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Otoc lEast CHarnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.3<lb/>
Thursday August 30, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Ebony Herald Manager Resigns;<lb/>
Different News Format Planned<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
When<lb/>
things<lb/>
More Neat Things To Do With A Newspaper<lb/>
ou're done with today's paper you ought to try this ? obviously a better way to get more use out of<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nrwi MHor<lb/>
"I want all the students to read<lb/>
the Ebony Herald said John<lb/>
Deaver, the Ebony Herald's new<lb/>
general manager. Subject to ap-<lb/>
proval by the ECU Media Board,<lb/>
Deaver will replace Ruben In-<lb/>
gram, who resigned the general<lb/>
manager's position to accept an<lb/>
internship in Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Deaver said he is very concern-<lb/>
ed with altering the format of the<lb/>
Ebony Herald, which is the<lb/>
minority newspaper for ECU.<lb/>
"My number one objective as<lb/>
general manager of the Ebony<lb/>
Herald is to present a paper to the<lb/>
students that they don't mind<lb/>
reading he said.<lb/>
Included in this objective are in-<lb/>
creasing the size of the paper and<lb/>
offering students information all<lb/>
of them need. "The paper is not<lb/>
limited to minorities Deaver<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Although he doesn't intend to<lb/>
produce a paper solely for minori-<lb/>
ty students, Deaver said he does<lb/>
intend to highlight minority<lb/>
students and their activities. "We<lb/>
will report on minority groups<lb/>
and what they have to offer all the<lb/>
students. This will make the<lb/>
organizations work to the benefit<lb/>
of all the students he said.<lb/>
The Ebony Herald's news needs<lb/>
to be more student-oriented and<lb/>
designed to assist students in their<lb/>
college life, Deaver commented.<lb/>
Instead of dealing with the same<lb/>
subjects dealt with by the Daily<lb/>
Reflector and East Carolinian,<lb/>
Deaver wants to branch out into<lb/>
new areas.<lb/>
"I want to deal with current<lb/>
events, entertainment and news in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina which will<lb/>
be of interest to all students he<lb/>
said. Included in this will be cur-<lb/>
rent trends, both locally and na-<lb/>
tionally. "The Ebony Herald<lb/>
should be more than just a paper,<lb/>
it should be something students<lb/>
can enjoy he said.<lb/>
Among the features Deaver has<lb/>
planned is a story on North<lb/>
Carolina's new movie studio in<lb/>
Wilmington. This is the studio<lb/>
where Firestarter was filmed. He<lb/>
said he also hopes to have a col-<lb/>
umn in each issue for students to<lb/>
express their opinions.<lb/>
One problem the Ebony Herald<lb/>
has always had is lack of revenue.<lb/>
"One of my main objectives is to<lb/>
have a paper that produces an in-<lb/>
come. We won't just spend the<lb/>
students' money he said.<lb/>
Antoinette Gibbs, who was just<lb/>
named business manager, said she<lb/>
intends to help Deaver and the<lb/>
director of advertising obtain<lb/>
more advertisements. "I'm con-<lb/>
cerned with improving the Ebony<lb/>
Herald in any way that I possibly<lb/>
can and that means working with<lb/>
all the staff members<lb/>
New Library Computer System To Provide Greater Access<lb/>
B ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Staff Witts<lb/>
The purchase of an OCLC<lb/>
Computer System for Joyner<lb/>
Library and the Health Sciences<lb/>
Librar will benefit ECU students<lb/>
by giving them greater access to<lb/>
the materials within both<lb/>
libraries, said Dr. Ruth Katz,<lb/>
director of Academic Library Ser-<lb/>
vices.<lb/>
The new computer was pur-<lb/>
chased from the OCLC, a Na-<lb/>
tional Service Center. Katz said<lb/>
the OCLC system is "a not-for-<lb/>
profit computer library service<lb/>
and research organization. It<lb/>
operates computer and telecom-<lb/>
munications systems that support<lb/>
major library activities. In addi-<lb/>
tion, OCLC is developing local<lb/>
automated library systems that<lb/>
will permit independent process-<lb/>
ing by a single library<lb/>
A committee composed of five<lb/>
people gathered information on<lb/>
various systems and decided<lb/>
which system would best suit the<lb/>
needs of ECU.<lb/>
Changes will be noticed as soon<lb/>
as the first installation is com-<lb/>
pleted in January of 1985, Katz<lb/>
said. An implemented circulation<lb/>
system will be the first part install-<lb/>
ed. When checking out books, in-<lb/>
stead of filling out cards, barcode<lb/>
labels on the books' sides will be<lb/>
used. A small pencil-like object<lb/>
picks up the codes on the labels<lb/>
and automatically records the in-<lb/>
formation in the computer. Infor-<lb/>
mation about the borrower will be<lb/>
taken from barcode labels on the<lb/>
new student I.Ds. However, the<lb/>
system will not be used until<lb/>
January 1985 so current library<lb/>
cards should not be discarded.<lb/>
Approximately one year after<lb/>
installation of the circulation<lb/>
system, the second phase will be<lb/>
installed. This will consist of an<lb/>
on-line catalog, replacing the cur-<lb/>
rent card catalog system. The on-<lb/>
line system will allow the<lb/>
materials from all three ECU<lb/>
libraries ? Joyner, Health<lb/>
Sciences and the Music Library ?<lb/>
to be accessed from the computer<lb/>
terminal. Students looking for<lb/>
books will know where the book is<lb/>
located, whether or not it is cur-<lb/>
rently checked out and if it is on<lb/>
reserve.<lb/>
Katz said the new system will<lb/>
allow students to have access to<lb/>
more information and to search<lb/>
more convienently. It will also<lb/>
provide the libraries with more ac-<lb/>
curate record keeping.<lb/>
The cost of the computer<lb/>
system is estimated at $400,000.<lb/>
That figure includes all licenses,<lb/>
installation and initial fees. An<lb/>
additional annual fee will be paid<lb/>
for maintenance of both hardware<lb/>
and software. The money for the<lb/>
project came out of the regular<lb/>
state budget for the libraries. The<lb/>
yearly maintenance fee will be<lb/>
divided between Joyner and the<lb/>
Health Sciences Library.<lb/>
According to Katz, the instaila<lb/>
tion of the OCLC Computer<lb/>
System has generated some<lb/>
publicity for ECU. Other colleges<lb/>
and universities within Eastern<lb/>
North Carolina have expressed in-<lb/>
terest in how the program works<lb/>
here.<lb/>
Katz said the system will offer<lb/>
the university better service, more<lb/>
management information and bet-<lb/>
ter long-range planning.<lb/>
Rainey Planning Leadership Conference, Aide Program<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
l?f? Writer<lb/>
"It's a time consuming effort,<lb/>
but it means a lot to me. It's<lb/>
challenging, frustrating and ex-<lb/>
citing Those were the words us-<lb/>
ed by Johnny Rainey who is settl-<lb/>
ing into his job as the 1984-85<lb/>
SGA President.<lb/>
Rainey has already started<lb/>
working on the goals he set for the<lb/>
student government. With the in-<lb/>
itiation of the Freshman Aide<lb/>
Program, he said he hopes to get<lb/>
more students involved in ECU's<lb/>
fudent government. The major<lb/>
purpose behind the program is to<lb/>
serve as a "stepping stone" for<lb/>
new students interested in SGA.<lb/>
Students will have various respon-<lb/>
sibilities including two hours of<lb/>
SGA office work per week and<lb/>
serving as a page at two legislative<lb/>
meetings per month. The benefits<lb/>
will be a chance to get involved<lb/>
with student life at ECU and the<lb/>
opportunity to become familiar<lb/>
with the SGA.<lb/>
Another program supported by<lb/>
Rainey is the Book Exchange Pro-<lb/>
gram. While the idea was not very<lb/>
successful last spring, Rainey said<lb/>
he feels it could be in the fall. The<lb/>
Book Exchange Program is exact-<lb/>
ly what it implies; the exchanging<lb/>
or buying of books from other<lb/>
students. There will be a bulletin<lb/>
board at the Student Book Store<lb/>
where interested students will be<lb/>
able to find out which books are<lb/>
being offered by other students.<lb/>
Rainey will also talk to the Facul-<lb/>
ty Senate in an attempt to con-<lb/>
vince professors to use certain tex-<lb/>
tbooks longer.<lb/>
Rainey is planning to hold a<lb/>
Leadership Conference before the<lb/>
annual budgeting meeting ten-<lb/>
tatively scheduled for Oct 8. He<lb/>
hopes to explain how to prepare a<lb/>
fiscal budget. It will also draw<lb/>
representatives from all organiza-<lb/>
tions together to show them how<lb/>
to get SGA appropriations and to<lb/>
swap fund-raising ideas and pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
The student information center<lb/>
is in an in-between stage at this<lb/>
point. The SGA is exploring<lb/>
possibilities of what kind of<lb/>
equipment will be needed and how<lb/>
it will work. However, it takes<lb/>
time to implement the system. The<lb/>
money appropriated from last<lb/>
year's budget went towards<lb/>
research of the "right" type of<lb/>
system.<lb/>
Ideally, the system will<lb/>
ultimately provide students with<lb/>
information about campus life<lb/>
through one phone call.<lb/>
The SGA elections will be Sept.<lb/>
26 with a two-week filing period<lb/>
prior to that date. The first<lb/>
legislative meeting will be October<lb/>
1st. Freshmen and all interested<lb/>
students are urged to attend.<lb/>
Alumni Association Awards<lb/>
Mathews, Biehn Win Teaching Awards<lb/>
ECU New Bureau<lb/>
An anthropologist widely<lb/>
known for her studies of "root<lb/>
doctors" and folk medicine in the<lb/>
South and a playhouse director<lb/>
who sometimes assumes a stage<lb/>
role himself were presented East<lb/>
Carolina University's annual<lb/>
teaching effectiveness awards<lb/>
Monday.<lb/>
Winners of the prestigious ECU<lb/>
Alumni Association awards for<lb/>
1984 were:<lb/>
Dr. Holly F. Mathews, assistant<lb/>
professor of anthropology, whose<lb/>
studies have focused on systems<lb/>
of folk medicine and beliefs in the<lb/>
rural South.<lb/>
Donald E. Biehn, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor in Theatre Arts and an ac-<lb/>
claimed director of ECU<lb/>
Playhouse productions.<lb/>
"I am, primarily, a teacher of<lb/>
acting Biehn said. "My audi-<lb/>
tionsacting roles are for the sole<lb/>
purpose of keeping my acting<lb/>
equipment oiled<lb/>
A native of Atlanta, Ga Dr.<lb/>
Mathews was a summa cum laude<lb/>
graduate of Georgia State Univer-<lb/>
sity in 1975 and received the PhD<lb/>
in anthropology at Duke Universi-<lb/>
ty in 1982. She held instructor-<lb/>
ships at Duke, Georgia State and<lb/>
N.C. State University before join-<lb/>
ing the ECU faculty in 1982.<lb/>
She teaches medical and<lb/>
psychological anthropology,<lb/>
culture and personality, ideology<lb/>
of sex roles in cross-cultural<lb/>
perspective and conducts a<lb/>
seminar on peasant societies.<lb/>
In 1976 she won attention with<lb/>
a paper, "Science as a Belief<lb/>
System at the 53rd annual<lb/>
meeting of the Georgia Academy<lb/>
of Science. In 1978 and 1980 she<lb/>
presented research findings on<lb/>
high and low blood pressure and<lb/>
its implications in folk medicine<lb/>
and a paper on "Stress as a Factor<lb/>
in the Treatment of High Blood<lb/>
by Southern Black Root<lb/>
Doctors These were presented<lb/>
before meetings of the Society for<lb/>
Applied Anthropology in Denver,<lb/>
Colo and Merida, Mexico.<lb/>
She has continued research and<lb/>
scholarly publication of findings<lb/>
in the field of folk medical beliefs<lb/>
and "root" medicine practices.<lb/>
She has presented papers on the<lb/>
subject at the School of Medicine,<lb/>
Duke Medical Center, and the<lb/>
University of South Carolina<lb/>
School of Medicine, Charleston,<lb/>
S.C.<lb/>
Biehn, of Westover, W. Va<lb/>
joined the ECU drama faculty in<lb/>
1973, having been assistant pro-<lb/>
fessor at the Goodman School of<lb/>
Drama, Art Institute of Chicago.<lb/>
He holds the Master's of Fine<lb/>
Arts degree from Goodman<lb/>
School of Drama, and had two<lb/>
years of private instruction at the<lb/>
Neighborhood Playhouse, New<lb/>
York City, and studied the<lb/>
teaching of acting with Uta<lb/>
Hagen.<lb/>
He has directed off-Broadway<lb/>
and has acted in three profes-<lb/>
sional repertory companies. At<lb/>
ECU, his Playhouse productions<lb/>
have included "Who's Happy<lb/>
Now?" "The Italian Straw Hat<lb/>
"A Scent of Flowers<lb/>
"Dracula "Indians and<lb/>
others. He directed "One Flew<lb/>
Over the Cuckoo's Nest" in its<lb/>
Chicago premiere at the Good-<lb/>
man School of Drama and in 1980<lb/>
directed "Wait Until Dark" at the<lb/>
West Virginia University Theatre.<lb/>
The awards were presented at<lb/>
the annual faculty convocation.<lb/>
The recipients are selected on the<lb/>
basis of a survey of student opi-<lb/>
nion of instruction.<lb/>
Students Parked Illegally In Greenville<lb/>
Can Expect To Have Their Cars Towed<lb/>
Hanging Around<lb/>
Hey, we're cod. We go to ECU.<lb/>
By STEPHEN HARDING<lb/>
Staff WrHcr<lb/>
According t0 the Greenville<lb/>
Police Department, students can<lb/>
expect increased towing of illegal-<lb/>
ly parked cars on city streets.<lb/>
In prior years, a person has<lb/>
been employed only part-time to<lb/>
enforce the city's towing laws. A<lb/>
full-time position has now been<lb/>
added to the payroll. Greenville<lb/>
ly for several weeks and then have<lb/>
their car towed. "That's not<lb/>
right Holmes said.<lb/>
A majority of the problem is<lb/>
cars parked in residential areas<lb/>
not leaving space available for<lb/>
residents. "This is a typical pro-<lb/>
blem of any college community<lb/>
where the college doesn't provide<lb/>
enough parking" Holmes said.<lb/>
There is an ordinance that<lb/>
allows an area to have controlled<lb/>
Police Chief Ted Holmes said the<lb/>
advantage of this is that people<lb/>
will not get used to parking illegal-<lb/>
residential parking if several<lb/>
criteria are met. This allows decals<lb/>
to be issued to residents permit-<lb/>
ting them to park anytime and<lb/>
restricts other vehicles to two-<lb/>
hour parking. Controlled residen-<lb/>
tial parking covers almost all the<lb/>
area within the north side of 5th<lb/>
street, said Assistant City At-<lb/>
torney Mac McCarley and added,<lb/>
"This is a parking regulation that<lb/>
authorizes towing<lb/>
There are also proposals before<lb/>
the city that would increase tow-<lb/>
ing fees. The department is sug-<lb/>
gesting the $5 city fine dropped so<lb/>
that persons only have to pay the<lb/>
towing charges. Holmes said,<lb/>
"We don't want to create a finan-<lb/>
cial burden but we have to enforce<lb/>
the traffic laws<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features7<lb/>
Classifieds8<lb/>
Sports11<lb/>
?You'll be amazed at the things<lb/>
Greg Rideouf has thought of<lb/>
this week. See Editorials, page<lb/>
L<lb/>
?The Lady In Red, a recent<lb/>
movie release is reviewed today<lb/>
In Features, page 7.<lb/>
?ECU Is preparing for this<lb/>
weekend's match with Florida<lb/>
State. For Sports Editor Randy<lb/>
Mews predictions, see Sports,<lb/>
P?g? 11.<lb/>
Y<lb/>
<lb/>
?i ' f '<lb/>
? ? .? ?.b.<lb/>
?L-i?<lb/>
" ?? ummM0tm<lb/>
? " ?<lb/>
Fi<lb/>
V I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I <lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0002"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 30.1984<lb/>
9B<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
PUTT-PUTT<lb/>
intramural Team Putt-Putt la set to Too off an<lb/>
Man Saert. W. Taam Captain tnovtd raalttar<lb/>
?a4r tamm m ??am Gym on Mon Sap W<lb/>
an? Two faart. n oatwaaw l:M a.m. ana? I p.m.<lb/>
?A?TC!??ATS RATHER THAN SRBCTATBIM<lb/>
CO-RIC SOFTBALL<lb/>
Join the fwnll Registration data for Co Rec<lb/>
Sofikatt are Saot iou Tha Taam Captains<lb/>
Waatlfie. h Ml for Sept. ?. 7:00 p.m. In BC-ltt.<lb/>
Coma fea Room 104 Memorial Gym to ragtatar.<lb/>
Anyone can parttclpat m tNTRAMURALS<lb/>
DtttMIRVOLLIYBALL<lb/>
eacti Monday ntgftt at S: JO p.m. the Baptist stu<lb/>
enf Unfon rfo topatnar for an evening at fun<lb/>
First there fa a homecoofcad maal for tt.ee follow<lb/>
ad by pamaa of votteybatr<lb/>
RKTRBAT<lb/>
Join wt far an excttmp weafcand ef fun,<lb/>
?niannlf) and Rfbta ttwdy at tmarafd Iota. Tne<lb/>
?ap?t ttvdint union ft going Sept. 7-9. A charge<lb/>
of 00 hataa pay far transportation.<lb/>
RfJACC COMMITT1R<lb/>
The Oroanviffa faaca Cammrttoa ia concernad<lb/>
wit tte R?i that affact we dotty ? 9na nuctaar<lb/>
arms bvttd-ve). Cantraf Amarica, fvrtnor eacala-<lb/>
M?n af American Troops on foreign soft, draft<lb/>
reg?tretian. teo. if you are concernad about your<lb/>
?utvra and the fvture of our planet, pleate lain us<lb/>
Fridayete:Kp.m. aims Rim Street, lust east<lb/>
o? tne campus Or call TSt 40.<lb/>
RRRfONAL DEVELOPMENT<lb/>
COURSES<lb/>
Scuba ? Sept. 4-Sapt. 37 Asscrtlv Com<lb/>
mwnkatiom ? Sopt. 4-Saot. 35; Small Camputar<lb/>
?Sept t. Oanca Factory ? Sopt. 13-Nov. IS. Con-<lb/>
tact ovw ef Contlnufng education, erwfn<lb/>
Hall, 757 4143.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
Pioaae loin wt for our first "PRIMS TIME"<lb/>
fellowship this Thurv, Aug. JO. at 7 p.m. In<lb/>
Jenklna Awd Art Bidg. We are featuring a film by<lb/>
Joan McDowell entitled "THE SECRET OF LOV-<lb/>
?NG" The gellep poll rated McDowell as tha matt<lb/>
popular speaktr on the American college campus,<lb/>
rcme loin in tha fun. We are looking forward to<lb/>
meeting you.<lb/>
NAVIGATORS<lb/>
Check if out! The Navigators Bible study<lb/>
fellowship Brewster D Wing, Room JOI. every<lb/>
Tuesday. '30 PM, beginning August M.<lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
Came to The bertom of Collage Hill on Tuesdays<lb/>
aj Thursdays at 3:30 to play some Lax. We're<lb/>
'inking for a few good rwart. Any questions call<lb/>
Oave Locket<lb/>
EMPLOYMENT AVAILABLE<lb/>
Emptoyrnent H evettebte to qwattfled persem<lb/>
mo ere interested In becoming: Personal Care<lb/>
At9ene)ente fa students In wheelchairs. Readers.<lb/>
Proofreaders, Tutors. Por further attain, con-<lb/>
tact: Office af Handicapped Student Services. )1<lb/>
PORStON STUDENTS<lb/>
it vow are interesfed In taking an English Se-<lb/>
cond Lanpuape course (non-credifi then sign up<lb/>
n tha Writing Confer, Austin 309. Students wfft be<lb/>
contacted about class scheduling.<lb/>
PACULTY<lb/>
A faewtfy Inwartmant cfwb Is prasantty being<lb/>
tormod m our area. This showfd bo an ewcHtng,<lb/>
tvn. educational, and financially rewarding op-<lb/>
portunity far aM. Por more Infer mallow end<lb/>
details an en erpenliaMonal meeting to bo hafd<lb/>
vw. can or write tedev JS? 3031 days and nights.<lb/>
FACULTY INVESTMENT CLUR, P.O. Row W7T<lb/>
Oreenvifta, N.C. TTU.<lb/>
MINORITY ARTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
Th Student Union Minority Arts Committee<lb/>
will meet en Wednesday, August 19, r04, at S:00<lb/>
P M m room 347 of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
ah members and Interested persons are urged to<lb/>
attend<lb/>
SPECIAL CONCERTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Special Concern Committee<lb/>
win moat on Wednesday. August 39, 194, at 4:01<lb/>
P.M. in Room 343 of Mendenhall Student center<lb/>
ah members and interested persona or urged fa<lb/>
SPECIAL EVENTS<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Special Events Committoe<lb/>
win meat on Thursday, August 10, 194, at $30<lb/>
PM m Roam 343 of Mandanhali Student center<lb/>
All marrfbers and Interested parsons are uregod to<lb/>
COMMUTERS<lb/>
student who commute to class from outside the<lb/>
Crsenlife aram and need rides or rtden. contact<lb/>
commuter Sorvleos, Whlchard in, 7S7-M1.<lb/>
LACROSSE PRACTICE<lb/>
There will be the first official Lacrosse practice<lb/>
