<?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="00057654_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
Qluralinmn<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina camn<lb/>
camPus community since 1925<lb/>
Teacher Education<lb/>
rh( Vadnnnl -  <lb/>
National Council for Ac-<lb/>
:at.on of Teacher Education<lb/>
has restored full accreditation Xo<lb/>
teacher education program" at<lb/>
ECU officiaJs have been confi<lb/>
John Howell<lb/>
ECU Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Howell said the university has<lb/>
people of North Carolina in carrv nu-at-c<lb/>
ing out new goals that have ?? credit toTeCU prof, S ?dUCation? School of Allied<lb/>
last month. In a letter notifying ?m? ? Scn001 of Home<lb/>
Dr. Howell of the action, NCATF ?r w ?1CS Scn?o1 of Art, School<lb/>
interim director George aL 1'? a"d the Colle?e of Arts<lb/>
Denemark expressed appreciation NCATF-f"Joni 5 ? answer to<lb/>
'for the fine cooperation received ZtJuvX. L 5? cntlclsms, ECU<lb/>
from the faculty, staff and ad- FdnStt C?UndI for Teacher<lb/>
 ucaiiy ju ? ministration of your institution " rhlii 5 ? aPP?inted Dr.<lb/>
teacher education programs was "Thl uv ECU officials said the re chifrl? R Coble dean of the<lb/>
never m question and thCATE this n i&amp;tonMnSff S-? accredi-n fc retroac iVe ? of ion, as fej<lb/>
action did not affect certification grea m y? n? Xr rn ??Ver the 1983'84 academic ye S V<lb/>
0! hCU graduates r, . "Id" ngs tnat Governor and was eramen for a o?rJ "OwelJ said ECU "had ar<lb/>
;Nowthatwehaveth Hum te General Assembly six oTal IF'umi mf "ed a great deal wl s"<lb/>
non behind us, we intend to move tcSnrJove ed ?, thl?? year September 1990. fganization for administer-<lb/>
ahead aggressively to assist the sLI P edUCatlon' H?ell ECU teacher education pro- ?? StS edUuCati?n prorams<lb/>
grams are located in the School of lion h the new organiza-<lb/>
tion which was put in place in<lb/>
ms Re-Accredited<lb/>
A&amp;iSftffft ?  -d dynamic<lb/>
governance structure ofeacner 'oo5" and for?ed <lb/>
at.on at ECU had been Cor JSP?? SP,m" an,on? ad'<lb/>
rected- ssa.? n-v?5ro H2.teachers a"d<lb/>
answer to the accreditation<lb/>
criticism will prepare us to do an<lb/>
even better job.<lb/>
"In the time we have worked to<lb/>
perfect this new organization, the<lb/>
university has developed new and<lb/>
dynamic leadership and forged a<lb/>
cooperative spirit among ad-<lb/>
ministrators, teachers and<lb/>
students<lb/>
Howell said "visions of the<lb/>
teacher education programs of the<lb/>
future are already being<lb/>
demonstrated He cited projects<lb/>
of the university's Rural Educa-<lb/>
tion Institute and said the univer-<lb/>
sity s whole teacher education<lb/>
Program has "set itself up as a<lb/>
model" to implement teacher ex-<lb/>
me 1983 General Assembly<lb/>
Dr. Angelo Volpe vice<lb/>
chancellor for academic affairs.<lb/>
Nrk-rlT extremel' Phased that<lb/>
rNLATE has accredited all of our<lb/>
eacher education programs. This<lb/>
" my opinion, is the culmination<lb/>
of a great deal of work bv a great<lb/>
number of people. '<lb/>
"The cooperative effort that<lb/>
was put forth by the administra-<lb/>
tion the faculty leadership the<lb/>
Faculty Senate, Dean Coble and<lb/>
the entire education faculty was<lb/>
an example of how much could be<lb/>
accomplished b, teanwork "<lb/>
Open Wide And Take A Big Bite<lb/>
fir from Pani????- ,?? ?<lb/>
LM TOOO - ecu Nmi BwrMv<lb/>
MStS!uStZ2l' t s?mCT "??? scheduled by<lb/>
mall. And we .11 know ,? ,m food ???. ?? Z? My' ? ??le on tie<lb/>
QntodJJiea?Progrmn<lb/>
M?lSchool To Begin Cardiac Surgery<lb/>
"he ECU School of kh? J?r academic medical centers and termediate ?? - ? <lb/>
?C? Tfteajfe Installs System<lb/>
To Benefit Hearing Impaired<lb/>
ByJENNffERJENDRASIAK ears and do not interfere wi.h p. ? u<lb/>
The ECU Summer Theatre and SSSTt M ??3ElM?<lb/>
the Program for the Hearing Im- rented on a nlJZL r  be hear,n8 io"es and with certain<lb/>
paired have inS,al.ed a wifeless bis and my no. ber-XlT' 'Pof h"g atds. Palker aid<lb/>
FM sound system in McGinnis advance "Srved ln that on'y newer hearing aids are<lb/>
iw L The system is designed to The system wa fi,  compatible with the system "I<lb/>
allow theatregoers with hearing Monday's DeVfnrmi 'I dohink we will be abl. to help<lb/>
problems to enjoy theatre perfor Chicago Accordfn. "t ?f ever Person he said. P<lb/>
Srt!llfc of ? seating SchreiLr. toecto "of 'the the?th Schreib and Pi? sa,d<lb/>
"Phonic Ear Theatre FM S5?Stt? SLTSi'ftEidTSjS<lb/>
System includes a transmitter and formace Thw?g  d?d in ,be fu,ure ? he<lb/>
sssrsaas'ts r?fr?J r,bim-fihe??-<lb/>
equipment of the theatre"8 S?Und MSSASSi: he Thre ? ??????? M unto<lb/>
anr5r?TrS in need of heari"8 of thnuslMhefreeomVfnnrr for usc' and' to"<lb/>
sss psi?? sssasss<lb/>
Ssones rriVWS d "Stenin8 Sun? Se-TS problem ?2 21 be P-vided. oTeTg<lb/>
accessories are mconsp cuously is that thm. Tr. .? ,ne Problem background of the Dla- anH<lb/>
and comfortably worn bPe.ow th T?? Jptio? of CJSS, -<lb/>
The ECU School of Medicine<lb/>
and Pitt County Memorial<lb/>
Hospital will institute full-scale<lb/>
open heart surgery at the Green-<lb/>
ville medical center beginning<lb/>
later this month.<lb/>
The startup of the cardiac<lb/>
surgery program represents a ma-<lb/>
jor addition to the medical<lb/>
school's education, service and<lb/>
research activities, according to<lb/>
Dr. William E. Laupus, ECU vice<lb/>
chancellor and dean of the School<lb/>
of Medicine.<lb/>
Heading the cardiac surgery<lb/>
program will be Dr. W. Randolph<lb/>
jor academic medical centers and<lb/>
at large urban hospitals in<lb/>
Raleigh, Charlotte, Greensboro<lb/>
and Asheville.<lb/>
Chitwood said the cardiac<lb/>
surgery team he has assembled<lb/>
I immediately begin perform-<lb/>
 -vojm uj ine major<lb/>
arteries nourishing the heart mus-<lb/>
cle. From there the team will<lb/>
move into the replacement of<lb/>
damaged heart valves and other<lb/>
corrective procedures.<lb/>
care and six general<lb/>
surgery during his final year at<lb/>
Duke. He and his wife, Tamara<lb/>
have two children.<lb/>
Duke's cardiac surgery training<lb/>
program, judged by many to be<lb/>
the nation's best, is three years<lb/>
ECU Nes Bureau<lb/>
termediate<lb/>
care beds.<lb/>
These facilities, Chitwood said<lb/>
have been equipped with the best<lb/>
available open-heart surgical and<lb/>
monitoring instruments, including<lb/>
?ng coronary artiry' bypass 'S'S?  ' the'seven-Z<lb/>
surgery, a fairly common p?" "IVe rSivTin ?.?n ?Ump' gram of most medical ceSrs ?<lb/>
cedure in which blood is rerouted with the LSL? ' P Msed goai is t0 tu" out specialists who<lb/>
around blockages in the major equipmem we'reJEH ?J are proficien in S cS?m<lb/>
anenes n?.H.hi  ? J ffi?, ????? ?" e laboratory as they arTm<lb/>
Chitwood's cadTac surgerv ThE? t0?m-<lb/>
rwnom bassS V-<lb/>
Chhwood,Jrjgho?e" tTSS" SnttaT Z LESF<lb/>
Umversity S8chIol of MedWne ST h ,han'wfJPer ??? (operator of the hear in- M'dicine's ???? surgery<lb/>
The Duke residency training pro! SShrlSS? Sh0U'd, inCrease mne) with15 yelrs exwrilnce 2? !d medical stud?nts.<lb/>
gram is the longest and among the surS, m ,h WC?nd CUdiK in ?art surgwy tSS? fd .?. m be responsible for<lb/>
most respected in the nation ShSS i?r wT? after mm,rs included nurk cKn eta SS?1 a  research<lb/>
.We are fortunate to have ob- ChitwoXpe'tt ewT T S  " fcW<lb/>
55?ssa;js sasu-s sasjasw; SrA-1-<lb/>
of Dr. Chitwood said Laupus A PT L ? , Memorial.  g maJ?r ?le in preparing<lb/>
demoLrated'S-fl prog ???1FS&amp;F BAttS fSSE<lb/>
ihesSdtsraXnri SS5?SS? sa-rShjsrS rr-<lb/>
class academic heart surcervnro radl?lolgy and emergency depart- Wytheville v? MrnH K?f Jack Welch- chairman of the<lb/>
;?Ps? isMi g?i?SH i?ss.H<lb/>
fdahesta,ehreeotherma- unit with st.elTLIn! Sota m'cc ? S. ?3<lb/>
It's All Up In The Aii<lb/>
? or trustees. that eveMo-vltal social life. Mayb<lb/>
Trr. . the talent this guy has.<lb/>
?'???UIZm?bJle Fi? Among Week's Incidents<lb/>
8 ? ?r" HUM.BRT - eCU Ptat. ij.<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
Two automobiles catching fire<lb/>
and the theft of a flute topped the<lb/>
hst of campus crimes this week<lb/>
Although crime last week was<lb/>
low, it increased this week.<lb/>
Crimes reported to the ECU<lb/>
Public Safety Department for Ju-<lb/>
ly 2-10 were:<lb/>
July 2 2:30a.m. - Cpl. Burrus<lb/>
found the vending machine in the<lb/>
lobby of Aycock Residence Hall<lb/>
had been broken into and several<lb/>
items stolen. 9:30 a.m. ? Patsy<lb/>
Collier of the English Department<lb/>
staff reported money had been<lb/>
stolen from her purse in her desk<lb/>
in 124 Austin Building.<lb/>
July 3, 5:47 p.m. ? An<lb/>
anonymous caller reported there<lb/>
were two unescorted males on the<lb/>
? floor of Greene Residence<lb/>
July 4, 12:40 a.m. ? Tommy<lb/>
L. Jones, David L. Richardson<lb/>
and Wayne A. Brown were bann-<lb/>
ed from campus for suspicious ac-<lb/>
tivity north of Fletcher Music<lb/>
Building. 3:35 p.m. ? Ashraf M<lb/>
Alhanbali of Raleigh was cited for<lb/>
The<lb/>
having an expired license plate ina ?,??? , .<lb/>
4:46p.m. - A vehicle registered L !n,??$5 S?? ,n the Boney and Hy C. Johnston<lb/>
to Paula B. Dudley was reported ?w?USt,?d Risldcn? Hall. July 7, 7:34p.m. -XkSL<lb/>
on fire east of Fletcher Music renJ'tf-T 2. DaJJ 2 PoUcc Department repZ?<lb/>
Building. The fire department w? ? ?f ? vedc f?tcd the bank of Mend?haU<lb/>
notified. 6:52 p.m. - A ban gj, S College Student Center was activatedI<lb/>
camp counselor reported two fill? Apa?men s , ?ught on 7My5, 2:?5a.m. - Greg?rvC<lb/>
suspicious male juveniles in the aZZZISTZ Gym Jhc flrc Pratt of 622 Ford St. imESmi<lb/>
area of Umstead and Slay nZ J S0tlcd' 4:45  L<lb/>
Residence HaUs. 6:58 p.m 1 ?I9rathw Ba??ay of e<lb/>
Terry A. Dierdre, a band camp l!l Vr SUffu reportcd<lb/>
student, reported her flute ?2 J?? ?? fromt,h.Pe  rcporied<lb/>
from her 2nd floor locker in Flet- reoorrf .? 7 2 Gien?ch domestic dispute on the 1st floor<lb/>
cher Music Building. 705 ?? 2E? fonlscat?ng a sign July 10, 2:32 a.m - wSX.<lb/>
- Three band can?p counselors menffiV? th.cDtraffic Part- A. Trenda of 311-C SumWt S?<lb/>
and Ptl. Murphy reported observ! Tt. dST ?WI -Sftft<lb/>
 ? x ?,u ou was arrested<lb/>
for not having a drivers' license<lb/>
and stop sign violation. 12:56<lb/>
p.m. ? Two residents of Slav<lb/>
Residence Hall reported a<lb/>
Announcements ?<lb/>
Editoriab4<lb/>
Features 5<lb/>
Sports 7<lb/>
Classifieds <lb/>
?ECU swimmer sets Peruvian<lb/>
national records in South<lb/>
American games. See Sports<lb/>
page 7.<lb/>
?Chicago, presented by ECU's<lb/>
Summer Theatre, opened Mon-<lb/>
day. For a review, see Feature,<lb/>
page 5.<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0002"/><lb/>
-?L?ASTCAROLIN I AN<lb/>
Announcem<lb/>
NEED A MAJOR?<lb/>
cJpV0"01' Un'Ver,fV COUNSELING<lb/>
?? mmm woola llke to g<lb/>
ST Car-r 8rM rt.clp.nh w ,?r?<lb/>
?boot ft, pr0CM1 ? C8rw dte(tJcn m <lb/>
"bout ft. maors and carr arM$ wftch ar <lb/>
sist?nf with th.lr interests<lb/>
The workshop win be he.d on WedneMay .nd<lb/>
Thurso July ? afK, )2, from 13X pM )n R)om<lb/>
JW Wright Annex.<lb/>
GOSPEL CHOIR<lb/>
East Carolina Gospel CHolr presets Caret's<lb/>
Unlimited to the city of Greenville the first .11<lb/>
Male Fashion Show Friday July 20th g oc at<lb/>
Greenville Sheraton for the fashion conscientious<lb/>
Man &amp; Woman Tickets can be purchased at the<lb/>
following locations Shonlfa's Hairstyiing, Can-<lb/>
non's Men Shop, Chess King, no J.rvls Hall, or<lb/>
by phoning 758 WSJ ? 7580W7<lb/>
TEST PERFORMANCE<lb/>
A I 12 hour workshop on Improving your test<lb/>
Prformanc. will be conducted by me Counseling<lb/>
Center, Wednesday July ? 2:00 3.30 PM. Coiv<lb/>
t.ct the center at 757! tor d.t.i.? No rcgi.tr<lb/>
flon or fees required<lb/>
INTERNSHIP PROGRAM<lb/>
M?or national ana North Carolina corporation<lb/>
has recently begin an internship program tor<lb/>
lunlor level students m.oring In computer<lb/>
science For further Information contact Co-op of<lb/>
fie. 313 Pawl Bldg<lb/>
SUMMER JOBS<lb/>
What win you be doing In m. wmm?- of IMS?<lb/>
Now I, not too won to lx.n pl.nn.ng tor c.rr<lb/>
.xper.ence with m.or corpor.t.on, and oovrn<lb/>
mmt .genc??. Opportunity, for v.rl.ty of m<lb/>
