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<pb facs="00057661_0001"/>
Otoe ?aat (Earolmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.5<lb/>
Thursday September 6, 1984<lb/>
(.reenville, N.C.<lb/>
20 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Fleming Renovations<lb/>
Result In Problems<lb/>
By HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
StaftWrltat<lb/>
A $700,000 renovation project<lb/>
at Fleming Residence Hall<lb/>
creating problems for some of the<lb/>
residents and the ECU<lb/>
Photography Lab, which is<lb/>
located in the basement of the<lb/>
building.<lb/>
Neil Johnson, head<lb/>
photographer for the<lb/>
Photography Lab, said the pro-<lb/>
blems of inconvienence are not<lb/>
half as bad as the potential health<lb/>
hazards present. He claimed there<lb/>
is asbestos hanging from the ceil-<lb/>
ing which is falling tro the floor<lb/>
due to the construction work.<lb/>
"We've reported the asbestos pro-<lb/>
blem to the Campus Health and<lb/>
Safety Office, but we have not<lb/>
heard anything,yet The Direc-<lb/>
tor of the Campus Health and<lb/>
Safety Office, Arthur Colclough,<lb/>
was not available for comment.<lb/>
Johnson added that all of the<lb/>
photographic equipment had to<lb/>
be covered because of the large<lb/>
amount of dust.<lb/>
Johnson also said much of the<lb/>
major photography equipment<lb/>
had to be relocated to the<lb/>
photographer's homes. "We<lb/>
were told by the general contrac-<lb/>
tors that the project would be<lb/>
completed by August 13. It is<lb/>
almost impossible to work in the<lb/>
lab now with the constant noise<lb/>
and traffic of construction<lb/>
workers Johnson said.<lb/>
Freshman Tonya Faulkner, a<lb/>
resident in Fleming Residence<lb/>
Hall, said the construction has<lb/>
caused her a minor interference<lb/>
with her studying. In addition she<lb/>
said the electricity in thcdorm had<lb/>
gone off several times for as long<lb/>
as 30 minutes. She said, "My<lb/>
roommate gets pretty mad with<lb/>
the construction because they<lb/>
begin to work around 7:30 a.m.<lb/>
and the drills and saws wake her<lb/>
up<lb/>
Faulkner has seen new heating<lb/>
and air vents installed along with<lb/>
new rubber baseboards. She also<lb/>
saw "something that was in a big<lb/>
roll. I think it was insulation<lb/>
Faulkner's RA explained to the<lb/>
residents the inconvience they<lb/>
would be experiencing and the<lb/>
work would be going on for<lb/>
another two weeks. "That two<lb/>
weeks was three weeks ago<lb/>
Faulkner said.<lb/>
Mr. Dan K. Wooten, director<lb/>
of Housing Operations said he<lb/>
was unaware of the asbestos pro-<lb/>
blem Johnson had reported. He is<lb/>
unsure of exactly who was respon-<lb/>
sible for the clean up, but he<lb/>
believed it would be the<lb/>
mechanical contractors respon-<lb/>
sibility.<lb/>
Wooten said three contractors<lb/>
were responsible for the renova-<lb/>
tion: J. H. Hudson Company of<lb/>
Greenville, general contractors;<lb/>
H. Baker Company of Wilson,<lb/>
mechanical contractors; and D. L.<lb/>
Johnson Company of Wilson,<lb/>
electrical contractors. Wooten<lb/>
said a new heating unit has be in-<lb/>
stalled and a new air-conditioning<lb/>
unit will be in by October. He ad-<lb/>
ded that the Fleming Dorm<lb/>
residents had paid $70 for the air-<lb/>
conditioning and their money<lb/>
would be refunded pro-rata if the<lb/>
unit is not used this year.<lb/>
The delays in completing the<lb/>
construction work, Wooten said,<lb/>
are due to late shipments of the<lb/>
heating and air-conditioning<lb/>
units. Mr. James Lowry, director<lb/>
of Physical Plant Operations was<lb/>
not available to confirm the con-<lb/>
struction delays.<lb/>
Johnson said he is hoping the<lb/>
Media Board will relocate the<lb/>
photography lab. "We've re-<lb/>
quested a ditterent place to house<lb/>
the lab. but they have told us there<lb/>
is simply no room on campus<lb/>
available for a photo lab. Right<lb/>
now, I am concerned with the<lb/>
hazards the renovation is<lb/>
causing Johnson added that in-<lb/>
itial plans to refurbish the<lb/>
photography lab only include pat-<lb/>
ching up the walls and replacing a<lb/>
bulletin board<lb/>
Ever wondered where all the action on campus is? You've got it,<lb/>
the automatic teller machines at Mendenhall. Of course, they see a<lb/>
Give Me All Your Money<lb/>
JON JORDAN ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
lot more action at the beginning of the month, but that's a<lb/>
student's life for you.<lb/>
Students Seek Support At Convention<lb/>
(CPS) ? The Republican Par-<lb/>
ty, never known as a haven for<lb/>
college-aged activists, developed a<lb/>
key role for youth at last week's<lb/>
convention:<lb/>
The signs, banners, well-<lb/>
rehearsed demonstrations and<lb/>
chants of "four more years" were<lb/>
all the work of a scrupulously-<lb/>
organized group of 2,000 young<lb/>
volunteers.<lb/>
On the night of President<lb/>
Reagan's renomination, for ex-<lb/>
ample, about 1,000 young people<lb/>
jammed the convention floor<lb/>
waving banners and signs, snaked<lb/>
through the delegates for exactly<lb/>
15 minutes, and then, on a pre-<lb/>
arranged signal from a campaign<lb/>
official, left the floor.<lb/>
And though the huge delegation<lb/>
of young people did lend some<lb/>
moments of spontaneity to the<lb/>
convention ? young Republicans<lb/>
were responsible for entertaining<lb/>
sideshows like a group of "Fritz-<lb/>
busters" commandos and a clique<lb/>
called "Coneheads for Reagan"<lb/>
? it was most significant for its<lb/>
visibility in a party where<lb/>
previously it had been invisible.<lb/>
The you'h leaders themselves<lb/>
attribute it to a growing conser-<lb/>
vatism among college students.<lb/>
"People my age have only seen<lb/>
two administrations, the Carter<lb/>
failure and the Reagan success<lb/>
explains Patrick Mizell, 20, the<lb/>
texas state coordinator for the<lb/>
Reagan-Bush campaign.<lb/>
"I think the man has done<lb/>
miracles adds<lb/>
Carey Ewing of the Young<lb/>
Republicans, the more moderate<lb/>
of the party's two youth organiza-<lb/>
tions. "I'm better off now than I<lb/>
was four years ago. I believe in<lb/>
hard work. I don't believe in get-<lb/>
ting something for nothing<lb/>
Fifty percent of the nation's<lb/>
18-to-29-year-olds would vote for<lb/>
Reagan if the election were held<lb/>
today, according to the latest<lb/>
CBSNew York Times poll.<lb/>
The party's youth wing has am-<lb/>
bitious plans to campaign on<lb/>
about 150 campuses in swing<lb/>
states to make sure people don't<lb/>
change their minds.<lb/>
"We're going out there and<lb/>
push our case says Jack<lb/>
Abramoff, head of the College<lb/>
See GOP, Page 5<lb/>
ECU Alumni Sponsor Annual National Telefund Sept. 17<lb/>
Bv ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Suff Wrilff<lb/>
The seventh annual ECU Na-<lb/>
tional Telefund will begin its an-<lb/>
nual fund drive on Sept. 17. The<lb/>
drive will run through Oct. 11<lb/>
with a goal of $80,000. This year's<lb/>
theme will be "Go for the Gold,<lb/>
the ECU Telefund<lb/>
The Telefund is a vital part of<lb/>
fund raising according to Cindy<lb/>
Kittrell, the Annual Fund Direc-<lb/>
tor. "Private funding makes a dif-<lb/>
ference between a good university<lb/>
and a great one she said. "You<lb/>
can't use state money alone.<lb/>
Private funds are needed to make<lb/>
various programs and schools bet-<lb/>
ter than with just state funds.<lb/>
Funds received are used for<lb/>
such things as scholarships and<lb/>
awards.<lb/>
"Alumni are the biggest source<lb/>
of outside funding, however, cur-<lb/>
rently only 20 percent of the alum-<lb/>
ni give Kittrell saidECU has a<lb/>
relatively new fund raising pro-<lb/>
gram. The goal is to build a net-<lb/>
work of successful ECU people.<lb/>
Support in not just dollars but in<lb/>
time and voice<lb/>
The Alumni Association relies<lb/>
heavily on the Ambassadors, a<lb/>
service organization composed of<lb/>
students, to help with the Tele-<lb/>
fund and they make up the ma-<lb/>
jority of the people manning<lb/>
phones.<lb/>
"The Telefund is fun and a lot<lb/>
of action" according to Kittrell.<lb/>
Various things will take place each<lb/>
night. The workers will receive a<lb/>
nice dinner and a free long-<lb/>
distance phone call each time they<lb/>
work. In addition, prizes will be<lb/>
given each night for the person<lb/>
who makes the most money, who<lb/>
gets the most donors and rookie<lb/>
awards for the best new caller.<lb/>
The prizes will include dinner for<lb/>
two at the King and Queen and a<lb/>
wine and cheese gift certificate.<lb/>
Every participate will receive a<lb/>
pirate hat and "Go for the Gold"<lb/>
buttons.<lb/>
In addition to the Am-<lb/>
bassadors, various fraternities,<lb/>
sororities and residence halls will<lb/>
be helping. There will be a contest<lb/>
between the different dorms with<lb/>
the winner receiving a plaque to<lb/>
hang in the dorm for a year. Also,<lb/>
each residence hall and frater-<lb/>
nitysorority will receive points<lb/>
towards the best in its respective<lb/>
class.<lb/>
When calling, there are three<lb/>
night captains appointed every<lb/>
night, each responsible for pro-<lb/>
viding nine people to man the<lb/>
telephones.<lb/>
Fraternity Wins A ward<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
N?w Editor<lb/>
ECU'S Phi Kappa Tau fraterni-<lb/>
ty recently won the Roland Max-<lb/>
well Outstanding Chapter Award.<lb/>
According to Bill Dawson, vice<lb/>
president of the fraternity, the<lb/>
award was given on the basis of<lb/>
the fraternity's "all-around<lb/>
superiority<lb/>
The national organization,<lb/>
which presented the award, con-<lb/>
sidered such factors as social pro-<lb/>
grams, chapter spirit and com-<lb/>
munity activities in selecting a<lb/>
winner. Dawson said.<lb/>
"We've worked a long time for<lb/>
this award, it's taken us 20 years<lb/>
to win Dawson said. "It means<lb/>
as much to alumni as it does to the<lb/>
undergraduates and th'ey deserve<lb/>
as much of the credit<lb/>
Three awards are presented na-<lb/>
tionwide, one in each size<lb/>
category. ECU's chapter won in<lb/>
the second category, which en-<lb/>
compasses campuses with nine to<lb/>
19 fraternities. Eighty-seven Phi<lb/>
Kappa Tau chapters competed,<lb/>
Dawson said.<lb/>
"This will be something that<lb/>
will help us get new members ?<lb/>
it's a positive factor he added.<lb/>
These two students are relaxing by enjoying an after-class game of<lb/>
friendly chess at Mendenhall Student Center. Students should<lb/>
Your Move, Baby<lb/>
JON JORDAN ? ecu Pheto Lab<lb/>
definitely "check" out the many services offered at Mendenhall<lb/>
before mid-terms begin. Hey bud, watch out, it's her move now.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features13<lb/>
Classifieds15<lb/>
Sports17<lb/>
?Pictured to the right is one of<lb/>
the campus landmarks which<lb/>
appeared in Tuesday's East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
i ? - ???<lb/>
?? ?'? ????? !? ?? !?? mmd<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBERS 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
LATTER-DAY SAINTS<lb/>
You and your friends are Invited to attend this<lb/>
ye?r's Institute ?? Religion class which will be on<lb/>
tt?e New Testament Every week promises to be<lb/>
orsat because Bill Evenhuls Is an excellent<lb/>
teacher Class meets each Thursday from 6 30 to<lb/>
I 00 pm In Brewster B 305.<lb/>
CAMPUS CRUSADE<lb/>
Come loin us tor "PRIME TIME'1 this Thurs. at<lb/>
7 p.m. in the Jenkins Aud. Art Bldg We're com-<lb/>
mitted to having tun, fellowship and the study of<lb/>
God's Word. See you nart<lb/>
COLLEGE REPUBLICANS<lb/>
College Republicans will have a social meeting<lb/>
tonight at 7 00 Come by, partake ot food and<lb/>
a ink make new friends, and learn how you can<lb/>
help our Republican candidates get elected Turn<lb/>
off 14th Street onto Berkely Drive, past front of<lb/>
Flcktln Stadium, until you reach circle Drive<lb/>
II7JI Circle Drive). No admittance without pay<lb/>
ing 11.00 dues to CR's You know it's worth Itl<lb/>
AMBASSADORS<lb/>
We will have our second general meeting at 5:00<lb/>
p.m , Wednesday, Sept 12 In me Mendenhall<lb/>
Multipurpose Room We have many exciting ac<lb/>
tivitles to discuss.<lb/>
PI KAPPS WELCOME<lb/>
The brothers would like to welcome everyone<lb/>
out to me Pi Kapp house for Rush, Sept. 10-13, to<lb/>
moot all me brothers, and be ready to party<lb/>
Okay, you Alpha Delta Pi's, the brothers are<lb/>
ready to iem Friday night for Pref night, we hope<lb/>
you can hang! A reminder for an the brothers,<lb/>
brotherhood will be Sunday night at 7:00 at<lb/>
Mendenhall, instead of Monday night<lb/>
SOFTBALL<lb/>
Anyone Interested in playing corec Softball tor<lb/>
me Department of intramural-Recreational Ser<lb/>
vices should come by room 204 Memorial Gym or<lb/>
call 757 637 for more information. Have fun and<lb/>
participate through "intramurals" the Deadline<lb/>
tor registration Is 5 00 Sept. 10, 11.<lb/>
DELTA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
Welcome back Delta Slgsl I Hope everyone had<lb/>
a great summer and ara ready to make this year<lb/>
one to remember Little Sister Meeting this Sun<lb/>
day. Sept ? at I 00 p.m Hope all Little Sisters can<lb/>
come. See you therel<lb/>
BICYCLE CLUB<lb/>
Everyone Is invited to Thursday, super novice<lb/>
evening ride starting at 630 p m and Saturday<lb/>
beginner's morning ride at 900 am. Both rides<lb/>
start a' Elm Street Gym Call Dr Mlyashlta<lb/>
7ST7553 for more inforr.iation<lb/>
MAT<lb/>
Due to Increased charges by the Psychological<lb/>
Corp the Testing Center at ECU finds It<lb/>
necessary to pas on the increase to the MAT can-<lb/>
didates. Beginning Oct. 1.1??4. the test fee win be<lb/>
$33.<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Art Exhibition Committee<lb/>
will hold an orientation meeting on Thursday,<lb/>
Sept a. 1?4, at 3:30 pm In room 230 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center. All members and Interested<lb/>
students are urged to attend<lb/>
NURSING STUDENTS<lb/>
In order to receive your Nursing Pin by<lb/>
December 14, 19B4 orders must be placed In me<lb/>
Student Supply Store, Wright Building, no later<lb/>
man September 21, 194 Orders should be placed<lb/>
at the Jewelry Counter. Orders must be paid In<lb/>
full when the order Is placed.<lb/>
PRE PHYSICAL THERAPY<lb/>
Deadline for 1905 admission to professional<lb/>
phase is Nov 1, 1904 All general college and<lb/>
