<?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="00057652_0001"/>
?ht<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina rnP ?<lb/>
Win" campus community<lb/>
Thursday June 28,1984<lb/>
(Earnlhttan<lb/>
since 1925<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
State Legislature's<lb/>
Approval Expected<lb/>
For Building, NMR<lb/>
Follow The Yellow Brick Road<lb/>
"?IL JOHNSON - ECU Photo Lob<lb/>
?a?.ttsf5ttsr5ir<lb/>
&amp;U? Jd' "  ?riat"io? ??<lb/>
ByGREGRIDEOUT<lb/>
M?u?iaf Editor<lb/>
The supplementary budget ex-<lb/>
pected to pass Wednesday was<lb/>
held up when differing versions<lb/>
nf fKaPVed by the two h?uses<lb/>
?i thke NC. General Assembly.<lb/>
The hold-up over a controversial<lb/>
House amendment on abandoned<lb/>
nazardous waste dumps kept ECU<lb/>
from officially getting $14 6<lb/>
million for the construction of a<lb/>
new general classroom building<lb/>
rhAS?,St?,t. t0 the Chancellor<lb/>
Charles Blake said Monday that<lb/>
J7 million was expected to be ap-<lb/>
proved for ECU for capital im-<lb/>
provement items. In addition to<lb/>
tne building, monies should be<lb/>
made available for completing the<lb/>
renovation of Wright Auditorium<lb/>
and the purchasing of a nuclear<lb/>
magnetic resonance instrument<lb/>
for the medical school.<lb/>
Blake said there was a consen-<lb/>
sus on the budget from both the<lb/>
House and Senate committees.<lb/>
fcCU s money is not expected to<lb/>
be affected by the current impass.<lb/>
The delay m approval because of<lb/>
tne House amendment would<lb/>
either mean a compromise or sen-<lb/>
ding the bill to a conference com-<lb/>
mittee. Either way the budget dif-<lb/>
ficulties are expected to be resolv-<lb/>
ed by Friday.<lb/>
ECU got a good portion of the<lb/>
capital improvement funds for the<lb/>
16 UNC-system schools. The<lb/>
General Assembly likes to spend<lb/>
it s excess funds on one-shot<lb/>
items, Blake said, especially if the<lb/>
project has already been approved<lb/>
once. The building, which spurred<lb/>
some controversy when the plans<lb/>
were first announced, should be<lb/>
under construction within the next<lb/>
six months.<lb/>
The Wright Auditorium project<lb/>
calls for $1.8 million to upgrade<lb/>
the seating and sound system to<lb/>
create a top-flight concert hall<lb/>
Blake said Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell was pleased with the<lb/>
General Assembly's actions.<lb/>
The new budget, when approv-<lb/>
ed, would also give ;U1 ECU and<lb/>
other state employees an across<lb/>
the board 10 percent pay raise<lb/>
Blake said the raises are ex-<lb/>
pected to help in recruiting and re-<lb/>
taining superior facuky members<lb/>
Academia is very competitive in<lb/>
North Carolina, and with the<lb/>
raises and other changes, ECU<lb/>
should get its share of good<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
All the new expected monies<lb/>
should make ECU s expected<lb/>
share of the pie more than $25<lb/>
million.<lb/>
 - ?v giuup 01 iresnmen-to-be escan- un ?jh s, . "?' ??" !??????? unemauon session. - , ? V1 "? ?ie ouaget dif- choro r .u ? "<lb/>
-y uoe P Wnen will it ever end? un Acuities are expected to be resolv ?"? the p,e more than $2-<lb/>
STfeJpproves ??king Age Increase;Bill Sent To House<lb/>
Spurred by pleas to savLhunL "Si " ?? provision, the ?? ?  Wf, XV AMUM&amp;V<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) <lb/>
Spurred by pleas to save hundreds<lb/>
of young lives per year, the Senate<lb/>
icaerai Tiigtway construction<lb/>
funds for states that do not enact<lb/>
a 21 -year-old drinking age within<lb/>
two years.<lb/>
The measure was adopted<lb/>
despite the protests of conser-<lb/>
vatives, who said it would curb<lb/>
states' rights and discriminate<lb/>
against young drivers But<lb/>
backers argued it would stem<lb/>
highway deaths, especially those<lb/>
of young people who drive over<lb/>
 blood borders" to neighboring<lb/>
states to drink.<lb/>
The drinking age provision<lb/>
would cut federal highwav con-<lb/>
?0r"ct,?" .f"nds 5 Percent in fiscal<lb/>
18 . which begins Oct. 1, 1986<lb/>
and 10 percent in fiscal 1988 for<lb/>
states that do not raise the'r drink-<lb/>
ing ages to 21. It wasanamend-<lb/>
Fall Semester<lb/>
ment to a child safety bill.<lb/>
Offered by Sen. Frank R.<lb/>
Lautenberg, D-N.J it would also<lb/>
add 5 iercem to hiahway safety<lb/>
grants for states imposing man-<lb/>
datory jail terms and license<lb/>
revocation for drunk driving of-<lb/>
fenses.<lb/>
The House adopted a drinking<lb/>
age amendment to a different bill<lb/>
June 7 ? and not including the<lb/>
mandatory sentencing provisions<lb/>
? so another House vote will be<lb/>
needed. President Reagan endors-<lb/>
ed the drinking age proposal June<lb/>
The chief sponsor of the House<lb/>
bill, Rep. James J. Howard<lb/>
D-N.J said, "The chances are<lb/>
very good that we will have a<lb/>
21-year-old minimum drinking<lb/>
age pass the House again before<lb/>
the July 4 break which begins<lb/>
Friday.<lb/>
Before adopting the Lautenberg<lb/>
provision, the Senate defeated<lb/>
65-32, a rival approach offered by<lb/>
conservative members to add 5<lb/>
percent to a state's highway safetv<lb/>
money for enacting a 21-year-old<lb/>
drinking age law, 5 percent more<lb/>
tor mandatory sentencing and 1<lb/>
percent more for every 1 percent<lb/>
decrease in alcohol-related deaths<lb/>
Twenty-three states have<lb/>
21-yMT-oM drinking laws, in-<lb/>
cluding four that approved them<lb/>
this year. In North Carolina, the<lb/>
minimum age for buying beer and<lb/>
wine is 19 and for liquor is 21.<lb/>
Lautenberg said his approach is<lb/>
the most effective way to end a<lb/>
"crazy quilt of drinking ages in<lb/>
neighboring states<lb/>
'There is no way to address the<lb/>
needless tragedy of young people<lb/>
driving into neighboring states<lb/>
without a uniform drinking age "<lb/>
Lautenberg said. "It's time to use<lb/>
the stick ? sparingly but effec-<lb/>
tively<lb/>
The National Highway Traffic<lb/>
Safety Administration estimates<lb/>
that 1,250 lives a year would be<lb/>
saved by a higher drinking age,<lb/>
Lautenberg said. Half the<lb/>
nation s teenage highway deaths<lb/>
are caused by drunk driving, he<lb/>
said, and although teenagers ac-<lb/>
count for only 10 percent of<lb/>
dnvers, they are involved in 21<lb/>
percent of alcohol-related<lb/>
highway deaths.<lb/>
The Lautenberg proposal also<lb/>
had support from law enforce-<lb/>
ment and insurance groups,<lb/>
Mothers Against Drunk Driving<lb/>
the American Medical Associa-<lb/>
tion, and the National PTA The<lb/>
Presidential Commission on<lb/>
Drunk Driving recommended<lb/>
such an approach in a report last<lb/>
December. But opponents, who<lb/>
favored the incentive approach,<lb/>
said the Lautenberg proposal<lb/>
tramples on states' rights by forc-<lb/>
ing a federal law on them.<lb/>
"What shall be next?" asked<lb/>
Sen. Gordon Humphrey, R-N H<lb/>
who offered the incentive amend-<lb/>
ment with Sen. Steve Symms,<lb/>
R-Idaho. -Shall we force states<lb/>
through coercion to mandate use<lb/>
of seat belts?"<lb/>
"Where do we stop enlarging<lb/>
the power of the federal govern-<lb/>
ment and protect the sovereignty<lb/>
of the states?" Humphrey asked.<lb/>
The U.S. Student Association<lb/>
which argued in concession hear-<lb/>
ings against a higher drinking age<lb/>
endorsed the Symms proposal<lb/>
Monday. Lautenberg said the stu-<lb/>
dent group's support is evidence<lb/>
the Symms measure would not<lb/>
work.<lb/>
Since, if the bill is passed, states<lb/>
will have a choice in whether they<lb/>
raise their drinking age, it is possi-<lb/>
ble that some would not. Dr<lb/>
NighlDe8e Programs To Be Offered<lb/>
ln?l aVaable to eve?g students. .<lb/>
Thomas Eamon, an associate pro-<lb/>
fessor in the ECU Department of<lb/>
Political Science, does not think<lb/>
this will happen. "I suspect, given<lb/>
states' hunger for money, most<lb/>
states would go along with it he<lb/>
In addition, Eamon said he<lb/>
beheves a majority of a state's<lb/>
citizens would favor the bill<lb/>
Between that and a cut in<lb/>
money, most states would go<lb/>
along with it he said.<lb/>
Eamon said there arc good and<lb/>
bad points to the proposed in-<lb/>
crease. An argument of those who<lb/>
favor the bill is that "although it<lb/>
would be difficult to enforce, it<lb/>
would cut down on drinking and<lb/>
driving" he said. On the other<lb/>
hand he said, if the law is not en-<lb/>
InclVfhOP,eWil,In0trespectit<lb/>
and if there is a law that people<lb/>
don t respect, it will break down<lb/>
respect for law in general<lb/>
Undergraduate degree<lb/>
5" " 10 subject areas will be<lb/>
offered at night by East Carolina<lb/>
2S!K be?innin8 with the<lb/>
1V84 fall semester.<lb/>
ECU officials said the evening<lb/>
degree programs will be made<lb/>
available through the University<lb/>
College, Division of Continuing<lb/>
Education. Academic advising<lb/>
the Counseling Center and other<lb/>
ottices of student services will be<lb/>
s7uafi, aVai'able t0 eVenin<lb/>
With the evening degree pro-<lb/>
grams, ECU joins many other in-<lb/>
stitutions across the country<lb/>
which make education programs<lb/>
available to "non-traditional"<lb/>
students, persons who because of<lb/>
family or job responsibilities, can-<lb/>
not be regular, full-time or day<lb/>
students, officials said. Evening<lb/>
degree programs are designed to<lb/>
draw less distinction among full-<lb/>
time, part-time and adult<lb/>
students.<lb/>
"This will draw less distinction<lb/>
and remove some of the tradi-<lb/>
tional, and somewhat artificial<lb/>
limits as to when in a person's life<lb/>
he or she may be a college<lb/>
student said Dr. Angelo A<lb/>
volpe, vice chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs.<lb/>
ECU officials said the rapid<lb/>
growth of eastern North Carolina<lb/>
has resulted in greater demand for<lb/>
additional educational oppor-<lb/>
(CPS) ? Most college students<lb/>
now oppose legalizing marijuana,<lb/>
a new survey of student attitudes<lb/>
has found.<lb/>
Two out of every three college<lb/>
students oppose the legalization<lb/>
of marijuana, Newsweek On<lb/>
Campus discovered in a survey of<lb/>
some 500 students nationwide.<lb/>
In a comparable college survey<lb/>
ttkenm 1975, 52 percent of the<lb/>
American college student body<lb/>
favored legalizing use of the drug.<lb/>
Now, 52 percent of 1984's<lb/>
students have used marijuana. In<lb/>
??t e numbcr as 64 percent,<lb/>
'nat information is com-<lb/>
parable with our field studies and<lb/>
mgh schooi surveys which indicate<lb/>
drug use is declining in the<lb/>
younger population says Edgar<lb/>
Adams with the National Institute<lb/>
on Drug Abuse in Washington,<lb/>
Students are using far fewer<lb/>
drugs than their counterparts of<lb/>
the late sixties and early seventies<lb/>
Adam says primarily because of<lb/>
the health hazards associated with<lb/>
frequent use.<lb/>
"The perceived harmfulness of<lb/>
marijuana is increasing. Sixty-<lb/>
three percent of the high school<lb/>
student surveyed last year said<lb/>
there was great risk in smoking<lb/>
marijuana regularly, compared to<lb/>
only 35 percent who felt that wav<lb/>
m 1978 he notes. y<lb/>
Although the generation that<lb/>
made drugs popular during the<lb/>
sixties and seventies will continue<lb/>
to show higher levels of drug use<lb/>
for some time, Adams says, to-<lb/>
day's students use illegal<lb/>
substances in a more restrained<lb/>
less frequent way, even though<lb/>
many of them may have grown up<lb/>
seeing their parents use drugs.<lb/>
Marijw<lb/>
tunities for personal and profes-<lb/>
sional development.<lb/>
The degree programs to be of-<lb/>
fered by the College of Arts and<lb/>
Sciences and The School of<lb/>
Technology include subject areas<lb/>
of Anthropology, Business<lb/>
Education and Administrative<lb/>
Services, Driver and Traffic Safe-<lb/>
ty, Economics, English (concen-<lb/>
tration in writing), Geography,<lb/>
History, Industrial Technology<lb/>
Psychology and Sociology<lb/>
Overall, marijuana use reached<lb/>
its high point in 1979, Adams<lb/>
says, when 39 percent of the<lb/>
Americans in the 13-to-25 age<lb/>
