs<lb/>
were drafted for city parks, civic<lb/>
centers, subdivisions, and in-<lb/>
dustrial parks. New industries<lb/>
were located in many Coastal<lb/>
Plains towns with the help of<lb/>
Willis and other RDI specialists.<lb/>
By 1974, when the Institute<lb/>
moved into its present day<lb/>
quarters at First and Reade Streets<lb/>
in Greenville, new patterns in the<lb/>
process of regional development<lb/>
were changing RDI's approach to<lb/>
area service. Federal support for<lb/>
regional projects was running<lb/>
strong. New government agencies<lb/>
and expanded municipal and<lb/>
county planning staffs were tackl-<lb/>
ing manyl of the challenges met by<lb/>
RDI in its first decade of service.<lb/>
Funding for the Institute itself<lb/>
also changed. Initial funding<lb/>
through large grants from the<lb/>
U.S. Economic Development Ad-<lb/>
ministration was gradually phased<lb/>
out and replaced with complete<lb/>
support provided by the state of<lb/>
North Carolina through ECU.<lb/>
As a result of these forces, the<lb/>
Institute shifted its course, placing<lb/>
greater emphasis on responding to<lb/>
specific requests for services<lb/>
generated primarily by small<lb/>
towns and individual businesses.<lb/>
The number of projects increased<lb/>
but the work carried less regional<lb/>
impact.<lb/>
A 1977-78 annual report<lb/>
describes the type of services pro-<lb/>
vided by RDI during this period.<lb/>
Of the 137 projects accepted by<lb/>
RDI staffers that year, many were<lb/>
feasibility studies for small<lb/>
businesses ranging from frog far-<lb/>
ming to boat storage and day<lb/>
camps. Other efforts attempted to<lb/>
help businessmen solve financial<lb/>
or management problems. Com-<lb/>
munities were assisted in the<lb/>
preparation of park and<lb/>
playground plans, promotional<lb/>
brochures, and downtown<lb/>
redevelopment proposals.<lb/>
Large-scale projects, such as a<lb/>
study of Outer Banks barrier<lb/>
dunes with the National Park Ser-<lb/>
vice, were still performed but no<lb/>
Jonger held the spotlight at what<lb/>
faulkner describes as a "passive"<lb/>
agency. Work was produced<lb/>
almost entirely by RDI staff<lb/>
members with limited input from<lb/>
ECU faculty.<lb/>
A final period of transition in<lb/>
the early 1980's was accompanied<lb/>
by a change in the Institute's<lb/>
leadership. After 17 years as<lb/>
RDI's chief officer, Tom Willis<lb/>
resigned in 1981 and was replaced<lb/>
by assistant director Tim Brinn.<lb/>
Brinn was followed within a year<lb/>
by present director Janice<lb/>
Faulkner.<lb/>
The course set by the new direc-<lb/>
tors was drawn from studies on<lb/>
RDI's performance done by an<lb/>
ECU faculty committee and by<lb/>
the RDI staff itself. The reports<lb/>
recommended that the agency<lb/>
adopt a more aggressive policy for<lb/>
identifying and solving major<lb/>
regional problems and called for<lb/>
RDI to increase its involvemmt<lb/>
with ECU faculty and students.<lb/>
Shrinking federal participation<lb/>
m community development pro-<lb/>
grams and increased demand for<lb/>
regional planning assistance also<lb/>
prompted RDI's staff to refocus<lb/>
attention on broader issues put<lb/>
aside during the seventies.<lb/>
According to Faulkner, current<lb/>
Priorities at RDI are aimed at in-<lb/>
creasing the agency's regional im-<lb/>
pact. A few recent highlights:<lb/>
Updating and expansion of the<lb/>
RDI data base to include a com-<lb/>
puterized mapping an graphic arts<lb/>
resource center.<lb/>
Reestablishing RDI as a key<lb/>
source of regional facts and<lb/>
figures by increasing the quantity<lb/>
and quality of publications from<lb/>
the Institute.<lb/>
Reaching larger numbers of<lb/>
busmesspeople and community<lb/>
leaders through seminars and con-<lb/>
ferences featuring well-known<lb/>
speakers on topics of regional im-<lb/>
portance.<lb/>
Maintaining a high level of ser-<lb/>
vice through greater cooperation<lb/>
with ECU faculty and greater use<lb/>
of student interns on RDI pro-<lb/>
jects.<lb/>
The installation of new micro-<lb/>
computer equipment, publication<lb/>
in 1983 of a widely-used atlas<lb/>
depicting demographic and<lb/>
economic trends in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, and the scheduling last<lb/>
year of more than 400 conferences<lb/>
at RDI's Willis Building are ex-<lb/>
amples that show the Institute is<lb/>
moving well in the direction it<lb/>
wants to go, says Faulkner.<lb/>
She also points to the extensive<lb/>
involvement of ECU faculty in a<lb/>
cultural program series sponsored<lb/>
by RDI in conjunction wih<lb/>
"America's 400th Birthda"<lb/>
celebrations, and the tripling of<lb/>
student internships at the agency<lb/>
as clear signs of improvement in<lb/>
faculty and student involvement.<lb/>
As far as regional development<lb/>
is concerned, Faulkner sees<lb/>
agricultural concerns as some of<lb/>
the most important issues in<lb/>
Eastern North Carolina's future<lb/>
"Our greatest need now is to<lb/>
take advantage of our agriculturai<lb/>
assets she says. "There is a big<lb/>
need to look at new agricultural<lb/>
markets, identify better growing<lb/>
and processing techniques, and<lb/>
explore new types of crops "<lb/>
"We can't engage in a 'magic<lb/>
dust approach to development<lb/>
sprinkling a little money and rf<lb/>
fort here and there and expecting<lb/>
great things to result. We must<lb/>
pursue realistic, long-range goals<lb/>
that meet the needs of the region<lb/>
as a whole K<lb/>
Advertise With<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
NTE ? CORE BATTERY 3<lb/>
A special administration of the National Teacher Examinations-r?r.<lb/>
Battery no. 3 (Professional Knowledge) and the Special A??iv7m .<lb/>
Advertise With<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
WOODWORKING DESIGNER<lb/>
Opportunity to design and construct a wood<lb/>
shop for construction firm located at Emerald<lb/>
isle Housing available at nominal cost Contact<lb/>
Co-op office, 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING<lb/>
Examine and analyze planning and zoning or-<lb/>
dinances In seaside community. Full time, nous<lb/>
ing available at nominal cost. Contact Co-op of<lb/>
FREE MUSICALS<lb/>
Want to see Broadway musicals for free? Usher<lb/>
for the East Carolina Summer Theatre. Sign up In<lb/>
me Messlck Art Center, room lot. This Is your op-<lb/>
portunity to have some fun and save money at the<lb/>
same time.<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union has dutch dinners<lb/>
every Tuesday Evening at 5:30. Join us at the<lb/>
BSU Center on 511 East Tenth Street every week<lb/>
Programs follow.<lb/>
PLANTERGROWER<lb/>
Positions available in Emerald Isle to assist In<lb/>
growing and planting flowers and shrubs for land-<lb/>
scaping. Full time, housing available at nominal<lb/>
cost. Contact Co-op office, 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
The international student Association will be<lb/>
h-vlng a "end" of the first summer session party<lb/>
?? the international House on Tuesday, June itrn<lb/>
?tOO p.m.untli. ah foreign students and in-<lb/>
terested students are welcome. Bring your own<lb/>
b?v?r?o?! See ya'therein<lb/>
gsijg-c,tv- ?-<lb/>
ATTTiCl<lb/>
OH BOY<lb/>
All Girl Band<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
LADIES LIGHT<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
FRIDAY<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
BRICE STREET<lb/>
Coming Next Week Thur. &amp; Fri<lb/>
SKIP CASTRO<lb/>
Sot. In Concert THE PRODUCERS<lb/>
Wed. Teen Concert No. 7 MAXWAMIQP<lb/>
5TH STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
? , "SB TOVOTA. "ONDA, VW.<lb/>
LVSE-0' ??Ml.<lb/>
umjtMnaDa.Mw.AtTM<lb/>
ANDOraiU<lb/>
78-1534<lb/>
512 I. f 4th Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
I Tea &amp; Free Meals with Semester Meal Plan<lb/>
 Monthly &amp; Summer Meal Plan Rates Available<lb/>
$50 monthly<lb/>
$250 per semester<lb/>
$65 Summer Semester<lb/>
Doily Specials For Only<lb/>
? .  f2?25 plus fox<lb/>
includes 1 meat, 2 vegetables and<lb/>
1 bread<lb/>
Fore-outeCaU 752-047A<lb/>
SIC TELEVISION<lb/>
TUESDAY NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE INflTE<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Including Ska res<lb/>
' 6:30-10:00<lb/>
16ft SCREEN!<lb/>
fAflpfa CCOfldg Super Summer SALE!<lb/>
? Many New Releases for $5.99 see ad below<lb/>
? Special! Maxell UDXLII-90 2pk $7.49<lb/>
? We buy and sell used albums<lb/>
WE HAVE THE BEST PB1TFS IN GREENVILLE<lb/>
?I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
4<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
CBS Records<lb/>
a- <lb/>
Super Summer Sale!<lb/>
BILLY IDOL<lb/>
REBEL TELL<lb/>
lyes ?si FaceNaM vm<lb/>
jMua WeJn?eWaBh For Fantasy<lb/>
Also avertable on cassette<lb/>
ALBUMS<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
CASSETTES<lb/>
For Only<lb/>
$5.99<lb/>
Also On Sale<lb/>
Latest releases by:<lb/>
Huey Lewis and the News<lb/>
Judas Priest<lb/>
Quiet Riot<lb/>
Ozzy Osboume<lb/>
Roger Waters<lb/>
Psychedelic Furs<lb/>
Paul McCartney<lb/>
Matthew Wilder<lb/>
Pat Senator<lb/>
Eddy Grant<lb/>
-IS 39242<lb/>
FOOTLOOSE<lb/>
ORK.INAL MOTION P TI Rf<lb/>
VDTR(K<lb/>
KtNNV LOGGINS-J m F,<lb/>
???ZL 1L ?" not:<lb/>
BOR P THE lA.<lb/>
i<lb/>
Mallo<lb/>
Continued From Page i<lb/>
ECUj, but we did hae<lb/>
naturalK. Anytime the<lb/>
ould find out we might<lb/>
demonstration, everywhere<lb/>
look, you'd see camera<lb/>
reporters. Many of the kid<lb/>
w that and jump ngr.<lb/>
ale of h because they war<lb/>
get their picture on TV<lb/>
One reason that EC!<lb/>
tie trouble during<lb/>
Mallor) reeK. Is that Leo Je<lb/>
ho was chanceilor at<lb/>
Umited their beh. .<lb/>
Jenkins let our students kno<lb/>
ne would protect the<lb/>
peaceful demonstration<lb/>
wouldn't stand one s<lb/>
anyone disrupting a cia<lb/>
ting down in c I<lb/>
said, "so we didn't ha<lb/>
that.<lb/>
Dursng g ECL-<lb/>
perienced on on<lb/>
This took place i<lb/>
Jenkins' residence ar<lb/>
test concerning visitatio<lb/>
"At the time we 01<lb/>
weekend visitation, and<lb/>
wanted seven da<lb/>
demonstrated and got a<lb/>
raunchy. I thinl<lb/>
about 29. That's the<lb/>
ue had; we were i<lb/>
A stage was kept out on<lb/>
mall and a<lb/>
demonstrate were ali<lb/>
up to use st ??! think most<lb/>
(the demons<lb/>
give the k:d-<lb/>
MaLory said.<lb/>
Neuse Algae<lb/>
Studied By<lb/>
Biologists<lb/>
? -<lb/>
i<lb/>
The slower the V<lb/>
flows across North Carol<lb/>
coastal plain, the ere<lb/>
chance of it develc-<lb/>
and potentially hai<lb/>
blooms, say a pair<lb/>
from ECU.<lb/>
Drs. Robert R. c<lb/>
Donald W. Stanley sa ,<lb/>
of Microtyrstis  .<lb/>
periodically paints the river<lb/>
ween Goldsboro and N<lb/>
with a blue-green v.<lb/>
gered by a combinati<lb/>
water How and bv the p-exe-<lb/>
nutrients that trick .<lb/>
from farm fields, and i<lb/>
and industrial sites. The<lb/>
hope to further verify their obd<lb/>
vations and devise a met!<lb/>
predicting the occurrance<lb/>
blooms in research<lb/>
ducting on the river thi<lb/>
Algal bloom<lb/>
nuisance about c i i<lb/>
years and only during the rr j<lb/>
of July and Augu- i<lb/>
noted. When it occurs<lb/>
an area of the :<lb/>
the Cliffs of the Neuse in '<lb/>
County stretching to ?<lb/>
miles of New Be:<lb/>
river with a<lb/>
scum that may be re<lb/>
fish kills and threate<lb/>
the river for :<lb/>
drinking water and<lb/>
agricultural and ir. p,<lb/>
poses.<lb/>
"In 1982. we were out there ?,<lb/>
there was no bkx<lb/>
river even though the cor<lb/>
tion of nutrients in the river <lb/>
very high Chr<lb/>
"In 1983. the wa:e was essej<lb/>
tially the same in<lb/>
nutrients but there was a mass:<lb/>
bloom of algae tt<lb/>
"The one big difference be<lb/>
ween the river in those two ye<lb/>
was the actual flow of the rr. er<lb/>
1983, the river's flow was mui<lb/>
slower than in !982 Christi!<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He noted that there are a vOuj<lb/>
of factors at work. One is<lb/>
when the river is in a "low i <lb/>
condition" the algae floats :o .<lb/>
surface where it gets more Iigj<lb/>
which enhances its growth.<lb/>
"The other factor and the 01<lb/>
which we'll be studying this sut<lb/>
mer he says, "is the fact<lb/>
when you have low flow.<lb/>
water stays in the .iver longer gi<lb/>
ing the algae more time<lb/>
develop<lb/>
In their study, the scientisj<lb/>
plan to examine the growth raii<lb/>
of the algae under a varietyof ligl<lb/>
and temperature conditions ;<lb/>
compare it with dilution rates <lb/>
times of travel for a variety<lb/>
river flow conditions.<lb/>
'If our hypothesis<lb/>
confirmed says Christian, "w<lb/>
should be able to predict the pre<lb/>
bability of the algal blooms dm.<lb/>
ing the year and will be able tj<lb/>
make recommendations concen<lb/>
ing future modifications of rivi<lb/>
flow<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0003"/><lb/>
fHE EAST CAROLINIAN JUN E 21, 1984 3<lb/>
versaryi Mallory Recalls Changes In 30 Years At<lb/>
ji al program series sponsored<lb/>
RDI in conjunction with<lb/>
nerica's 400th Birthday"<lb/>
)rations. and the tripling of<lb/>
lent internships at the agency<lb/>
Bear signs of improvement in<lb/>
llty and student involvement.<lb/>
far as regional development<lb/>
concerned, Faulkner sees<lb/>
pultural concerns as some of<lb/>
most important issues in<lb/>
lern North Carolina's future,<lb/>
ur greatest need now is to<lb/>
advantage of our agricultural<lb/>
' she says. "There is a big<lb/>
look at new agricultural<lb/>
. identify better growing<lb/>
processing techniques, and<lb/>
re new types of crops<lb/>
e can't engage in a 'magic<lb/>
I approach to development,<lb/>
nkling a little money and ef-<lb/>
Ihere and there and expecting<lb/>
things to result. We must<lb/>
e realistic, long-range goals<lb/>
I: eet the needs of the region<lb/>
? v hole<lb/>
With<lb/>
Irolinian<lb/>
Y NIGHT<lb/>
GE NITE<lb/>
.00<lb/>
including Skates<lb/>
6:30- 10:00<lb/>
16ft SCREEN<lb/>
ALE!<lb/>
:d8<lb/>
s<lb/>
lei<lb/>
i39242<lb/>
I80MME<lb/>
FOOTLOOSE<lb/>
"RK.ISU MOTION PKTI RR<lb/>
SOI MTK( k<lb/>
?ENN' OGGINS? m Fiw<lb/>
H"?" HetD, The Man <lb/>
? ? ? eno at ioM, ano<lb/>
MM M iOM ? r .Almo?<lb/>
SHALAMAB-Oancy; rSh??,<lb/>
BRUCE<lb/>
SPRINGSTEEN<lb/>
BOHV l THE l.&amp;A.<lb/>
- 'ncluding<lb/>
DJMM ()? i m o, b,<lb/>
???Mtintai Down<lb/>
Bot?v JM1<lb/>
?o Mfii on cMMtta<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
ECU), but we did have some,<lb/>
naturally. Anytime the media<lb/>
would find out we might have a<lb/>
demonstration, everywhere you'd<lb/>
look, you'd see cameras and<lb/>
reporters. Many of the kids would<lb/>
see that and jump right in the mid-<lb/>
dle of it because they wanted to<lb/>
get their picture on TV he said.<lb/>
One reason that ECU had so lit-<lb/>
tle trouble during the '60s,<lb/>
Mallory feels, is that Leo Jenkins,<lb/>
who was chancellor at the time,<lb/>
limited their behavior. "Dr.<lb/>
Jenkins let our students know that<lb/>
he would protect their right for<lb/>
peaceful demonstration, but he<lb/>
wouldn't stand one second of<lb/>
anyone disrupting a class or sit-<lb/>
ting down in offices Mallory<lb/>
said, "so we didn't have any of<lb/>
that.<lb/>
During the '60s, ECU ex-<lb/>
perienced only one confrontation.<lb/>
This took place in front of<lb/>
Jenkins' residence and was a pro-<lb/>
test concerning visitation rights.<lb/>
"At the time we only had<lb/>
weekend visitation, and the kids<lb/>
wanted seven days. They<lb/>
demonstrated and got a little<lb/>
raunchy. I think thev arrested<lb/>
about 29. That's the biggest thing<lb/>
we had; we were very fortunate<lb/>
A stage was kept out on the<lb/>
mall and any students wanting to<lb/>
demonstrate were allowed to sign<lb/>
up to use it. "I think most of it<lb/>
(the demonstrations) was just to<lb/>
give the kids something to do<lb/>
Mallory said.<lb/>
Neuse Algae<lb/>
Studied By<lb/>
Biologists<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The slower the Neuse River<lb/>
flows across North Carolina's<lb/>