or, in location. n.flonw.de. Contact Co-op off.ee,<lb/>
313 Rawl.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS NEEDED<lb/>
A study Is being conducted at the ECU Speech<lb/>
?nd Hearing Clinic to determine the difficulty<lb/>
hrlng impaired students may have <lb/>
H?crlmlnatlng words In foreign l.ngu.ges. Hear<lb/>
lnfllmp.lr?j volunteers II to 20 years of age are<lb/>
"??otd tor a simple hearing test and word<lb/>
discrimination tasks No foreign i.ngu.g,<lb/>
background Is rwc.ss.ry Pie.s. cont.c, Mrs<lb/>
M.t. Oownn. Department of Speech Language<lb/>
?nd Auditory pathology, 757 4M1, ext 270<lb/>
ADMINISTRATIVE PLANNING<lb/>
dlmES? and "n,ly" p,8nnl"0 ?"d zoning or<lb/>
dinar In seaside community. Full time hou,<lb/>
ing .vb  nominal cost Contact ctoof<lb/>
WOODWORKING DESIGNER<lb/>
?h2??tUn,tV deon and conduct a wood<lb/>
? ZLfZ"??,1? ,lrm ,oca? ? Em?rd<lb/>
'V,J"b 8f nom,n" CMf Contact<lb/>
co-op office, 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
FREE MUSICALS<lb/>
W.mtos Broadway musicals tor froa? u?hor<lb/>
or ft. E?, Carolna Summr ThMfr s(9n <lb/>
?ne Mawick Art Center, room 10. This I. your op-<lb/>
portunity to hove som. fun .nd save money at ttw<lb/>
.me time.<lb/>
PERSONAL CARE ATTENDANTS<lb/>
Appllcflon. .r. reo.ue.hK, from tf prion.<lb/>
Fan iML!HDANTS ,0 "?l'?" ?tudant? for<lb/>
gMI ? W. .re particularly ft<lb/>
mSSL tjSSS. " " ? "ground of<lb/>
?Misting lndlv.du.1. with ttwlr actlvm of dally<lb/>
-???? confet: Offfc. of Hand.cap-<lb/>
K,2 S.rv.c??, 212 Whlcnard Building<lb/>
East Crollna University, Phone 757 ?7W.<lb/>
I.S.A. MEMBERS<lb/>
There will be . meeting at 9:00 PM Friday July<lb/>
13th at the International House. A dinner and a<lb/>
party will follow the meeting. You may bring your<lb/>
friends and your own drink or food.<lb/>
COMPUTER SCIENCE<lb/>
Position, available with m.or defense contra<lb/>
tor located In Washington. DC tor Spring ,?d<lb/>
Summor, IttS Opportunity for state of the art?<lb/>
P?rlanca. Deeoline to appi, October, 14 Con<lb/>
tactCoopar?,v. Edocat(on ,? Rw( <lb/>
-SLlUJ MmM is h, .?,? (n<lb/>
onroct Cop offlc, 313 Rawl Bldg.<lb/>
.AUDITOR INTERN<lb/>
ScoSSSltS c,tv Co?<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
BSU cJToVsilTVIr. JMn U " W?<lb/>
Programs follow ?"m Slrrt ev?ry week<lb/>
?ht East QIarnlmiati<lb/>
SUBCRIPTION FORM<lb/>
MARKETING OPENINGS<lb/>
Opportunity for good pay ar.1 operierx ojojjj<lb/>
direct rn.rk.tlng department of m.or leisu<lb/>
tim. corporation located In R.i.lgh Salary p,v,<lb/>
mileage and travel bwwflts Aixi, Co-op off f<lb/>
313 Rawl Bldg<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
Like canoeing? A local canoe trip is being M<lb/>
fared July 11 through me Outdoor Recre4t,o,<lb/>
C??nter. For all additional information ce,<lb/>
757 Wll or come by Memorial Gym<lb/>
PLANTERGROWER<lb/>
Positions available in Emerald isle to ass ?<lb/>
growing and planting flowers and shrubs tor ill!<lb/>
c.plng Full time, housing av. l.bl. .t Z?l<lb/>
cost Contact Co-op office, 313 R awl Bldg<lb/>
BEACH JOBS<lb/>
Retail, grocery and fast food positions avau.h.<lb/>
at Nags Head. Kill Devil Hills ard Myrtle B?<lb/>
Some with accomodation assistance Contact ?v<lb/>
op office, 313 Rawl Bldg v.unTect Co-<lb/>
Name: <lb/>
Address<lb/>
Date to Begin:<lb/>
Complimentary<lb/>
Business<lb/>
Amount Paid $.<lb/>
Looking for a place to live this fall?<lb/>
t I av IV y? .?s. . <lb/>
Date to End:<lb/>
Individual<lb/>
RINCCOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At V:e Campus -East Carolina Unwersity<lb/>
M.I<lb/>
Dale Paid<lb/>
Students wantmg to hive their parents receive'<lb/>
ine East Carolinian can fill out the form<lb/>
above and drop it by The East Carolinian of-<lb/>
rTlHin" SeC?r"d n??r ?f the Publications<lb/>
building across from the entrance of Joyner<lb/>
Library. Rates are S30 for one year and $20 for<lb/>
Student Condos<lb/>
SALE AND RENTAL UNITS AVAILABLE<lb/>
camou, tTV" h'V' ' SP P'a? ? ?? ?fall ?ex, w<lb/>
rh n ?ndom,n,um units Surrounded ?n<lb/>
available Wed Sm i ' LWlthnP to95? financing<lb/>
other states. 9 355-2698 (collect) from<lb/>
RINGGOLD DEVELOPMFNT CO INC<lb/>
105 Commerce Street<lb/>
P O Drawer 563<lb/>
Greenville. XC 27354<lb/>
(919) 355-2698<lb/>
The East Carolinian classifieds<lb/>
The campus community's No. 1 marketplace<lb/>
c Marty, Mike&amp; Jame?<lb/>
0, Both Men &amp; Women (919) 752 1855<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
?v noted in m?? 7Z SSVJ1 ???c<lb/>
"V voo voor choice VcwWSwe ?i2 2S2L" r1' ?<lb/>
fffftecttng the ume ?vln?o7f2iL21 "Sv"w?<lb/>
t? vou to purCh?si trVSoVer " ?"?'<lb/>
Ortce within so o o1rt2,i!20ym,$,<lb/>
c?Dteo per item v  ynK ?uoon win be ?c<lb/>
i I :<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
301 EvonsSt<lb/>
2nd Floor M.nges Bldg<lb/>
Greenville, N C 27834<lb/>
Kim Shirley<lb/>
(919)752-7637 FQshl0n a, a p e<lb/>
?5ta.<lb/>
items ana Prices Copy'HUH 1934<lb/>
Effective Tni-j jflt ?rnger Sjv or<lb/>
July 14 1984 Oo.ntiry Manrs ? hmm<lb/>
one SOI0 To DilfVs<lb/>
DORM?<lb/>
APARTMENT?<lb/>
CONDO?<lb/>
CONFUSED OVER CONDOS?<lb/>
We invite you<lb/>
to compare<lb/>
We believe that our product far surpasses others in the area<lb/>
m benefits to students, parents and investors. If you will only com-<lb/>
pare we think you'll see why. Recent changes in tn laws make<lb/>
ownmg rather than rennng no. only possible but more tfvT<lb/>
tageous. We'd like to show you how our product is the iZ'<lb/>
proving you with your own place to Uve as well as an excellent<lb/>
investment.<lb/>
 ?2- only $40'500 en? TEflfc?<lb/>
S Down Payment fig 0251 F, n " ?"???<lb/>
No Closing Costs 9 TV ,<lb/>
Payment w no, increase fClece"0"<lb/>
? Tax Shelter for Parent or Investor<lb/>
CALL TODAY<lb/>
FOB MORE INFORMATION<lb/>
WE RE EXPERTS IN THE SALE Of AfFORDABLE<lb/>
TOWNHOMES AND CONDOMINIUMS.<lb/>
finn??EJi 2 ,?0URS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
KROGER U S D A<lb/>
CRADE A<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
? ?-??r<lb/>
ssp<lb/>
DOZ<lb/>
Limit 2 Doz Please<lb/>
SWEET, RIPE<lb/>
California<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
FOR YOUR LAUNDRY<lb/>
Tide A<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
HS"<lb/>
t<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Size<lb/>
Ea<lb/>
49 0Z.<lb/>
BOX<lb/>
LIMIT 1 PLEASE<lb/>
KROCER WHEAT OR WHITE<lb/>
Buttercrust<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
5V<lb/>
24 0Z.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
iff<lb/>
COLLICE C. MOORE<lb/>
I 10 South Evans ? Greenville. NC 27834<lb/>
(919) 7S8-60SO<lb/>
KBOCER HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
 L0WFATJKIM.<lb/>
CHOCOLATE, BUTTERMILK OR<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
Vi Gal-<lb/>
an.<lb/>
DIET COKE, TAB OR<lb/>
Coca<lb/>
Cola<lb/>
r $109<lb/>
Btl. ?<lb/>
THIN OR THICK CRUST<lb/>
TAKE N BAKE<lb/>
Deli-Fresh<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
215<lb/>
2ffi?5SE ?Cheese<lb/>
'Italian Sausage ?Pepperoni<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Meister Brau<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
Latha<lb/>
i<lb/>
b' I ?????? Bur??u<lb/>
$89<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
CRISP N TASTY<lb/>
jeno's<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE HEAVY acctc?.<lb/>
GRA.N FED M BatmUBS?"<lb/>
Cubed<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
CHABLIS BLANC<lb/>
RHINE OR<lb/>
m.Petri<lb/>
VinRose<lb/>
J<lb/>
10 02-<lb/>
pkg.<lb/>
LlM,T 2 PLEASE<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
deeHnKlniS T Lalha,?  a<lb/>
work their 3<lb/>
fJL I a deC,S,on wh,ch Latri<lb/>
Sn B-SJ5 <lb/>
I have realized from observf<lb/>
otheT f:andhchl,dr" and oth<lb/>
DeonU 8Vhat S0 ma" vol<lb/>
PPle are finishing high sch<lb/>
Md g0I?g l0 colj ? ch<lb/>
cirtr ? k 3bOUt Ch??<lb/>
career Latham says.<lb/>
I here are many who<lb/>
graduating frorn colleyge ?<lb/>
Former<lb/>
<lb/>
nnPSf Z ln the;r late for<lb/>
"0? former members of<lb/>
gt some say started i<lb/>
J5 movement that rock<lb/>
fc? ,CanpUSeS for <lb/>
than a decade gathered for a re<lb/>
"10" at the University<lb/>
Cdiforma-Berkeiey campus<lb/>
forh? S?me dlsParagmg ?Q<lb/>
for the apparent lack of pol-n<lb/>
activism on todav's caZ"<lb/>
?"cjdedaconVerenlTfffo<lb/>
ending the get-together in rath<lb/>
raditiona fashon Sunday<lb/>
U?e cutting of an anniversary<lb/>
aid a game of soft ball<lb/>
The anniversary was of<lb/>
founding of SLATE on tr<lb/>
.Berkeley campus in 1957 to tn i<lb/>
integrate fraternities<lb/>
. Before it voted to dissolve i <lb/>
-1968, SLATE helpedTnu<lb/>
nationwide student movement fc<lb/>
raising money to help t d<lb/>
nghts Freedom Fighters intr<lb/>
South staging a national<lb/>
televised sit-in at a San Francisc<lb/>
meeting of the notorious Hou<lb/>
Un-American Activities C3mn<lb/>
tee, and, by giving birth to tr<lb/>
famous Free Speech Movemem<lb/>
Pioneering the long student strug<lb/>
f LagaTSL Campus control ove<lb/>
student behavior.<lb/>
There has been nothing in rm<lb/>
Me I was involved in that I felt '<lb/>
Fei3of Thygcson of his auS?<lb/>
days -ft magnified out It ha<lb/>
npple effects all aver th<lb/>
country<lb/>
"One of the reasons SLATE<lb/>
was so effective was that McCar-<lb/>
tnyism was so effective "<lb/>
speculated Jim Gallegher, who<lb/>
now works at the University of<lb/>
Oregon s Labor Education and<lb/>
Research Center<lb/>
"It was a horrible time recall-<lb/>
ed Ellen Margren, who joinec<lb/>
H,HnTE, m 1958- "You iiteralh<lb/>
didn t know what vou could sa<lb/>
to your neighbor. 0u didn1'<lb/>
know what you could sav to vou<lb/>
best friend<lb/>
Sen. Joseph McCarthy, o<lb/>
course was the Wisconsii<lb/>
Republican who publiclv brands<lb/>
People as communists, usualh<lb/>
without any evidence )r motiv<lb/>
besides the publicity value o<lb/>
making dramatic accusations<lb/>
Though McCarthy himself diec<lb/>
the same year SLATE began, th<lb/>
defamations had broken mam<lb/>
people and careers ? a gooc<lb/>
number of them belonging to pro-<lb/>
fessors ? and even mild forms of<lb/>
dissent were dropped for fear the<lb/>
dissenters would be personally<lb/>
and professionally ruined<lb/>
rLWaS afraidV' said Jackie<lb/>
Ooldberg, one of SLATE's<lb/>
effect. I didn't want to be duped<lb/>
by anyone. I was 17 and a linJe<lb/>
afraid. I was attracted to campus<lb/>
politics because it seemed a little<lb/>
SlfkIhme0kedkereaSOnab,e<lb/>
Those fears kept manv cam-<lb/>
Puses so Quiet that fifties col-<lb/>
Rea<lb/>
the<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0003"/><lb/>
MARKETING OPENINGS<lb/>
JOorTumtv tor 9000 pay and experience win<lb/>
Irect marketing department of maor tel?ur,<lb/>
Irve .orpormor, located in Raieigrt Salary piut<lb/>
1 aoe ana travel Deneits Apply Co-op ofict<lb/>
Sawi BiOfl<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
?e .anoeing? A local canoe trip is being .<lb/>
I e3 July 1) tnrough me Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Fa an eaa.tionai information c,(,<lb/>
or come e? Memorial Gym<lb/>
PLANTER GROWER<lb/>
ms a.a laoie n Emerald isle to assist 1.<lb/>
ana planting newers and shrubs or i.J,<lb/>
J FuMMma nous.ng available at nominT,<lb/>
' Contact Co op office 313 Raw! Bldg<lb/>
BEACH JOBS<lb/>
1 eMraatfoad positions avaiiabi<lb/>
? -eac K.ii Dev.1 m.us ana Myrtle Beach<lb/>
- - aomooation assistance Contact r<lb/>
113 Saw Biog t0"<lb/>
S<lb/>
fall ?<lb/>
Jexi <lb/>
<lb/>
H : <lb/>
 n<lb/>
1 ?ned<lb/>
-newng to -? nil be<lb/>
<lb/>
? -8 rs can rchase<lb/>
V1<lb/>
NT CO, INC<lb/>
on<lb/>
JS4<lb/>
?rooa? Sj, 3-<lb/>
?" r tgnts ?e$rvM<lb/>
 fSoaa '0 Deal's<lb/>
?KS EVERYDAY<lb/>
Jvd - Greenville<lb/>
 ? . DOZ<lb/>
'02 Please<lb/>
39<lb/>
SWEET RIPE<lb/>
California<lb/>
Cantaloupes<lb/>
88<lb/>
'HIN OR THICK CRUST<lb/>
TAKE N BAKE<lb/>
Deli-Fresh<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
For<lb/>
snroom<lb/>
Sausage<lb/>
$5<lb/>
? Cheese<lb/>
'Pepperoni<lb/>
REFRESHING<lb/>
Meister Brau<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
??- I HI h.AS<lb/>
Lawn Establishes Careers Program<lb/>
H-nis T. Latham Jr H 1VgIIH<lb/>
deeply concerned r'sua,man in? dohesakI C 8?" - lcvcls' P??uniai and career planning agencies and Pur. , ?<lb/>
young rple clfooK ?he P1" ham, who ha, h?ri , "More necd to be done - f ?Ups' includin8 trade and pro " Jamcsr<lb/>