poup reported they were current-<lb/>
ly using marijuana.<lb/>
By 1982, the 1?. year for which<lb/>
statistics are available, that figure<lb/>
had dropped to 27 percent<lb/>
Over half of the students who<lb/>
use pot or other drugs do so for<lb/>
jrf ?" Campus survey<lb/>
shows. Thirty-two percent of the<lb/>
respondents use chugs to relax<lb/>
percent "to be sociable<lb/>
College may even cause<lb/>
students to use fewer drugs ?<lb/>
cording to the study.<lb/>
Eighty percent of the students<lb/>
?y they started using druS<lb/>
before entering cuegTover 60<lb/>
percent of the students says they<lb/>
use fewer drugs than before com-<lb/>
ing to campus.<lb/>
Yet, excluding alcohol and<lb/>
cigarettes, marijuana is still the<lb/>
drug of choice on campus, follow-<lb/>
ed by cocaine, barbiturates, am-<lb/>
phetamines, LSD, PCP and<lb/>
heroin.<lb/>
Cocaine's rise in popularity<lb/>
may simply mean more people<lb/>
have tried the drug, not necessari-<lb/>
ly that more people are using it<lb/>
regularly, Adams says.<lb/>
Adams believes cocaine is too<lb/>
expensive for students to use<lb/>
regularly.<lb/>
Indeed, the Newsweek On<lb/>
Campus survey found that sixty-<lb/>
eight percent of the students<lb/>
surveyed say they don't spend any<lb/>
money to get their drugs.<lb/>
Twelve percent of the students<lb/>
have worried about being too<lb/>
dependent on narcotics.<lb/>
NBH-JONNK-BcuJ?<lb/>
- . "???- JOHNSON ?<lb/>
Things Mom Never Told You<lb/>
rvthin vnn aim . .<lb/>
sWeMzrjrrEotasr-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057652_0002"/><lb/>
IHEEASTCAROLINIAN JUNE 28, 1984<lb/>
lbu!ePvei,tion Prgrams Not Working Well<lb/>
drinking abuse orevenrinn 1 uB ?ne. however? Questions cd that student nrohlm HHn?  Cf<lb/>
(CPS) ? Most of the student<lb/>
dnnking abuse prevention pro-<lb/>
grams on the nation's campuses<lb/>
aren't working well, a University<lb/>
of Pittsburgh psychology pro-<lb/>
fessor contends.<lb/>
A thorough review of the pro-<lb/>
grams presents "no evidence that<lb/>
anything that has been done<lb/>
works in changing attitudes,<lb/>
knowledge or behavior asserts<lb/>
Howard Blane. a professor of<lb/>
education and psychology at Pitt.<lb/>
Blane's criticism of" existing<lb/>
campus programs caused a major<lb/>
stir at the recent convention of the<lb/>
American College Health<lb/>
Association in Atlanta, if only<lb/>
because so many campuses have<lb/>
begun abuse prevention programs<lb/>
in recent years.<lb/>
Almost 80 percent of the na-<lb/>
tion's colleges now have some<lb/>
kind of program, a Radford<lb/>
University survey recently found.<lb/>
That represents an increase of<lb/>
some 300 colleges betweo 1978<lb/>
and 1982.<lb/>
Blane, however, questions<lb/>
whether the programs are doing<lb/>
any good. He says they are often<lb/>
directed at the wrong people,<lb/>
"For every 100 youngsters in<lb/>
college, 70 to 80 percent drink in<lb/>
ways that are not hazardous, he<lb/>
says. "You want to focus on the<lb/>
other 20 to 30 percent. But all col-<lb/>
lege programs focus on the stu-<lb/>
dent body as a whole. Yet most<lb/>
students, rightly, don't see<lb/>
themselves as problem drinkers<lb/>
Problem drinkers often don't<lb/>
see themselves as problem<lb/>
drinkers, either, and aren't likely-<lb/>
to benefit from programs that<lb/>
say, 'Call the counseling center '<lb/>
Research shows that students with<lb/>
substance abuse disorders don't<lb/>
use counseling centers very<lb/>
much Blane adds.<lb/>
As proof, he points to a<lb/>
federally-funded program at the<lb/>
University of Massachusetts-<lb/>
Amherst.<lb/>
After five years, research show-<lb/>
ed that student problem drinkers<lb/>
got drunk an average of four<lb/>
times a month instead of five<lb/>
tunes.<lb/>
Blane is "focusing on just one<lb/>
part of our evaluation counters<lb/>
Dr. David Kraft, head of UMass's<lb/>
health services and of the campus<lb/>
alcohol abuse prevention pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
He argues the program helped<lb/>
make other, more subtle changes<lb/>
in student drinking habits.<lb/>
"Individual reported drinking<lb/>
behavior didn't decrease he<lb/>
concedes, "but in the dorms,<lb/>
there were changes<lb/>
The kinds of refreshments serv-<lb/>
ed at dorm parties changed,<lb/>
students confronted drinking<lb/>
students more frequently over<lb/>
disruptive behavior, and traffic at<lb/>
the counseling center increased,<lb/>
he points out.<lb/>
"Blane is right in criticising this<lb/>
(educational) approach if it stops<lb/>
there says Dr. Peter Claydon,<lb/>
Gay Students Want Married<lb/>
director of Cal-Santa Barbara's<lb/>
AicoM and Drug Awareness<lb/>
An awareness, educational pro-<lb/>
StsaVf631"<lb/>
kfoUSi: if vou ?ve students<lb/>
rr K.?n;hcy would mae<lb/>
responsible (drinking) decisions<lb/>
22??S ?? "But therc <lb/>
some students for whom this<lb/>
doesn't work<lb/>
Blane's convention attack on<lb/>
campus prevention programs was<lb/>
BACCHUS, one of the biggest of<lb/>
the awareness programs.<lb/>
BACCHUS, which stands for<lb/>
Boost Alcohol Consciousness<lb/>
SST the Hea,th of Univer-<lb/>
sity students, is now on some 153<lb/>
campuses, reports Gerrardo Gon-<lb/>
zales, assistant dean of student<lb/>
services at the University of<lb/>
Florida and BACCHUS's na-<lb/>
tional coordinator.<lb/>
Gonzales says BACCHUS's<lb/>
(CPS) ? Gay students at<lb/>
University of California at Sai<lb/>
Barbara have lost the first roui<lb/>
in what promises to be an ongoi<lb/>
battle to get the campus to It<lb/>
them rent rooms in the campus'<lb/>
family housing complex.<lb/>
Despite appeals to the U C<lb/>
System's general counsel, two<lb/>
Santa Barbara students, Veronica<lb/>
Padilla and Laurie Smedlev, a les-<lb/>
bian couple, are leaving campus<lb/>
this spring defeated in what they<lb/>
see as the first of a series of tests<lb/>
of the University of California's<lb/>
new non-discrimnation policy giv-<lb/>
ing them the same right as amar-<lb/>
ned, heterosexual couple to live in<lb/>
married housing.<lb/>
The system's non-<lb/>
discnmination policy, which the<lb/>
regents passed unanimously last<lb/>
June, specifically forbids any of<lb/>
the nine U.C. campuses to<lb/>
discriminate on the basis of a per-<lb/>
son's sexual orientation.<lb/>
Because gay couples legally can-<lb/>
not marry in California, Padilla<lb/>
and Smedley claim "denying<lb/>
(married) housing discriminates<lb/>
against us on the basis of sexual<lb/>
orientation<lb/>
School officials disagree.<lb/>
"I'm not aware of any other<lb/>
U.C. campus that has family<lb/>
housing not administered the way<lb/>
we do Housing Director Everett<lb/>
Kirkehe told the student paper last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
Kirkelie, who would not res-<lb/>
pond ro repeated phone calls from<lb/>
College Press Service, contended<lb/>
Announcements,<lb/>
the non-discrimination policy<lb/>
does not require the school to pro-<lb/>
vide same-sex housing.<lb/>
Under current policy, students<lb/>
must be married or have legal<lb/>
custody of a child to live in family<lb/>
housing.<lb/>
"(Padilla and Smedley) ar not<lb/>
being discriminated against<lb/>
adds Ernest Zomalt, assistant<lb/>
chancellor of student and com-<lb/>
munity affairs. "They are just not<lb/>
eligible for housing according to<lb/>
the specifications of the policy<lb/>
Ultimately, however, "all such<lb/>
matters on a campus level if<lb/>
unresolved, will go to the presi-<lb/>
dent of the system and then to the<lb/>
board of regents if necessary<lb/>
says Lilia Villaneuva, a U.C.<lb/>
system spokeswoman.<lb/>
Copenhaver says gay students<lb/>
in the system intend to keep trying<lb/>
to force the board to enforce the<lb/>
non-discrimination policy in all<lb/>
areas.<lb/>
"Starting over the summer and<lb/>
over next year (compliance with<lb/>
the policy) will be one of the big-<lb/>
gest issues we'll be pushing he<lb/>
warns.<lb/>
'Wnen you take into account<lb/>
ROTC, which bars homosexuals<lb/>
frm enlisting in their campus-<lb/>
based military training program,<lb/>
campus placement center<lb/>
employers who discriminate on<lb/>
the basis of sexual orientation,<lb/>
and many others, the university is<lb/>
going to be pushed to make a lot<lb/>
of changes he says.<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
ADDcations are requestea from mose person,<lb/>
?are terwtw ,n becoming pTrsSSJ<lb/>
'ai?ESeAmlNDrTS  ?"? ?<lb/>
'erwtefl m anyone wno has a backoroona of<lb/>
??.n. ??. witn tneir activXa "<lb/>
oeeI Student Serv.ces. 212 Whicharc Building<lb/>
tasf Carolina University, Phone 757 6799<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
A study is being conducted at the ECU Speech<lb/>
and Hearing Clime to determine the difficulty<lb/>
fearing impaired students may nave in<lb/>
discriminating words in foreign ianguages Hear<lb/>
ng imDaired volunteers 18 to 28 years of age are<lb/>
Tf for 8 simP'e faring test and word<lb/>
discrimination tasks No foreign language<lb/>
background ,s necessary Please contact Mrs<lb/>
Met, Down. DeMnmen, ? SpeeefLanfloaBe<lb/>
and Auditory pathology, 757 6961, ext 270.<lb/>
FREE MUSICALS<lb/>
Want to see Broadway musicals for free' Usher<lb/>
for the East Carolina Summer Theatre Sign up in<lb/>
the Wessick Art Center, room 108 This ,s your op-<lb/>
portunity to have some fun and save money at the<lb/>
same time<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING<lb/>
Examine and analyze planning and zoning or<lb/>
amances in seaside community. Full time hous-<lb/>
ing available at nominal cost. Contact CoWoJ-<lb/>
WOODWORKING DESIGNER<lb/>
Opportunity to design and construct ? wood<lb/>
??? COnSfrucri0? "rm "? " Em?'a<lb/>
isle. Housing available at nominal cost Contact<lb/>
Co-op office, 313 Rawl Bldg. <lb/>
?Ch of r- OV"T'S?0 ITEM POUCV<lb/>
iv noted in this a? Twe ?L?Z?Z "ceDt as <lb/>
'er you your 5?M?af????2? 0f 5 lt'm ? ?? Of<lb/>
reflecting the urnl 2&amp;2SY3?5I2 n'n ???<lb/>
tie you to purchase tne advm???,c. wrl wn,ch wl" ?<lb/>
once yyitnin 50 day,Ton'??2 ?.V?m at th 'Overmen<lb/>
ceoted pe, item v ? ' "naor coupon win be ac<lb/>
BEACH JOBS<lb/>
Retail grocery and fast food positions available<lb/>
at Nags Head, Kill Devil Hm, and Myrtla Bch<lb/>
Some with accomodation assistance. Contact C<lb/>
op office, 313 Rawl Bldg.<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/>
AUDITOR INTERN<lb/>
Audit under supervision of senior accountant-<lb/>
auditing courses required. Position available in<lb/>
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The Baptist Student Union has dutch dinners<lb/>
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Programs follow.<lb/>
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rapid growth over the last two<lb/>
years is "evidence" that campus<lb/>
attitudes are changing.<lb/>
He readily agrees awareness of<lb/>
abuse problems probably isn't<lb/>
enough to change behavior.<lb/>
"There are a number of op-<lb/>
tions, but they must be tied<lb/>
together into a comprehensive<lb/>
program" if they're to change stu-<lb/>
dent behavior, he says. "Tighten-<lb/>
ing policies won't do it alone.<lb/>
Awareness measures won't do it<lb/>
alone. Balance is needed. Pro-<lb/>
grams are beginning to evolve in<lb/>
this direction<lb/>
At UMass, for example,<lb/>
tougher rules now hold students<lb/>
responsible for their drunk<lb/>
behavior, Kraft says.<lb/>
"Drinking is no longer con<lb/>
sidered a mitigating<lb/>
circumstance he says. "It's no<lb/>
longer If you were drunk you<lb/>
won't be held accountable The<lb/>
student has to take responsibility<lb/>
for the consequences of his drink-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
"There's a lot of effort, much<lb/>
wasted Claydon says. "Blane's<lb/>
plea is to harness energy, use more<lb/>
refined ways" to moderate cam-<lb/>
pus drinking.<lb/>
"I suggest that programs<lb/>
should look at the students who<lb/>
have problems, and put them in a<lb/>
high-intensity program, rather<lb/>
than focus on the entire student<lb/>
body Blane says. "The entire<lb/>
student body is not at risk<lb/>
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Many<lb/>
(CPS) ? It appears tc be q<lb/>