coastal plain, the greater the<lb/>
chance of it developing unsightly<lb/>
and potentially harmful algal<lb/>
blooms, say a pair of biologists<lb/>
from ECU.<lb/>
Drs. Robert R. Christian and<lb/>
Donald W. Stanley say the growth<lb/>
of Microcystis algae that<lb/>
periodically paints the river bet-<lb/>
ween Goldsboro and New Bern<lb/>
with a blue-green scum is trig-<lb/>
gered by a combination of low<lb/>
water flow and by the presence of<lb/>
nutrients that trickle into the river<lb/>
from farm fields, and from urban<lb/>
and industrial sites. The scientists<lb/>
hope to further verify their obser-<lb/>
vations and devise a method of<lb/>
predicting the occurrance of algal<lb/>
blooms in research they are con-<lb/>
ducting on the river this summer.<lb/>
Algal blooms become a<lb/>
nuisance about once in every three<lb/>
years and only during the months<lb/>
of July and August, Christian<lb/>
noted. When it occurs, it affects<lb/>
an area of the river starting near<lb/>
the Cliffs of the Neuse in Wayne<lb/>
County stretching to within as few<lb/>
miles of New Bern. It covers the<lb/>
river with a smelly, blue-green<lb/>
scum that may be responsible for<lb/>
fish kills and threatens the use of<lb/>
the river for fishing, boating,<lb/>
drinking water and for<lb/>
agricultural and industrial pur-<lb/>
poses.<lb/>
"In 1982, we were out there and<lb/>
there was no bloom of algae in the<lb/>
river even though the concentra-<lb/>
tion of nutrients in the river was<lb/>
very high Christian said.<lb/>
"In 1983, the water was essen-<lb/>
tially the same in terms of<lb/>
nutrients but there was a massive<lb/>
bloom of algae he said.<lb/>
"The one big difference bet-<lb/>
ween the river in those two years<lb/>
was the actual flow of the river. In<lb/>
1983, the river's flow was much<lb/>
slower than in 1982 Christian<lb/>
said.<lb/>
He noted that there are a couple<lb/>
of factors at work. One is that<lb/>
when the river is in a "low flow<lb/>
condition" the algae floats to the<lb/>
surface where it gets more light<lb/>
which enhances its growth.<lb/>
"The other factor and the one<lb/>
which we'll be studying this sum-<lb/>
mer he says, "is the fact that<lb/>
when you have low flow, the<lb/>
water stays in the river longer giv-<lb/>
ing the algae more time to<lb/>
develop<lb/>
In their study, the scientists<lb/>
plan to examine the growth rates<lb/>
of the algae under a varietyof light<lb/>
and temperature conditions and<lb/>
compare it with dilution rates and<lb/>
times of travel for a variety of<lb/>
river flow conditions.<lb/>
'If our hypothesis is<lb/>
confirmed says Christian, "we<lb/>
should be able to predict the pro-<lb/>
bability of the algal blooms dur-<lb/>
ing the year and will be able to<lb/>
make recommendations concern-<lb/>
ing future modifications of river<lb/>
flow<lb/>
Not only are students today less<lb/>
rebellious, but they are more<lb/>
serious, Mallory said. "I think the<lb/>
college student today is not as<lb/>
carefree and is not as happy-go-<lb/>
lucky as when I was in school. I<lb/>
think the reason for that is that<lb/>
you people have so much more<lb/>
pressure on you; the pressure of<lb/>
getting jobs, possible nuclear war,<lb/>
the high cost of living, the high<lb/>
cost of educationyou've got all<lb/>
kinds of pressure.<lb/>
"I think today you're seeing<lb/>
more kids who have varying<lb/>
degrees of depression and have<lb/>
emotional and mental and ner-<lb/>
vous problems he said. "But of<lb/>
course if you have these problems<lb/>
and you drink alcohol, it affects<lb/>
different people different people<lb/>
different ways, but you see a lot<lb/>
of college kids just blow up, you<lb/>
might say.<lb/>
"We're convinced that 75 to 80<lb/>
percent of the discipline problems<lb/>
in college are either directly or in-<lb/>
directly related to alcohol andor<lb/>
drugs Mallory said, adding that<lb/>
he feels "the drug scene is<lb/>
relatively quiet on our campus<lb/>
Increasing the drinking age to<lb/>
21 would not decrease alcohol-<lb/>
related problems, Mallory said.<lb/>
"It is absolutely impossible to<lb/>
monitor. During prohibition there<lb/>
was more drinking in the United<lb/>
States than there has ever been. I<lb/>
think you have to be realistic<lb/>
about this. We at East Carolina<lb/>
believe in responsible drinking<lb/>
Most of the workjvlallory has<lb/>
done has dealt directly with<lb/>
students. This has been a pleasure<lb/>
for him, he said. "We have good<lb/>
students. They're a pleasure to<lb/>
work with. You can sit and talk<lb/>
with them and reason with them.<lb/>
We don't have too many that are<lb/>
belligerent<lb/>
In fact, Mallory said, in pro-<lb/>
portion to the number of<lb/>
students, there is very little trou-<lb/>
ble on the ECU campus. "This is<lb/>
due in large respect to the<lb/>
students; we treat our students<lb/>
like adults, and we expect them to<lb/>
act like adults<lb/>
"The student judiciary has<lb/>
done a good job, and the SGA has<lb/>
always been responsible he said.<lb/>
"For the last three years, the stu-<lb/>
dent newspaper has been better<lb/>
than at any time I can remember<lb/>
in 30 years. It's been objective and<lb/>
aired both sides of disputes.<lb/>
That's good journalism, as far as<lb/>
I'm concerned<lb/>
This has not always been the<lb/>
case, however, he said. "In my 30<lb/>
years, I have written one letter to<lb/>
the editor. Years ago, I wrote a<lb/>
letter and, before that letter was<lb/>
published, the editor wrote a<lb/>
rebuttal. If that's good jour-<lb/>
nalism, I'm a monkey's uncle<lb/>
Mallory said that he's been<lb/>
"lucky" in that most of the pro-<lb/>
blems he's encountered at ECU<lb/>
have been minor ones. He said his<lb/>
biggest problem has been the lack<lb/>
of parking. "At one time it was so<lb/>
bad that the SGA passed a rule<lb/>
that no freshman could own or<lb/>
operate a motor vehicle in the<lb/>
Greenville area or on the ECU<lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
With The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
campus. If you were caught, you<lb/>
were suspended from school for<lb/>
one quarter. That's a tough rule.<lb/>
That rule caused me more<lb/>
headaches than anything else<lb/>
What Mallory remembers most<lb/>
are the humorous incidents. He<lb/>
remembers panty raids as being<lb/>
especially funny. "They were<lb/>
always comic. Really and truly, I<lb/>
could never get too serious about<lb/>
them. As long as the kids didn't<lb/>
break any windows or vandalize,<lb/>
we let them go until they got tired<lb/>
of it<lb/>
Another humorous incident<lb/>
concerned a suspended student.<lb/>
The student was suspended for<lb/>
book stealing and Mallory wrote a<lb/>
letter to the student's father, ex-<lb/>
plaining the suspension and its<lb/>
cause. The father then wrote a let-<lb/>
ter to the governor, saying he had<lb/>
received a letter from Mallory and<lb/>
the people at ECU were "a bunch<lb/>
of crooks He ended the letter by<lb/>
saying "to hell with the regrets, I<lb/>
want my money back<lb/>
Mallory has served as an ad-<lb/>
visor to the fraternities for many<lb/>
years. He said that he has seen big<lb/>
improvements in greek life at<lb/>
ECU, such as the decline in hazing<lb/>
and the development of a more<lb/>
"cosmopolitan and<lb/>
heterogeneous" atmosphere.<lb/>
Minority relations have chang-<lb/>
ed greatly during Mallory's tenure<lb/>
at ECU. "I wish people could<lb/>
have been with me in the '60s and<lb/>
seen the relations then and then<lb/>
compared them with today. East<lb/>
Carolina has made many, many<lb/>
changes and improvements which<lb/>
have led to better minority rela-<lb/>
tions<lb/>
He added that he feels ECU is<lb/>
one of the schools in North<lb/>
Carolina which has put forth a<lb/>
great deal of effort to recruit<lb/>
minority students. "I think the<lb/>
minorities on our campus realize<lb/>
that we want to treat them the<lb/>
same as anybody else and give<lb/>
them all the same rights and<lb/>
privileges he said.<lb/>
Mallory has worked with "so<lb/>
many good people" while at ECU<lb/>
that "it would be hard to name<lb/>
them Among those he mention-<lb/>
ed were Carolyn Fulghum,<lb/>
associate dean of residence life,<lb/>
C.C. Rowe, director of handicap-<lb/>
ped student services and Dan<lb/>
Wooten, director of housing.<lb/>
"I consider myself a very for-<lb/>
tunate man he said. "I'm a very<lb/>
lucky person because I've never<lb/>
done anything but work with<lb/>
young people either as a coach, a<lb/>
teacher, or an administrator<lb/>
Send your message<lb/>
in the Classifieds<lb/>
He said he is retiring because "I<lb/>
wanted to retire while I was in<lb/>
fairly good health o I could enjoy<lb/>
some things. I just feel like I've<lb/>
been here long enough. I'll soon<lb/>
be 66 and I guess it's time to roll<lb/>
up the carpet and go home<lb/>
Mallory plans to remain in<lb/>
Greenville but to travel extensive-<lb/>
ly. He will remain at ECU until<lb/>
July 12 working with freshman<lb/>
orientation, and will also help to<lb/>
train his replacement, who is ex-<lb/>
pected to take over his duties<lb/>
August 15.<lb/>
Mallory's advice to his suc-<lb/>
cessor is to "realize that you're a<lb/>
jack-of-all-trades. Sit here and<lb/>
observe. Don't try to change the<lb/>
world, that's a mistake. Just move<lb/>
along slow and easy and if you see<lb/>
that a change need; to be made,<lb/>
go ahead and make it<lb/>
"I'll miss all the people I've<lb/>
worked with and sbove all, I'll<lb/>
miss the students Mallorv said.<lb/>
Wester<lb/>
Siz<lb/>
2<lb/>
2031<lb/>
'STOW<lb/>
1<lb/>
mum.<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 S2.99<lb/>
Served with King Idaho<lb/>
Baked Potato &amp; Texas<lb/>
Toast.<lb/>
Now Featuring Hx It Yourseli Potato Bar<lb/>
Free with meal.<lb/>
Marty, Mike &amp; James<lb/>
Fashion Cuts For Both Men &amp; Women (91 9) 752 - 1 855<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
OREDKENT<lb/>
SHIRLEY' CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
30' Evans Sr<lb/>
2nd F loo' Minges Bldg<lb/>
Greenv.iie NC 27834<lb/>
Kim Shirley<lb/>
(9 1 9) 752 - 7637 Fash,on Cuts &amp; Perms For Both Men &amp; Wor<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
MfSf<lb/>
<lb/>
YJfJ<lb/>
UNISEX LTD. and<lb/>
Offering "A Totally New Concept" with: <lb/>
I Indoor Suntans<lb/>
. Hairstyling<lb/>
- Waxing<lb/>
I<lb/>
WilIlM<lb/>
Trained Technicians H H H III<lb/>
And First Quality I II 11 I HI I<lb/>
mm<lb/>
We Specialize In<lb/>
Air Conditioning<lb/>
Tune-Ups<lb/>
Brake Service<lb/>
Exhaust Systems<lb/>
2616 E.TENTH ST758-7676<lb/>
Lash &amp; Brow Tinting<lb/>
Sculptured Nails<lb/>
Lingerie<lb/>
I<lb/>
f Tan<lb/>
I Magic<lb/>
i<lb/>
I Hours: Lingerie Shoppe<lb/>
Mon-Fn9-6p.m.<lb/>
A Sat 9- 2p.m.<lb/>
?tm (Or by special appointment;<lb/>
;t 'J<lb/>
i?tt f<lb/>
N?IIS<lb/>
<lb/>
Hair Styling:<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
2510 S. Charles Blvd.<lb/>
756 - 3705<lb/>
WE PAY<lb/>
CASH<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Clan Rings Diamond Ring<lb/>
?mM GoW Silver Jeweriy t ,1<lb/>
 SilverCoins <lb/>
Tvt, WE BUYSILL<lb/>
wcyctei, watches, Mnocnlars, waikmaas portable<lb/>
AM-FM, cassette, heaters, good faraiture, china A<lb/>
crystal, typewriters, etc.<lb/>
c0lH &amp; RING M?<lb/>
Vv omfSAirsco ,JVIjy<lb/>
.<lb/>
EVAN?<lb/>
Downtown Greenvflk<lb/>
752-3066<lb/>
i<lb/>
"<lb/>
 - ??'<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0004"/><lb/>
?te ?aat GlwcalMtm<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C Hunter Fisher, crwmwr<lb/>
Darryl Brown, ???,?,&amp;,?.<lb/>
JENNIFER JENDRASIAK. .?, J.T. PlETRZAK Ummt,AM<lb/>
Randy Mews, mior Anthony Martin, w?, ?.??,<lb/>
Tina Maroschak, ?w ,? ToM NorTon. o- <lb/>
Greg Rideout. ?? a, kathy Fuerst, ? Wowifr<lb/>
Bill Austin. a?w, ManattT LlNDA vizena. , r<lb/>
June 21, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
30<lb/>
If you insist upon reading the<lb/>
traditional self-indulgence of the<lb/>
"30" column, let's just put it this<lb/>
way:<lb/>
I still believe most of the things I<lb/>
wrote: affirmative action is a<lb/>
necessary evil, the SGA Legislature<lb/>
should be able to hold a referen-<lb/>
dum, more money should go to<lb/>
federal financial aid, ECU<lb/>
students should be able to vote in<lb/>
Greenville, PIRG would have done<lb/>
ECU some good.<lb/>
It has been an interesting job,<lb/>
good both for my cynicism and<lb/>
idealism. The job really fosters the<lb/>
cynicism more, for it is easy to<lb/>
realize sometimes how futile<lb/>
editorial writing, especially for a<lb/>
school paper, can be. But you sus-<lb/>
tain yourself by trying to maintain<lb/>
a glimmer of idealism, thinking<lb/>
maybe you can make a difference<lb/>
and someone really does read this<lb/>
stuff, and also by conjuring up<lb/>
such vague notions as the power of<lb/>
the press. That, coupled with the<lb/>
time or two this year when this<lb/>
page really did spark a small action<lb/>
or change, and the cynicism is kept<lb/>
at bay for the moment from total<lb/>
victory. And so it goes. (Thanks,<lb/>
Kurt Vonnegut; those four words<lb/>
have always been a favorite phrase<lb/>
of mine. In this age they often<lb/>
seem the most relevant reaction for<lb/>
that majority who can neither sus-<lb/>
tain their idealism or sink to pure<lb/>
cynicism.)<lb/>
To all those people who took it<lb/>
on the chin this year in this column<lb/>
? the Alumni Association, Pitt<lb/>
County Board of Elections, Kirk<lb/>
Shelley, Jesse Helms (if you aren't<lb/>
the same person), and others ?<lb/>
well, you can't please all the people<lb/>
all the time. Let's just say I never<lb/>
dozed off when writing about you.<lb/>
Nothing personal.<lb/>
I suppose I ought to reflect on a<lb/>
few of the realizations that hit<lb/>
home pretty hard this year: lessons<lb/>
learned in passing, I guess. Actual-<lb/>
ly, these are things people learn in<lb/>
everyday life; it is just that in this<lb/>
job you have to observe the course<lb/>
of human events with a little more<lb/>
regularity, so the lessons come<lb/>
maybe a little quicker or stronger.<lb/>
I have seen racial tensions flare on<lb/>
this campus like I never realized<lb/>
they still could, though that was<lb/>
probably a naive misjudgement on<lb/>
my part. I also realize now there<lb/>
are people who really do not<lb/>
believe in the toleration of diverse<lb/>
opinions and beliefs or in the<lb/>
balance afforded by a two-party<lb/>
political system. By the way, that<lb/>
lesson was learned from a phrase<lb/>
by the ECU College Republicans<lb/>
which will rest forever in my<lb/>
memory: "It's not our job to seek<lb/>
peaceful coexistence with the Left.<lb/>
(That's Democrats, folks, not just<lb/>
commies.) Our job is to remove<lb/>
them from power permanently<lb/>
Those are the two more sobering<lb/>
and depressing realizations. There<lb/>
are many better ones, such as the<lb/>
propensity for people to come<lb/>
together in times of tragedy such as<lb/>
the Village Green explosion or last<lb/>
spring's tornadoes. Then there are<lb/>
just the quirks; I got a barrage of<lb/>
angry responses from a two-line,<lb/>
flippant comment on an art show<lb/>
reception, while weeks went by<lb/>
without a word responding to long<lb/>
editorials on things from civil<lb/>
rights to voting rights. You live<lb/>
and you learn.<lb/>
I offer no words of wisdom to<lb/>
live by; I have none that you can-<lb/>
not think of yourself or you<lb/>
haven't heard before in a com-<lb/>
mencement speech. Besides, you<lb/>
won't follow them anyway; neither<lb/>
would I. People learn by doing or<lb/>
being done unto, not from being<lb/>
told. So, like me, most of you will<lb/>
ignore good advice and screw up<lb/>
from time to time; we will miss the<lb/>
point and miss the bus, mix<lb/>
priorities and mix drinks, lose faith<lb/>
and lose the car keys. And so it<lb/>
goes.<lb/>
Now the really personal part: I<lb/>
cannot close my tenure here<lb/>
without expressing my gratitude to<lb/>
many of those with whom I have<lb/>
associated. Most of the university<lb/>
administrators have been very<lb/>