work People choose the,r life's cril Latham said in presenting gffto fS,?n seti? and asscS a- Lathrn??? aPP?ate Mr.<lb/>
a J ? a decision which La,h t0r ?f a???info?tio?cSS CSta1b,ishuthe fu"d in honor o?h? 2? Jj can have far-reacWng cocW ?? li' and<lb/>
feels many yonnprc a,lham which he establishftrTafVi? u?r unc,e. the late Fordyce C Har 2? by Pooling and coor win h? S V James said- "We<lb/>
2 Wta mrolClUbt f a Greenville attorney who ?- inTh 3?? ?? " promote<lb/>
S?. -metimrSmll 2? 2? ?SBJSS ST .212.?8 found of ?&amp; r ThTmVr<lb/>
lyEJCAROUNj<lb/>
r?-? T. -?ww?uig a more<lb/>
mwiimgful, more rewarding pro-<lb/>
these activities<lb/>
propriate manner<lb/>
a most ap-<lb/>
educUonor- ,?l in their recognizes .r1, C He ? one of th<lb/>
m-iri?g aiSTtS fe'SxJe8 cesT-? -wardmg pro- l h <lb/>
?f?h?rathaia?nMd0thers indivuals in makYna2J2 TSt Latham said- Instead of a ciuLS -Ualcs ?f the ECU<lb/>
People Jefimshin. "ST 23 sions' b" hefeS&amp;fSjf1- Sporadic, spur-of-the momem 2, James- director of ZZ??? "1<lb/>
d going to 3 J?S sch?J "? coordiniiori of ?i2? Cp,SOde' he " jt sho"?d be "on S?' P,annin8 and Placemen ca?? - gram a"d ?ne of his<lb/>
slightest idea arW 2 h?Ut the ?? SCT' g?m? over ? years ?" ?51lc5 at ECU, will be director SSSl?i Tf J a pub,ic h001<lb/>
career Latham Ch??Smg a t Acting on his concern Latham r 2 2? makin? this my Personal g Hafdin? Careers'? o- later ctee" S? NC" A<lb/>
ng, guidance 'friendship for and confidence in 2S?2 ?f International<lb/>
rOmUM As4 ? - tidencem Business Machines (IBM). IBM<lb/>
?"? wunseung, guidance ??f?- j r1" ??'u nc<lb/>
I laance friendship for and confide<lb/>
now, former memhJatei?r ?Ians were known as The Sil?.t ?v4<lb/>
Fund<lb/>
will match Latham's gifts to the<lb/>
careers program fund.<lb/>
Latham's uncle for whom the<lb/>
2;s na?ed worked closely<lb/>
with Gov. Thomas Jarvis in the<lb/>
early 1900's to establish the schoo!<lb/>
which became East Carolina<lb/>
University at Greenville. Harding<lb/>
later served on the school's board<lb/>
of trustees longer than any other<lb/>
Person. One of Greenville's streets<lb/>
leading from the heart of the ECU<lb/>
campus is named Harding Street<lb/>
in his honor.<lb/>
Carohna,Q"nding president,3St<lb/>
JPSL In their late ties<lb/>
nou, former members of the<lb/>
group.that some say started Z<lb/>
New Left movement that rocked<lb/>
Amencan campuses for more<lb/>
than a decade gathered for a reu<lb/>
nion at the University of<lb/>
California-Berkeley campus ?<lb/>
forTS S?me disParaging words<lb/>
for the apparent lack of political<lb/>
activism on today's campu ef<lb/>
?S 3ttended a inference before<lb/>
ending the get-together in rather<lb/>
heS faShi?n Sunday h<lb/>
the cutting of an anniversary cake<lb/>
and a game of softball.<lb/>
fn I anniversary was of the<lb/>
founding of SLATE on the<lb/>
Berkeley campus in 1957 to try to<lb/>
integrate fraternities<lb/>
in ?SSre? ?n?d t0 dissoIve itself<lb/>
in 968, SLATE helped ignite the<lb/>
Sride StUdem dement by<lb/>
raising money to help the civil<lb/>
rights Freedom Fighters i? "h<lb/>
?.? ? , Stag,ng a nationally-<lb/>
telev,sed sit-in at a San Francisco<lb/>
meeting of the notorious fEu?<lb/>
tee nCun Activities Commit-<lb/>
?L d,r y gmng birtn to the<lb/>
famous Free Speech Movement<lb/>
Pioneering the long student strug-<lb/>
gle against campus control over<lb/>
student behavior.<lb/>
"There has been nothing in mv<lb/>
Me I was involved in that I felt I<lb/>
had so much of an effect " L J<lb/>
days "It magnified out. It had<lb/>
npple effects all ove the<lb/>
country ine<lb/>
"One of the reasons SLATF<lb/>
was so effective was that McCar<lb/>
thyism was so effective "<lb/>
speculated Jim Gallegher, who<lb/>
now works at the University of<lb/>
Oregon's Labor Education and<lb/>
Research Center.<lb/>
"It was a horrible time recall-<lb/>
S ATP wh0 Joined<lb/>
h 7t m 1958- "You literallj<lb/>
didn t know what you could saj<lb/>
to your neighbor. You didn'<lb/>
bTfrrend,UC0U,dSayt0y0U<lb/>
Sen. Joseph McCarthy, o<lb/>
RnrKr W3S, the wisconsir<lb/>
Republican who publicly brandec<lb/>
People as communists, usually<lb/>
without any evidence or motivi<lb/>
besides the publicity value o;<lb/>
making dramatic accusations<lb/>
Though McCarthy himself diec<lb/>
the same year SLATE began, the<lb/>
defamations had broken mam<lb/>
People and careers ? a good<lb/>
number of them belonging to pro-<lb/>
fessors - and even mild forms of<lb/>
dissent were dropped for fear the<lb/>
dissenters would be personally<lb/>
and professionally ruined<lb/>
OnMHWaS afraid "M Jackie<lb/>
Ooldberg, one of SLATE's<lb/>
e?eiSHHN?CCarthyism had its<lb/>
effect. I didn't want to be duped<lb/>
afraid1?6' ! was 17 and a litSe<lb/>
afraid. I was attracted to campus<lb/>
politics because it seemed a little<lb/>
Those fears kept many cam-<lb/>
puses so quiet that fifties col<lb/>
&amp;Kknown M The Sil?? ?<lb/>
JSrxM r S?ssr ?3fto dominate the<lb/>
s,rf?:i- SSMtess tH"Tr-<lb/>
?ttS'2?s SSfiSMP- S&amp;S?-3<lb/>
?s??iSS saSsaa: SSh?-<lb/>
an annual nationwide surevf JhlS wou,dn,t be happening if a?r e.rally in the Place of the<lb/>
college freshman polidc?nH here Wasn,t wmethitigVicome " dZt L -l?sdy gating stu-<lb/>
social views cntende in f TT Paul Kaga1i, now S3. . that animated<lb/>
telephone interview m a e photographe in Sa? SI?, fl,ts . ?mediate suc-<lb/>
"The material values of that SSSS " ??X ? the s?vSs SWtieS and "<lb/>
generation were nowhere nfr ?ntennae of social change rw ?<lb/>
what they are nowtX? so?me "T1 the co?er ofSSSVS. ?f 3 nUmber<lb/>
he said. "There was m.Z  !?me grounds well, some ?L i  that have reinstituted<lb/>
altruism in the SSeTC! fCent hett10"5 t0 govern st?dent<lb/>
was considered a Kve&amp;s theT ? SOmc f?ent at &amp;I ? ?VCT the<lb/>
a5M?-?S ?S?s SES-1<lb/>
highest in history " ? ????"??"i<lb/>
Today's students are much less<lb/>
mterested in political activity tnSi<lb/>
tfteir predecessors primarily<lb/>
because they're preoccupied wi!th<lb/>
tangjblgoals like wealfh, AstM<lb/>
Another non-SLATEnik<lb/>
observer Rutgers History Prof<lb/>
2E" S.usman, who telches a<lb/>
sixties history course, added<lb/>
cyrucism keeps many of today's<lb/>
students on the sidelines. X<lb/>
Some of the SLATE reuruon<lb/>
participants also wondered why<lb/>
today's students aren't more ac<lb/>
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oaturdav g<lb/>
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Sffwan<lb/>
????iaiarSTc<lb/>
?MatCkMMW<lb/>
no PuacMaat aVaaaaWM Towmaauc. ?.<lb/>
"Ul" "? '? ' ?? oa acr<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0004"/><lb/>
Stye East (Karolfntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus<lb/>
community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. 0mmmlMmmr<lb/>
, GREGR'DEOUT,va?a,w<lb/>
1 NNIFER JENDRASIAK. sr?, tdllor , T<lb/>
Randy Mews. ?,? ' - IfcTRZAK-????.<lb/>
TIN A M AROSCHAK. ? MART'N' ? <lb/>
Bii l Austin r . alene Sippel, ww? Ww<lb/>
"ii L nuSllIN, Circulation Manager r , <lb/>
Linda Vizena. a?, <lb/>
July II. 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Financial Aid<lb/>
Court's Decision A Good One<lb/>
The Supreme Court last week<lb/>
upheld by a 6-2 vote the right to<lb/>
deny student financial aid to voung<lb/>
men who refuse to register for the<lb/>
draft. Six college students from<lb/>
Minnesota had urged the Court to<lb/>
??n,fud?WVhe Iaw' contending<lb/>
thai the law forced them to give in<lb/>
criminating evidence about their<lb/>
registration status and punished<lb/>
them without a trial. The Court<lb/>
disagreed, and so do we.<lb/>
Court watchers view this as a<lb/>
tory for the Reagan administra-<lb/>
n, but the decision is more a win<lb/>
or fairness. All legal considera-<lb/>
te about "bills of attainder"<lb/>
that punish a particular<lb/>
of people without a hearing<lb/>
legal under the Constitution)<lb/>
de, what the question boils<lb/>
n to is should people who<lb/>
ise to fight for their country be<lb/>
n money by it for an educa-<lb/>
law does not compel in-<lb/>
clination because financial aid is<lb/>
mandatory. You don't have to<lb/>
Ply. Although if you need it and<lb/>
aren't willing to sign up ?<lb/>
:1I, tough luck. Sure, people are<lb/>
hurt by this law, but if their<lb/>
conscience objects to registration<lb/>
ours objects to giving over our<lb/>
hard-earned tax dollars to educate<lb/>
non-conforming ingrates. How<lb/>
dare someone expect a country to<lb/>
educate them when they're not<lb/>
willing to stick by that same coun-<lb/>
try. Any rational argument leads<lb/>
you back to the same conclusion ?<lb/>
that it's a two-way street, and you<lb/>
have to ride in both directions to<lb/>
get what's yours.<lb/>
But, you say, "poor people are<lb/>
hurt most. Rich people aren't af-<lb/>
fected That's true. They're the<lb/>
ones applying; but a well-off non-<lb/>
registrant would get the same treat-<lb/>
ment if he happened to apply. So<lb/>
the law is uniform; it just doesn't<lb/>
appear so. We agree with Justice<lb/>
Thurgood Marshall who chides his<lb/>
colleagues in a dissenting opinion<lb/>
for not admitting that the law is a<lb/>
form of punishment. We agree ?<lb/>
ft is, but unlike Marshall, we think<lb/>
it s okay.<lb/>
Financial aid is valuable, and as<lb/>
we said before in this space the<lb/>
program is a good thing for the na-<lb/>
tion We just don't want it given to<lb/>
people who break the law<lb/>
Heredity vs. Education: Family Ties<lb/>
MBAs<lb/>
SIPS Hp-SHS Sa?a?aa<lb/>
-wSSSbs- ??tM"i SgjgsKSsss<lb/>
-ggrttsaas scsHS s??Sj?3sk<lb/>
&amp;?wasses si 55?5rm asarsM?<lb/>
Art Buchwald<lb/>
-? 'viutuiuu uuw proua<lb/>
J2J ?CTC Whcn he ot his MBA You<lb/>
to d him you were going to make him a<lb/>
full partner, but I had no idea you were<lb/>
going to appoint him president "<lb/>
out m the mailroom, and then worked<lb/>
hirnself up to underwear and socks.<lb/>
After two weeks he became restless so I<lb/>
made him vice president of merchandis-<lb/>
ing. Before I knew it he put in a whole<lb/>
new computer system, renovated all<lb/>
foLnd ??0rS' ad,ded a ladies' fine, and<lb/>
found a way of earnin. 13 peroant in<lb/>
tcrest over the weekend on owcashflow<lb/>
by paying our suppliers through a bank<lb/>
in Hong Kong. Roger said the one thing<lb/>
nfnHarnedat?Harvard was y?u either ex<lb/>
pand or die.<lb/>
"How old is Roger?" I asked.<lb/>
He s 28. He came to me about eight ?H <lb/>
W S StfJSK Br that BI<lb/>
-Campus Forum- " ?r B,oomin8tafc,s<lb/>
a w JT, ' "????? "ur image.<lb/>
and the name Efrem Wrinreb was too<lb/>
associated!inour customers' minds with<lb/>
the late '70s. I don't want to be too hard<lb/>
on him. He worked out a Golden<lb/>
Parachute' deal with me before we went<lb/>
public. He said I could stav on at mv<lb/>
present salary as a consultant and have<lb/>
"Young Harvard MBA's don't mince<lb/>
words I said. "Did you tell hin?thU .<lb/>
business was your whole hfe and yor STS " a consuJtant ?d have<lb/>
dream had always been fo ?Sd ZJfZT? FCached 55' providin ?<lb/>
Roger to work as a team?" ? ' .work for a competing store<lb/>
"Yes, and he said from a fam.lv . P1 ?say you had t0 work in lhe<lb/>
standpoint he understood but "SFZ1"<lb/>
executive of a corporation he had t Q ? ' was m' own choicc- ?'?<lb/>
-  lad to ??? to work back here than to explain<lb/>
wE. 'tockhoJders first<lb/>
ow?xders? ? th? ?<lb/>
? 2 f?rg0t t0 teU vou- Roger took us<lb/>
public last year. He told me it w? the<lb/>
? w?. UW.H H?c Uld.il IU CAJ. Id.<lb/>
to everyone why we changed the name of<lb/>
the store<lb/>
"I think Roger's an ingrate<lb/>
"I don't blame him and I don't bhme<lb/>
Harvard. I understand the first thing<lb/>
SWaSSSSS? ?teach you at any top busi<lb/>
???? .rying to buy Brooks ssssrs:<lb/>
blood, you go for the bottom line<lb/>
1 whm.u,<lb/>
WZMB Listener Input Encouraged<lb/>
tor's note: The following is a W7mp  ?<lb/>
!CK OF H?ARIM6 ABOUT c65S5 Jmiu<lb/>
Reagan: A Nixon 4<lb/>
rf!t0r'i n?te: The following is a<lb/>
response from the ECU Media Board<lb/>
tZZnmt0aletterinlaStk'S<lb/>
Dear Ms. Gooch:<lb/>
I appreciate your letter concerning<lb/>
he Permanent Wave show on WZMB<lb/>
faput from the many students who<lb/>
fasten to WZMB is welcome and ver?<lb/>
helpful to our programmers.<lb/>
our iLWaVe muSic is very P"1 with<lb/>
m and for this reason we<lb/>