physical therapy prerequisites must be com<lb/>
pleted by end of Spring, 1905. Allied Health Pro<lb/>
fesslons Admissions Test must be taken in<lb/>
November (apply early October) Application<lb/>
packets are to be picked up Oct 5, 1984 In me<lb/>
Physical Therapy Department Office (Belk<lb/>
Building, Annex 3. 757 6941. Ext 261)<lb/>
ALPHASIGMA PHI RUSH<lb/>
The Brothers of Alpha Sigma Phi would like to<lb/>
invite anyone interested in the great experiences<lb/>
of fraternity life to attend our FALL RUSH.<lb/>
Beautiful girls, beer, and me opportunity to ioln a<lb/>
fantastic brotherhood will be yours Be there<lb/>
Sept 10 12 900 p.m<lb/>
BINGOICECREAM<lb/>
The Student Union Recreation Committee is<lb/>
sponsoring a BingoIce Cream Party to be held on<lb/>
Tuesday, Sept 11 at 700 p.m in the Mult!<lb/>
Purpose Room All ECU students, faculty, staff,<lb/>
their dependents and guests are welcome Admls<lb/>
sion is 25 cents Play 8 different bingo games for<lb/>
prizes and eat delicious ice cream<lb/>
LAMBDA CHI ALPHA<lb/>
Little Sister Rush will be held on Sept 17 and 18<lb/>
starting at 9:30 p.m. Come out and meet great<lb/>
guys and super girlsl The Little Sisters look for<lb/>
ward to meeting any girls interested In becoming<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha Little Sisters themselves! its<lb/>
a great opportunity! I Call 752-6159 for any Infer<lb/>
matlon.<lb/>
CORSOANDNASW<lb/>
All Social Worx and Corrections Melor and in-<lb/>
tended Majors are urged to attend. Monday, Sept<lb/>
17, lf?4 at 4:00 p.m. Rm. 105 Allied Health Get In<lb/>
volved in fund-raisers, community service and<lb/>
parties. Come and moot people In the department.<lb/>
ALL STUDENTS<lb/>
Undecided about your career path? Stay one<lb/>
step ahead of the competition by increasing your<lb/>
social opportunities and knowledge of the work<lb/>
Ing Do yourself a favor: attend the first meeting<lb/>
of the Society for Advancement of Management<lb/>
Refreshments will be served For more informa<lb/>
lion call: Rick at 752 8787 or Lori at 758 2293 Don't<lb/>
miss OUtl<lb/>
PUTT PUTT<lb/>
intramural Team Putt Putt Is set to tee off on<lb/>
Mon. Sept 17 Team captains should register<lb/>
their teams in Memorial Gym on Mon Sept. 10<lb/>
and Tuesday Sept 11 between 8:00 a.m. and 500<lb/>
p.m PARTICIPATE RATHER THAN SPEC<lb/>
TATEIIIII<lb/>
SLAP<lb/>
The Department of Speech Language 8.<lb/>
Auditory Pathology (SLAP) will be providing the<lb/>
speech and hearing screening for all students<lb/>
eligible for admission to the upper division of<lb/>
teacher education on Monday, September 17,<lb/>
Tuesday, September 18, and Wednesday,<lb/>
September 19.<lb/>
The department will be testing from 500 7:30<lb/>
p.m on the abov? days NO APPOINTMENT IS<lb/>
REQUIRED The SLAP Department is located in<lb/>
Belk Annex on Charles Street<lb/>
There will not be a makeup session Fall<lb/>
Semester<lb/>
SPORT CLUB COUNCIL<lb/>
The first meeting of the Intramural and Recrea<lb/>
tlonal Services Sport Club Council will be on<lb/>
September 19, 1984, at 4 00 in Brewster B 103. All<lb/>
officers should attend<lb/>
RESUME WORKSHOPS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Service in<lb/>
the Bloxton House is offering one hour sessions to<lb/>
help you prepare your own resume Few<lb/>
graduates get jobs without some preparation<lb/>
Many employers request a resume showing your<lb/>
education and experience Sessions to help will be<lb/>
held In the Career Planning Room at 3 p.m Come<lb/>
on any of the following dates September 12, 18, 27<lb/>
or September 19 at 7 p.m.<lb/>
ZBT BROTHERS<lb/>
Brotherhood will rx- Sunday at 9:00 p m<lb/>
Mendenhall Bring your class schedule and<lb/>
syllabus Dues will be the same as last year! They<lb/>
will not increase as stated last Sunday!<lb/>
SKI CHRISTMAS BREAK<lb/>
Any persons interested in snowskling<lb/>
December 30 through January 4 at Snowshoe,<lb/>
W.V should call Jo Saunders at 757 6000 to get<lb/>
your name on the list for the trip Beginners to<lb/>
hotdoggers are welcome Ski Instruction is<lb/>
available for all levels of ability Price depends on<lb/>
ski package Space for housing on slopes and<lb/>
transportation Is limited. You are Invited to come<lb/>
by Memorial Gym 108 on Oct 30 at 4:00 p.m. to<lb/>
register, see the slides and, talk skiing! A $5 00<lb/>
deposit at this time will reserve your space.<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Beginning Monday, September 10th, at 5:30 In<lb/>
the Coffeehouse located on the ground floor of<lb/>
Mendenhall, NAACP will meet on me 2nd and 4th<lb/>
Mondays So come on out and give a little of<lb/>
yourseld for a great cause! 111<lb/>
COREC SOFTBALL<lb/>
IRS (Intramural Recreational Services) Join<lb/>
the fun Registration dates for COREC SOFT<lb/>
BALL are Sept 1011 The Team Captains'<lb/>
Meeting is set for Sept 9, 700 p.m In BC 103<lb/>
Come by room 204 Memorial Gym to register. Any<lb/>
one can participate in INTRAMURALS<lb/>
ALPHA SIGMA PHI<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
The Little Sisters would like to welcome<lb/>
everyone back from the summer Brothers, lets<lb/>
make this year as much fun as last! We would<lb/>
also like to encourage any guys interested in fin-<lb/>
ding out more about the brotherly circle of the<lb/>
Alpha Sig's to attend our fall Rush. Sept. 10 12 at<lb/>
8 00 See you there!<lb/>
TOGA PARTY<lb/>
We are having a TOGA PARTY, and it promises<lb/>
to be lots of fun on Friday, September 7, 1984 at<lb/>
the Cultural Center from 10-2. Admission will be<lb/>
50 cents with a toga, 75 cents without a toga, and<lb/>
$1.00 for non students. This party is sponsered by<lb/>
the ladles of Alpha Kappa Alpha. Music will be<lb/>
provided by Kappa Alpha Psi Fraternity, Inc.<lb/>
ALPHA KAPPA ALPHA RUSH<lb/>
The Theta Alpha Chapter of Alpha Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Sorority, Inc will host its formal Rush for Fall<lb/>
1984 on Thursday, September 6, at 8:00 pm. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose Room The theme will<lb/>
be "An Alpha Kappa Alpha Hawaiian Paradise"<lb/>
Invitations are available In front of me bookstore<lb/>
or from any AKA You may still attend the Rush<lb/>
without invitation Please dress appropriately<lb/>
CHORAL SOCIETY AUDITIONS<lb/>
Rehearsal for the 15th season of the Greenville<lb/>
Choral Society will commence at 7 30 p m .<lb/>
September 11. 1984 at the Immanuel Baptist<lb/>
Church The Society invites all singers who are In-<lb/>
terested In participating in the preparation for the<lb/>
three concerts to be given in 1984 to call Ms<lb/>
Carolyn Greene Ipock, 355 2717 to arrange for<lb/>
voice placement auditions which will be held on<lb/>
September 11 at 7:00 p m at the Church<lb/>
MARTIN FOR GOVERNOR<lb/>
Meet and speak to Congressman Martin this<lb/>
Sat. the 8th. Volunteers and interested persons<lb/>
meet at Mendenhall on Thurs the 6th, at 5 30 p m<lb/>
or come to College Republican Social at 7 00 p m<lb/>
This won't conflict with Sat football game<lb/>
MARAUDERSARMY ROTC<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting for all<lb/>
members Persons Interested in becoming a<lb/>
member are welcome to attend. Time: Wed ,<lb/>
Sept 12th at 7:30 The place is room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
AIR FORCE ROTC<lb/>
The Air Force Reserve OHIcers Training Corps,<lb/>
along with the Red Cross will be sponsoring a<lb/>
Blood Drive on Sept 18 and 19 In the Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center room 244 We urge everyone to<lb/>
please come donate a pint of life.<lb/>
TEAM HANDBALL<lb/>
Anyone interested in playing team handball for<lb/>
the ECU Club Team should contact Jeff Humbert<lb/>
(752 9635) or Willie Ehling (757 6387) for more in<lb/>
formation All levels of experience are welcome<lb/>
to play<lb/>
FRISBEECLUB<lb/>
You've seen one frisbee fly you've seen'em all<lb/>
Bologna Ultimate, Golf, Double Disc Court Guts,<lb/>
Freestyle, Max time aloft, K 9, Distance The<lb/>
ECU Frisbee Club is waiting for you to come out<lb/>
Tues Thurs Sunday at 500 Bottom of College<lb/>
Hill Drive General membership meeting Tues<lb/>
day night 8:00 at Mendenhall Student Center Be<lb/>
there or be round<lb/>
ZBT LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
There will be a meeting in The Coffeehouse at<lb/>
5:00 p.m. on Thursday. Sept 6, 1984 Please make<lb/>
every effort to attend<lb/>
PSI CHI<lb/>
All members present and future, are urgeo to<lb/>
attend General info and motivation topics for<lb/>
this semester win oe discussed Lets get phycr<lb/>
ed! Thur . Sept 13, 5 00 p m Also, applications<lb/>
for Psi Chi membership art now available in me<lb/>
Psychology Office<lb/>
RUSH SIGMA NU<lb/>
Sigma Nu is on a roll! Join us Monday night tor<lb/>
the rock and roll of Harbor and your favorite<lb/>
beverages party starts at 9 p m No admission<lb/>
charge Please bring ECU ID and driver s<lb/>
license. 1301 Cotanche St behind PTA<lb/>
FACULTY<lb/>
A faculty investment club is presently being<lb/>
formed in our area Trus should be an exciting<lb/>
tun, educational, and financially rewarding oc<lb/>
portunity tor all For more information ana<lb/>
details on an organnationai meeting to be heo<lb/>
soon, call or write today 355 2025 days and n.ghts<lb/>
FACULTY INVESTMENT CLUB, P O Box 837<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
LACROSSE CLUB<lb/>
Come to the bottom of College Hill on Tuesdays<lb/>
and Thursdays at 3 30 to pie some Lax A '?<lb/>
looking for a few good men Any questions c?M<lb/>
Dave Locke" at 752 7136<lb/>
ANNOUNCEMENTS<lb/>
Due to limited space, The East<lb/>
Carolinian requests that orgranizations<lb/>
submit only important announcements<lb/>
about up coming events that students<lb/>
need to know about in advance. Please<lb/>
submit such messages as "thank you"<lb/>
and "congratulation" notes to the Per-<lb/>
sonals section of the classifieds in The<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
The deadline for announcements is 3<lb/>
i.m. Monday for the Tuesday paper<lb/>
uid 3 p.m. Wednesday for the Thursday-<lb/>
paper.<lb/>
They must be typed on an announce-<lb/>
ment form to be accepted. These forms<lb/>
can be picked up at our office.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
The next meeting will be Sunday. Sept. 9 at 5:00<lb/>
p.m. In Room 221 Mendenhall Attendance is man<lb/>
datory All Inactive Little Sisters who wish to<lb/>
become active, please attend this meeting.<lb/>
SIGN LANGUAGE CLUB<lb/>
We will be having our first Silent Dinner, this<lb/>
Thurs Sept 6 at 5 00 p m Everyone Is welcome<lb/>
to come loin us. The place is Mr. Gatti's. so come<lb/>
on out and have son-e tun with us! Be prepared to<lb/>
finger sell!<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
LITTLE SISTERS<lb/>
There will be a mandatory little sister meeting<lb/>
and rush seminar mis Sunday at 500 in room 221<lb/>
Mendenhall Also, any inactive little sisters who<lb/>
wish to be active again, please attend<lb/>
Opynqnt 193<lb/>
Kroger S.iv on<lb/>
Ouantitv Riqnrs Reserved<lb/>
None Sold To Dealer<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
-DveBTlSf 9 ITEM POUCY<lb/>
facn ot rne?" advertised items is '<lb/>
auireo to oe r?aanv avjiuoie tor saie in<lb/>
e?n xroger sav on except as specincai<lb/>
iv noted in mis ad it we do run out o?<lb/>
an item we win otter you your cnoice o<lb/>
i comparaoie item when avanaoe<lb/>
reflecting tne same savings or a rain<lb/>
cnecu whlcn win entitle you to purcnase<lb/>
trip advertised item at the advertised<lb/>
once witnin 50 days Only one vendor<lb/>
coupon win o accepted per item<lb/>
items ,incl Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru S.it<lb/>
Sept a 1984<lb/>
SENIOR-GRAD STUDENTS<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
will meet witti thote interested in learning more<lb/>
about this service. This general session will en-<lb/>
courage those graduating In this 194-85 academic<lb/>
year to picK up registration packets and return<lb/>
mem. Registration, credentials, and Interview<lb/>
procedures will be explained. The session will be<lb/>
held in Mendenhall 244 at 1:00 p.m. on Sept. 11.<lb/>
FACILITIES CLOSED<lb/>
Memorial Gymnasium Recreation Facilities<lb/>
will be cloaed during the home football game on<lb/>
Sat September 8 This Includes the basketball<lb/>
courti. equipment room and pool The facilities<lb/>
will be open on Sunday a normally scheduled.<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
Attention ISA Members old, new and new In<lb/>
forested students! The election tor 'M '?5 new of<lb/>
fleers will take place on Sat Sept. S at 6:00 p.m<lb/>
at Mendenhall Student Center. (Ask at Informa-<lb/>
tion desk tor Rm. no please.) A celebration party<lb/>
will alto be held fclowlng the election at 9:00 p.m.<lb/>
at the international House, come and loin usl It<lb/>
won't be fun without you.<lb/>
SURF CLUB<lb/>
The first meeting of the year is scheduled for<lb/>
Thursday, Sept 6 in room 221 Mendenhall at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. New officers will be elected and a date for<lb/>
the team trials at Harteras will be set. New<lb/>
members, girls, and anyone who enloys the beach<lb/>
are all welcome. Persons Interested who cannot<lb/>
attend the first meeting should contact Dave Col-<lb/>
by at 7S? 7-m<lb/>
ALPHA PHI OMEGA<lb/>
Welcome back brothers. This semester's<lb/>
meetings are Thuredey at 5:00 in 212 Mendenhall.<lb/>
There will be a covered dish supper Sept. 6 at<lb/>
Denny i Meet ef Mendenhall at 4:45 if you need a<lb/>
rtoe or direction. Brothers art strongly en-<lb/>
couraged to attend meeting.<lb/>
ART EXHIBITION<lb/>
COMMITTEE<lb/>
The Student Union Art Exhibition Committee Is<lb/>
now accepting application for committee<lb/>
member, for detail, contact Ban Branson at<lb/>
757-eeU. ext. 310.<lb/>
KARATE CLUB<lb/>
Registration for beginning Karate will be In the<lb/>
dence room of Memorial Gym on Sept. 27 at 7:30.<lb/>
Ciiwn for advanced yellow belt and up will begin<lb/>
Sept. n at 7. JO In the seme room KICK your heart<lb/>
put with the Karate club 111<lb/>
BALL ROOM DANCING<lb/>
Mil room donee for faculdtv and staff will<lb/>
begin on Oct. 2 at noon in Memorial Gym Room<lb/>
iga. Classes or scheduled for Tuesday and Thurs<lb/>
gay. Tr ' i? charge. Bring a partner or come<lb/>
atone and loam basic dance slops In the Fox Trot,<lb/>
CM Cha. watfi. Rumba and Bopi Contact Jo<lb/>