season on colleges that wanl<lb/>
adopt new names to help rec<lb/>
students and faculty member<lb/>
Last week, a Louis<lb/>
legislative committee approve<lb/>
bill that will keep the Umve<lb/>
of Southwestern Louisiana t<lb/>
changing its name to the Univ<lb/>
tv of Louisiana.<lb/>
And on June 12 North Dai<lb/>
voters will go to the polls to de<lb/>
if Minot State College can ch<lb/>
us name to Dakota North we;<lb/>
University.<lb/>
In Louisiana, the state Boar<lb/>
Trustees abruptly voted in e<lb/>
May to change the name of I<lb/>
to the University of Louis 1a<lb/>
order to help recruit better fa<lb/>
members.<lb/>
The change was a big hn<lb/>
campus administrators, whe<lb/>
Purses S<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
t?ff Writer<lb/>
Two purse thefts and vai<lb/>
to a window and doer contnbu<lb/>
to campus crime last week.<lb/>
Reported crimes for I<lb/>
include:<lb/>
June 21, 8p.m.  Sgt m<lb/>
reported a license plate n<lb/>
from a state vehicle parke<lb/>
side Minges Coliseum<lb/>
June 22, 2.20 a.m. - jCS(<lb/>
Russell Davenport of<lb/>
Industrh<lb/>
J. Barry DuVall has joined<lb/>
ECU faculty as professor<lb/>
chairperson of the departmer<lb/>
Industrial and Technical Edu<lb/>
tion in the School of TechnobJ<lb/>
DuVall comes to ECU frd<lb/>
Central Michigan Univers<lb/>
where he has been professor<lb/>
chatr of the department of<lb/>
dustrial Education a!<lb/>
Herpes Ep<lb/>
(CPS) ? The campus her<lb/>
epidemic has subsided, but<lb/>
news is mitigated bv "alarmj<lb/>
increases in eating disord<lb/>
"?-?1tt and -??lrj m<lb/>
to reports given at the" re-<lb/>
American College Hea,<lb/>
Association (ACHA) annual c<lb/>
vention in Atlanta, Ga.<lb/>
"The full area of sexual<lb/>
transmitted diseases is one<lb/>
which colleges have b?en tan<lb/>
with a big brush Clif fo<lb/>
Reifler, a physician at the Urm<lb/>
sity of Rochester, told the Geon<lb/>
State University student paper 1;<lb/>
week.<lb/>
But in fact, Reiner says, "the<lb/>
has actually been a decrease<lb/>
Adve<lb/>
The Eas<lb/>
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'Drinking is no longer con-<lb/>
jtred a mitigating<lb/>
himsfancc he says. "It's no<lb/>
jger 'If you were drunk you<lb/>
Vt be held accountable The<lb/>
lent has to take responsibility<lb/>
the consequences of his drink-<lb/>
'There's a lot of effort, much<lb/>
5;ed Clay don says. "Blane's<lb/>
a is to harness energy, use more<lb/>
fried ways" to moderate cam-<lb/>
dnnking.<lb/>
suggest that programs<lb/>
kid look at the students who<lb/>
k problems, and put them in a<lb/>
Ih-intensity program, rather<lb/>
focus on the entire student<lb/>
Blane says. "The entire<lb/>
lent body is not at risk<lb/>
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rolinian<lb/>
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Many<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
adop, new ?SS o help r?ruh u'8 remOVing ,he "S" frora<lb/>
?? dFf ST ST" C- and?<lb/>
And on June 12, North Dako.a Buf ?,$1<lb/>
voters will goto .he polls Io decide also fauffi  was<lb/>
f Minot State College can change Louisiana Star I iniv ?.<lb/>
S53T Dako,a North? 7- ?S<lb/>
t In Louisiana, the state Board of K"&amp;?3 <lb/>
Trustees abruptly voted in early JamesWharZ Ch????'<lb/>
May to change the name of USL Wharton sav .h. ?ki-<lb/>
to the University of Louisiana in miaak, Z Univershv if i?U'd<lb/>
order to help recruit better faculty liana for ,J??S22 L <lb/>
members ' . a ,or a comprehensive umvei-<lb/>
The change was a big hit with could? 5n? h?f L,SU: and<lb/>
campus admi?is,ratorsgwho im lobby ?t!KV?o?<lb/>
Opting For Name<lb/>
JUNE 2. 1984<lb/>
money.<lb/>
"The University of Louisiana<lb/>
has no ambitions to be a com-<lb/>
prehensive university says Mike<lb/>
Maher, the school's news direc-<lb/>
tor. The name change will just<lb/>
"make the school competitive in<lb/>
computer science and other<lb/>
technological fields<lb/>
Moreover, "professors want to<lb/>
go to big-name schools. The old<lb/>
name sounds like a small school<lb/>
from a small part of the state<lb/>
Professors don't apply here<lb/>
because they assume that a school<lb/>
with a name like that would not be<lb/>
a research institution Maher ex-<lb/>
plains.<lb/>
"I can't envision LSU being<lb/>
threatened by this name Ray<lb/>
Authement, president of either<lb/>
USL or UL, told a state Senate<lb/>
committee.<lb/>
The committee, however<lb/>
adopted a measure scuttling the<lb/>
name change for moment.<lb/>
"The name change puts one<lb/>
university ahead of the others at<lb/>
the disadvantage of the others<lb/>
and that is wrong explains Sen!<lb/>
Cliff Newman, sponsor of the bill<lb/>
opposing the name change.<lb/>
The bill must be approved by<lb/>
the entire legislature, but<lb/>
observers expect a compromise<lb/>
will emerge before then.<lb/>
Under the proposed com-<lb/>
promise, the University of Loui-<lb/>
siana would get most of what it<lb/>
wants, but the eight other cam-<lb/>
puses in the state system would<lb/>
also have to change their names.<lb/>
The University of Southeastern<lb/>
Louisiana, for example, would be<lb/>
re-named the University of Loui-<lb/>
siana at Hammond. Grambling<lb/>
 siana ai Hammond. Gram<lb/>
Purses Stolen, Auditorium Vandalized<lb/>
would change to the University of<lb/>
Louisiana at Grambling. Nor-<lb/>
thwestern State to UL at Nat-<lb/>
chitoches.<lb/>
Folks at the old Southeastern<lb/>
Louisiana campus remain op-<lb/>
timistic they can keep their new<lb/>
name, despite the prospect of hav-<lb/>
ing to share it with eight other<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
Some suggest the school may<lb/>
end up in court if the legislature<lb/>
aoesn t compromise on the issue<lb/>
Meanwhile, in North Dakota<lb/>
Minot State College officials are<lb/>
similarly hopeful they can change<lb/>
their name.<lb/>
The feeling is very positive "<lb/>
reE?Tu Hardy Leberg, the<lb/>
school s alumni affairs director<lb/>
'We're getting positive vibes<lb/>
The school plans to launch a<lb/>
media campaign this week, com-<lb/>
plete with mass mailings, a phone<lb/>
bank, student writing letters to<lb/>
voters, and campus officials<lb/>
speaking to service clubs around<lb/>
the state.<lb/>
Minot wants to change its name<lb/>
to Dakota Northwestern to<lb/>
"reflect what we already are; a<lb/>
full-fledged university. It's fair<lb/>
for western North Dakota to have<lb/>
a university. There are two on the<lb/>
eastern border of the state<lb/>
The legislature agreed last year,<lb/>
but a petition drive led by<lb/>
businessmen in the eastern part of<lb/>
the state gathered enough<lb/>
signatures to force Minot State to<lb/>
ask the voters for permission to<lb/>
change the name.<lb/>
Petition sponsors argued the<lb/>
state is too small to support three<lb/>
large universities.<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Two purse thefts and vandalism<lb/>
to a window and door contributed<lb/>
to campus crime last week.<lb/>
Reported crimes for June 21-26<lb/>
include:<lb/>
June 21, 8 p.m. ? Sgt. Lawler<lb/>
reported a license plate missing<lb/>
trom a state vehicle parked out-<lb/>
side Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
June 22, 2:20 a.m. ? Joseph<lb/>
Russell Davenport of 404<lb/>
the window in room 141<lb/>
was<lb/>
Biltmore St. was arrested for DWI<lb/>
on Campus Drive. 12:30 p m ?<lb/>
An official from the Student Sup- broken<lb/>
Evans IH of 7un?k Da- ' June 24 Jana John?n of the<lb/>
was s 1Kb? rook.Qrcle School of Art reported the door to<lb/>
- t-shirts without Jenkins Auditorium and the<lb/>
orientation students were found<lb/>
drinking beer in room 312 of<lb/>
Aycock Residence Hall.<lb/>
authorization. 11.30 a.m.<lb/>
Yvette Ellis reported her purse<lb/>
stolen from the Personnel Office.<lb/>
June 23 ? Steven Strickland,<lb/>
first floor residence advisor of<lb/>
Garrett Residence Hall reported<lb/>
? auditorium had been vandalized.<lb/>
June26, 12:40a.m. -Cynthia<lb/>
Lynne Harris of Wilson Acres was<lb/>
arrested for not carrying her<lb/>
5:15 p.m Sgt. Lawler reported Mfchad SSZ J?. m' <lb/>
an accident west of Avcock v i 5 MaxweI1  Rodric<lb/>
Residence Hall involving LMS banned fr0m<lb/>
bicyclist and a pedestrian. ll:30 sir T n '??' Caro1<lb/>
- Cpl. Watson reported two iJZVSTZSi<lb/>
V<lb/>
rft<lb/>
Sell<lb/>
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Trade With<lb/>
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T - 9 " "ai3U" Icponea two dent reported her purse<lb/>
Industrial Technology chair Selected<lb/>
J-Ban-y.DuVail has Joined the Technology and nrofeor rtf ?r.? .<lb/>
rm?<lb/>
J. Barry DuVall has joined the<lb/>
ECU faculty as professor and<lb/>
chairperson of the department of<lb/>
Industrial and Technical Educa-<lb/>
tion in the School of Technology<lb/>
DuVall comes to ECU from<lb/>
Central Michigan University<lb/>
where he has been professor and<lb/>
chair of the department of In-<lb/>
dustrial Education and<lb/>
Technology and professor of<lb/>
honors. A native of Richmond,<lb/>
Indiana, he holds the PhD in in-<lb/>
dustrial technology from the<lb/>
University of Maryland and has<lb/>
BS and MS degrees in technology<lb/>
from Indiana State University.<lb/>
At Central Michigan, where he<lb/>
joined the faculty in 1978, he has<lb/>
served as vice chair of the council<lb/>
of chairpersons and as a member<lb/>
of the university honors faculty<lb/>
for six years. Previous faculty ex-<lb/>
perience has been at West Virginia<lb/>
University and Iowa State Univer-<lb/>
sity and he also was an instructor<lb/>
in industrial education at<lb/>
Maryland. He has nine years ad-<lb/>
ministrative experience and 16<lb/>
years teaching experience.<lb/>
He is the author of more tnan<lb/>
50 articles and presentations in-<lb/>
cluding a text, teacher's hand-<lb/>
book and activity concepts<lb/>
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Elmer Erber (Technology has<lb/>
been acting chair of Industrial and<lb/>
Technical Education for some<lb/>
time.<lb/>
UNISEX LTD. md<lb/>
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Offering "A Totally New Concept" with: <lb/>
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Indoor Suntans<lb/>
Hairstyling<lb/>
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(CPS) ? The campus herpes<lb/>
epidemic has subsided, but that<lb/>
news is mitigated by "alarming"<lb/>
increases in eating disorders,<lb/>
tepresslMk. anil ?Jrinr accordnx,<lb/>
to reports given at the recent<lb/>
American College<lb/>
transmits diseases on col 2e ,h?P ?may haVe aba,ed amon8<lb/>
campuses in no? h gh as in It emin'8'03"0 suicide'<lb/>
H.hougn ,he for ?rr.aetera?rarfrrOCte,ed<lb/>
Rdne"s dal?" "i, S ? T8 ??"?S<lb/>
possible there could be a dec eae H ' V-udeiU health Pro"<lb/>
whicn colleges-ha-vVbiarred Wffii-?5?S "<lb/>
w?h a big brush Clifford PaXcker ' PhyS1C'a" There,s ?" question that<lb/>
Kemer, a physician at the Univer- On the orhr h?nA  eatln8 disorders ? such as suicide<lb/>
sny ofRochester, told the Georgia "more students could'simpfv be h3 "erv0sa and bulimi- - taSSJSj<lb/>
State Un.vers.ty student paper last going of f campus for nerpTtreat- bKO?  S,Uden' heal,h le?e ?"d?'s<lb/>
ment <lb/>
issues Dilley says.<lb/>
Anorexia victims, of course,<lb/>
slowly starve themselves to death<lb/>
in obsessive attempts to lose<lb/>
weight, while bulimia sufferers<lb/>
gorge themselves with food and<lb/>
Association (AChX annJaf co KoLHF EKE suicide 55S?F<lb/>
vention in Atlanta, Ga. ?L? Sl?sUcs. supporting and eatina disorder, Jf?? ?J?.TCe the.mselves to vomit.<lb/>
"The full area of sexually<lb/>
transmitted diseases is one in<lb/>
However, "suicide is our big-<lb/>
gest and most threatening con-<lb/>
cern among college students, ac-<lb/>
cording University of Washington<lb/>
physician Gordon Bergy<lb/>
Suicide is still the second<lb/>
eading cause of death among col-<lb/>
Tan (<lb/>
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RINCCaDTCWERS<lb/>
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Serving the East Carotin campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, .??,?<lb/>
GREO RlDEOUT. ???, fittor<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, ?. ?, j.T. Pietrzak. ?? ?m?<lb/>