helpful ? they are a by and large<lb/>
sincere group who put up with<lb/>
more than I ever could. I must<lb/>
mention two names, Vice<lb/>
Chancellors Elmer Meyer and<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, two men whom I<lb/>
greatly admire and to whom I owe<lb/>
much. Gentlemen, thank you. You<lb/>
have put up with me more than<lb/>
you should have, and it is only by<lb/>
your good humor, patience and<lb/>
understanding that I have not been<lb/>
expelled.<lb/>
Thanks go out to many people:<lb/>
first and foremost, to Greg<lb/>
Rideout, for letting me hold this<lb/>
job a year and teaching me most of<lb/>
what I know. Also to Jennifer Jen-<lb/>
drasiak, for bringing competence<lb/>
to chaos. To Ed Nicklas, for grace<lb/>
under pressure, to Hunter Fisher<lb/>
for ingenuous balance and an even<lb/>
keel, and to Tina, Liz Ann, Cindy,<lb/>
Todd, Fielding, Randy, Gordon,<lb/>
Mike and everyone else for hard<lb/>
work through uninspiring condi-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Readers, have patience with this<lb/>
crew next year. They have the same<lb/>
tests and term papers that you do,<lb/>
plus they have to make a<lb/>
newspaper twice a week until 3<lb/>
a.m. Greg, the keys are in my of-<lb/>
fice; thanks for letting me borrow<lb/>
them. Gang, keep up the hard<lb/>
work. Godspeed.<lb/>
D.B.<lb/>
W WMOUWANTTO Mfiiai JEMONMIE INAUGURATION<lb/>
 A NEW 6ARV HART CAMPAIGN SPOT ?<lb/>
Happy Days Here Again?<lb/>
A summit meeting was held last<lb/>
weekend at the Holiday Inn on the out-<lb/>
skirts of Washington between the<lb/>
leaders of the Mondale, Hart and<lb/>
Jackson forces to discuss Democratic<lb/>
Party unity. The conference was called<lb/>
at the behest of Mondale's campaign<lb/>
managers.<lb/>
"Hie Hart and Jackson people were<lb/>
stone faced.<lb/>
Mondale's man was the only one smil-<lb/>
ing. "Now that the battle is over and our<lb/>
man has won, we feel it is time to heal<lb/>
the wounds of the primary race and<lb/>
work for a victory in November<lb/>
Hart's man objected, "We thought<lb/>
you'd say that Mondale's man<lb/>
retorted; he pushed a buzzer and a fat<lb/>
lady entered the room and started to sing<lb/>
"Happy Days Are Here Again<lb/>
The Hart man stood up and said,<lb/>
"That's one more dirty trick. How do<lb/>
you expect us to agree to unity when you<lb/>
pull a stunt like that?"<lb/>
"We were only kidding around, to<lb/>
ease the tension the Mondale man<lb/>
said. "Let's be serious. Mondale has the<lb/>
delegates and he's going to be the can-<lb/>
didate. But we need to work together if<lb/>
we're going to beat Reagan in<lb/>
November<lb/>
The Jackson man said, "Mondale<lb/>
stole our delegates. We're not going to<lb/>
agree to unity until we get them back<lb/>
Mondale's man saidWe played by<lb/>
the rules. You don't change them after<lb/>
the game is over<lb/>
Hart's man said, "Gary doesn't con-<lb/>
sider the game over. He wants to go into<lb/>
overtime<lb/>
"How can he go into overtime when<lb/>
the score is 2,000 to 1,200?"<lb/>
"It doesn't matter what the score is.<lb/>
Hart won California. That proves the<lb/>
voters have rejected Mondale<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
Jackson's man said, "Jesse got<lb/>
cheated out of delegates in California<lb/>
and New Jersey<lb/>
Hart's representative said, "Gary<lb/>
doesn't want to be a spoiler. He is win-<lb/>
ing to meet Mondale halfway<lb/>
"What does that mean?"<lb/>
"He will get up at the convention and<lb/>
say numerically Mondale has the<lb/>
delegates, but politically it would be a<lb/>
disaster to nominate him<lb/>
"What kind of a unity message is<lb/>
that?" Mondale's man shouted.<lb/>
"It's the best Hart can do after the<lb/>
things Mondale said about him<lb/>
Jackson's man said, "I can't<lb/>
guarantee Jesse will even come to the<lb/>
convention if the Democrats don't<lb/>
change the rules<lb/>
Mondale's man took a sheet of paper<lb/>
out of his briefcase. "The candidate has<lb/>
given me permission to offe Garv the<lb/>
vice presidency on his ticket Big<lb/>
deal Hart's man said. "Hoh can Garv<lb/>
be vice president when he can t stand be-<lb/>
ing in the same room with M:ndaie?<lb/>
"A vice president never has to be in<lb/>
the same room with the president<lb/>
Mondale's man said. "That's what<lb/>
makes the American presidency work.<lb/>
Mondale can always communicate with<lb/>
Hart through Lane Kirkland<lb/>
Jackson's man said, "Jess; wants to<lb/>
be secretary of state<lb/>
Mondale's man said, "We can't offer<lb/>
Jesse a Cabinet position if we don't win<lb/>
the election. But in the spirit of unity<lb/>
Fritz would like Jesse to nominate him<lb/>
ut the convention<lb/>
"Jesse thought you'd come up with a<lb/>
stupid idea like that. He said if you did<lb/>
he would use the time to tell tie country<lb/>
how we got cheated out of his<lb/>
delegates<lb/>
"That's time with us Mondale's<lb/>
man said. "Then it's agreed We will an-<lb/>
nounce to the press that the party has<lb/>
been unified<lb/>
The fat lady started sincing. "San<lb/>
Francisco, open those golden gates<lb/>
and Hart's man said, "Oh slut up<lb/>
Burial Ceremony Provokes Pride<lb/>
WHENIIOQKWWNAT<lb/>
TOCOUNTRIBANP<lb/>
SEEAUTHEWVERTV<lb/>
HOWttffn HAVE<lb/>
IT IM AMERICA<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
The burial of the unknown soldier a<lb/>
few weeks ago coupled with the recent<lb/>
celebration of the 40th anniversary of<lb/>
D-Day made me pause and reflect on<lb/>
war. Those who stormed the beaches at<lb/>
Normandy were full of pride and pur-<lb/>
pose, and, although scared, they fully<lb/>
believed that dying for their country was<lb/>
admirable and honorable. We cannot be<lb/>
so sure about the nameless man who lies<lb/>
in the tomb at Arlington. More likely<lb/>
than not all he wanted to do was survive<lb/>
until his hitch was up. But, he was there<lb/>
? so deep down there was a commit-<lb/>
ment to American ideals.<lb/>
These ideals were forever clashing into<lb/>
reality in Viet Nam, but in the cities of<lb/>
Europe and on the beaches of the<lb/>
pacific, the strength of American sup-<lb/>
port kept the pride of each soldier alive.<lb/>
The wars were as different as night and<lb/>
day. The only thing they had in common<lb/>
is young men dying. Each man who fell<lb/>
in both wars deserves recognition.<lb/>
Now, ten years later, the Viet Nam<lb/>
veterans get some. As the young man<lb/>
was buried with full military honors, I<lb/>
felt nothing but pride for our country. I<lb/>
thought how both wars shouls make us<lb/>
cherish our American ideals, ones easily<lb/>
taken for granted. It strikes me as noble<lb/>
that men have fought and died so I can<lb/>
read what I want, say what I want, do<lb/>
what I want and be where I want. I am in<lb/>
one of the few countries where I am<lb/>
guaranteed a chance. I am living on<lb/>
there time; those who have perished<lb/>
have me indebted to them.<lb/>
The same is true of the men killed in<lb/>
Granada and Lebanon. They believed<lb/>
their mission was good. And all politics<lb/>
aside, they deserve our gratitude.<lb/>
Lessons are not easily learned today. But<lb/>
of all the teachers I know, History is the<lb/>
best. She will always be wise and possess<lb/>
every answer. It seems fitting that the<lb/>
majesty, pomp and circumstance of a<lb/>
snappy military funeral has awakened<lb/>
me to the beauty of democracy and<lb/>
those who have died in its name.<lb/>
Some may say I have conveniently-<lb/>
clouded disturbing facts of both wars<lb/>
with my patriotic haze. I will concede<lb/>
that point. But my purpose was to<lb/>
reflect on what we have and who has<lb/>
helped us keep it; I am not analyzing the<lb/>
intricacies of wartime politics.<lb/>
Those problems are not part of my<lb/>
subject. We have dwelled to long on Viet<lb/>
Nam's tragedies; we have been over-<lb/>
shadowed to much by the bombings at<lb/>
Nagasaki and Hiroshima. Men fight<lb/>
wars, and they are the ones who deserve<lb/>
praise for going across the seas to die.<lb/>
The politicians are far from my mind.<lb/>
They did their part ? some good, some<lb/>
Campus Forum'<lb/>
bad; but that is another level, another<lb/>
subject for thought.<lb/>
So, today, my thoughts hae not been<lb/>
on why and how. They are emotions<lb/>
triggered by a touching tribu:e to those<lb/>
who have gave the greatest gift for those<lb/>
of us here at ECU and across the coun-<lb/>
try. When President Reagan said of the<lb/>
man buried in the Tomb of the<lb/>
Unknown Soldier, "Let us, If we must,<lb/>
debate the lessons learned at some other<lb/>
time; today we simply sav with pride:<lb/>
Thank you, dear son, and mav God<lb/>
cradle you in his loving arms we musi<lb/>
do just that. Think of those words as we<lb/>
approach July 4 ? and remember<lb/>
Football Players Chastised<lb/>
(The following is an open letter to<lb/>
head football coach Ed Emory.)<lb/>
Recently, some friends and I went<lb/>
to Jones Cafeteria for our supper. As<lb/>
usual, the food was good. But food is<lb/>
not the issue of this open letter.<lb/>
This letter concerns the behavior of<lb/>
some of Jones Cafeteria's customers<lb/>
specifically some of ECU's football<lb/>
players. The conduct of "ECU's<lb/>
Finest" made it impossible for my<lb/>
friends and me to enjoy our meal.<lb/>
To put it bluntly, they acted like a<lb/>
group of uncouth pigs, and we were<lb/>
all thoroughly disgusted. If this is the<lb/>
type of behavior that I will be sub-<lb/>
jected to every time I eat at Jones, I<lb/>
will take my business elsewhere. Is<lb/>
this the way ECU would like to be<lb/>
represented?<lb/>
After the ECU Pirates' excellent<lb/>
performance last year, our school is<lb/>
on its way to a winning tradition.<lb/>
Respect breeds respect. If you wish to<lb/>
gain the respect of the student body<lb/>
and the surrounding communities,<lb/>
you should instill some manners into<lb/>
your ball players. These men should<lb/>
be setting good examples for the in-<lb/>
coming freshmen, but instead (thev)<lb/>
are showing a lack of discipline and<lb/>
leadership qualities. Just as respect<lb/>
breeds respect, disrespect breeds<lb/>
disrespect.<lb/>
I realize that the whole football<lb/>
team does not act like high school<lb/>
kids. But as the old saying goes.<lb/>
"You are judged by the company you<lb/>
keep<lb/>
Coach Emory, I truly hope that<lb/>
you, your coaching staff ind the<lb/>
football team take this mesage to<lb/>
heart. If ECU is to enhance its image,<lb/>
then those students in the public eye<lb/>
must learn how to behave in the<lb/>
public.<lb/>
Bud Walker<lb/>
Sophomore, Corrections<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail them to or drop them by the<lb/>
newspaper's offices on the second<lb/>
floor of the publications building,<lb/>
across from Joyner Library.<lb/>
Hit<lb/>
Murrax<lb/>
B TINAMAROSt rUk<lb/>
Are ou haunted b ghoul<lb/>
ghosts and goblins? Do spool<lb/>
and spectras stalk through voi<lb/>
houe ar njght0 If so, you nc<lb/>
('hostbusters.<lb/>
Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd an<lb/>
Harold Ram star as tta<lb/>
Ohosibusters. three somewha<lb/>
strange but extreme! inteJ .<lb/>
parapsycholoj.<lb/>
ing fired from <lb/>
team up t? nma<lb/>
and elim. ;he une<lb/>
visitors that are plague.ng e<lb/>
Wk City in increasing r.u<lb/>
k? vta? uj the new Colun<lb/>
b i a Pictures a r<lb/>
Sigourne) ?<lb/>
Moranis. Weaver p<lb/>
Barrett a beautiful viol.<lb/>
is possessed by the<lb/>
Sumarian<lb/>
dispossessed fn<lb/>
penthouse M rai<lb/>
member of the &amp;<lb/>
Med School,<lb/>
EC l<lb/>
B BURNADETTtHi<lb/>
t is just da igUw<lb/>
universities to take a<lb/>
It shov.s m<lb/>
- where I ?<lb/>
? c and gold<lb/>
stewing oer the rdu<lb/>
some Atlantic Coast Con:<lb/>
schools pla ECL<lb/>
powerho ball te<lb/>
"A lot<lb/>
detractors never thoun:<lb/>
happen ire happening - Ko<lb/>
mith, ECL's direct<lb/>
publicity "We wen d wi<lb/>
wouldn't be a unive: . . i<lb/>
are. Thev I e couldn't hav<lb/>
a medical school, and e do. W<lb/>
were roid we couidn'r pla any<lb/>
the major schools. Well.<lb/>
plaved them all and we'<lb/>
them all. Just tell this scr <lb/>
can't, and you can be -<lb/>
win<lb/>
ECL has a long histon. I j<lb/>
brashness, claiming to be <lb/>
in almost everything a<lb/>
mother despite <lb/>
-ome people a ECTC<lb/>
abbreviation stucl Ea-<lb/>
Carolina Tea .<lb/>
lege because the sound<lb/>
d to reinforce the u:<lb/>
reputation as ar, eas a<lb/>
-de.<lb/>
In the 1961 s a<lb/>
ECU was most ck<lb/>
mate's money anc<lb/>
claims to quai . <lb/>
i  than - .<lb/>
vas bravado tirmh : ed in th<lb/>
tremendous political p<lb/>
ECU Ski<lb/>
B J.T P1MKK<lb/>
In 12. Dick Pope Jr. steppe<lb/>
out of hi skiis md tu<lb/>
world on to barefootin Todal<lb/>
"footin" i- a bight) i npetitivf<lb/>
sport and ECU has three of<lb/>
Gordon McKeUar, Mike<lb/>
-  .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
?WI<lb/>
gain ?<lb/>
e Democrats don't<lb/>
 in took a sheet of paper<lb/>
'The candidate has<lb/>
n to offer Gary the<lb/>
on his ticket "Big<lb/>
man said. "How can Gary<lb/>
 when he can't stand be-<lb/>
ne room with Mondale?"<lb/>
J Jent never has to be in<lb/>
jr m with the president<lb/>
man said. "That's what<lb/>
American presidency work.<lb/>
s communicate with<lb/>
-l Lane Kirkland<lb/>
man said, "Jesse wants to<lb/>
:ate<lb/>
s man said, "We can't offer<lb/>
linet position if we don't win<lb/>
But in the spirit of unity<lb/>
like Jesse to nominate him<lb/>
n<lb/>
ught you'd come up with a<lb/>
hat. He said if you did<lb/>
.se the time to tell the country<lb/>
:ot cheated out of his<lb/>
time with us Mondale's<lb/>
" Then it's agreed. We will an-<lb/>
the press that the party has<lb/>
lady started singing, "San<lb/>
open those golden gates<lb/>
man said, "Oh shut up<lb/>
Pride<lb/>
another level, another<lb/>
r thought.<lb/>
w, my thoughts have not been<lb/>
md how. They are emotions<lb/>
 si touching tribute to those<lb/>
'gave the greatest gift for those<lb/>
at ECU and across the coun-<lb/>
President Reagan said of the<lb/>
led in the Tomb of the<lb/>
soldier, "Let us, if we must,<lb/>
le lessons learned at some other<lb/>
1 e simply say with pride:<lb/>
ou, dear son, and may God<lb/>
u in his loving arms we must<lb/>
lat. Think of those words as we<lb/>
July 4 ? and remember.<lb/>
Chastised<lb/>
ig good examples for the in-<lb/>
freshmen, but instead (they)<lb/>
wing a lack of discipline and<lb/>
lip qualities. Just as respect<lb/>
respect, disrespect breeds<lb/>
Ic ?<lb/>
lze that the whole football<lb/>
not act like high school<lb/>
ut as the old saying goes,<lb/>
e judged by the company you<lb/>
h Emory, I truly hope that<lb/>
Jour coaching staff and the<lb/>
ll team take this message to<lb/>
if ECU is to enhance its image,<lb/>
lose students in the public eye<lb/>
learn how to behave in the<lb/>
Bud Walker<lb/>
Sophomore, Corrections<lb/>
East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
xpressing all points of view,<lb/>
yiem to or drop them by the<lb/>
Vper's offices on the second<lb/>
9 the publications building,<lb/>
from Joyner Library.<lb/>
Features<lb/>
JUNE 21, 1984<lb/>
Page S<lb/>
Murray Shines Once Again<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Fealarcs Kditor<lb/>
Are you haunted by ghouls<lb/>
ghosts and goblins? Do spooks<lb/>
and spectras stalk through your<lb/>
house at night? If so, you need the<lb/>
Ghostbusters.<lb/>
Bill Murray, Dan Aykroyd and<lb/>
Harold Ramis star as the<lb/>
Ghostbusters, three somewhat<lb/>
strange but extremelv intelligent<lb/>
parapsychologists who, after be-<lb/>
ing fired from a college faculty,<lb/>
team up to eradicate, exterminate<lb/>
and eliminate the unwelcome<lb/>
visitors that are plagueing New<lb/>
York City in increasing numbers.<lb/>
Also starring in the new Colum-<lb/>
bia Pictures comedy are<lb/>
Sigourney Weaver and Rick<lb/>
Moranis. Weaver portrays Dana<lb/>
Barrett, a beautiful violinist who<lb/>
is possessed by the spirit of a<lb/>
Sumarian devil-worshiper and<lb/>
dispossessed from her Manhattan<lb/>