latmden at 7S7-O000 or tust arrive to dance.<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
Campus Alcohol and Drug Program will bo<lb/>
apt. a room 211 at 4:00. Anyone ft?<lb/>
I in lofnlng is urged to attend.<lb/>
ALPHA PHI BIG BROTHERS<lb/>
important notice The next big brother<lb/>
meeting has been changed! It will be next<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon at 3:00 Please be there or<lb/>
leave a note at the house that you will not be able<lb/>
to attend, with your name, address. ID no and<lb/>
phone no<lb/>
COMPUTER SCIENCE<lb/>
Work with Defense Department in Washington,<lb/>
D.C. for computer science malors available for<lb/>
Spring Semester. GPA of 2.5 required and ap<lb/>
plication deadline Spetember 15. 19S4 Contact:<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office, Rawi Building 313.<lb/>
NATUR1ST INTERN<lb/>
Position available in Wheeling, West Virginia<lb/>
tor junior level student interested in working with<lb/>
children In park setting Expense money plus<lb/>
housing furnished. Closing date for applications<lb/>
Sept 7, 1904. Contact: Cooperative Education Of<lb/>
fice 313 Rawl Building.<lb/>
STUDENT INTERNSHIP<lb/>
internship position available with maior<lb/>
Philadelphia Television Station. Experience in<lb/>
writing, research, and TV production offered.<lb/>
Contact: Cooperative Education Office 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building.<lb/>
DRIVER AND ORDER TAKER<lb/>
Local firm has need for drivers and order<lb/>
takers for peak perlods.Twenty hours per week,<lb/>
must be li and have own car. Contact:<lb/>
Cooperative Education 313 Rawl Building.<lb/>
CO-OP<lb/>
Northern Telecom, Research Triangle Park,<lb/>
NC has a co-op opening for students Interested In<lb/>
human resources development as a career. Must<lb/>
have a good GPA and be willing to alternate work<lb/>
alignments. The co-op position begins Spring,<lb/>
MM,<lb/>
GENERAL ACCOUNTING OFFICE<lb/>
A representative from the U.S. General Accoun<lb/>
ting Office, Virginia Beach, VA will be on campus<lb/>
October 23, 1904 to Interview coop students who<lb/>
would tike to work as GAO Evaluators. Accoun-<lb/>
ting maors who have completed 60 semester<lb/>
hour and have a 2.9 GPA or higher, should con-<lb/>
tact the Coop office, 313 Rawl Bldg. to arrange an<lb/>
interview Immediately.<lb/>
GAMMA BETA PHI<lb/>
There will be a general meeting of all Gamma<lb/>
Mta Phi member, Thur September 6 at 7:00<lb/>
p.m. in Mendenhall, room 244. The executive<lb/>
board will meet before the general meeting at<lb/>
6 ? p.m. In Mendenhall room 244.<lb/>
VOLUNTEERS FOR MARTIN<lb/>
Call ECU coordinator Sandy Hardy at 757-0711<lb/>
or me headquarter on W. 6th St. beside<lb/>
Hollow off rVWmorlal Dr 757 3077.<lb/>
PILLSBURY ORIGINAL<lb/>
. FLAVOR<lb/>
Microwave<lb/>
BRUT, WHITE<lb/>
CHAMPAGNE OR<lb/>
Andre<lb/>
Cold Duck<lb/>
FREEZER PLEEZER<lb/>
Assorted Pops<lb/>
BUY ONE<lb/>
16 CT. PKC.<lb/>
GET ONE<lb/>
FREE!<lb/>
KROGER 2 LOWFAT,<lb/>
SKIM OR HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
whole<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
HOT DOG OR<lb/>
Hamburger<lb/>
Buns<lb/>
2 Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
12 ct<lb/>
Pkgs.<lb/>
CLASSIFIEDS<lb/>
WORK<lb/>
i,<lb/>
Deli-Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
99<lb/>
ONE 14 OZ. BAG<lb/>
Nacho Chips<lb/>
when you purchase 1 Lb.<lb/>
or more<lb/>
Nacho Cheese<lb/>
sauce<lb/>
Prof Su<lb/>
(CPS) ? A Stanford professor, Gut<lb/>
angered his class was included in a para<lb/>
list of easy college courses, has Amet<lb/>
sued Sews week on Campus, the<lb/>
national campus paper insert that any<lb/>
published the list last October, for lawsi<lb/>
$l million. to<lb/>
In papers filed with the suit, mags<lb/>
Professor John Kaplan says the Vi<lb/>
characterization of his "Criminal serttt<lb/>
Lav. and the Criminal System" colle,<lb/>
course as "the easiest five credits l<lb/>
a Stanford student can earn" in kai1<lb/>
the article was unfair and un- mam<lb/>
truthful, and damaged his reputa- Elizj<lb/>
tion. under<lb/>
The course was one of 11 listed ford<lb/>
in the article, "A Giggle of meni<lb/>
Career Planning<lb/>
Center Hel<lb/>
INCLUDES FREE 4 ROLLS<lb/>
AND 1 LB. POTATO SALAD<lb/>
wishbone<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
U.S. NO. 1<lb/>
ALL PURPOSE<lb/>
White<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
c<lb/>
LIMIT ONE BAG PLEASE<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
NEW CROP GOLD OR<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
B ELAINE PERM<lb/>
Miff Wnier<lb/>
"Interviews need preparation.<lb/>
People need to prepare for them.<lb/>
They need to be able to talk about<lb/>
their strengths and weaknesses"<lb/>
said Jim Westmoreland, ass:<lb/>
director of the ECU Career Plai<lb/>
ning and Placement Service. The<lb/>
Placement Center has an audio-<lb/>
visual room with videotape equip-<lb/>
ment for practice interviewing.<lb/>
The equipment was a present<lb/>
from the 1983 Senior Class.<lb/>
-<lb/>
able<lb/>
how<lb/>
Coml<lb/>
Fraternities<lb/>
May Unite<lb/>
In Council<lb/>
B ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Staff v. rliw<lb/>
ECU fraternities may develop<lb/>
an all-Greek council within the<lb/>
next year for the purpose of ex-<lb/>
changing ideas and working on<lb/>
common goals, according to<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council president<lb/>
Glenn Conway.<lb/>
Conway said the council would<lb/>
include representatives from the<lb/>
1FC, the Panhellenic Council, and<lb/>
the Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students. The purpose of trie<lb/>
council would be to set up a calen-<lb/>
dar of events which are common<lb/>
to all three bodies such as rais -<lb/>
money for charitable organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The all Greek council plan was<lb/>
suggested at an IFC meeting last<lb/>
January, Conway said, and would<lb/>
probably come up again this year.<lb/>
The idea of a fraternity merger<lb/>
had been suggested in the past b<lb/>
Greeks, but Associate Dean<lb/>
Orientation and Judiciary Dr.<lb/>
Ronald Speier said he did not feel<lb/>
a merger was feasible due to dif-<lb/>
ferences between the groups'<lb/>
rushes and ritualistic activities.<lb/>
However Speier said he will work<lb/>
to bring all Greeks together on<lb/>
areas of common ground, and 1<lb/>
hopes the organizations can wort<lb/>
together on philanthropist pro-<lb/>
jects even if Greeks are not merg-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
conway said he supported the<lb/>
all-Greek council because it would<lb/>
provide Greeks the chance to<lb/>
work together. "We do have<lb/>
many differences, but we a s<lb/>
have much in common C<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Conway said he was not sure<lb/>
when the all-Greek council plan<lb/>
would come up again, because ol<lb/>
the disorder associated with the<lb/>
beginning of the school year, and<lb/>
each fraternity working twoar<lb/>
membership at the present time<lb/>
However, Conway said he ex-<lb/>
pected to see the council plan<lb/>
come up in an IFC meeting in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
Classes<lb/>
comi<lb/>
grar<lb/>
1<lb/>
anc<lb/>
Offered<lb/>
ECU NriM Bu'f?.<lb/>
Beginning and experienced<lb/>
computer users in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina may wish to participate<lb/>
in one of ECU's Saturday com-<lb/>
puter seminars this fall.<lb/>
The series includes: "The Small<lb/>
Computer Revolution: .An In-<lb/>
troduction to the Machine Sept<lb/>
15; "Introduction to dBASE II<lb/>
Sept. 22; "Introduction to<lb/>
Multiplane' Sept. 29 and "In-<lb/>
troduction to Word Processing<lb/>
Oct. 20.<lb/>
Each program is scheduled to<lb/>
run from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. In-<lb/>
structors are members of the ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
? i ? mm<lb/>
f<lb/>
V<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0003"/><lb/>
I Ml-I-AS IAROUNIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 19B4<lb/>
 Ml<lb/>
?1 Del phVv:n<lb/>
?lvl aDie n tl<lb/>
?svofite<lb/>
N idmlSSlOfl<lb/>
 '  ver i<lb/>
'  ' B<lb/>
' ana<lb/>
B ' b? he d<lb/>
Box gj<lb/>
? i<lb/>
IENTS<lb/>
apei<lb/>
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??<lb/>
? <lb/>
??????<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
???????<lb/>
RV ORIGINAL<lb/>
WOR<lb/>
Microwave<lb/>
Popcorn<lb/>
$-j29<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
OR<lb/>
Hamburger<lb/>
Buns<lb/>
99<lb/>
Chips<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
71<lb/>
J<lb/>
-I CAROLINA<lb/>
'OP COLD OR<lb/>
d Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
9<lb/>
Prof Sues Because Course Termed Easy<lb/>
(CPS) - - a Stanford professor<lb/>
?ed his class was included a<lb/>
1st oeasy college courses, has<lb/>
sued ,k,hwA on Campus, the<lb/>
I n'ampus paper insert that<lb/>
PuM.shed the l.st last October, for<lb/>
??? million.<lb/>
In papers filed with the suit<lb/>
Professor John Kaplan says the<lb/>
-naractenzation of his "Criminal<lb/>
1 a and the Criminal System"<lb/>
course as "the easiest five credits<lb/>
 Stanford student can earn<lb/>
the article was unfair and<lb/>
truthful, and damaged his reputa<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The course was one of 11 listed<lb/>
in the article. " Giggle of<lb/>
Career Planning<lb/>
in<lb/>
un-<lb/>
Ciuts The piece's introductory<lb/>
paragraphs called them "an AI1-<lb/>
Amencan team of" easy classes.<lb/>
"At this point, we can't sav<lb/>
anything" about the article or the<lb/>
lawsuit, says Ute Lange, assistant<lb/>
to Jerrold Footlick, the<lb/>
magazine's managing editor.<lb/>
Newsweek on Campus is in-<lb/>
serted six times a year into KM<lb/>
college papers, and reaches some<lb/>
1 1 million collegians, I ange said<lb/>
Kaplan left for a visit to Ger-<lb/>
many shortly after filing suit, but<lb/>
Elizabeth Rafferty,<lb/>
undergraduate secretary at Stan-<lb/>
ford's political science depart<lb/>
ment, contends. "I know the<lb/>
students do not find it an easy<lb/>
course, what they would call a<lb/>
Mickey Mouse course<lb/>
The magazine judged it a gut<lb/>
course because Kaplan's lectures<lb/>
are recorded and then broadcast<lb/>
over the campus radio station,<lb/>
making lecture attendance un-<lb/>
necessary.<lb/>
"Some students might find it<lb/>
easy because their physical<lb/>
presence might not be required<lb/>
Rafferty concedes.<lb/>
Teachers of other courses nam-<lb/>
ed in the article were less than<lb/>
amused, although they have no<lb/>
current plans to sue.<lb/>
"We did not appreciate the arti-<lb/>
cle, says Iran Fowler, depart<lb/>
ment secretary at Michigan State's<lb/>
Department ol Health and<lb/>
Physical Education, which was<lb/>
cited for offering Beginning<lb/>
Billiards. "It didn't sit real well<lb/>
here<lb/>
She points out "the students are<lb/>
expected to be in class, rhey are<lb/>
graded on their skill improve-<lb/>
ment" in learning to make "a<lb/>
straight shot and a cut shot<lb/>
Professor John B. Droste, who<lb/>
teaches an Indiana University<lb/>
geology course named in the arti-<lb/>
cle, isn't sure what to make ot it.<lb/>
"I thought it was tongue-in-<lb/>
cheek he says. "But apparently<lb/>
(Newsweek on Campus) was<lb/>
serious<lb/>
Center Helps With Interviews<lb/>
By El A1NF PFRRY<lb/>
Staff Wrtlfr<lb/>
"Interviews need preparation.<lb/>
People need to prepare for them.<lb/>
They need to be able to talk about<lb/>
'heir strengths and weaknesses"<lb/>
said Jim Westmoreland, assistant<lb/>
director of the ECU Career Plan-<lb/>
ning and Placement Service. The<lb/>
Placement Center has an audio-<lb/>
visual room with videotape equip-<lb/>
ment for practice interviewing.<lb/>
The equipment was a present<lb/>
from the 1983 Senior Class.<lb/>
Fraternities<lb/>
May Unite<lb/>
In Council<lb/>
By ELIZABETH BIRO<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
ECU fraternities may develop<lb/>
an all-Greek council within the<lb/>
xt year for the purpose of ex-<lb/>
changing ideas and working on<lb/>
-non goals, according to<lb/>
Inter-Fraternity Council president<lb/>
enn Conway.<lb/>
Conway said the council would<lb/>
ide representatives from the<lb/>
he Panhelienic Council, and<lb/>
Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students. The purpose of the<lb/>
uncil would be to set up a calen-<lb/>
? of events which are common<lb/>
to all three bodies such as raising<lb/>
money for charitable organiza-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The all Greek council plan was<lb/>
suggested at an IFC meeting last<lb/>
January. Conway said, and would<lb/>
probabiv come up again this year.<lb/>
The idea of a fraternity merger<lb/>
had been suggested in the past by-<lb/>
Greek v but Associate Dean of<lb/>
Orientation and Judiciary Dr.<lb/>
Ronald Speier said he did not feel<lb/>
merger was feasible due to dif-<lb/>
ferences between the groups'<lb/>
rushes and ritualistic activities.<lb/>
wever Speier said he will work<lb/>
ng all Greeks together on<lb/>
common ground, and<lb/>
opes the organizations can work<lb/>
aether on philanthropist pro-<lb/>
ts even if Greeks are not merg-<lb/>
conway said he supported the<lb/>
ail-Greek council because it would<lb/>
v ide Greeks the chance to<lb/>
work together. "We do have<lb/>
many differences, but we also<lb/>
have much in common Conway<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Conway said he was not sure<lb/>
when the all-Greek council plan<lb/>
? ild come up again, because of<lb/>
the disorder associated with the<lb/>
beginning of the school year, and<lb/>
fraternity working twoards<lb/>
membership at the present time.<lb/>
H wever, Conway said he ex-<lb/>
see the council plan<lb/>
me up in an IFC meeting in the<lb/>
near future.<lb/>
Computer<lb/>
Classes<lb/>
Offered<lb/>
i I Sc Bureau<lb/>
Beginning and experienced<lb/>
computer users in eastern North<lb/>
Carolina may wish to participate<lb/>
in one of ECU's Saturday com-<lb/>
puter seminars this fall.<lb/>
The series includes: "The Small<lb/>
Computer Revolution: An In-<lb/>
troduction to the Machine Sept.<lb/>
15; "Introduction to dBASE II<lb/>
Sept. 22; "Introduction to<lb/>
Multiplan Sept. 29 and "In-<lb/>
troduction to Word Processing<lb/>
Oct. 20.<lb/>
Each program is scheduled to<lb/>
run from 9 a.m. until 4 p.m. In-<lb/>
structors are members of the ECU<lb/>
faculty and staff.<lb/>
The system will aid students<lb/>
who wish to practice their inter-<lb/>