Randy Mews, &amp; Anthony Martin, ???? Manattr<lb/>
Tina Maroschak, w ?? Dalene Sippel. ? a,<lb/>
Bill Austin, cm. ?, LlNDA Vizena, a ??ic?<lb/>
June 28, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Jackson<lb/>
Let's Not Go Diplomating Again<lb/>
At one point last year we said<lb/>
Jesse Jackson would take votes<lb/>
from Walter Mondale and make<lb/>
the nomination process a tougher<lb/>
fight. Well, that happened, but<lb/>
what we didn't see was the<lb/>
theatrics and vigor Jackson would<lb/>
bring to the bland Democratic<lb/>
nomination process. Yet, now it<lb/>
seems he's gone a bit too far.<lb/>
We applaud him for being the<lb/>
first black to seriously attempt a<lb/>
run for the presidency, although<lb/>
his stand on the issues was a bit<lb/>
murky and naive. But, as far as his<lb/>
going places, such as Syria and<lb/>
now Cuba ? well, that's a bit<lb/>
much, even for a politician.<lb/>
Jackson thinks he's helping, but<lb/>
be better think again. A private<lb/>
citizen has no right to be preten-<lb/>
ding to conduct official business<lb/>
with other heads of state. His<lb/>
grandstanding seems to be part<lb/>
politics and part ego, but it's most-<lb/>
ly bad for the United States. Any<lb/>
contact with other nations that has<lb/>
anything to do with relations bet-<lb/>
ween the two countries should be<lb/>
conducted by an official represen-<lb/>
tative of our country, not by so-<lb/>
meone who wants his name in the<lb/>
papers.<lb/>
A second point is he should<lb/>
especially not be galloping off to<lb/>
countries that the United States<lb/>
does not even recognize<lb/>
diplomatically. Cuba and its com-<lb/>
munist government are using<lb/>
Jackson for publicity in the United<lb/>
States. What they want portrayed<lb/>
is "hey, look we are really nice<lb/>
guys we know better ? but does<lb/>
Jackson?<lb/>
Why? Why does he do such<lb/>
things? We believe it's an exten-<lb/>
sion of his ego and his little<lb/>
knowledge of world affairs. Does<lb/>
he really believe in the fairy tale<lb/>
world he yearns for if all his posi-<lb/>
tions on the issues come to pass.<lb/>
Or is it just a way to say, "I'm for<lb/>
anything that isn't mainstream<lb/>
Or is it a way to be a part of history<lb/>
and massage his ego.<lb/>
We wish Jackson would stick to<lb/>
his campaign and keep his nose out<lb/>
of world affairs. If and when the<lb/>
voters elect him president, then he<lb/>
can go to Cuba or wherever ? but<lb/>
take a seat for now Jesse.<lb/>
VP Line<lb/>
Brains Waste Money<lb/>
Back when I was a magazine editor, I<lb/>
tried unsucessfully to persuade a promi-<lb/>
nent writer to conduct an experiment and<lb/>
write an article about it: How many times<lb/>
over the course of six months could he get<lb/>
a West German foundation to fly him to<lb/>
Europe for a conference?<lb/>
The Germans, understandably eager to<lb/>
reassure and characteristically literal-<lb/>
minded, have a wild passion for financing<lb/>
conferences, institues, exchanges,<lb/>
fellowships, toga parties, whatever,<lb/>
dedicated to freedom, democracy, inter-<lb/>
national understanding, Atlantic unity<lb/>
and suchlike values. Much of the money,<lb/>
about $150 million a year, is funneled by<lb/>
the government itself through founda-<lb/>
tions run by the major political parties,<lb/>
and thence out into the ether.<lb/>
In a speech to the British Parliament<lb/>
two years ago, President Reagan praised<lb/>
the West German world. Who is going to<lb/>
argue with that?<lb/>
Congress obUgingly created the Na-<lb/>
tional Endowment for Democracy, an<lb/>
"independent" organization (exempt, for<lb/>
example, from the Freedom of Informa-<lb/>
tion Act) to receive government money<lb/>
and pass it on to private groups. Two<lb/>
months ago, the Endowment started dol-<lb/>
ing out its first $18 million: large chunks<lb/>
to subsidiaries of the AFL-CIO, the U.S.<lb/>
Chamber of Commerce, the Democratic<lb/>
and Republican parties, and smaller bits<lb/>
to other groups.<lb/>
All was going swimmingly, with $31<lb/>
million in prospect for next year, when<lb/>
the House of Representatives on May 31<lb/>
unexpectedly cut that down to $0. The<lb/>
cause seems to have been a newspaper<lb/>
report that the AFL-CIO had spent<lb/>
$20,000 of endowment money in support<lb/>
of the victorious candidate in the May 6<lb/>
presidential election in Panama.<lb/>
"It would be embarrassing to the<lb/>
United States' if this came out, said a<lb/>
(temporarily) secret cable from our am-<lb/>
bassador there. Endowment officials have<lb/>
launched an urgent campaign around<lb/>
Washington to get their money back.<lb/>
One document they're distributing lists<lb/>
some of the endowment's proposed good<lb/>
works. A Washington foundation would<lb/>
get $50,000 to conduct a "comprehensive<lb/>
study" of the readership of American<lb/>
books in the Third World, and produce<lb/>
"a comprehensive package for action<lb/>
The "Committee for a Community of<lb/>
Democracies" would get $73,000 to<lb/>
finance a "preliminary meeting" to "con-<lb/>
sider proposals and make recommenda-<lb/>
tions" for "establishment of an Interna-<lb/>
tional Institute" to promote democracy.<lb/>
This is not to be confused with another<lb/>
"Institute for Democracy to be<lb/>
established with $249,000 a year to "con-<lb/>
duct seminars" in Washington and (I love<lb/>
this) to distribute articles by "100 leading<lb/>
European intellectuals" to "1,000 in-<lb/>
fluential media representatives No<lb/>
grants to the media representatives to read<lb/>
these articles.<lb/>
The world needs more human rftuts<lb/>
and more peace. The world does nu eed<lb/>
a Center for Human Rights and Peace<lb/>
Look up "Center" in the D.C. phone<lb/>
book if you don't believe me. A Free<lb/>
Afghanistan University will not produce a<lb/>
free Afghanistan. And giving money to<lb/>
the Andrei Sakharov Institute of<lb/>
Washington, D.C, is not the same thing<lb/>
as giving money to Andrei Sakharov.<lb/>
What we have here is a pork barrel for<lb/>
intellectuals. Money for study grants, for<lb/>
travel, for conferences and especially for<lb/>
layers of administration ? as the govern-<lb/>
ment gives money to the endowment,<lb/>
which gives it to a foundation, which<lb/>
gives it to an institute to fund a fellowship<lb/>
program. Jobs for the boys, as Mayor<lb/>
Daley used to say.<lb/>
The fact that most of its money will be<lb/>
squandered is only one flaw in the endow-<lb/>
ment. The other flaw is conceptual. It's<lb/>
the money that's not squandered. Pro-<lb/>
moting American values in the world is a<lb/>
perfectly legitimate function of govern-<lb/>
ment, but we already have several govern-<lb/>
ment agencies doing that, such as the<lb/>
USIA. More power to them. The<lb/>
hypocritical, squeamish and ultimately<lb/>
futile idea behind the endowment is that<lb/>
the U.S. government can finance certain<lb/>
activities and yet somehow not be<lb/>
associated with them. The Panama<lb/>
episode shows that this won't work. Nor<lb/>
should it.<lb/>
In using government funds to meddle in<lb/>
a foreign election, the AFL-CIO was not<lb/>
exceeding its mandate. It was doing exact-<lb/>
ly what endowment grantees are supposed<lb/>
to do. Whether Reagan is aware of it or<lb/>
not, the West German program he ad-<lb/>
mires so much, the one the endowment is<lb/>
modeled on, is itself modeled on the ef-<lb/>
forts of the Socialist International to en-<lb/>
courage mutual support among social<lb/>
democratic parties around the world. The<lb/>
inherent assumption is that class interests<lb/>
cross national boundaries.<lb/>
As a journalist, I anticipate an unen-<lb/>
ding bounty of embarrassing revelations<lb/>
if the endowment is revived. As a tax-<lb/>
payer, though, I wonder by what logic I<lb/>
am obligated to help fund the business<lb/>
establishment's choice in foreign elec-<lb/>
tions. And if this is our new theory of<lb/>
democracy, shouldn't we repeal our own<lb/>
law against political contributions from<lb/>
foreigners so that other governments can<lb/>
finance candidates in American elections?<lb/>
Or is the theory actually that we can do<lb/>
unto other people's elections, but they<lb/>
can't do unto ours?<lb/>
An operation that is not accountable to<lb/>
the democratic process here and contemp-<lb/>
tuous of the democratic process abroad is<lb/>
no way to promote democracy. This is not<lb/>
naive fastidiousness. It's practical sense.<lb/>
Of course there are foreign elections<lb/>
where democratic forces are contending<lb/>
against undemocratic elements which<lb/>
hope to make this election the last. If the<lb/>
anti-democrats are getting help from out-<lb/>
side, a good case can be made that the<lb/>
democrats ? all the democrats ? should<lb/>
get help too.<lb/>
I was walking down the street minding<lb/>
my own business when I passed the<lb/>
"Mondale for President" headquarters<lb/>
building. There was a long line out<lb/>
front, and I asked a man what was going<lb/>
on.<lb/>
"The candidate is interviewing people<lb/>
to be his vice president he replied.<lb/>
"What did he do ? put an ad in the<lb/>
paper?" I asked.<lb/>
"Not exactly. But he put out word to<lb/>
all the leaders of the unions, women and<lb/>
minority groups that he'd talk to anyone<lb/>
who wanted the job. I heard about it<lb/>
from my cousin who works with<lb/>
'Hispanic Joggers for Mondale "<lb/>
"I didn't know Mondale had time to<lb/>
see everyone who wanted to be vice<lb/>
president<lb/>
"He has nothing else to do until the<lb/>
July convention. By interviewing vice<lb/>
presidential candidates he can keep his<lb/>
name in the paper. You want to get in<lb/>
line?"<lb/>
"It looks awfully long<lb/>
"That's what I thought, but it moves<lb/>
pretty fast. Every once in a while a<lb/>
volunteer brings out coffee and<lb/>
doughnuts so it isn't as bad as vou<lb/>
think<lb/>
I had nothing to do for the afternoon<lb/>
so I went to the end of the line. There<lb/>
was a woman senior citizen in front of<lb/>
Family Fun?<lb/>
OfFu<lb/>
me.<lb/>
"You going to go for it?" I asked her<lb/>
"Why not?" she said. "He's going to<lb/>
need a woman on the ticket, and he also<lb/>
needs the senior citizen vote. I could be a<lb/>
twofer<lb/>
"Do you think you're up to being vice<lb/>
president of the United States?"<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
"As far as I can tell, a vice president's<lb/>
main function is to go to funerals, and I<lb/>
go to a lot of funerals<lb/>
"I understand the vice president also<lb/>
serves on the National Security<lb/>
Council<lb/>
"I thought it was the Social Security<lb/>
Council she said. "That was one of<lb/>
the reasons I came down for the job<lb/>
"Not to worry I assured her. "You<lb/>
have to go along with the president on<lb/>
national security anyway, so you just<lb/>
agree with everything he says<lb/>
"I hear the job pays pretty good<lb/>
"You don't get what you would as<lb/>
vice president of General Motors, but<lb/>
you won't starve to death<lb/>
"Well, that's better than being<lb/>
Social Security<lb/>
on<lb/>
Two hours later I was escorted into<lb/>
the candidate's office. He was surround-<lb/>
ed by advisers.<lb/>
He shook my hand and told me to<lb/>
take a seat. "What can vou add to mv<lb/>
ticket?" he asked. ' y<lb/>
"Well, sir, the way I see it the only<lb/>
way you can beat Reagan is if you have<lb/>
the media behind you. If you make a<lb/>
newspaperman your running mate, I can<lb/>
deliver CBS, ABC, NBC - and George<lb/>
Will.<lb/>
Mondale seemed interested. "Are you<lb/>
sure?"<lb/>
"I have the Eastern Establishment<lb/>
media m my pocket I told him.<lb/>
"We've been dying to have one of our<lb/>
own in the White House for years<lb/>
 "Well, it's something to think about.<lb/>
I'm very impressed with your qualifica-<lb/>
tions. Leave your name with my<lb/>
secretary and we'll get back to you<lb/>
"Thank you, sir I said and left.<lb/>
I met the little old lady out on the<lb/>
sidewalk. "How did you do?"<lb/>
She said, "He was very impressed<lb/>
with my qualifications and told me he'd<lb/>
get back to me. Do you think he means<lb/>
it?"<lb/>
"I'm sure he does. But I wouldn't give<lb/>
up your Social Security check until you<lb/>