at tha bottom of College Hill this Thursday the<lb/>
30th Tha time to be there Is at 3:30 pm, if you can-<lb/>
not coma please call Chris Tomasic at 752 4999<lb/>
Wa witl practice Tues Wed , and Thurv of each<lb/>
weak this fall and. also there will be some mat<lb/>
ches too.<lb/>
STUDENT ATHETIC BOARD<lb/>
There will be an orientation meeting of the ECU<lb/>
student athletic board on Tues Sept. 4, 1904 at 5<lb/>
p.m. in Room 244 Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Anyone Interested In loinlng should attend this<lb/>
orientation meeting. For more info, about the<lb/>
organliatlon, contact Pam Holt at 757 6417<lb/>
MUSIC<lb/>
Tune In to your campus radio station this Sun<lb/>
day morning for your chance to win free B.J<lb/>
concert tickets 1 The Contemporary<lb/>
I Show airs 4-10 am every Sunday morning<lb/>
featuring the newest artists In Contemporary<lb/>
Christian Music. That's on WZMB 91.3 FM.<lb/>
YOUTH FOR HELMS<lb/>
Many students have expressed a desire to help<lb/>
with Senator Jesse Halms' re-election campaign<lb/>
Our headquarters Is located at 600 E. 10th Street<lb/>
fetes to Oarryl's). Please stop by tor literature,<lb/>
signs and to sign up for volunteer slots, or phone<lb/>
US at 790-4361 Welcome back to ECU, and<lb/>
wet come to our campaign.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
O.K. girls. If s party timed I Be out at the nous<lb/>
at 1:30 for one great TOGA PARTY tonight Look<lb/>
for upcoming announcements on the place and<lb/>
date of our next little sister meeting<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
Registration for beginning Karate will be !n the<lb/>
dance room of Memorial Gym on Sept. 27 at 7 30<lb/>
Classes for advanced yellow belt and up will begin<lb/>
Sept. 30 at 7:30 In the same room. KICK your<lb/>
heart out with the Karate Clubl I!<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL<lb/>
ATTENTIONI 11 ECU Team Handball Club<lb/>
Anyone Interested in playing team handball for<lb/>
the ECU Club Team should contact Jeff Humbert<lb/>
(7SJ-94M) or Willie Ehllng (757-6387) for more In<lb/>
formation. All levels of experience are welcome<lb/>
to play.<lb/>
ICE HOCKEY<lb/>
If you are Interested in playing ice hockey at<lb/>
ECU this year, please contact George at 753 8525<lb/>
Wa need to hear from new people as well as those<lb/>
from last yeaY to set up a meeting time as well as<lb/>
practice dates and etc. it is most important that<lb/>
those from last year call us so we know that mey<lb/>
stHf exist!<lb/>
STUDENT SAVINGS CARDS<lb/>
SGA Student Savings Cards are were! You can<lb/>
pick up yours at Mandenhall's lobby, The Croatan<lb/>
and fh Student Store. Take advantage of great<lb/>
savings offered by Greenville merchants and get<lb/>
your card now!<lb/>
PHI ETA SIGMA<lb/>
ti ??? Sigma will ba having Its first moating<lb/>
Ttturs Sept. 6th at 5:15 p.m. at Mendenhall<lb/>
ffaoaa ask for the room number at the Informa<lb/>
tfan doe All new members are urged to attend<lb/>
TM is going to be a great year so we hope you will<lb/>
rSnu.<lb/>
FLAG FOOTBALL<lb/>
Anyone Interested in playing flag football or<lb/>
starting up a team PAY ATTENTIONI I The IRS<lb/>
Dept. wants you to participate! Register for In<lb/>
framural Flag Football on Sept 45. The team<lb/>
Captains meeting is Sept 6 at 7:00 pm InRm 103<lb/>
in the Biology Building Come to Rm 304<lb/>
Memorial Gym to sign up PARTICIPATE<lb/>
RATHER THAN SPECTATEM<lb/>
ZBT Brothers<lb/>
The first Brotherhood meeting will be held Sun<lb/>
day, Sept. 1 from 7:00 to 10:00 pm Everyone<lb/>
must attend even if you plan to go Inactive this<lb/>
semester. Coats and ties required I The meeting<lb/>
will be In 321 Mendenhall.<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
To all interested students: the first meeting of<lb/>
ECU'S delegation to the N.C. Student Legislature<lb/>
will be held on Mon Sept 2, In Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center at 7:00 p.m. No obligations, come<lb/>
check us out! For more Info, call Braxton O'Nell<lb/>
355 2662, Sandy Thurmond 756 8669, or Tina Rossi<lb/>
7587614<lb/>
DELTAZETA<lb/>
The sisters and pledges would like to welcome<lb/>
everyone back to school and are hoping for a sue<lb/>
cessful Rush for all Greeks! Reminder to Delta<lb/>
Zeta sisters to be at the house by 4:15 today.<lb/>
LATTER-DAY SAINTS<lb/>
You and your friends are invited to attend this<lb/>
year's Institute of Religion class which will be on<lb/>
the New Testament Every week promises to be<lb/>
great because Bill Evenhuls is an excellent<lb/>
teacher. Class meets each Thursday from 6:30 to<lb/>
8:00 p.m. in Brewster B 305<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLASS<lb/>
A beginning American sign language class will<lb/>
be held every Wednesday night, starting Sept. 5,<lb/>
from 6:00900 p m In B 05 (MEDIA ROOM) of<lb/>
Joyner Library. The class Is free and open to all<lb/>
individuals Interested in Sign Language. It Is<lb/>
sponsored by the Program for Hearing Impaired<lb/>
Students and the Sign Language Club. No<lb/>
registration required, lust show up the first night.<lb/>
OCCUPATIONAL THERAP<lb/>
All students interested In Occupational Therapy<lb/>
are invited to attend the first O.T. Club meeting<lb/>
Tues Sept 4 at 5:45 in Rm. 203, Allied Health<lb/>
Building. Hope to see you there.<lb/>
SIGMA IOTA EPSILON<lb/>
Sigma Iota Epsllon, ECU'S honor management<lb/>
fraternity, will hold Its first organizational<lb/>
meeting on Wed Sepf. 5 in Rawl 102 at 2:00 pm.<lb/>
All members are encouraged to attend.<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug Program meeting to<lb/>
be held Aug. 30 at 4:00 in Erwin Hall room 218. All<lb/>
officers, members and anyone interested in join-<lb/>
ing are urged to attend<lb/>
RECREATION TRIP<lb/>
Anyone who loves having FUN outdoors should<lb/>
contact the Intramural Outdoor Recreation<lb/>
Center and register for the upcoming<lb/>
BACKPACKING TRIP Reservations must be<lb/>
made by 5:00 p.m Friday, Sept 7 the UWHAR<lb/>
RIE NATIONAL FOREST will be the sight for all<lb/>
me excitement. Just call (757 6911), or come by<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
HONORS SEMINAR<lb/>
All University faculty and all students par<lb/>
tlclpatlng In the Honors Program are reminded of<lb/>
their opportunity of designing or requesting the<lb/>
Honors Seminar of their choice The Honors com<lb/>
mlttee makes the final selection from among pro<lb/>
posals submitted each semester Seminars are<lb/>
topic oriented and often interdisciplinary and<lb/>
team taught Proposals for courses to be taught<lb/>
spring semester 1985 must be submitted before<lb/>
Frl Sept. 7, 1904, to Dr David Sanders, Director<lb/>
of the Honors Program, co English Dept , Cam<lb/>
pus. For further Information see Dr Sanders In<lb/>
Ragsdale 212 or call 757 6373<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
Welcome back members and new students! You<lb/>
are cordially Invited to attend our first meeting<lb/>
and dinner on Saturday, Sept 1 at 6 00 pm af the<lb/>
international House. 306 East 9th St All old<lb/>
member and new Interested students are en<lb/>
courogod to ?ttand. Hope to see you all there!<lb/>
NEWTIMES<lb/>
Catholic mass is now offered at 11 30 AM in<lb/>
the Biology lecture hall, rm 103, and at 9 00 P M<lb/>
at the Newman Center Every Wednesday at the<lb/>
Newman Center mass is celebrated, followed by a<lb/>
meeting, a shared meal and fellowship, beginning<lb/>
at 5:00 P M. C'mon and join the fun!<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
The East Carolina KARATE CLUB will have its<lb/>
first meeting on Thursday, August 30. 1984, at 7 30<lb/>
in Memorial Gym dance room This meeting is for<lb/>
those of yellow belt rank and up Bring your Gi<lb/>
Beginning classes will begin in September<lb/>
AEROBIC EXERCISE<lb/>
Get PHYSICAL with the Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services Aerobic Exercise Ciaaaai<lb/>
Register for the first session of classes AUG $?<lb/>
27 31 from ? 30 4 30 in Room 204 Memo at om<lb/>
Exercise through the IRS<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
The Department of intramural Recreation,<lb/>
Services has iobs available for Flag Foot<lb/>
BALL OFFICIALS NO experience is necess,),<lb/>
A CLINIC is held In which rules position,ng ,?<lb/>
all other aspects of the iob are taught A' -y<lb/>
and women who are interested m oHir,itlf,6 or<lb/>
iust earning some extra money snoula con t.<lb/>
the 1st clinic AUG Ml OOpnn Rm 103 Memory.<lb/>
Gym THE ONLY JOB YOU'LL EVER lO;c<lb/>
SPORT CLUBS<lb/>
Anyone interested in participating In th $<lb/>
Club Program can go to Memorial Gym Roorr )0J<lb/>
tor further information Numerous clubl ??<lb/>
available<lb/>
GBA<lb/>
All Graduate Business Students ar.d cro?Msor,<lb/>
<lb/>
the Graduate Business Association u sponsor,<lb/>
a volleyball party at 4 00 Fnaay, Ajguj- n?<lb/>
located at the corner of 14m. st anr Charles ? <lb/>
across from Kash n Karry<lb/>
PAUSE<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union will noic ,f,r , -(t<lb/>
PAUSE of the semester Thursday niqtrt ? ,<lb/>
p m Highlighting the evening . Br c<lb/>
violmist Join us for this inform, m .<lb/>
WZMB-FM<lb/>
Is Presently Taking Applications For:<lb/>
Classical Director<lb/>
News Director<lb/>
Production Manager<lb/>
Sports Director<lb/>
Apply Monday-Friday 12:00-2:00<lb/>
2nd FloorOld Joyner Library<lb/>
THE SHOE<lb/>
OUTLET<lb/>
Name Brand<lb/>
Athletic Shoes $12.88pr.<lb/>
Leather TopSiders $15.00<lb/>
2 pair $20.00<lb/>
Walking Distance From Campus<lb/>
203 W. 9th Street<lb/>
Thanl<lb/>
2 complete meals, including baked<lb/>
potato orfmnch fries and bread<lb/>
$2.99<lb/>
We want you to come<lb/>
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? 40 discounts evenings, 60 discounts nights and weekenc<lb/>
? Immediate credit for incomplete calls and wrong numbers<lb/>
? Calls from anywhere to anywhere, anytime<lb/>
? 24-hour operator assistance.<lb/>
? Quality that sounds as close as next door.<lb/>
iTs a winning combination Why settle for less?<lb/>
Visit the display in the Intramurals Gym.<lb/>
PHt Plaza<lb/>
Stop in at Brody's jewelry counter and let<lb/>
us show you the latest in fashion<lb/>
jewelrythe TWIST BEAD!<lb/>
Choose from several colors<lb/>
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which can be accented with<lb/>
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LET'S DO THE<lb/>
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Rag MH<lb/>
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distance<lb/>
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The longest one-day "massed start" race is the 551-620 km<lb/>
(342-385 miles) Bordeaux-Paris event. In 1981,<lb/>
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v<lb/>
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The more you hear<lb/>
the better we sound<lb/>
4<lb/>
fr<lb/>
<lb/>
vo"<lb/>
Mondal<lb/>
m<lb/>
mi<lb/>
tw<lb/>
in<lb/>
rej<lb/>
R<lb/>
Mi<lb/>
01<lb/>
D<lb/>
pit<lb/>
lar<lb/>
th<lb/>
dJ?S) Llke a11 th? other<lb/>
delegations and interest groups at<lb/>
Moscone Center the da befo?e<lb/>
nnm.n l"815 n3mcd eir<lb/>
nonunee, the Young Democrats<lb/>
- the youth and student arm of<lb/>
me party - continued to hear the<lb/>
candidates' last-minute appeals<lb/>
for their votes.<lb/>
Sen. Gary Hart spoke first,<lb/>
evoking some enthusiastic ap-<lb/>
plause by challenging the Young<lb/>
Democarats to redouble their<lb/>
voter registration efforts.<lb/>
Rev. Jesse Jackson got a<lb/>
spirited response, too, by charg-<lb/>
ing the somewhat-sedate, clean-<lb/>
cut students and recent grads to<lb/>
fight for a change in direction<lb/>
Discomfor: spread around the<lb/>
room, however, as the 100 Young<lb/>
Democrats stopped clapping for<lb/>
Jackson and began waiting for<lb/>
Walter Mondaie.<lb/>
Stop-gap speeches didn't stop<lb/>
an angry resolution to end the<lb/>
meeting from passing. Most of the<lb/>
people had left the room when so-<lb/>
Greeks Reil<lb/>
Guidelines<lb/>
B ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
NUtf ?mrr<lb/>
The ECU Interfraternity Coun-<lb/>
cil decided last spring to reinitiate<lb/>
serving alcoholic beverage during<lb/>
the 1984-85 fraternity rush.<lb/>
 According to IFC President<lb/>
Glenn Con way, the dry rushes<lb/>
were started to avoid the problem<lb/>
of checking all rushee's identifica-<lb/>
tion, and eliminating those who<lb/>
attended because of alcohol. Con-<lb/>
way said the fraternities which<lb/>
were most successful last year<lb/>
were those which held big all-<lb/>
campus parties before the drv<lb/>
1<lb/>
WATCH ECU<lb/>
AT<lb/>
Saturday<lb/>
Super HAPPY<lb/>
c<lb/>
L<lb/>
Open 8 a.i<lb/>
Locati<lb/>
2510 E. 10th Streetl<lb/>
Remember td<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
? ,mm naiftwoMWW<lb/>
MMIMMAMN<lb/>
m<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 30, 1984<lb/>
kEROBK EXERCISE<lb/>
? ? Ml. aniurail<lb/>
? o.?. Exeroie class,<lb/>
M ? 'asses 4UGUS1<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
?tramMr Re.reati0nalj<lb/>
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NO??pw en.es necessary<lb/>
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A'lesB.va<lb/>
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x<lb/>
imurais Gym.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Mondale Has Limited Appeal For Students<lb/>
(CPS) ? Like all the other<lb/>
Moscone Center the day before<lb/>
the Democrats named their<lb/>
nominee, the Young Democrais<lb/>
- the youth and student arm of<lb/>
thPy7C0ntinuedt? hear the<lb/>
candidates' last-minute appeals<lb/>
tor their votes.<lb/>
Sen. Gary Hart spoke first,<lb/>
evoking some enthusiastic ap-<lb/>
plause by challenging the Young<lb/>
Democarats to redouble their<lb/>
voter registration efforts.<lb/>
Rev. Jesse Jackson got a<lb/>
spirited response, too, by charg-<lb/>
ing the somewhat-sedate, clean-<lb/>
cut students and recent grads to<lb/>
"tight for a change in direction<lb/>
Discomfort spread around the<lb/>
room, however, as the 100 Young<lb/>
Democrats stopped clapping for<lb/>
Jackson and began waiting for<lb/>
Walter Mondale.<lb/>
Stop-gap speeches didn't stop<lb/>
an angry resolution to end the<lb/>
meeting from passing. Most of the<lb/>
people had left the room when so-<lb/>
meone rushed in, seized the<lb/>
microphone and announced that<lb/>
two Mondale representatives were<lb/>
indeed on their way.<lb/>
But by the time the Mondale<lb/>
representatives ? Massachusetts<lb/>
Rep. Barney Frank and Atlanta<lb/>
Mayor Andrew Young ? arrived,<lb/>
only a handful of Young<lb/>
Democrats remained to hear their<lb/>
pitches.<lb/>
So has gone Walter Mondales's<lb/>
largely unsuccessful courting of<lb/>
the American student vote.<lb/>
While the Hart and Jackson<lb/>
campaigns stirred impassioned<lb/>
voter registration drives on a wide<lb/>
variety of campuses during the<lb/>
campaign ? Jackson in particular<lb/>
led busloads of students to<lb/>
register after speeches at Southern<lb/>
University, southern Mississippi,<lb/>
the University of the District of<lb/>
Columbia, Xavier, Tuskegee In-<lb/>
stitute and other campuses ?<lb/>
even college Democrats greeted<lb/>
Mondale's nomination with a lack<lb/>
of enthusiasm.<lb/>
I don't think (Mondale) as an<lb/>
individual excites young people<lb/>
says Arthur Wang, a 23-year-old<lb/>
law student who was a Hart<lb/>
delegate.<lb/>
While Wang says he'll vote for<lb/>
Mondale, he adds, "I'd vote for a<lb/>
dead dog over Ronald Reagan<lb/>
"I'm still not convinced as of<lb/>
right now that I'm going to get<lb/>
out in the street for Mondale<lb/>
adds Georgia State student and<lb/>
Jackson delegate Mable Thomas.<lb/>
John Edelman, a Hart sup-<lb/>
porter and Northwestern business<lb/>
student, pledges to "definitely<lb/>
support the Democratic nominee<lb/>
and vote for him but notes<lb/>
Mondale doesn't excite him the<lb/>
way Hart does.<lb/>
Edelman reports he has friends<lb/>
who supported Hart, however,<lb/>
who won't vote for Mondale.<lb/>
Others fear the limp appeal of<lb/>
Mondale to students may even<lb/>
drive most of the student vote,<lb/>
which has never been much of a<lb/>
factor in presidential campaigns,<lb/>
to Ronald Reagan.<lb/>
"Right now, Reagan is appeali-<lb/>
ng to a lot of the youth says<lb/>
Greg Moore, president of the U.S.<lb/>
Student Association, which is run-<lb/>
ning an ambitious nationwide stu-<lb/>
dent voter registration drive.<lb/>
"Unless (Mondale) makes that<lb/>
inroad to the youth community,<lb/>
he's almost guaranteed to lose the<lb/>
election because we're registering<lb/>
record numbers of young<lb/>
People Moore predicts.<lb/>
A June New York Times poll<lb/>
found Reagan led Mondale by 18<lb/>
percentage points among 18-to-<lb/>
24-year-old voters.<lb/>
Mondale nevertheless has<lb/>
strong ties to education. One<lb/>
brother is a professor at George<lb/>
Washington University. Another<lb/>
is an official with the National<lb/>
Education Association, the na-<lb/>
tion's largest teachers' union.<lb/>
In his policy statements, the<lb/>
former vice president has long ad-<lb/>
vocated increasing federal educa-<lb/>
tion and student aid, pay increases<lb/>
Greeks Reinstate Wet Rush;<lb/>
Guidelines Will Be Followed<lb/>
B ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
The ECU Interfraternity Coun-<lb/>
cil decided last spring to reinitiate<lb/>
serving aL oholic beverages during<lb/>
the 1984-85 fraternity rush.<lb/>
According to IFC President<lb/>
Glenn Conway, the dry rushes<lb/>
ere started to avoid the problem<lb/>
checking all rushee's identifica-<lb/>
tion, and eliminating those who<lb/>
attended because of alcohol. Con-<lb/>
way said the fraternities which<lb/>
were most successful last year<lb/>
were those which held big all-<lb/>
campus parties before the dry<lb/>
rush period.<lb/>
Former Associate Dean of<lb/>
Orientation James Mallory said if<lb/>
organizations followed guidelines,<lb/>
they should not have any pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
New Associate Dean of Orien-<lb/>
tation Dr. Ronald Speier cited<lb/>
guidelines each fraternity is ex-<lb/>
pected to follow during wet rush.<lb/>
Each guest should be carded and<lb/>
stamped, he said. Dean Speier<lb/>
also said he is encouraging faculty<lb/>
and alumni advisors to attend<lb/>
rush parties to ensure the<lb/>
guidelines are followed. A bus ser-<lb/>
vice will be provided to prevent<lb/>
guests from drinking and driving,<lb/>
said Speier.<lb/>
Although Speier said he did not<lb/>
prefer a wet rush, he assumed the<lb/>
IFC approved it for a good<lb/>
reason. However,<lb/>
"Alcohol becomes<lb/>
the parties instead<lb/>
serious people.<lb/>
Both Mallory and Conway said<lb/>
passage of the 21-year-old drink-<lb/>
ing age will make the question<lb/>
academic. "It will be a reality<lb/>
soon said Conway. "why not<lb/>
give them a chance to use the beer<lb/>
as a tool now?"<lb/>
Speier said,<lb/>
the focus of<lb/>
of generating<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Drink<lb/>
And<lb/>
Drive<lb/>
WHY RENT ?<lb/>
For less than dorm or apartment rent<lb/>
you could:<lb/>
1. Buy your own home<lb/>
2. Enjoy peace and privacy<lb/>
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STOP BY AND SEE HOW<lb/>
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WATCH ECU BEAT FLORIDA ST AT<lb/>
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Saturday Night - Large Screen TV<lb/>
with<lb/>
Super HAPPY HOUR Puces - 35 cent draft<lb/>
for teachers ana protessors, and<lb/>
establishing a "Fund for Ex-<lb/>
cellence" to help schools experi-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
None of it, though, seemed to<lb/>
attract many student volunteers or<lb/>
much student enthusiasm.<lb/>
"We miscalculated concedes<lb/>
Ted Mondale, the candidate's<lb/>
son, in an interview about the<lb/>
campus campaign. "We didn't<lb/>
spend enough time<lb/>
The younger Mondale, toying<lb/>