penthouse. Moranis, former<lb/>
member of the Second City<lb/>
Television Company, portrays<lb/>
Louis Tully, a phantom accoun-<lb/>
tant who prowls Central Park.<lb/>
This light comedy of laugh-<lb/>
studded visual effects seems a bit<lb/>
strange at times, but not strange<lb/>
enough to be totally ridiculous<lb/>
Co-writer Aykroyd believes that<lb/>
ghosts and American humor are<lb/>
linked forever in film history by<lb/>
groups like Laurel and Hardy,<lb/>
Abbott and Costello, Dean Mar-<lb/>
tin, Jerry Lewis, and Bob Hope.<lb/>
"All comedy performers have<lb/>
dealt with ghosts in some of their<lb/>
work says Aykroyd. "We're<lb/>
just doing the modern version of<lb/>
the old-time ghost movies. The<lb/>
only difference is that we have a<lb/>
little more theory, perhaps a little<lb/>
more science, and a lot more<lb/>
technology than our<lb/>
predecessors Aykroyd plays Dr.<lb/>
Ray Stantz, the optimist of the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
As with Aykroyd, Murray<lb/>
should be commended for his<lb/>
usual superb performance. At<lb/>
times when the movie seemed to<lb/>
drag, Murray stepped in and left<lb/>
the audience in stitches. With six<lb/>
movie credits to his name, Murray<lb/>
attributes his success as one of<lb/>
America's finest comedy talents<lb/>
to his collegues. "I met the best<lb/>
people in the business-Dan,<lb/>
Harold, Belushi, Gilda, and my<lb/>
brother Brian, who was my<lb/>
greatest influence says Murray.<lb/>
"Just hanging around these peo-<lb/>
ple was like a crash course in com-<lb/>
edy<lb/>
And comedy it was. After set-<lb/>
ting up shop in an old firehouse<lb/>
the ghostbusters chased<lb/>
everything from a poltergeist in<lb/>
the public library to a demon in<lb/>
the hotel ballroom. How bad is<lb/>
the situation in New York? As<lb/>
Murray (Dr. Peter Venkman) tells<lb/>
the Mayor of the city, "We're<lb/>
talkingboiling seas, fire and<lb/>
brimstone, forty years of<lb/>
darkness, earthquakes, mass<lb/>
hysteria, human sacrifice<lb/>
Co-writer Harold Ramis, who<lb/>
stars as Dr. Egon Spengler in<lb/>
Ghostbusters, is probably better<lb/>
known as a writer and director<lb/>
(having co-written Animal House,<lb/>
Meatballs and Caddyshack and<lb/>
having directed Caddyshack and<lb/>
National Lampoons Vacation).<lb/>
Ramis' first film role was opposite<lb/>
of Bill Murray in Stripes.<lb/>
Two that did an excellent job<lb/>
producing spectacular visual and<lb/>
special effects are Richard<lb/>
Edlund, A.S.C. and Chuck<lb/>
Gaspar.<lb/>
All in all the movie is everything<lb/>
a comedy should be. The unique<lb/>
talents of Murray, Aykroyd,<lb/>
Ramis, and Reitman combine to<lb/>
produce a contemporary new-<lb/>
generation comedy.<lb/>
Ghostbusters is now playing at<lb/>
the Bucaneer Movie Theatre.<lb/>
Med School, Football, Ironclad Monitor Bring Prestige<lb/>
ECU Moving From Brashness Tt<lb/>
Dan Aykroyd and BUI Murray star in Columbia Picture<lb/>
Ghostbusters.<lb/>
By BERNADETTE HEARNE<lb/>
No doubt abrv it p t<lb/>
lina University has a tremen-<lb/>
? chip on its shoulder, and the<lb/>
school is just daring the rest of the<lb/>
state's universities to take a swipe.<lb/>
It shows most clearly in<lb/>
athletics, where folks in "plush<lb/>
purple and gold offices are still<lb/>
stewing over the reluctance of<lb/>
some Atlantic Coast Conference<lb/>
schools to play ECU's<lb/>
powerhouse football team.<lb/>
"A lot of things East Carolina's<lb/>
detractors never thought would<lb/>
happen are happening says Ken<lb/>
mith, ECU's director of sports<lb/>
publicity. "We were told we<lb/>
couldn't be a university, and we<lb/>
are. They told us we couldn't have<lb/>
a medical school, and we do. We<lb/>
. were told we couldn't play any of<lb/>
the major schools. Well, we've<lb/>
played them all and we've beaten<lb/>
them all. Just tell this school it<lb/>
can't, and you can be sure it<lb/>
will<lb/>
ECU has a long history of such<lb/>
brashness, claiming to be the best<lb/>
in almost everything at one time<lb/>
or another despite sniggling from<lb/>
some people about ECTC. The<lb/>
abbreviation stuck long after East<lb/>
Carolina Teachers College<lb/>
ccame simply East Carolina Col-<lb/>
lege because the sound of it seem-<lb/>
ed to reinforce the university's<lb/>
putation as an easy academic<lb/>
r-de.<lb/>
In the 1960s and 70s, when<lb/>
t CU was most demanding of the<lb/>
state's money and recognition, its<lb/>
claims to quality often were more<lb/>
bravado than substance. But it<lb/>
was bravado firmly rooted in the<lb/>
'remendous political power of the<lb/>
sprawling East, a power ECU<lb/>
could harness virtually at will.<lb/>
Deserving or not, ECU usually<lb/>
got its way.<lb/>
It also was the fastest growing<lb/>
public university in the state at the<lb/>
time, giving it extra clout. ECU<lb/>
now is the state's third largest<lb/>
university, public or private. With<lb/>
an enrollment of 13,357 in<lb/>
1983-84, it ranks close behind<lb/>
arch-rivals UNC-Chapel Hill and<lb/>
N.C. State, although it lacks their<lb/>
extensive graduate programs.<lb/>
In the 80's, ECU is a university<lb/>
in transition from swagger to<lb/>
substance. The former lightweight<lb/>
of North Carolina higher educa-<lb/>
tion is developing its academic<lb/>
muscle, and its power is beginning<lb/>
to be felt across the state in more<lb/>
than athletics.<lb/>
The changes are subtle, ranging<lb/>
from a chancellor who cajoles the<lb/>
University of North Carolina<lb/>
General Administration rather<lb/>
than threatening it, as the volatile<lb/>
Leo Jenkins did; to a heightened<lb/>
emphasis on quality academics,<lb/>
students and teaching and on rais-<lb/>
ing the money to get them; to a<lb/>
new preoccupation with image<lb/>
and deciding how to sell what<lb/>
ECU does best to students who in-<lb/>
creasingly come not only from the<lb/>
East,<lb/>
but from across the state and the<lb/>
nation.<lb/>
"The laughter now is an in-<lb/>
secure laughter ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell says.<lb/>
"We don't feel at an intellectual<lb/>
disadvantage<lb/>
Howell has no trouble pointing<lb/>
out where the university shines,<lb/>
and officials of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina system, of which<lb/>
ECU is a part, endorse his<lb/>
choices. Those include ECU's<lb/>
favorably low ratio of students to<lb/>
faculty (17:1), high percentage of<lb/>
doctoral degrees among instruc-<lb/>
tors (80 percent) and quality of<lb/>
programs, particularly nursing<lb/>
arts, business and family<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
And it's only just begun.<lb/>
"If you think we've grown and<lb/>
done tremendous things in the<lb/>
past, just sit back and watch our<lb/>
dust now Howell says.<lb/>
Howell has been at ECU most of<lb/>
his life, but he became chancellor<lb/>
less than three years ago. He<lb/>
might never have gotten the<lb/>
chance at all had his predecessor,<lb/>
Thomas Brewer, not made the<lb/>
fatal mistake of scouting for<lb/>
greener pastures outside the<lb/>
flatlands of Greenville.<lb/>
Such a breach of loyalty is not<lb/>
the region that transcends mere<lb/>
boosterism.<lb/>
Jenkins made the university a<lb/>
focal point for the East's diffused<lb/>
power. He made farmers who<lb/>
never graduated from high<lb/>
school, who felt they had no right<lb/>
to be on a college campus, feel at<lb/>
home there. He gave them pride<lb/>
and he gave them anger. He told<lb/>
them the Piedmont was keeping<lb/>
them down and he used their<lb/>
anger, channeled through their<lb/>
legislators, to fulfill his vision.<lb/>
They loved him; he was their<lb/>
children's crusader.<lb/>
Brewer, a scholarly, low-profile<lb/>
Texan, lacked Jenkins' dynamic<lb/>
flair for populist politics. Brewer<lb/>
was, as one faculty member<lb/>
described him 179 degrees dif-<lb/>
ferent<lb/>
But he immediately set a new<lb/>
tone for the university, funneling<lb/>
its former energy for conquest<lb/>
'Just tell this school it can't,<lb/>
and you can be sure it will<lb/>
? Ken Smith, Director of Sports Publicity<lb/>
looked on kindly by the close-knit<lb/>
East, which challenged Brewer to<lb/>
take one of those fancy jobs and<lb/>
leave ECU to folks who ap-<lb/>
preciated it. He obliged; Howell<lb/>
became Chancellor.<lb/>
Brewer may have been a mark-<lb/>
ed man from the start. He suc-<lb/>
ceeded the immensely popular<lb/>
Leo Jenkins, who for 18 years<lb/>
bullied or outmaneuvered anyone<lb/>
who tried to interfere with his vi-<lb/>
sion of ECU and who fostered a<lb/>
bond between the institution and<lb/>
and conflict into a striving for<lb/>
academic excellence. And then he<lb/>
was gone and John Howell a<lb/>
member of the faculty since 1957<lb/>
and experienced in virtually every<lb/>
administrative post the school had<lb/>
to offer, was chancellor. No<lb/>
doubts about his loyalty.<lb/>
When Brewer arrived and<lb/>
began talking about quality, many<lb/>
saw it as a slap at Jenkins. If<lb/>
nothing else, Brewer's breief<lb/>
tenure mav have saved Howell,<lb/>
ECU Skiiers Barefootin' To The Top<lb/>
ByJ.T. PIETRZAK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
In 1962, Dick Pope Jr. stepped<lb/>
out of his skiis and turned the<lb/>
world on to barefootin Today<lb/>
"footin" is a highly competitive<lb/>
sport and ECU has three of the<lb/>
state's hottest. Kevin Singletary,<lb/>
Gordon McKellar and Mike<lb/>
Hodges can be found on the Tar<lb/>
River most everyday. They ski<lb/>
about 15 hours a week  it's not<lb/>
rare to see one of them strolling to<lb/>
class a few minutes late with damp<lb/>
hair.<lb/>
Recently they started their own<lb/>
KGM Water Ski School. They're<lb/>
not in business for big bucks yet,<lb/>
just trying to ski for free. With the<lb/>
equipment they have, they claim<lb/>
to have anyone skiing in one after-<lb/>
Gordon McKellar, Mike Hodges ami Kevin Singletary own KGM Water Std School.<lb/>
noon. If you're already an in-<lb/>
termediate skier, they'll have you<lb/>
footin' in one afternoon also.<lb/>
"You just can't be scared<lb/>
McKellar says. "You have to go<lb/>
42 m.p.h. to foot. You'll pro-<lb/>
bably bust ass a few times before<lb/>
you get the hang of it. That's what<lb/>
makes you want to say 'toes up<lb/>
Each of the trio is an industrial<lb/>
technology major and lives at<lb/>
Eastbrook Apartments.<lb/>
Singletary, from Wrightsville<lb/>
Beach, is a five time North<lb/>
Carolina three-event champion.<lb/>
The three-event competition con-<lb/>
sists of slalom, trick and jumping.<lb/>
He holds the state record for jum-<lb/>
ping (144 feet) and has been<lb/>
footin' for three years.<lb/>
McKellar and Hodges are from<lb/>
Southern Pines, N.C. Both ski<lb/>
competitively. McKellar has been<lb/>
footin' four years, Hodges for<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Last year these guys were in The<lb/>
Great American Water Ski Show<lb/>
in Myrtle Beach. This summer<lb/>
they'll be collecting points in<lb/>
Georgia and Florida in hopes of<lb/>
an invitation to the Southern<lb/>
Regionals. Kevin's goal is to reach<lb/>
the Nationals in Sefner Florida.<lb/>
Check these guys out (you can<lb/>
see them doing their thing from<lb/>
the park on First Street) and see if<lb/>
you might want to learn a few<lb/>
tricks from them. If you like what<lb/>
you see, give KGM Ski School a<lb/>
nng at 752-2185.<lb/>
who has carried on the theme in<lb/>
his administration.<lb/>
"When Brewer came, he em-<lb/>
phasized quality over quantity,<lb/>
put more emphasis on publica-<lb/>
tion, research, and set aside facul-<lb/>
ty enrichment grants to let us do<lb/>
that faculty chairman James<lb/>
LeRoy Smith says. "A lot of use,<lb/>
when we came here, wished for<lb/>
more emphasis on academics. But<lb/>
enrollment was exploding, new<lb/>
programs were being added<lb/>
almost daily. There's a limit on<lb/>
what you can do all at once<lb/>
Raymond Dawson, vice presi-<lb/>
dent for academic affairs for the<lb/>
UNC system, agrees that growth<lb/>
sapped ECU's potential for quali-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
"I think ECU definately has<lb/>
come into its own in the past few-<lb/>
years Dawson says. "ECU is a<lb/>
much stronger school,<lb/>
academically, than ever before.<lb/>
The school's leaders always have<lb/>
been interested in quality, but<lb/>
we're seeing more done about it<lb/>
under Chancellor Howell<lb/>
With the college age population<lb/>
ebbing rapidly, the era of growth<lb/>
is clearly over, giving Howell time<lb/>
to spend on other tasks, such as<lb/>
redefining ECU's style.<lb/>
"We've passed the time when a<lb/>
chief executive officer of a mature<lb/>
institution stands out as the per-<lb/>
son that is the university Howell<lb/>
says, "It is appropriate for (John)<lb/>
Messick and Jenkins as the<lb/>
university was trying to develop.<lb/>
But I have the luxury of being a<lb/>
low-profile chancellor. It's a sign<lb/>
I think, that ECU has arrived '<lb/>
Howell's style differs from<lb/>
Jenkins in other ways as well.<lb/>
Jenkins often got what he<lb/>
wanted by force, a method<lb/>
repellant to Howell. In 1967,<lb/>
when the now-defunct N C<lb/>
Board of Higher Education balk-<lb/>
ed at giving East Carolina the<lb/>
designation of 'university' that<lb/>
Jenkins thought it deserved, he<lb/>
went to the legislature and<lb/>
demanded it. When opponents<lb/>
tried to stop him, their efforts<lb/>
backfired and each of the cam-<lb/>
puses in the state system got the ti-<lb/>
tle.<lb/>
And in 1974, when hordes of<lb/>
consultants and the University of<lb/>
North Carolina Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors decided once and for all,<lb/>
after a decade of c.ispute, that<lb/>
ECU didn't need and wouldn't get<lb/>
a four-year medical school,<lb/>
Jenkins again went to the<lb/>
legislature. The school, which this<lb/>
year graduated its fourth class of<lb/>
doctors, is ECU proudest<lb/>
achievement.<lb/>
Howell probabb has the<lb/>
political acumen to pull off<lb/>
similar coups. But he's eager to<lb/>
lose ECU's bad-kid reputation, to<lb/>
put the era of infighting between<lb/>
ECU and the rest of the university<lb/>
system, particulary golden boy<lb/>
UNC-Chapel Hill, squarely<lb/>
behind him.<lb/>
"Leo Jenkins neec.ed popular<lb/>
support to deal with (kneral Ad-<lb/>
?<lb/>
ministration, but I don't<lb/>
Howell says confidently. "Just as<lb/>
the era of tremendous growth that<lb/>
Leo presided over ha- passed, so<lb/>
has the period of popular<lb/>
support<lb/>
"When I go to see (UNC Presi-<lb/>
dent) Bill Friday with a proposal<lb/>
for a new program, I need a good<lb/>
proposal. I need documentation.<lb/>
"It's not the sort of thing where<lb/>
I say, 'Do this or I'll sic the<lb/>
legislature on you We come off<lb/>
better than any other university in<lb/>
our class in the system in terms of<lb/>
money we get. ECU can see to it<lb/>
that it gets what it has coming<lb/>
David Whichard, publisher of<lb/>
the Greenville Daily Reflector<lb/>
member of the UNC Board of<lb/>
Governors and avid ECU booster,<lb/>
agrees.<lb/>
"There's no doubt that, after<lb/>
so many years, we've come into<lb/>
See ECU, Page 6.<lb/>
Dance Production Tape<lb/>
To Premier Tonight<lb/>
A video tape production of the<lb/>
creation of Dimensions of Time<lb/>
and Space, a performance piece<lb/>
for the East Carolina Dance<lb/>
Theatre, will premier on Thurs-<lb/>
day, June 21, in the Messick<lb/>
Theatre Arts Center. The produc-<lb/>
tion, which highlights the work of<lb/>
creative artists within the universi-<lb/>
ty community, was funded by the<lb/>
Office of Academic Affairs to use<lb/>
for recruitment activities and for<lb/>
presentation on statewide PBS.<lb/>
Directed by Dave Balch, the<lb/>
production is a documentary of a<lb/>
collaboration between dance<lb/>
faculty member Patricia Pertalion<lb/>
and Tom Grubb, an M F A<lb/>
graduate of the School of Art. Us-<lb/>
ing kinetic sculptures fashioned of<lb/>
bamboo and rope, Grubb's work<lb/>
provides a dynamic setting for the<lb/>
dance work with a cast of five<lb/>
men. The production captures the<lb/>