see what happens in San Francisco<lb/>
?)1M. to. AafttaiTTa?S?a?cate<lb/>
'Hey, Let's Go To The Movies'<lb/>
By GREG RlDEOUT<lb/>
An abundance of new movies is one of<lb/>
summer's gifts to America. Each year,<lb/>
enough cinema is produced to keep even<lb/>
the most rabid of moviegoers happy,<lb/>
and even I never get a chance to see theni<lb/>
all.<lb/>
But, what I'm here to talk about is the<lb/>
movie experience. For instance, take the<lb/>
average American family getting ready<lb/>
tosctout on a Saturday to catch a flick.<lb/>
Viewpoint<lb/>
"Come on junior, your father, sister<lb/>
and I are ready to go. Shut the TV off<lb/>
and get in the car<lb/>
"Aw, Mom Junior moaned, "can't<lb/>
I finish watching 'The Incredible<lb/>
HulkScoobie Doo Comedy Massacre<lb/>
show I never see the end. You guys<lb/>
always want to take us to some dumb<lb/>
movie on account of this family stuff<lb/>
"It's fun to go to the movies Mom<lb/>
said cheerily. "Just the four of us over<lb/>
to the new Cinema 24. Gee, junior, I bet<lb/>
some nice movie like Bambi or<lb/>
something is playing with that many<lb/>
places to show them<lb/>
"Mom, have you been forgetting to<lb/>
take your medication lately. Geez ?<lb/>
Bambi ? what kind of pervert do you<lb/>
think I am<lb/>
Six-year-old Molly and Mr. Smith<lb/>
were waiting impatiently in the car.<lb/>
Finally, Junior and Mom came out of<lb/>
the house and got in the family's station<lb/>
wagon, a wood-paneled suburban job.<lb/>
"All right everyone Dad said in a<lb/>
fatherly tone, "fasten your seat belts.<lb/>
It's time to roll<lb/>
"I want to see Body Heat. I hear it's<lb/>
a, like, bitchin' movie. I mean like soo<lb/>
cool Molly screamed.<lb/>
"We'll decide when we get there. Now<lb/>
be quiet and<lb/>
"Yeah, shut up Molly Junior yell-<lb/>
ed. "I want to see Star Trek IV ? Cap-<lb/>
tain Kirk Saves The World And Opens A<lb/>
Bakery On Akair VI<lb/>
"Now, now, children. We're going to<lb/>
see a nice movie. Now behave so your<lb/>
father can concentrate on his driving.<lb/>
You know how he gets nervous on the<lb/>
expressway ever since he flipped the<lb/>
wagon on our way home from<lb/>
Scarf ace"<lb/>
Junior and Molly weren't listening.<lb/>
They were getting tired of this Saturday<lb/>
afternoon going to the movie stuff. Both<lb/>
had put on Walkmans and were break<lb/>
dancin' in the back of the car when the<lb/>
car suddenly stopped abruptly, throwing<lb/>
the kids into the front seat.<lb/>
"Well, honey, kids, we're here<lb/>
"Like wow Molly said. "This new<lb/>
Cinema 24 is like, you know, like sooo<lb/>
VEPmTHAT WAS SURE SOME<lb/>
HORSE RACE VOU m M,<lb/>
MR.MONPALE. SAMNT<lb/>
WMfcJMBEHINPUS?<lb/>
vmi<lb/>
tSi<lb/>
Ilium<lb/>
A<lb/>
w<lb/>
coool. Like, look at all the bitchin'<lb/>
movies we can choose from. Ooh<lb/>
"Oh, Molly dear, I wish you'd stop<lb/>
talking like that Mom said absent-<lb/>
mindedly. "Ever since we went to see<lb/>
Valley Girls Invade Iowa you haven't<lb/>
been the same.<lb/>
"Mom, look what's playing ? Sex<lb/>
Kittens Of New York In 3-D ? let's see<lb/>
that Junior screamed.<lb/>
"No Dad said, although thinking<lb/>
that's exactly what he'd like to see.<lb/>
"we're either going to see Ghostbusters<lb/>
or Mr. Rogers Explains Oral Hygiene.<lb/>
Which one will it be gang?"<lb/>
"God, Mom, he's the one that's nuts,<lb/>
not you Junior said. "What's this Mr.<lb/>
Rogers shit. I'm staying in the lobby and<lb/>
playing video games if we see that<lb/>
"Like, uh, me, too Pops<lb/>
"Okay gang. We'll see Ghostbusters,<lb/>
but Junior take off those sunglasses<lb/>
before we go in ? and the Michael<lb/>
Jackson glove<lb/>
Dad paid the $25 for the four of them<lb/>
to see the latest comedy smash, and the<lb/>
family, after buying four tubs of pop-<lb/>
corn and six drinks, went in and took<lb/>
their seats.<lb/>
"I want to sit up front Junior said.<lb/>
"Like the front is soo bitchin So do<lb/>
"No Mom said, as she found a seat<lb/>
in the back and darted her eyes around<lb/>
to see if any Gremlins wen; there to at-<lb/>
tack her. "We have to sit in the back in<lb/>
case the film breaks and we need to go to<lb/>
the bathroom for some lemonade<lb/>
 Dad just rolled his eyes and thought,<lb/>
"Thank God, I'm getting some on the<lb/>
side from my secretary or I'd ao<lb/>
bonkers <lb/>
"Okay kids he said at last, "let's go<lb/>
ahead and humor ? I mesa ? be nice<lb/>
for Mom and sit back here<lb/>
"Ah, Dad Molly and Junior<lb/>
screamed. "Do we have to<lb/>
"Yes<lb/>
They did. During the movie, mom<lb/>
kept hiding her head and looking for<lb/>
free-floating vapors, but, finally, it was<lb/>
over.<lb/>
"That stunk "That was great<lb/>
"That was bitchin "I hope the mar-<lb/>
shmallow man doesn't come after us<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
"Wdl gang Dad said its he took a<lb/>
long draw on his pipe. (What's in the<lb/>
pipe with this group of people we can<lb/>
only guess.) "It's fun to go on a family<lb/>
outing to the movies. Boy, isn't America<lb/>
great. Can't wait till next week<lb/>
The core of the<lb/>
k<lb/>
The mt<lb/>
Sum<lb/>
. Oii<lb/>
On Monday, July 2. the<lb/>
haired orphan with the fJu,<lb/>
red dress and lovable mutt nj<lb/>
Sandy will come to Greenvi<lb/>
the East Carolina Su;<lb/>
Theatre production of<lb/>
blockbuster Broadway m<lb/>
for the entire family,<lb/>
Scheduled for a six night run<lb/>
2-7), the overture will begij<lb/>
8:15 p.m. in McGinnis Th<lb/>
corner of Fifth and Ea<lb/>
Streets.<lb/>
Jam-packed with tunes sue<lb/>
"Tomorrow "Easy Str<lb/>
and "You're Never Fully Dri<lb/>
tH<lb/>
' ??<lb/>
Annie and Sandy nose for<lb/>
a quick snapshot.<lb/>
History Of<lb/>
Skynyrd Bai<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Col<lb/>
Lynyrd Skynyrd forme<lb/>
Jacksonville, Florida during<lb/>
and named themselves for a<lb/>
school gym teacher who w<lb/>
quite hip to long hair.<lb/>
members playing on their<lb/>
release in 1973 included: R<lb/>
Van Zant, vocals; Gary<lb/>
Higton, guitar; Allen<lb/>
guitar; Bob Burns, drums;<lb/>
Powell, keyboards, and<lb/>
Wilkeson, bass.<lb/>
, While playing at an Atlant<lb/>
JMied Funocchio's, they<lb/>
heard by long-time musicia<lb/>
Cooper (who founded Bi<lb/>
Sweat &amp; Tears) and signed t<lb/>
??w Sound of the South labe<lb/>
Produced their debut album<lb/>
Sac ROCBJN. Page 6<lb/>
<pb facs="00057652_0005"/><lb/>
!XCUS?ME<lb/>
mm a<lb/>
un<lb/>
is later I was escorted into<lb/>
office. He was surround-<lb/>
 my hand and told me to<lb/>
 hat can you add to my<lb/>
he way I see it the only<lb/>
beat Reagan is if you have<lb/>
vh:nd you. If you make a<lb/>
ia" ?ur inning mate, I can<lb/>
ABC. NBC - and George<lb/>
eemed interested. "Are you<lb/>
the Eastern Establishment<lb/>
my pocket i Iold him<lb/>
en dying to have one of our<lb/>
white House for vears "<lb/>
I s something to think about<lb/>
ppressed with your qualifica-<lb/>
v? your name with my<lb/>
W we 11 get back to you<lb/>
J u. sir I said and"left<lb/>
NJntle old lady out on the<lb/>
THow did you do?"<lb/>
I. "He was very impressed<lb/>
la.canons and told me he'd<lb/>
me. Do you think he means<lb/>
he does. But I wouldn't give<lb/>
al Security check until you<lb/>
Movies'<lb/>
look at all the bitchin'<lb/>
i- -hoose from. Ooh<lb/>
1 V dear, I wish you'd stop<lb/>
I that Mom said absent-<lb/>
I tver since we went to see<lb/>
Invade Iowa you haven't<lb/>
le.<lb/>
ok what's playing ? Sex<lb/>
fe" York In 3-D - let's see<lb/>
pr screamed.<lb/>
ad said, although thinking<lb/>
l what he'd like to see<lb/>
?r going to see Ghostbusters<lb/>
irs Explains Oral Hygiene.<lb/>
nil it be gang?"<lb/>
m, he's the one that's nuts<lb/>
Nor said. "What's this Mr<lb/>
? m staying in the lobby and<lb/>
1 games if we see that<lb/>
-me, too Pops<lb/>
Pg. We'll see Ghostbusters,<lb/>
Jtake off those sunglasses<lb/>
o in - and the Michael<lb/>
fe.<lb/>
p $25 for the four of them<lb/>
lest comedy smash, and the<lb/>
buying four tubs of pop-<lb/>
drinks, went in and took<lb/>
I sit up front Junior said<lb/>
pom is soo bitchin So do<lb/>
said, as she found a seat<lb/>
id darted her eyes around<lb/>
lOremlins were there to at-<lb/>
 have to sit in the back in<lb/>
breaks and we need to go to<lb/>
I for some lemonade "<lb/>
plied his eyes and thought,<lb/>
?? ? m getting some on the<lb/>
secretary or I'd go<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
features<lb/>
ECU's Medical School<lb/>
?ge5<lb/>
Our Pride And Joy<lb/>
HyBERNADETTCHEARNE<lb/>
IT core of the School of Medicine rtm!? " . m<lb/>
 I i  ?"? ? " Medlcn. Sdenc BolldnT<lb/>
n? -M Pngnaa taph? mmdM Md 9ilJ<lb/>
PomcoieTHaoVS JTSl<lb/>
ndghbor-snegaivrbaTlosto?<lb/>
College to Greenville<lb/>
ChL?Wfarthe80'0 "P<lb/>
port their university.<lb/>
xa- d? thc existence of ECU'<lb/>
Medical School. U s<lb/>
The only medical school in<lb/>
Xta ?Vu Caro,ina th? ?" "<lb/>
one in the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system outside of Chapel<lb/>
MB. the ECU Med School is a<lb/>
o"?re,enaci'yandinga<lb/>
mschoo, charloTwodd<lb/>
iJ??1 k Dv orowbeatintt the<lb/>
CSS t? daWlUlg rUrai ren<lb/>
needed AS?nS? desately<lb/>
th? AJtnouh most experts<lb/>
XTrelaiStthCtW0n<lb/>
uoway related, a vote against the<lb/>
" Kh"l looked liil a vote<lb/>
against preventive health care for<lb/>
Members of ECU's first cla? nf<lb/>
0?J?l"fb?<lb/>
years ago, are just now finishing<lb/>
ST N 3t h?tPitaJs ac?<lb/>
Sve ther,h?SeT the ?? tht<lb/>
gave them their education<lb/>
bummer Theatre To Perform<lb/>
On-Monday, Juiy 2, &amp; ? VllUlIIl<lb/>
But no one can deny that with<lb/>
or without them, the medTci<lb/>
school already has caused?<lb/>
"inWtK in the regn-<lb/>
m 175, there were 75 phvsi-<lb/>
Wmiani Pi" Coum dS,<lb/>
William Laupus saki. "There an.<lb/>
now 250 to 260 doctors in t"e<lb/>
SSg 10? ???. in the<lb/>
,?5Cu tile medical school was<lb/>
wtabhshed, Laupus said, infant<lb/>
?Siy in Castern No?h<lb/>
Carolina were among the highest<lb/>
? the country. Cancer, heart<lb/>
disease and diabetes rates ??<lb/>
weU above state and national<lb/>
ZTTgely because <lb/>
tive health care was neither<lb/>
available nor sought.<lb/>
"Those rates were comDletelv<lb/>
But the medical school changed<lb/>
that. Through its cooperative<lb/>
association with Pitt County<lb/>
shoTt H?Tita' the medi<lb/>
school brought the expertise<lb/>
c?eSun7t f? bCgin m inSve<lb/>
care unit for premature babies<lb/>
cTeltedn neWb?rns- ft -S<lb/>
created programs to identify<lb/>
women whose pregnancies would<lb/>
be high-risk and get them special<lb/>
HnrT 3lHCare t0 prevem comK<lb/>
tions and premature births<lb/>
It brought cancer treatment to<lb/>
??, Sl?u f0r the flrst te. Pa-<lb/>
tients who used to travel to<lb/>
Chapel Hill or Durham for treat<lb/>
?S can ?et it close to home. The<lb/>
third and final phase of the cance?<lb/>
center will open at the hosS<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Also this summer, open heart<lb/>
SJ2 J?"rbe availabk inTe"<lb/>
East for the first time, through the<lb/>
hospital and medical school Cor<lb/>
onary catheterization, used to<lb/>
ortZC and trMt mm9 heart<lb/>
problems, came to the region<lb/>
through the school. &amp;<lb/>
The school also is making conti-<lb/>
nuing education more available to<lb/>
doctors who serve the region<lb/>
helping them abreast of health<lb/>
care developments It also con-<lb/>
ducts programs on importance of<lb/>
regular medical car<lb/>
Although these specialties and<lb/>
services have been a boon to the<lb/>
region the school's primary<lb/>
responsibility is to provide e<lb/>
region s residents with personal<lb/>
Physicians. Primary healthcare -<lb/>
including family medicine practi-<lb/>
tioners, gynecologists, obstetri-<lb/>
cians and pediatriciais - was tne<lb/>
batte cry of those who fought for<lb/>
the school. It remains so today<lb/>
It would just boggle your<lb/>
mind the percentage of people we<lb/>
tike to have a personal<lb/>
Physician said Jam? "ones<lb/>
r-amily Medicine. The department<lb/>
2y ?? ?flW bymeSS<lb/>
school faculty, that offers the<lb/>
drorrfce35 a nei?hood<lb/>
n "eU over 50 percent of the<lb/>
people we see are in that<lb/>
ZX?nes said "<lb/>
ment climes before, but never to<lb/>