SLE t0 pIay morc new wave<lb/>
SS8 2 rcgular rock sh?w<lb/>
programmmg. Because of the amount<lb/>
of new wave that is being ni? on<lb/>
we Mi?t?F5 25 Pamming,<lb/>
Tern w W! Shou,d Umit tfle Permf:<lb/>
nem Wave show to one night each<lb/>
Again, we do appreciate your interest<lb/>
MarkNiewald<lb/>
Media Board Chairman<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
?Z Z? ?Ur ?ffiCe in the lica.<lb/>
iraZLnf? OCross Srom " en-<lb/>
trance ofJoyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ten must include the name, major and<lb/>
ZfaSSZ ?fthe ?"or(s). Utters<lb/>
rZlT " '? tWO 'yPwritten pages,<lb/>
itterieCei?r neatly <lb/>
letters are subject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
2?!2??? ?dnipersonal<lb/>
attacks will be permitted. Students<lb/>
faculty and staff writing letters for this<lb/>
inLr'mi?ded that the ? limited<lb/>
to one every five issues.<lb/>
Thejtii<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
<lb/>
By GORDON IPOCK<lb/>
readers familiar with the term ???Q?i,<lb/>
votVhwrraMWinkle: Coervatives should<lb/>
votr or Walter Mondale. You heard me correctlv<lb/>
a! 'nT5' RepUblicans ?? ? ndCvo eeCfor<lb/>
Sin'bhh SCrVatiVes shou,d vote for Mondale,<lb/>
it UJ IK C dtes get the nomination. If Gary Hart<lb/>
Jesse Jackson or Ted Kennedy should garnerTt cSn<lb/>
servanves should pull the lever or mart the bX"<lb/>
even faster for them. 0t<lb/>
I'B explain my reasoning.<lb/>
Iewi7' ToT rhin8Sam Donaldson, Anthony<lb/>
d u 2? Wicker, the editors of The New<lb/>
,n fh lCThC N,CW! and ?bserver everyone els"<lb/>
n the media said about Ronald Reagan. Forgeut'<lb/>
Forget everything you've heard Reagan himself<lb/>
say. hts jabber about the Soviet-Cuban ffiEt ? cen<lb/>
tral Amercia, his "evil empire" rhetoric, his-hogwash<lb/>
about free enterprise. Forget it. Talk is cheap<lb/>
Instead, Look at the Reagan record<lb/>
dehr" nfS a P.resident who has run up a national<lb/>
debt of staggenng proportions. (I've read all the<lb/>
JfPuMican excuses for it, but forget them as well<lb/>
Remember, talk is cheap.)<lb/>
torT Xl a presidcnt who is se"?ng nuclear reac-<lb/>
ts to Communist China. Actually, selling is a<lb/>
misnomer. The Chinese don't have billions of dollars<lb/>
or nard currency to buy them with. They'll get a<lb/>
ter?tSrUate,dlZ?d "Tc" at a ?" <lb/>
terest rate - from U.S. banks. A loan that Kissinger<lb/>
? if he's still around ? will cancel 20 vear? fmm<lb/>
Plutonium from the rS?or?  bU'1' W"h the<lb/>
doFarhrtelc? funne,ed??of<lb/>
KomTToc.r " "<lb/>
didate fondly 5?3 jSi ?henhe  ? "?-<lb/>
diplomatic HrtftftWfSiS 2f SeVerin?<lb/>
capitalism in the wlTL at 5"le dyno of<lb/>
bother to VaVAXIS<lb/>
maSianTecen ChineS? ?-S-? e<lb/>
? JLSttMSA-rno fl?<lb/>
Here is a president who, as a candidate foam, ?<lb/>
he mouth as he attacked Jimmy Carter for tS to<lb/>
hove strategic inferiority upon the U S. Waf T<lb/>
II Treaty, but since his election has honoredI thlt<lb/>
ii 7.? S ! Pr?'dem who could have uMraded<lb/>
SMS f?rCeS "i,hin  " ?f SALTT<lb/>
?55 o05-s,rbom - aa<lb/>
of7J!fIf prcsidnct wuo promised to cut the size<lb/>
of federal government, who promised to slash soS<lb/>
programs. Government is bigger tadm rW?,<lb/>
three years ago, and more kSLlS<lb/>
pro-ams today than was ZZ?<lb/>
I could go on, but why waste time.<lb/>
impeccable<lb/>
as Reagan.<lb/>
Alger Hiss<lb/>
size of the<lb/>
steidy?nViHrC vS ?S " thc Press W)df and in-<lb/>
stead focus on his actions, you'll see that Snn.M<lb/>
Reagan is hardly a conservativl aJK t<lb/>
Americans think they've 2SUfi?S?<lb/>
aLst 2rfm ? ?fficc? R?aga7?a pro!<lb/>
gressive moderate by any standard of lhe definitioT<lb/>
His presidency resembles Nixon's<lb/>
Nixon was elected with the same<lb/>
commie-hating, conservative creditials<lb/>
Nixon was the man who helped put<lb/>
behind bars. But Nixon doubled the size of the<lb/>
federal budget, quadrupled the national debT, gave us<lb/>
ote??A2? m ictnam' "??? Tai'ww out<lb/>
of the Umted Nations and ushered Communist Oima<lb/>
ui, gave us detente and Salt I and even usedTaae a?5<lb/>
price controls - hardly a laissez-fairrappTotcho<lb/>
economics. Nixon did things that no DemSSwdd<lb/>
have done - and so hasRonald Reagan "<lb/>
All while the establishment press mwDainted horh<lb/>
men as right-wing conservatives <lb/>
Contrast Reagan to Jesse Helms, Phil Crane<lb/>
oS P?nt?n' Jack KemP- Joh? EaS 2TSS<lb/>
other "real" conservative, and you'll Mthl L y<lb/>
vative hoax that Ronald ReagJm " " " conser-<lb/>
His policies promote socialism both at hnm? ?a<lb/>
abroad. If he continues his presentWi befo?<lb/>
second term is out, Reagan wffl have SShS<lb/>
SSKS S S?SLiSthro agent<lb/>
have ?dvMcJ?S??.He<lb/>
Americanism. Clal,sm wh,Ie preaching<lb/>
ThtouTcome'wIi S Sfc"1! Mondaif<lb/>
and there will be no !n?e " PP5 swfter -<lb/>
about freetmXCwn?rvative speeches<lb/>
sionsim. OTlCrpnse thrwarting Soviet expan-<lb/>
nS MSTit S2?VS hNovcmbCT r -Ukc<lb/>
American can snot 2S becausc ? averagc<lb/>
Hart, Mondlk andJactr?" uUke McGovern,<lb/>
fooled by cCjdeorLfe1' 5M I<lb/>
so, the average vo?? will f?" md N?on- d<lb/>
Pie. and Nix VtSJ ff Md a,C<lb/>
conIuvTf Ucan convention,<lb/>
record and firmlyLrLfritid2e ? <lb/>
best way to dous ?Sn?1?,SC,Ves from E?<lb/>
Although it'srX5? J2! ? ? conservative,<lb/>
least itTould 222155: S" uceed. at<lb/>
to the American dcoS,11,1 " demonstrate<lb/>
true coiifthaf h? Rca?lul h not a<lb/>
servative policies.  P0" ?? not con-<lb/>
TshouId VOtc for<lb/>
servative movementv.?t0 Pf8 the con-<lb/>
win a sure etectio? tnatlSft ,Rcag,U1' ?" t0<lb/>
ment. mt wU1 on,y doom the move-<lb/>
is left of the rqmbBc " to W h?i<lb/>
?rt.<lb/>
-V<lb/>
Roxie (Maun<lb/>
Thingj<lb/>
By BRIAN RANG<lb/>
Circumstances aren<lb/>
what they seem. Al<lb/>
sometimes seems that y<lb/>
A simple misunderst<lb/>
missed assumption can<lb/>
meone into an embarras<lb/>
tion so fast that he da<lb/>
realize that he's making<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Such was the case<lb/>
friend Buck Penrv. B<lb/>
joker through and" thrc<lb/>
specialty is mind gam<lb/>
thrives on the art of o<lb/>
which makes it doubl<lb/>
when he finds himself th<lb/>
his own joke.<lb/>
Once upon last Wi<lb/>
mght, at about 10:30, rr<lb/>
rang. Buck was close<lb/>
phone, so he answered<lb/>
17-year-old sister Lori wa<lb/>
other end. I took the ph<lb/>
talked to her.<lb/>
I knew that Buck often<lb/>
talk trash to the ori<lb/>
Duo 'Sqi<lb/>
By DAVID WTTHERINt<lb/>
 In 1978, amid Britain's<lb/>
"new wave" invasion, a<lb/>
called Squeeze made<lb/>
unheralded debut. Little d<lb/>
suspect that in the followii<lb/>
years they would become<lb/>
the most respected names i<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Squeeze was the "critics<lb/>
ings and much of that<lb/>
was due to the bri<lb/>
songwriting of Chris Diffor<lb/>
Crlen Tilbrook. The team's<lb/>
tious lyrics and pop hooks<lb/>
simply irresistable, and thev<lb/>
soon tagged "a modern U<lb/>
and McCartney<lb/>
After two formative all<lb/>
MT Squeeze and Cool For<lb/>
the band released Argybargy<lb/>
from there it seemed they <lb/>
do no wrong. This BeaUesqi<lb/>
fort was followed bv the inc<lb/>
Me iSaff Side Story, consider<lb/>
many to be their masterpiece,<lb/>
album featured their biggest<lb/>
? hit 'Tempted with<lb/>
vocals by keyboardist Paul<lb/>
rack. Soon afterwards, Car<lb/>
left Squeeze to pursue his<lb/>
career, following in the foots<lb/>
of the mad genius Jools HolL<lb/>
the band's original ivory tkkl<lb/>
The group pulled itself t<lb/>
together for what was to beo<lb/>
mmmtm?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0005"/><lb/>
MSOMffiOW<lb/>
OTHER,<lb/>
EN,<lb/>
mily Ties<lb/>
r MB As<lb/>
the details, except<lb/>
i use Roger Weinreb as a<lb/>
pany to threaten takeovers<lb/>
es. His roommate, who<lb/>
estment banker who<lb/>
Averaged buvouts<lb/>
tuu means<lb/>
"derstand Roger wan-<lb/>
?ead, but whv would he<lb/>
Weinreb &amp; Son to Roger<lb/>
. Father<lb/>
: wanted to be in the<lb/>
-hange our image<lb/>
? Weinreb was too<lb/>
"omers' minds with<lb/>
I want to be too hard<lb/>
iced out a 'Golden<lb/>
h me before we went<lb/>
rould stay on at my<lb/>
as a consultant and have<lb/>
-hed 55, providing I<lb/>
mpeting store<lb/>
nad to work in the<lb/>
' z<lb/>
vas m owti choice. It's<lb/>
ark Dack here than to explain<lb/>
M Nhy ve changed the name of<lb/>
tk Roger's an ingrate<lb/>
: Mame him d I don't blame<lb/>
1 understand the first thing<lb/>
- at any top business<lb/>
you have to choose bet-<lb/>
s and your own flesh and<lb/>
 or the bottom line<lb/>
xaged<lb/>
?J points of view. Mail or<lb/>
our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tmg, across from the en-<lb/>
yner Library.<lb/>
Yeses of verification, all let-<lb/>
It de the name, major and<lb/>
n, address, phone number<lb/>
ye oj the authorfs. Letters<lb/>
to two typewritten pages,<lb/>
?ed or neatly printed. All<lb/>
rubject to editing for brevi-<lb/>
J -d libel, and no personal<lb/>
V be permitted. Students,<lb/>
staff writing letters for this<lb/>
Winded that they are limited<lb/>
five issues.<lb/>
king<lb/>
ftral America through his agent<lb/>
ve busted the economy. He will<lb/>
?cialism while preaching<lb/>
now socialist like Mondale.<lb/>
ie same ? perhaps swifter ?<lb/>
pon fusing conservative speeches<lb/>
land thrwarting Soviet expan-<lb/>
-w this November - just like<lb/>
yat s because the average<lb/>
heft-wmgers like McGovern,<lb/>
ickson; but, they are genuinely<lb/>
?ke Reagan and Nixon. And<lb/>
I will vote for mom and apple<lb/>
eagans every time.<lb/>
Itional Republican convention,<lb/>
sharply criticize the Reagan<lb/>
rate themselves from it. The<lb/>
nominate a real conservative.<lb/>
such a move would suceed, at<lb/>
cord straight and demonstrate<lb/>
e that Ronald Reagan is not a<lb/>
nat his policies are not con-<lb/>
servatives should vote for<lb/>
tar better to preserve the con-<lb/>
y sacrificing Reagan, than to<lb/>
at will only doom the move-<lb/>
I ship has gone down, the na-<lb/>
?vauve leaders to salvage what<lb/>
HEEASTCARQLINI<lb/>
?eRip-Roarin<lb/>
Features<lb/>
'20s Of 'Chicago<lb/>
Summer Musical Shimmers With Excitement<lb/>
 By TINAJJ4ARQSCHAK ' ' ' <lb/>
Roxie (M.ureen Kerrigan) reaches for the stars.<lb/>
Shimmy on back to the days<lb/>
when jazz was hot, passion was<lb/>
intense and women were<lb/>
merciless-back to Chicago of the<lb/>
1920s. Once again the East<lb/>
Carolina Summer Theatre cap-<lb/>
tured the spirit of Broadway with<lb/>
its second 1984 summer perfor-<lb/>
mance, Chicago, Based on the<lb/>
drama by Maurine Dallas<lb/>
Watkins, Chicago relates a tale of<lb/>
murder, fervor and fortune-<lb/>
hunting.<lb/>
Maureen Kerrigan stars in the<lb/>
play as Roxie Hart, a club singer<lb/>
who kills her faithless lover and is<lb/>
thrown in jail with six other sexy<lb/>
and seductive jailbirds (Su-Su<lb/>
Corbitt as Liz; Connie Yoder as<lb/>
Annie; Jamie Wilkerson as June-<lb/>
Paula Johnson as Hunyak<lb/>
Patricia Weeks as Mona; Jennifer<lb/>
Paulson as Stella).<lb/>
David Heckert portrays Billy<lb/>
Flynn, the fast-talking, fortune-<lb/>
seeking lawyer who helps acquit<lb/>
Roxie and her somewhat jelouse<lb/>
soon-to-be sidekick, Velma Kelly<lb/>
(Barbara Gulan).<lb/>
At first hot-tempered Velma<lb/>
treats newcomer Roxie with con-<lb/>
tempt . And once Flynn puts her<lb/>
case on the back burner to attend<lb/>
to Roxie's, Velma becomes<lb/>
jelouse and outraged. Being the<lb/>
thrill-seeker she is, she attempts to<lb/>
pursuade Roxie to team up with<lb/>
her (only so she can share in Rox-<lb/>
ie's newfound attention.) Refus-<lb/>
ing at first, Roxie finally gives in<lb/>
when someone else steals the<lb/>
spotlight, and the two show their<lb/>
stuff in the final song and dance<lb/>
number "Nowadays<lb/>
Flynn makes his grand entrance<lb/>
on stage with the song "All I Care<lb/>
About. It is through this song<lb/>
that we learn just how suave and<lb/>
facetious Mr. Billy Flynn really is<lb/>
Throughout the play Flynn<lb/>
manipulates Roxie's very passive<lb/>
husband Amos (Gary Lamb), in-<lb/>
trigues the press - especially the<lb/>
gullible, singing reporter, Mary<lb/>
Sunshine (J. Loeffelholz) ? and<lb/>
twists and turns Roxie's alibi to<lb/>
serve his own desire for fame<lb/>
This musical vaudville incor-<lb/>