viewing skills. Students who<lb/>
register with the service will be<lb/>
able to attend workshops showing<lb/>
how the system can aid them.<lb/>
Companies also make informa-<lb/>
tional tapes available for the<lb/>
students benefit.<lb/>
Companies will send interviews<lb/>
concerning the jobs they have<lb/>
available and students can look at<lb/>
the tapes to see if they are in-<lb/>
terested in the jobs. Students can<lb/>
sign-up for interviews with certain<lb/>
companies. However, the pro<lb/>
gram is still in the beginning stage<lb/>
Ideally, students will be able to<lb/>
come to the center and practice in-<lb/>
terviewing by using trial questions<lb/>
and talking things out and then<lb/>
watching themselves on T.V.<lb/>
Students are able to see how they<lb/>
come across to others. "It's nut<lb/>
like a mirror, because you can see<lb/>
the little mannerisms that need to<lb/>
c changed" Westmoreland said.<lb/>
The Placement Service invites<lb/>
classes and clubs to make use of<lb/>
the equipment on a regular basis.<lb/>
While practice interviewing,<lb/>
students learn the do's and dont's<lb/>
o( an interview.<lb/>
For example, go alone. Don't<lb/>
join forces with a friend. Know<lb/>
what the company does or makes<lb/>
and learn the interviewer's name<lb/>
and use it.<lb/>
For additional information,<lb/>
contact the ECU Career Planning<lb/>
and Placement Service.<lb/>
Droste is aware students<lb/>
sometimes refer to his course as<lb/>
"Rocks for Jocks" and "Land<lb/>
scape Appreciation and notes<lb/>
that "any civilized person would<lb/>
be ol fended by the article.<lb/>
But he stresses that "professors<lb/>
are human folks. They don't mind<lb/>
having fUn poked at them, for<lb/>
they indeed poke fun at others.<lb/>
But something that is presented<lb/>
factually is gross. It makes an<lb/>
enormous difference for people to<lb/>
know this (article) is a fun thing<lb/>
Consequently, "I don't blame<lb/>
the guy (Kaplan) for suing says<lb/>
Dr. Gail Mikles, head of MSU's<lb/>
Health and Physical Education<lb/>
Department. "Most of the people<lb/>
who write these articles don't<lb/>
know what the hell they are talk-<lb/>
ing about<lb/>
Mikles points out Newswttk on<lb/>
Campus was "very careful not to<lb/>
mention the name of the student<lb/>
they talked to" in assessing the<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
Students were quoted by name<lb/>
in describing four of the article's<lb/>
11 courses, including Kaplan's.<lb/>
The other courses were Ap-<lb/>
prehension Reduction at<lb/>
Oklahoma, Human Sexuality at<lb/>
Colorado, Metropolitan Los<lb/>
Angeles at UCLA, Structure of<lb/>
the New York Mambo at Yale,<lb/>
Recording Arts Workshop at<lb/>
Southern Cal, Theater Apprecia-<lb/>
tion I at Florida, and<lb/>
h?colate at Cal- Berkeley.<lb/>
ans S'reet Ma<lb/>
Formai Wea<lb/>
ctemfcecfe's<lb/>
TOP-SfOEir<lb/>
Reg Price $59.95<lb/>
Now $47.90<lb/>
Canvas, Am. Cup. &amp; Oxford<lb/>
all 20 percent oft.<lb/>
t 1 SHOP<lb/>
Caro ma Eas Ma<lb/>
Big &amp; Fail Oeps<lb/>
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Foshion Cut For Both Mm? Women (919)752- V<lb/>
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Qttfc ISaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, General ????,?<lb/>
GREG RIDEOUT, Managing Editor<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. sews?d?or J.T. Pietrzak, ova Advtnutm<lb/>
Randy Mews, ?? em? Anthony Martin, bus,? Manager<lb/>
TINA MAROSCHAK, Features Editor KATHY FUERST, Production Manager<lb/>
Bill Austin, gmwm rrrmr Linda Vizena, mwiwi ???<lb/>
September 6, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Women V.P.<lb/>
The Price Is Too Much<lb/>
Can a woman run for vice presi-<lb/>
dent? Silly question 20 years ago.<lb/>
But now, as we know, a woman is<lb/>
doing just that. Rep. Geraldine<lb/>
Ferraro is on the campaign trail at<lb/>
this very moment. Yet the question<lb/>
remains. Can she run? Consider<lb/>
the climate Ferraro is being sub-<lb/>
jected to as she roams the country<lb/>
in her quest for Blair House. Is it<lb/>
conducive to a healthy society?<lb/>
Is America willing to fully part<lb/>
with the so-called traditional role<lb/>
of women? For all the leaps and<lb/>
bounds of progress, the answer<lb/>
seems to be no. Because of this,<lb/>
Ferraro is undergoing the most in-<lb/>
tense scrutiny the country has ever<lb/>
seen save the inquiry into the<lb/>
assasination of President Kennedy.<lb/>
The consensus appears to be,<lb/>
"let's see if she's man enough to<lb/>
take what we can give her Socie-<lb/>
ty's yearnings, in this case, are<lb/>
manifested by the press.<lb/>
We feel newspapers, TV sta-<lb/>
tions, magazines, etc etc are ac-<lb/>
ting too harshly. They sense a big<lb/>
story if something negative can be<lb/>
found. Thus, they are stretching<lb/>
the bounds of good journalism.<lb/>
Very much so. What the media<lb/>
have done is to make it impossible<lb/>
for most people to run for a high<lb/>
public office. Many who are overly<lb/>
qualified just don't see the<lb/>
justification for the intense<lb/>
scrutiny they would be under.<lb/>
What you will end up getting are<lb/>
the power-crazy and the gluttons-<lb/>
for-punishment running for office.<lb/>
The problem is compounded<lb/>
when a woman is involved. And<lb/>
although the extraordinary<lb/>
character of Rep. Ferraro has<lb/>
enabled her to withstand the<lb/>
tremendous pressure on her and<lb/>
give a splendid performance at her<lb/>
recent press conference (read grill-<lb/>
ing), most women ? or man for<lb/>
that matter ? can't take it. What a<lb/>
questionable tenant in a building<lb/>
her husband used to own has to do<lb/>
with the way she will help run the<lb/>
country is not relevant. Tradition<lb/>
dictates that a wife is connected to<lb/>
her husband but the reverse is not<lb/>
true. So no one digs deep into Joan<lb/>
Mondale's private or business life.<lb/>
The tangents the press, and<lb/>
ultimately society, has gotten off<lb/>
to are way off base.<lb/>
The price of power is too high.<lb/>
Too few good people are willing to<lb/>
pay the going rate. The people wat-<lb/>
ching Ferraro's experience,<lb/>
especially women, may decide they<lb/>
don't want to play the game. The<lb/>
country will suffer for it.<lb/>
STRANGE 7OT5 W WS MIP-AIR COLLISIOH 7W5 Htift,<lb/>
It Just Sounds Too Funny<lb/>
No More Pee Dee<lb/>
The Olde<lb/>
SAL<lb/>
The<lb/>
All AB<lb/>
In exchange<lb/>
ticket sU-b,<lb/>
wich of our<lb/>
of equal or<lb/>
FREF<lb/>
THREE 11 <lb/>
PK IAU<lb/>
Happ<lb/>
4pm ui<lb/>
10pm ui<lb/>
m?mH?MmErmH,TmiwsRprW,<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
Today, my "Things I Thought<lb/>
Of column switches to one topic.<lb/>
Yes, I know this is rarely done, but<lb/>
the subject is important. Today, let's<lb/>
all think about that unlovable<lb/>
character ? Pee Dee. Let me set the<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
Some friends and I were sitting<lb/>
around talking about the football<lb/>
game and, well, just Pirate athletics in<lb/>
general. The talk was subdued follow-<lb/>
ing the Florida St. thrashing, and<lb/>
much of it naturallly centered around<lb/>
why we lost.<lb/>
"Well, heck, Greg, I just don't<lb/>
know what happened said Sam the<lb/>
ROTC man. 'i got up to use the<lb/>
sandbox in the first quarter and when<lb/>
I got back ol' Ed was drawing X's<lb/>
and O's for the Temple game. Goldar-<lb/>
nit! I think it's a !$&amp;???? Com-<lb/>
munist plot by the Cubans ? who are<lb/>
infested in Florida anyway ? to<lb/>
humiliate us God-fearing, good guys<lb/>
here in the real United States. If Jesse<lb/>
had been there, we'd have won<lb/>
Big Bob said, "I think we should<lb/>
have played Pittsburgh first. We need-<lb/>
ed a little warm up. Ah, it was just an<lb/>
off day. If Ed had let me QB, I'd a<lb/>
shown'em<lb/>
 thought for a moment. I knew<lb/>
they both had plausible explanations,<lb/>
but, alas, they were both wrong. What<lb/>
it was ? the it being why we lost ?<lb/>
was ? that, that, that GUY. The,<lb/>
gulp, our mascot. Pee Pee. Dip Dee.<lb/>
Dee pee ? ah shit, you know what<lb/>
I'm trying to say. That unmenacing,<lb/>
unfierce, unstrong, uncool, small pur-<lb/>
ple thing the half-baked athletic<lb/>
department wants us to rally around.<lb/>
PEE DEE. (Give me a break!)<lb/>
Where did the people who approved<lb/>
this leave their brains when the deci-<lb/>
sion was made. It's bad enough the<lb/>
thing sounds like a breakfast cereal<lb/>
character. It's bad enough everytime I<lb/>
say the name someone points me in<lb/>
the direction of a John. It's bad<lb/>
enough people are confusing the darn<lb/>
thing with the tweetie bird cartoon.<lb/>
BUT, for gosh sakes, the short,<lb/>
stocky, ugly guy looks just like the<lb/>
Carolina Ram, the Georgia Tech<lb/>
Yellow Jacket and the N.C. State<lb/>
wolf!<lb/>
C'mon. Can't we at least try to be<lb/>
original. This off-the-rack-at-Krogers<lb/>
stuff is unbecoming of an up-and-<lb/>
coming sports program.<lb/>
But, it's not too late to get our old,<lb/>
fierce Pirate back. Which, incidental-<lb/>
ly, was drawn after many hours of<lb/>
research on North Carolina pirates by<lb/>
an ECU student. Let's be university<lb/>
enough to admit we made a mistake.<lb/>
No one likes it. Not the students I'e<lb/>
talked to. Not any of the faculty I've<lb/>
talked. And, from the grapevine, the<lb/>
alumni aren't to hot about the darn<lb/>
thing either.<lb/>
I, this paper, and the students are<lb/>
ready to wage war on Pee Dee. (Gee,<lb/>
sounds like we're planning an invasion<lb/>
of the toilet bowl.) We will not rest<lb/>
until ECU Public Safety bans the<lb/>
short, smug, arrogant thing from ever<lb/>
again setting foot on this campus.<lb/>
So, remember let's keep those let-<lb/>
ters coming in support of the Get-Pee -<lb/>
Dee-Out-Of-Here campaign. Yes, a<lb/>
world without Pee Dee is a safer one.<lb/>
Republican Zealots Confuse Everyone In Dallas, America<lb/>
ByTRB<lb/>
Tkc New RepuWtc<lb/>
The Games of the Ilnd Reaganiad opened of-<lb/>
ficially with the hitherto and henceforth unknown<lb/>
Katherine D. Ortega settling for a bronze medal in<lb/>
women's freestyle orating.<lb/>
Judges rejected a challenge to Jeane<lb/>
Kirkpatrick's gold medal after urinalysis showed<lb/>
no trace of Democratic impurities in her system.<lb/>
The general level of competition was low.<lb/>
There was a reception in honor of Mrs.<lb/>
Kirkpatrick and the two other women in President<lb/>
Reagan's cabinet, Elizabeth Dole and Margaret<lb/>
Heckler, at Dallas' famous Neiman-Marcus<lb/>
department store. Entertainment was provided by<lb/>
a conga line of nearly naked black ladies who<lb/>
weaved through the crowd to the beat of a bongo<lb/>
drum, whooping and chanting. Honest.<lb/>
The chant was imcomprehensible, but I suppose<lb/>
it translated roughly as, "See? Who says the<lb/>
Republican Party doesn't respect women?"<lb/>
To the young turks who took over the 1984<lb/>
Republican platform, and seem well on their way<lb/>
to taking over the party ? Reps. Jack Kemp and<lb/>
Newt Gingrich leading the pack ? this convention<lb/>
is the kickoff not merely of an election campaign<lb/>
but of something they call the "Conservative Op-<lb/>
portunity Society which will extend long beyond<lb/>
Reagan's second term.<lb/>
The chief feature of the "COS" will be the vir-<lb/>
tual disappearance of taxes. In this sense, the con-<lb/>
vention is a foretaste of life in the Conservative<lb/>
Opportunity Society, since almost all the lavish<lb/>
celebrating that went on in Dallas (as well as, to be<lb/>
fair, at the Democratic convention) was paid for<lb/>
with tax-free dollars as somebody's "business ex-<lb/>
pense<lb/>
We saw in Dallas how the miracle of capitalism,<lb/>
when unburdened by taxation, can supply almost<lb/>
unlimited quantities of food and drink to<lb/>
thousands of ravenous politicians and journalists,<lb/>
at no apparent cost to anybody. I never saw a<lb/>
dollar change hands.<lb/>
Two episodes involving a lowly comma illustrate<lb/>
the difference in self-confidence and clarity of pur-<lb/>
pose in the two parties. The Democratic platform,<lb/>
in its discussion of affirmative action, originally<lb/>
denounced "quotas, which are un-American and<lb/>
cause cancer or some such ringing formulation.<lb/>
The Jesse Jackson forces demanded removal of the<lb/>
comma, leaving the suggestion that some kinds of<lb/>
quotas are OK. The final version avoided all direct<lb/>
reference to quotas.<lb/>
The Republicans had the exact opposite ex-<lb/>
perience on the topic of taxes. The original draft<lb/>
read, "We therefore oppose any attempts to in-<lb/>
crease taxes which would harm the recovery" and<lb/>
cause cancer, etc etc. The Gingrich-Kemp zealots<lb/>
demanded that a comma be added before the<lb/>
"which In this case, the zealots won, thus put-<lb/>
ting the Republican Party firmly on record as<lb/>
believing that all tax increases cause cancer. (Or<lb/>
were delegates swayed by grammar? Without a<lb/>
comma, the word should be "that and not<lb/>
"which)<lb/>
The Republicans are equally unequivocal about<lb/>
quotas. They say, "We oppose attempts to dictate<lb/>
results Quotas are the most insidious form of<lb/>
discrimination But in another passage, about<lb/>
encouraging entrepreneurship, they brag about<lb/>
how much they've expanded the 8(a) program of<lb/>
the Small Business Administration. This program<lb/>
guarantees a fixed percentage of government con-<lb/>
tracts for minorities. It is ? how you say? ? a<lb/>
quota.<lb/>
But this is a rare lapse into self-contradiction in a<lb/>
document that generally knows its own mind.<lb/>
More telling is a contradiction between this year's<lb/>
platform and the Republican platform of 1980.<lb/>
Four years ago, the platform charged that the<lb/>
Democrats "seek to derail our nation's money<lb/>
creation policies and swore, "The independence<lb/>
of the Federal Reserve System must be preserved<lb/>
This year's version declares that "The in-<lb/>
dependence of the Federal Reserve Board's<lb/>
destabilizing actions muststop It demands<lb/>
"coordination between fiscal and monetary<lb/>
policy and hints that it's time for a gold stan-<lb/>
dard.<lb/>
Inflation has subsided mainly because Volcker<lb/>
squeezed it out with a painful recession. This was<lb/>
not the best remedy, but it was the only remedy<lb/>
anyone was prepared to administer. Volcker's<lb/>
recession set the stage for Reagan's recovery.<lb/>
Renewed confidence in the currency is more<lb/>