someplace where they could<lb/>
always see the doctor. When we<lb/>
first opened our doom, we lerl<lb/>
See Medical, Page 6.<lb/>
lai"onda. July 2, the curly<lb/>
haired orphan with the flaming<lb/>
Sand.rdl?Vab,emu?S<lb/>
SffiS T6 ? GreenviIle jn<lb/>
Theatre nrnHr?na Summer<lb/>
ineatre production of the<lb/>
blockbuster Broadway mus cal<lb/>
11 i , entlre far?Jiy.<lb/>
2Sc7hedforasix night run (July<lb/>
III' n ? ?VeUre ! be?in at<lb/>
81' P.m. in McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
corner of Fifth nJt p631'<lb/>
Streets. Md Eastern<lb/>
-d "You're'NevefFully<lb/>
Without a Smile K<lb/>
ed on the famrus ???<lb/>
character LitUe Orphan Annfe"<lb/>
The show opens with ll-yold<lb/>
YL f?Und,in? in a N?w<lb/>
MTsks?rPHngerUnbym<lb/>
miss Hannigan (Janice<lb/>
Schreiber), who hates al? Jh!<lb/>
??o?<lb/>
cheon, Warbucks (ck McCut-<lb/>
cheon) who yearns to adopt her<lb/>
but nobly joins in search for her<lb/>
real parents. The search becomes<lb/>
ndDRd'aTfe l? lines of young ladies<lb/>
Goverment traipse up FVfth SShT815" than fiv'<lb/>
Avenue and down gg g weight of<lb/>
Hit<lb/>
umr ewe' ayre a.cr' womankind<lb/>
rea'che?1 Hous.e the show age from 1ZT ,h ? ,<lb/>
reaches a glonous climax on rhnr ? 2 The 8'rls of the<lb/>
Christmas morning. maX 0n S?Luvs ?re six (Susan Bramley!<lb/>
-tumes, a STpAft ? fe. JuharS'<lb/>
one of musical VafS 22<lb/>
Oin' 171 luommates-in-misery at the<lb/>
New York Municipal Orphanaae u<lb/>
"Anita ?? r Vu ? 31C s caned<lb/>
Anita, in their review of the<lb/>
Broadway opening, Newsday<lb/>
said, iwisajoy, a delight a<lb/>
bonanza and ; boon to 2<lb/>
woitiSeCagUe " fire and<lb/>
a Grammy, five Outer CrScs SSa V for Tuesda;<lb/>
Circle and seven Drama Dei avShu? (JuIy -7), are<lb/>
Awards. It has generated a nSjor SteGtaH " pur "aied a?<lb/>
motion picture starring Carol thmnlh cL Theatre, Monday<lb/>
Burnett and Albert Finney, a r?sh fS'JP ? ?4<lb/>
of dolls, a series of books and W-?9a " by ??<lb/>
li? ran four years on Broad-<lb/>
3V fOmaA or-<lb/>
Pict? 9s New Release<lb/>
Lacks Original Lyrics<lb/>
"he said at last, "let's go<lb/>
T,?KAmean be nice<lb/>
sit back here<lb/>
?" Molly and Junior<lb/>
o we have to<lb/>
During the movie, mom<lb/>
er head and looking for<lb/>
apors, but, finally, it was<lb/>
 That was great "<lb/>
chin Ihopethemar-<lb/>
' doesn't come after us<lb/>
Dad said as he took a<lb/>
his pipe. (What's in the<lb/>
group of people we can<lb/>
t s fun to go on a family<lb/>
ovres. Boy, isn't America<lb/>
it till next week<lb/>
Aiurie and Sandy nose for<lb/>
a quick snapshot.<lb/>
History Of<lb/>
Skynyrd Band<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Staff Wifer<lb/>
Lynyrd Skynyrd formed in<lb/>
Jacksonville, Florida during 1966<lb/>
and named themselves for a high<lb/>
school gym teacher who wasn't<lb/>
quite hip to long hair. The<lb/>
members playing on their first<lb/>
release in 1973 included: Ronnie<lb/>
van Zant, vocals; Gary Ross-<lb/>
?n?ton, guitar; Allen Collins<lb/>
guitar; Bob Burns, drums; Billy<lb/>
P?weU, keyboards, and Leon<lb/>
wH?son, bass.<lb/>
While playing at an Atlanta bar<lb/>
named Funocchio's, they were<lb/>
neard by long-time musician Al<lb/>
cooper (who founded Blood.<lb/>
2S Tcars ?? signed to his<lb/>
new Sound of the South label. He<lb/>
Produced their debut album Pro-<lb/>
See ROCKIN Page 6.<lb/>
ByDAVroWTTHERINGTON<lb/>
After years of recording<lb/>
obscure dance albums, the flam<lb/>
bouyant Prince finally scored with<lb/>
1999, one of the hottest soul<lb/>
albums of 1983. Songs like-Little<lb/>
Red Corvette" and "Delirious"<lb/>
S?e,?nnCeua name,<lb/>
and today he is probably the<lb/>
closest threat to Michael<lb/>
Jackson's throne Mlcriael<lb/>
HS' " the anticipa-<lb/>
non built around "When Doves<lb/>
97: n11 admit I'm disap-<lb/>
thZm general- For one<lb/>
thing, lt isn't the dance album<lb/>
everyone is expecting. It starts Z<lb/>
famihar enough, with Prince's<lb/>
narraaonVCT-syntnesizer leading<lb/>
rap which keeps you snapping<lb/>
your fingers. Then, out of<lb/>
nowhere comes this absurd heaw-<lb/>
metal guitar solo, totally destroy,<lb/>
mg the song's melody. '<lb/>
The next song, "Take Me With<lb/>
U, is a tender love song with sur-<lb/>
prisingly subdued lyrics that ac-<lb/>
tually work - if for no other<lb/>
reason than to prove that Prince<lb/>
can write a touching song without<lb/>
direct sexuaJ references. But, this<lb/>
S5?!to a fluke as "Darling<lb/>
Nikki finds our star up to his old<lb/>
cks: "I knew a girl named<lb/>
NikkiI guess u could say she was<lb/>
a sex fiendI met her in a hotel<lb/>
lobbymasurbating with a<lb/>
magazine This is just a rewrite<lb/>
of anything from his previous<lb/>
25 and' amusing as it may<lb/>
&amp;?&amp;rwears thin<lb/>
The only time this record really<lb/>
"WlSnrL thc hit siney<lb/>
JJ ves Cry which stand<lb/>
?P to anything from 1999<lb/>
Pnnce's vocals are emotional the<lb/>
song is well-written, and you'et<lb/>
wantefroJ!atm?recoy<lb/>
want from a Prince song? Unfor<lb/>
tunately hearing this gfeat son<lb/>
previously only makes the rest 0f<lb/>
the album pale in comparison.<lb/>
I consider most of the son?<lb/>
throwaways written as filler ?S<lb/>
the movie, which may be the<lb/>
whole problem with this alhumo<lb/>
begin with. For the soundtrack<lb/>
ronunel J? " ?<lb/>
ray of tunes to accompany the rZ<lb/>
jure, but his own lintatfons ? a<lb/>
songwriter are painfully apDJSm<lb/>
m those damned ZSLSSST<lb/>
colons he takes througSomtS<lb/>
These songs may work well nn<lb/>
film, but on record they're w<lb/>
m I Would Die 4 U " PHn<lb/>
TSLnT. n? a manI'm not<lb/>
a manI am something that vouM<lb/>
never understandTl wess he<lb/>
knows what he's talkinf at,ut<lb/>
after coming from a mJtt?111'<lb/>
like 199Tfo a ?e?rmrP1C?<lb/>
uneven qUahtyasd?f SUCh<lb/>
alh?? PurpU R(dn soundtrack<lb/>
album, as well as 7990.<lb/>
available at the Record Bar ?<lb/>
Carohna East Mall and AeWaza"<lb/>
tPhotm9mwltkhkmKW<lb/>
PpkX4h.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057652_0006"/><lb/>
HEJASTCAROUNIAN<lb/>
Medical III<lb/>
School ?"?<lb/>
Growing<lb/>
Continued From Page 5<lb/>
absolutely inundated. Now th,<lb/>
5 hool has drawn In ?<lb/>
7 ?f Physicians who serve that<lb/>
demand and have taken the<lb/>
pressure off us "<lb/>
par? ofECU Medical &amp;h?l was<lb/>
EfT ? a, natlonw?demovement<lb/>
for medical schools founded on<lb/>
oaid6 ?TfhPri<lb/>
dcvelU ites?, ZZ?<lb/>
2 2S"1 ?hooh reS to<lb/>
P, ? -et the<lb/>
"Family medicine generally has<lb/>
Rockin' The South<lb/>
f MHIbuI ?.m.<lb/>
I Ml<lb/>
The original members of Lvnvr cl, ?????-???b-<lb/>
CO Rosso, ???,? ?? ??? U- ?? B?,y PowdI, ???? Vm <lb/>
Advertise With<lb/>
The East Carolinian<lb/>
ComUmmeU Fro? Pe 5<lb/>
7 Strawberry Alann a<lb/>
967)CenTh PcPP?n?nts "<lb/>
stettL ?  , r,y P0P"lnty<lb/>
stemmed largely from the use of<lb/>
three guitarists, which w? a<lb/>
novelty at the time. The nine<lb/>
nmiute "Free Bird" became <lb/>
22"?mte: Tucsdy Gone?<lb/>
and Gimme Three Steps" heloed<lb/>
Robert n?rofS,nte TST<lb/>
Whos Quadrophenia tour the<lb/>
follow-up, Second Helping ' Jt<lb/>
to twelfth and plating in ??<lb/>
and included number eht<lb/>
anrn;1?<lb/>
soon became heaKf. Uter m<lb/>
the year Artimus Pyie ???<lb/>
Burns and Ed Km? 'cp,acea<lb/>
before NoWF Jjg?"J<lb/>
mn.h and included ? ?<lb/>
"Saturday Night Special a nan<lb/>
dgun protest scng In 29"?6<lb/>
Gimme Back My Outlets sold less<lb/>
but included the mildly popular u<lb/>
tie cut and "Double Trouble "<lb/>
Steve Games then .omed, return-<lb/>
ing the group to a three-guitar<lb/>
lineup for the live One More from<lb/>
the Road double aJbum in 1977<lb/>
Sales went to a new high as the<lb/>
record went to ninth place and<lb/>
platinum status. It was recorded<lb/>
at Atlanta's Fox Theatre and in-<lb/>
cluded a live version of "Free<lb/>
Bird" which proved its durability<lb/>
by hitting the top forty again<lb/>
Sfcw Survivors was the lar<lb/>
album of newlv rr?. h?<lb/>
released ZrT L ded matenal<lb/>
released before disaster struck It<lb/>
occame one of their best seller<lb/>
with "What's Your Name<lb/>
nth along th "I Kriow A<lb/>
J2. and the '?nic "That<lb/>
,nTClJ MJUSt " the ? -asgc<lb/>
S 107 uSSlSS,ppi 0n October<lb/>
Ws' istJrs<lb/>
. Slster Cassie (a band back r<lb/>
singer), and others. Funher ironv<lb/>
was disDlav h? u ? , ,ron<lb/>
uispjayed by the inclusion of<lb/>
a survival k t" and rhe aiK<lb/>
replaced. subsequently<lb/>
Technology At Work<lb/>
been shut out of the older schools,<lb/>
which focus more on research "<lb/>
sZn.SaKd,KIf?neoftheexisting<lb/>
.l-ha?-becn Willin8 to evo'vf<lb/>
into this kind of school, there<lb/>
wouW have been no need for us "<lb/>
We like to think we're the<lb/>
people's medical school. Our pro-<lb/>
gram's designed to keep in tcSS<lb/>
with the grassroots. If it ever<lb/>
changes, loses touch with the peo-<lb/>
down"en WC ?Ught t0 close<lb/>
rltHv .J?nes said North<lb/>
Carolina s taxpayers already have<lb/>
EC?rMdHthfcinVestmentthe<lb/>
fcCU Medical School.<lb/>
k theydidn't8et anything else<lb/>
but the tremendous improvement<lb/>
in this region's health that has<lb/>
happened since this school open-<lb/>
ed, they got their monev's<lb/>
worth "uiiey s<lb/>
Re?fT,ed W"h thC ?- ?f Grboro News &amp;<lb/>
S A I D<lb/>
r?<lb/>
I C H<lb/>
SHOP<lb/>
THIS WEEK SPECIAL<lb/>
WHOLE SUBS<lb/>
Subs No. 1 Horn &amp; Cheese<lb/>
No. 10 Turkey &amp; Cheese<lb/>
For Only $2.69<lb/>
"your Favorite Beer Is Now A vailab,e<lb/>
752-2183<lb/>
??<lb/>
Expires Sundov July 1<lb/>
sf<lb/>
Read<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ATTENTION INCOMING FRESHME<lb/>
1 sm? ??,? wa ?, fmmmm<lb/>
MAINSTREAM<lb/>
Admission is Free!<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
8:30-11:00 p.m.<lb/>
ThfAcon?eTt ffl held in front of<lb/>
McndenhaU Student Center.<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
.<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
L MUSIC<lb/>
??U-i<lb/>
TELEVISION<lb/>
TJSDA Y NIGHT<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
Including Skates<lb/>
6:30-10:00<lb/>
16ft SCREEN<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/>
ffLoverstake your<lb/>
PickofThePfe<lb/>
East Carolina's Party Center<lb/>
417Cotanche St.<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
758-4591<lb/>
5a?ft!tSt5s?<lb/>
<lb/>
(AM You Can Eat) &amp; oo<lb/>
Dinner Buffet-5-?pm<lb/>
Mo Wed. $3.09<lb/>
(AH You Can Eat) $2.45<lb/>
HappyMour8DaUy.2ti5j)IIi-<lb/>
8 p.m. til closing<lb/>
Video Games Big Screen TV<lb/>
The Best Pizza In Town Cor ? Cofjn<lb/>
Hort1 Phone 758-6121 ,otnSt.<lb/>
Wed: OrtenlMion Pwly. $1.00 Adm. (18 ?? a ?? <lb/>
AU c??.55 0111:00 p.m. JKi d'$200)<lb/>
TbunCoBegeNile.$1.00Adm. (1?? Adm SI am<lb/>
All cm.55 . ?:?? p.m j5 f?<lb/>
S?B: Um" N" m ? ??? Adm. ?.00)<lb/>
 .05 draft while it lasts!<lb/>
Mon: Orientation Party-$1.00 Adm. (18 vrs Adm ?9 nm<lb/>
AU cans.55 til 11:00 p.m. &amp;????<lb/>
EARLY<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
The ECU football team face-<lb/>
PS ?,f Jhc lou8hest schedules u<lb/>
-school history this fall, and as <lb/>
Jesuit, assistant coaches are work<lb/>
ing ovenme to prepare for dJ<lb/>
opening of fall practice<lb/>
Third year Offensive Lin,<lb/>
Coach John Zernhelt hopes to u?<lb/>
the experience on this year's EC I<lb/>
team that won him three ACC<lb/>
championships while he was<lb/>
player at Man land. He ha<lb/>
Cotton Bowls, now he wouid<lb/>
toeturn to a bowl game Jl<lb/>
Zernhelt is optimistic about the<lb/>
upcoming season, but said ifsao-<lb/>
? t0 ?ugh t0 rePce All-<lb/>
America offensive guard Tern<lb/>
SSrif S 8?nna Uke a l0t Of<lb/>
character to even come close to<lb/>
matching Terry. He had so muc<lb/>
natural talent"<lb/>
to:hfzaihispiaers<lb/>
L I, fCeIs that thc offensive<lb/>
hne will oe stronger and deecer<lb/>
overall, with good depth a: each<lb/>
Position but is still uncertain<lb/>
who is going to fill the vacated<lb/>
positions.<lb/>
,?'tC don'r expect ?? freshmen<lb/>
to become staners Zernhelt ad-<lb/>
ded 'but there's always a<lb/>
possibility that they could see a lot<lb/>
of action. You can never rule<lb/>
anything out in this game<lb/>
Other offensive line starters<lb/>