porates flappers and gangsters<lb/>
with colorful tunes like "All That<lb/>
Jazz "We Both Reached for the<lb/>
?7 Roie "dazzle<lb/>
Dazzle and "Nowadays "<lb/>
Music Director Barry Shank led<lb/>
tne company through the<lb/>
numbers.<lb/>
Throughout the play Master of<lb/>
?rm0n,CS ,John Person<lb/>
periodically enlightened the au-<lb/>
dience with tidbits of helpful, yet<lb/>
comically obvious information<lb/>
Janice Schreiber should also be<lb/>
commended for an excellent job<lb/>
portraying the crooked jail<lb/>
matron, Mrs. Morton.<lb/>
Chicago was directed and<lb/>
choreographed by Broadway<lb/>
veteran Jay Fox. Robert Alpers<lb/>
brilliantly designed the scenery for<lb/>
the toddhn' town" of Windy Ci-<lb/>
Theend of the play contains<lb/>
one unique surprise that shocked<lb/>
the audience tremendously but<lb/>
HI leave things at that. The East<lb/>
Carolina Summer Theatre's rendi-<lb/>
tion of Chicago is packed with<lb/>
seductive dance numbers, comedy<lb/>
and intrigue that should not be<lb/>
m ssed.<lb/>
Tickets are available for the<lb/>
Wednesday through Saturday per-<lb/>
formances (July 11-14) and may<lb/>
be purchased at McGinnis Theatre-<lb/>
from 10 a.m. until 8:30 p.m or<lb/>
reserved by calling 757-6390 Per-<lb/>
formances begin at 8:15 p.m<lb/>
I lungs Aren t Always What They SeemOr Are Thev<lb/>
By BRIAN RANGELEY , u iTI -I HCj ?<lb/>
?"?? freshman girls. Since I ori u ,k ?<lb/>
Circumstances aren't always<lb/>
what they seem. At least it<lb/>
sometimes seems that way.<lb/>
A simple misunderstanding of<lb/>
missed assumption can hurdle so-<lb/>
meone into an embarrassing situa-<lb/>
tion so fast that he doesn't even<lb/>
realize that he's making a fool of<lb/>
himself.<lb/>
Such was the case with my<lb/>
friend Buck Penry. Buck is a<lb/>
joker through and through. His<lb/>
specialty is rnind games. Buck<lb/>
thrives on the art of confusion,<lb/>
which makes it doubly funny<lb/>
when he finds himself the butt of<lb/>
his own joke.<lb/>
Once upon last Wednesday<lb/>
mght, at about 10:30, my phone<lb/>
rang. Buck was close to the<lb/>
Phone, so he answered it. My<lb/>
17-year-old sister Lori was on the<lb/>
ftHerend- l t00k the Phone and<lb/>
talked to her.<lb/>
I knew that Buck often liked to<lb/>
talk trash to the orientating<lb/>
freshman girls. Since Lori is that<lb/>
age, I decided to put her on the<lb/>
spot by putting Buck back on the<lb/>
phone.<lb/>
So I said, "Hold on" to Lori<lb/>
and threw the phone on the bed<lb/>
beside Buck.<lb/>
"Here I said, "Talk to my<lb/>
sister. Her name's Lori<lb/>
Buck picked up the phone and<lb/>
said, "Hello Lori ? hello?"<lb/>
"Hey said Buck, "How are<lb/>
you doing?"<lb/>
"Fine, how are you?"<lb/>
"Oh, I'm okay. You sound ter-<lb/>
rible. Are you tired or<lb/>
something?"<lb/>
"Well, yes, I am tired. I've<lb/>
done a lot today<lb/>
"Or it might be that you just<lb/>
don t want to talk to me said<lb/>
Buck. He was loosening up.<lb/>
"No, it's not that I<lb/>
"I bet you even hate me, don't<lb/>
you?"<lb/>
"I don't hate you<lb/>
"Yes you do, I can tell<lb/>
"I don't hate you<lb/>
Duo 'Squeezes' A Hit<lb/>
I decided to contribute to the<lb/>
conversation. "She hates all black<lb/>
people<lb/>
"Brian said you hate all black<lb/>
People said Buck.<lb/>
"I don't hate black people<lb/>
"Brian said you did said<lb/>
Buck. "Is that why you hate me,<lb/>
because you hate black people?"<lb/>
Buck waited; the other end of<lb/>
the phone was covered. He heard<lb/>
laughter in the background, then<lb/>
the voice again.<lb/>
"I don't hate you and I don't<lb/>
hate black people she said.<lb/>
"Well, that's okay, because I'm<lb/>
not black said Buck.<lb/>
"I didn't think so. You don't<lb/>
sound black<lb/>
"I don't sound black?" Buck<lb/>
looked at me; I shrugged my<lb/>
shoulders.<lb/>
"How does a black person<lb/>
sound?" Buck asked.<lb/>
"Well  you know<lb/>
"Yeah, like fer sure Buck<lb/>
began to unwind a string of Valley<lb/>
t ui t. ly gnar,y- y'know?<lb/>
Like, I m from California<lb/>
y know, and I've got this really'<lb/>
tubular tan, y'know? And like I<lb/>
bSTSS? h?W people can really<lb/>
yrem- ItS Iike' stelJ<lb/>
I figured that Lori and Buck<lb/>
had had enough long-distance fun<lb/>
at my parents'expense, so I wav-<lb/>
ed my hand in gesture for the<lb/>
phone.<lb/>
'Like, Brian wants to talk to<lb/>
him the phone, okay? Later "<lb/>
Buck handed me the phone I<lb/>
said, "Like, hello<lb/>
on"thel!?" My mother was than<lb/>
? hete- talked to her for a<lb/>
while then to my grandmother,<lb/>
then to my sister again. After<lb/>
that, I hung up the phone.<lb/>
Buck was stretched comfor-<lb/>
tably out on my bed with one arm<lb/>
cradled behind his head. He look-<lb/>
ed at me with a perplexed look<lb/>
and said, 'You know, Brian, your<lb/>
sister sure does sound - older<lb/>
By DAVID WTTHERINGTON<lb/>
Staff Wrtlcr<lb/>
In 1978, amid Britain's initial<lb/>
"new wave" invasion, a group<lb/>
called Squeeze made their<lb/>
unheralded debut. Little did they<lb/>
suspect that in the following five<lb/>
years they would become one of<lb/>
the most respected names in rock<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Squeeze was the "critics' darl-<lb/>
ings and much of that praise<lb/>
was due to the brilliant<lb/>
songwriting of Chris Difford and<lb/>
Glen Tilbrook. The team's infec-<lb/>
tious lyrics and pop hooks were<lb/>
simply irresistable, and they were<lb/>
soon tagged "a modern Lennon<lb/>
and McCartney<lb/>
After two formative albums,<lb/>
UK Squeeze and Cool For Cats,<lb/>
the band released Argybargy, and<lb/>
from there it seemed they could<lb/>
do no wrong. This Beatlesque ef-<lb/>
fort was followed by the incredi-<lb/>
ble East Side Story, considered by<lb/>
many to be their masterpiece. The<lb/>
album featured their biggest U.S.<lb/>
chart hit "Tempted with lead<lb/>
vocals by keyboardist Paul Car-<lb/>
rack. Soon afterwards, Carrack<lb/>
left Squeeze to pursue his own<lb/>
career, following in the footsteps<lb/>
of the mad genius Jools Holland,<lb/>
the band's original ivory tickler.<lb/>
The group pulled itself back<lb/>
together for what was to become<lb/>
the last Squeeze album, Sweets<lb/>
From A Stranger. After spending<lb/>
most of 1982 touring the U.S. the<lb/>
band seemed to be on its way to<lb/>
international stardom. Then out<lb/>
of nowhere, came the shocking<lb/>
announcement: Squeeze was<lb/>
breaking up. While the rock world<lb/>
mourned the loss of the group,<lb/>
Difford and Tilbrook were busy<lb/>
finding a new outlet for their<lb/>
songs ? namely themselves.<lb/>
The biggest surprise about the<lb/>
duos self-titled debut album is<lb/>
that there is no real surprise. The<lb/>
basic Squeeze sound is still there<lb/>
? catchy melodies that stick in<lb/>
you head. However, it is nice to<lb/>
see how the boys' writing has pro-<lb/>
gressed. These songs are among<lb/>
the most profound they have ever<lb/>
penned.<lb/>
Tilbrook's smooth vocals are as<lb/>
ovely as ever, echoing the<lb/>
kmhness in "On My Mind<lb/>
Tonight "The silence of the<lb/>
telephonedoesn't bother meBut<lb/>
I wish that it would ringI'm con-<lb/>
fined to quartersI'm in<lb/>
solitaryI'm the man who would<lb/>
be kingthe small hand's on the<lb/>
fiveI've got you on my mind<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Particulary effective is the sub-<lb/>
tle approach to heartbreak<lb/>
presented in the touching "You<lb/>
Can't Hurt the Girl "Her<lb/>
heart's been broken too many<lb/>
I thought about Lori's voice.<lb/>
She sounded seventeen to me He<lb/>
said she sounded older. When he<lb/>
handed me the phone, my mother<lb/>
was on the line.<lb/>
The thought hit me then.<lb/>
"When I gave you the phone,<lb/>
you said 'hello' twice before you<lb/>
got an answer, didn't you9"<lb/>
"Yes said Buck.<lb/>
"J bet you were talking to my<lb/>
mother I said.<lb/>
Buck's eyes nearly popped out<lb/>
of his face. He bolted upright in<lb/>
the bed.<lb/>
"Oh, my God he exclaimed,<lb/>
That was your mother<lb/>
I laughed so hard I couldn't<lb/>
talk Tears streaked my cheeks.<lb/>
Buck had covered his face with his<lb/>
hands, but I could see that his face<lb/>
and neck were bright red.<lb/>
"Does your sister have sort of a<lb/>
low voice?"<lb/>
I shook my head. Buck looked<lb/>
at me.<lb/>
"How old is she?"<lb/>
"Seventeen I said between<lb/>
breaths.<lb/>
"Oh, no<lb/>
"My mother is fifty-seven "<lb/>
fJr -?ndS Went bak over the<lb/>
2Sl was talkin? t0 your<lb/>
mother! I think I've done<lb/>
something very foolish<lb/>
Buck made me caJl home to<lb/>
SS-Ck Te ?that he reaJ1y was<lb/>
2 hJ-fLZn a?SWCT?I and I ask-<lb/>
ed her if she talked to Buck<lb/>
?I don't know she replied<lb/>
If that was him thai answered<lb/>
the phone, then I gues I did "<lb/>
It was " I said, "Then I talk-<lb/>
ed to you for a while "<lb/>
"Right<lb/>
"Then I said hold on <lb/>
MAnd I gave the phone to<lb/>
I started laughing again. Buck<lb/>
covered his face and moaned Bet-<lb/>
w?en,the daughter, I told Lori that<lb/>
I had to go. I laughed and Buck<lb/>
moaned.<lb/>
The moral of the story:<lb/>
before you leap.<lb/>
Look<lb/>
lllbfook ?d Difford m Mktag ? OB 0WB<lb/>
??- ??  - <lb/>
timesYou can't hurt the girlAnd<lb/>
not cry The team's brilliant use<lb/>
of imagery can also be found in<lb/>
this song: "She cried for a week<lb/>
the wound remains openHer<lb/>
heart turned to oak, she wept like<lb/>
a willowYou can't hurt the<lb/>
girlAnd not cry on her pillow "<lb/>
Producer Tony Visconti's string<lb/>
arrangements greatly enhance the<lb/>
mid-tempo tunes like "Action<lb/>
Speaks Faster "Man for All<lb/>
Seasons and the McCartney-<lb/>
mfluenced ballad, "The Apple<lb/>
Even the up-tempo numbers<lb/>
nave an underlying sadness to<lb/>
them: "Picking Up the Pieces"<lb/>
opens with the lines "Words<lb/>
escape me now, I'm in<lb/>
prisonSentenced to life of<lb/>
tearsNow she hates me, that's<lb/>
ner decisionwaiting for the<lb/>
smoke to clear And the fallacies<lb/>
of a corrupt love affair are<lb/>
presented in "Tears for Atten-<lb/>
tion "Tears for attention dry<lb/>
upon a smiling faceKisses of af-<lb/>
fection, lips that touch without a<lb/>
traceThe idea of conception puts<lb/>
the smile back on my face<lb/>
However, in the tradition of the<lb/>
Beatles, Difford and Tilbrook's<lb/>
topsy-turvy love story ends in a<lb/>
positive note. In "Love's<lb/>
Crashing Waves Tilbrook sings:<lb/>
Love s crashing waves upon the<lb/>
rocksIs seen by some, by you it's<lb/>
notBut you won't drown, love is<lb/>
your townWhen love is found<lb/>
for all to want Chris Difford<lb/>
and Glen Tilbrook share a vision,<lb/>
and in the end they are merely<lb/>
echoing the desperate voice of<lb/>
generations past: "All you need is<lb/>
love<lb/>
The Difford and Tilbrook<lb/>
debut LP is available at the<lb/>
Record Bar in Carolina East Mall<lb/>
and the Plaza.<lb/>
Novel Concentrates On<lb/>
Present, Not Future<lb/>
By MARY CASHIO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
fire . pcop.e ?tempt to draal.Kw'isTnThc E5<lb/>
and the actual events of the year 1984 However to mlL .<lb/>
TwfiSlu "PW18" nP for ten years. puiLsnabl?<lb/>
of?h??tr<lb/>
of the state which promoted blind loyalty; completelv unof. ,Vlt,cs<lb/>
member so it was all the more shockina when it ml ?J? dcal p?rty<lb/>
was guilty of thoughtcrime mSSSLSS VZESSll? he<lb/>
consciously. He, without bdn ae oHt hadtbv?1 su<lb/>
and muttered "Down with Bii Brother" in S,?SSP WShti<lb/>
tWhh? TrhWd Wm, promptly turned ZkfiT?TZ&amp;.<lb/>
that he was proud of his daughter for ctfrwiSy <lb/>
See WARNING, Page 6. <lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0006"/><lb/>
JULY11,1984<lb/>
MTB<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Stmtt Witter<lb/>
The Marshall Tucker Band<lb/>
began their career in Spartanburg,<lb/>
South Carolina as a group called<lb/>
?" T?y Factory, with Toy<lb/>
Caldwell (guitar, steel guitar<lb/>
vocals); Doug Gray (vocals); and<lb/>
Jerry Eubanks (sax, flute, vocals)<lb/>
With the addition of Tommy<lb/>
Caldwell (bass), George Mc-<lb/>
Sk Crhytnm guitar), and Paul<lb/>
Riddle (drums), they transformed<lb/>
into The Marshall Tucker Band in<lb/>
1971; the new name came either<lb/>
from a key Toy found or from a<lb/>
piano-tuner.<lb/>
pie Marshall Tucker Band was<lb/>
released in 1973 as their debut<lb/>
album ? going gold after two<lb/>