responsible than tax cuts for the present boom in<lb/>
long-term investment.<lb/>
The Republicans take credit for curbing infla-<lb/>
tion. "We did it their platform says. But they<lb/>
blame the recession on a two-headed beast called<lb/>
"Carter-Mondale A COS manifesto issued on<lb/>
the eve of the convention demands "an absolute<lb/>
commitment to pursue honest money which it<lb/>
correctly calls the key to lower interest rates and<lb/>
long-term growth. Yet Gingrich says with con-<lb/>
tempt that. "One way we could in fact gain<lb/>
(against) the Japanese is to loan them Paul<lb/>
Volcker.<lb/>
The gold standard is supposed to be an antiseptic<lb/>
solution to the problem of avoiding inflation<lb/>
without causing stagnation. As an "automatic<lb/>
pilot" device that avoids the risks of both human<lb/>
ineptitude and political pressure, it has some ap-<lb/>
peal. But a gold standard doesn't avoid the pain of<lb/>
tight money. It is tight money, as William Jennings<lb/>
Bryan memorably reminded an earlier convention.<lb/>
And while the gold standard avoids human<lb/>
vagaries, it has unpredictable vagaries of its own,<lb/>
which allowed rapid inflations and deflations long<lb/>
before Richard Nixon shut the gold window in<lb/>
1971.<lb/>
The Republican's platform gloats that "those<lb/>
earning more than $50,000 pay a larger percentage<lb/>
of total income taxes than they did in 1980 An<lb/>
Urban Institute report released the same week<lb/>
reveals why.<lb/>
It's not the "free lunch" promised by supply-<lb/>
side economics ? more revenue from lower taxes.<lb/>
Affluent people pay more of the income tax<lb/>
because affluent people have more of the income.<lb/>
Theirs has risen from 8.7 percent while that of the<lb/>
poorest faith has declined by 7.6 percent and the<lb/>
median family's has stayed about even.<lb/>
But this is all traditional economic thought,<lb/>
which Gingrich dismisses as "geriatric economics<lb/>
for a dying industrial economy What we need, he<lb/>
says, is "pediatric economics for a baby-boom<lb/>
economy Goo-goo.<lb/>
let. IH4, I tit Feature Syndicate. I?k.<lb/>
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<lb/>
EUj<lb/>
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ft<lb/>
ikJftf<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0005"/><lb/>
)J<lb/>
I Ml hAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
k?W<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
1<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
ss<lb/>
7W5 HfiSfC<lb/>
I've<lb/>
ie darn<lb/>
?<lb/>
enca<lb/>
i - con-<lb/>
gain<lb/>
Paul<lb/>
septic<lb/>
i nation<lb/>
matic<lb/>
" numan<lb/>
me ap-<lb/>
pain of<lb/>
 lennings<lb/>
ention.<lb/>
ids human<lb/>
f its own,<lb/>
Flations long<lb/>
? idow in<lb/>
8 ? se<lb/>
age<lb/>
I in 1980 ?' An<lb/>
leased the same week<lb/>
ipply-<lb/>
om lower taxes.<lb/>
he income tax<lb/>
'he income.<lb/>
tale that of the<lb/>
erceni and the<lb/>
? en.<lb/>
lomic thought,<lb/>
ttric economics<lb/>
 hat we need, he<lb/>
a babv-boom<lb/>
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Continued Prom Page 1<lb/>
Republicans, the party's conser-<lb/>
vative youth group.<lb/>
The College Republicans hope<lb/>
to register nearly 200,000 ouths<lb/>
before the election.<lb/>
Abramoff is behind the "Fritz-<lb/>
busters" campaign as well, which<lb/>
will also tour campuses this fall.<lb/>
Armed with $25,000 worth of<lb/>
buttons, t-shirts and<lb/>
bumperstickers, the group en-<lb/>
joyed a bull market in Dallas and<lb/>
quickly recouped its investment,<lb/>
Abramoff says.<lb/>
A supporter donated an old am-<lb/>
bulance to transport the four<lb/>
Fritzbusters, and Yale student<lb/>
Paul Erickson wrote lyrics, sung<lb/>
to the "Ghostbusters" melody,<lb/>
that goes in part: "If there-<lb/>
something strange in America,<lb/>
who you gonna call? Fritz-<lb/>
busters! If your tax rates are high,<lb/>
way up in the sky, who you gonna<lb/>
call? Fritzbusters<lb/>
A GOP delegate hopes to make<lb/>
a Fritzbusters video for M-TV, ac-<lb/>
cording to Fritzbuster Kim<lb/>
Manifold, who by day is a Univer-<lb/>
sity of Texas student.<lb/>
On a more -omber note,<lb/>
Reagan vouth leaders also will<lb/>
stage a "Liberation Da" on Oc-<lb/>
toer 25th, when American<lb/>
students who were in Grenada at<lb/>
the time of the 1983 U.S. invasion<lb/>
will speak at more than 100 col-<lb/>
lege rallies around the nation.<lb/>
Man of the young delegate<lb/>
were looking farther into the<lb/>
future, in the rite speculation<lb/>
about who would be the 19s-<lb/>
GOP nominee, Rep. Jack Kemp<lb/>
of New York was a clear favorite<lb/>
among the ouih group-<lb/>
Kemp was the featured speaker<lb/>
at a youth rally at the convention,<lb/>
where he told the enthusiastic<lb/>
crowd the Republicans can<lb/>
become a majority party.<lb/>
He urged the oung people to<lb/>
provide "a leader that will la)<lb/>
this party into the next century<lb/>
'We are the part ol these r<lb/>
pie's future echoed Abram I<lb/>
later. "We're going to explain U<lb/>
them to .ote for technology, ex<lb/>
pansion. The Democrats are tht<lb/>
party of no hope. We're growth<lb/>
oriented, carine about solutions<lb/>
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THE EASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
SEPTI MBKK6. 1984<lb/>
L ' "W<lb/>
The Fraternity Experience<lb/>
Fraternity life-offers U gjHerKf of a com<lb/>
tnnation of different stages It involves rushing,<lb/>
pledging, being a brother, and finally, being an<lb/>
alumnus after graduation trom college.<lb/>
What is Rush?<lb/>
The first and foremost stage is iha! o! the frater-<lb/>
nity rush. As a student at ECU, rush is very im<lb/>
portant. because joining a fraternity depends on<lb/>
this stage Each fraternity at ECU is different<lb/>
Each stresses different qualities which may or may<lb/>
not appeal to sou Therefore, deciding which<lb/>
fraternity you would like to join is an important<lb/>
decision to make.<lb/>
Fratermts rush at East Carolina is informal and<lb/>
open An individual has the freedom to look at all<lb/>
of the houses during this period. There arc three<lb/>
days that all houses are open for rush During that<lb/>
time, you will want to visa each house at least<lb/>
once Men are encouraged to participate fully in<lb/>
these three davs, to meet as many of the members<lb/>
a possible. After these three days, a man should<lb/>
have a good idea of what houses interest him.<lb/>
The purpose of rush is not only to have a good<lb/>
time; it also gives you a chance to meet new people<lb/>
and for them to meet sou. Rush is a meaningful<lb/>
experience that can lead to iong-iasting college<lb/>
nendships<lb/>
 hat is Pledging?<lb/>
Pledging consists of an educational process that<lb/>
familiarizes voi ujrh your individual fraternity's<lb/>
history This period will last from eight to 10<lb/>
weeks I ike rush, this will be a period of time for<lb/>
you to make a final decision on whether fraternity<lb/>
life is right for you. You will have the chance to<lb/>
paiucipate in chapter functions. The activities of<lb/>
pledges vanes from house to house but is<lb/>
guaranteed to be a most enjoyable time.<lb/>
What is it like<lb/>
to be a Brother?<lb/>
As a mother, von uill do most ot the same<lb/>
ih t, flat ffgrt do4 tfunafrjyouitpfc dgtBguprsk<lb/>
vice to East Cuioliiui and the surrounding cbm<lb/>
jnumty is a top priority of all fraternities. Also,<lb/>
social calendars must be planned at least a<lb/>
semester in advance to allow the brothers to get all<lb/>
their studying done beforehand. Participating in<lb/>
serenades, dances and sorority mixers provides<lb/>
many opportunities for making new friends and<lb/>
for taking a break from school during the<lb/>
semester.<lb/>
The allumni and intramural programs are also<lb/>
important parts of the fraternity. An active alum-<lb/>
ni program keeps graduates involved in the<lb/>
chapter. Intramurals helps to bring out that com-<lb/>
petitive spirit which lies deep within us all.<lb/>
Another experience in fraternity life that can help<lb/>
you to become a better person is the respon-<lb/>
sibilities and leadership capabilities that are learn-<lb/>
ed by being an officer.<lb/>
Most important of all is the feeling of<lb/>
brotherhood, of knowing that there are always<lb/>
several around whom you can depend on in time<lb/>
of need or simply have a good time with.<lb/>
What is it like<lb/>
to be an Alumnus?<lb/>
Upon graduation, as an alumnus, one of your<lb/>
first benefits from having been in a fraternity will<lb/>
be vour use of job-finding opportunities, which<lb/>
every fraternity has. Applying the leadership<lb/>
qualities learned as a member of a fraternity is<lb/>
always a plus when looking for a job. Also, as an<lb/>
alumnus, you will always be welcome to return to<lb/>
your fraternity house at ECU to reminisce about<lb/>
your college days to the new undergraduate<lb/>
brothers.<lb/>
Of course, if you would like to be even more ac<lb/>
tive, then you may wish to join your chapter's<lb/>
alumni association. This organization will keep<lb/>
you in touch with your fraternity as well as with<lb/>
vour school.<lb/>
Greek Week U oother event enjoyed by ail Gr?ek<lb/>
Sigma Tau Gamma Tug-o-war.<lb/>
Jiitcr 9 ?. lt? (fouuril<lb/>
Glenn CONwa -<lb/>
on i<lb/>
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Kappa Alpha<lb/>
k&amp;ppa Sigma<lb/>
Beta ITieti Pi<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
greek<lb/>
alphabets<lb/>
ALPHA<lb/>
. '?-<lb/>
N<lb/>
greek<lb/>
terms<lb/>
B<lb/>
BETA<lb/>
My Uk<lb/>
E<lb/>
GAMMA<lb/>
am-ah<lb/>
DELTA<lb/>
dtl-llH<lb/>
EKILON<lb/>
ep-ti-lon<lb/>
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OM'CHG<lb/>
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KAPPA<lb/>
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LAMIDA<lb/>
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SIGMA<lb/>
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UPS1ION<lb/>
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it<lb/>
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Pl<lb/>
M<lb/>
Active - An inib?f?d r.ember of a fraternity, who is still active at<lb/>
(hecolie ge<lb/>
Kidding - Inviting a rushec to join a fraternity<lb/>
Chapter - The local unit of a national fraternity<lb/>
Fraternity - A Greek letter organization based on brotherhood<lb/>
and honor<lb/>
Creeks - Sorority or fraternity members<lb/>
Hazing - Unethical initiation practices frowned upon by Greek-<lb/>
letter societies<lb/>
Honorary - A fraternity which bases its membership on scholarship,<lb/>
achievements, and other prerequisites<lb/>
Housemother - The chaperone or house director who lives in the<lb/>
fraternity house<lb/>
independents - Students who are not members of social fraterni-<lb/>
ties<lb/>
Initiation - Ritualistic ceremony by which pledges are made active<lb/>
members<lb/>
? nterfratemity Council (IKC) - College organization of men's<lb/>
fraternities<lb/>
Finning - The act of bestowing a fraternity pin of a man upon the<lb/>
girl of his choice<lb/>
Pledge - A man who has accepted the bid of a fraternity and who<lb/>
ha taken the first step toward full membership<lb/>
Preferential bidding - A system used during the last days of rush<lb/>
by fraternities to indicate their choices<lb/>
Professional fraternities - Specialized fraternities which confine<lb/>
its membership to a special field of professional or vocational<lb/>
education Om may he a member of both a prdfesstonal and<lb/>
a social college fraternity<lb/>
Sorority - A Creek letter sisterhood, also called a fraternity<lb/>
KU<lb/>
Sigma Nil<lb/>
?<lb/>
foiTvf?<lb/>
M<lb/>
I<lb/>
k&amp;jfr'n<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
Signs Taj Gamma<lb/>
the<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
experience<lb/>
EC<lb/>
Septe<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
m m m ss?s?j?afc?.<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
3?ter3rrtt<lb/>
ItMDtNi<lb/>
j (Lumtctl<lb/>
GLENN CONWAY<lb/>
take to<lb/>
? a to e. ?.<lb/>
?-V, tl .<lb/>
?<lb/>
!? C <lb/>
K 0 1 ? I II , to<lb/>
11. f.ateinite s<lb/>
? o.enuikelun <lb/>
1.1 <lb/>
vH'i i; i i c .<lb/>
. J I 4 fc ' ('<lb/>
.<lb/>
?.1.<lb/>
1<lb/>
 s v 2I34<lb/>
Fraternities At ECU I<lb/>
Fiction<lb/>
Fact<lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
I dont care anything about fraternities; all they<lb/>
do is drink and party.<lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
I can't join a fraternity because I'm not rich. All<lb/>
fraternity brother are rich.<lb/>
The Greeks participating in one of the many philanthropic<lb/>
projects held during the year.<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
I NO ONE ADMITTED<lb/>
 WITHOUT<lb/>
 ECU ID &amp; DRIVER'S<lb/>
I LICENSE<lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
1 don't want to join a fraternity because they all<lb/>
dress and act the same. I want to be myself.<lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
If I do join a fraternity, I'll do bad in school,<lb/>
maybe even flunk out. Fraternity brothers' grades<lb/>
are always terrible, and they never study.<lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
I'm scared to rush a t.aternity, because if I go to<lb/>
one, I'll have to join.<lb/>
Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
?? <lb/>
Fiction:<lb/>
If I do join a fraternity, I'll lose all my old<lb/>
friends and won't be able to get involved in other<lb/>
campus activities.<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsiion<lb/>
Fact;<lb/>
Contrary to popular belief, drinking is not a<lb/>
prerequisite to joining a fraternity. The consump-<lb/>
tion of alcohol is a decision that is left up to the in-<lb/>
dividual. Partying is only one aspect of fraternity<lb/>
life. The total fraternity experience involves par-<lb/>
ticipation in scholarship, service, athletic activities<lb/>
and most importantly, brotherhood.<lb/>
Fact:<lb/>
A common misconception that often prevents<lb/>
college men from joining a fraternity is that the<lb/>
fraternity experience" is too expensive.<lb/>
However, on the average, fraternity life will pro-<lb/>
bably save you money. The greatest advantage ap-<lb/>
pears in room rent. For the 1983-84 school year<lb/>
dorm rent is listed at S430 per semester, while the<lb/>
average room rent in a fraternity house is $340 per<lb/>
semester. Also, as a fraternity member, most of<lb/>
your social activities will be paid through your<lb/>