that were lost to graduation in-<lb/>
Riggan Is<lb/>
Local Hero<lb/>
ByPETEFERNALD<lb/>
Women's volleyball plaver<lb/>
Tammy Riggan of Ehzabethtown<lb/>
NC was working at the White<lb/>
Lake pavilhon when someone said<lb/>
does anyone know CPR"<lb/>
Fortunately, Riggan had just<lb/>
taicen a course on CPR at ECU<lb/>
5dS2cdfidtorevivea2Sye<lb/>
, According to voileybaJ head<lb/>
coach Imogene TurnerT "Tfte<lb/>
unusual thing about the incident<lb/>
7? iat,CPR is n?nnallv per-<lb/>
formed for about io to 15<lb/>
pmutes " After that, the person<lb/>
is considered unrevivable<lb/>
But Riggan refused to give up<lb/>
Performing CPR for 35 ?nut?<lb/>
as a result, the man was revived<lb/>
by Riggan and taken to the<lb/>
hospital where he later mm<lb/>
reported in stable condition<lb/>
Lfi?" rsuffered three davs of<lb/>
result of her persistence to revive<lb/>
tiie man.<lb/>
Governor Jim Hunt made a<lb/>
S? Riggan Page g<lb/>
Orioles Oi<lb/>
Hey! Do you think Detroit is<lb/>
going to run away with the<lb/>
American League East crown?<lb/>
Thmk again. The Tigers may be<lb/>
out in front of second place<lb/>
to by nine game but watch<lb/>
behind?,??!? 5? k 12 Ses<lb/>
behind: the Baltimore Orioles<lb/>
ntLBlrds fe at e same pace<lb/>
n? were.Ia$t y" when thev<lb/>
won the division ude. Whv should<lb/>
anyone thmk they won't repeat<lb/>
the same feat? Well, the Birdiare<lb/>
wlrh KSOUn?a? last year' d<lb/>
wSn r djU?un of veteran<lb/>
Wayne Gross at third base, they<lb/>
2:? more stey come<lb/>
peptember, the month they usual-<lb/>
:itLVfidd?ut abcad of ? ?"? of<lb/>
l Wbl tbout Detroit? Fans<lb/>
fjjy the Tigs arc so far in front<lb/>
IaFI1 ?? y mey can blow it.<lb/>
AU they have to do is play .500 the<lb/>
re?r of the season. But the<lb/>
ading factor won't be how the<lb/>
?fs play; the story will be the<lb/>
Is sensational as usual August<lb/>
na September. And with the ad-<lb/>
aaon of Gross and their typically<lb/>
?2? Pitching and superb<lb/>
Jng (they lead the league in<lb/>
tk?ng percentage thus far), this<lb/>
should be a repeat of last.<lb/>
Pitching and fielding. That's<lb/>
nat wins ballgames. The Birds<lb/>
h ijUSt i?? dcP m competent<lb/>
juners: Scott McGregor, Mike<lb/>
an, Storm Davis and Mike<lb/>
-cker.<lb/>
roit, although leading the<lb/>
 in earned run average,<lb/>
11 have the proven late<lb/>
Pitchers. Of tlie Tigs staff,<lb/>
Jack Morris and Dan Petry<lb/>
TOwown consistency over a full<lb/>
?n. At the pace Morris is go-<lb/>
now, and excluding injuries<lb/>
"? had a sore arm recently), v<lb/>
sei<lb/>
onhj<lb/>
hitt<lb/>
aroii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057652_0007"/><lb/>
e South<lb/>
urdaj Night Special a han-<lb/>
i protest song. in io<lb/>
ime Hack My Bullets sold less<lb/>
included the mildlv popular ti-<lb/>
nt and "Double Trouble "<lb/>
? Games then joined, return-<lb/>
he group to a three-guitar<lb/>
' the live One More From<lb/>
d double album in 1977<lb/>
h went to a new high as the<lb/>
 ?ent to ninth place and<lb/>
I Ii was recorded<lb/>
v Theatre and in-<lb/>
version of "Free<lb/>
 its durability<lb/>
rort) again.<lb/>
s the last<lb/>
led material<lb/>
uck. It<lb/>
Name" at<lb/>
Know a<lb/>
m was go-<lb/>
kynyrd's jet<lb/>
ber<lb/>
Gaines,<lb/>
? hack-up<lb/>
Further iron)<lb/>
 inclusion of<lb/>
J the album<lb/>
? j<lb/>
? ibseque<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
E?tant Coaches Anticinatino rTi<lb/>
a?5 ssffiaw &amp;Mt? ?"uipuiinz rail<lb/>
ASHMEN I<lb/>
N:<lb/>
1<lb/>
'<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
ii<lb/>
loll<lb/>
oo<lb/>
$1.00)<lb/>
.00)<lb/>
By TONV BROWN<lb/>
The ECU football team faces<lb/>
one of the toughest schedules in<lb/>
school history this fall, and i a<lb/>
result, assistant coaches are work<lb/>
mg overtime to prepare for the<lb/>
opening of fall practice<lb/>
Third year Offensive Line<lb/>
Coach John Zernhelt hopes to use<lb/>
the experience on this year's ECU<lb/>
team that won him three ACC<lb/>
championships while he was a<lb/>
Player at Maryland. He had I<lb/>
taste of the Liberty. Gator and<lb/>
cotton Bowls, now he would Se<lb/>
return to a bowl game as a<lb/>
Zernhelt is optimistic about the<lb/>
upcoming season, but said it's no<lb/>
m to be tough to replace All<lb/>
America offensive guard Terry<lb/>
rhaYrsdon'trep,acet<lb/>
iJe that. It s gonna take a lot of<lb/>
character to even come close to<lb/>
matching Terry. He had so much<lb/>
natural talent"<lb/>
Coach "Z as his players refer<lb/>
o him -feels that the offens ve<lb/>
une will be stronger and deeper<lb/>
overall, with good depth at each<lb/>
Position but is still uncertain<lb/>
who is going to fill the vacated<lb/>
positions. diea<lb/>
We don't expect any freshmen<lb/>
to become starters Zernhelt ad-<lb/>
ded 'but there's always a<lb/>
possibility that they could see a lot<lb/>
of action. You can never rule<lb/>
anything out in this game "<lb/>
Other offensive line starters<lb/>
that were lost to graduation in-<lb/>
I Riggan Is f<lb/>
Local Hero <lb/>
ByPETEFERNALD<lb/>
Women's volleyball player<lb/>
Tammy Riggan of Elizabethtown<lb/>
iS WaS ,WOrking at the White<lb/>
Lake pavilhon when someone said<lb/>
does anyone know CPR?"<lb/>
Fortunately, Rjggan had just<lb/>
taken a course on CPR at ECU<lb/>
oTddmanCeededt?reViVea25year-<lb/>
ccSBU voygW j d<lb/>
was that CPR is normally per-<lb/>
formed for about 10 to 15<lb/>
minutes After that, the person<lb/>
is considered unrevivable<lb/>
But R.ggan refused<lb/>
Performing CPR for 35 minutes'<lb/>
As a result, the man was revived<lb/>
b Rjggan and taken to the<lb/>
hospital where he later was<lb/>
reported in stable condition<lb/>
a,rhmfan Uffeed three days of<lb/>
asthma after the incident as a<lb/>
th7ma?nf ?? <lb/>
Governor Jim Hunt made a<lb/>
Jolfn i?ln F1?yd at cener and<lb/>
Robert?5011 at ri?ht tackle.<lb/>
Robertson was drafted by the<lb/>
dev n?h,Phia, Eagles in S<lb/>
eleventh round and Flovd ha<lb/>
an?2d a two-year starter<lb/>
and n d the most valuable of-<lb/>
?K PTr his junior year- He<lb/>
coaching and is delighted to have<lb/>
a chance to gain valuable ex-<lb/>
wtrilenhe ln hJS futUre Pression<lb/>
whiles works toward graduation<lb/>
It fefs good to be on the<lb/>
SSSlfhS F1?ydau8hed; and<lb/>
although ,t seems it will be tough<lb/>
for him to adjust to his new role<lb/>
as an advisor, he seems determin-<lb/>
ed to use the same devotion in his<lb/>
coaching career as it took him to<lb/>
become an outstanding player.<lb/>
Rex Kipps, the defensive line<lb/>
coach, came to the Pirates from a<lb/>
coaching position at Clemson<lb/>
V??yu He Plaved at Ferrum<lb/>
ifRkhSS?and the University<lb/>
Commenting on the incoming<lb/>
freshmen, Kipps said "they need<lb/>
to become bigger and gain<lb/>
strength. We're going to be the<lb/>
youngest on defense in a long<lb/>
!?J Jt0n Guy at defensive<lb/>
back and Walter Bryant at defen-<lb/>
sive tackle are two of the<lb/>
newcomers most likely to see ac-<lb/>
tion this year.<lb/>
"The first game tells a lot "<lb/>
Kipps added, "you just don't<lb/>
know how each individual will<lb/>
come along. We'll just have to<lb/>
wait to see how fast they mature"<lb/>
Linwood Ferguson is also in his<lb/>
first year with the Pirates A<lb/>
former Greenville resident, he<lb/>
Played at Chowan, then East<lb/>
Carolina, before becoming the<lb/>
new secondary coach.<lb/>
Ferguson is really enthusiastic<lb/>
about his new position, but is con-<lb/>
cerned about how to replace free<lb/>
safety Clint Harris who was<lb/>
drafted by the New York Giants<lb/>
"He's such a great athlete it's<lb/>
tough for anyone who has to<lb/>
follow in his tracks ? the Giants<lb/>
got a real fine player.<lb/>
"Clint's spot will probably be<lb/>
taken by Vernard Wynn, a red-<lb/>
shirt junior from Monroe "<lb/>
Ferguson continued. "He hurt his<lb/>
ankle two years ago and received<lb/>
the most courageous award for his<lb/>
comeback efforts - he runs the<lb/>
forty-yard dash in 4.3 seconds "<lb/>
Ferguson also feels that Keith<lb/>
frord, a South Carolina native<lb/>
who transferred from Sacramento<lb/>
Junior College, will challenge<lb/>
Wynn at free safety.<lb/>
Describing the strong safety<lb/>
situation, Ferguson said "there's<lb/>
going to be a three-way battle We<lb/>
had so many players hurt for spr-<lb/>
ing practice that a lot of back-uo<lb/>
Players got enough experience to<lb/>
challenge for positions they<lb/>
wouldn't otherwise have had a<lb/>
shot at Keith Brown's absence<lb/>
has really opened a hole<lb/>
 <lb/>
?<lb/>
Defensive Back Coach Linwood Funjeson callow ,h " ?&amp; " - v'r ' 555Bm?<lb/>
See Riggan Page 8<lb/>
roJreLMartin' a red'shirt se"ior<lb/>
from West Columbus High<lb/>
School Randy Bost, a senior<lb/>
from Kannapolis and sophomore<lb/>
Gary London, a part-time starter<lb/>
hkely candidates for the open<lb/>
position as Ferguson sees it<lb/>
NCAA<lb/>
"At cornerback we should have<lb/>
Jpg00d J.M rguson said.<lb/>
Kevm Walker, a red-shirt junior<lb/>
trom Greensboro Smith and<lb/>
Calvin Adams, from Southwest<lb/>
Guilford who's a junior in<lb/>
eligibility, are leading for the star-<lb/>
ting role Walk-on Tim Pittman<lb/>
anally Caparas are dose<lb/>
Although the Pirate? suffered<lb/>
heavy Josses due to graduation,<lb/>
it s obvious from the assistant<lb/>
coaches that the Pirate; are op-<lb/>
timistic about thier chances for<lb/>
a successful season this fall<lb/>
fv A??? Ulf "own<lb/>
i V Options Abound<lb/>
The Supreme Court todav ml ??u<lb/>
erf that ??u. iuudy rui- tailing outnnr anri ki? <lb/>
? ? SSSStS5"<lb/>
 . "remneiH ?? miDivine? won'm?"<lb/>
2fei?! Comeback Trail<lb/>
going to run awav SSTIk" . 25 to 30 games. B?r .u  . <lb/>
Hey! Do you think Detroit is<lb/>
going to run away with he<lb/>
African League East crown?<lb/>
ol I? The, Tigers may be<lb/>
out in front of second place<lb/>
forr?,r by nlne games- but watch<lb/>
or the team that is 12 ?am?<lb/>
behind, the Baltimore Orioles<lb/>
The Birds are at the same pace<lb/>
wonthyHJelaStyearwhenthey<lb/>
won the division title. Why should<lb/>
anyone think they won'f repeat<lb/>
he same feat? Well, the Birdsare<lb/>
just as sound as last year and<lb/>
with the addition of' veten"<lb/>
Wayne Gross at third base, they<lb/>
will be even more steady come<lb/>
September, the month they usual<lb/>
he could win 25 to 30 games<lb/>
even ,f Petry pulls out 20 vie TV' S?Und m?re like a bunch<lb/>
ffwisa? ?r,n than basebal,<lb/>
Wilcox (lifetime pitc0eror h L?S? Can - talk<lb/>
Juan Berenguer (second yea pS ZT" dout Dave Stieb<lb/>
berwith little experience) P "dffth stru?ng Jim Clancy, the<lb/>
staff is having a way-above-<lb/>
average-year. Luis Leal will have<lb/>
to keep up his blistering pace<lb/>
aespite his past average perfor-<lb/>
mance. Who else is left? Doyle<lb/>
Alexander is too old and the rest<lb/>
are Cy Awful candidates. The<lb/>
Baltimore's Tippy Martinez nor<lb/>
Detroit's troika.<lb/>
?Mi!wlaukee: Ah, here's a team<lb/>
COMMENTARY<lb/>
Buzz McCallahan<lb/>
The Supreme Court today rul-<lb/>
ed hat powerhouse college foot-<lb/>
nail teams can ignore the NCAA<lb/>
and cut their own deals with<lb/>
television networks to broadcast<lb/>
games.<lb/>
A,T.he National Collegiate<lb/>
?Si1?0?ti0n "gwd that<lb/>
s m.d- 0 to continue<lb/>
"s jmlhon dollar arrang-<lb/>
ment: with television networkffo<lb/>
broadest Saturday afternoo<lb/>
The justices disagreed<lb/>
:KgatderaJaPPeaioun<lb/>
ruling hat the package is anti-<lb/>
competitive because it reduces the<lb/>
number of games available to TV<lb/>
viewers nationwide.<lb/>
FrT?YU-ing Paves the way for<lb/>
K.n q Stant Athletic Director<lb/>
onrLn? f t0 C?nsider his many<lb/>
ftKJh ?i ?r 8etting the Pirate<lb/>
98 rtCam ?n te,evisi?n in<lb/>
184 I ve spent the last three<lb/>
months talking with networks<lb/>
independent operators and area<lb/>
stations who might be intersted in<lb/>
P?duc'n8 J Package for us this<lb/>
tall, Smith said.<lb/>
The court's action keept in ef-<lb/>
fect a stay issued last Julv bv<lb/>
justice Byron White, one-time<lb/>
AH-America halfback, that<lb/>
S?i?he N,CAA t0 COntinue i"s<lb/>
normal broadcasting schedule<lb/>
Jon Png. r the COUrt' Justi?<lb/>
John Paul Stevens held that the<lb/>
NCAAs role should be to<lb/>