years. "Can't You See" became a<lb/>
minor hit off the album.<lb/>
Later during the same year they<lb/>
A History<lb/>
began opening for The Allman<lb/>
Brothers Band, and such tunes as<lb/>
Take the Highway "24 Hours<lb/>
at a Time" and "Fire On the<lb/>
Mountain" gained the band FM<lb/>
exposure, with the latter song at-<lb/>
197T8 nUmbCr 38 ?n the Charts in<lb/>
Two albums released in 1974 A<lb/>
ew Life and Where We All<lb/>
Belong also went gold. Even more<lb/>
success followed the next year<lb/>
with the platinum Searchin'For A<lb/>
Rainbow, which included the very<lb/>
popular title song.<lb/>
In 1976 Long Hard Ride was<lb/>
released; however, it did not<lb/>
match the success of its predessor.<lb/>
Again the best known cut was the<lb/>
title song. The Marshall Tucker<lb/>
Band peaked in 1977 with another<lb/>
platinum album, Carolina<lb/>
Dreams, which included the big<lb/>
seller "Heard It In A Love<lb/>
Song The song went 14th and<lb/>
became the highest rated single.<lb/>
The album also included the<lb/>
favorite cut "Never Trust A<lb/>
Stranger "Can't You Sec" was<lb/>
re-released during this time and<lb/>
again made the charts.<lb/>
In January, 1977 the band<lb/>
played for Jimmy Carter's in-<lb/>
augural.<lb/>
Further albums include<lb/>
Together Forever, (1978); Runn-<lb/>
ing Like the Wind, (1979); and<lb/>
Tenth, (1980)-<lb/>
Tragedy struck with the death<lb/>
of Tommy Caldwell on April 28,<lb/>
1980. A year later Dedicated was<lb/>
released in his honor. Caldwell?s<lb/>
place was taken by Frank Wilkie<lb/>
a former member of the Toy Fac-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
Dedicated Guitarist Receives Praise<lb/>
T M.r.h.11 M. Itod ?????, ??,? h, ???? Tuckerlud n m2<lb/>
Send your message in the Classifieds<lb/>
Bart Walsh<lb/>
? ?? ?<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
B?rt W?tah Is jamming his wiv to ultimate success.<lb/>
Warning Is<lb/>
Still Relevant<lb/>
Continued From Page 5.<lb/>
stated.<lb/>
However, that is not the way it<lb/>
was in Russia in the 1970s. People<lb/>
could poke fun at Brezhner, the<lb/>
Soviet leader, and tell anecdotes<lb/>
about him with impunity.<lb/>
ByJ.T.PIETRZAK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Another one on ECU's<lb/>
laianted and Dedicated" list is<lb/>
Bart Walsh, a Winston-Salem<lb/>
guitarist majoring in psychology<lb/>
A serious guitarist since the age of<lb/>
16 Bart played in bar-bands<lb/>
(under age) while in high school,<lb/>
when he arrived at ECU in 1981<lb/>
he met bassist Steve Cambell and<lb/>
drummer Scott Patters. Together<lb/>
with a few others, they formed the<lb/>
band Threshhold. After receiving<lb/>
an enthusiastic response from a<lb/>
??ni Room CTOwd ?n April<lb/>
1982, they were called back to<lb/>
Greenville to open at the Attic for<lb/>
bands such as States and Animus<lb/>
Pile (ex-Lynyrd Skynyrd drum-<lb/>
mer). They were approached by<lb/>
Driver to join that band, but<lb/>
decided to stay in school<lb/>
By May of ?83 all three were<lb/>
members of Driver and stayed<lb/>
with the band until "cir-<lb/>
cumstances" broke them up in<lb/>
Nov. They then took a break from<lb/>
school for a semester.<lb/>
Finishing school is a common<lb/>
Ba?l I?' .SteVe ? Scott.<lb/>
Back m Jan. of '84 they finally<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
. THEATRES<lb/>
CHILDREN<lb/>
ANYTIME<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
BILL MURRAY,<lb/>
DAN<lb/>
AYKROYD<lb/>
GHOSTBUSTFRS<lb/>
12:45, 2:50<lb/>
4:55, 7:00,9:05<lb/>
PG<lb/>
I<lb/>
1:00,3:05,5:10,7:15,9:20<lb/>
An outrageous new<lb/>
comedy from the creators of<lb/>
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?ar of "Splash R<lb/>
12:30,2:45,5:00,7:15,9:30<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
FX<lb/>
!S1<lb/>
SYLVESTER<lb/>
STALLONE<lb/>
Such a slackening of<lb/>
totalitarian controls may make it<lb/>
seem that totalitarianism does not<lb/>
necessarily last. Thankfully, there<lb/>
is no guarantee that it will endure.<lb/>
But we should not let ourselves<lb/>
get lulled into complacency<lb/>
Orwell's warning is still relevant<lb/>
as is shown by the degree of<lb/>
repression which still exists in<lb/>
Haiti. There, people can face im-<lb/>
prisonment of three years for<lb/>
speaking out against President-<lb/>
for-Life Jean-Claude Duvalier or<lb/>
his family. That is why Orwell's<lb/>
warning should be heeded for now<lb/>
and the years to come and not be<lb/>
treated as a Cassandra warning<lb/>
DOU.Y<lb/>
PARTON PG<lb/>
LATE SHOW<lb/>
FRI &amp; SAT<lb/>
Open 11:00-Starts 11:30pm<lb/>
NO PASSES RATED X<lb/>
DEVEL IN<lb/>
MISS JONES<lb/>
PART II<lb/>
DECORATE<lb/>
HERO.<lb/>
<lb/>
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jrk XAKi<lb/>
.?X5?<lb/>
?I<lb/>
Trom,ShHmp<lb/>
W Airport tie<lb/>
Orttvi?t?, MC 27W4<lb/>
(Wt)7J<lb/>
?<lb/>
B?<lb/>
m<lb/>
few<lb/>
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m<lb/>
kS?<lb/>
SUBWATS<lb/>
WANTED!<lb/>
in'omt 2 "lling involved. For<lb/>
varTtdi 2 ! ?PPii?tion write to:<lb/>
Wwrt!tu' Service 8i6 Orange<lb/>
' Silv? Spring, Maryland 20901<lb/>
????<lb/>
fSSSSFREB<lb/>
 'Wffl ,(v puktes and<lb/>
t<lb/>
O?<lb/>
on Subways famous freshly baked<lb/>
rolls So come in to Subway, where<lb/>
heroes get decorated every day<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
758 - 7979<lb/>
fc S$ai twtafa<lb/>
?suB(yyim<lb/>
 Sandwiches &amp; Salads<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th St.<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
recorded a tune Bart wrote when<lb/>
he was 17 - "Day of<lb/>
Reckoning Currently, "Day of<lb/>
Reckoning" is played on WZMB<lb/>
WQDR and WKNC (N.C. State)<lb/>
They hope to have an EP ready in<lb/>
a few months.<lb/>
Bart says that his early in-<lb/>
fluences came from Eric Clapton<lb/>
and Richie Blackmore. His con-<lb/>
temporary influences came from<lb/>
Eddy VanHalen and Randy<lb/>
Rhoades. Rhoades was a member<lb/>
of the original Quiet Riot and also<lb/>
played on Ozzy Osborn's first two<lb/>
solo albums.<lb/>
Bart is basically a "heavy<lb/>
metal" guitarist, though he<lb/>
doesn't like the terminology and<lb/>
plays a variety of styles. The songs<lb/>
he writes vary with his moods, he<lb/>
said; he even has a couple mushy<lb/>
ones he plays on a twelve string<lb/>
If you're thinking about im-<lb/>
PuM,Vmg (0r ginning) your guitar<lb/>
skills, Bart also teaches and his<lb/>
prices are negotiable. Rocket<lb/>
Music refers many customers to<lb/>
Bart.<lb/>
iSHll<lb/>
CHICA-<lb/>
A MUSICAL VAUDEVILLE<lb/>
"A RAZZLE-DAZZLE<lb/>
SONG AND DANCE<lb/>
SPECTACULAR<lb/>
OF THE ROARING '20s"<lb/>
July 9-14 ? 8.15 p.m<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
For reservations call 757-6390.<lb/>
BEFORE YOU RENT ELSEWHERE COMPARE! 1<lb/>
Greenville's Newest and Finest Student-Oriented<lb/>
Condominium Village!<lb/>
Wl ARE HOW TAK.NG RENTAL APPUCATKNS FOR FALL TESTER<lb/>
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2820 East Tenth Street<lb/>
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Telephone 757-1971<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
Record<lb/>
Larranaga<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
Peruvian national record holder<lb/>
and ECU recruit Chema Lar-<lb/>
ranaga recently quaJified for the<lb/>
Peru Olympic Swimming Tear<lb/>
the South American Games<lb/>
Swimming in the 1500-mete-<lb/>
freestyle event, Larranaga placed<lb/>
fourth with a qualifying time<lb/>
16.03 minutes. The Peru Olvrr<lb/>
Swimming Team will hopefully be<lb/>
participating in 1984 Olvrr<lb/>
Games held in Los Angeles this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"Chema set a Peruvian na-<lb/>
tional record with his suim and<lb/>
we are real proud of him head<lb/>
swim coach Rick Kobe said "I<lb/>
proud and I'm sure the whole<lb/>
university is proud because he is a<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Larranaga already hole<lb/>
Peruvian national record and<lb/>
competed in both the 1980 Olym-<lb/>
pics held in Moscow and tin<lb/>
ttorld Games under his native<lb/>
flag of Peru.<lb/>
After an outstanding freshman ear<lb/>
upcoming football season.<lb/>
Blacks Fan<lb/>
(CPS) ? Some football coaches<lb/>
tend to consign black players to<lb/>
certain positions, while ieing<lb/>
more central "decision-making"<lb/>
positions for white plavers, a<lb/>
study of Southeastern Conference<lb/>
football teams has found.<lb/>
Though the researchers w ho did<lb/>
the study of SEC team rosters<lb/>
from 1973 to 1983 disagree over<lb/>
whether the "stacking" of black<lb/>
players at wide receiver, running<lb/>
back is deliberate, all stress their<lb/>
study didn't ask why the teams<lb/>
have been "segregated bv posi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
. The report "is not an attack<lb/>
it s a study says Joan Paul, one<lb/>
of the three professors who did<lb/>
the research.<lb/>
The three defined "central"<lb/>
positions as linebacker, guard<lb/>
center and quarterback.<lb/>
"The positions farthest from<lb/>
the center of operations were<lb/>
stacked with black plavers says<lb/>
Paul, who teaches at Southeast<lb/>
(Louisiana University and co-<lb/>
authored the study with Richard<lb/>
McGehee of the same school and<lb/>
Helen Fant of Louisiana State.<lb/>
Two-thirds of the athletes who<lb/>
played the "periphery" positions<lb/>
on SEC teams in 1983 were black<lb/>
while 73 percent of the plavers in<lb/>
"central" positions were white.<lb/>
"The accusation was made<lb/>
years ago that people were trying<lb/>
to keep blacks on the periphery "<lb/>
Fant says. "That seems<lb/>
fallacious. Who would want to<lb/>
move a black person 10 yards<lb/>
back? It's not deliberate, or at<lb/>
least not now A ,<lb/>
"There is no way (stacking) W?<lb/>
oould be by chance counter w<lb/>
Paul. "Some of the possible<lb/>
leasons might be skill differences<lb/>
!? prejudice, but not by chance<lb/>
"It seems unlikely that coaches<lb/>
Could do such a thing observes<lb/>
PJ Maure, just-retired coach at<lb/>
Wittenberg University in Ohio<lb/>
gnd current head of the American<lb/>
football Coaches Association.<lb/>
Maure hadn't seen or heard of<lb/>
? study Unking race and posi-<lb/>
n, but added "coaches try to<lb/>
velop balance, to do what's best<lb/>
v the team and the individual. If<lb/>
best to have three black<lb/>
tail<lb/>
ne<lb/>
ecu<lb/>
P<lb/>
?<lb/>
co<lb/>
aw<lb/>
spd<lb/>
she<lb/>
mat<lb/>
jus<lb/>
leg<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0007"/><lb/>
Kftrtflfr<lb/>
A<lb/>
HflM<lb/>
<lb/>
?flfl<lb/>
Sr5<lb/>
?HMD '?? ? '? <lb/>
J. in 1982.<lb/>
m the Classifieds<lb/>
iOO<lb/>
VAUDEVILLE<lb/>
DAZZLE<lb/>
DANCE<lb/>
VLAR<lb/>
RING '20s"<lb/>
8:15 p.m.<lb/>
rheatre<lb/>
all 757-6390.<lb/>
COMPARE!<lb/>
dent-Oriented<lb/>
urn Village!<lb/>
1!<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
-<lb/>
R FALL SEMESTER.<lb/>
IE STREET?<lb/>
IES YEARROUNO!<lb/>
?se Arrangements<lb/>
it Away!<lb/>
!<lb/>
THEEAS1 t AROIINIAN<lb/>
Records Broken<lb/>
Larranaga sets sights on Olympics<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 11, 1984<lb/>
Page"<lb/>
By PETE FERN ALD<lb/>
"taU?l Sport. E4lior<lb/>
Peruvian national record holder<lb/>
and ECU recruit Chema Lar-<lb/>
ranaga recently qualified for the<lb/>
Peru Olympic Swimming Team at<lb/>
the South American Games.<lb/>
Swimming in the 1500-meter<lb/>
freestyle event, Larranaga placed<lb/>
tourth with a qualifying time of<lb/>
16.03 minutes. The Peru Olympic<lb/>
Swimming Team will hopefully be<lb/>
participating in 1984 Olympic<lb/>
Games held in Los Angeles this<lb/>
summer.<lb/>
"Chema set a Peruvian na-<lb/>
tional record with his swim and<lb/>
we are real proud of him head<lb/>
swim coach Rick Kobe said. "I'm<lb/>
proud and I'm sure the whole<lb/>
university is proud because he is a<lb/>
Pirate<lb/>
Larranaga already holds two<lb/>
Peruvian national records and<lb/>
competed in both the 1980 Olym-<lb/>
pics held in Moscow and the 1982<lb/>
World Games under his native<lb/>
flag of Peru.<lb/>
In the '80 Olympics Larranaga<lb/>
swam in two events ? the 400 and<lb/>
the 1500-meter freestyle. "I got<lb/>
17th in the 400 and 15th in the<lb/>
1500. I broke the Peruvian record<lb/>
in the 1500, so we were pretty hap<lb/>
py he said<lb/>
He qualified for the 1980 Olym-<lb/>