two artists at work in their<lb/>
studios, and shows the installation<lb/>
of the sculptures in McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre for Jie first rehearsal<lb/>
period with the dancers, and the<lb/>
in-concert performance of the<lb/>
work.<lb/>
The production offers an in-<lb/>
sider's view of a collaboration<lb/>
between two artists who work in<lb/>
time and space with different<lb/>
materials but who are committed<lb/>
to an endeavor to coalesce their<lb/>
work into an artistic whole. To<lb/>
achieve this, the dancers interact<lb/>
with the kinetic sculptures as well<lb/>
as with each other, and the bam-<lb/>
boo and rope sculpture moves<lb/>
past the traditional suige space<lb/>
defined by the prosceniim arch.<lb/>
Performed by the East Carolina<lb/>
Dance Theatre in their 1983 con-<lb/>
cert, "Dimensions in Time and<lb/>
Space" received enthusiastic<lb/>
response and acclaim from au-<lb/>
diences and local reviewers. The<lb/>
Daily Reflector noted, "an in-<lb/>
triguing correlation between the<lb/>
vigorous, athletic dance and the<lb/>
revolving over-the-jiudience<lb/>
sculpture cc<lb/>
i<lb/>
Copies will be presented t?<lb/>
ECU officials by produS<lb/>
Gaino of Diversified Madia Srf<lb/>
ductions. rro"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0006"/><lb/>
 THE LAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 21. 19?4 Pe<lb/>
'ECU Is Laying The Ground work To Fatten Endowment'<lb/>
Continued From Pace 5. craduates who atr k?,?. i ?.<lb/>
Continued From Page 5.<lb/>
the fold, or else the fold has come<lb/>
to us Whichard says. "East<lb/>
Carolina has sort of established<lb/>
itself within the university system<lb/>
and people are recognizing that<lb/>
But that doesn't mean East<lb/>
Carolina isn't still looking for an<lb/>
edge in the race for status and<lb/>
students. Charles Blake, Howell's<lb/>
assistant, said, "Once we thought<lb/>
we were Avis and we fought like<lb/>
we were Avis. Now we think we're<lb/>
Hertz, but we still fight like we're<lb/>
Avis<lb/>
ECU officials aren't shy about<lb/>
tooting their own horn. They'll<lb/>
tell anyone that ECU offers one<lb/>
of the best educations the<lb/>
Southeast has to offer. In some<lb/>
areas, like art, music, business<lb/>
and family medicine, they'll even<lb/>
say they offer the very best.<lb/>
But not as good as they're going<lb/>
to offer if Howell has it his way.<lb/>
For the first time in its history,<lb/>
ECU is laying the groundwork for<lb/>
an ambitious campaign to fatten<lb/>
its endowment. Because the ex-<lb/>
isting endowment is, by most<lb/>
standards, paltry at $1 million,<lb/>
the fund-raising effort must start<lb/>
almost from scratch.<lb/>
ECU produced teachers for<lb/>
most of its history, not the sort of<lb/>
graduates who later have large<lb/>
sums of money to plow back into<lb/>
their alma mater. But the universi-<lb/>
ty has always enjoyed the support<lb/>
of businessmen who are not<lb/>
graduates and ECU is now turn-<lb/>
ing out, mostly through its<lb/>
schools of business and medicine,<lb/>
graduates who command big<lb/>
salaries and make big contribu-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"Fundraising is not new for the<lb/>
trustees of this university says<lb/>
board chairman C. Ralph Kinsey,<lb/>
a Charlotte lawyer. "Some of<lb/>
them have raised big money<lb/>
before. But it's never been as<lb/>
organized as it's going to be. The<lb/>
dream of this university is to in-<lb/>
crease its endowment in a way<lb/>
that will assist and foster the kind<lb/>
of qualitative growth we<lb/>
envision<lb/>
Howell knows exactly where to<lb/>
spend money. At the last trustees<lb/>
meeting of the 1983-84 school<lb/>
year, he outlined a proposal for<lb/>
an ECU merit scholarship pro-<lb/>
gram on a par with the Moreheads<lb/>
at Chapel Hill or the Angier B.<lb/>
Dukes at Duke.<lb/>
He also told the trustees how a<lb/>
relatively small amount of private<lb/>
money has gone a long way<lb/>
toward making one ECU pro-<lb/>
fessor, geologist Stan Riggs, an<lb/>
Novel Provokes Sorrow<lb/>
By MARY CASHIO<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
Starting with the opening line<lb/>
"He awoke at 7 a.m. with pain in<lb/>
his chest the book Heartsounds<lb/>
by Martha Weinman Lear is filled<lb/>
with a pervasive sense of sorrow.<lb/>
Weinman is Hal Lear, a physician<lb/>
whose courageous bout with car-<lb/>
diac disease and its unexpected<lb/>
complications is recorded by his<lb/>
wife in a deeply moving and grip-<lb/>
ping account of their every agony,<lb/>
tantrum and humiliation.<lb/>
The book is also a severe indict-<lb/>
ment of medical institutions. Hal<lb/>
suffers every indignity open to<lb/>
victims of cardiac disease. Worse,<lb/>
as a physician, he is fully aware of<lb/>
what is going on around him. But<lb/>
as a victim of highly selective<lb/>
brain damage brought on by ap-<lb/>
parently unknown causes, he is ut-<lb/>
terly helpless to light the system<lb/>
which allows the indiscriminate<lb/>
dispensing of sleeping pills just to<lb/>
give the house staff an easier<lb/>
night. As a result of this neglect,<lb/>
Hal nearly dies but for the timely<lb/>
intervention of his wife, Martha.<lb/>
Neither does surgery improve his<lb/>
condition, which worsens instead.<lb/>
After four long years of battl-<lb/>
ing the disease and the system,<lb/>
Hal succumbs. Again, the<lb/>
unknown creeps in as the ultimate<lb/>
cause of- his death proves elusive<lb/>
to the coroner. On that note of<lb/>
sorrow, which is cathartic ? no<lb/>
more tears can be shed ? the<lb/>
book comes to a full circle. What<lb/>
at first glance appears to be a<lb/>
frivolous romance is actually a<lb/>
poignant portrayal of a couple<lb/>
brought closer by their tragedy.<lb/>
Everyone should read it.<lb/>
Come To Where WASHING<lb/>
jJflt Is Fun<lb/>
ytJiS Color<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
VGiiCX Videos<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
Cable TV<lb/>
Snacks<lb/>
DRYERS.25<lb/>
Washers.75<lb/>
AIR CONDITIONED COMFORT<lb/>
-<lb/>
Good ?nr 1 P<lb/>
OUPON<lb/>
Good 'of 1 free when using at<lb/>
least 1 other washer<lb/>
ALSO 1 FREE Beverage and a<lb/>
?ag of Popcorn when washing at<lb/>
rWASH<lb/>
"HOUSE<lb/>
514 E !4'<lb/>
Welcome Back Students!<lb/>
NEW &amp; USED<lb/>
Ratread Tlrat<lb/>
$7.00 4 Up<lb/>
ERVlCj<lb/>
.COUMM-<lb/>
Compleie5Po?nt<lb/>
Brake Safety<lb/>
50 Check<lb/>
l?ch?J? ?????<lb/>
 CAR SHAKES?<lb/>
1 w6 ELIMINATE<lb/>
$14.88<lb/>
For<lb/>
Alignment.<lb/>
C ??1? ?<lb/>
55?ZcSSroSPr<lb/>
4-Cyttndcr<lb/>
$29.95<lb/>
16 and 8 cylinder<lb/>
'All size<lb/>
tires<lb/>
dightty higher available.<lb/>
-U MRIH UHOUNA SJAU IJiSflCIIOJ, SWuh<lb/>
Wl StVICC NATIONAL ACCOUNTS<lb/>
HFGoodrieh<lb/>
StTIRE CENTER<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
l:NAJMl:Mf.M.<lb/>
OMNMOHFBI.<lb/>
?:WA.MS:J?r.M.<lb/>
 'Consider us your cars'<lb/>
Home Away From Home '?'<lb/>
Cog gins Car Care<lb/>
756-5244<lb/>
320 West Greenville Blvd<lb/>
KJ?ooooooooeoooooeo<lb/>
internationally known expert.<lb/>
Riggs will host an international<lb/>
phosphates seminar at ECU this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
It is that sort of exposure,<lb/>
Howell told the trustees, that will<lb/>
give ECU the reputation to match<lb/>
its accomplishments.<lb/>
"I don't think people are aware<lb/>
of the programs and the service<lb/>
provided by this university<lb/>
Kinsey says. "But awareness is be-<lb/>
ing enhanced every year by the<lb/>
fact more and more of the enter-<lb/>
ing freshman at East Carolina are<lb/>
coming from the Piedmont and<lb/>
western parts of the state<lb/>
Last fall, ECU drew students<lb/>
from 96 of the state's 100 coun-<lb/>
ties. Enrollment from Wake<lb/>
County, N.C. State's home, was<lb/>
second only to that of Pitt Coun-<lb/>
ty, ECU's home county. Guilford<lb/>
County, home of UNC-<lb/>
Greensboro and N.C. A&amp;T State<lb/>
University, was ninth in the<lb/>
number of students attending<lb/>
ECU and Mecklenburg, home of<lb/>
UNC-Charlotte, was eighth.<lb/>
"Leo Jenkins used to say that<lb/>
to come here from Charlotte,<lb/>
students have to pass 60 other col-<lb/>
leges Registrar Gilbert Moore<lb/>
says. "They must be hearing<lb/>
something good about us<lb/>
Kinsey says the students are<lb/>
ECU's best advertisement, and<lb/>
student body president John<lb/>
Rainey Jr. of Enfield is a good ex-<lb/>
ample. Rainey could have gone to<lb/>
virtually any school. He chose<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
"I see it as a good school that<lb/>
soon will be as respected as UNC-<lb/>
Chapel Hill or N.C. State<lb/>
Rainey says. "I'm getting a very<lb/>
good education, better than some<lb/>
of my friends at bigger schools.<lb/>
You're not just a number here.<lb/>
You can talk to your professors,<lb/>
establish a relationship with them,<lb/>
and they're excellent teachers<lb/>
"I would hope that in the years<lb/>
to come, we'll be fully recognized<lb/>
as the great school we are<lb/>
Rainey says.<lb/>
ECU administrators share<lb/>
Rainey's conviction that what<lb/>
ECU lacks most is a reputation to<lb/>
match its aspirations. They're set-<lb/>
ting out to correct that.<lb/>
"We're surveying people in the<lb/>
area, trying basically to get at<lb/>
their perceptions of ECU says<lb/>
James Lanier, vice chancellor for<lb/>
institutional advancement.<lb/>
"We've found we're in a good<lb/>
position because people frankly<lb/>
don't think very much about us<lb/>
one way or the other. We have an<lb/>
opportunity to create an image in<lb/>
people's minds. Not a false image,<lb/>
of course, but an image that<lb/>
reflects the excellence that is<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Building an image is important<lb/>
to raising money. And ECU's<lb/>
leaders have decided both image<lb/>
and money are largely dependent<lb/>
on promoting what ECU has done<lb/>
best since its founding in 1907:<lb/>
Serving the region and the state.<lb/>
"We're committed to being a<lb/>
university that really affects the<lb/>
lives of people Lanier said.<lb/>
"So when we developed the<lb/>
advertising campaign we're using<lb/>
now, we chose the theme<lb/>
'ECU: A Part of Your Life Wt<lb/>
hope that by the time we finish,<lb/>
there won't be anybody in our ser-<lb/>
vice area that won't have seen ont<lb/>
(commercial) they can say affect<lb/>
their life<lb/>
The first three TV commercials,<lb/>
in the series focu; on the things<lb/>
for which ECU is most famous:<lb/>
its hard-won medical school,<lb/>
which has helped lower infant<lb/>
mortality rates and established<lb/>
Greenville as Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina's medical mecca; its<lb/>
football program, which this fall<lb/>
will tackle one of the nation'i<lb/>
toughest schedules; and its role n<lb/>
raising the anchor of the Civil<lb/>
War ironclad Monitor.<lb/>
Future spots will focus oa<lb/>
academics. ECU has learned that<lb/>
quality is the key to being the big-<lb/>
gest kid on the block<lb/>
R ?o?T "h pernuon o( " Greensboro se<lb/>
Little Bit of Mexico<lb/>
Restaurante &amp; Cantina<lb/>
Op?n Sun. thru Thur.<lb/>
11 AM to 10 PM<lb/>
Frl. A Sat.<lb/>
11 AM to 11 PM<lb/>
Good Food From 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/>
c- ?.  DVEBTIS?0 ITEM POUCV<lb/>
Coovignt "984<lb/>
?roge' Sj on<lb/>
Ouantirv ?tgnts Bner ,M<lb/>
??on soio to Oeaien<lb/>
mrP?EN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. Greenville<lb/>
H'NE. SANGRIA OR<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
Chabifs<lb/>
?<lb/>
?r.<lb/>
? <lb/>
L<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
LS<lb/>
I <lb/>
<lb/>
Eileen's Spec<lb/>
'Goodbye<lb/>
Features Si<lb/>
Costello's<lb/>
By DAVID WITHER!NGTC<lb/>
You've ail heard the cor.<lb/>
story of Elvis Costello, soogwi<lb/>
extraordinaire, therefore.<lb/>
spare you the history that usu<lb/>
accompanies his review? a<lb/>
to the business at hand Good<lb/>
Cruel World is Costello's tc<lb/>
album, a collection of third<lb/>
?pop tunes with an uncU <lb/>
?fcck on the nuclear arrr.<lb/>
among other topics.<lb/>
Though the album mas<lb/>
as accessible as last year's Pu<lb/>
Hfce Clock, it opens ?<lb/>
Motown-ish tune that finds,<lb/>
sharing vocals with the kine<lb/>
blue-eyed soul, Daryl Hal<lb/>
"Home Truth a beau<lb/>
ballad addressing the theme j<lb/>
fidelity, features some<lb/>
Costello's most effective lyi<lb/>
"Does your touch feel the samj<lb/>
jf should doOr is it sorr.i<lb/>
quite similarWho killed me .<lb/>
kindnessNow do I lock a:I<lb/>
familiar?" More importafl<lb/>
Ehis makes you iccl the<lb/>
through his affectionate oca.<lb/>
This brings us to "I.<lb/>
Inch already one of m favt<lb/>
all-time favorite Costello ti<lb/>
What can I say? Great lyi<lb/>
"You can take a powder <lb/>
take a drink You can keep<lb/>
shrink And the kite:<lb/>
sink Write my name in hea ei<lb/>
Divisible ink I just woe up fi<lb/>
dreaming, I think These revi<lb/>
tions, coupled with a killer bl<lb/>
arrangement, create a powd<lb/>
centerpiece for the album C.i<lb/>
out Steve Sieve's creej<lb/>
keyboards (presented here ui<lb/>
his umpteenth pseudc j<lb/>
Maurice Worm!)<lb/>
"Worthless Thine'<lb/>
Costello's scathing a:<lb/>
MTV, a modern sequel to R<lb/>
Radio "I wish you could st<lb/>
Quite how much you could mi<lb/>
to me If you were ten feet<lb/>
and almost handsome I<lb/>
pay this king's ransome<lb/>
help but agree with the man w<lb/>
I turn on the tube and see D<lb/>
Lee Roth crooning the<lb/>
gfneaningful lyrics of "Jump<lb/>
 Moving on, the highlights I<lb/>
ide two include the album's oj<lb/>
ver version, "I Wanna Be LJ<lb/>
(with backing vocals by thef<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
Monday -<lb/>
11 to 2 or<lb/>
no. 1 Hi<lb/>
no.5 Ham &amp;<lb/>
no. 10 Tin<lb/>
no.l5Ham&amp;<lb/>
All sandwiches include<lb/>
Also choice of: Potato.<lb/>
Bring this ad<lb/>
. ?, ?. ? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0007"/><lb/>
H M 21.<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
wment'<lb/>
we chose the theme of<lb/>
I Part of Your Life We<lb/>
e that b the time we finish,<lb/>
e won't be anybody in our ser-<lb/>
i that won't have seen one<lb/>
nmercial) the can say affects<lb/>
rst three TV commercials<lb/>
ie series focus on the things<lb/>
eh ECU is most famous:<lb/>
d-won medical school,<lb/>
?h haN helped lower infant<lb/>
;altt rates and established<lb/>
leenville as Eastern North<lb/>
lina's medical mecca; its<lb/>
program, which this fall<lb/>
Me one of the nation's<lb/>
si chedules; and its role in<lb/>
I b the anchor of the Civil<lb/>
ironclad Monitor.<lb/>
II tture spots will focus on<lb/>
pdemics. ECU has learned that<lb/>
it) is the key to being the big-<lb/>
on the block.<lb/>
I :ht Greeosboro News<lb/>
:o<lb/>
ina<lb/>
Bv pass near Memorial Dr.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
have all ABC permits<lb/>
on<lb/>
 Sa. or<lb/>
S EVERYDAY<lb/>
rd - Greenville<lb/>
DOZ<lb/>
39c<lb/>
HT 2 DOZEN PLEASE<lb/>
SWEET, RIPE<lb/>
Southern<lb/>
Peaches<lb/>
Lbs<lb/>
1<lb/>
DELI FRESH<lb/>
TAKE N BAKE<lb/>
lushroom Or<lb/>
lusage Pizza<lb/>
$650<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
s<lb/>
ANHEUSER BUSCH<lb/>
Busch<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
$399<lb/>
M.<lb/>
c<lb/>
if<lb/>
1-<lb/>
ie<lb/>
t,<lb/>
ar<lb/>
e:<lb/>
d<lb/>
st<lb/>
ft<lb/>
1<lb/>
I<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
RHINE, SANGRIA OR<lb/>
Carlo Rossi<lb/>
Chablis<lb/>
$499<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 21,1914<lb/>
Unique Shop Popular<lb/>
aa .<lb/>
Bryan Humbert ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Eileen's Special Occasions features gourmet foods and fine wines.<lb/>
By KIMBERLY COX<lb/>
Staff Wrtiar<lb/>
Eileen's Special Occasions is a<lb/>
unique specialty shop that is<lb/>
located in Greenville Square. The<lb/>
gourmet and wine shop is<lb/>
patronized by customers all<lb/>
through Pitt County and Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina. Mrs. Eileene<lb/>
Huber is the owner.<lb/>