with an unlit cigarette and looking<lb/>
very much like his father, thinks<lb/>
student voter registration and the<lb/>
student vote will come around<lb/>
when youth sees Reagan policies<lb/>
won't help them "unless you hap-<lb/>
pen to inherit a multinational cor-<lb/>
poration<lb/>
As for getting students excited<lb/>
during the general election cam-<lb/>
paign, "Geraldine Ferraro is a<lb/>
pretty good answer Ted Mon-<lb/>
dale, 26, says.<lb/>
Indeed, the little genuine youth<lb/>
excitement at the convention<lb/>
generated by the Mondale cam-<lb/>
paign seemed to emanate from the<lb/>
vice presidential candidate.<lb/>
"I'm not real hot on<lb/>
Mondale Brian Lawson, a<lb/>
21-year-old UCLA student and<lb/>
Hart volunteer, says. "Ferraro, of<lb/>
course, helps that out<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
work for you<lb/>
BREAKFAST AT<lb/>
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Breakfast Served Ail DAN<lb/>
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Central Book and News<lb/>
? THE PETER PAN SYNDROME by Dar Kiley<lb/>
??? Men who never grow up<lb/>
?ON WINGS OF EAGLES by Ken Follett<lb/>
Theodds-lf you had to calculate them-You didn't go.<lb/>
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Electrifying true story of Dr. Jeffrey MacDonald.<lb/>
? WHO KILLED THE ROBINS FAMILY by Thomas Chastin<lb/>
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?THE AUERBACH WILL by Stephen Birmingham<lb/>
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?1?? iEaat (Earnlmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hi N I E R FlSHHR. Ocnrral Manager<lb/>
Gkhti RlDtOL'T, Hwumm Trillin<lb/>
JENNIFI R JENDRASIAK. ,?,? J.T. PlETRZAK. a,A<lb/>
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Bll I Al SI IN, I  ? Manage, L.INDA VlZENA, ?? r?cMcMH<lb/>
AugiW JO, 184<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Football<lb/>
Season Opener Starts Frenzy<lb/>
The time has come to firmly<lb/>
ate that the Pirate football team<lb/>
in a contender. Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
and his staff along with the men<lb/>
who suit up in the Purple and Gold<lb/>
have been fighting a long time for<lb/>
respect, and with three tough<lb/>
schedules behind them and the<lb/>
years ahead filled with name op-<lb/>
ponent, the road in front of<lb/>
Emory and the team is filled with<lb/>
numerous chances for glory.<lb/>
Emory's artful and diligent<lb/>
recruiting is paying off in big ways<lb/>
for him, the school, :he fans and<lb/>
eastern North Carolina. A Top-20<lb/>
team has frenzied Pirate mania in-<lb/>
to a hot topic of conversation and<lb/>
helped place the school on the<lb/>
an. We are now arguably the best<lb/>
he state.<lb/>
But, as the new season is about<lb/>
to begin, we can't afford to live on<lb/>
the glory of the past. Fans and<lb/>
students should be proud of the<lb/>
budding tradition but must not<lb/>
Ice it for granted. Support by all<lb/>
the school and the eastern part of<lb/>
North Carolina should be uncondi-<lb/>
Tial, no matter how the season<lb/>
urns out. We must think Purple in<lb/>
der to win the Cold come the<lb/>
beginning of January. When the<lb/>
Pirates know that all of us are<lb/>
behind them, they will give that ex-<lb/>
tra effort that is desperately need-<lb/>
ed in the upcoming season.<lb/>
For those of you new to ECU,<lb/>
the old loyalties to other schools in<lb/>
the state should be shed; commit<lb/>
yourself to Pirate football and the<lb/>
rewards will be many. You must be<lb/>
an all-weather Pirate fan, ready to<lb/>
defend the school and all its sports<lb/>
programs at the drop of a hat. Be a<lb/>
fan through the good times and the<lb/>
bad.<lb/>
We don't know about Coach<lb/>
Emory and the football players,<lb/>
but we know the fans and students<lb/>
are ready to go for it all this<lb/>
season. We have a strong feeling<lb/>
he is, too. A notch in the "W" col-<lb/>
umn after the Florida State game,<lb/>
along with one from the Pittsburgh<lb/>
contest will surely put us in conten-<lb/>
tion for the top spot at the end of<lb/>
the year. Pirate supporters are<lb/>
ready to rock Ficklen Stadium,<lb/>
and, with the help of area fans and<lb/>
the Pirate Club, we are ready to fill<lb/>
the thing to the brim.<lb/>
So, Ed Emory and crew, we just<lb/>
want you to know that you have<lb/>
the school's unwavering support as<lb/>
you embark on your flight to<lb/>
Florida. Win or lose (we know it<lb/>
will be win) we are behind you. Go<lb/>
for it.<lb/>
WEREPUBUWIS<lb/>
ARE STJO-<lb/>
SAD Mi<lb/>
mm M?<lb/>
FINANCE , EPjMFESe<lb/>
in<lb/>
?<lb/>
mmw<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
Reagan Flunks Education<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
President Reagan blaming Walter<lb/>
Mondale and the Democrats for pro-<lb/>
blems in education is somewhat<lb/>
ridiculous, even for politics. And taking<lb/>
credit for anything good that's happen-<lb/>
ed since he's lived in the White House is<lb/>
close to preposterous. Reagan does not<lb/>
feel strongly about education; his con-<lb/>
servatism works against it ? except<lb/>
when re-election time comes around.<lb/>
But you can't hide the record, and the<lb/>
falsehoods in his argument against the<lb/>
Democrats are easily explained.<lb/>
Ronald Reagan implied Tuesday that<lb/>
the Democratic Party is responsible for<lb/>
the decline in test scores over the last 20<lb/>
years, and because of this, any money<lb/>
spent on education during that time was<lb/>
wasted. Well, Reagan is right: test scores<lb/>
have fallen off. But not because students<lb/>
are stupider now than in the early '60s,<lb/>
but instead because more students have<lb/>
the opportunity to attend college. The<lb/>
Democrats opened the doors.<lb/>
Now, not just the brightest and those<lb/>
with economic advantages get to go.<lb/>
Everyone has a chance. And as a result,<lb/>
test averages have tuned themselves in<lb/>
with the general public. Democrats and<lb/>
moderates did this ? not Reagan's con-<lb/>
servatives. In fact, scores are now rising<lb/>
in certain areas because the government<lb/>
activism of the '60s is paying off.<lb/>
But Reagan says government should<lb/>
stay out of the classroom. Government,<lb/>
he intones, is harmful. Yet, he uses<lb/>
government to shape education when it<lb/>
will help his political constituency. He<lb/>
pushed for tuition tax credits for<lb/>
families who send their children to<lb/>
private schools, but fought against tax<lb/>
breaks for faculty members who get tui-<lb/>
tion breaks for their families. This,<lb/>
along with government as a moralizer, is<lb/>
okay.<lb/>
Reagan will let big brother come to<lb/>
school to force children to pray. And<lb/>
then, while they are praying, he will let<lb/>
school officials violate their civil rights<lb/>
so their lockers can be searched. The<lb/>
president would rather have a law-and-<lb/>
order type teacher who prays than pay<lb/>
another one and have two instead.<lb/>
When Reagan promises the teachers<lb/>
of America that he will send one of them<lb/>
into space, he is treading on familiar<lb/>
ground: the Reagan administration has<lb/>
been trying to launch education pro-<lb/>
grams into the ozone for the last four<lb/>
years. Financial aid would have been cut<lb/>
more than 40 percent if he had had his<lb/>
way, and all but the ketchup bottles in<lb/>
the school lunch program would have<lb/>
gone up in space if things had went<lb/>
right.<lb/>
All these factors point to a serious<lb/>
disregard for education and higher lear-<lb/>
ning. The only thing Ronald Reagan has<lb/>
done right is not abolish the Department<lb/>
of Education. Faculty members whose<lb/>
grant opportunities have been cul ki<lb/>
only all too well that the preserr<lb/>
ministration has no right to the cl<lb/>
that it is a champion of education.<lb/>
It boils down to politics. Reagan' ?<lb/>
to say something, but in his hear-<lb/>
knows that he really doesn't care to help<lb/>
all of America become educated.<lb/>
even if he did, he couldn't begin to take<lb/>
credit for something that involves<lb/>
many factors. Sorry, Ronnie.<lb/>
Things I Thought Of<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOl T<lb/>
Whether you like what I thought of last week or not, I'm about to think<lb/>
again. It's not easy, but someone's got to do it. Yep. here comes another<lb/>
"Things I Thought Of<lb/>
First of all, I have to tee off on Pee Dee the Pirate again. Gee, just saying<lb/>
it makes me feel like I just drank a case of beer. It's so stupid it makes<lb/>
more sense backwards. Write in and tell us what you think of Pee Dee for<lb/>
our once-every-so-often "What Pee Dee Means To Me" column.<lb/>
Oh yeah, the Buccaneer people asked me to announce that the 1933-34<lb/>
yearbooks are in. You can either come by and pick them up or have them<lb/>
delivered td the resthome of yonr choice. There is a 10-percent senior<lb/>
citizen discount.<lb/>
Everybody's wearing those funny-colored, baggy shorts on campus. Why0<lb/>
Is it because there's so much room you can convienth carry your lunch in<lb/>
them? Is it because you can avoid using the toilet until vou get back to your<lb/>
dorm room? I guess people are getting less selfish because there's certainly<lb/>
room for a friend in those babies.<lb/>
Do underwear commercials make you lose faith in the human race0 Heck<lb/>
they sure make me want to slink away every time I see one. Hev, c'mon ad<lb/>
guys in the big apple, do you have no dignitv. I mean business executives in<lb/>
crowded elevators extolling the virtues of their briefs to every one aboard ?<lb/>
surely there are other ways.<lb/>
And while we're on the subject. Can't they make no-stick underuear for<lb/>
girls so they don't have to always pull it out of unmentionable places It kin-<lb/>
da" gets embarrassing at parties when the girl vou're with is reaching into<lb/>
her shorts every 10 minutes.<lb/>
Do you know any Driver's Ed majors? Second question, do vou know am<lb/>
with an IQ over 65? If you do, don't admit it ? even if his IQ's 'Oor <lb/>
But do ask him if this has been a life-long career goal If he replies yes<lb/>
check for damage to the brain and immediately call Gage and DeSoto<lb/>
Did you know that carrying your backpack by one strap hung loosely over<lb/>
the left shoulder signifies that you like to eat whale blubber and mavonaisse<lb/>
sandwiches? C est vrai. And if you carry the thing with both straps "it<lb/>
means you enjoy the company of muleskinners who drink Lowenbrau<lb/>
Did you know that people who live in Liechtenstein don't give a shit that<lb/>
the Cubs are in first place. I guess they don't understand that the last time<lb/>
this happened Mrs. O'Leary's cow was just a pup.<lb/>
I think the guys on the third floor of Aycock misunderstand the meaning<lb/>
of "higher education Fellas, I'm afraid the term has nothing to do with<lb/>
bongs and hallucinogenic tablets. Good try, I'm sure you'll learn one of<lb/>
these days.<lb/>
Well, a word of reminder for those of you who got this far. Don't forget<lb/>
to lambast that ridiculous new mascot in upcoming issues. Remember a<lb/>
world without Pee Dee is a safer one.<lb/>
Mail<lb/>
TRB<lb/>
Th? New Rrpublu<lb/>
"Caution shrieked the envelope in<lb/>
bright red, "the Enclosed Information is<lb/>
Extremely Damaging to the State of<lb/>
Israel<lb/>
Oh my gosh! My first thought was to<lb/>
dash to the bathroom and douse it in a<lb/>
tub of water. Instead, I took a deep<lb/>
breath and opened what turned out to be<lb/>
a fund-raising appeal for North<lb/>
Carolina Gov. Jim Hunt, who is trying<lb/>
to knock Jesse Helms out of the Senate.<lb/>
The letter described Helms' copious<lb/>
anti-Israel activities.<lb/>
This "package" (as they're called in<lb/>
the direct-mail business) was prepared<lb/>
by a Milwaukee firm called AB Data,<lb/>
which specializes in raising money on<lb/>
Jewish themes. The owners claim to<lb/>
have developed a unique computer pro-<lb/>
gram which can find the Jews in any<lb/>
mailing list. The piDcess?they call it<lb/>
"ethnication" ? uses surnames, ZIP<lb/>
codes and comparisons with other lists.<lb/>
For cynical manipulation, deception<lb/>
and sheer malarkey, political mailings<lb/>
make even the wildest TV commercials<lb/>
look like models of Socratic discourse.<lb/>
Many of these techniques were<lb/>
developed by the magazine industry.<lb/>
Having been involved in both the<lb/>
editorial and business sides of<lb/>
magazines, I'm sometimes unnerved by<lb/>
the contrast between what you assume<lb/>
about your readers as a journalist and<lb/>
what you assume about your customers<lb/>
as a businessman.<lb/>
As a journalist, you assume your<lb/>
readers are intelligent, rational, discern-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
As a businessman in search of those<lb/>
readers, you assume that they will really<lb/>
believe they've been especially selected<lb/>
to receive this limited offer; that they<lb/>
need a package full of little items to play<lb/>
with, such as a reply card that's too big<lb/>
for the return envelope unless they tear<lb/>
off a pointless stub; that they'll respond<lb/>
better to a long form letter with the word<lb/>
"you " several times in the First<lb/>
paragraph, occasional passages framed<lb/>
by little stars, and at least one "P.S at<lb/>
the end. These are just a few standard<lb/>
tricks of the trade.<lb/>
Here is a package AB Data prepared<lb/>
for the re-election campaign of<lb/>
Michigan Sen. Carl Levin. It's directed<lb/>
at people who've already contributed<lb/>
once, and the envelope says, "You have<lb/>
to be a little meshuga Meshuga<lb/>
means crazy in Yiddish.<lb/>
The pitch, signed by Levin, is that he<lb/>
knows it's crazy to ask people for money<lb/>
a second time, but he's doing it anyway.<lb/>
Bruce Arbit of AB Data explains the<lb/>
theory behind claiming to be crazy while<lb/>
asking to be re-elected to the U.S.<lb/>
Senate: "You're dealing with a man of<lb/>
incredibly high integrity, unflinchingly<lb/>
honest, and I think his donors ap-<lb/>
preciate that<lb/>
This nicely illustrates the difference<lb/>
between "honest" in the political con-<lb/>
sultant's sense of projecting an image<lb/>
and honest in the more traditional sense<lb/>
of telling the truth.<lb/>
The first letter is called<lb/>
"prospecting and almost always costs<lb/>
more than it brings in. The payoff comes<lb/>
when you hit up givers again. Roger<lb/>
Craver, the dean of Democratic mail<lb/>
mavens, says that in a typical campaign<lb/>
he hits a proven donor once a month un-<lb/>
til six months before the election, then<lb/>
two or three times a month until voting<lb/>
day. And then, like chattel slaves, the<lb/>
donors are rented out to new candidates<lb/>
and causes.<lb/>
 Craver denies that these are gimmicks.<lb/>
'There's a difference between a gim-<lb/>
mick and the effect of a mailing piece<lb/>
Well, what, in Craver's opinion, is a<lb/>
gimmick? He showed me a package<lb/>
from a fundamentalist church in which a<lb/>
woman claims to have seen Jesus in her<lb/>
napkin, and actually includes a paper<lb/>
napkin with Shroud-of-Turin type<lb/>
markings on it.<lb/>
OK. There's a difference between<lb/>
hamless mood-setting devices and<lb/>
outright deception. But how much dif-<lb/>
ference is there between the holy napkin<lb/>
and this mailing from Craver for the<lb/>
DNC?<lb/>
The outside envelope is official-<lb/>
looking gray and says, "Urgent! Federal<lb/>
Election Commission Data Enclosed<lb/>
Inside, along with a letter from Manatt,<lb/>
is what appears to be a green-and-white<lb/>
computer printout from the FEC, com-<lb/>
plete with little hole up the sides, repor-<lb/>
ting how much money the Republicans<lb/>
are raising.<lb/>
A footnote confesses that these are<lb/>
"figures compiled by the DNC But,<lb/>
apart from this, every effort has been<lb/>
made to make the sheet look like an of-<lb/>
ficial document. "Document<lb/>
441104-001-XBN it proclaims. "Page<lb/>
79. Summer Sheet PC50114<lb/>
The phony FEC report is included in<lb/>
the package, Craver amiably explained,<lb/>
"to give it credibility Once again<lb/>
that's "credibility in the sense of be-<lb/>
ing worthy of belief.<lb/>
As people become injured to each new<lb/>
gimmick, maintaining "credibility" re-<lb/>
quires ever-higher levels of guile. A re-<lb/>
cent fund-raising package from the<lb/>
Mondale campaign, for example, begins<lb/>
with a letter from Timothy Finchem, the<lb/>
campaign finance director.<lb/>
"Dear Mr. Softtouch it says, "Mr.<lb/>
Mondale asked me to send to you a copy<lb/>
of the attached campaign<lb/>
memorandum Attached is an ostensi-<lb/>
ble memo from Finchem to Mondale<lb/>
("Interoffice Communication"), urging<lb/>
Mondale to overcome his reluctance and<lb/>
ask "our generous longtime supporters"<lb/>
for more money. Scrawled across the<lb/>
top in blue ink are the words, "Boss ?<lb/>
Can we distribute this? Tim<lb/>
So far, standard B.S. But how about<lb/>
this? There's another message scrawled<lb/>
at the top in what appears to be hand-<lb/>
writing: "Tim ? c.c. Mr. Bob Beckel,<lb/>
Mr. Jim Johnson, Mr. Stanley Soft-<lb/>
touch, Mr. John Reilly ? Fritz The<lb/>
other names are top Mondale campaign<lb/>
officials.<lb/>
Mondale's direct-mail consultant,<lb/>
Robert Smith, told me it was "a<lb/>
rewrite" of a real memo, then, when<lb/>
pressed, said, "I don't recall  it might<lb/>
have been a couple Of course, Fin-<lb/>
chem never asked Mondale's permission<lb/>
to distribute it, and Mondale never ask-<lb/>
ed Finchem to send a copy to Stanley<lb/>
Softtouch.<lb/>
Yet Smith seemed genuinely dumb-<lb/>
founded by my suggestion that the<lb/>
package could be considered<lb/>
"deceptive "People increasingly want<lb/>
to be dealt with one to one and more<lb/>
personally he said sincerely.<lb/>
"Technology permits you to do that<lb/>
(cj. I9t4, Vmtttd Featurr Syndicate, Inc<lb/>
WSt<lb/>
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WELCOME TO Gi<lb/>
When you get settled i<lb/>
moi<lb/>
JARVIS<lb/>
UNITED<lb/>
CHI<lb/>
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ember, a<lb/>
tches<lb/>
,hed is an ostensi-<lb/>
hem to Mondale<lb/>
nunication"), urging<lb/>
me his reluctance and<lb/>
longtime supporters"<lb/>
Scrawled across the<lb/>
? are the words, "Boss ?<lb/>
: ibute this? Tirr<lb/>
Jard B.S. But how about<lb/>
mother message scrawled<lb/>
a hat appears to be hand-<lb/>
Mr Bob Beck el,<lb/>
Johnson, Mr Stanley Soft-<lb/>
I John Reilly - - Fritz The<lb/>
rc top Mondale campaign<lb/>
direct-mail consultant,<lb/>
told me it was "a<lb/>
a real memo, then, when<lb/>
1 don't recall  it might<lb/>
a couple Of course, Fin-<lb/>
 asked Mondale's permission<lb/>
it, and MondaJe never ask-<lb/>
lem to send a copy to Stanley<lb/>
mith seemed genuinely dumb-<lb/>
by my suggestion that the<lb/>
e could be considered<lb/>
"People increasingly want<lb/>
salt with one to one and more<lb/>
1 he said sincerely.<lb/>
)iogy permits you to do that<lb/>
!9g4. t mm Feature Svuiicair. Inc<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1984<lb/>
IV Student Offers Peers Fake Mail Service<lb/>
died FaHh he"Ba the dog<lb/>
Gannon ?b5 ??,le8e Studcn<lb/>
?n a 1" , f heard about i<lb/>
tfsisfrom h?me that<lb/>
em on m 0n0UsChl,d"and<lb/>
ep sorrow CXPreSS ??<lb/>
S1n'r;hff-locked by the dog's<lb/>
ddZmiSC rote a reply that<lb/>
SbLS: parems ?f<lb/>
Sound cold and unforgiving<lb/>
Maybe, but Kirchoff's parents<lb/>
bL'T' the death " eve"<lb/>
Barky himself are just inventions<lb/>
M i . N! Enterprises, Ron<lb/>
V1er s "fak<lb/>
college<lb/>
ce mail ' service for<lb/>
students suffering from<lb/>
empty mailboxes.<lb/>
For a modest $2 a semester,<lb/>
Mader will write his subscribers a<lb/>
monthly letter to help them ward<lb/>
off loneliness with hometown<lb/>
gossip. The only catch is that<lb/>
nothing ? the family writing the<lb/>
letter or the gossip ? is real.<lb/>