pics by making the cuts in the<lb/>
Peru open trials and then going on<lb/>
to make the final cuts just before<lb/>
the Olympics.<lb/>
"They cut the swim team down<lb/>
to just four  two guys and two<lb/>
girls because the Moscow games<lb/>
were very expensive ? all the way<lb/>
to the other side of the world<lb/>
Larranaga said. "They weren't<lb/>
going to send the swim team at all,<lb/>
but our cuts were pretty good and<lb/>
the Russians were giving smaller<lb/>
countries financial aid to go.<lb/>
According to Larranaga, only<lb/>
the Peru track and volleyball<lb/>
teams are going to the '84 Olym-<lb/>
pics so far due to financial dif-<lb/>
ficulties. "You know with the<lb/>
Moscow Olympics swimming only<lb/>
went because of the financial aic<lb/>
we got<lb/>
If Peru can afford to send the<lb/>
swimming team or receives finan-<lb/>
cial aid, then Larranaga will have<lb/>
yet another chance to break a<lb/>
record. "I think we would go up<lb/>
to Los Angeles around July 21, if<lb/>
everything goes right Lar-<lb/>
ranaga said. "Those who make<lb/>
the Olympic qualifying cuts and<lb/>
place either first of second get to<lb/>
go<lb/>
In addition to his many honors,<lb/>
Larranaga enrolled at Daytona<lb/>
Beach Community College where,<lb/>
in 1982, he became the NJCAA<lb/>
(National Junior College Athelic<lb/>
Association) champion in the 500<lb/>
and 1650 yard free-style events.<lb/>
Born on July 7, 1963 to Javier<lb/>
and Mayte Larranaga in Lima,<lb/>
Peru, Chema is presently enrolled<lb/>
at ECU on a swimming scholar-<lb/>
ship and is majoring in computer<lb/>
science. He will be returning in the<lb/>
fall to finish his senior year.<lb/>
Blacks Farthest From Center???<lb/>
(CPS) ? Some football coaches<lb/>
tend to consign black players to<lb/>
certain positions, while ieaving<lb/>
more central "decision-making"<lb/>
positions for white players, a<lb/>
study of Southeastern Conference<lb/>
football teams has found.<lb/>
Though the researchers who did<lb/>
the study of SEC team rosters<lb/>
from 1973 to 1983 disagree over<lb/>
whether the "stacking" of black<lb/>
players at wide receiver, running<lb/>
back is deliberate, all stress their<lb/>
study didn't ask why the teams<lb/>
have been "segregated by posi-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
The report "is not an attack,<lb/>
it's a study says Joan Paul, one<lb/>
of the three professors who did<lb/>
the research.<lb/>
The three defined "central"<lb/>
positions as linebacker, guard,<lb/>
center and quarterback.<lb/>
"The positions farthest from<lb/>
the center of operations were<lb/>
stacked with black players says<lb/>
Paul, who teaches at Southeast<lb/>
Louisiana University and co-<lb/>
authored the study with Richard<lb/>
McGehee of the same school and<lb/>
Helen Fant of Louisiana State.<lb/>
Two-thirds of the athletes who<lb/>
played the "periphery" positions<lb/>
on SEC teams in 1983 were black,<lb/>
while 73 percent of the players in<lb/>
"central" positions were white.<lb/>
"The accusation was made<lb/>
years ago that people were trying<lb/>
to keep blacks on the periphery<lb/>
Fant says. "That seems<lb/>
fallacious. Who would want to<lb/>
move a black person 10 yards<lb/>
back? It's not deliberate, or at<lb/>
least not now<lb/>
"There is no way (stacking)<lb/>
could be by chance counters<lb/>
Paul. "Some of the possible<lb/>
reasons might be skill differences<lb/>
or prejudice, but not by chance<lb/>
"It seems unlikely that coaches<lb/>
could do such a thing observes<lb/>
Dave Maure, just-retired coach at<lb/>
Wittenberg University in Ohio<lb/>
and current head of the American<lb/>
Football Coaches Association.<lb/>
Maure hadn't seen or heard of<lb/>
the study linking race and posi-<lb/>
tion, but added "coaches try to<lb/>
develop balance, to do what's best<lb/>
for the team and the individual. If<lb/>
it's best to have three black<lb/>
A study of the Southeastern Football Conference haTdeTthtt<lb/>
St? Tuttar "stedposltions "E ZZZ<lb/>
action takes place - What will Whitey think up next?<lb/>
tailbacks or three white, that's<lb/>
never been a concern of coaches<lb/>
Paul, however, notes "many<lb/>
coaches may say 'We do it (assign<lb/>
positions) by skill. A lot of things<lb/>
may happen that are sub-<lb/>
conscious. People aren't always<lb/>
aware of stereotyping<lb/>
"We weren't trying to say the<lb/>
sports establishment is racist<lb/>
she adds. "We don't want to<lb/>
make the coaches defensive. We<lb/>
just wanted to see 'what is' in col-<lb/>
leges'<lb/>
Paul, McGehee and Fant are<lb/>
now beginning another study that!<lb/>
hopes to uncover the dynamics of<lb/>
how position segregation occurs.<lb/>
They also found that whole<lb/>
sports are segregated, too, in the<lb/>
conference.<lb/>
The researchers found no black<lb/>
swimmers or golfers, and only<lb/>
three black tennis players com-<lb/>
peting in conference play in 1983.<lb/>
They're also unsure about why<lb/>
sports segregation happens.<lb/>
Dumas, All-America<lb/>
lomore Year?<lb/>
ZZZXSSZZZ ? ?" Dun"? " ?"? ? ? A?- ??? for ??<lb/>
Tim Dumas was so impressive<lb/>
in his first year on the Pirate foot-<lb/>
ball team that ECU coaches con-<lb/>
sider the 6'6 290-pound offen-<lb/>
sive tackle a prime candidate for<lb/>
All-America honors this fall.<lb/>
"Tim should have been on the<lb/>
freshman All-America team last<lb/>
year Pirate head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory said. "I thought he was<lb/>
the best freshman offensive<lb/>
lineman in the country last year<lb/>
"He's a real smart player and<lb/>
understands his place in the<lb/>
overall unit, which is exceptional<lb/>
for a freshman Emory added.<lb/>
"Most players take a year to get a<lb/>
good concept of what their par-<lb/>
ticular function is<lb/>
Although Dumas was hurt in<lb/>
the ninth game of the season<lb/>
against eventual national-<lb/>
-champion Miami, just to start as a<lb/>
freshman is indicative of the<lb/>
regard Emory has for Dumas. The<lb/>
head coach usually uses the<lb/>
freshman season for building a<lb/>
basis for playing in later years.<lb/>
"Tim really developed a great<lb/>
technique last year Emory said.<lb/>
"If he stays healthy and adds to<lb/>
his strength and maturity over the<lb/>
next three years he will become a<lb/>
great player<lb/>
"He held his own against some<lb/>
of the finest defensive linemen in<lb/>
college last year Emory con-<lb/>
tinued, "and he played his best<lb/>
against teams like Missouri and<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
Offensive Line Coach John<lb/>
Zernhelt also praised Dumas,<lb/>
commenting on his excellent field<lb/>
presence, ability to adjust to<lb/>
changing defenses and the tremen-<lb/>
dous amount of intensity he<lb/>
displays while on the field<lb/>
Tim Dumas<lb/>
"Tim played well above the<lb/>
level we had anticipated Zer-<lb/>
nhelt said. "If he continues to im-<lb/>
prove he can be as good as any<lb/>
lineman in the country ? his level<lb/>
of play was very near that of last<lb/>
year's stars Terry Long and John<lb/>
Robertson<lb/>
Dumas doesn't feel the pressure<lb/>
of being promoted as a potential<lb/>
Major League Baseball<lb/>
All-American will affect him I<lb/>
much. "The team is like a famih .<lb/>
we all pull for each other, so whe<lb/>
one gets publicity we're all har<lb/>
for him<lb/>
Publicity is part of what<lb/>
brought Dumas to ECU. "Sincr<lb/>
ECU plays bigger schools,<lb/>
thought I'd get more oppt<lb/>
tunities to get into the pros he<lb/>
said. "That's my goal in the<lb/>
future. I feel God has given me<lb/>
this talent and I want to use it<lb/>
the best ad van-age<lb/>
Dumas also used his talent<lb/>
his best advantage in high scho-<lb/>
as he was named all-state in<lb/>
senior year and led East Guilfc<lb/>
High School to the 3-A east cham-<lb/>
p i o n s h i p<lb/>
Now that he's playing or I<lb/>
collegiate level, Dumas sa<lb/>
there's a lot more pressure involv-<lb/>
ed. "In high school you couid<lb/>
fool around more, so it's less fur.<lb/>
in that way, but college is better<lb/>
because it's mere exciting<lb/>
According io Dumas, "the<lb/>
team has high spirits" and doubts<lb/>
about their ability to bea:<lb/>
anybody has been replaced by a<lb/>
high degree of optimism.<lb/>
If Tim Dumas can continue to<lb/>
perform as he did throughout fa<lb/>
first year, everybody associat<lb/>
with Pirate football should be op-<lb/>
timistic about what's in store for<lb/>
ECU in '84.<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI) ?<lb/>
With the great Carl Hubbell look-<lb/>
ing on, Fernando Valenzuela and<lb/>
Dwight Gooden put on a dazzling<lb/>
strikeout display by fanning a<lb/>
club record six straight batters in<lb/>
the middle innings Tuesday night<lb/>
to lead the National League to a<lb/>
3-1 victory over the American<lb/>
League in the 55th all-star game.<lb/>
Homeruns by Gary Carter and<lb/>
Dale Murphy were the margin of<lb/>
victory but it was strong pitching<lb/>
of Valenzuela, Gooden, Mario<lb/>
Soto and Rick Gossage that enabl-<lb/>
ed the National League to win for<lb/>
the 12th time in the last 13 years<lb/>
and the 20th time in the last 22<lb/>
seasons. The NL leads the overall<lb/>
series 35-19-1.<lb/>
Except for George Brett's<lb/>
420-foot homer to center field off<lb/>
Charlie Lea in the second inning,<lb/>
the AL was completely stymied by<lb/>
the NL pitchers. The AL managed<lb/>
but seven hits off five pitchers and<lb/>
three times failed to come up with<lb/>
a base hit with runners in scoring<lb/>
position and less than two outs.<lb/>
In the first inning, Lou Whit-<lb/>
taker led off with a double, but<lb/>
was stranded as Lea retired the<lb/>
next three batters. In the third, the<lb/>
American League failed to score<lb/>
after putting runners on first and<lb/>
third with no outs; and in the sixth<lb/>
the AL was unable to score again<lb/>
after putting a runner on second<lb/>
with one out.<lb/>
The tone of the game and the<lb/>
most dramatic moments,<lb/>
however, occured in the fourth<lb/>
and fifth innings when Valenzuela<lb/>
and Gooden, at 19, the youngest<lb/>
player in all-star history, took<lb/>
turns in striking out the side to<lb/>
delight of the 57,756 fans who<lb/>
turned out for the first all-star<lb/>
game in Candlestick Park since<lb/>
1961.<lb/>
Valenzuela, who relived Lea in<lb/>
Gooden Awesome<lb/>
the second inning, struck out<lb/>
Dave Winfield, Reggie Jackson<lb/>
and Brett in the fourth, and<lb/>
Gooden followed by fanning<lb/>
Lance Parrish, Chet Lemon and<lb/>
Alvin Davidson in the fifth.<lb/>
That string set an all-star record<lb/>
for the most consecutive strike<lb/>
outs by a team. Fittingly, Hub-<lb/>
bell, who was celebrating the 50th<lb/>
anniversary of his record-setting<lb/>
five consecutive strike outs in the<lb/>
1934 all-star game, was one of two<lb/>
guests to throw out the first ball.<lb/>
In all, a record 21 batters were<lb/>
struck out. The NL fanned eleven<lb/>
with Gossage approriately nailing<lb/>
down the final out by striking out<lb/>
Ricky Henderson after Winfield<lb/>
stroked a two-out double to left<lb/>
off the glove of a diving Tim<lb/>
Raines.<lb/>
In addition to not coming up<lb/>
with the clutch hit, the AL was<lb/>
guilty of errors ? both physical<lb/>
and mental. Fielding errors by<lb/>
Jackson and Parrish enabled the<lb/>
NL to score a run in the first.<lb/>
The AL also took itself out of<lb/>
possible scoring chances by hav-<lb/>
ing a runner thrown out at the<lb/>
plate after breaking too late and<lb/>
having another runner picked off<lb/>
of first base.<lb/>
After starter Dave Stieb retired<lb/>
the first two batters of the game<lb/>
on groundouts, Steve Garvey lin-<lb/>
ed a single to right and went to se-<lb/>
cond when the ball bounced off<lb/>
Jackson's foot and went through<lb/>
his legs.<lb/>
Murphy singled to left and<lb/>
Winfield appeared to have Garvey<lb/>
at the plate, but Parrish sensing a<lb/>
collision with Garvey took his eye<lb/>
off the ball and dropped it while<lb/>
Garvery scored. Murphy went to<lb/>
second on the error but was<lb/>
stranded when Stieb struck out<lb/>
Mike Schmidt.<lb/>
Brett tied it with his one-out<lb/>
homer in the second, but Carter<lb/>
quickly put the NL back in front<lb/>
by hitting the first pitch thrown tc<lb/>
him over the left field fence. It<lb/>
was Carter's thrd homer in ail-<lb/>
Star competition and earned him<lb/>