Special Occasions specializes in<lb/>
fine wines, cheeses (over 500<lb/>
domestic and Inport), crackers,<lb/>
coffees, teas, chocolates, candies,<lb/>
oils, vinegars, breads, pastas,<lb/>
mustards, dressings, sorbets,<lb/>
rices, cookies, nuts, spices, soups,<lb/>
pickels, cakes, and sauces.<lb/>
A visitor to Eileen's Special Oc-<lb/>
casions will find Eileen to be<lb/>
friendly and helpful. She will sug-<lb/>
gest just the right item for the<lb/>
customer's need and lets them<lb/>
learn about and experiment with<lb/>
fine and imported foods. She en-<lb/>
courages them to sample what<lb/>
products she carries. Eileen wants<lb/>
her customers to be satisfied with<lb/>
their purchases. She asks that they<lb/>
try a sample of what they are<lb/>
about to purchase. The premise of<lb/>
Special Occasions, according to<lb/>
Eileen, is "personalized, one to<lb/>
one service Eileen successfully<lb/>
deals with each of her customers<lb/>
on a one to one basis.<lb/>
Mrs. Huber makes available<lb/>
many specialty items such as the<lb/>
"Baskets of Bounty basket<lb/>
which is creatively filled with<lb/>
wine, cheese, or any thing that the<lb/>
customer would like to incor-<lb/>
porate into his or her gift. Special<lb/>
Occasions will deliver these<lb/>
baskets to their recipiants.<lb/>
Other specialty items Eileen<lb/>
carries are hand molded<lb/>
chocolates, fresh chocolate<lb/>
covered strawberries, croisants,<lb/>
bagels, and phyllo.<lb/>
Phyllo is sheets of dough for<lb/>
the cook that wants to make his or<lb/>
her own creations. The phyllo can<lb/>
be filled with meats, vegetables,<lb/>
or shrimp. They then are rolled in-<lb/>
to specific shapes, brushed with<lb/>
butter and baked.<lb/>
When you are in the market for<lb/>
gourmet food and fine wine,<lb/>
Eileen's Special Occasions is the<lb/>
place to go in Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Eileen's Special Occasions is<lb/>
open Monday-Thursday (10<lb/>
a.m6 p.m.) Friday until 7 p.m.<lb/>
and Saturday (10 a.m6 p.m.).<lb/>
 Goodbye Cruel World'<lb/>
Features Some Of Elvis<lb/>
Costello's Best Material<lb/>
Bv DAVID WITHERINGTON<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
You've all heard the continuing<lb/>
story of Elvis Costello, songwriter<lb/>
extraordinaire, therefore, I'll<lb/>
spare you the history that usually<lb/>
accompanies his reviews and get<lb/>
to the business at hand. Goodbye<lb/>
Cruel World is Costello's tenth<lb/>
album, a collection of thirteen<lb/>
pop tunes with an underlying at-<lb/>
tack on the nuclear arms race,<lb/>
among other topics.<lb/>
Though the album may not be<lb/>
as accessible as last year's Punch<lb/>
the Clock, it opens with a<lb/>
Motown-ish tune that finds El<lb/>
sharing vocals with the king of<lb/>
blue-eyed soul, Daryl Hall.<lb/>
"Home Truth a beautiful<lb/>
ballad addressing the theme of in-<lb/>
fidelity, features some of<lb/>
Costello's most effective lyrics:<lb/>
"Does your touch feel the same as<lb/>
it should doOr is it someone<lb/>
quite similarWho killed me with<lb/>
kindnessNow do I look at all<lb/>
familiar?" More importantly,<lb/>
Elvis makes you feel the pain<lb/>
through his affectionate vocals.<lb/>
This brings us to "Inch by<lb/>
Inch already one of my favorite<lb/>
all-time favorite Costello tracks.<lb/>
What can I say? Great lyrics:<lb/>
"You can take a powderYou can<lb/>
take a drinkYou can keep the<lb/>
shrinkAnd the kitchen<lb/>
sinkWrite my name in heaven in<lb/>
invisible inkI just woke up from<lb/>
dreaming, I think These revela-<lb/>
tions, coupled with a killer blues<lb/>
arrangement, create a powerful<lb/>
centerpiece for the album. Check<lb/>
out Steve Nieve's creeping<lb/>
keyboards (presented here under<lb/>
his umpteenth pseudonym,<lb/>
Maurice Worm!)<lb/>
"Worthless Thing" is<lb/>
Costello's scathing attack on<lb/>
MTV, a modern sequel to "Radio<lb/>
Radio "1 wish you could see-<lb/>
Quite how much you could mean<lb/>
to meIf you were ten feet taller<lb/>
and almost handsomeI might<lb/>
pay this king's ransome I can't<lb/>
help but agree with the man when<lb/>
I turn on the tube and see David<lb/>
Lee Roth crooning the deep,<lb/>
meaningful lyrics of "Jump<lb/>
Moving on, the highlights of<lb/>
side two include the album's only<lb/>
cover version, "I Wanna Be Lov-<lb/>
ed (with backing vocals by the ac-<lb/>
claimed Green from Scritti<lb/>
Polliti") and the morbid "Great<lb/>
Unknown However, these tunes<lb/>
are quickly overshadowed by the<lb/>
album's grand finale, "Peace in<lb/>
Our Time Introduced to this<lb/>
country on his recent solo tour,<lb/>
the anthemn contains blatant<lb/>
references to Reagan's nuclear<lb/>
arms policy: "Just another tiny<lb/>
island invaded when he's got the<lb/>
whole world in bis handsThere's<lb/>
already one spaceman in the<lb/>
White House, what do you want<lb/>
another one for?"<lb/>
With that thought, I'll end by<lb/>
stating that Goodbye Cruel World<lb/>
has it's share of filler, but also<lb/>
features some of Costello's<lb/>
strongest material to date. In a<lb/>
summer when Bruce is the Boss,<lb/>
Elvis is still the King on my block.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
X<lb/>
<lb/>
s<lb/>
N<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
Every Thursday Night<lb/>
Ladies Night<lb/>
Ladv Member Free<lb/>
With Don Vickers Playing The<lb/>
Best Of Top 40 &amp; Beach<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/>
Every Saturday Night<lb/>
?&amp; STEVE HARDY'S ORIGINAL &amp;.<lb/>
BEACH PARTY<lb/>
FREE BEER FROM 8 - 9:30 PM<lb/>
SHOW STARTS AT 9:30 PM<lb/>
Buffet Lovers, take your<lb/>
Pick of The Pizzas at Mr.Gatti's<lb/>
Lunch Buffet -1 lam-2pm Dotty<lb/>
(All You Can Eat) $2.99<lb/>
Dinner Buffet - 5-8pm<lb/>
Mon. &amp; Wed. $3.09<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 5:00 PM<lb/>
Every Tuesday Night<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
Shag lessons Starts Jun I9ih<lb/>
Tuesday Thru Saturday<lb/>
Specials Every Night<lb/>
$1 00 Highballs<lb/>
52 00 I'n.hm ol B?r<lb/>
Night<lb/>
Every Wednesday<lb/>
AM Night<lb/>
Pitchers Of Margaritas<lb/>
&amp; 2 Shots Of Tequila 10 00<lb/>
Every Friday Night<lb/>
All Night<lb/>
DJ Playing Top 40<lb/>
Rock A Beach Muck<lb/>
$1 00 Highballs<lb/>
S2 00 Pitchers Of Beer<lb/>
Membership available at the door<lb/>
nur.ii ifcrltomr<lb/>
756-6401<lb/>
Location: Caroltn 1 F.aist Cenli?<lb/>
S2 SO lird Tea<lb/>
51 1 S Marqarila<lb/>
52 OO I'm, Colada<lb/>
51 OO ScrrM.driver<lb/>
52 00 Toasted Almond<lb/>
S2 00 Singapore Sling<lb/>
51 25 Vodka Collins<lb/>
52 OO While Russian<lb/>
S2 SO Daiquiris<lb/>
SI 25 Tom t ollms<lb/>
SI OO I adv SMpfMf<lb/>
5 00 To<lb/>
1000<lb/>
Only<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
ejeje js?xrrtKevix?e<lb/>
Spaghetti - 5-8pm Thurs.<lb/>
(AU You Can Eat) $2.65<lb/>
Happy HoursDaily - 2 til 5pm<lb/>
8 p.m. tU closing<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
Video Games Big Screen TV<lb/>
$ 1.00 Membership<lb/>
at door with coupon<lb/>
?<lb/>
' Offer good Isms. 12 16 1984<lb/>
CoufMin L<lb/>
lssssssassassia.assaBisss?rassiastsssss?i<lb/>
Beau's is a private club for members &amp;<lb/>
guests only All ABC Permits.<lb/>
The Best pizza In Town.<lb/>
He"5'1<lb/>
Corner of Cotanc<lb/>
Phone 758-4121<lb/>
heat 10th St.<lb/>
??<lb/>
SUMMER<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FANTASTIC<lb/>
SAVINGS<lb/>
Ad Must Accompany Order<lb/>
25<lb/>
Oofl<lb/>
Prescription Eyeglasses<lb/>
For All ECU Students &amp; Faculty<lb/>
(ONE DISCOUNT PER PURCHASE)<lb/>
REC SPEC 3995<lb/>
ATHLETIC GOGGLES WITH MOST S.V. Rz't<lb/>
Excellent For Baseball, Racketbali &amp; Tennis<lb/>
LAUSCH &amp; LOMB<lb/>
SUNGLASSES<lb/>
BEFORE YOU RENT ELSEWHERE COMPARE!<lb/>
Greenville's Newest and Finest Student-Oriented<lb/>
Condominium Village!<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
NOW SERVING<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
SANDWICH<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
Monday - Friday<lb/>
Hto2or4to7<lb/>
Join us for Lunch or Dinner!<lb/>
The choice is yours<lb/>
no.l 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/>
HALF SUBS<lb/>
For<lb/>
Only<lb/>
$2.39<lb/>
All sandwiches include: lettuce, tomatoes, onions, salt, pepper, oregano, oil, A vinegar.<lb/>
(Hot &amp; sweet peppers available upon request)<lb/>
Also choice of: Potato, Macaroni, Salad or Cole Slaw &amp; your choice of 12 oz. soft drink.<lb/>
Bring this ad and receive chips of your choice in store promotion only<lb/>
WE ARE NOW TAKING RENTAL APPLICATIONS FOR FALL SEMESTER.<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
? LUXURIOUS POOL 4 PRIVATE CLUBHOUSE!<lb/>
? FULLY FURNISHED AND ACCESSORIZED!<lb/>
? TENN5 COURTS AND PARKS JUST ACROSS THE STREET!<lb/>
? CITY LIBRARY NEARBY!<lb/>
? COMPLETE LAUNDRY FACILITIES ON SITE!<lb/>
? CAMPUS BUSES STOP AT OUR FRONT DOOR!<lb/>
? PLENTY OF PARKING ON SITE!<lb/>
? LOTS OF SOCIAL AND RECREATIONAL ACTIVITIES YE AR ROUND!<lb/>
For Complete Information On Rental or Purchase Arrangements<lb/>
Call or Stop By Our Sales and Rental Office Right Away!<lb/>
2820 East Tenth Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Telephone 757-1971<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLaACE<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 21, 1984<lb/>
mt<lb/>
<lb/>
Emory Anticipating Fall<lb/>
M<lb/>
G?ry r?n?r?m - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
The Pirates will be flying high if they can beat teams like Pittsburgh<lb/>
and Florida State this fall.<lb/>
Akeem 'The<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
stiff Writer<lb/>
If the Pirate football team is as<lb/>
confident and r expectant as<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory is about the up-<lb/>
coming season, there will be no<lb/>
limit to the progress of ascension<lb/>
toward the top ten and a continu-<lb/>
ing rise in national reputation as a<lb/>
football power to be feared.<lb/>
Emory feels that the recent ad-<lb/>
mission to the College Football<lb/>
Association is just one more rung<lb/>
on the ladder towards a potential<lb/>
national championship and has<lb/>
added a lot to the national<lb/>
recognition of ECU as a major<lb/>
college foe.<lb/>
Coach Emory is firmly insistent<lb/>
that the assets are in place at East<lb/>
Carolina upon which to build a<lb/>
championship-quality team<lb/>
capable of defeating anyone.<lb/>
With the nation-wide exposure<lb/>
from not only playing, but also<lb/>
beating, major teams such as<lb/>
Missouri, more and more high<lb/>
school prospective players will<lb/>
sign with ECU.<lb/>
The recent National Football<lb/>
League draft which took more<lb/>
Pirates than all but two other<lb/>
schools is an indication to Coach<lb/>
Emory of the progress being made<lb/>
by his football team and thinks it<lb/>
will serve as an incentive for<lb/>
players deciding whether to come<lb/>
here to play football. The coach<lb/>
likes to emphasize the advantages<lb/>
of becoming a Pirate, as opposed<lb/>
to attending other colleges at<lb/>
which the same players wouldn't<lb/>
be given a chance to prove<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
Here they get a chance to excel<lb/>
and become overachievers. Teams<lb/>
such as Nebraska are so well-oiled<lb/>
that the presence or absence of<lb/>
particular players seldom is even<lb/>
noticed. At ECU, those who are<lb/>
slightly shorter or just passed over<lb/>
by the football factories can build<lb/>
themselves up and have a good<lb/>
chance of becoming a starter,<lb/>
which could lead to a pro career.<lb/>
As of now, pending the out-<lb/>
come of first session grades, no<lb/>
Pirate is mathmatically eliminated<lb/>
from playing for academic<lb/>
reasons. The Coach is fervent in<lb/>
his belief in maintaining his<lb/>
player's scholastics and has an in-<lb/>
tensive tutoring system to assure<lb/>
that they keep their grades up and<lb/>
graduate. He believes the team is<lb/>
in the best shape academically<lb/>
since he arrived.<lb/>
As far as any drug use on the<lb/>
team, Coach Emory recognizes<lb/>
the possibility, but feels his exten-<lb/>
sive drug prevention and testing<lb/>
program have effectively dealt<lb/>
positions could be in for a rude<lb/>
awakening.<lb/>
Coach Emory has attended over<lb/>
fifty Pirate Club meetings in the<lb/>
past few weeks and says "en-<lb/>
thusiasm is way up, everywhere<lb/>
He indicated his pleasure with the<lb/>
support the alumni are giving and<lb/>
is proud that they are adhering to<lb/>
NCAA regulations, unlike some<lb/>
of ECU's rivals in recruiting.<lb/>
When asked if ECU's current<lb/>
status paralleled that of Miami<lb/>
(last year's national champion),<lb/>
ECU begins their march to the National Championship in nirie weeks<lb/>
with the situation which existed<lb/>
when he arrived. The FBI has<lb/>
discussed the topic with the team,<lb/>
along with a series of speakers and<lb/>
a testing system.<lb/>
Coach Emory's belief in senior<lb/>
leadership is belied by the greater<lb/>
severity of punishment to be<lb/>
received by seniors when rule in-<lb/>
fractions occur. It's in line with<lb/>
this belief that he says he doesn't<lb/>
expect the veterans will let the<lb/>
newcomers get much playing<lb/>
time, but those veterans who slack<lb/>
up and expect to coast to starting<lb/>
Emory said that a correlation does<lb/>
exist. "With the right breaks, we<lb/>
can make it. It may not happen,<lb/>
but the pieces are here, if thev just<lb/>
come together at the same' mo-<lb/>
ment Emory said.<lb/>
With the departure of Art<lb/>
Baker as offensive coordinator,<lb/>
replacement Don Murray will be<lb/>
hard-pressed to continue the<lb/>
traditional powerful offense at<lb/>
ECU. Linwood Ferguson also<lb/>
joins the staff this year.<lb/>
Emory noted that a season-<lb/>
record average attendance was set<lb/>
last season. He pointed out that<lb/>
the teams which nave been visiting<lb/>
here bring viruU'lly no supporters<lb/>
to bolster atteidance. If area<lb/>
teams such as N.C. State could<lb/>
come our attendance would sky-<lb/>
rocket. A large number of South<lb/>
Carolina fans are expected when<lb/>
their team comes to Ficklen and<lb/>
it's expected tha the quality op-<lb/>
ponents and continued winning<lb/>
ways will fill the stadium. Emory<lb/>
likes winning and has no use for<lb/>
"moral" victories. He has<lb/>
tremendous pride in the athletic<lb/>
facilities here and views Ficklen as<lb/>
a major asset, since so mans<lb/>
schools have to share municipal<lb/>
stadiums with other events. He<lb/>
says the field is in "super" condi<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
When asked in a humorous vein<lb/>
if his son Battle will join the<lb/>
Pirates after his senior high school<lb/>
year, and if he was "good<lb/>
enough" for the Pirates, Emor<lb/>
let a little smile crease his face, but<lb/>
would only say thai his step-son<lb/>
Tommy Buie has transferred to<lb/>
ECU. You and I both know Battle<lb/>
will know the meaning of "war"<lb/>
if he shows up at his father-<lb/>
house in a North Carolina jersey'<lb/>
It's early to start assessing the<lb/>
potential, but a quick scan show,<lb/>
plenty of talent to fill empty slots<lb/>
at quarterback, offensive' line,<lb/>
and defensive backs. A temporary<lb/>
platoon system at quarterback<lb/>
may exist untii each are tested<lb/>
under pressure. More aerial<lb/>
displays are in the works with the<lb/>
fleet corps of receivers such as<lb/>
Henry ("The Flip") Williams.<lb/>
Stefan Adams, Ricky Nichols,<lb/>
and Damon Pope. Tonv Baker<lb/>
and Jimmy Walden are expected<lb/>
to have good seasons, with Nor-<lb/>
man Quick a stand-out on the<lb/>
line. Fall practice begins August 6<lb/>
for newcomers and the 10th for<lb/>
veterans.<lb/>
The first order of business after<lb/>
setting each position will be how<lb/>
to slow down the Florida State<lb/>
Seminoles' offense that riddled<lb/>
the Pirates last year while the<lb/>
Pirates repeat their high-scoring<lb/>
offense.<lb/>
oycoi<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (UPI) QlynJ<lb/>
(ics organizer Peter Ueoerrotl<lb/>