Mader, 20, a telecommunica-<lb/>
tions major at Indiana University,<lb/>
created his fake family letters<lb/>
when friends complained they<lb/>
never got any mail.<lb/>
"The concept of writing fake<lb/>
letters really lends itself to a lot of<lb/>
questions Mader admits. "But<lb/>
it's news from home, family and<lb/>
neighbor gossip<lb/>
Letter ideas originate in his<lb/>
copious note taking.<lb/>
"I take very different kinds of<lb/>
notes he says. "They're<lb/>
obscure. If anyone looked at<lb/>
them, they would think 'very<lb/>
Yellow Jackets, Hornets<lb/>
Sought By Scientists<lb/>
I i. I New Bureau<lb/>
Most people go out of their way<lb/>
to avoid a confrontation with an<lb/>
anar hornet or yellow jacket. But<lb/>
a pair of scientists at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine are once again<lb/>
collecting these creatures in the in-<lb/>
terest of medical research.<lb/>
In a continuation of work<lb/>
begun, last summer, the scientists<lb/>
are asking residents of Greenville<lb/>
d surrounding areas to call<lb/>
them if they know of a hornet nest<lb/>
or ground-dwelling yellow jacket<lb/>
colon that they wouldn't mind<lb/>
being rid of. The scientists will do<lb/>
e hard part ? come out and col-<lb/>
lect the insects for use in the lab.<lb/>
The scientists need a supply of<lb/>
the living creatures to study<lb/>
human hypersensitivity to insect<lb/>
?tings, a research project of<lb/>
medical school pathologist Dr.<lb/>
Donald Hoffman.<lb/>
Unlike last year, the scientists<lb/>
are only interested in hornets and<lb/>
yellow jackets. Other kinds of<lb/>
bees and wasps are not being col-<lb/>
lected, according to Robert<lb/>
Jacobson, an entomologist work-<lb/>
rtg with Hoffman.<lb/>
Area residents who think they<lb/>
might be able to help the ECU<lb/>
researchers can best identify the<lb/>
desired insects by their dwellings,<lb/>
Jacobson said. White-faced<lb/>
hornets, which are black with<lb/>
white markings, make their nests<lb/>
in large gray bag-like structures<lb/>
often found suspended from the<lb/>
eaves of buildings and from tree<lb/>
limbs. Yellow jackets, on the<lb/>
other hand, are almost always<lb/>
found living in holes in the<lb/>
ground, and are sometimes refer-<lb/>
red to as "ground bees<lb/>
Jacobson stressed that the in-<lb/>
sects need to be alive and in good<lb/>
condition to be useful in the<lb/>
research. Yellow jackets con-<lb/>
taminated with insect spray or<lb/>
gasoline, for example, would not<lb/>
be acceptable.<lb/>
Jacobson, who received more<lb/>
than 100 calls from helpful<lb/>
residents last summer, said the<lb/>
peak season for stinging insects is<lb/>
just beginning and should con-<lb/>
tinue through the fall.<lb/>
"I suspect that there are quite a<lb/>
few of them out there said<lb/>
Jacobson. "This year will pro-<lb/>
bably be better than last year for<lb/>
these kinds of insects<lb/>
r<lb/>
WELCOME TO GREENVILLE AND ECU<lb/>
When you get settled in, come and visit us Sunday<lb/>
morning<lb/>
i ARVIS MEMORIAL<lb/>
UNITED METHODIST<lb/>
CHURCH<lb/>
510 S. Washington Street<lb/>
Downtown just off campus on Reade Circle<lb/>
8:45am Early Worship<lb/>
9 45am Sunday School<lb/>
1 1:00am Worship<lb/>
Phone: 752-3101<lb/>
"A place to go and grow"<lb/>
CATERING<lb/>
We cater<lb/>
all occasions<lb/>
campus or<lb/>
:itt carbliiiaciihing service<lb/>
strange If I hear anything parents, who typically begin their<lb/>
unusual, even in class, I'll write it letters with a Dear Trouble"<lb/>
down and turn the story around to salutation, outsell the supportive<lb/>
make it funny<lb/>
Last year, his first in business,<lb/>
Mader wrote and photocopied all<lb/>
the letters for his 26 subscribers.<lb/>
This year he has a computer to<lb/>
help him personalize the cor-<lb/>
respondence.<lb/>
"It takes about two hours to<lb/>
write one letter he explains.<lb/>
"Then another three hours to pro-<lb/>
cess and personalize them<lb/>
He began by offering<lb/>
subscribers letters from a "generic<lb/>
suburban family and then bran-<lb/>
ched out to offer subscribers a<lb/>
choice of friendly or hostile<lb/>
parents at the head of the family.<lb/>
Mader says the "suspicious"<lb/>
parents, who begin their letters<lb/>
with "Dear Glorious Child<lb/>
"I like writing the suspicious<lb/>
ones better he adds.<lb/>
IU student Scott Anderson<lb/>
subscribes to the suspicious family<lb/>
for himself and to the nice family<lb/>
for a friend.<lb/>
"I don't get nearly enough<lb/>
mail he explains. "So I looked<lb/>
forward to getting the letters.<lb/>
They're a parody of a typical<lb/>
American family from suburbia<lb/>
Mader recruits his subscribers<lb/>
during campus orientation week,<lb/>
posting signs in IU's dorms. Last<lb/>
year, the campus newspaper ran a<lb/>
story about his service as well.<lb/>
Most of the subscribers actually<lb/>
have Mader write to friends in-<lb/>
stead of themselves.<lb/>
"It's definitely a unique gift<lb/>
says IU junior Deborah Freed-<lb/>
man. "The letters are personal<lb/>
enough you can laugh over things<lb/>
that really could be from your<lb/>
family<lb/>
She compares the letters' tone<lb/>
to the homey, innocuous humor<lb/>
of the "Leave It To Beaver" and<lb/>
"Ozzie and Harriet" TV shows.<lb/>
"You could see families writing<lb/>
letters like these Freedman<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
Only three subscribers have<lb/>
replied to Mader's fake families<lb/>
so far, but those responses were<lb/>
"very creative he says. He<lb/>
hopes to encourage more students<lb/>
to "write home<lb/>
"I would love that he laughs.<lb/>
Freedman, for one, intends to<lb/>
resubscribe for a friend this year.<lb/>
She'll have a wider choice than<lb/>
last year, too, since Mader is of-<lb/>
fering to write from three new<lb/>
fake families.<lb/>
Students can be the oldest child<lb/>
from a New Paltz, N.Y family,<lb/>
the second youngest child in a<lb/>
family from Santa Barbara, Ca ,<lb/>
or the child of a Fort Wayne,<lb/>
Ind single-parent family.<lb/>
"It's filling a void Mader<lb/>
says. "I actually like writing, and<lb/>
this is one way of doing it<lb/>
Besides, he sees the letters as a<lb/>
good alternative to typing term<lb/>
papers or working in the cafeteria<lb/>
as a money-making venture.<lb/>
Charles R. Hardee<lb/>
and<lb/>
G. Wayne Hardee<lb/>
are pleased to announce the<lb/>
formation of a partnership<lb/>
for the practice of law.<lb/>
HARDEE &amp; HARDEE<lb/>
319 South Cotanche Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
(919) 752-5565<lb/>
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when you purchase 1 Lb<lb/>
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i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
AUGUST 30, 1984<lb/>
Student Association Leadership In Disarray<lb/>
(CPS) ? For at least the third<lb/>
administration in a row, the<lb/>
leadership of the American Stu-<lb/>
dent Association has fallen into<lb/>
disarray, with former officers<lb/>
resigning in anger and complain-<lb/>
ing the group was ineffective.<lb/>
The group, founded in 1978<lb/>
and marketed to colleges nation-<lb/>
wide as a "conservative alter-<lb/>
native" the U.S. Student Associa-<lb/>
tion, aimed to help lobby in Con-<lb/>
gress on student and education<lb/>
issues.<lb/>
Its Washington, D.C. phone is<lb/>
now disconnected, though its ex-<lb/>
ecutive director and new president<lb/>
both contend the organization re-<lb/>
mains viable.<lb/>
But in the last few months.<lb/>
President Lori Hand resigned in<lb/>
anger, claiming ASA owed her<lb/>
SI. 000.<lb/>
The Texas Student Association,<lb/>
a group representing many stu-<lb/>
dent governments in Texas, decid-<lb/>
ed to withdraw from ASA, largely<lb/>
on the recommendation of Dave<lb/>
Galyon, ASA's national vice<lb/>
president.<lb/>
Last week, New Mexico's state<lb/>
student association voted to<lb/>
secede from ASA.<lb/>
Student presidents at Min-<lb/>
nesota, Michigan and Pan<lb/>
American universities say that,<lb/>
while they have not officially<lb/>
withdrawn from the group, to<lb/>
which campus student govern-<lb/>
mnets pay $95 a year to support<lb/>
lobbying efforts, they do not plan<lb/>
to renew their memberships in<lb/>
ASA.<lb/>
In the last year, moreover,<lb/>
previous President Michael<lb/>
Gallegos resigned, complaining<lb/>
ASA Washington, D.C. consul-<lb/>
tant Jim Newton had asked him to<lb/>
loan the organization money.<lb/>
Gallegos had come to power<lb/>
when his predecessor, Michael<lb/>
Chapman, quit the ASA presiden-<lb/>
cy because of suspicions about<lb/>
Newton's effectiveness and the<lb/>
amount of money the organiza-<lb/>
tion owed to staffers and<lb/>
creditors.<lb/>
"The people who are in control<lb/>
of (ASA) now have no interest in<lb/>
students Galyon contends.<lb/>
Galyon, who officially should<lb/>
have become ASA president when<lb/>
Hand resigned, was surprised to<lb/>
hear former Albion College Presi-<lb/>
dent Craig Kirby was now presi-<lb/>
dent, working out of a<lb/>
Philadelphia address.<lb/>
Kirby promises ASA's debts<lb/>
will "be squared away and<lb/>
hopes to revitalize the group<lb/>
"because of the (better) com-<lb/>
munication that will take place,<lb/>
and because of the rapport that<lb/>
Jim Newton and I have<lb/>
Newton, recently elevated from<lb/>
Blue Lights Mean Safety<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Sl?ff Unicr<lb/>
The ECU Department of Public<lb/>
Safety reminds students again this<lb/>
 ear that campus is not immune to<lb/>
crime and security precautions<lb/>
must be taken.<lb/>
The department suggests a<lb/>
number of ways students may<lb/>
avoid becoming victims of crime.<lb/>
The ECU Department of Public<lb/>
Safety ha- provided students not<lb/>
only with campus policemen<lb/>
patrolling the area but also with<lb/>
blue lights a! various locations on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
According to Francis Eddings,<lb/>
assistant director of security, the<lb/>
blue lights should only be used in<lb/>
emergency situations. Each light<lb/>
has a phone which is directly link-<lb/>
ed to campus security and which is<lb/>
activated by simply picking up the<lb/>
receiver. "The student only has to<lb/>
give us an idea as to the extent of<lb/>
the emergency, we will already<lb/>
know where he is located he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Since the installment two years<lb/>
ago, Eddings said the blue lights<lb/>
have not been used extensively<lb/>
but, "if they serve a purpose iust<lb/>
once then they have been suc-<lb/>
cessful<lb/>
Edding suggested that students,<lb/>
particularly females, always avoid<lb/>
walking alone or in dark areas.<lb/>
Other precautions the department<lb/>
suggests students take are registra-<lb/>
tion of bicycles with the depart-<lb/>
ment, keeping dorm rooms locked<lb/>
at all times, never leaving valuable<lb/>
property in vehicles, and repor-<lb/>
ting all crimes promptly.<lb/>
"We have a whole list of dif-<lb/>
ferent campus crimes said Ed-<lb/>
dings. "and we must deal with it<lb/>
on a daih basis<lb/>
19 Alcohol-Related Citations Issued<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
Muff Wnirr<lb/>
Nineteen persons, many of<lb/>
whom are ECL students, were<lb/>
Study Habits'<lb/>
Classes Set<lb/>
For This Fall<lb/>
B MARIJAKE FREEMAN<lb/>
Staff ttrllrr<lb/>
? series of classes based on<lb/>
ategies for "studying smarter"<lb/>
will be coordinated this fall by<lb/>
Drs. lone Ryan, Steve Deters and<lb/>
Will Ball of the University-<lb/>
Counseling Center. The<lb/>
unselors said they are encourag-<lb/>
ing freshmen to attend the classes<lb/>
but added that anyone who would<lb/>
like to learn more with less effort<lb/>
should attend. The course is aim-<lb/>
ed at helping students discover<lb/>
hovA to study more effectively.<lb/>
Ball said he feels this course will<lb/>
be a confidence builder for<lb/>
students who find what they are<lb/>
already doing is saving them time<lb/>
and helping them learn more.<lb/>
"Students who have practiced<lb/>
what these sessions teach tend to<lb/>
learn more by studying smarter<lb/>
Ryan said. These classes are a way<lb/>
to prevent bad study habits by<lb/>
teaching the student better study<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
For the convenience of the stu-<lb/>
dent, classes will be held at dif-<lb/>
ferent times. The first session will<lb/>
be Sept. 3-8 from 3-4 p.m the se-<lb/>
cond will be Sept. 4 through Oct.<lb/>
4 from 1-2 p.m. on Tuesdays and<lb/>
Thursdays. All classes will be held<lb/>
in room 305 of the Wright Annex<lb/>
building located in Central Cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
cited for various alcohol and drug<lb/>
charges in Greenville parking lots<lb/>
last Friday and Saturday night,<lb/>
according to the Greenville Police<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
Greenville Police Chief Ted<lb/>
Holmes said officers of the State<lb/>
Alcohol Law Enforcement agen-<lb/>
cies, in cooperation with the<lb/>
Greenville Police Department,<lb/>
issued citations for illegal posses-<lb/>
sion of alcohol by underaged per-<lb/>
sons.<lb/>
Two persons were charged with<lb/>
the illegal purchase of alcoholic<lb/>
beverages and three persons were<lb/>
arrested for providing alcohol to<lb/>
minors. Holmes also said one per-<lb/>
son was arrested for the posses-<lb/>
sion of marijuana and drug<lb/>
paraphenalia.<lb/>
Holmes said, "Downtown<lb/>
parking lots, particularly on<lb/>
weekends, are a problem In<lb/>
weeks to come, officers will con-<lb/>
tinue to concentrate efforts in<lb/>
downtown parking lots, he added.<lb/>
ECL"s Director of Public Safe-<lb/>
ty, Joseph Calder said student<lb/>
should be aware of the fact that<lb/>
"openly consuming" an alcoholic<lb/>
beverage while on campus is il-<lb/>
legal. He said if an officer should<lb/>
see a student displaying an<lb/>
alcoholic beverage, the student<lb/>
will be arrested.<lb/>
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consultant to ASA's executive<lb/>
director, has been at the center of<lb/>
the controversy for the past year<lb/>
and a half.<lb/>
Various student leaders around<lb/>
the country reported in April,<lb/>
1983 that Newton had led them to<lb/>
believe he was a lawyer, which he<lb/>
is not.<lb/>
Others got the impression from<lb/>
conversations with Newton that<lb/>
he had ties to the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration, the Moral Majority,<lb/>
the Young Americans for<lb/>
Freedom, the College<lb/>
Republicans, and the U.S.<lb/>
Department of Education, but<lb/>
none of the contacts at those<lb/>
organizations had heard of<lb/>
Newton at the time.<lb/>
Asked to respond to Galyon,<lb/>
Hand and University of Min-<lb/>
nesota student officer Mike<lb/>
Olmstead's negative remarks<lb/>
about ASA's stability, Newton<lb/>
Don't<lb/>
Discard<lb/>
Old<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Cards<lb/>
did reply, "No one but me is able<lb/>
to officially comment for ASA,<lb/>
and that includes Craig Kirby<lb/>
Newton now refuses to talk<lb/>
with College Press Service about<lb/>
ASA affairs.<lb/>
"I would have no official com-<lb/>
ment to College Press Service un-<lb/>
til I could teach you responsible<lb/>
journalism he says.<lb/>
Olmstead says Minnesota's pro-<lb/>
blems began at last October's<lb/>
ASA convention in New Orleans.<lb/>
"We sent them a check for an<lb/>
admission of six people, but only<lb/>
two attended he says. "They<lb/>
were promised they would be<lb/>
reimbursed for the four who did<lb/>
not attend. They gave us a check.<lb/>
I called Jim Newton, and told him<lb/>
'Your check bounced He said,<lb/>
'Okay, send it through again But<lb/>
it still didn't clear<lb/>
Former President Hand's com-<lb/>
plaint was similar.<lb/>
"Jim called one Friday in a<lb/>
panic, and told me he needed<lb/>
$1,000, so I wired him $1,000<lb/>
from my personal account<lb/>
Hand recounted in a phone inter<lb/>
view in May.<lb/>
"He has essentially told me<lb/>
forget about getting the mone<lb/>
back she reported<lb/>
Since then, Newton has repaid<lb/>
her. Galyon, student president a'<lb/>
the University of Texas at El<lb/>
Paso, says it was because "1 made<lb/>
him. That's why he doesn't tali<lb/>
me anymore<lb/>
ASA President Kirby was un<lb/>
sure how many schools still<lb/>
belong to ASA.<lb/>
"1 have no letters in the lasJ<lb/>
year from any schools withdraw!<lb/>
ing Newton says. "If I tell voJ<lb/>
ASA has 100 member schools, if"<lb/>
will end up in a headline 'AS<lb/>
Membership dwindles to 0<lb/>
schools<lb/>
"Technically, we are a<lb/>
member Minnesota's Olmsteaf<lb/>
savs. "But spiritually, we art<lb/>
not<lb/>
TARLANDING SEAFOOD<lb/>
r J 4.? . '<lb/>
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Shrimp, Trout &amp; Deviled Crab<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
Logos<lb/>
FRIDAY SEPT.14<lb/>
DOORS C'N AT 7:00<lb/>
ATTKE "RERNLEAF<lb/>
ON S. MEMORIAL<lb/>
Tickets Available At:<lb/>
This Way Up<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Christian Bookstore<lb/>
WBZQ<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
All Proceeds Of Concert GoToThis Way Up A Nonprofit<lb/>
Christian Nightclub In Downtown Greenville-Corner Of<lb/>
5th and Cotanche<lb/>
Writing Certit<lb/>
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Hv IEYN1 U OOR<lb/>
?<lb/>
The A<lb/>
Bv low<lb/>
-<lb/>
Tom Hame<lb/>
?<lb/>
f<lb/>
A<lb/>
Sho<lb/>
B M BONr "l Y H<lb/>
n<lb/>
hope<lb/>
t -<lb/>
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fair<lb/>
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Such an expo<lb/>
movie jusi does<lb/>
ahe viewe. 's epe.<lb/>
Gene Wilder - i I H wo"<lb/>
In Red as The d<lb/>
.typical middle g<lb/>
-advertising executive ?<lb/>
b companions that a<lb/>
but tranquil. The<lb/>
aconsists of an r<lb/>
Srife (Judith Ivej a<lb/>
tha; date a punk<lb/>
plete with a<lb/>
piohawk).<lb/>
- His friends are equa<lb/>
que ? Joseph B.<lb/>
married playboy, M<lb/>
d 1 e s t o n portrays<lb/>
Theodore's buddies wh<lb/>
XMth a doctor's wife wh<lb/>
doctor) is in surgerv, an,<lb/>
prodin portrays his ga frie<lb/>
Gilda Radner plays the part<lb/>
?gn office co-worker who,<lb/>
tfatuated with Theodore, v<lb/>
beserk when she thinks that<lb/>
Stood her up. kelh le Brock i<lb/>
The Woman in Red"<lb/>
'beautiful model who Theodore<lb/>
spots one day when she walks over<lb/>
:a drafty vent. To his delight, shel<lb/>
.shows up at his advertising of!<lb/>
From that moment forth, the<lb/>
chase is on (reminiscent of Bo<lb/>
Derek and Dudley Moore in Iff)<lb/>
:nly instead of a chase on sunn<lb/>
Reaches, this one takes place or<lb/>
horseback and in various bar<lb/>
m<lb/>
f ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0007"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
?<lb/>
array<lb/>
10, no 1 wired him $1,000<lb/>
n mv personal account "<lb/>
d recounted in a phone inter-<lb/>
Mas<lb/>
le has esentially told me to<lb/>
ixnil getting the money<lb/>
. reported.<lb/>
hen, Newton has repaid<lb/>
on, student president at<lb/>
liversit) of Texas at El<lb/>
- il va because "I made<lb/>
h he doesn't talk to<lb/>
fti ir?<lb/>
 s dent Kirby was un-<lb/>
an schools still<lb/>
ave no letters in the last<lb/>
schools withdraw-<lb/>
says "If I tell you<lb/>
member schools, it<lb/>
a headline 'ASA<lb/>
kindles to 100<lb/>
v e are a<lb/>
Minnesota's Olmstead<lb/>
tually. we are<lb/>
EAFOOD<lb/>
iol:<lb/>
De iied Crab<lb/>
pies $3.99<lb/>
.8-0327<lb/>
?<lb/>
Thomas<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
ogos<lb/>
Y SEPT.14<lb/>
rN T 7:00<lb/>
i "RESNLEAF<lb/>
MEMORIAL<lb/>
You Will<lb/>
ireasure!<lb/>
pecial $10<lb/>
Discount<lb/>
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w<lb/>
<lb/>
THF FAST C AROLINJAN<lb/>
Writing Certificate Being Offered<lb/>
style<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1984 Page 7<lb/>
New Program Benefits All Concentrations<lb/>
B JENNY MEADOR<lb/>
surf w rim<lb/>