dues Individual social expense! can add up to<lb/>
much more. Although fraternities are reputed to<lb/>
be expensive, a closer look can show a more effi-<lb/>
cient and meaningful use of your money.<lb/>
Fact:<lb/>
While fraternity members do live together,<lb/>
share common goals and interests and participate<lb/>
in many of the same activities, no one ever<lb/>
demands that you dress one way, nor that you act<lb/>
m a certain manner. Most fraternities pride<lb/>
themselves on diversity. Just as there are dozens of<lb/>
types of students at ECU. the same applies to<lb/>
members of each fraternity.<lb/>
Fact:<lb/>
Not true, a top priority of most fraternities on<lb/>
campus is scholastic achievement. National<lb/>
studies show that members of fraternities are more<lb/>
likely to graduate than non-members. This is pro-<lb/>
moted at ECU through the assistance and en-<lb/>
couragement of fellow brothers. Perhaps the<lb/>
greatest academic advantage the fraternity system<lb/>
has to offer are the individual houses themselves.<lb/>
Being in a fraternity brings one into contact with<lb/>
as wide variety of people who possess a wide range<lb/>
of knowledge in different academic areas.<lb/>
Fact:<lb/>
A fraternity does not consider a visit during<lb/>
rush to a house a commitment to join. As a matter<lb/>
of fact, you are encouraged to rush more than one<lb/>
fraternity to see which one. if any. is suited to you<lb/>
The more contact one makes with a fraternity is to<lb/>
the advantage of everyone concerned.<lb/>
Fact:<lb/>
As was stateu before, fraternities don't seek to<lb/>
take over and control your life; they are merely a<lb/>
group of men bonded together in brotherhood by<lb/>
common goals and ideals. Fraternities are places<lb/>
to make new friends, not to forget the old ones<lb/>
you have. Yon are also encouraged to get involved<lb/>
in campus activities. Of all the factors in a univer-<lb/>
sity environment, fraternities offer the greatest<lb/>
opportunity for leadership development. In fact,<lb/>
the continued successful and efficient operation of<lb/>
a fraternity demands that leadership be developed.<lb/>
?????-tv??? ?'?<lb/>
Tail Kappa Epsiion<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
Sign Ta? Gamma<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
experience<lb/>
ECU Rush<lb/>
September 10-12<lb/>
1. Alpha Sigma Phi<lb/>
2. Beta Theta Pi<lb/>
3. Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
4. Kappa Alpha<lb/>
5. Kappa Sigma<lb/>
6. Lambda Chi Alpha<lb/>
7. Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
8. Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
9. Sigma Nu<lb/>
10. Sigma Phi Epsiion<lb/>
11. Sigma Tau Gamma<lb/>
12. Tau Kappa Epsiion<lb/>
13. Zeta Beta Tau<lb/>
14. Theta Chi Colonv<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
Early Indian Campsite Discovered In Area<lb/>
MONROE, N.C. (UPI) - Ar-<lb/>
chaeologists plan to investigate<lb/>
next year what may be the earliest<lb/>
known Indian campsite in the<lb/>
Carolinas and possibly the<lb/>
Southeast, a site that is said to<lb/>
date back about 11,000 years.<lb/>
If the site near the Rocky River<lb/>
in Union County is that old, the<lb/>
discovery could help revolutionize<lb/>
archaeologists' view of early<lb/>
man's devlopment in North<lb/>
America. Archaeologists said the<lb/>
North Carolina discovery could<lb/>
support the theory of Floyd<lb/>
Painter, an archaeologist with the<lb/>
Virginia Museum of Marine<lb/>
Sciences in Virginia Beach, Va.<lb/>
For years, Painter of Norfolk,<lb/>
Va has theorized that a group of<lb/>
Indians known as the Clovis peo-<lb/>
ple developed from another<lb/>
culture in the Southeast, and not<lb/>
from some unknown culture in<lb/>
the West as had been supposed.<lb/>
The North Carolina finding by<lb/>
a group of amateur archaelogists<lb/>
is thought to be so significant that<lb/>
archaeologists Dennis Stanford of<lb/>
the Smithsonian Institution and<lb/>
Vance Haynes, a radiocarbon-<lb/>
dating specialist with the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Arizona, have agreed to ex-<lb/>
cavate there next year.<lb/>
They are expected to establish<lb/>
whether the early date is correct.<lb/>
For two decades, archaeologists<lb/>
had believed the Clovis people,<lb/>
known by a scattering of peculiar-<lb/>
ly fluted, leaf-shaped spearpoints,<lb/>
had been the first Indians to use<lb/>
the stone-tipped spear. Clovis<lb/>
sites have been radiocarbon dated<lb/>
at about 9,500 to 11,500 years old.<lb/>
Archaeologists had believed<lb/>
another culture, the Hardaway<lb/>
people whose campsite was<lb/>
discovered in Union County, lived<lb/>
after the Clovis people. But<lb/>
researchers now say charcoal<lb/>
from the site ? radiocarbon<lb/>
dated to 11,100 years ago ? in-<lb/>
dicates the Hardaway people may<lb/>
have coexisted or preceded the<lb/>
Clovis people.<lb/>
The Hardaway people would<lb/>
Teachers May Get Raise<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) ? The<lb/>
state Board of Education today<lb/>
plans to consider a statewide<lb/>
career development plan that<lb/>
would raise teachers' salaries, in-<lb/>
crease benefits and provide an an-<lb/>
nual salary of about $45,700 for<lb/>
top teachers.<lb/>
The 1984 General Assembly<lb/>
had ordered the state to adopt a<lb/>
career plan by October. The<lb/>
General Assembly is expected to<lb/>
select several school districts<lb/>
across the state to test the plan.<lb/>
The proposed plan by the state<lb/>
Board of Education would<lb/>
establish five levels of teachers<lb/>
with each level including salary in-<lb/>
creases and additional benefits.<lb/>
The plan also would include<lb/>
teacher evaluation committees,<lb/>
composed of teachers and ad-<lb/>
ministrators.<lb/>
A statement accompanying the<lb/>
plan said the board "intends to at-<lb/>
tract the best candidates into<lb/>
teaching, to develop and retain<lb/>
teachers in the profession for<lb/>
longer periods of time, reward ex-<lb/>
cellent instruction, as well as<lb/>
create career options<lb/>
The statement said currently all<lb/>
teachers are treated alike, based<lb/>
on certification and level of ex-<lb/>
perience, regardless of their effec-<lb/>
tiveness.<lb/>
Under the proposed plan, a<lb/>
teacher at the Initial Level would<lb/>
be paid a base salary, estimated to<lb/>
be $15,680, and would be given a<lb/>
two-year, non-renewable cer-<lb/>
tificate to teach. The teacher<lb/>
would be closely supervised and<lb/>
would be periodically evaluated<lb/>
by a team of educators.<lb/>
To qualify for a continuing cer-<lb/>
tificate, the teacher must be<lb/>
recommended by the evaluation<lb/>
team.<lb/>
The next salary step ? the Pro-<lb/>
visional Level ? would pay a<lb/>
teacher about $17,150. After two<lb/>
years at the Provisional Level, a<lb/>
teacher would be recommended<lb/>
for the Career Status I level, at<lb/>
which he would receive a<lb/>
10-percent raise. The salary could<lb/>
range from $18,790 for teachers<lb/>
with at least two years experience<lb/>
to $34,620 for teachers with 31<lb/>
years experience.<lb/>
A Career Status I teacher could<lb/>
earn an additional 5 percent every<lb/>
other year if he completes at least<lb/>
tour continuing education credits<lb/>
during a two-year period.<lb/>
After two years as a Career<lb/>
Status I teacher, a teacher may ap-<lb/>
ply for Career Status II teacher<lb/>
would receive a 10-percent pay<lb/>
supplement and also be eligible<lb/>
for an additional 5-percent pay<lb/>
supplement for completing conti-<lb/>
nuing education courses.<lb/>
The state estimates salaries for<lb/>
Career Status II teachers would<lb/>
range from $20,540 to $29,952. A<lb/>
Career Status II teacher would be<lb/>
eligible for 11-month employ-<lb/>
ment, receiving an additional<lb/>
month's salary.<lb/>
After 12 years of teaching, a<lb/>
Career Status II teacher would be<lb/>
eligible for a one-year sabbatical<lb/>
MITCHELL'S BEAUTY<lb/>
SALON<lb/>
303 S. Mills St.<lb/>
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904<lb/>
Specialize in all hairare<lb/>
10 percent discount to all ECU<lb/>
Students with ID<lb/>
Barbara Mitchell - Owner<lb/>
with 70 percent of salary.<lb/>
After two years as a Career<lb/>
Status II teacher, a teacher may<lb/>
apply for Career Status III. To be<lb/>
approved, a teacher must have a<lb/>
master's degree and must have<lb/>
received "exceptional" evalua-<lb/>
tions. Continuing education<lb/>
courses also are a requirement.<lb/>
A Career Status III teacher<lb/>
would receive a 10 percent salary<lb/>
supplement and an additional 5<lb/>
percent supplement every other<lb/>
year for taking continuing educa-<lb/>
tion courses. Teachers salaries in<lb/>
this level would range from<lb/>
$22,590 to $45,6.<lb/>
Teachers also would be given a<lb/>
sabbatical at full salary if they had<lb/>
14 years experience.<lb/>
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then possibly be the earliest<lb/>
culture in North America to have<lb/>
used the so-called stone ar-<lb/>
rowhead, archaeologist said.<lb/>
Amateur archaeologist Heath<lb/>
Baucom of Oakboro discovered<lb/>
the North Carolina site as he<lb/>
walked with his two grandsons on<lb/>
his cousin's farm in August 1979.<lb/>
"I though it would be a good<lb/>
place to pick up some ar-<lb/>
rowheads Baucoms said.<lb/>
Baucom soon found one ar<lb/>
rowhead, but he also discovered<lb/>
stone chips and charcoal imbedd-<lb/>
ed in the clay and sand, indicating<lb/>
Indians had camped there over an<lb/>
extensive period.<lb/>
Within weeks, one of Baucoms<lb/>
sons found a scarce type of spear-<lb/>
point used by the Hardaway peo-<lb/>
ple, a culture once concentrated in<lb/>
the Piedmont and spread thinly<lb/>
across the South.<lb/>
Knowing there was no date for<lb/>
the Hardaway culture, Baucom, a<lb/>
66-vear-old millworker, and<lb/>
Rodnev Peck, a Duke Power Co.<lb/>
design supervisor, contacted the<lb/>
state Department of Cultural<lb/>
Resources for help in excavating<lb/>
and dating the site.<lb/>
The state declined to help the<lb/>
pair because of a lack of funds.<lb/>
So Baucom. Peck and other<lb/>
amateur archaeologists ? mostly<lb/>
members of the Charlotte-based<lb/>
Piedmont Archaeological Society<lb/>
? continued digging.<lb/>
A: a depth of 8 feet. thev<lb/>
discovered hearths that contained<lb/>
Hardaway point.<lb/>
h.<lb/>
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enter what man expc<lb/>
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at ECU Thursday S<lb/>
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The foruir<lb/>
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Science in cooperati r -  Peo<lb/>
pie for the .American w<lb/>
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Barrv Hager. din<lb/>
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forum land similar pr<lb/>
Asheville and Durham "g: <lb/>
Srbur concern that there is a cen-<lb/>
sorship danger in North i a<lb/>
today<lb/>
"High quality be ?<lb/>
ed and sometimes<lb/>
our classrooms anc es<lb/>
said. "All of us ?<lb/>
the First Amendment, about<lb/>
right to read and think foi<lb/>
ourseKes. need<lb/>
about this problem arc h a<lb/>
respond to it<lb/>
Dr. Gene Lamer, pi<lb/>
library science at ECl<lb/>
forum panelist, noted<lb/>
Greemille forum coim ck<lb/>
national Banned Books Weel<lb/>
Sept. 8-15.<lb/>
Lanier said cens rshipatteri<lb/>
at North Carolina <lb/>
universities have beet:<lb/>
such diverse books as<lb/>
Grapes of Wrath "The Dm<lb/>
Anne Frank "Catche-<lb/>
Rye "Huckleberr Finn<lb/>
tic Red Riding Hood "Th<lb/>
Living Bible<lb/>
Copies of a 1983 People<lb/>
American WA) reP?rt<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
i<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6. 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
V<lb/>
WS5ff?<lb/>
:c<lb/>
idake.<lb/>
e I've<lb/>
he ultvI've<lb/>
grthe<lb/>
)Ol. - dirn<lb/>
2 Sare<lb/>
Pe : cGee,<lb/>
ur: an inasion<lb/>
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thing fromeer<lb/>
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Of the Ge-Pee-<lb/>
Mign es3<lb/>
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d<lb/>
ica<lb/>
ith con-<lb/>
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lo; them Paul<lb/>
to in antiseptic<lb/>
avo ling inflation<lb/>
"automatic<lb/>
of both human<lb/>
ft has some ap-<lb/>
oid the pain of<lb/>
rilliam Jennings<lb/>
(ier convention,<lb/>
avoids human<lb/>
ries of its own,<lb/>
deflations long<lb/>
lold window in<lb/>
gtofcs that "those<lb/>
a larger percentage<lb/>
II in 1980 An<lb/>
he same week<lb/>
sed by supply-<lb/>
 m lower taxes.<lb/>
ie income tax<lb/>
of the income,<lb/>
hile that of the<lb/>
ercent and the<lb/>
ven.<lb/>
omic thought,<lb/>
atric economics<lb/>
hat we need, he<lb/>
a baby-boom<lb/>
Buildings Decaying On Many Campuses<lb/>
(CPS) ? Chemistry students at<lb/>
Columbia University in New York<lb/>
Nometimes can't complete lab ex-<lb/>
penments because mineral<lb/>
deposits clog the decades-old<lb/>
plumbing system in the school's<lb/>
iboratories.<lb/>
I ast semester, over 240 Univer-<lb/>
sity of Maryland students peti-<lb/>
tioned to get their rent money<lb/>
back because of "deplorable"<lb/>
dorm conditions like broken win-<lb/>
dows that are never repaired, hot<lb/>
ater that cuts out in mid-shower<lb/>
ind legions of ants and roaches<lb/>
he buildings.<lb/>
Administrators at Colorado's<lb/>
itate colleges and universities wor-<lb/>
ied publicly last week that<lb/>
eglected campus buildings ?<lb/>
tiering from sagging roofs,<lb/>
wiring, and cracked walls ?<lb/>
actually pose potential hazards to<lb/>
dent and faculty next fall.<lb/>
s ich campus building pro-<lb/>
teins, it seems, are cropping up<lb/>
schools nationwide as colleges<lb/>
enter what many experts have<lb/>
bbed "the deferred<lb/>
ntenance dilemma<lb/>
The need to renew and update<lb/>
d eplace campus facilities is a<lb/>
critical, nationwide problem<lb/>
arns Harvey Kaiser, vice presi-<lb/>
dent for facilities management at<lb/>
Syracuse University, and author<lb/>
"Crumbling Academe a<lb/>
book on the campus building pro-<lb/>
blem.<lb/>
"The problems include not only<lb/>
buildings, but grounds, utiltiy<lb/>
management, and equipment ?<lb/>
right across the board he adds.<lb/>
Overall, Kaiser estimates the<lb/>
nation's colleges must spend a<lb/>
minimum of $40 to $50 billion in<lb/>
the next decade to upgrade and<lb/>
replace dilapidated buildings and<lb/>
other campus facilities.<lb/>