preserve "the student-athlete in<lb/>
higher educationa tradition<lb/>
mat might otherwise die "<lb/>
But, the NCAA rules, "by cur-<lb/>
tailing output and blunting the<lb/>
ability of member institutions to<lb/>
S; consumer preference.<lb/>
the NCAA has restricted rather<lb/>
than enhanced the place of inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics in the nation's<lb/>
tire, he concluded<lb/>
In dissent, Justice Byron<lb/>
White, who granted the original<lb/>
stay keepmg the schedule in ef-<lb/>
in'?Trgthatlhecoim erred<lb/>
?u, .treatlng intercollegiate<lb/>
athletics under the NCAA's col<lb/>
trol as a purely commercial ven-<lb/>
ture, or even primarily, jn the<lb/>
prusuit of profits "<lb/>
Justice William Rehnauisr<lb/>
joined him in dissent ennqu,st<lb/>
The NCAA's contracts with<lb/>
tne networks involve $74 3<lb/>
million in payments in 1983, and<lb/>
affect audiences of up to 22 5<lb/>
million for each game broadcast<lb/>
The television contracts were<lb/>
challenged by the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma and University of<lb/>
Georgia, which want to make<lb/>
their own deals.<lb/>
J?? rules restrict them to<lb/>
six appearences every two years<lb/>
tacn broadcast can net a schooi<lb/>
UP to $600,000, plus the atten-<lb/>
aent national publicity<lb/>
The athletic association, com-<lb/>
posed of 785 member coUeaes<lb/>
and 100 athletic conferences ha<lb/>
contracts with ABC and CBS ?<lb/>
auT? aftern??n 8ames eacb<lb/>
tall. A seperate arrangement with<lb/>
Turner Broadcasting System<lb/>
?Mow. the showing of 19 etn<lb/>
Oklahoma and Georgia, tradi-<lb/>
tionally big football draws, com-<lb/>
plained the arrangement was a<lb/>
monopoly because it limited their<lb/>
national TV appearences.<lb/>
Joined by the College Football<lb/>
f.tl0n a gr0up of maJor<lb/>
footbaU powers, they also argued<lb/>
e plan, by offering eLal<lb/>
payments for every game vis-<lb/>
ed nationally and regionally<lb/>
Also the NCAA's threat to expel<lb/>
 31 1 uhat Vi0late the riues is<lb/>
an illegal boycott, they maintain-<lb/>
A federal district coun agreed<lb/>
holding the payment for games'<lb/>
was un awfully fixed, and?<lb/>
association placed unreasonable<lb/>
controls on the schools<lb/>
The 10th U.S. Circuit Court of<lb/>
Appeals in Denver upheld the rul-<lb/>
thfTvirhlnd,SNCAA,s,)ckon<lb/>
he TV schedule violates antitrust<lb/>
games that may be shown<lb/>
stakffth1 f00tbaJU is at<lb/>
left -in fthe)owercourtrulin,jis<lb/>
left alone, the group's fanrm<lb/>
said. It could affect S<lb/>
Zn(tlSSful ProfesS<lb/>
Tat) has P001 d sold<lb/>
TV nghts as a package to one or<lb/>
more networks the iwZUZ<lb/>
were told Justices<lb/>
. Jhe NCAA's TV deals are<lb/>
joint venture arrangemems th t<lb/>
Uo?nmrhte n0t 55 comp<lb/>
tion, they argued.<lb/>
One point in favor of rtm,tv<lb/>
' come out"ahead of t'hTresTof Winning the divisi?n could be he J?'S ? here's a team<lb/>
the field. ftC rCSt of sensational relief work thus fL hv Li ??uld be in contention if it<lb/>
But what about Detroit? F?n? "J"0 Lopez' Wi?ie Hernandez S! Started so terribly- The<lb/>
say the Tigs are o far fn frZ "d P?Ug B? If these Sen Sf T thdr ERA "<lb/>
there is no way they can blow ? Up the 8?od work the tiZ i S he ,eague and their hit-<lb/>
AJ1 they have JdoiIpTy 5?Mh. onlv Th I V0 But tha"s he able" mT hTT b,Ut a ??<lb/>
est of the season But he lin??? keep ? cl?se. games oumA Le Sti11 2I<lb/>
deciding factor won't h?. hrL ?k l- Detr?11 has its share of good ?S' No chance here.<lb/>
Tigers play; the story wU be th' fhmers but not hitting with thl JZ?u Y??k: ?" PaPer, these<lb/>
Bird's sensational sS August ,OUS Set earlier this SSjLi?1 te leading<lb/>
and September. And w?th the ad f'350 Ater hittin? -300 the fir for h " httin?- If jt "S<lb/>
dition of Gross anS thd Mcaot m?"th?' the Ti?s have fallen Dve wfnTf;1 batting of<lb/>
Sa5&amp;s a-M SMttWA1<lb/>
SSCSBK'at. ?JTe; h0 hover cGargeSteinbren-o?<lb/>
hurlis sStt MPceaormPS S5 Baltimore's sensa'tio SS1<lb/>
Dctroi although leading ,he t?&amp;2?SZ2" out??a??s mTZc m  Sh0uld re"<lb/>
SSraSS SS2SSS: .rftr?<lb/>
season pitchers. Of the Tias staff A T Yu e ?her teams in the Yes SltSSf"<lb/>
only Jack Morri. .S n5f !2 AL East have a shot at the title? -JS1 BaJtlmore, behind proven<lb/>
SjtSSS?3 s?SS??aS HSRaa<lb/>
 had a sore a? wenlIy), S.USl S. 2j ? ?JS 5V?2<lb/>
vr<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
s<lb/>
n6?-<lb/>
iV<lb/>
v<lb/>
3v,<lb/>
Zip Landing<lb/>
mtr BII? <lb/>
Following yesterday's Supreme rvr - - ? "<lb/>
00, ca. aagodo g oL" WU"?? - ????? -P - ??, TOW uy<lb/>
<pb facs="00057652_0008"/><lb/>
-Ii-EASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
Navratilova Sweats For Win<lb/>
WIMBLETON, England (UPI)<lb/>
lAflti, , ?"2, 7"5 ctory over<lb/>
iSnHranked.Amy HoUon n the<lb/>
second round of the women's<lb/>
reehnalff Jimn,y Connors;<lb/>
reeling off a string of nine games<lb/>
m the first and second sets and<lb/>
another five in the third to wran<lb/>
up the match, crushed SwS<lb/>
Davtd Cupper Stefan Simonton<lb/>
otLt3 2" thc Center Court.<lb/>
1982 ?S chamPion 1974 and<lb/>
service" f ?n his "WMe<lb/>
backhnH "fn ,and trusted<lb/>
two se in308 tJ;rOUgn the fi?<lb/>
outer H?nly 56 minutes en<lb/>
route to third round placing.<lb/>
Ba" ?ther aetion, Carling<lb/>
? eeded 16, dumped<lb/>
rrance s Mane Christine Calleja<lb/>
Anight Hones<lb/>
J-l. 6-4. Bulgarian seventh seed<lb/>
Manuela Maleeva beat Russian<lb/>
Natalia Reva 6-2, 6-2 and No. 13<lb/>
Barbara Potter swept past Grace<lb/>
Kim 6-3, 6-0.<lb/>
Among the men, No. 16 Tim<lb/>
Mayotte upset Paraguay's Fran-<lb/>
cisco Gonzalez 7-5, 7-6, 7-6 and<lb/>
Rolf Gehnng of West Germany<lb/>
beat Hungary's Zoltan Kuharsky<lb/>
7-6, 7-5, 6-3.<lb/>
Holton, aged 19 and playing<lb/>
only her second senior season<lb/>
cnoCa7tr V Nav'atilova to<lb/>
serUth Caklng thc pion's<lb/>
serve three times durin the ?<lb/>
minute matrh t. u- . 65<lb/>
stream ?f' fashioning a<lb/>
mi??i ?f winnera from her for<lb/>
mutable two-fisted backhand.<lb/>
way '? LTHaSK,PUShing mc ail the<lb/>
mSjL Navratilova, who ha.<lb/>
Pledged not to lower her ??.S<lb/>
accommodate the relative S if<lb/>
competition as she aims for ?a<lb/>
third consecutive win at the All<lb/>
England Club. Afl<lb/>
BLOOMINGTON, Ind. (UPI)<lb/>
3 hhy Knight has hon-<lb/>
ed he United States Olympic<lb/>
nnal 12-person roster, cuttins two<lb/>
guards and two forward of<lb/>
ficials said today<lb/>
formi3"3 University Sports In-<lb/>
formation Director Kit K<lb/>
tngelhoffer said Knight ?d ?<lb/>
awistants cut guards Johnny<lb/>
Srlr?f?UMdLancaer<lb/>
Zf Louisville and for-<lb/>
Tim McCormick, of<lb/>
5SSr - chuck pers?n' of<lb/>
Klingerlhoffer said there was no<lb/>
overriding reason for the cms ?<lb/>
Hawkins and Person will be re<lb/>
tainea as alternates for the team<lb/>
auseCormick and SordT<lb/>
Bafketbaf by- the Nati?nai<lb/>
Basketball Association, may be<lb/>
2E? Win a profeJ?<lb/>
J? m ? P fy good li?ht tennis<lb/>
said Navratilova. "She was mov-<lb/>
ing well and hitting my service<lb/>
really well. I wasn't expecting a ?<lb/>
down affair ?lI?8 a ne<lb/>
WahY.Hi,OVa- ,biddin? for a fifth<lb/>
Wimbledon title and a second<lb/>
Grand Slam of the major'cW<lb/>
Pionships, won the first set in 23<lb/>
minutes behind a model serve and<lb/>
volley game.<lb/>
from' hiTf ?" Under Pre?ure<lb/>
m 1 mu !f fellow American who<lb/>
mpic Team psr<lb/>
however, and cranked uHer<lb/>
Play, serving out to love with one<lb/>
of her three aces in the final gane<lb/>
in r' W?? beat Joh" McEnJS<lb/>
m the final of the French Onen<lb/>
two weeks ago to infiic? the o2<lb/>
defeat on the Wimbledon ch2<lb/>
Pion, looked more comfortiwe<lb/>
on grass than the 115nked<lb/>
lefthanded South African <lb/>
The court was much drier to-<lb/>
Holman<lb/>
Steve Alford, of Indiana,<lb/>
Patrick Ewing, of Georgetown,<lb/>
Vern Fleming, of Georgia,<lb/>
Michael Jordon, of North<lb/>
Carolina, Joe Kleine, of Arkan-<lb/>
sas Jon Koncak, of SMU, Chris<lb/>
Mulhn, of St. John's, Sam<lb/>
Perkins, of North Carolina, Alvin<lb/>
Robertson, of Arkansas,<lb/>
Wayman Tisdale, of Oklahoma,<lb/>
Jeff Turner, of Vanderbuilt, and<lb/>
? - m Mcc??ick. or foliosp,aXasacons,s,sof,he  <lb/>
Feds And NCAA t c,ass,f,eds<lb/>
WASHINGTON riJPn - . . AX ?<lb/>
Leon Wood, of Fullerton State<lb/>
SQu?dn81n?ffer Saidthe OIvmPie<lb/>
squad, in preparation for the<lb/>
13, V" L?S An?eles<lb/>
late next month, will continue<lb/>
Practicing in Bloomingtond and<lb/>
P Hen?aSHeVfKral CXhibitiSl ?es<lb/>
He said the team will travel to<lb/>
Providence, R.I Thursday nfght<lb/>
and to Minneapolis Sunday to<lb/>
Play a collection of NBA all-sLs<lb/>
day and that made it easier for me<lb/>
to run and kept the -me<lb/>
UndTU00 maiy <lb/>
Undl said he was not worried<lb/>
took a break from singles<lb/>
Wednesday to open the defense of<lb/>
bis doubles title with partner Peter<lb/>
JSnVr0"1. hC is Seed to<lb/>
meet in the finals.<lb/>
"I am worried about my nexr<lb/>
match and should I be Cu<lb/>
enough to get through and nav<lb/>
him I will have plenty of "fine to<lb/>
worry about him, "LendlsaiT<lb/>
have enough problems now and<lb/>
don t have to create any "<lb/>
Connors, seeded third said he<lb/>
never looked at the draw tosee<lb/>
who he would play and wouldn'<lb/>
be changing his plan.<lb/>
"It's no good to worry abom<lb/>
who you're playing- said rZ<lb/>
nors whollLManvrS<lb/>
coun " aSy and go on e<lb/>
Eve<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) <lb/>
DenmaThlina,basketbal, coaeh<lb/>
?? So fl sports commen-<lb/>
tator Howard Cosell told Con<lb/>
gress Tuesday that the NCAA<lb/>
mem' JhT fedCral ??v:<lb/>
went, should be responsible for<lb/>
cleaning up what Cosell called he<lb/>
corruption that so pervades big<lb/>
time college sports "<lb/>
to'ied "TrltieS  suPP?sed<lb/>
? ' Smith sajd, and thev<lb/>
She fhe3"6 H UP?n them-lves to"<lb/>
solve the current problems.<lb/>
ffovirnUeSUOnuWhether the federal<lb/>
Sr entshouldgetim?this<lb/>
of inST11 ing a number<lb/>
or incidents involving coliece<lb/>
athletes who were unable to read<lb/>
also PrfK,dem J?hn L- To"er<lb/>
also told the panel that his<lb/>
organization, rather than the<lb/>
federal government, should nan!<lb/>
die the situation.<lb/>
"I firmly believe that this is not<lb/>
an issue with which the ConLe<lb/>
shouid become involved W<lb/>
stitutions may place a legislative<lb/>
proposal before the NCAA" con<lb/>
ventionif thev are unhappy about<lb/>
"hoLrrpr1"8 el,gibi,i -<lb/>
Toner also said it was unfair to<lb/>
The first step in cleaning up the<lb/>
duTs"?rodneOUi,awin?boo?er<lb/>
f'Ti Cosell said, because thev<lb/>
include alumni who "represent a<lb/>
juvenile mbtijgg<lb/>
After both Smith and Cosell<lb/>
criticized Metzenbaum's no<lb/>
R-Vt. said, "This is not the time<lb/>
? federal attempt at regu?<lb/>
But he added that "unless the<lb/>
schools police themselves the<lb/>
chances for federal regulation<lb/>
becomes greater regulation<lb/>
Cosell said sports should no<lb/>
trigtryexceptionsfromanti-<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
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Riggan Is<lb/>
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Continued From Page 7<lb/>
special trip to Elizabethtown to<lb/>
efforts" Rigga f?r her rescue<lb/>
hn?i aD.dinner meeting in her<lb/>
honor, Riggan received an award<lb/>
of bravery and was congratulated<lb/>
friends' famUy and<lb/>
Riggan is a rising sophomore at<lb/>
tCU and w!ll play her second year<lb/>
this fan women's VOI,eyba11 team<lb/>
Surprisingly, Riggan is only<lb/>
seventeen years old. She skipped<lb/>
her senior year in high school due<lb/>
to academic excellence to come to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Riggan, a 5'4' 134-pound set-<lb/>
ter for the lady pirates, will help<lb/>
the team next fall to come off of<lb/>
their worst season in history<lb/>
The Lady Pirates competed<lb/>
against top Division 1 teams last<lb/>
tall, compiling their "worst<lb/>
season ever of 3-23 coach<lb/>
Turner said.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057652_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>