Probably one-fourth to one-<lb/>
halt of ECU students will obtain a<lb/>
Bachelor of Arts degree upon<lb/>
graduation. Perhaps many these<lb/>
students will be worried about<lb/>
what the future holds for them in<lb/>
the way of available careers.<lb/>
Recently there has been rumors<lb/>
that the social sciences, i.e.<lb/>
pscholog and sociology, as well<lb/>
as the arts and especially English,<lb/>
hae little promise for an exciting<lb/>
Oi interesting career choice. But,<lb/>
alas, these fields are growing as<lb/>
well as the demand for specialists<lb/>
in the health and human service<lb/>
fields, and now the demand for<lb/>
those with English degrees and<lb/>
writing abilities is steadily increas-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Technical writing incorporates<lb/>
many aspects of one's writing<lb/>
abilities. Not only does one have<lb/>
to be creative and logical, but one<lb/>
must be extremely accurate and<lb/>
careful when recording events,<lb/>
technology and terminology!<lb/>
Often research and scientific<lb/>
orientation play a major role in<lb/>
the organization of articles. But<lb/>
it's not all cut and dry. The job<lb/>
opportunities are astounding.<lb/>
"The job outlook is, in fact, ex-<lb/>
cellent. If you've looked in the<lb/>
local papers for the last two years<lb/>
in the Sunday want ads, there<lb/>
have been plenty of jobs available<lb/>
for publications managers, full-<lb/>
time technical writers, and editors<lb/>
working for publishing houses,<lb/>
and even establishing your own<lb/>
freelance communications firm<lb/>
said Dr. Bertie Fearing, Professor<lb/>
of English and Co-director of the<lb/>
Technical Communications pro-<lb/>
gram. Other options include such<lb/>
areas as governmental or in-<lb/>
dustrial research, working for<lb/>
civic or cultural organizations,<lb/>
and of course, writing, editing<lb/>
and directing in public relations<lb/>
for businesses.<lb/>
Being a relatively new program<lb/>
and pet project of Fearing and Dr.<lb/>
Keats Sparrow, Professor of<lb/>
English and Co-director of the<lb/>
Technical Communications pro-<lb/>
gram, it allows both<lb/>
undergraduates and graduates to<lb/>
become certified writing techni-<lb/>
cians. Students have already<lb/>
shown an avid interest in the<lb/>
Writing for Business and Industry<lb/>
class. "We normally run three<lb/>
sections of 3880. This fall we<lb/>
started with seven sections and<lb/>
went to nine, still having to turn<lb/>
People away. We will offer at least<lb/>
nine sections next semester and it<lb/>
may go to twelve Fearing said.<lb/>
For undergraduates interested<lb/>
in writing, five of eight specific<lb/>
courses are offered to obtain the<lb/>
"Certificate in Business and<lb/>
Technical Writing These<lb/>
courses are: Business and Profes-<lb/>
sional Speech, Functional Gram-<lb/>
mar, Advanced Composition,<lb/>
Scientific Writing, Introduction<lb/>
to Editing and Abstracting,<lb/>
Writing for Business and In-<lb/>
dustry, Introduction to Nonfic-<lb/>
tion, and Practicum: Careers in<lb/>
Writing. The certificate for<lb/>
undergraduates was designed to<lb/>
entice students from all majors,<lb/>
whether it be political science,<lb/>
geography, business, physics, or<lb/>
English. "Of course<lb/>
undergraduate writing majors<lb/>
would have the best preparation,<lb/>
but we do not exclude those who<lb/>
did not major in English as an<lb/>
undergraduate. An engineer or so-<lb/>
meone from business could take<lb/>
the program Fearing said. "My<lb/>
philosophy is that a good liberal<lb/>
arts background would certainly<lb/>
enhance one's knowledge and<lb/>
ability to write even in a technical<lb/>
field, but most importantly is that<lb/>
one has an interest in technical<lb/>
communications<lb/>
As for the graduate level<lb/>
Master's program, a diverse cir-<lb/>
riculum is offered to cover both<lb/>
the technical and communitive<lb/>
aspects of writing. The overall<lb/>
course load is 30 hours, and<lb/>
graduate assistantships are<lb/>
available. With a limited enroll-<lb/>
ment, it is a competitive program.<lb/>
Technical production, com-<lb/>
munications, research, literature,<lb/>
and linguistics are the concentra-<lb/>
tions covered. Fearing com-<lb/>
mented, "There are only nine<lb/>
graduate level programs in the<lb/>
United States, and there are none<lb/>
in the Southeast. The closest<lb/>
graduate programs I know of<lb/>
would be Carnegie Mellon in Pen-<lb/>
nsylvania, R.P.I, in New York,<lb/>
University of Oklahoma State,<lb/>
and University of Minnesota in<lb/>
St. Paul; so we are among the<lb/>
forefront<lb/>
The Attic Celebrates Its 13th Anniversary<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Staff ? rtler<lb/>
?<lb/>
The Attic is rock &amp; roll, and as<lb/>
long as owner Tom Haines is in<lb/>
charge, that's the way it'll be.<lb/>
Begun in the attic of a building<lb/>
"Usually a name change in-<lb/>
dicates a different approach or<lb/>
new ownership, that's why we<lb/>
kept the Attic name even though<lb/>
the club is no longer in an attic<lb/>
Haines said. "We continued the<lb/>
same high quality rock sound we<lb/>
Tom Haines is the proud owner of the Attic.<lb/>
on Fifth Street in Greenville 13<lb/>
years ago this week, the nightclub<lb/>
has enjoyed steady growth over<lb/>
the years as evidenced by the<lb/>
move to the old Colonial Super-<lb/>
market building on Forth Street it<lb/>
now occupies.<lb/>
had worked so hard to be<lb/>
recognized for, so it didn't make<lb/>
sense to change the name<lb/>
ECU has always been the prime<lb/>
source of their customers and<lb/>
employees, but with the tough<lb/>
new drunk driving laws and the<lb/>
lowered drinking age, the em-<lb/>
phasis has become even greater.<lb/>
In response to this need to at-<lb/>
tract ECU students, Tom Haines<lb/>
and The Attic have increased their<lb/>
ties to the university by several<lb/>
means. The club regularly spon-<lb/>
sors charity events in conjunction<lb/>
with campus fraternities,<lb/>
sororities and other organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Currently Haines is looking for<lb/>
dormitory councils and organiza-<lb/>
tions wanting to participate in<lb/>
such events and asks that in-<lb/>
terested parties call 752-7303 and<lb/>
leave their name and number so<lb/>
he can work with them.<lb/>
Another way The Attic is at-<lb/>
tracting ECU students is through<lb/>
student special discounts. Those<lb/>
with ECU ID's are now charged<lb/>
only one dollar every night<lb/>
bufconcert" nights. This price<lb/>
applied 21 out of 23 nights in<lb/>
August.<lb/>
Certain ECU groups also<lb/>
benefit from the prices. Every<lb/>
Thursday night is either free or<lb/>
discounted for ladies; female<lb/>
dorm students get in free every<lb/>
night except during special events.<lb/>
A new attraction for ECU (and<lb/>
Pitt Community College) students<lb/>
is the admission of 18 year olds<lb/>
for $1.50. "We're experimenting<lb/>
right now with this idea Haines<lb/>
said. "It will be in coordination<lb/>
'A Woman In Red' Falls<lb/>
Short Of Expectations<lb/>
By AMY BONESTEEL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
An older married man falls<lb/>
.hopelessly in love with a beautiful<lb/>
girl and will do anything to get her<lb/>
? sound a lot like Iff? Well, it's<lb/>
iiot. It's Orion Picture's new<lb/>
release, A Woman In Red ? a<lb/>
fair comedy filled with a cast full<lb/>
of talented actors but lacking in<lb/>
general comedy and content. With<lb/>
such an experienced cast, the<lb/>
movie just doesn't measure up to<lb/>
ahe viewer's expectations.<lb/>
Gene Wilder stars in A Woman<lb/>
In Red as Theodore Pierce, a<lb/>
lypical middle-aged San Francisco<lb/>
advertising executive surrounded<lb/>
i?y companions that are anything<lb/>
fcut tranquil. Theodore's family<lb/>
consists of an insanely jelouse<lb/>
wife (Judith Ivey) and a daughter<lb/>
jthat dates a punk rocker (com-<lb/>
plete with a red and blue<lb/>
inohawk).<lb/>
1 His friends are equally as uni-<lb/>
que ? Joseph Bologna portrays a<lb/>
jnarried playboy, Micheal Hud-<lb/>
dleston portrays one of<lb/>
Theodore's buddies who sleeps<lb/>
Vith a doctor's wife while he (the<lb/>
doctor) is in surgery, and Charles<lb/>
Xirodin portrays his gay friend.<lb/>
Giida Radner plays the part of<lb/>
$n office co-worker who, in-<lb/>
fatuated with Theodore, goes<lb/>
fceserk when she thinks that he<lb/>
tood her up. Kelly Le Brock is<lb/>
?The Woman in Red" ? a<lb/>
rfeeautiful model who Theodore<lb/>
spots one day when she walks over<lb/>
a drafty vent. To his delight, she<lb/>
ihows up at his advertising office,<lb/>
prom tha' moment forth, the<lb/>
jJBhase is on (reminiscent of Bo<lb/>
j)erek and Dudley Moore in 10),<lb/>
jjnly instead of a chase on sunny<lb/>
Reaches, this one takes place on<lb/>
'horseback and in various bars<lb/>
"A Woman in Red " is playing at the Buccaneer Movie Theatre.<lb/>
around San Francisco.<lb/>
In several romance scenes, the<lb/>
movie features new tunes by<lb/>
Stevie Wonder and Dionne War-<lb/>
wick.<lb/>
The acting is mediocre all<lb/>
around ? Radner doing her best<lb/>
with a very limiUdrole1Wilder<lb/>
not nearly as funny as he was in<lb/>
Young Frankenstein or Stir<lb/>
Crazy. Le Brock does her best ac<lb/>
ting with her mouth shut.<lb/>
Although it's certainly not the<lb/>
best or funniest movie Wilder has<lb/>
ever done, his die-hard fans will<lb/>
surely enjoy it. <lb/>
r ??'?. <lb/>
- ? ? - -<lb/>
with The Elbo's wristbandonly<lb/>
a stamp will be required to enter<lb/>
one or the other after a wristband<lb/>
is acquired.<lb/>
'This will last as long as it's not<lb/>
abused. If people start removing<lb/>
the bands and wiping off the<lb/>
stamp indicating they're under<lb/>
age, the privilege will end<lb/>
Haines added. There's another<lb/>
incentive to keep the 18 year olds<lb/>
honest ?the 18 year olds in the<lb/>
general population will possibly<lb/>
get the same right if the experi-<lb/>
ment is successful.<lb/>
"We're making every effort<lb/>
possible to bring good, live rock<lb/>
music to as many people as possi-<lb/>
ble Haines said. "We've added<lb/>
a snack bar and constantly work<lb/>
to make the atmosphere one<lb/>
which will attract responsible<lb/>
adults who know how to behave<lb/>
A check with some local police<lb/>
officers bears testimony to the At-<lb/>
tic's ability to maintain peace<lb/>
among its customers. "We have<lb/>
very little problem inside the At-<lb/>
tic several related. "We have<lb/>
less trouble there than with other<lb/>
downtown nightclubs<lb/>
This fact is even more im-<lb/>
pressive considering the Attic<lb/>
features live rock &amp; roll music<lb/>
every night they're open, which<lb/>
currently is Thursday through<lb/>
Sunday nights, generally at 9 p.m.<lb/>
Since the Attic is on the "A"<lb/>
band circuit, the finest bands on<lb/>
the club tour are available. "The<lb/>
bands which consistently drew the<lb/>
best in the past year or so were<lb/>
Sidewinder, Skip Castro and<lb/>
Maxx Warrior Haines said.<lb/>
"These are the types of 'show<lb/>
bands' we like to feature on Fri-<lb/>
day and Saturday night. On<lb/>
Thursday we generally have<lb/>
straight forward rock &amp; roll and<lb/>
lesser-known groups, but we<lb/>
always get the best group<lb/>
available<lb/>
"Right now we're open on Sun-<lb/>
day nights, featuring alternative<lb/>
music, such as new wave, reggae<lb/>
and so on Haines said. "If peo-<lb/>
ple come, we'll keep it goingif<lb/>
not, we won't.<lb/>
IJVU J<lb/>
I<lb/>
The Attic<lb/>
For 13 years the Attic has been a source of rock'n'roll entertainment<lb/>
for many ECU students.<lb/>
Making Money Off Books<lb/>
(UPI) ? Ingram Book Co. has<lb/>
revolutionized the book selling<lb/>
business in the past decade and<lb/>
confounded even the most<lb/>
change-resistent segments of the<lb/>
industry by becoming a sort of<lb/>
literary Federal Express.<lb/>
That assessment of the<lb/>
Nashville-based firm comes from<lb/>
Harry McCullough, director of<lb/>
sales for the Scribner Book Com-<lb/>
panies in New York.<lb/>
Speed is money in the book<lb/>
business because of the pickle<lb/>
nature of the public's buying<lb/>
habits. A book sought today may<lb/>
be a book forgotten two weeks<lb/>
hence ? the time it normally<lb/>
takes publishers to deliver.<lb/>
"Ingram has revolutionized the<lb/>
business said McCullough,<lb/>
whose only accounts are Ingram<lb/>
and Baker G. Taylor, another<lb/>
wholesale firm that deals more<lb/>
with libraries.<lb/>
Ingram is by far the biggest<lb/>
middleman between the 400 or so<lb/>
publishers, mostly based in New<lb/>
York, and the estimated 15,000 to<lb/>
20,000 book stores throughout the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
But Ingram is not resting on its<lb/>
success, exemplified by 40 percent<lb/>
annual growth rates in the past<lb/>
few years. The company has em-<lb/>
barked on ambitious programs to<lb/>
further entrench itself with<lb/>
booksellers and is vigorously pur-<lb/>
suing the new video and computer<lb/>
software markets.<lb/>
Ingram views itself as a sort of<lb/>
tail being wagged by the book<lb/>
retailers in the United States and<lb/>
that is one of their secrets of suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
Company officials have<lb/>
vigorously pursued a policy of<lb/>
catering to the wishes of the<lb/>
bookstores because, without<lb/>
them, there wouldn't be an In-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Phillip Pfeffer, the company's<lb/>
dynamic board chairman and<lb/>
chief executive officer, said in an<lb/>
interview, the book business in the<lb/>
United States is an $8 billion a<lb/>
year industry and lngram's sales<lb/>
last year were about $250 million<lb/>
? so there is plenty of room for<lb/>
growih. Fifteen years ago, it had<lb/>
sales of only $600,000.<lb/>
lngram's strong suite is it can<lb/>
get books it has in its 65,000-title<lb/>
stock to anywhere in the United<lb/>
States within a matter of days,<lb/>
often the next day after an order is<lb/>
placed by telephone. The com-<lb/>
pany distributed 43 million books<lb/>
in 1983. Ironically, the<lb/>
booksellers can buy books<lb/>
cheaper from publishers so In-<lb/>
gram has to provide a service that<lb/>
is worth the extra cost. That's<lb/>
where speed comes in.<lb/>
Some Ingram officials feel that<lb/>
the now developing and still<lb/>
unstructured video and computer<lb/>
software markets may eventually<lb/>
eclipse the book business within a<lb/>
few years.<lb/>
Pfeffer symbolized the down to<lb/>
earth atmosphere at Ingram. The<lb/>
39-year-old board chairman<lb/>
greeted every single employee he<lb/>
met (many by their first names) as<lb/>
he guided a visitor through cor-<lb/>
porate offices that resembled a<lb/>
large suburban insurance office<lb/>
more than a giant book<lb/>
distributor.<lb/>
This relaxed atmosphere is only<lb/>
on the surface and could be<lb/>
deceiving.<lb/>
Ingram Book Co. has a svelte<lb/>
management structure. And there<lb/>
is a sharply focused definition of<lb/>
role among its young managers.<lb/>
"The book business is like<lb/>
this explains Margaret<lb/>
Langstaff, a vice president of the<lb/>
firm. "The retailers need the<lb/>
books fast. We get them to the<lb/>
stores faster than the publishers<lb/>
Ingram has three warehouses<lb/>
from which shipping originates ?<lb/>
Jessup, Md which services the<lb/>
Northeast; Nashville, which<lb/>
serves the country's midsection<lb/>
and Southeast; and City of In-<lb/>
dustry, Calif which serves the<lb/>
West.<lb/>
Ingram buys its books at a dis-<lb/>
count from the publishers ?<lb/>
anywhere from 40-43 percent. The<lb/>
company sells them to the<lb/>
booksellers at a discount based on<lb/>
volume ? an average of 10 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
Ingram processes orders by the<lb/>
thousands each day, mostly over<lb/>
the telephone. (The company's<lb/>
telephone bill will run about $2<lb/>
million this year.)<lb/>
There may be as many as 80<lb/>
operators on duty. On an average<lb/>
day during the summer about<lb/>
3,000 orders from all over the<lb/>
country are taken on computer<lb/>
terminals. The average order is<lb/>
about 115 books at a unit price of<lb/>
$4, company officials said. The<lb/>
orders are delivered mostly by<lb/>
truck, some of them company<lb/>
owned.<lb/>
Ingram is a subsidiary of In-<lb/>
gram Industries, a firm known<lb/>
worldwide as a barge manufac-<lb/>
turer, but which also has in-<lb/>
surance and other in interests.<lb/>
McCullough said there was<lb/>
much skepticism about Ingram by<lb/>
the New York publishers at the<lb/>
start.<lb/>
"I never thought it would<lb/>
work. They did something amaz-<lb/>
ing. The bookstore people are set<lb/>
in their ways, but Ingram com-<lb/>
pletely changed everything. It<lb/>
took them a couple of years. They<lb/>
made books available quickly<lb/>
through microfiche. A bookstore<lb/>
can see what is in stock and get it<lb/>
in a couple of days. I don't think<lb/>
anything will ever make the im-<lb/>
See INGRAM, Page 10.<lb/>
wn .m$m<lb/>
??4fc<lb/>
 m m i?i<lb/>
<lb/>
? <lb/>
t<lb/>
??<lb/>
N<lb/>
?L&amp;<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0008"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
f<lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN AUGUST 30, 1984<lb/>
'Ingram Has Revolutionized The Business'<lb/>
tumilMIHIHIMIINIIIINIIHIIHlMHIIIIIIMHluiiiiiiHUlliUHt<lb/>
I<lb/>
YO<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
pression on the book business that<lb/>
Ingram has made McCullough<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The Scribner executive said In-<lb/>
gram doesn't make a lot of money<lb/>
per unit so they have to do<lb/>
volume.<lb/>
"You ask the bookstores, par-<lb/>
ticularly the independent<lb/>
bookstores. Many will say they<lb/>
couldn't survive without Ingram.<lb/>
They are stocking more and more<lb/>
titles in Superstock. I would be<lb/>
shocked if anyone had anything<lb/>
bad to say about Ingram. They do<lb/>
something that the publishers<lb/>
can't do. They have been great for<lb/>
the publishers and the<lb/>
bookseller he said.<lb/>
Pfeffer talks with pride about<lb/>
the company's history.<lb/>
In the 1960s, he said, the library<lb/>
aid programs of President Lyn-<lb/>
don Johnson began to dry up<lb/>
because of the Vietnam War.<lb/>
Harry Hoffman, then president<lb/>
of the company and now head of<lb/>
Waldenbooks, wondered why In-<lb/>
gram couldn't sell books direct to<lb/>
retailers.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE '75 Ford Grand Torino.<lb/>
Runs good, rides good, stereo, C.B<lb/>
AC. Call George 758-7240 after 4 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1977 DATSUN B210 Hat<lb/>
chback 5 speed Runs well. Call<lb/>
756 8253 after 6. Needs bodywork Best<lb/>
offer<lb/>
7 VOLARE, FULLY LOADED, EX-<lb/>
CELLENT CONDITION. 756 8356<lb/>
RIDES<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
DESPERATE STUDENT needs ride<lb/>
to Northern Va. area. Will help pay<lb/>
gas. 758 8326. Ask for Al.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
FOR SALE<lb/>
'ress and<lb/>
752 1649<lb/>
New Box Springs, mat<lb/>
bed . frame. $50. Call<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
LOANS ON ' BUYING TV's, Stereos,<lb/>
cameras, typewriters, gold ' silver,<lb/>
anything else of value. Southern Pawn<lb/>
Slop, 752 2464<lb/>
DON'T MISS ANOTHER CONCERT!<lb/>
Road Trips Unltd. is taking a busload<lb/>
ept 14 to Yes in Greensboro Pick up<lb/>
our tickets at Apple Records soon.<lb/>
FREE KITTEN, 4 months old, very<lb/>
? endlv. tortoise-colored. Free cat, l<lb/>
vear old, gray and white. Both<lb/>
female Call 752-5483.<lb/>
'HE SGA STUDENT SAVINGS<lb/>
CARDS are now in! Pick yours up at<lb/>
e Student Supply Store, The Croatan<lb/>
and at the Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
obby. Take advantage of great sav-<lb/>
gs and get your card now!<lb/>