UCLA Chancellor Charles<lb/>
Young would call Kaiser's<lb/>
estimate conservative.<lb/>
The University of California<lb/>
system alone, Young says, needs<lb/>
over $4 billion to repair and<lb/>
replac its facilities. He recently<lb/>
told a congressional committee<lb/>
the problem could cost the<lb/>
nation's colleges as much as $60<lb/>
billion over the next ten years.<lb/>
The experts trace the crisis to<lb/>
colleges stalling routing<lb/>
maintenance for many years.<lb/>
"Many buildings are simply<lb/>
reaching their half-lives<lb/>
observes Janet Jackley, with the<lb/>
National Association of College<lb/>
and University Business Officers.<lb/>
"Half the college physical<lb/>
plants in the country were built<lb/>
right after Sputnik (the first or-<lb/>
bital satellite launched by the<lb/>
Soviets in 1957), when there was a<lb/>
big push on education and<lb/>
research she says.<lb/>
Much of the post-Sputnik cam-<lb/>
pus building boom, though, was<lb/>
financed by federal loans and<lb/>
grants that no longer CAist, leaving<lb/>
school to maintain the buildings<lb/>
on their own.<lb/>
In addition, Kaiser points out<lb/>
that "very little attention was paid<lb/>
to older, existing buildings on<lb/>
campuses" during the boom.<lb/>
Now, "when administrators<lb/>
have been faced with the decision<lb/>
of firing faculty or repairing a<lb/>
building, they've opted to keep<lb/>
their faculty Jackley explains.<lb/>
The little money schools have to<lb/>
maintain buildings and equipment<lb/>
often has gone into urgent,<lb/>
government-mandated programs<lb/>
to remove hazardous materials ?<lb/>
such as asbestos ? or to retrofit<lb/>
buildings for handicapped<lb/>
students, Kaiser adds.<lb/>
So Colorado State University<lb/>
now estimates it needs $30 million<lb/>
just to get its existing facilities up<lb/>
to par. The state legislature,<lb/>
however, has given the school on-<lb/>
ly $77,000 for maintenance this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"At our present funding rate,<lb/>
it'll take 500 years to get our<lb/>
buildings structurally sound<lb/>
says Dick Conard, director of<lb/>
CSU's architecture and engineer-<lb/>
ing group.<lb/>
Banning Forum Scheduled<lb/>
fcCl News Bureau<lb/>
A public forum, "Censorship<lb/>
i ducation: From Kindergarten<lb/>
.ugh University will be held<lb/>
ai ECU Thursday, Sept. 13, at 7<lb/>
The forum is sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Department of Library<lb/>
rice in cooperation with Peo-<lb/>
ple for the American Way, a na-<lb/>
il citizens' group devoted to<lb/>
First Amendment issues. Other<lb/>
sponsors are the N.C. Freedom<lb/>
i mi t tee, the N.C. Library<lb/>
Association's Intellectual<lb/>
iom Committee and the N.C.<lb/>
ssociation of Educators.<lb/>
Barry Hager, director of the<lb/>
N.C. Office of People for the<lb/>
American Way and forum<lb/>
moderator, said the Greenville<lb/>
forum land similar programs in<lb/>
Asheville and Durham "grow out<lb/>
of our concern that there is a cen-<lb/>
ship danger in North Carolina<lb/>
"High quality b oks are attack-<lb/>
ed and sometimes banned from<lb/>
lassrooms and libraries he<lb/>
"All of us who care about<lb/>
? ;rs! Amendment, about the<lb/>
to read and think for<lb/>
urselves, need to learn more<lb/>
lit thib problem and how to<lb/>
respond to it<lb/>
Dr. Gene Lanier, professor of<lb/>
ibrary science at ECU and a<lb/>
rum panelist, noted that the<lb/>
rreenville forum coincides with<lb/>
national Banned Books Week<lb/>
Sept. 8-15.<lb/>
1 anier said censorship attempts<lb/>
North Carolina schools and<lb/>
ersities have been aimed at<lb/>
-uch diverse books as "The<lb/>
Grapes of Wrath "The Diary of<lb/>
Anne Frank "Catcher in the<lb/>
Rye "Huckleberry Finn "Lit-<lb/>
tle Red Riding Hood" and "The<lb/>
I iving Bible<lb/>
Copies of a 1983 People for the<lb/>
American WAy report outlining<lb/>
cases of censorship attempts will aspect of public education<lb/>
be distributed at the forum, he Hager said.<lb/>
said. An informal coffee hour will<lb/>
"We hope many citizens will percede the forum at the Willis<lb/>
turn out to discuss this important Building, First and Reade Streets.<lb/>
 And Now<lb/>
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"We're holding things together<lb/>
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Sooner or later, some of these<lb/>
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go down and become unusuable<lb/>
And while faculty salaries and<lb/>
tuition freezes continue to take<lb/>
precedence over maintenance fun-<lb/>
ding, Conard says, "we're even-<lb/>
tually going to find ourselves hard<lb/>
pressed to use faculty if they have<lb/>
no place to teach<lb/>
Many colleges share CSU's lack<lb/>
of maintenance funds, inspiring<lb/>
many experts to call for federal<lb/>
and private-sector aid to keep the<lb/>
country's college campuses from<lb/>
falling apart.<lb/>
A federal funding program "is<lb/>
desperately needed says Kaiser,<lb/>
as well as state and corporate<lb/>
assistance to help colleges main-<lb/>
tain their facilities.<lb/>
Of the dozens of federal pro-<lb/>
grams that helped build campuses<lb/>
in the late fifties and early sixties,<lb/>
though, "only one federal pro-<lb/>
gram exists right now" to aid<lb/>
campus building budgets, says<lb/>
NACUBO's Jackley.<lb/>
An average of 300 schools app-<lb/>
ly for that federal aid each year,<lb/>
she adds, but "maybe 20-25<lb/>
schools" get money.<lb/>
But "the current congress and<lb/>
the administration have given lit-<lb/>
tle indication" they'll expand the<lb/>
maintenance aid, she says.<lb/>
In the meantime, some schools<lb/>
are scrambling for maintenance<lb/>
money.<lb/>
Columbia University, for in-<lb/>
stance, paid a Washington, D.C.<lb/>
lobbying firm to get it a $20<lb/>
million federal grant for a new<lb/>
chemistry center.<lb/>
The University of Southern<lb/>
California sold an unused hotel ?<lb/>
once student housing ? to help<lb/>
finance dorm renovations.<lb/>
And Kaiser's Syracuse Univer-<lb/>
sity recently sold a $3.2 million<lb/>
painting to fund long-awaited<lb/>
building improvements there.<lb/>
"Schools need to become much<lb/>
more innovative, and a lot of at-<lb/>
tics need to be cleaned out he<lb/>
advises.<lb/>
Your Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
$20 Deposit Required<lb/>
Date: ? 5?-7tfc Time: 9:00 - <lb/>
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Including:<lb/>
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SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
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DISCOUNT DOES NOT APPLY TO<lb/>
ALCOHOL, TOBACCO PRODUCTS, FILM<lb/>
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Revco reserves the right to limit quantities.<lb/>
College<lb/>
(CPS) ? In a case that "serves<lb/>
notice that colleges are responsi-<lb/>
ble for students' safety, New<lb/>
York's highest court has ruled the<lb/>
State University of New York-<lb/>
Stony Brook was partly to blame<lb/>
for the rape of a student in one of<lb/>
its dorms.<lb/>
The ruling repeats recent ? and<lb/>
increasingly urgent ? warnings<lb/>
from legal experts that courts are<lb/>
making colleges responsible for all<lb/>
safety and security on their cam-<lb/>
puses, and that colleges are going<lb/>
to have to change in order to meet<lb/>
those responsibilities.<lb/>
In response, man colleges are<lb/>
imposing strict new regulations on<lb/>
student behavior ranging from<lb/>
drinking to dorm visiting hours<lb/>
epart<lb/>
B ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
S4?fT Vkni?<lb/>
The ECU Public Safety De:<lb/>
ment recently announced a<lb/>
crime prevention offue:<lb/>
Arthur Eugene (Gene) McA<lb/>
31, was renamed crime preve-<lb/>
officer after being a detect<lb/>
lieutenant since April, 1982<lb/>
replacing Corporal Rr<lb/>
Gurley. Cpl. Gurley will be<lb/>
ing McAbee this year, particula<lb/>
with the development ol<lb/>
! Sup<lb/>
The<lb/>
At Fil<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057661_0011"/><lb/>
I HI FAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6. 1984<lb/>
11<lb/>
.Lish<lb/>
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S j<lb/>
:hpaste<lb/>
?<lb/>
'XTUVJ<lb/>
iirrnt qt<lb/>
Colleges ResponsibleTor Students' Safety<lb/>
(CPS) - In a case that "serves<lb/>
notice that colleges are responsi-<lb/>
ble for students' safety, New<lb/>
 ork's highest court has ruled the<lb/>
State University of New York-<lb/>
Stonj Brook was partly to blame<lb/>
tor the rape of a student in one of<lb/>
its dorms.<lb/>
The ruling repeats recent ? and<lb/>
increasingly urgent ? warnings<lb/>
trom legal experts that courts are<lb/>
making colleges responsible for all<lb/>
safety and security on their cam-<lb/>
puses, and that colleges are going<lb/>
to have to change in orde. to meet<lb/>
:hose responsibilities.<lb/>
In response, many colleges are<lb/>
imposing strict new regulations on<lb/>
student behavior ranging from<lb/>
drinking to dorm visiting hours.<lb/>
A growing number are toying<lb/>
with the idea of banning or severe-<lb/>
ly limiting fraternities, a frequent<lb/>
source of campus injuries.<lb/>
"1 think (the New York deci-<lb/>
sion) reinforces other cases<lb/>
throughout the U.S in which<lb/>
colleges have been found liable<lb/>
for student injuries, says Leonard<lb/>
Territo, a criminologist and<lb/>
liability expert at the University of<lb/>
South Florida.<lb/>
While the suits involve<lb/>
everything from grade disputes to<lb/>
hazing deaths, students are now<lb/>
winning many of the rape cases<lb/>
they're bringing against their<lb/>
schools, Territo explains.<lb/>
The Hastings Law Center in<lb/>
San Francisco, for example, was<lb/>
forced to pay $215,000 in<lb/>
damages several years ago to a<lb/>
student who was raped in a<lb/>
women's restroom there.<lb/>
Similarly, Catholic University<lb/>
in Washington, D.C had to pay<lb/>
$20,000 to a student raped on its<lb/>
campus several years ago.<lb/>
Students now have analogous<lb/>
suits pending against the univer-<lb/>
sities of Washington, South<lb/>
Florida and Cal State at Chico,<lb/>
among others.<lb/>
Because some lower courts had<lb/>
ruled against the Stony Brook<lb/>
rape victim, legal observers have<lb/>
been watching the case closely.<lb/>
The Stony Brook student,<lb/>
Madelyn Miller, was attacked and<lb/>
raped in 1975 in her campus dor-<lb/>
mitory basement.<lb/>
Before the incident, Miller and<lb/>
other students, including the cam-<lb/>
pus newspaper, had complained<lb/>
repeatedly about the lack of<lb/>
security on campus, according to<lb/>
Martin Rubenstein, her lawyer.<lb/>
In 1980, a lower court agreed<lb/>
the university had failed to secure<lb/>
the residence hall well enough to<lb/>
stop criminals from entering,<lb/>
found Stony Brook negligent, and<lb/>
awarded Miller $25,000 in<lb/>
damages.<lb/>
University lawyers argued the<lb/>
school could not be sued because<lb/>
of the doctrine of sovereign im-<lb/>
munity, which prevents private<lb/>
citizens from suing government<lb/>
agencies. However, the judge rul-<lb/>
Department Promotes McA bee<lb/>
B FRNFSTROBFRTS<lb/>
suff Wrllft<lb/>
The ECU Public Safet Depart-<lb/>
ment recently announced a new<lb/>
crime prevention officer.<lb/>
Arthur Eugene (Gene) McAbee,<lb/>
il, was renamed crime prevention<lb/>
officer after being a detective<lb/>
lieutenant since April, 1982. He is<lb/>
replacing Corporal Rhonda<lb/>
Gurley. Cpl. Gurley will be help-<lb/>
ing McAbee this year, particularly<lb/>
vith the development of rape<lb/>
prevention programs.<lb/>
McAbee has been on with the<lb/>
department since August 1980.<lb/>
McAbee, as the new crime<lb/>
prevention officer, will be in<lb/>
charge of crime prevention pro-<lb/>
grams on campus. He will also be<lb/>
investigating police records and<lb/>
training police reserves or student<lb/>
officers.<lb/>
McAbee's main objective is to<lb/>
educate students about preventing<lb/>
crime. "I want students to realize<lb/>
and understand that crime<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
-<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
I Support <lb/>
The Pirates<lb/>
At Ficklen<lb/>
I Saturday; j I<lb/>
? i 5 ? ? i !<lb/>
T<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
exists McAbee said. He also<lb/>
plans to work with the media,<lb/>
SGA and the Resident Life<lb/>
Association to set up programs to<lb/>
aid in crime prevention. He is<lb/>
already planning a program called<lb/>
Operation Identification where<lb/>
students can register by serial<lb/>
numbers their valuables such as<lb/>
stereos and televisions with the<lb/>
Public Safety Department.<lb/>
McAbee commented that<lb/>
crimes should be reported.<lb/>
"Reporting crimes is verj impor-<lb/>
tant because it aids in recognizing<lb/>
patterns of the criminals. It also<lb/>
aids in recovering stolen property<lb/>
like bicycles<lb/>
McAbee graduated from ECU<lb/>
with a B.S. in Social Work and<lb/>
Correctional Services in 1976 and<lb/>
a M.S. in Administrative Services<lb/>
in 1982. He's had extensive train-<lb/>
ing in criminal investigation,<lb/>
fingerprinting, search warrants<lb/>
and sex crimes<lb/>
ed the university had the same<lb/>
responsibility as a private<lb/>
landlord in maintaining safety<lb/>
and security for on campus<lb/>
residents.<lb/>
An appellate court later ruled<lb/>
the university was indeed exempt<lb/>
from being sued, citing a state law<lb/>
which prevents citizens from suing<lb/>
because police fail to prevent a<lb/>
crime, explains New York Assis-<lb/>
tant Attorney General Julie<lb/>
Mereson, one of the attorneys<lb/>
representing Stony Brook.<lb/>
But last summer the New York<lb/>
State Court of Appeals upheld the<lb/>
original court decision, agreeing<lb/>
the school had a landlord's<lb/>
responsibility to provide a safe<lb/>
and secure living environment for<lb/>
its students.<lb/>
"Thus, a student who is injured<lb/>
in a criminal assault in a state-<lb/>
operated college dormitory" can<lb/>
sue the college if the student can<lb/>
prove school officials were<lb/>
negligent in preventing the attack,<lb/>
the New York judges ruled.<lb/>
Although Miller,<lb/>
students, and the<lb/>
other<lb/>
school<lb/>
newspaper had warned ad-<lb/>
ministrators the dorm was unsafe,<lb/>
"the doors at all of the ap-<lb/>
prosimately 10 entrances to the<lb/>
dormitory were kept unlocked at<lb/>
all hours the judges admonish-<lb/>
ed. Such inaction "was a prox-<lb/>
imate cause of the injury<lb/>