ibeled as "ridiculousei<lb/>
jneous" a report this week <lb/>
le LAOOC stands to lose S<lb/>
lillion in revenues as a result.<lb/>
le Soviet boycott of the Summel<lb/>
ames.<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? The<lb/>
Houston Rockets drew up<lb/>
blueprints for their skyscraper<lb/>
front line Tuesday by selecting<lb/>
center Akeem Olajuwon of the<lb/>
University of Houston as the top<lb/>
choice in the NBA draft.<lb/>
In making the anticipated pick,<lb/>
the Rockets assured themselves<lb/>
one of the league's most compell-<lb/>
ing front courts next season.<lb/>
Announcement of Olajuwon's<lb/>
selection was made by NBA com-<lb/>
missioner David Stern before a<lb/>
crowd of some 3,000 at Madison<lb/>
Square Garden's Felt Forum.<lb/>
Making the No. 1 choice has<lb/>
become somewhat routine for the<lb/>
Rockets. Last year they chose<lb/>
7-foot-4 Ralph Sampson, who<lb/>
went on to become the league's<lb/>
rookie of the year. Now the twin<lb/>
towers will be teamed, with Samp-<lb/>
son shifting to forward and Ola-<lb/>
juwon, a 7-foot, 250-pounder<lb/>
from Nigeria, patrolling in the<lb/>
pivot.<lb/>
"Now I know I'm going to<lb/>
Houston said Olajuwon, dress-<lb/>
ed in formal black and a red bow-<lb/>
tie. "I am very happy and confi-<lb/>
dent in knowing I'm going to be<lb/>
playing with Ralph<lb/>
Olajuwon, one of the nine<lb/>
undergraduates in the draft,<lb/>
powered the Cougars to the Final<lb/>
Four in each of his three years.<lb/>
Last year he was arguably college<lb/>
basketball's dominant figure,<lb/>
leading the nation in rebounding<lb/>
field goal percentage and blocked<lb/>
shots.<lb/>
The first seven picks held to<lb/>
form. Portland chose second and<lb/>
took Sam Bowie of Kentucky, the<lb/>
7-1 center who missed two seasons<lb/>
with a fractured leg. Chicago,<lb/>
unable to find a quality center,<lb/>
selected All-America swingman<lb/>
Michael Jordan of North<lb/>
Carolina, the NCAA player of the<lb/>
year. And Dallas, also searching<lb/>
for pivot strength, named Sam<lb/>
Perkins, North Carolina's All-<lb/>
America forward.<lb/>
Philadelphia, which had three<lb/>
first-round picks, took Charles<lb/>
Barkley, Auburn's beefy forward,<lb/>
with the fifth pick. Washington<lb/>
then named Melvin Turpin before<lb/>
unloading the Kentucky center in<lb/>
a three-way trade with Cleveland<lb/>
and Seattle. San Antonio follow-<lb/>
ed with Alvin Robertson, a cat-<lb/>
quick guard from Arkansas. The<lb/>
Clippers then stirred the waters a<lb/>
bit with the unexpectedly high<lb/>
selection of Louisville guard Lan-<lb/>
caster Gordon.<lb/>
In the rest of the first round, it<lb/>
was: Kansas City ? center Otis<lb/>
Thorpe of Providence;<lb/>
Philadelphia ? guard Leon<lb/>
Wood of Fullerton State; Atlanta<lb/>
? center Kevin Willis of<lb/>
1st In NBA Draft<lb/>
<lb/>
Michigan State; Cleveland ?<lb/>
center-forward Tim McCormick<lb/>
of Michigan, who was subse-<lb/>
quently traded; Phoenix ? guard<lb/>
Jay Humphries of Colorado;<lb/>
Clippers ? forward Michael Cage<lb/>
of San Diego State.<lb/>
Dallas ? guard Terence<lb/>
Stansbury of Temple; Utah ?<lb/>
guard John Stockton of Gonzaga;<lb/>
New Jersey ? forward Jeff<lb/>
Turner of Vanderbilt; Indiana ?<lb/>
guard Vern Fleming of Geaorgia;<lb/>
Portland ? forward Bernard<lb/>
Thompson of Fresno State;<lb/>
Detroit ? forward Tony Camp-<lb/>
bell of Ohio State; Mi! .vaukee ?<lb/>
forward Kenny Fields of UCLA;<lb/>
Philadelphia ? guard Tom Sewell<lb/>
of Lamar, also sent away in a<lb/>
trade; Los Angeles ? center Earl<lb/>
Jones of District of Columbia;<lb/>
and Boston ? forward Michael<lb/>
Young of Houston.<lb/>
Denver, Golden State, Seattle<lb/>
and New York did not select in the<lb/>
first round.<lb/>
In the three-way deal, the<lb/>
Bullets acquired guard Gus<lb/>
Williams and forward Cliff<lb/>
Robinson. The Cavaliers wound<lb/>
up with Turpin and the Super<lb/>
Sonics obtained guard Rickey<lb/>
Sobers and McCormick. The<lb/>
76ers sent the rights of Sewell to<lb/>
Washington for a 1988 first-round<lb/>
choice.<lb/>
"The key to the first round was<lb/>
Lancaster Gordon going to San<lb/>
Diego and Utah, with the 16th<lb/>
pick, taking John Stockton said<lb/>
NBA scouting director Marty<lb/>
Blake. "That opened things up<lb/>
Blake dismissed the notion that<lb/>
the draft was thin on talent.<lb/>
"The quality is there he said.<lb/>
"Teams like Philadelphia,<lb/>
Milwaukee, Boston and Los<lb/>
Angeles wound up beter than they<lb/>
were at a quarter after 12 (when<lb/>
the draft began). You have six<lb/>
super players in the early picks,<lb/>
players who are going to be All-<lb/>
Stars<lb/>
The draft was especially impor-<lb/>
tant to the 76ers, orc.inarilv not in<lb/>
such an admirable position in the<lb/>
first round.<lb/>
With an eye toward the even-<lb/>
tual retirement of Juluis Erving<lb/>
and Bobby Jones, they acquired<lb/>
in Barkley an agile 275-pounder<lb/>
who can play beside Moses<lb/>
Malone. In Wood, they have a<lb/>
point guard to back up Mauri;e<lb/>
Cheeks and run the break.<lb/>
Three schools ? Houston,<lb/>
Kentucky and North Carolina ?<lb/>
had two players each drafted in<lb/>
the first round. The Southeastern<lb/>
Conference was the early winner<lb/>
with five players going in round<lb/>
one.<lb/>
Johnson, Hardison<lb/>
Honored; Boyette<lb/>
Named All-America<lb/>
After leading the ECU baseball<lb/>
team to a third place finish in the<lb/>
NCAA southern regionals, Win-<lb/>
fred Johnson has been honored as<lb/>
the ECAC South co-player of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
Johnson, along with teammate<lb/>
Greg Hardison, was also named<lb/>
to the all-conference team as both<lb/>
a pitcher and designated hitter.<lb/>
On the mound, Johnson posted<lb/>
a 10-3 record, had nine complete<lb/>
games and recorded a 3.30 earned<lb/>
run average. In post-season play<lb/>
Johnson pitched three complete<lb/>
games, all for victories.<lb/>
Johnson was just as impressive<lb/>
at the plate as he set single-season<lb/>
school records with 46 RBI's, 18<lb/>
homeruns and 115 total bases. He<lb/>
had a .321 batting average with a<lb/>
total of 52 hits and 33 runs.<lb/>
Hardison Finished the season as<lb/>
one of the best hitting shortstops<lb/>
in ECU history. He led the team<lb/>
with 41 runs, 61 hits, 12 doubles<lb/>
and 4 triples. He finsihed right<lb/>
behind Johnson with a .319 bat-<lb/>
5<lb/>
ting average, while also picking up<lb/>
33 RBI's and 96 total bases.<lb/>
Both players are sophomores<lb/>
and are expected back for the next<lb/>
two seasons.<lb/>
ECU softball player Stacy<lb/>
Boyette was named last week as<lb/>
the school's first-ever Academic<lb/>
All-America.<lb/>
Boyette was the Pirate's ace pit-<lb/>
cher this season posting a 12-2<lb/>
mark, and also served as<lb/>
designated hitter while not on the<lb/>
mound.<lb/>
"Stacy is a very intense com-<lb/>
petitor and is a person who gets<lb/>
the most out of her ability <lb/>
Pirate head coach Sue Manahan<lb/>
said. "She's our top pitcher and<lb/>
we're excited about having her 4<lb/>
back for next year <lb/>
In the classroom Boyette sports<lb/>
a 4.0 grade point average, and was<lb/>
named as ECU's top chemistry<lb/>
student for the 1983-84 school<lb/>
year. <lb/>
iav I<lb/>
Academic All-America Stacy Boyette<lb/>
ECAC So.lt c ot <lb/>
After an interview with loreig<lb/>
)urnalists by satellite telecas<lb/>
;eberroth, the president of tL<lb/>
Los Angeles Olympic Qrganizin<lb/>
.ommittee, said there would be<lb/>
Jvery small" or "tiny" surplus<lb/>
for the Games in response to<lb/>
feoort from San Bernardin<lb/>
earlier in the week that a<lb/>
LAOOC security negotiator ha<lb/>
told county sheriff representative<lb/>
.there that the LAOOC has<lb/>
pioney left to pay more th<lb/>
Olajuwo<lb/>
One Picl<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) - Akea<lb/>
Olajuwon visited his native com<lb/>
try of Nigeria this month an<lb/>
found out his parents weren<lb/>
completely sold on his becoming<lb/>
professional basketball player.<lb/>
"They're very happy aboul<lb/>
money, but they want me I ?;<lb/>
back to school and get m<lb/>
degree Olajuwon said after I<lb/>
Houston Rockets made bin<lb/>
number one pick in Tuesdav<lb/>
tional Basketball Associatio<lb/>
draft, the fourth time in six yea.<lb/>
that an underclassman was the to<lb/>
pick.<lb/>
"I've played in pick-up gam<lb/>
with Moses Malone and<lb/>
$1.6<lb/>
Any foot<lb/>
?with puretaka<lb/>
?<lb/>
Expires<lb/>
.SUE<lb/>
m<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
IF TOO MAN<lb/>
THISCOUPON,<lb/>
SOUSE ITONL1<lb/>
ALL-YO!<lb/>
FISHE<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PM<lb/>
INCUDES:<lb/>
A variefv of Fillets.<lb/>
including Lousiana-<lb/>
Stvle Fish Fillets, Hush<lb/>
Puppies. French Fries,<lb/>
a choice of Hot Vegetables<lb/>
and our own Famous Seaf<lb/>
be orange:<lb/>
enjoy florida<lb/>
Shoney;<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0009"/><lb/>
Fall<lb/>
7<lb/>
He pointed out that<lb/>
have been lsiting<lb/>
-upporters<lb/>
If area<lb/>
 C Mate could<lb/>
vould sky-<lb/>
number of South<lb/>
ed w hen<lb/>
cklen and<lb/>
iialit) op-<lb/>
ed winning<lb/>
s - ad m. Emor<lb/>
i se for<lb/>
He has<lb/>
- in the athletic<lb/>
ews I icklen as<lb/>
or asset, since so many<lb/>
share municipal<lb/>
other events. He<lb/>
'super" condi-<lb/>
lumorous vein<lb/>
Battle will join the<lb/>
high school<lb/>
he was "good<lb/>
e Pirates, Emor<lb/>
face, but<lb/>
ep-son<lb/>
erred to<lb/>
know Battle<lb/>
rung of "war"<lb/>
- father's<lb/>
arolina jersey!<lb/>
jessing the<lb/>
? scan shows<lb/>
)t) slots<lb/>
' ensh e line,<lb/>
A temporary<lb/>
quarterback<lb/>
ch are tested<lb/>
More aerial<lb/>
ks with the<lb/>
??? such as<lb/>
") Williams,<lb/>
dams, Rick Nichols,<lb/>
? pe. Ton Baker<lb/>
expected<lb/>
? Nor-<lb/>
d-out on the<lb/>
- - August 6<lb/>
10th for<lb/>
II be how<lb/>
State<lb/>
Eiai riddled<lb/>
year while the<lb/>
heir high-scoring<lb/>
Draft<lb/>
n<lb/>
You have six<lb/>
? picks.<lb/>
All-<lb/>
ally impor-<lb/>
v not in<lb/>
"arable v<lb/>
an eye toward the even-<lb/>
Erving<lb/>
red<lb/>
under<lb/>
eside Moses<lb/>
?ey have a<lb/>
?  Maurice<lb/>
eak.<lb/>
' m,<lb/>
ina ?<lb/>
"ed in<lb/>
v heastern<lb/>
ner<lb/>
I in round<lb/>
x<lb/>
?ar Winfred Johnson<lb/>
LOS ANGELES (UPI) ? Olym-<lb/>
pus organizer Peter Ueberroth<lb/>
labeled as "ridiculouser-<lb/>
roneous" a report this week that<lb/>
the LAOOC stands to lose $95<lb/>
million in revenues as a result of<lb/>
the Soviet boycott of the Summer<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
After an interview with foreign<lb/>
journalists by satellite telecast,<lb/>
Ueberroth, the president of the<lb/>
?s Angeles Olympic Organizing<lb/>
Committee, said there would be a<lb/>
very small" or "tiny" surplus<lb/>
for the Games in response to a<lb/>
report from San Bernardino<lb/>
ier in the week that an<lb/>
LAOOC security negotiator had<lb/>
told county sheriff representatives<lb/>
there that the LAOOC has no<lb/>
money left to pay more than<lb/>
$50,000 for the county's Olympic<lb/>
security costs.<lb/>
The negotiator reportedly said<lb/>
the committee stands to lose $90<lb/>
million to $95 million in revenues<lb/>
because of the Soviet boycott.<lb/>
Deputy Chief Keith Larson, the<lb/>
San Bernardino County sheriff's<lb/>
security commander at the Olym-<lb/>
pic shooting events at Prado<lb/>
Regional Park near Chino,<lb/>
reiterated Friday that the state-<lb/>
ment had been made by Melvin<lb/>
Wessell, the LAOOC's security<lb/>
chief for the Prado site. He<lb/>
reported that Wessell made the<lb/>
point shortly after the Soviets an-<lb/>
nounced their boycott May 8.<lb/>
An LAOOC press officer,<lb/>
however, who checked with<lb/>
Wessell, said the security officer<lb/>
denied saying anything of the<lb/>
Nations Cause $95 Million<lb/>
THE EAST CAJtOLINtAN JUNE i 1 194 9<lb/>
Olajuwon Number<lb/>
One Pick In Draft<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) - Akeem<lb/>
Olajuwon visited his native coun-<lb/>
try of Nigeria this month and<lb/>
found out his parents weren't<lb/>
completely sold on his becoming a<lb/>
professional basketball player.<lb/>
"They're very happy about the<lb/>
money, but they want me to go<lb/>
back to school and get my<lb/>
degree Olajuwon said after the<lb/>
Houston Rockets made him the<lb/>
number one pick in Tuesday's Na-<lb/>
tional Basketball Association<lb/>
draft, the fourth time in six years<lb/>
that an underclassman was the top<lb/>
pick.<lb/>
"I've played in pick-up games<lb/>
with Moses Malone and other<lb/>
NBA players, so I have no doubts<lb/>
about my ability to play said<lb/>
Olajuwon, a junior in college<lb/>
eligibility who grew up playing<lb/>
soccer and team handball in<lb/>
Nigeria before taking up basket-<lb/>
ball only five years ago. "I don't<lb/>
think my lack of experience will<lb/>
hurt me. I believe if you can play,<lb/>
you can play with anybody<lb/>
The only questions about Ola-<lb/>
juwon revolve around his relative<lb/>
inexperience in basketball and his<lb/>
ability to adapt to playing with 7-4<lb/>
Ralph Sampson, the 1983-84 NBA<lb/>
Rookie of the Year and the<lb/>
See AKEEM Page 10<lb/>
$1.00 OFF<lb/>
 Any foot-Long Sub<lb/>
wrth purcH?e of a ftUdhw<lb/>
Expires June 30, 1984<lb/>
tSUBGllfW?<lb/>
797919<lb/>
?E. Fifth StrMt<lb/>
Gr?nvHI?N.C.<lb/>
I F TOO MAN Y PEOPLE USE<lb/>
THIS COUPON, WE'LL LOSE MONEY<lb/>
SOUSE ITONLY IF YOU NEEDTO<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!<lb/>
FISHERMAN'S<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PM<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
INCUDES:<lb/>
A variety of Fillets,<lb/>
including Lousiana-<lb/>
Style Fish Fillets, Hush<lb/>
Puppies, French Fries,<lb/>
a choice of Ho Vegetables<lb/>
and our own Famous Seafood Chowder.<lb/>
BE "ORANGE YOU SMART' TODAY<lb/>
ENJOY FLORIDA ORANGE JUICE ANYTIME<lb/>
With AII-VwhCm-Cm<lb/>
SaM Mr ll-i.<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
kind, and Ueberroth said the<lb/>
figure for projected lost revenue<lb/>
due to the boycott "isn't close" to<lb/>
the real figure.<lb/>
"I don't know what it is<lb/>
Ueberroth said of the projected<lb/>
loss. "It's certainly nowhere near<lb/>
those kinds of figures<lb/>
Ueberroth tole Lost Angeles<lb/>
reporters Friday immediately<lb/>
after the African news conference<lb/>
that "an awful lot of questions"<lb/>
will have to be answered before he<lb/>
can estimate the committee's<lb/>
boycott losses. He indicated the<lb/>
loss would be determined by how<lb/>
many of the 142 countries that<lb/>
have committed themselves to the<lb/>
Games actually show up.<lb/>
During the teleconference,<lb/>
Ueberroth and Mayor Tom<lb/>
Bradley were repeatedly question-<lb/>
ed about security concerns, high<lb/>
costs and commercialization.<lb/>
Ueberroth defended the<lb/>
LAOOC, the first private group in<lb/>
history to sponsor the Games, but<lb/>
said it was likely that this would<lb/>
be the last time the concept would<lb/>
be used.<lb/>
"This exact type of Games I<lb/>
don't think will ever happen<lb/>
again he said. But he added,<lb/>
there is "a great deal that can be<lb/>
learned from these Games<lb/>
Ueberroth also suggested Fri-<lb/>
day that a substandard team and<lb/>
strict drug controls may have been<lb/>
factors in the Soviet Union's<lb/>
pullout of Games, but later toned<lb/>
down his remarks.<lb/>
During the news conference<lb/>
Ueberroth said the drug<lb/>
crackdown in Pan-American<lb/>
Games last summer sent a<lb/>
message "to all the world that<lb/>
there will be no banned substances<lb/>
permitted in Los Angeles<lb/>
Ueberroth then addedAnd<lb/>
some people say that's a factor<lb/>
why some people don't compete<lb/>
After the telecast, when asked<lb/>
to elaborate on the remark,<lb/>
Ueberroth backed off, saying the<lb/>
matter was something he read in a<lb/>
report. He added, "I would hope<lb/>
it's probably not true<lb/>
Ueberroth, who has grown in-<lb/>
creasingly critical of the Soviets<lb/>
since the boycott was announced<lb/>
May 8, cited several reasons for<lb/>