NEED A FRENCH TUTOR? Tutoring<lb/>
service available for serious students.<lb/>
Able to instruct all levels. Fee<lb/>
negotiable. Call: 757 3281<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER-<lb/>
?JCEWord Processing. Spelling<lb/>
electronically checked. Term Papers<lb/>
and Dissertations. SI.75 a page, paper<lb/>
included. Call Mark after 5 at 757-3440<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT. Ideal for 34<lb/>
r ends. 5 minute walk from campus,<lb/>
-art furnished. CHEAP-S260 plus<lb/>
deposit Water included. 752 2615.<lb/>
"?vailabie Now.<lb/>
HELLO LATTER-DAY SAINTS<lb/>
A footnote to remind you of all<lb/>
the great activities just for you<lb/>
and your friends.<lb/>
1. Church Servire:Every<lb/>
i Sunday 9-12, 3" Mor-<lb/>
I tinsborough Rd.<lb/>
 Te' 756 5890<lb/>
2 Institute Of Religion:<lb/>
ffJTipUi or Brewster 30 5 B<lb/>
Tlriw" -t Septmbpr<lb/>
6th ' t 6:30-8:00pm. <lb/>
The Course- THE NEW<lb/>
TESTAMENT. <lb/>
Call Bro. F.venhuis tor<lb/>
jinore information<lb/>
756-1473 <lb/>
Young Adult Activities-<lb/>
Call Amy Brew 355-6364<lb/>
<lb/>
IT'S GREAT TO HAVE<lb/>
OUAT ECU.<lb/>
J.W. Thanx for a fantastic summer.<lb/>
You made it for me. Looking forward<lb/>
to spending more time with you this<lb/>
semester. Let me check my calendar<lb/>
first. I'll see if I have time for you.<lb/>
Hope you have a big 21st Birthday!<lb/>
Love, Piggy<lb/>
JAMIE BIGGERS AND K. KIMBER-<lb/>
LY please get in touch with the<lb/>
REBEL.<lb/>
LYNN PAGE I hope to see you and<lb/>
Fran out a1 the Pi Kappa Phi house<lb/>
for the TOGA party tonight. B.S.<lb/>
PI KAPPS if you see a little sister this<lb/>
week, give her a kiss ? they deserve<lb/>
it.<lb/>
PIANO PLAYERS WANTED reper<lb/>
toire should include Jazz, Blues,<lb/>
Rags, Dixieland. Call 752-1341 or come<lb/>
by Piquant Alley.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED.<lb/>
Non smoker-washerdryer provided;<lb/>
new mobile home, rent $165, Va<lb/>
utilities; private room and private<lb/>
bath; Call 756 6151.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDEO ??<lb/>
rent, Va utilities, Call 355 6933af ter<lb/>
4:00 p.m on weekdays.<lb/>
FEMALE STUDENT NEEDED<lb/>
to share furnished condo. Central<lb/>
airheat, washerdryer, $150.00<lb/>
plus 'a utilities. Apt. 1-1 Cannon<lb/>
Court. Call 758-7090 after 5 pm.<lb/>
BABYSITTER NEEDED In my<lb/>
home: T W afternoons from 3<lb/>
p.m6:30 p.m. for 2 year-old girl.<lb/>
$41mo. Call 758 0805 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHERS AND<lb/>
PHOTOGRAPHER'S REPRESEN-<lb/>
TATIVE needed to work with local<lb/>
fraternity and sorority parties. Earn<lb/>
$l5-20hr. Send resume to: Picture<lb/>
Perfect, 101 Woodland St Morgan<lb/>
ton, NC 28655.<lb/>
NEEDED: PART-TIME SOCCER<lb/>
COACHES for various Pitt County<lb/>
Schools. Contact Alice or Barry at<lb/>
752-6106 if interested.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom townhouse apart-<lb/>
ment, $140 month plus Va utilities.<lb/>
Carpeted, air, furnished,<lb/>
dishwasher, laundry facilities and<lb/>
pool. Deposit required. Call 758-1263<lb/>
after 5 p.m.<lb/>
POSITION WITH SALES<lb/>
AVAILABLE. Excellent opportunity<lb/>
for extra money. No experience<lb/>
necessary. Flexible work hours. Call<lb/>
Ron at 752-7039.<lb/>
By 1970, the company's sales to<lb/>
bookstores totaled $1.4 million.<lb/>
In 1972, Ingram introduced its<lb/>
microfiche program, which gives<lb/>
individual bookstores a weekly in-<lb/>
sight into the books that are<lb/>
available and in what quantities.<lb/>
The bookseller can rent or pur-<lb/>
chase a device for viewing the<lb/>
microfiche. They can telephone<lb/>
their orders in and have the books<lb/>
on the shelves in a matter of days.<lb/>
"This is information the<lb/>
booksellers never had before<lb/>
said Pfeffer.<lb/>
In 1976, Ingram purchased<lb/>
Raymar, a west coast book<lb/>
distributor, and that solidified its<lb/>
claim as a national wholesaler of<lb/>
books.<lb/>
Ingram began Superstock in<lb/>
1982. That program is what the<lb/>
name implies. The company add-<lb/>
ed 35.000 titles in its inventory for<lb/>
faster availability to customers<lb/>
throughout the United States.<lb/>
Pfeffer said an order placed<lb/>
Friday afternoon from San Fran<lb/>
cisco from Superstock will arrive<lb/>
at the store Wednesday.<lb/>
Superstock's warehouse is at<lb/>
Jessup, which is near most of the<lb/>
warehouses of the New York<lb/>
publishers. Superstock contains<lb/>
the "second tier" of books in de-<lb/>
mand, and this service has placed<lb/>
thousands of books days from a<lb/>
retailer where they had always<lb/>
been weeks away at best.<lb/>
2BLO<lb/>
"i<lb/>
211 JA<lb/>
1<lb/>
Western Sizzlin Has Eyes For Yon<lb/>
Ribe yes, TTiat Is<lb/>
)CUTTHICK<lb/>
FRESH AND COOKED<lb/>
JHEWAYYOU<lb/>
LIKE IT<lb/>
Fri, Sat &amp; Sun<lb/>
For Only<lb/>
S3.99<lb/>
Wt PUT rT ON THE PLMT<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
WELCOME STUDENTS!<lb/>
PLITT<lb/>
CAROLINA EAST CENTER<lb/>
756-1449<lb/>
DISCOUNT MOVIE TICKETS<lb/>
You can purchase Plitt Theatre tickets at a 40<lb/>
discount that are good for any movie seven days a<lb/>
week. These tickets may be purchased at:<lb/>
MENDENHALL STUDENT CENTER<lb/>
SHOWING THIS WEEK:<lb/>
'TIGHTROPE'<lb/>
7:05 9:20 R<lb/>
THE PHILADELPHIA EXPEMMEHl<lb/>
7:009:00 PG<lb/>
"RED DAWN"<lb/>
7:00 9:15 PG-13<lb/>
HOUSE BY THE CEMETARY<lb/>
7:309:15 R<lb/>
"We want to be your night spot<lb/>
every nite<lb/>
? js <lb/>
&amp;.<lb/>
o ,<lb/>
WELCOMES<lb/>
THE CLASS OF 1988<lb/>
TO ECU<lb/>
Doors Open: DST 9:00-2:00 a.m. Est. 8:30-1:00 a.m.<lb/>
MONDAY ?<lb/>
CLOSED ? Open for private dorm socials and special Mondays, i.e.<lb/>
first week of each semester.<lb/>
CRAZY TUESDAY ? Different events each week from Bikini Contest to<lb/>
Air Band Contest to Draft Nite. Each Tuesday is always different<lb/>
&amp; always fun.<lb/>
HUMP NITE ? Free admission to ECU students ($1.00 18 yr. adm.).<lb/>
All cans 55? till 11:00 p.m 80C till closing.<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE ? $1.00 admission for ECU students ($2.00<lb/>
18 yr. adm All cans 55C till 11:00 p.m 80S till closing.<lb/>
End of the Week Party ? Friday Afternoon-3:30 till 7:30 - Free<lb/>
admission ,$ 1.00 18 vr. adm.). All cans 55? till 5:15 p.m 80t cans<lb/>
till 7:30. FRIDAY NITE - $1.00 admission ($2.00 18 yr. adm.). All<lb/>
cans80? till 11:00 p.m.<lb/>
Best in Dance Music ? $1.00 admission ECU students<lb/>
($2.00 18 yr. adm.).<lb/>
LADIES NITE ? For 15 years our favorite way to wrap up the weekend.<lb/>
Free admission for ladies ($1.00 18 yr. adm.), 6 Nickel Draft while it<lb/>
lasts.<lb/>
"BRING YOUR FRIENDS &amp; COME EARLY<lb/>
'You mutt be 18 to enter the club.<lb/>
NC. Slate law prohibits persons under 19 to purchase ? . wverages<lb/>
Persons under 19 required to wear a wnstband while 0. uses<lb/>
Alternative Beverages are provided<lb/>
?Excludes 1 st Wednesday of each semester<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
'WEDNESDAY ?<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
FRIDAY -<lb/>
SATURDAY<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
All New Deli Dog<lb/>
Daily Specials<lb/>
DELI SANDWICHES ? HEROES ? SOUPS<lb/>
C ADS ? VEGETARIAN SANDWICHES<lb/>
FRESHLY BAKED BREADS<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR DAILY<lb/>
4:00pm to 7:00pm<lb/>
UVE ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
FRI AND SAT<lb/>
AUG 31 &amp; SEPT 1<lb/>
FEATURING:<lb/>
The G-MEN<lb/>
513COTANCHE STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC<lb/>
Video. Pmball. Billarrjs<lb/>
OVE<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
and<lb/>
Khaki<lb/>
We are not sure about<lb/>
the validity of the thought<lb/>
that KHAKI was a World<lb/>
War II invention, but we<lb/>
do know that immediately<lb/>
afterwards there was a<lb/>
sudden appearance of the<lb/>
fabric in every young<lb/>
man's Wardrobe in this<lb/>
country. The love affair<lb/>
continues to persist. For<lb/>
Fall 1984 you can expect<lb/>
to see KHAKI pants as a<lb/>
basic for young men on<lb/>
campus or for any man's<lb/>
weekend Wardrobe. And.<lb/>
I suppose, we all know<lb/>
that there is no friend like<lb/>
that'special pair of<lb/>
KHAKi pants that have<lb/>
been washed until they are paper thin and who<lb/>
cares about the wrinkles? At all of our Coffmans<lb/>
stores we are going to be offeri g. a special value<lb/>
to the true KHAKI customer<lb/>
100 Cotton Khaki Pants<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Duckheads<lb/>
our own Coffman's<lb/>
Fine Quality Khakis<lb/>
?w pair for O . -70<lb/>
lL pair for O . 37 3<lb/>
o&amp;maris<lb/>
MENS WEAR<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Carolina East Mall<lb/>
Tarrytown Mall ? Rocky Mount<lb/>
?????? "2?<lb/>
Overt , ?<lb/>
m it P -<lb/>
 <lb/>
t woe ? J<lb/>
ocetoroer<lb/>
.1 cheeks i.<lb/>
f&amp;0 10 ci<lb/>
Skectf -<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057659_0010"/><lb/>
f<lb/>
10<lb/>
r HEEAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
jMJGUST 30, 1984<lb/>
N<lb/>
S<lb/>
O<lb/>
V<lb/>
H<lb/>
Of<lb/>
a<lb/>
<lb/>
'The Empire Strikes Back' Showing On Campus Tonight<lb/>
By MATTHEW A. GILLIS<lb/>
surf v ritrf<lb/>
Are you looking to wet your<lb/>
whistle with some adventures that<lb/>
are out of this world? Can't resist<lb/>
leading the forces of good against<lb/>
the forces of gulp-eternal<lb/>
darkness? Then hold on to your<lb/>
hats and your lightsabers because<lb/>
The Empire strikes again this<lb/>
weekend ? at Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
that is! The Empire Strikes Back,<lb/>
the second of George Lucas' three<lb/>
very successful Star Hars sci-fi<lb/>
film series, blasts off once more to<lb/>
that galaxy "far, far away" as<lb/>
young Jedi warrior Luke<lb/>
Skywalker (Mark Hamill) and<lb/>
company continue their battle<lb/>
against the evil forces led by the<lb/>
man we love to hate maybe even<lb/>
more than J.R. Ewing ? "Mr.<lb/>
Mean" himself, Darth Vader!<lb/>
As the film gets going, we find<lb/>
many of our old friends from Star<lb/>
Hars on the run again from Vader<lb/>
and his army of nasties. For-<lb/>
tunately, for a time, they do<lb/>
manage to escape, with Han Solo<lb/>
("Indiana Jones" himself, Har-<lb/>
rison Ford), Princess Leia (Carrie<lb/>
Fisher), Chewbacca the wookie,<lb/>
and the humanoid droid C3PO<lb/>
safe at the planetary hideaway of<lb/>
Han's old space smuggler friend,<lb/>
Lando Calrissian ? one of two<lb/>
new main characters introduced<lb/>
into the series and played by Billy<lb/>
Dee Williams. Still, there does<lb/>
seem to be something wrong with<lb/>
Lando<lb/>
Anyway, what happened to<lb/>
Luke? Well, he and R2D2, his<lb/>
other droid companion, have<lb/>
headed to the planet Dagobah to<lb/>
receive training in using the<lb/>
mysterious powers of "The<lb/>
Force" from the spirit of Ben<lb/>
Kenobi (Sir Alec Guinness) and<lb/>
the wise old Jedi master named<lb/>
Yoda. If Yoda turns out to be one<lb/>
of the wildest creations you've<lb/>
ever seen, don't be surprised ?<lb/>
the character was created especial-<lb/>
ly for this film by one of the noted<lb/>
"Muppet masters Miss Piggy's<lb/>
"mentor Frank Oz. (Incidental-<lb/>
ly, he also performs as Yoda in<lb/>
the film as well.)<lb/>
Yeah, they're safe for now ?<lb/>
but Vader and those bounty<lb/>
hunters are sure closing in fast!<lb/>
I won't reveal too much more,<lb/>
but you've seen it, haven't you?<lb/>
Not Well, here's a golden oppor-<lb/>
tunity to see a film that you might<lb/>
even take your bratty kid sister to<lb/>
see! Maybe that sounds a bit<lb/>
ny, but The Empire Strikes fiah<lb/>
offers a fun-filled, power-pa ?<lb/>
story of the battle bet wet .<lb/>
and evil, filled with cliff!<lb/>
perils, surprises galore, o<lb/>
this-world characters, and the<lb/>
wildest special effects any<lb/>
(with a bit of cute an : leve<lb/>
dialogue and even a little I<lb/>
romance thrown in for <lb/>
measure). Now, true, it wili never<lb/>
match the success r 'he :<lb/>
of Star Hars, but it ha -<lb/>
going for it to make it ano<lb/>
box-office smash worthy<lb/>
the successful sequel of one i<lb/>
. irwies of all time (as<lb/>
! -? "sequel Return of<lb/>
the Jed Hut, then again, I'll let<lb/>
. ige this weekend!<lb/>
pire and companv<lb/>
? -rekend only. The<lb/>
lay, Friday and<lb/>
? p.m. and" 9:30<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre in<lb/>
idem Center Ac<lb/>
? free to I L Students<lb/>
f with either your EC L<lb/>
. ard or MSC<lb/>
And, need I saj<lb/>
' rce be with v<lb/>
ou!<lb/>
ECU Poetry Forum To Meet Sept. 6<lb/>
By TIM GILES<lb/>
SUff Wrtlrr<lb/>
Peter Makuck<lb/>
Where amoungst ECU's in-<lb/>
tellectual hubbub can the former<lb/>
high school literary phenomenon<lb/>
find the comradeship of like<lb/>
minds? If he or she is or wants to<lb/>
be a poet, then ECU's Poetrv<lb/>
Forum has much to offer.<lb/>
Sponsored by the English<lb/>
Department, the Poetry Forum<lb/>
will hold its first meeting on<lb/>
Thursday, Sept. 6, at 8 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall, room 248.<lb/>
Leading the Forum is Dr. Peter<lb/>
Makuck, author of a short story<lb/>
collection, Breaking and Enter-<lb/>
ing, and a book of poetrv, Where<lb/>
We Live. Makuck has published<lb/>
extensively, and his work has ap-<lb/>
peared in many major literary<lb/>
magazines.<lb/>
The Poetry Forum is a<lb/>
workshop for student poetry.<lb/>
When a poem is presented to the<lb/>
Forum, the author passes out<lb/>
copies to the other members.<lb/>
After reading his work aloud, the<lb/>
poet sits back while Poetry Forum<lb/>
members tell him what they did<lb/>
and did not like about the poem<lb/>
and suggest ways to improve it.<lb/>
Meetings usually last until 9:30<lb/>
p.m. and often spill over to a<lb/>
nearby restaurant.<lb/>
Students are inviti :<lb/>
Poetry Forum meetii .<lb/>
feel shy about reading<lb/>
first time. Meetinj<lb/>
semester are scheduled for St-<lb/>
and 20, Oct. 4 and 1 - '<lb/>
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pro ?<lb/>
Last ea:<lb/>
NFL<lb/>
higher<lb/>
three other :<lb/>
draft for careers<lb/>
CFL<lb/>
The eight NF.<lb/>
highest total in sch<lb/>
but this ea tea<lb/>
many players who have<lb/>
professional career<lb/>
The follow, g . ? loo<lb/>
seen seniors who appea<lb/>
prime candidates<lb/>
NFL draft:<lb/>
Henry Williams: i: there is<lb/>
one player who put exoitementi<lb/>
to the Pirates' attack last ea:<lb/>
would have to be Williams w I<lb/>
known for his infamous flip a:<lb/>
every- touchdown he scores<lb/>
The First time that the<lb/>
180-pound sparkplug ee: j<lb/>
ed the ball in varsity competrjf<lb/>
for the Pirates, he broke l<lb/>
a 56-yard touchdown on<lb/>
return against the Florid S J<lb/>
Seminoles Later in the al<lb/>
game, he ran a kickoff back I j<lb/>
99-yard score.<lb/>
He led the nation last vear<lb/>
kickoff returns with a 31.1<lb/>
average and was named seccJ<lb/>
Stefon Adams<lb/>
4t<lb/>
MMMtltaM<lb/>
!<lb/>
?i . .<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0011"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
night<lb/>
THE EAST C AROL INI AN<lb/>
es ol all time (as<lb/>
el Return of<lb/>
igain, I'll lei<lb/>
his weekend'<lb/>
compai <lb/>
- The<lb/>
I ida and<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
I heatre in<lb/>
.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
youi I Cl<lb/>
MS<lb/>
d I tV it,<lb/>
? ? vou<lb/>
I) K<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
AUGUST 30, 1984 Page 11<lb/>
? ? si<lb/>
'TOES<lb/>
3<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
port? Kdlioi<lb/>
lorida State has defeated ECU's football team<lb/>
iree consecutive seasons, but Pirate head coach Ed<lb/>
?or sa.d that this Saturday his team will make<lb/>
ehevers out of the boys from Tallahassee<lb/>
We re only going down there for one reason -<lb/>
that s to win. Emory said in a Tuesday mid-<lb/>
noon press conference.<lb/>
it's a great challenge to play on the road against a<lb/>
like Florida State, but we're better prepared for<lb/>
s game than any team I've ever had the opportuni-<lb/>
coach.<lb/>
oi was as bold to say that this club had more<lb/>
nan last year's team, eleven of whom are now<lb/>
mg professional football, but admitted that the<lb/>
rience wasn't there.<lb/>
Pirates' inexperience will be most evident at<lb/>
back, a position in which a starter has yet to<lb/>
ted. Three candidates are vying for the starting<lb/>
and Emory has been disappointed with how<lb/>
iave progressed thus far.<lb/>
scrimmaged over the weekend, and not a<lb/>
quarterback could get our receivers the ball "<lb/>
'I think we have the finest receiving corps'in<lb/>
in Stefon Adams, Ricky Nichols, Henrv<lb/>
Williams and Damon Pope, but if we're to be suc-<lb/>
cessful through the air, we've got to find somebody<lb/>
who can get them the ball<lb/>
Emory briefly mentioned several lineman who sus-<lb/>
tained minor injuries during practice, but exuded<lb/>
confidence when describing the other facets of the of-<lb/>
fensive game.<lb/>
Defensively, the Pirates' biggest worry will be All-<lb/>
America and Heisman Trophy candidate Greg Allen.<lb/>
Last year Allen romped over ECU for 154 yards on<lb/>
33 carries, while also picking up three touchdowns.<lb/>
 "He's burned us for three years Emory said.<lb/>
"Our defensive line is going to have to get to him and<lb/>
then stop him<lb/>
Teaming with Allen in the FSU backfield will be<lb/>
Junior Roosevelt Snipes. An extremely powerful run-<lb/>
ner, Snipes ran for over 600 yards in 1983, and<lb/>
averaged an impressive 6.6 yards per carry.<lb/>
"I know our kids won't back down from anything<lb/>
or anybody Emory said, "but we're really hurting<lb/>
up front<lb/>
To compound matters, defensive ends Curtis<lb/>
Wyatt and J.C. Plott, both of whom were battling<lb/>
for starting positions, will miss the game because of<lb/>
injuries.<lb/>
Although the productivity of a quarterback and<lb/>
Former Player Looks Back<lb/>
the containment of Greg Allen are Emory's primary<lb/>
concerns, they are still things that can be worked on<lb/>
m practice.<lb/>
"We've practiced to the point where we can't be<lb/>
any better prepared than we already are Emory<lb/>
said, "But the one thing you can't practice is how to<lb/>
P'ay in front of 70,000 people<lb/>
Considering the fact that none of the ECU quarter-<lb/>
backs has ever taken a snap in a varsity football<lb/>
game, how the pressure will effect his signal caller is<lb/>
Emory's biggest concern going into the game.<lb/>
Although ECU is a relatively inexperienced team,<lb/>
rlorida State is not soon to forget their come-from-<lb/>
behind victory over the Pirates last year.<lb/>
"I've never seen anything like this one Seminole<lb/>
Coach Bobby Bow den said after the contest.<lb/>
"Nobody was able to stop each other on defense<lb/>
There were 948 yards worth of total offense in the<lb/>
game, but ECU All-America candidate Henry<lb/>
Williams stole the show by returning the only punt of<lb/>
the game for a touchdown, and then opening the se-<lb/>
cond half with a 99-yard TD kickoff return.<lb/>
Emory said he doesn't expect Florida State to let<lb/>
Williams do the same thing to them again this year,<lb/>
so he's come up with a very basic game plan.<lb/>
"We're going to go all out on each play ? and if<lb/>
we win enough plays, we'll win the game<lb/>
ECU must stop Florida State's Heisman Trophv<lb/>
candidate Greg Allen this Saturdav<lb/>
00 9 CO<lb/>
10 900<lb/>
y<lb/>
t place<lb/>
OL<lb/>
Bv TONY BROWN<lb/>
NIaff Wrtl?<lb/>
Bumgarner was a dif-<lb/>
kind of athlete from the<lb/>
hat go through the<lb/>
ittending college while<lb/>
 their futures on pro<lb/>
he wanted to know<lb/>
arh as a player to<lb/>
. school coach and I<lb/>
took more than just<lb/>
ick ig and catching<lb/>
"I made sure I<lb/>
reasons we block-<lb/>
or why certain<lb/>
d in specific situa-<lb/>
after practice I<lb/>
es what their<lb/>
. through that<lb/>