the most valuable player award.<lb/>
Carter was also the MVP of the<lb/>
1981 all-star game when he hit two<lb/>
homeruns in Cleveland.<lb/>
The AL put runners on first and<lb/>
third with no out in the third on<lb/>
singles by Ancre Dawson and<lb/>
Whittaker, but failed to score.<lb/>
Rod Carew grounded to Garvey<lb/>
who stepped on first and threw<lb/>
home to Carter. The Montreal<lb/>
catcher blocked vhe plate and tag-<lb/>
ged Thorton to camplete the dou-<lb/>
ble play. Thorton delaved in<lb/>
breaking after the ball was hit,<lb/>
and might have scored if he had<lb/>
taken off immediately.<lb/>
Whittaker went to second, but<lb/>
was stranded when third baseman<lb/>
Schmidt snagged Cal Ripken's<lb/>
grounder and got the Baltimore<lb/>
shortstop. A wind-aided double<lb/>
by Eddie Murray in the sixth put<lb/>
the AL in scoring position for the<lb/>
first time since the third inning,<lb/>
but Gooden bor down and got<lb/>
Ripken on a bouncer to third ana<lb/>
retired Winfield on a fly to left.<lb/>
The NL put runners on first and<lb/>
second against lUichard Dotson<lb/>
with one out in the sixth, but did<lb/>
not score. Clauclell Washington<lb/>
doubled with one out and Cartei<lb/>
walked. Ozzie Smith then hut <lb/>
apparent double-play grounder to<lb/>
Garcia, but the bull was dropped<lb/>
in attempting the relay. Smith<lb/>
then stole second, the record<lb/>
setting fourth stolen base of the<lb/>
game for the NL, but Bob Brendlv<lb/>
struck out to end the inning<lb/>
Lea, who worked the first two<lb/>
innings was credited with the vic-<lb/>
tory and Gossage earned the save<lb/>
after striking out two in the ninth<lb/>
Stieb, the winner of last year's all<lb/>
star game, was th: loser<lb/>
<pb facs="00057654_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
1 HE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 11, 1984<lb/>
Tiger s Probation Reconsideration Rejected<lb/>
J ,9??lso" " lo? its supporting factors like attendance h?h ? ??   . ?<lb/>
(UPI) ? Clemson has lost its<lb/>
bid to get off the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference's probationary hook,<lb/>
and now look to do the rest of<lb/>
their talking on the football field.<lb/>
The ACC membership, which<lb/>
rejected a Clemson request last<lb/>
week to have its conference pro-<lb/>
bation reconsidered, is looking at<lb/>
another mighty mean Tiger for<lb/>
the upcoming football season.<lb/>
Two seasons of no bowls and<lb/>
reduced scholarships have failed<lb/>
to blunt Clemson's dominance in<lb/>
ACC football. In fact, some<lb/>
coaches around the league believe<lb/>
Danny Ford and his coaching<lb/>
staff, working under enormous<lb/>
pressures, have actually made the<lb/>
Tiger program stronger.<lb/>
"They've done an incredible<lb/>
job. There's no question about<lb/>
that said an assistant coach who<lb/>
asked not to be named.<lb/>
Last season there wasn't a team<lb/>
in the ACC, and few in the coun-<lb/>
try, that could match the Tigers'<lb/>
manpower, execution, and all the<lb/>
supporting factors like attendance<lb/>
and financial contributions.<lb/>
They lost 31-16 to a surprising<lb/>
Boston College team, tied Georgia<lb/>
16-16, and beat everyone else.<lb/>
They really bushwhacked North<lb/>
Carolina and Maryland, whipping<lb/>
both teams at a time when each<lb/>
had one loss and was hoping for a<lb/>
trip to a major bowl. The Tigers<lb/>
beat a North Carolina team 16-3<lb/>
that was regarded as the Tar<lb/>
Heels' best ever, and defensive<lb/>
lineman William DeVane trotted<lb/>
off the field and told reporters:<lb/>
"We work hard for the money<lb/>
They drilled Maryland 52-27,<lb/>
and have won five of the last<lb/>
seven games against North<lb/>
Carolina which has aspirations of<lb/>
its own for national prominence<lb/>
in football.<lb/>
When the 1984 season begins,<lb/>
the Tigers will be working on 19<lb/>
straight wins over ACC teams,<lb/>
and a 20-game unbeaten streak at<lb/>
home. Ford's record in six years<lb/>
at Clemson is now 45-11-2 and in-<lb/>
cludes a national championship. with Clemson's request last week,<lb/>
The Tiger program continues to the Tigers would have been eligi-<lb/>
fhTVfS m,UCh SUPP?u? at h?mc ble for a bowl bid this season.<lb/>
Jl?" wcrc able con- Now they will have to wait until<lb/>
vince Wake Forest to move its up- the end of 1985<lb/>
SEX VSF afrt5.sf CIfmson to The Clemson battle cry all<lb/>
Death Valley. There the Tigers along has been to let the punish-<lb/>
spent their probation building a ment fit the crime. And many<lb/>
new upper deck and increasing<lb/>
seating to 80,000. That made the<lb/>
stadium the eighth largest on-<lb/>
campus facility in the country,<lb/>
and often last year it was full.<lb/>
The initial NCAA penalty put<lb/>
the Tigers on a two-year proba-<lb/>
tion for recruiting violations. It<lb/>
reduced the number of scholar-<lb/>
ships they could offer during each<lb/>
year by 10 and disallowed live<lb/>
television appearances and bowl<lb/>
games. The ACC membership, led<lb/>
by North Carolina and Virginia,<lb/>
didn't feel that was enough. They<lb/>
added an additional year on to the<lb/>
Tiger fans will go to the grave<lb/>
feeling like the ACC penalties<lb/>
were motivated by something<lb/>
more than a desire to punish them<lb/>
for past transgressions.<lb/>
"The additional sanctions, in<lb/>
our opinion, were not ap-<lb/>
propriate said Clemson Presi-<lb/>
dent Dr. Bill Atchley in a state-<lb/>
ment released after the ACC<lb/>
voted down the appeal at a secret<lb/>
meeting in Chicago last Thursday<lb/>
night. The Tigers appeal was bas-<lb/>
ed on the contention they had<lb/>
cleaned up their act.<lb/>
"I don't know if there is any<lb/>
anybody was trying to make it<lb/>
tough to win at Clemson, that has<lb/>
been done. I would think if<lb/>
anyone is caught and convicted in<lb/>
the future they would have to pay<lb/>
the same price as Clemson. But<lb/>
there is no guarantee the price will<lb/>
be the same as what Clemson has<lb/>
had to pay<lb/>
have played on teams that have a<lb/>
composite record of 30-2-2.<lb/>
On offense quarterback Mike<lb/>
Eppley will be playing out his<lb/>
senior year, and the Tigers are<lb/>
already promoting him for All-<lb/>
America. He completed 99 of 166<lb/>
passes last year for 1,410 yards<lb/>
and his "efficiency rating was<lb/>
Ford is usually subdued in his third best in the nation and tops in<lb/>
the ACC. The Tigers are excep-<lb/>
tionally deep at running back with<lb/>
Stacey Driver, Kenny Flowers,<lb/>
Terrence Flagler and Steve Griffin<lb/>
back.<lb/>
assessments of his teams, but says<lb/>
this can be "a good football<lb/>
team" if it doesn't rest on its<lb/>
reputation.<lb/>
"We won't be afraid of anyone<lb/>
because I think we have the<lb/>
numbers and the depth to com- fill on the defensiveTine j<lb/>
pete with anyone says Ford. tional Clemson strength' But at-<lb/>
There are 15 starters back and tribution has never been as bia a<lb/>
50 lettermen from last year's 9-1-1 problem for the Tigers as it has<lb/>
team. The seniors on board will been for other teams.<lb/>
Ford does have some holes<lb/>
to<lb/>
 ?? ?? -  . ? ? ?? ?? "ivn, u oil<lb/>
NCAA probation which expires at motive involved aside from pro<lb/>
tne end of the coming regular viding punishment for wrongdo-<lb/>
season ing said Clemson assistant head<lb/>
If the league had gone along coach Tom Harper. "But if<lb/>
Tarkanian Remains As UNLV Coach<lb/>
(CPS)  Likening the National<lb/>
Collegiate Athletic Association's<lb/>
behavior to the Ayatollah Kho-<lb/>
meini's, a Nevada state judge has<lb/>
ruled the NCAA can not force the<lb/>
University of Nevada at Las<lb/>
Vegas to fire its head basketball<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
In a strongly-worded ruling<lb/>
against the NCAA. Nevada<lb/>
District Judge Paul Goldman said<lb/>
NCAA officials acted like "ar-<lb/>
rogant lords of the manor" in try-<lb/>
ing to suspend UNLV basketball<lb/>
coach Jerry Tarkanian.<lb/>
The NCAA put the university<lb/>
on probation for two years in<lb/>
for 80 alleged rules viola-<lb/>
tions. 11 of them involving Tarka-<lb/>
nian.<lb/>
 It also thought UNLV and<lb/>
Tarkanian's supposed misdeeds<lb/>
outrageous enough to demand<lb/>
that UNLV suspend the coach for<lb/>
the same two-year period, a<lb/>
punishment meted out to onlv<lb/>
three other coaches in NCAA<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Instead, Tarkanian and UNLV<lb/>
tookthe NCAA to court, arguing<lb/>
the 750-member collegiate sports<lb/>
organization violated Tarkanian's<lb/>
due process rights by ordering the<lb/>
school to fire him.<lb/>
After a seven-year trek through<lb/>
the courts, the case finally reached<lb/>
Goldman.<lb/>
Goldman ruled the NCAA<lb/>
denied Tarkanian's rights to due<lb/>
process by not giving him a<lb/>
"neutral forum" in which to de-<lb/>
fend himself.<lb/>
The NCAA is an association<lb/>
which exists for the purpose of<lb/>
seeing that there is fair play. It<lb/>
also has the obligation to play<lb/>
fairly Goldman said.<lb/>
The NCAA, says NCAA in-<lb/>
IRS Activities<lb/>
Require You<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
Start Wrttn<lb/>
WANTED: INTRAMURAL<lb/>
PARTICIPANTS<lb/>
CHARGE: Participation in the<lb/>
Softball Tournament to be held<lb/>
July 16.<lb/>
LAST SEEN: Enjoying other in-<lb/>
tramural activities.<lb/>
REWARD: T-shirts, enjoyment,<lb/>
fun.<lb/>
For any information regarding<lb/>
the whereabouts of several<lb/>
women's co-rec and men's soft-<lb/>
ball teams, please contact the IRS<lb/>
(Intramural Recreational Ser-<lb/>
vices) at 757-6387.<lb/>
These criminals may be armed<lb/>
with bats and are considered<lb/>
dangerous. They are notorious for<lb/>
knocking singles, hitting homers,<lb/>
and turning double plays.<lb/>
They've been seen stealing<lb/>
bases and are often thrown out.<lb/>
They always wear gloves to cover<lb/>
up the crime. If sighted at home<lb/>
they will make another score.<lb/>
They are usually spotted in<lb/>
groups of 10 or more. They hang<lb/>
out on fields of dirt or grass and<lb/>
can be seen practicing swinging<lb/>
their bats.<lb/>
Please do not withhold infor-<lb/>
mation regarding their<lb/>
whereabouts. Come by room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym to identify any<lb/>
suspects. The IRS needs your<lb/>
help.<lb/>
5TH STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
H I HOHM l) I l ? "I I' ? I ?l<lb/>
I OI I S MtKlllll ? HM? l l<lb/>
N II III K-<lb/>
EXPfRT a;K?v<lb/>
758-1534<lb/>
vestigator DavidI Berst, charged coaching) he says. "And there<lb/>
Tarkanian and UNLV made " ef- are lots of other penalties given<lb/>
torts to discourage witnesses to out involving other coaching staff<lb/>
report violations to the NCAA members, freezing coaches-<lb/>
gave an athlete 'airline transpor- salaries, or restricting coaches' in-<lb/>
tation between the university and volvements with recruiting "<lb/>
his home and made "ar-<lb/>
rangements for a student athlete<lb/>
to receive items of clothing<lb/>
without cost to the athlete<lb/>
Tarkanian argued those and<lb/>
other allegations were trumped up<lb/>
by the NCAA, which has harassed<lb/>
him since he first wrote a column<lb/>
criticising the NCAA 15 years<lb/>
ago, a UNLV sports spokesman<lb/>
says.<lb/>
In 1963, the NCAA placed the<lb/>
University of California at Long<lb/>
Beach on probation shortly after<lb/>
Tarkanian left his coaching job<lb/>
there.<lb/>
But the NCAA's Berst says it is<lb/>
"common for the NCAA to im-<lb/>
pose penalties" like those placed<lb/>
on UNLV and Tarkanian.<lb/>
"Four head basketball coaches,<lb/>
including Tarkanian, have had<lb/>
similar penalties (of being<lb/>
suspended or disassociated from<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
ini<lb/>
Berst believes the Nevada ruling<lb/>
applies only to the Tarkanian<lb/>
case, so it will not affect the<lb/>
NCAA's abnity to discipline other<lb/>
coaches.<lb/>
Others are not sure. "Now a<lb/>
coach can get in dutch and go to<lb/>
court and get off Indiana<lb/>
University football coach Bill<lb/>
Mallory says.<lb/>
The NCAA, however, has<lb/>
"plans to appeal the decision to<lb/>
the Nevada Supreme Court<lb/>
Berst says.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057654_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>