the USSR action.<lb/>
"My guess is, my guess only, is<lb/>
the first reason was to react to<lb/>
1980 he said, referring to the<lb/>
U.Sled boycott of the Moscow<lb/>
Games.<lb/>
"It was an eye for an eye. The<lb/>
second reason, I think that this<lb/>
time the Soviet team was not near-<lb/>
ly as strong as it's been in the past.<lb/>
"I believe the teams from the<lb/>
DDR (East Germany) and<lb/>
Czechoslovakia had the strongest<lb/>
teams ever, but not the Soviet<lb/>
Union. And the chance to come<lb/>
here and not win many medals<lb/>
was another factor in their<lb/>
decision-making he said.<lb/>
With more than 50 teams join-<lb/>
ing the U.S. led boycott, the<lb/>
Soviets won an Olympic-record 80<lb/>
gold medals in 1980.<lb/>
When an African journalist<lb/>
suggested the LAOOC was "in-<lb/>
sensitive" to the needs of third<lb/>
world nations by not providing<lb/>
more financial aid, Ueberroth<lb/>
said the private group lacked<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"We don't have the funds to<lb/>
send out free airline tickets he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
After the news conference he<lb/>
tole reporters that the USSR, at<lb/>
the height of the 1980 boycott,<lb/>
"blanketed Africa and said 'we'll<lb/>
pay for everything<lb/>
About 20 African nations at-<lb/>
tended the Moscow Games. More<lb/>
than 40 have announced plans to<lb/>
participate in the Los Angeles<lb/>
Olympics.<lb/>
Bradley, responding to ques-<lb/>
tions about having a private<lb/>
organization stage the Games,<lb/>
gave Ueberroth and the LAOOC a<lb/>
full vote of confidence.<lb/>
"I would not change a thing. If<lb/>
I had to do it over aiiain, I'd look<lb/>
for another Peter Ueberroth he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Uebberoth said he has one<lb/>
regret.<lb/>
"In retrospect, I think we can<lb/>
be criticized for not recognizing<lb/>
the change of power when (Soviet<lb/>
President Yuri) Anoropov died<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Given the luxury of hindsight,<lb/>
he said that the LAOOC should<lb/>
have moved faster after Konstan-<lb/>
tin Chernenko took power and<lb/>
"redoubled our efforts to avoid<lb/>
the problems that took place<lb/>
"Maybe we could have done<lb/>
more-but frankly, we have tried in<lb/>
every possible way he said.<lb/>
Following the news conference,<lb/>
when asked for a reaction to the<lb/>
line of questioning from African<lb/>
nations, Ueberroth said he was<lb/>
surprised that the Zola Budd issue<lb/>
was not raised.<lb/>
Budd, a teenage running sensa-<lb/>
tion from South Africa, was<lb/>
recently granted British citizen-<lb/>
ship. South Africa was banned<lb/>
from Olympic competition in<lb/>
1970 for its apartheid racial<lb/>
policies.<lb/>
"I expected that question, but it<lb/>
is a matter for the IOC to decide<lb/>
eligibility he said<lb/>
Looking for a place to live this fall ?<lb/>
RINGCOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At The Campus 'East Carolina University<lb/>
to<lb/>
Student Condos<lb/>
SALE AND RENTAL UNITS AVAILABLE<lb/>
ECU studentsi will have a spec.al place to live this fall - nex. ?<lb/>
campus m their own private, secure, fully-furnished and<lb/>
carpeted air-conditioned condominium units. Surrounded on<lb/>
three sides by ECU property. Ringgold Towers is closer to<lb/>
classrooms than some on-campus dormitories. Downtown<lb/>
Oreenville is one block away<lb/>
Completely furnished, each unit will be individually owned<lb/>
either by students and their parents or by mvestors renting to<lb/>
students There will be on-s,te management with security<lb/>
personnel on duty at night. Tbese brand new units will be<lb/>
occupied for the first time fall semester.<lb/>
Recent changes in tax laws make ownership of this type<lb/>
property advantageous for both investors and parents of<lb/>
S S ?in "527.900 with up to 95financing<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/>
SC VA. MD. WV. DL. TN), (919) 355-2698 (collect) frcm<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/>
Welcomes the Class of 1988 to ECU<lb/>
Bringing you the best in<lb/>
dance music &amp; rock n' roll<lb/>
for 15 years.<lb/>
East Carolina's Party Center<lb/>
417Cotanche St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758-4591<lb/>
Doors open 9:00 p.m. - 2:00 a.m. each night<lb/>
?????????????<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. $2.00)<lb/>
All cans.55 til 11:00 p.m. &amp;.80 cans til close<lb/>
COME EARLY<lb/>
You must be II to enter the club. N.C. State Law prohibits persons under 19 to<lb/>
purchase tlcholk beverages. Alternative beverages are provided on the i<lb/>
Persons under 19 required to wear a wrist band while on the<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 21, 1984<lb/>
Hearns<lb/>
LAS VEGAS, Nev. (UPI) ?<lb/>
The "Hit Man returned Friday<lb/>
night after a two-year absence and<lb/>
Thomas Heams welcomed him<lb/>
home like a long-lost friend.<lb/>
"The Hit Man is back, all the<lb/>
way now Hearns said after he<lb/>
devastated Roberto Duran in little<lb/>
more than four minutes of action<lb/>
to retain the World Boxing Coun-<lb/>
cil super welterweight title in a<lb/>
sceduled 12-rouder.<lb/>
Duran With A wesome<lb/>
ZZZ?E2?hJ!? NKHfc h, knows we're com-<lb/>
champion Marvelous Marvin<lb/>
Hagler by the end of the year.<lb/>
Hearns' manager Emanuel<lb/>
Steward said: "The fight is on as<lb/>
far as we're concerned. Being<lb/>
it<lb/>
'I<lb/>
overhead right hand<lb/>
Duran, who was stopped for<lb/>
the first time in this 16 year pro-<lb/>
fessional career, said Hearns<lb/>
caught him off guard.<lb/>
"I don't have any excuses<lb/>
said Duran. "I was surprised by realistic, I think the"fight would<lb/>
Tommy Hearns. He won in a take place in October or<lb/>
good way. I congratulate him for November at the earliest "<lb/>
the victory<lb/>
Duran, who was stripped of his Hearns promised a similar en-<lb/>
World Boxing Association junior ding for Hagler as with Duran<lb/>
hid ?E, TS! V3UntCd ?ght middlweight title when he step- who went 15 rounds w th S<lb/>
rih? in ?h d ?"?m??A hard intothc rin ? Hea?. 1? November before d oppinfa<lb/>
22 v JlT PKUt h,m t?Wn ? Said he Wasnt sure whether he c,ose. bu unanimous, Son<lb/>
itially and a crushing nght in the would fight again<lb/>
second stopped him cold at 1:07 "I don't know.I haven't made<lb/>
of the round. a decision yet said Duran, who<lb/>
bince the Hit Man has been turned 33 Saturday,<lb/>
away for a while, on vacaion, I Hearns predicted before the<lb/>
thought the right had was one of fight that he would knock Duran<lb/>
my hardest ever said Hearns. out in the second round and<lb/>
Hearns said he set up Duran managed to keep his promise,<lb/>
with his left jab and confused the "You thought I was crazy,<lb/>
Panamanian by looking toward huh Hearns told reporters after<lb/>
his body when he hit him in the the fight. "I felt it would pro-<lb/>
face with the nght hand that first bably take me a round or so to<lb/>
PU?i ?? down . . . figure Duran out, I was able to ring before his thoughts turnedto<lb/>
?iH h ?!5aky n?ht,hand" outsmart him in the first round a fight against middleweight<lb/>
Z l2T ? HHC,WaS L"8 f?r Hearns he wiU now move champion Ma velous Ma Wn<lb/>
the left jab and it wasn't there. I up in weight to the 160 pound Hagler<lb/>
faked the body and shot the middleweight division and hopes "Marvin Hagler knows what's unToading<lb/>
Akeem Picked First In Draft<lb/>
?ng Hearns said after stopping<lb/>
Duran at 1.07 of the second round<lb/>
Friday night. "I can see him now<lb/>
shaking like a leaf<lb/>
But for Duran the magic that<lb/>
spurred his most recent comeback<lb/>
"Marvin Hagler knows what's<lb/>
happening. He knows we're com-<lb/>
ing. I can see him now shaking<lb/>
like a leaf<lb/>
Thomas Hearns, reborn as the<lb/>
"Hit Man" following a<lb/>
devastating a second- round<lb/>
knockout of Roberto Duran,<lb/>
hadn't even stepped out of the<lb/>
It didn't even take that long, best punch of the fight, a bruising<lb/>
After a cautious first two minutes right that jerked Duran upright<lb/>
that saw both fighters trying to before he fell fa ce first on the can-<lb/>
feel each other out, Hearns sud- vas and referee Carlos Padilla<lb/>
denly shot out a left jab and stopped the figit.<lb/>
followed it with a crushing right<lb/>
to Duran's head that put the "It was a sneaky right hand ??<lb/>
Surfln?nCr' SSif! ty5,Cal Pa?manian on the canva. Hearns said uf the knoTkoui<lb/>
Duran fashion he refused to admit Duran, 154, was up at the count punch. He was looking for e <lb/>
Hr?Hn?t i? i ho  ?.  Dut Hcarns moved in and jab and it wasn't there. The right<lb/>
 ; haven pmned Duran on the ropes where was 8<lb/>
The knockout was the first for<lb/>
Hearns in almost two years, and<lb/>
may have stopped speculation<lb/>
that he could not knock out op-<lb/>
ponents in the h gher weight class<lb/>
like he had in stopping 28 of his<lb/>
first 30 opponents as a<lb/>
welterweight.<lb/>
"It was very important for rne<lb/>
to win by a knockout Hearns<lb/>
said. "I was fighting a legend, the<lb/>
SS8. fS ft" P1?' hc ashed a series ofSnbS<lb/>
who turned 33 today. "I don't<lb/>
feel too good right now<lb/>
Hearns had predicted before<lb/>
the scheduled 12-round bout that<lb/>
he would knock Duran out in the<lb/>
second round to retain his World<lb/>
tions that put him down for a se-<lb/>
cond time.<lb/>
The bell sounded as Duran<lb/>
struggled to his feet, but he was so<lb/>
dazed he staggered toward a<lb/>
neutral corner before his handlers<lb/>
Dn?in??  ?? r ?????? Mum ociore nis nand<lb/>
??Z C?UCl1 SUper Welte?cl?ht brought him back to his stool.<lb/>
crown<lb/>
That prediction not only didn't<lb/>
sit well with Duran, but was scoff-<lb/>
ed at by his handlers, among<lb/>
others, who pointed out that<lb/>
Duran had never been knocked<lb/>
out in his 81-bout professional<lb/>
career.<lb/>
'You thought I was crazy,<lb/>
huh?" Hearns told the media<lb/>
after the fight. "I felt I could box<lb/>
him a round and then start<lb/>
Duran drew upon his vast ring<lb/>
savvy to open the second round<lb/>
with a combination that Hearns<lb/>
said later<lb/>
made me stop a minute greatest fighter in the ring today<lb/>
was<lb/>
and think about what I<lb/>
doing<lb/>
But Hearns, 153, regrouped<lb/>
and again began throwing com-<lb/>
binations to Duran's head as<lb/>
Duran struggled to stay upright.<lb/>
Duran said he could take<lb/>
nothing away from Hearns' per<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"I don't have an excuse he said<lb/>
through his intepreter-manager,<lb/>
Luis Spada. "I was surprised by<lb/>
Than o rC  -t?.e??. 1-113 OjJdUd. I 1<lb/>
the ; iran mouved away on Tommy Hearns- He w?n<lb/>
uS 25 ' Hearnsthrew out the good way. I congradulate him for<lb/>
left and caught Duran with his this victory<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
Rockets' No. 1 pick a year ago.<lb/>
Olajuwon led the nation in field-<lb/>
goal percentage, rebounding and<lb/>
blocked shots while leading the<lb/>
University of Houston to its se-<lb/>
cond straight NCAA final.<lb/>
He predicted that he and Samp-<lb/>
son "will make a great combina-<lb/>
tion. I don't think we'll get in<lb/>
each other's way. A few weeks in<lb/>
practice will get us used to each<lb/>
.other<lb/>
ECU Intramurals<lb/>
Saampson and Purdue's Joe<lb/>
Barry Carroll were the only<lb/>
seniors drafted No. 1 in the last<lb/>
six years. Earvin "Magic"<lb/>
Johnson of Michigan State and<lb/>
from Kentucky, with the No. 2<lb/>
pick.<lb/>
Bowie missed two seasons with<lb/>
the Wildcats because of a stress<lb/>
fracture in his left leg, but he said<lb/>
Los Angeles (1979), Mark Aguirre seven hours of physical tests bv<lb/>
of Depaul and Dallas (1981) and the Trail Blazers convinced them<lb/>
James Worthy of North Carolina he was ready<lb/>
and Los Angeles (1982) all had<lb/>
college eligibility remaining when<lb/>
they were chosen first.<lb/>
The Portland Trail Blazers<lb/>
selected Sam Bowie, a 7-footer<lb/>
"I think they know more about<lb/>
my body now than I do said<lb/>
Bowie, who said he never had any<lb/>
doubts about coming back from<lb/>
his leg injury.<lb/>
First Session Champions Crowned<lb/>
H TIT A mim-ri, n-nw . .<lb/>
By JEANETTE ROTH<lb/>
ECU latnuRarmh<lb/>
Here they are ? the summer<lb/>
school champs of first session,<lb/>
1984, and their respective events.<lb/>
Tennis Singles: Don Joyner<lb/>
Racquetball: Kathleen Cartland<lb/>
Putt-Putt: William Norwood<lb/>
Golf Classic: Doug McCotter<lb/>
Softball: The Bombed Skaggs<lb/>
Men's, three-on-three Basketball:<lb/>
Midnight Express.<lb/>
Women's three-on-three Basket-<lb/>
ball: Strickley for Fun<lb/>
Physical fitness classes begin This is your chance to become a<lb/>
June 20 and end July 24. Come by part of one of the most enjoyable<lb/>
Room 204 Memorial Gym to programs on campus. Participate<lb/>
register for all classes on June through the Department of In-<lb/>
tramural Recreational Services.<lb/>
? ???????????? ??B??i.??<lb/>
co-rec volleyball ? the registra<lb/>
tion dates are June 20-26 with<lb/>
play starting June 27.<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
Sports Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Congratulations are in order to<lb/>
all you champions<lb/>
Who will be next sessions<lb/>
champs? Upcoming registration<lb/>
j ?2r?????rP r BuB8 across ,rom Joyner Librar-<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1974 Yamaha 7S0. Good Bike-looks<lb/>
good. New engine Lot of power. $400 00 Call<lb/>
758 3753 before 1.30 a.m.<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST IBM typewriter, full<lb/>
time typing at home. Call 756-3660.<lb/>
COLOR CO-ORDINATE yourself for the sum<lb/>
mer! Free make-up and color analysis by Profes-<lb/>
sional consultant Classic Reflections, 75 264<lb/>
after 4 PM.<lb/>
BABYSITTERS NEEDED: occasional nights &amp;<lb/>
weekends. Must be good with children and have<lb/>
car. gMBM,<lb/>
PART TIME TELEPHONE work. Apply in per"<lb/>
son Southern Credit Adu?ter?, inc. 30 Evans<lb/>
Street Mall<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
BE CAREFUL on the Gvllle roads; Cobb Is back<lb/>
in action. (Steve, now you have a much better<lb/>
chance of winning your summer challenge. I say<lb/>
Go Fo Three).<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATES 1 or 7 wanted. Located<lb/>
on East Sfh St. Call 75? 47T?<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED for Fall. Must be neat ft<lb/>
responsible. Private furnished room behind Belk<lb/>
dorm $135 Call 7? 7470<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
L THEATRES<lb/>
Ml Airport Rd.<lb/>
Or?wWe,?CP?tt4<lb/>
(tit);<lb/>
:?al<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
&amp; 756 3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
, DILL MURRAY<lb/>
jm DAN<lb/>
P AYKROYD<lb/>
GHOSTDUSTERS bb<lb/>
Starts Sat. 12:45<lb/>
4:55,7:00,9:05<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
Starts Sat. 12:30<lb/>
4 2:45,5:00,7:15,9:30<lb/>
l4)Ueellte<lb/>
E&amp;s<lb/>
Starts Sat. 1:00 " TUa J3a m<lb/>
3:00,5:00,7:00,9:00 W ?V?<lb/>
Late Show<lb/>
Fri&amp;Sat<lb/>
Starts at 11:30<lb/>
Open 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Starts Friday<lb/>
12:30,2:45,<lb/>
5:00,7:15,<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
.? NWi?5wnrru?s-ftisBfis?smH)<lb/>
IHrKr S()K miN(. SKXIFR IHW<lb/>
HKR DRrVMS<lb/>
!iS!ii3S<lb/>
 dulis ()nl<lb/>
'The Knockout Coardyott<lb/>
f Theresa new fashion place<lb/>
Wn with the Tiame fcrandb<lb/>
fou<lb/>
want at puces yj can aflbd<lb/>
special<lb/>
sruo&amp;tr<lb/>
DISCO<lb/>
JUST BRING THIS AD AND<lb/>
YOUR EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
STUDENT LD. CARD AND<lb/>
GETAHfc DISCOUNT OFF<lb/>
YOUR PURCHASE<lb/>
otver expiris juni tm. mm AND does not APPLY TO SALE MERCHANDISE<lb/>
LEISURE WEAR SHOP<lb/>
LOCATED INSIDE<lb/>
SUPER<lb/>
SAVING<lb/>
CENTER I<lb/>
ME.Gftl?rviIABnLVD<lb/>
? - - - T<lb/>
<pb facs="00057650_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>