ed a lot of<lb/>
ting, but it<lb/>
-ate me as a<lb/>
d what<lb/>
i "d in the overall game<lb/>
 " full use of this<lb/>
went on to set<lb/>
rds in his davs as<lb/>
a receiver at ECU in 1964-65. He<lb/>
is still standing second in passes<lb/>
caught and fourth in career yar-<lb/>
dage even though he played on the<lb/>
last of the single-wing teams in the<lb/>
country. He was a major force on<lb/>
Coach Clarence Stasavich's teams<lb/>
in the years ECU won the now-<lb/>
defunct Eastern Bowl and the<lb/>
Tangerine Bowl.<lb/>
He was named to the all-state<lb/>
team and honorable mention All-<lb/>
America and was signed by-<lb/>
Toronto of the Canadian Football<lb/>
League. As a starter in his first<lb/>
season, he caught 25 passes for<lb/>
four touchdowns and had an im-<lb/>
pressive debut for a rookie, but<lb/>
found something was lacking.<lb/>
"It just wasn't what I thought it<lb/>
would be he said. "There was<lb/>
so much travel involved and<lb/>
things they had promised didn't<lb/>
happen ? so after one year I<lb/>
decided to follow my goal of<lb/>
becoming a high school football<lb/>
coach and got a job in the<lb/>
Edenton-Chowan school system.<lb/>
"That's when I really<lb/>
began to understand the impor-<lb/>
tance of a broad education. I<lb/>
taught classes from eighth to 12th<lb/>
grade in such courses as English,<lb/>
math, spelling, literature, history,<lb/>
health and physical education,<lb/>
geography and economics ? all<lb/>
while serving as head baseball and<lb/>
assistant football coach<lb/>
It was Bumgarner's educational<lb/>
background that made this and<lb/>
subsequent upward career moves<lb/>
possible ? not football. "The<lb/>
best thing a college athlete could<lb/>
do would be to examine their<lb/>
motives for playing and plan ac-<lb/>
cordingly<lb/>
"In the past you could pretty<lb/>
much get by on coaching and<lb/>
teaching P.E but today the<lb/>
school budgets are so tight that<lb/>
only those qualified in physical<lb/>
science, math and other courses,<lb/>
as well as coaching, are being<lb/>
hired<lb/>
In 1968 Bumgarner decided to<lb/>
take the next step toward his goal<lb/>
and obtained a job at Greenville's<lb/>
Rose High School as a social<lb/>
See BUMGARNER, Page 14<lb/>
Best Appointed As<lb/>
Baseball Assistant<lb/>
JON JORDAN ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Billy Best (swinging bat) is ECU's<lb/>
new assistant baseball coach.<lb/>
By DON GROSS<lb/>
staff W rt(r<lb/>
Success sometimes takes a toll.<lb/>
Last year's Pirate baseball team<lb/>
won the ECAC-South tourna-<lb/>
ment, and then came within two<lb/>
games of going to the College<lb/>
World Series. They ended the<lb/>
season ranked 20th in the nation.<lb/>
Head coach Hal Baird rode the<lb/>
success of his team to a better<lb/>
coaching job at Auburn Universi-<lb/>
ty, leaving the helm to last year's<lb/>
assistant coach Gary Overton.<lb/>
To replace the assistant<lb/>
coaching void, ECU hired former<lb/>
Pirate star Billy Best. He played<lb/>
centerfield for the Pirates from<lb/>
1977 to 1980.<lb/>
Best was then drafted by the<lb/>
Kansas City Royal organization.<lb/>
There he rose to AA ball, playing<lb/>
for Memphis in the Southern<lb/>
League.<lb/>
Due to his age (26) and the fact<lb/>
that the Royals drafted three new<lb/>
promising outfielders, he<lb/>
to take the assistant coaching job.<lb/>
"I'll miss pro ball Best sai<lb/>
"but I've always wanted to come<lb/>
back to mv alma mater and do<lb/>
this<lb/>
Best thinks that the team has a<lb/>
good nucleus of players and come<lb/>
spring they all should be healthy<lb/>
enough to go after another con-<lb/>
ference title.<lb/>
"Coach Overton is a very<lb/>
knowledgable man commented<lb/>
BestThere are essentially few<lb/>
changes in the running of the<lb/>
team<lb/>
Best will concentrate on instruc-<lb/>
ting the outfielders and will also<lb/>
help with hitting and baserunning.<lb/>
With his experience in profes-<lb/>
sional baseball, Coach Best will<lb/>
make a great addition to the<lb/>
coaching staff.<lb/>
"I really want to stay here for a<lb/>
long time added Best. "It's<lb/>
good to be back<lb/>
ECU Once Again Sports NFL Candidates<lb/>
B. s( OTT POWERS<lb/>
Miff Writer<lb/>
aiss of 12 players to<lb/>
fessional football ranks<lb/>
ear, many feel the Pirates<lb/>
be lacking potential All-<lb/>
cans and professional draft<lb/>
is, but this year's team has<lb/>
seniors that have the ability<lb/>
careers for themselves in<lb/>
" t ball,<lb/>
t year's team produced nine<lb/>
draft choices, the third<lb/>
? total in the country, while<lb/>
other players skipped the<lb/>
' careers in the USFL and<lb/>
he eight NFL draftees was the<lb/>
? est total in school history,<lb/>
but this year's team also has<lb/>
players who have a shot at<lb/>
'essional careers.<lb/>
The following is a brief look at<lb/>
seven seniors who appear to be<lb/>
me candidates for the next<lb/>
NFL draft:<lb/>
Henry Williams: If there is any<lb/>
ne player who put excitement in-<lb/>
the Pirates' attack last year, it<lb/>
would have to be Williams who is<lb/>
known for his infamous flip after<lb/>
every touchdown he scores.<lb/>
The first time that the 5-6,<lb/>
180-pound sparkplug ever touch-<lb/>
ed the ball in varsity competition<lb/>
for the Pirates, he broke loose for<lb/>
a 56-yard touchdown on a punt<lb/>
return against the Florida State<lb/>
Seminoles. Later in the same<lb/>
game, he ran a kickoff back for a<lb/>
99-yard score.<lb/>
He led the nation last year in<lb/>
kickoff returns with a 31.1 yard<lb/>
average and was named second<lb/>
team All-South Independent and on the team In addition to his<lb/>
second team return specialist in 4.4 speed in the forty, Adams<lb/>
Sporting News. He is obviously also possesses strength ? lifting a<lb/>
the premier return man in the na<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Although he only caught four<lb/>
passes for 62 yards as a flanker<lb/>
last year, his 4.2 speed in the<lb/>
forty-yard dash also makes him a<lb/>
deep threat.<lb/>
Stefon Adams: Adams returns<lb/>
to his split end position as a se-<lb/>
cond year starter after leading the<lb/>
team with 20 receptions for 277<lb/>
yards and an average of 13.9<lb/>
yards per catch last year.<lb/>
His longest catch was for 39<lb/>
yards against Missouri. As a<lb/>
sophomore, Adams made 12 cat-<lb/>
ches for 185 yards averaging 15.5<lb/>
yards per catch.<lb/>
As far as athletic ability and<lb/>
talent is concerned, coach Ed<lb/>
Emory calls him the "best player<lb/>
total 1,489 pounds in four lifts<lb/>
the bench press, squat, hang<lb/>
clean and the push press.<lb/>
Ricky Nichols: Nichols, who is<lb/>
one of the group of receivers that<lb/>
Emory calls the best in the coun-<lb/>
try, will be back for his third year<lb/>
as starting flanker, a position<lb/>
which he will share with Henry<lb/>
Williams.<lb/>
Last year, Nichols was the<lb/>
third leading receiver on the team<lb/>
with 15 catches for 222 yards and<lb/>
an average of 14.8 yards per<lb/>
catch and two touchdowns. His<lb/>
biggest catch of the year was a<lb/>
27-yard touchdown against<lb/>
Missouri, which assured the<lb/>
Pirates of a 13-6 victory.<lb/>
He's an excellent athlete with<lb/>
4.3 speed to make him a deep<lb/>
threat, and he's also a member of<lb/>
the ECU baseball team.<lb/>
Damon Pope: Pope is likely one<lb/>
of the most underrated players on<lb/>
this year's team, but he has ex-<lb/>
perience, playing in every varsity<lb/>
game for the Pirates in the last<lb/>
three seasons.<lb/>
He had seven catches for 83<lb/>
yards and one touchdown for the<lb/>
Pirates last vear in his backup<lb/>
roll. His size ? 6-3, 230 pounds<lb/>
? and blocking ability should<lb/>
make him a strong pro prospect<lb/>
this season.<lb/>
Pope is expected to be one of<lb/>
the leaders on offense this year<lb/>
and with a good year he could<lb/>
really make a name for himself.<lb/>
He's also considered one of the<lb/>
fastest tight ends in the country<lb/>
with 4.4 speed.<lb/>
third year as a starter for the<lb/>
Pirates after being forced into a<lb/>
starting role as a sophomore after<lb/>
injuries depleted the linebackers.<lb/>
The 6-2, 230-pound Jordan<lb/>
was the third leading tackier on<lb/>
the team last year with 90, which<lb/>
included 48 primary tackles and<lb/>
three quarterback sacks. His best<lb/>
games were against N.C. State,<lb/>
when he had 14 tackles, and<lb/>
against Missouri, when he had<lb/>
four tackles behind the line of<lb/>
scrimmage.<lb/>
Jordan has played in all but<lb/>
one of ECU's varsity games since<lb/>
he arrived at the school. He's ex-<lb/>
pected to be one of the premier<lb/>
defensive players on this year's<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Tyrone Johnson: Johnson alter-<lb/>
nated at the linebacker spot last<lb/>
vear. but with Mike Grant now<lb/>
Ricky Nichols<lb/>
Damon Pope<lb/>
playing with the Memphis<lb/>
Showboats of the USFL, he will<lb/>
inherit the starting job alongside<lb/>
Jordan.<lb/>
Johnson transferred last year<lb/>
from Hinds Junior College and<lb/>
proceeded to be the seventh<lb/>
leading tackier for ECU in his<lb/>
first season with 56 tackles,<lb/>
which included 3? initial hits and<lb/>
four quarterback sacks.<lb/>
He is very strong, as evidenced<lb/>
by a 365-pound bench press and a<lb/>
600-pound squat, which will<lb/>
make him extremely hard to<lb/>
block.<lb/>
Chris Santa Cruz: Santa Cruz<lb/>
also transferred from Hinds<lb/>
Junior College last year, and in<lb/>
his first season for the Pirates he<lb/>
played linebacker, defensive end<lb/>
and noseguard.<lb/>
Noseguard will be his home<lb/>
this year, and with heavy losses<lb/>
on the defensive line, he will have<lb/>
the opportunity to prove to<lb/>
everybody what the coaches<lb/>
already know.<lb/>
Last year's statistics of 19 in-<lb/>
itial hits and 12 assists are not in-<lb/>
dicative of the important role he<lb/>
played on last season's squad. He<lb/>
is very' quick and mobile for a<lb/>
defensive lineman, and has a<lb/>
good nose for the football He<lb/>
had his best game of the season<lb/>
last year against Florida, wher<lb/>
he had four tackles and one<lb/>
quarterback sack, while also<lb/>
keeping Gator quarterback<lb/>
Wayne Peace under constant<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
All-America Candidate Henry Williams<lb/>
Tyrone Johnson<lb/>
Chris Santa Cruz<lb/>
 ? - -???- ? f,?. .? a? o.axa???X<lb/>
??<lb/>
noii ? mi<lb/>
? a In ? ?<lb/>
????9?aatMMMaMMMha??<lb/>
ia ?? ? JU? il ?? a?i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN I AN<lb/>
AUGUST 30. 1984<lb/>
Pirates, Seminoles Prepare For Saturday<lb/>
TV AND FLORIDA STATE:<lb/>
The Pirates' garni with Florida<lb/>
State in Tallahassee will be televis-<lb/>
ed, but on a tape-delaved basis.<lb/>
WIIN-TV (Channel 7,<lb/>
Washington, NC), an NBC af-<lb/>
filiate, will carry the game, but<lb/>
sas forced to opt for a tape delay<lb/>
in compliance with the College<lb/>
 ootball Association's night-time<lb/>
IV window.<lb/>
In Monday's edition of The<lb/>
East Caroinian, no mention was<lb/>
made of the fact that the game<lb/>
was on a tape-delayed basis. This<lb/>
was the direct result of a WTTN<lb/>
news release which stated "the<lb/>
game will be broadcast direct<lb/>
from Tallahassee<lb/>
The release gave the time WTTN<lb/>
as going to air the game, but<lb/>
tailed to mention the game actual-<lb/>
 started at 7:00 and failed to<lb/>
mention the game was on a tape-<lb/>
wlayed basis.<lb/>
ESPN owns the night-time win-<lb/>
dow rights, and no exempt<lb/>
telecast can begin any earlier than<lb/>
30 minutes after ESPN's broad-<lb/>
cast goes on the air. On Sept. 1<lb/>
FSPN will carrv Miami vs.<lb/>
orida from Tampa, Fla which<lb/>
ks off at 7:30 p.m. (EDT).<lb/>
iN.C. State<lb/>
Tickets<lb/>
Go On Sale<lb/>
rickets for the ECU-North<lb/>
C aroiina State football game went<lb/>
sale yesterday.<lb/>
kets will be sold from 8<lb/>
5 p.m. through Friday at<lb/>
Minges athletic ticket office,<lb/>
Dnl) ECU students with a<lb/>
valid ID and Activity card are<lb/>
eligible to make the purcha-e.<lb/>
A maximum number of two<lb/>
tickets per ID will be sold. Cost is<lb/>
12<lb/>
FSl AND ECU: ECU and<lb/>
Florida State will do their best to<lb/>
replay last year's thrilling 47-46<lb/>
season-opener, which was also<lb/>
played in Tallahassee.<lb/>
The Seminoles and Pirates com-<lb/>
bined to set records for most<lb/>
points scored by both teams (93),<lb/>
most touchdowns scored by both<lb/>
teams (13) and most points in a<lb/>
defeat for ECU (46).<lb/>
The Pirates have never beaten<lb/>
Florida State, sporting an 0-3<lb/>
mark in Tallahassee's Doak<lb/>
Campbell Stadium. The<lb/>
Seminoles have outscored ECU<lb/>
166 to 70 in those three games.<lb/>
ECU AND THE STATE OF<lb/>
FLORIDA: ECU not only has<lb/>
had problem with Florida State,<lb/>
but the State of Florida as a<lb/>
whole. ECU is 3-12-2 vs Florida<lb/>
competition, but that includes a<lb/>
1-5 record vs Tampa and a 2-0-0<lb/>
mark vs Stetson. Both schcjls<lb/>
have since dropped collegiate<lb/>
football.<lb/>
Against Division I competition<lb/>
within Florida, the Pirates are 0-7<lb/>
(0-3 vs Florida State, 0-3 vs<lb/>
Miami, and 0-1 vs Florida). Three<lb/>
of those seven losses came during<lb/>
the 1983 season, ECU's only three<lb/>
losses on the season (FSU 47-46,<lb/>
Florida 24-17 and Miami 12-7).<lb/>
FSl AND THE STATE OF<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA: The<lb/>
Seminoles. 7-5 in 1983 and 28-3<lb/>
winners over North Carolina in<lb/>
the Peach Bowl, sport an im-<lb/>
pressive 20-6-1 record against the<lb/>
State of North Carolina. Their<lb/>
last victory was the Peach Bowl<lb/>
win.<lb/>
ALIEN LIKES<lb/>
COLD: Florida St<lb/>
Trophy candidate<lb/>
seems to thrive on<lb/>
Gold. The juinor t<lb/>
Milton, Fla has<lb/>
Pirates, rushing for<lb/>
45 carries in the two<lb/>
played.<lb/>
PURPLE &amp;<lb/>
ate Heisman<lb/>
Greg Allen<lb/>
Purple and<lb/>
ailback from<lb/>
burned the<lb/>
214 yards on<lb/>
games he has<lb/>
140 Oakmont Dr.<lb/>
756-9175<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK<lb/>
GREENVIl LE<lb/>
ATHLETIC CLUB<lb/>
RanuetbaM ? Nautilus ? Indoor nack ? 23-rrmtcr Pool<lb/>
5ro Shop ? Free We ghts ? Steam &amp; bauna ? Aerobic Exercise<lb/>
SOON TO BE COMPLETED<lb/>
MULTI-PURPOSE GYMNASIUM<lb/>
"Everything A<lb/>
y Club Can Ben<lb/>
 Special Monthly &amp; Semester Student<lb/>
Memberships Available<lb/>
? The Finest Health and Fitness Facility<lb/>
in Town<lb/>
BRING THIS COUPON<lb/>
IN FOR A FREE VISIT<lb/>
(Offer Expires Sept. 15,1984)<lb/>
Hawaii Fountain<lb/>
Restaurants<lb/>
Chinese Food<lb/>
Excellent Atmosphere -<lb/>
Completely Remodeled<lb/>
Luncheon Buffet<lb/>
Mon-Sat 11:30-2:30<lb/>
ONLY $3.75<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Dinner Buffet Friday &amp; Saturday 5pm-9:30pm<lb/>
Only $7.95 per person<lb/>
All You Can Eat!<lb/>
355 - 2169<lb/>
2217MEMORIAL DRIVE<lb/>
Allen has also scored six<lb/>
touchdowns, which gives him a<lb/>
gaudy 107-yard-per-game average<lb/>
against ECU, while also averaging<lb/>
three TDs a game. Allen has also<lb/>
had two straight 200-plus vard<lb/>
games against LSU, whose colors<lb/>
also happen to be Purple and<lb/>
Gold.<lb/>
COMMON OPPONENTS:<lb/>
ECU and Florida State share two<lb/>
common opponents on their 1984<lb/>
schedules. The Pirates meet Tem-<lb/>
ple in Ficklen Stadium and South<lb/>
Carolina at Columbia, SC. The<lb/>
Seminoles also host Temple while<lb/>
playing South Carolina on the<lb/>
road.<lb/>
This year's meeting between the<lb/>
Seminoles and Pirates will be the<lb/>
team's last until the 1987 season,<lb/>
when Florida State is scheduled to<lb/>
play in Greenville, NC. The two<lb/>
teams have met four of the last<lb/>
five years including this season's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
ECU AND SEASON<lb/>
OPENERS: ECU has compiled a<lb/>
23-24-1 record in season openers<lb/>
during its 48 years of playing col-<lb/>
legiate football. ECU has cap-<lb/>
tured six of its last eight openers,<lb/>
but has dropped its last two ?<lb/>
North Carolina State in 1982 and<lb/>
Florida State in 1983.<lb/>
This will be the second straight<lb/>
season the Pirates will open the<lb/>
season with a Florida school, and<lb/>
only the third time in the school's<lb/>
history. ECU opened the 1953<lb/>
season with a 40-6 victory over<lb/>
Stetson under the guidance of<lb/>
former ECU head coach Jack<lb/>
Boone, who passed away earlier<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
FSU AND THE RANKINGS:<lb/>
Florida State occupies a spot<lb/>
among most of the 1984 pre-<lb/>
season Top 20 polls, while the<lb/>
Pirates, 20th in last year's final<lb/>
Associated Press poll, are absent.<lb/>
The following are the publications<lb/>
which rank FSU among their Top<lb/>
20:<lb/>
Game Plan: 13th<lb/>
Playboy: 17th<lb/>
The Pirates, although not rank-<lb/>
ed among the nation's Top 20, are<lb/>
picked as favorites in nine of their<lb/>
11 games this season by Street and<lb/>
Smith Magazine. That publication<lb/>
also selected guard Norman Quick<lb/>
and flankerkick returner Henry<lb/>
Williams to its All-Atlantic Coast<lb/>
team.<lb/>
The only games Street &amp; Smith<lb/>
ranked ECU as underdogs in were<lb/>
Florida State and Pittsburgh<lb/>
NO HOME FOR HENRY<lb/>
Senior Henry Williams, the na-<lb/>
tion's No. 1 kick returner in 1983<lb/>
(31.1 average), has been selected<lb/>
to several pre-season all-<lb/>
conference teams. Williams was a<lb/>
Southern Living All-South pick, a<lb/>
Playboy All-South pick and a<lb/>
Street &amp; Smith All-AC C pick.<lb/>
But of those three, only one<lb/>
chose Williams as a return<lb/>
specialist Southern Living and<lb/>
Playboy plugged Williams in a'<lb/>
split end or flanker Why not a<lb/>
kick returner on the All-America<lb/>
teams?<lb/>
 And Now<lb/>
For Something<lb/>
A Little<lb/>
Different On<lb/>
SUNDAYS<lb/>
Sept. 2nd Persian Gulf<lb/>
Sept. 9th Turbo Hydromatic<lb/>
Sept. 23rd I - Tal<lb/>
? NewWave Reggae -fc- Techno Pop<lb/>
iANDWICH SHOP<lb/>
Featuring Our<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
It's Always Happy Hour At<lb/>
Sub Station II With<lb/>
$1.50 pitchers Bud &amp; Nat. Lite<lb/>
Ample FiiEE i arkin<lb/>
752 - 2183<lb/>
( orner of Reade A 4th Sis.<lb/>
I<lb/>
The New<lb/>
MMiovia<lb/>
Banking Card<lb/>
Ti II II <lb/>
' ' E - i<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Campu;<lb/>
Pitt Plaza Highwa) 261 Bypass<lb/>
I niversit 802 E! 10thStreet<lb/>
Bank around campus <lb/>
get cash around<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
With the new Wachovia Banking Card, you can<lb/>
bank anytime at Teller II" machines around campus<lb/>
and at more than 125 locations statewide. And now<lb/>
you can use it to get cash and check your balances<lb/>
at thousands of other automated teller machines all<lb/>
across the country. Just look for the Relay symbol<lb/>
at participating financial institutions in North Carolina.<lb/>
South Carolina and Virginia or the CIRRI IS; symbol<lb/>
at banks nationwide.<lb/>
The new Wachovia Banking Card comes with<lb/>
every Wachovia checking or Statement Savings<lb/>
account at no extra charge. One more reason to make<lb/>
Wachovia your bank. A Personal Banker can tell<lb/>
you more - and why you shouldn't settle tor less.<lb/>
 Included among North Carolina financial institutions<lb/>
participating in the Relay network are:<lb/>
Wachovia Bank &amp; Trust<lb/>
First Union National Hank<lb/>
Northwestern Hank<lb/>
First Citizens Hank &amp; Trust<lb/>
Southern National Hank<lb/>
United Carolina Bank<lb/>
Planters National Bank<lb/>
Peoples Bank&amp; Trust<lb/>
Wachovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
Member F.D.I?.<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
FUTURE sc HUM its<lb/>
pirates, 20th ?- the final 1983 AP<lb/>
poll and 17th in the Sport<lb/>
iustrated poll, face an<lb/>
tougher 1985 schedule. Next<lb/>
season sees ECU face 1983 na-<lb/>
tional champion Miami-Florida at<lb/>
home, along with Sou- :ina<lb/>
Tulsa and Temple A fifth I<lb/>
game will be piaed, <lb/>
ponent to be named.<lb/>
The Pirates' 198!<lb/>
ma be one of the toughest it<lb/>
nation. ECU <lb/>
Auburn, LSU, P-<lb/>
Southwe<lb/>
Editoria<lb/>
I received<lb/>
amourv<lb/>
several EC1<lb/>
athletic admin<lb/>
column that appeared<lb/>
day's sports section<lb/>
Carolir ii<lb/>
The s le pu <lb/>
cle was<lb/>
besi '<lb/>
of Noil<lb/>
jest of ?<lb/>
The conti<lb/>
id, "v. ?? ?<lb/>
me: tracl<lb/>
doesn't ha<lb/>
?n worth n ?<lb/>
The staten ?<lb/>
. :?<lb/>
"Come Play<lb/>
This<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Weekday<lb/>
Wee- e?<lb/>
Indian Trail<lb/>
Grifl<lb/>
Applications are<lb/>
now being accepted<lb/>
for persons interested<lb/>
in assisting the Pirate<lb/>
during athletic eveni<lb/>
drive socials, banqu<lb/>
miscellaneous duties<lb/>
For more information<lb/>
Chris Wray, Studen<lb/>
757-6178 or stop b Pir<lb/>
Located Behind Fickle<lb/>
Deadline for applicants in VI<lb/>
for<lb/>
Color Print Fil<lb/>
Applies to 110 12(<lb/>
Color Print C<lb/>
One<lb/>
12 exp<lb/>
15exp 2<lb/>
24 exp<lb/>
36 exp ?i<lb/>
Offer Good Sept<lb/>
fotoexi<lb/>
lOth&amp;CorancheStl<lb/>
Hours: 9-6 MorvFt<lb/>
10-2<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
SJ<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057659_0013"/><lb/>
?<lb/>
day<lb/>
THE EAST CAKOLINlAN AUGUST , IVH4<lb/>
'illiams to its All-Atlantic Coast<lb/>
ram.<lb/>
The only games Street &amp; Smith<lb/>
nked ECU as underdogs in were<lb/>
florida State and Pittsburgh.<lb/>
NO HOME FOR HENRY<lb/>
Senior Henr Williams, the na-<lb/>
n's No. 1 kick returner in 1983<lb/>
1.1 aerage), has been selected<lb/>
several pre-season ali-<lb/>
enee teams. Williams was a<lb/>
uthern I iving All-South pick, a<lb/>
laybo) All-South pick and a<lb/>
 smith AJJ-ACC pick.<lb/>
But oi those three, onlv one<lb/>
;e Williams as a return<lb/>
; southern Living and<lb/>
' vwd Williams in at<lb/>
Hanker. Why not a<lb/>
k returner on the All-America<lb/>
Our<lb/>
lOl'R<lb/>
pp Hour At<lb/>
II With<lb/>
d &amp; Nat. Lite<lb/>
i trking<lb/>
udent Center Campus<lb/>
Highway 26 i Bypass<lb/>
 K02 . I Oth Street<lb/>
ited ?<lb/>
r th( Reh ?<lb/>
itin  in vv ithC irolina,<lb/>
he CIRRUS1 symbol<lb/>
with<lb/>
r Statement S i<lb/>
tomake<lb/>
il Banker tell<lb/>
uldn I sett ?<lb/>
chovia<lb/>
Bank&amp;Trust<lb/>
Pirates Face Tough Road Schedule In 1985<lb/>
KITDRE SCHEmirpc. . ? .<lb/>
13<lb/>
HTDRE SCHEDULES: The<lb/>
Pirates, 20th in the final 1983 AP<lb/>
poll and 17th in the Sports Il-<lb/>
lustrated poll, face an even<lb/>
tougher 1985 schedule Next<lb/>
season sees ECU face 1983 na-<lb/>
tional champion Miami-Florida at<lb/>
home, along with South Carolina<lb/>
Tulsa and Temple. A fifth home<lb/>
eame will be played, with the op-<lb/>
ponent to be named.<lb/>
The Pirates'1985 road schedule<lb/>
ma be one of the toughest in the<lb/>
nation. ECU will travel to<lb/>
Auburn, LSU, Penn State<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana<lb/>
Southern Mississippi and North<lb/>
Carolina State.<lb/>
Over the next three seasons the<lb/>
Pirates will face three former na-<lb/>
tional champions (Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Miami-Florida and Penn State) Southwestern Louisiana'becomes<lb/>
na six teams that have been to the third offensive coordinator in<lb/>
bowl games the past threee<lb/>
seasons (Penn State, Pittsburgh,<lb/>
Miami-Florida, Florida State,<lb/>
Auburn and LSU).<lb/>
season. Joining ECU for 1984 is Jeff Autry.<lb/>
Don Murry, who succeeds Art Caparas left the team last week<lb/>
Baker as offensive coordinator, for personal reasons while Plott<lb/>
Murry, who came to ECU from suffered a shoulder injury over<lb/>
1983 and 1984 opponent the summer and Wyatt underwent<lb/>
surgery last week for a hernia.<lb/>
Autry, who missed the entire 1983<lb/>
Division I school in the state can 33,767 fans that witnessed ECU's<lb/>
match. Last season's 8-3 record 21-9 victory over East Tennessee<lb/>
helped ECU pass North CaroUna State during last year's<lb/>
State, who has had nine winning Homecoming game<lb/>
seasons during the same period. The Pirates boast an eight game<lb/>
The other three Division I schools home winning streak. ECU's last<lb/>
in North Carolina have had less loss in Ficklen Stadium was a<lb/>
31-21 setback to William A Mary<lb/>
to dose the 1981 season (Nov. 14).<lb/>
?mm j73mZ7i? STZTBTCWS<lb/>
last live. was not given doctor's clearance Carolina and Duke)<lb/>
Linwood Ferguson joins the to play this season. Autry put his<lb/>
ECU staff from North Carolina arm through a glass window HOME OPENER SEPT. g The ON THF ROAD in r<lb/>
rnA-uiM- -?t A&amp;T? where he was defensive before spring practice in 1981 and Pirate un ?T.u ? ini L THE ROAD AGAIN: East<lb/>
Coach ff CHAN Head coordinator and secondary coach the arm requiredSen ?ve surgery schSulTw tnhVrJi0?' CvM  face its Mcond<lb/>
??achEd Emory we comcs tw? for two seasons (1982-83). to correct the nmhLTlvesurgcry SS?? the JcmPc Owls in straight season of seven road<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory welcomes two<lb/>
new faces among his assistant<lb/>
coaches for the 1984 football<lb/>
Editorial Notice<lb/>
I received a considerable<lb/>
amount of criticism from<lb/>
several ECU coaches and<lb/>
athletic administrators for a<lb/>
column that appeared in Tues-<lb/>
day's sports section of The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
The sole purpose of the arti-<lb/>
cle was to promote ECU as the<lb/>
i Kt football team in the state<lb/>
ol North Carolina, not to make<lb/>
i jesl of the other athletic teams.<lb/>
The controersial statement<lb/>
j read. "With the exception of<lb/>
men's track and baseball, ECU<lb/>
; doesn'1 have an athletic pro-<lb/>
 cram worth mentioning<lb/>
The statement was not made<lb/>
j to undermine the efforts of the<lb/>
coaches and players on the<lb/>
other teams, but to merely<lb/>
point out that football, track<lb/>
and baseball are the only teams<lb/>
a person would mention if they<lb/>
were asked to name possible<lb/>
national contendors.<lb/>
I'm sure that all the athletic<lb/>
teams at this University put<lb/>
forth the same amount of ef-<lb/>
fort in preparing for their<lb/>
season, but it is my opinion<lb/>
that football, track and<lb/>
baseball are the only teams at<lb/>
ECU at this time that have the<lb/>
ability to compete for a na-<lb/>
tional title.<lb/>
?Randy Mews j<lb/>
"Come Play The Indian<lb/>
This Fair<lb/>
Students Welcome<lb/>
Weekday's $5.00<lb/>
Weekends $7.00<lb/>
Indian Trails Country Club<lb/>
Griffon, NC<lb/>
Applications are<lb/>
now being accepted<lb/>
for persons interested<lb/>
in assisting the Pirated Club<lb/>
during athletic events, membership<lb/>
drive socials, banquets and other<lb/>
miscellaneous duties.<lb/>
For more information call:<lb/>
Chris Wray, Student Assistant, at<lb/>
757-6178 or stop by Pirate Club Office -<lb/>
Located Behind Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
Deadline for applicants is Wed, Sept. 4, 1984<lb/>
!?????????????<lb/>
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Applies to 110,126,135 and Disc<lb/>
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12 exp 1.99 2.99<lb/>
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24 exp 3.99 4.99<lb/>
36 exp 4.99 5.99<lb/>
Offer Good Sept. 4,5,6,7,1984<lb/>
foto express<lb/>
lOHi&amp;CotoncheSt.<lb/>
Hours: 9-6 Mon-Fri<lb/>
10-2 Sot<lb/>
for two seasons (1982-83)<lb/>
Ferguson, who played his college<lb/>
football at East Carolina, was PITT KICKOFF CHANGED:<lb/>
defensive coordinator at Elon The time for East Carolina's Oct.<lb/>
College before his stop at A&amp;T 6 game with the University of Pitt-<lb/>
and helped Elon to the NAIA Na- sburgh has been changed from<lb/>
tional Championship twice. 1:30 p.m. EDT to 12:20 p.m. The<lb/>
change was made ?y Pittsburgh to<lb/>
VETERANS MISSING: Four<lb/>
veterans of East Carolina's 1983<lb/>
team will be missing when the dow in the event the game has<lb/>
Pirates kick off Sept. 1 versus some television appeal.<lb/>
Florida State. They are senior cor-<lb/>
nerback Rally Caparas, senior 10 IN 12: East Carolina has ex-<lb/>
defensive ends Curtis Wyatt and perienced 10 winning seasons in<lb/>
J.C. Plott and offensive tackle the last 12 years, a mark no other<lb/>
kickoff, will also boast a car<lb/>
givaway if Ficklen Stadium is sold<lb/>
out.<lb/>
Since being expanded to 35,000<lb/>
seats in 1978, Ficklen has never<lb/>
sold out. The largest Ficklen<lb/>
coincide with the College Football Stadium crowd to date w? the<lb/>
Association's afternoon TV win-<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium Saturday, Sept. games. A year ago the Pirates fac-<lb/>
8. Jne game, set for a 7:00 p.m. ed the same task they do in 1984,<lb/>
with only four of the 11 games<lb/>
scheduled for Ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
The Pirates, however, will be<lb/>
home five times in 1985, including<lb/>
games with 1983 national cham-<lb/>
pion Miami-Florida, Tulsa and<lb/>
South Carolina.<lb/>
Sat's4P?-P<lb/>
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Save ? on any large Mr Gatti's<lb/>
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One coupon per order please Offer<lb/>
ijood through Sept. 10 'M at<lb/>
Mr Gattis<lb/>
Offer gcxHl for delivery orders only<lb/>
Coupon may not he used in combination<lb/>
w"n "iy otkmrdiscount offer or coupon.<lb/>
Floyd Go Robinson<lb/>
Jewelers<lb/>
We Stock One Of The Largest Selections Of<lb/>
Watches in Greenville<lb/>
Seiko Pulsar Goto Times<lb/>
"We service oil watches we soil"<lb/>
Full Selection<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057659_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THEEAST CAROLON1AN<lb/>
AUGUST 30, 1984<lb/>
Informal Recreation Hours Announced<lb/>
JON JORDAN KCU PIWNj L?b<lb/>
Football player Isaiah Hill enjoys pizza at Tuesday's welcoming get-<lb/>
together for ECU athletes.<lb/>
Area's Merchants<lb/>
Sponsor Welcome<lb/>
Bi RICK McC ORMAC<lb/>
Starr u rlirr<lb/>
On ruesday Sept. 28, the ECU<lb/>
student Athletic Board, in con-<lb/>
tion with area merchants,<lb/>
nsored a welcoming get-<lb/>
togethei for over 500 athletes.<lb/>
Domino's Pizza, Pepsi Cola of<lb/>
Greenville, Substation II and Ser-<lb/>
omation ail donated goods and<lb/>
services to the fourteen sports<lb/>
s, coaches, cheerleaders and<lb/>
ports medicine personnel.<lb/>
This was the second time that<lb/>
ill of the athletes from the athletic<lb/>
rtment have got together for<lb/>
teni since the merger of the<lb/>
nen's md women's programs in<lb/>
mid seventies.<lb/>
1 oraine T ter, president of the<lb/>
jAB, vaid the purpose of the<lb/>
gathering was to allow all athletes<lb/>
he opportunity to become well<lb/>
tinted with one another, to<lb/>
ss the concern of the SAB<lb/>
ill sports are equal con-<lb/>
iributors to our entire athletic<lb/>
family and lo acquaint the student<lb/>
ithletes with the Pirate Club and<lb/>
s role in their athletic careers at<lb/>
I CU ??<lb/>
Chancellor Dr. John Howell at-<lb/>
tended the get- together with his<lb/>
?ire, and 'hought it was a good<lb/>
idea to get all of the athletes<lb/>
ogether for such an event. "I like<lb/>
all of the athletes from the<lb/>
lifferent sports are here Howell<lb/>
"It's a good place for<lb/>
athletes to meet each other on<lb/>
lal terms. Football gets most of<lb/>
the attention but I like all the<lb/>
rts Howell went on to say<lb/>
athletes are just like everybody<lb/>
?e they like Domino's pizza<lb/>
All oi the athletes seemed to<lb/>
like the idea of having their peers<lb/>
together tor an event of this<lb/>
nature. Senior football player<lb/>
ESEARCH PAPERS<lb/>
I '89 to f-oose from ? all subnets'<lb/>
? S; recurrent 306-pagecata-<lb/>
: jstom research &amp; thesis asss-<lb/>
ta ? 1 s .i.a :ao!e<lb/>
Research 3. daho Avft. ?206 JC,<lb/>
Vngeies.CA90025(213)477 8225.<lb/>
Ricky Nichols said "It's a good<lb/>
way to meet the freshman athletes<lb/>
who are just coming in. The food<lb/>
is good too<lb/>
Tim Dumas, a sophomore of-<lb/>
fensive tackle on the football<lb/>
team, explained that there was<lb/>
nothing better than "meeting new<lb/>
people and eating lots of good<lb/>
food<lb/>
Chris Santa Cruz, a senior<lb/>
nosegaurd, said he had a really<lb/>
good time. "You get to meet the<lb/>
athletes from the other sports and<lb/>
it's just a really good way to meet<lb/>
new people<lb/>
The SAB has participated in<lb/>
the Pitt-Greenville Special Olym-<lb/>
pics and in the Pitt-Greenville<lb/>
Senior Games. They also provide<lb/>
media releases, and help sponsor<lb/>
the Converse Lady Basketball<lb/>
Classic.<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
For those of us who are laid<lb/>
back, never enjoying those team<lb/>
sports where grit and pain go<lb/>
hand in hand; for you in-<lb/>
dependently spirited souls who<lb/>
would rather do it alone than with<lb/>
a teammate; the Department of<lb/>
Intramural-Recreational Services<lb/>
has something for you ? INFOR-<lb/>
MAL RECREATION.<lb/>
Informal Recreation is "drop<lb/>
in" play in which nothing is plan-<lb/>
ned except for the amount of time<lb/>
You plan to spend playing! The<lb/>
IRS Department has several<lb/>
facilities open for your conve-<lb/>
nience during a variety of hours<lb/>
every day including weekends.<lb/>
Swimming pools, weight rooms,<lb/>
gymnasiums and the Intramural<lb/>
Equipment Center are all open for<lb/>
you to enjoy.<lb/>
By simply bringing your school<lb/>
I.D. you can check out everything<lb/>
from bowling pins to horse shoes.<lb/>
All equipment must be returned<lb/>
by 3:00 p.m. the following day<lb/>
before a late fee will be charged to<lb/>
you. The Informal Recreation<lb/>
hours for fall semester 1984 are as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 7a.m8a.m.<lb/>
M-F 12Noon-l :30 p.m.<lb/>
M-F 3:30-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 1p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 8p.m9:30p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
maxeil<lb/>
niiixMIML C!iO<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th 9a.m8<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m5<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M-F 3p.m7<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
M-Th 10a.m12<lb/>
M-Th 2p.m6<lb/>
VC'L OR PD MAGNETICS<lb/>
3 Tapes for $9.99<lb/>
Free T-Shtrt or<lb/>
Koozie Cooler with coupon<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
noon<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
.? ? i<lb/>
Todd s stereo<lb/>
NA UTIL US, INC.<lb/>
758-9584<lb/>
Weight Training Center WAerobic Classes Daily<lb/>
Within walking distance from ECU campus<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
Al TOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
M0 Gnrnvtfle Blvd.<lb/>
"500? jI- u BBS<lb/>
-4 hoUr Towing Service<lb/>
I -Haul Rentals<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Gym Hours:<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 10:00-9:00<lb/>
Friday 10:00-8:00<lb/>
Saturday 10:00-5:00<lb/>
Sunday 100-5:00<lb/>
Our Gym Has:<lb/>
Rates:<lb/>
100.00 Semester-indiv.<lb/>
85.00 Semester-Group of 3 or More<lb/>
Add 20.00 for Aerobic Classes<lb/>
Just Aerobics - 60.00 Semester<lb/>
(Unlimited Classes)<lb/>
6.000 lbs. of Olympic Weights<lb/>
Complete Nautilus Circuit<lb/>
Tanning Booth<lb/>
SaunaShowers<lb/>
Good Supervision on Nutrition<lb/>
and YES we have air conditioning<lb/>
lautilus<lb/>
Bring This Ad In For A Free<lb/>
Trial In Both Aerobics<lb/>
And Weight Training<lb/>
THE<lb/>
FITNESS<lb/>
CLUB<lb/>
for men and women<lb/>
1001 EVANS STREET<lb/>
GREENVILLE. N.C. 17??4<lb/>
Kings's Sandwich Delicatessen<lb/>
Happy Hour 2:00-4:00pm<lb/>
$ .50 Beer<lb/>
$2.50 Pitcher<lb/>
$10.00 Coupon. 15 Off For One Year<lb/>
271 IE. Tenth Street<lb/>
152-4279<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th 3 p.m4:45 p.m.<lb/>
(4:45-10 based on availability)<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. 1p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
EQUIPMENT CHECK-OUT<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
(Memorial Gym 115)<lb/>
M-Th 9 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
MF 9a.m11 a.m.<lb/>
1:30p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
T-W-Th 2 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
Operational Hours Adjusted<lb/>
accordance with the seasons.<lb/>
in<lb/>
Even you people who plan to<lb/>
practice for the big Intramural<lb/>
Hag Football game of the week<lb/>
can check out all the practice<lb/>
equipment you need.<lb/>
Informal Recreation is for<lb/>
everyone, as well as all it's related<lb/>
services. Take advantage of us<lb/>
USE US. The IRS Department is'<lb/>
especially for you Participate in<lb/>
our Informal Recreation pro-<lb/>
gram. Your smile will brighten as<lb/>
your muscles tighten<lb/>
Bumgarner Tells His Story<lb/>
Continued From Page II<lb/>
studies teacher, head baseball and<lb/>
assistant football coach so he<lb/>
could attend ECU and gain his<lb/>
master's degree.<lb/>
Any ideas that he was sliding by<lb/>
on his sports background<lb/>
evaporated as he was named<lb/>
Educator of the Year in his first<lb/>
year at Rose High; then he finally<lb/>
realized his dream and became<lb/>
head football coach, replacing<lb/>
long-time coach Bud Philips.<lb/>
Bumgarncr's college football<lb/>
experience showed itself as he<lb/>
coached his 1975 team to the N.C.<lb/>
state championship and runner-up<lb/>
in 1979. Now began the true<lb/>
lesson for college athletes ?<lb/>
reaching out for more.<lb/>
"I really enjoyed coaching, but<lb/>
it's hot out there he said. "Dur-<lb/>
ing football season I was either<lb/>
practicing with the team or plann-<lb/>
ing for 16-18 hours a day. I was<lb/>
missing time with my children and<lb/>
I needed another challenge<lb/>
That's when Bumgarner set an<lb/>
example any athlete would be pro-<lb/>
ud to follow ? he applied and<lb/>
was hired as the principal at Rose<lb/>
High School. "I enjoy this job<lb/>
more because there's greater<lb/>
responsibility and more time for<lb/>
my family, but I still miss<lb/>
coaching sometimes he said.<lb/>
"I would advise college athletes<lb/>
to look beyond sports and work to<lb/>
later they will<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
want more for<lb/>
This story is an unusual one to<lb/>
find in the sports pages, but it's<lb/>
more important than most<lb/>
because of the inspiration it gives<lb/>
to college athletes to excel in the<lb/>
classroom as well as in their play.<lb/>
In years to come, people will<lb/>
tell him "I didn't know you<lb/>
played football but D?v<lb/>
give themselves a good Bumgarner will just smile because<lb/>
background for advancement ,n he's no longer an cT-athlc -<lb/>
ojier fields, because sooner or he's an educator<lb/>
YOUTH SOCCER COACHES<lb/>
Youth Soccer Coaches work part-time 10-20 hours<lb/>
weekly beginn.ng Monday September 10th Hours are<lb/>
normally 3:30-7:30pm Monday thru Friday with occa<lb/>
sional Saturdays. Salary rate $3 45hr Knowledge of soc<lb/>
cer skills and the ability to coach young people ages 9-15<lb/>
T-Jfi?'?" Greenville Recreat.on and Parks Dept<lb/>
at 752-4137 (ext d 248, 220, 259) Deadline for applica-<lb/>
tions is Friday August 31st.<lb/>
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KAPPA<lb/>
featuring<lb/>
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DOUG CLARK AND THE HOT NUTS<lb/>
Presents the 3rd Annual<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS<lb/>
TOGA PARTY<lb/>
ADMISSION REQUIREMENTS:<lb/>
Toga, I.D $1.00, B.Y.O.B.<lb/>
THURSDAY AUGUST 30 8:00 PM<lb/>
Hooker Rd.<lb/>
Lake<lb/>
Stop-N-Go<lb/>
BUSES TO<lb/>
COLLEGE HILL<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057659_0015"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>