"Ten years ago Rubinstein<lb/>
speculates, "this case could very<lb/>
well have been lost. Now, we feel<lb/>
very strongly it will add momen-<lb/>
tum to the trend of holding col-<lb/>
leges more responsible for student<lb/>
injuries. It has certainly served<lb/>
notice to attorneys in similar<lb/>
situations<lb/>
If attorneys and administrators<lb/>
heed such warnings to make their<lb/>
ampuses more secure, "they'll<lb/>
certainly save themselves a lot of<lb/>
time and money in the long run<lb/>
Territo adds.<lb/>
"Colleges are very vulnerable<lb/>
now he says. "And their defen-<lb/>
sive posture will sure be a lot bet-<lb/>
ter if they can say 'We've done<lb/>
everything we can' to make a safe<lb/>
environment<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
mm<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED <lb/>
. THEATRES I<lb/>
dults s2.oo<lb/>
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5:30<lb/>
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90,000 Awarded Each Year In Loans, Grants, and<lb/>
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Three separate building: front house, back house and party<lb/>
RUSH<lb/>
Mon. 10th 8:30<lb/>
Tues. 11th 8:30<lb/>
Wed. 12th 8:30<lb/>
505 East Fifth Street<lb/>
Across Art Building &amp; Garrett Dorm<lb/>
"CO-ED FEVER"<lb/>
Starring Samantha Fox<lb/>
Wai<lb/>
'flittS<lb/>
ss<lb/>
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PRESENTS<lb/>
OLD TIME ROCK-N-ROLL<lb/>
FRIDAY, SEPT. 7th<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
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For Information or Ride<lb/>
Call 752-2941 or 752-6502<lb/>
CATCH THE RUSH BUS!<lb/>
And<lb/>
Rockin Rhythm &amp; Blues<lb/>
With The<lb/>
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.iPPEIJtl.YG<lb/>
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'50's - 60's HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
$ .50 Wine and.60 Can Beer<lb/>
(till 10:00)<lb/>
For more information call: 758-5570<lb/>
The COH is a private club for members &amp; guests<lb/>
All ABC Permits<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
gmmmmmmmiMMmmmimmitiimiMUMmmmmTmmitimiimimiiiimiiiimiiiin<lb/>
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UNIVERSITY ECONO WASH<lb/>
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IT'S NEW!<lb/>
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Name <lb/>
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ECU 10 DISCOUNT<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
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l.D. Number<lb/>
ON ALL FOOD ORDERS<lb/>
OVER $10.00<lb/>
PRESENT COUPON<lb/>
TO CASHIER FOR .0<lb/>
DISCOUNT ON GROCERIES<lb/>
tfMNMHHHIIIIHnilHllllinMMHIIfl<lb/>
lllltllUillltllliltllllltfllfltlKHIItlllHIIIIIIMIIlllllMIIIMItlllllllllMtlCIIIMIIIIIIItlllflttlllfltttUinHCIII Ml IIIM Mt II If tl IIII4IIH tMlltCJHirt tltltlll<lb/>
?<lb/>
7<lb/>
flf<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0013"/><lb/>
I IH I AM (. AKi till<lb/>
Style<lb/>
SI rllMBhkft,<lb/>
Page i 3<lb/>
Bo Shows All Except Talent<lb/>
B BRIAN RM;M M<lb/>
Bo Derek is one ol th<lb/>
consistent performers in motion<lb/>
pictures today. In Bolero, she<lb/>
again looks beautiful but flatly,<lb/>
delivers her lines like she doesn't<lb/>
know what the words mean<lb/>
But 1 know that's not<lb/>
you're waiting to heai So, for<lb/>
you skin flick efficianados, yes,<lb/>
Bo makes it in this movie, and you<lb/>
get to watch 1 he sex is tastel<lb/>
done ? directoi lohn D<lb/>
wouldn't want to sp<lb/>
primary model with Hus<lb/>
photograph<lb/>
I don't think<lb/>
entirely her fault<lb/>
husband, Jol<lb/>
writer o the I<lb/>
par' ?e blame<lb/>
contrived,<lb/>
so met imes,<lb/>
sometime tails ap<lb/>
some of the scenes<lb/>
. ry<lb/>
The ston<lb/>
howe Bo's<lb/>
the<lb/>
I he dia<lb/>
even<lb/>
s t o r .<lb/>
thine<lb/>
?<lb/>
meets hei " I 10 He's a<lb/>
winery, ownei and parttime<lb/>
bullfighter named Angel from a<lb/>
tin Spanish town<lb/>
1 he two meet, she tells him<lb/>
it the sheik he sas she<lb/>
should've come to Spain first, i he<lb/>
romance hens up a little because<lb/>
Kngel's jealous gypsy lover,<lb/>
but he and Bo do finally get<lb/>
get her 1 sex the morning<lb/>
at dawn M i some Spanish<lb/>
lal he nevei xplained it.<lb/>
I he wholi . Fail moves in-<lb/>
credibly fast; the couple fall in<lb/>
love quickei than two teenagers in<lb/>
lowever, heat is<lb/>
exac tlj vhai the intimate scenes<lb/>
lack Some put pas<lb/>
sion into the picture gain, it was<lb/>
probabh pooi direction and emo-<lb/>
tions ie actual sex<lb/>
es had ark. no .?<lb/>
mem a couple g nj<lb/>
thro motions with about as<lb/>
as tv o people shar-<lb/>
id doughnuts at<lb/>
a<lb/>
ing<lb/>
take,<lb/>
and a<lb/>
cues,<lb/>
theti<lb/>
'lie<lb/>
a co . age<lb/>
et in the early<lb/>
a s<lb/>
fell<lb/>
or the<lb/>
irginit G<lb/>
1, Bo<lb/>
aie beg<lb/>
s<lb/>
? obablj ?<lb/>
are for the<lb/>
I he mo ie is<lb/>
? g d<lb/>
- n8<lb/>
nion. B sn' <lb/>
p .<lb/>
-<lb/>
w ea<lb/>
Bolero<lb/>
h to<lb/>
sokii<lb/>
I<lb/>
tion seems to r<lb/>
at Bo. He hand<lb/>
kill a;<lb/>
edibility<lb/>
ten<lb/>
v well.<lb/>
Like most girls I<lb/>
Bo is in Ic e w<lb/>
;he wants ti<lb/>
"Sheik a real one. and otter<lb/>
him the "gift' of her irginit) . Of<lb/>
and<lb/>
B<lb/>
isn't entirely<lb/>
? . gifl He<lb/>
i bet ore he<lb/>
milk and<lb/>
course, the sheik<lb/>
s'upid; he accepts<lb/>
takes the blond ?<lb/>
her offer, but :<lb/>
much haprv weed<lb/>
finishes licking<lb/>
noney off of her stomach.<lb/>
Jus' - re that anticlimatic<lb/>
moment, howevei Derek's<lb/>
pad direction realls shines. He has<lb/>
Bo wa ing her hands in quick mo-<lb/>
tions around her head and face<lb/>
like the "Solid Gold" dancers<lb/>
sometimes do 1 still can't figure<lb/>
that one out ? i never saw a girl<lb/>
do thai in a moment of pleasure.<lb/>
These kinds of confusing little<lb/>
details, which littered the movie,<lb/>
added nothing to the story and<lb/>
left you .sondenng why they were<lb/>
there in I e first place.<lb/>
By now the movie is more than<lb/>
halfway through, and Bo finally<lb/>
<lb/>
. I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
? ere well<lb/>
le everyone<lb/>
-<lb/>
ide If<lb/>
e ple who<lb/>
Bo Derek, this<lb/>
you. You<lb/>
( film's<lb/>
a and<lb/>
My<lb/>
tax of the mo ie<lb/>
: ? Kngel was im-<lb/>
upward thi ust of a<lb/>
hull's hern into the groin. He<lb/>
It ?? I ? mm l .? - f? .s.v t tT ??? I - j . , .??-<lb/>
 Cli C v ? ?? - vu ,iv. L vJ I igC J iiilC IsCa,<lb/>
but Bo promises him he will be<lb/>
earns how to fight<lb/>
moke big cigars. 1<lb/>
knov doesn't connect too well,<lb/>
but that's what happened.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Angel stays in bed<lb/>
all the time. The sheik reappears<lb/>
long enough to steal back his<lb/>
"gift but she is saved, not by a<lb/>
heroic action from her lover, but<lb/>
by simply parachuting out of the<lb/>
biplane. No real conflict, just a<lb/>
hint.<lb/>
Finally, after dodging the issue<lb/>
for a while, Bo enters the<lb/>
bedroom, sa a ants to find<lb/>
ecstacy ers the spelling<lb/>
"extasy" - ai d well, you know<lb/>
whal happens But you'll be<lb/>
disappointed I he scene is<lb/>
Bolero'<lb/>
Bo Derek does everything but act in the revealing release.<lb/>
'Bolero<lb/>
One critic attribute, her poor performance to the direction of her<lb/>
husband. John Derek<lb/>
laughable.<lb/>
rek is a lovely<lb/>
woman and John knows how to motion picture. This case is one a: aracter development The ac-<lb/>
make her look good on film, but 1 where the anticipation is better po ting needs personality and Das-<lb/>
think the Playboy photos were than the fulfillment. Bo and hub- on. I was bored, but 1 didn't fall<lb/>
more erotic than sex scenes in the by are a model and photographer As Bolero ia.ks asleer<lb/>
Plans For Homecoming '84<lb/>
Already In The Making<lb/>
America's hottest comedian, Gallagher, is bound to land a sell-out show here at ECU.<lb/>
Gallagher, The Master Of Comedy<lb/>
Heading For ECU On October 4<lb/>
You've probably seen him on<lb/>
the Tonight show or on one of his<lb/>
many cable specials. This master<lb/>
of comedy, this Wizard of Odd,<lb/>
the one and only inventor of the<lb/>
Sledge-O-Matic will be perform-<lb/>
ing at ECU on Thursday, October<lb/>
4. America's hottest new come-<lb/>
dian, Gallagher, sponsored by the<lb/>
Student Union Special Events<lb/>
Committee, will perform at 8<lb/>
p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
For two hours or more, this<lb/>
mustached funny man (who<lb/>
rollerskates on stage generally at-<lb/>
tired in a black-and-red shirt,<lb/>
black pants, and black tarn) im-<lb/>
merses his audiences in his off-<lb/>
beat brand of honest observa-<lb/>
tions. He calls his comedy<lb/>
satire because all my comedy<lb/>
is truth, and the truth is funny. I<lb/>
vent frustration in society He<lb/>
uses an arsenal of inventions and<lb/>
props, including a hat with clapp-<lb/>
ing hands, a car you drive stan-<lb/>
ding up (to save space), a pant leg<lb/>
and shoe he dangles out of a car,<lb/>
and a Playboy magazine for mar-<lb/>
ried men ? the same girl every<lb/>
month. He dabbles in semantics<lb/>
and has uncanny powers of obser-<lb/>
vation; for example, did you<lb/>
know that most home economics<lb/>
teachers are divorced? Without<lb/>
question, he is best known for his<lb/>
Sledge-O-Matic, but if you don't<lb/>
know what that is, you'll have to<lb/>
wait until his show at ECU to find<lb/>
out.<lb/>
In between gags, Gallagher<lb/>
disperses chocolate kisses,<lb/>
cookies, and candy to the au-<lb/>
dience, and the audience heartily<lb/>
accepts his edible gifts as easily as<lb/>
they accept his unique gift of com-<lb/>
edy. Gallagher is undoubtedly one<lb/>
of the freshest, brightest talents in<lb/>
the wide, competitive world of<lb/>
comedy. His seemingly irreverent<lb/>
sense of humor will carry him a<lb/>
long way. You can bet a smashed<lb/>
watermelon on it.<lb/>
On October 20, 1984. ECU will<lb/>
host East Tennessee State Univer-<lb/>
sity for Homecoming '84. This<lb/>
year's theme is "ECU '84 ? A<lb/>
Part Of Your Life The parade<lb/>
will begin at Rose High School at<lb/>
10 a.m. All organizations in-<lb/>
terested in entering a float in the<lb/>
parade or participating in house<lb/>
or dorm decorating must commit<lb/>
themselves in writing. Applica-<lb/>
tions should be submitted to Mr.<lb/>
Jon Curtis' office (Room 204 ?<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center) by<lb/>
September 29. This written com-<lb/>
mitment should include the title of<lb/>
your organization, which<lb/>
contest(s) you will participate in,<lb/>
how and who to reach if needed,<lb/>
and should be signed by your<lb/>
respective advisor.<lb/>
Each float entrant will be allow-<lb/>
ed $150 to put toward expenses,<lb/>
and each house and dorm will be<lb/>
given $40. These monies may be<lb/>
secured through the Student Fund<lb/>
Accounting Office (Room 222 of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center) after<lb/>
October 10. Please apply as soon<lb/>
as possible, as there is only<lb/>
enough money for 15 floats and<lb/>
15 decorations: first come, first<lb/>
served. All entries will be judged<lb/>
on design, color combination,<lb/>
originality, completeness of<lb/>
theme, workmanship, and overall<lb/>
evaluation. Awards will be given<lb/>
for first, second, and third place<lb/>
floats, first place house decora-<lb/>
tion, and first place dorm decora-<lb/>
tion. In addition, monetary<lb/>
awards will be given for floats as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
- First Place ? S200<lb/>
- Second Place ? SI00<lb/>
- Third Place ? $75<lb/>
All awards will be presented<lb/>
during halftime of the football<lb/>
game. All entries (floats and<lb/>
decorations) must be cleaned up<lb/>
Monday, October 22. 1984.<lb/>
The Student Homecoming<lb/>
Committee urges you to make the<lb/>
most of this opportunity to join in<lb/>
on "ECU '84 ? A Part Of Your<lb/>
Life<lb/>
No organization can combine<lb/>
their efforts with another<lb/>
organization in either the float,<lb/>
house, or dorm competitions.<lb/>
Procedures For<lb/>
Delegate Registration<lb/>
1. Nominees must be E.C.U.<lb/>
students and only one student<lb/>
may represent each organization.<lb/>
2. All candidates must submit an 8<lb/>
x 10 black and white, glossy<lb/>
photograph, along with their<lb/>
name, address, and telephone<lb/>
number (written on the back side<lb/>
with a felt tip pen) to:<lb/>
Jon Curtis ? Co-Advisor<lb/>
Room 204 ? Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina 27834<lb/>
Telephone: 757-6611, Ext. 210<lb/>
3. All candidates must have their<lb/>
photographs taken at the<lb/>
Photography Lab. You will be<lb/>
contacted as to the date and time<lb/>
pictures will be taken.<lb/>
4 All information must be sub-<lb/>
mitted no later than September<lb/>
28, 1984, by 5 p.m.<lb/>
Voting Procedures<lb/>
1. Voting will be held in the lobby<lb/>
of the Student Supply Store on<lb/>
October 9, 10, 11, from 9 a.m. un-<lb/>
til 4 p.m.<lb/>
2. Any student with a valit ECU<lb/>
l.D. and Activity Card is eligible<lb/>
to vote.<lb/>
3. An eight-student court will be<lb/>
selected after votes are tabulated<lb/>
and notified Friday, October 12,<lb/>
1984. Transportation will be pro-<lb/>
vided for the court. All court<lb/>
members are exDected to ride in<lb/>
the parade and attend the game<lb/>
with an escort. Any other par-<lb/>
ticipants in the Homecoming<lb/>
Pirate Contest may ride in the<lb/>
parade, however, they must pro-<lb/>
vide their own transportation.<lb/>
4. All eight court members and<lb/>
their escorts will be presented at<lb/>
half-time.<lb/>
All organizations are urged to<lb/>
submit an entry so that the court<lb/>
will represent all students at ECU.<lb/>
If there are any questions,<lb/>
please contact Mr. C.C. Rowe,<lb/>
212 Whichard Building, telephone<lb/>
? 757-6799.<lb/>
iV<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
?Y<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0014"/><lb/>
14<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLONIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
I<lb/>
Need Something To Do With Your Time?<lb/>
Greenville May Be Better Than You Think<lb/>
By AMY BONESTEEL<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
So you think you're stuck in a<lb/>
small little town with nothing to<lb/>
dobelieve it or not, ECU and<lb/>
Greenville offer a wide range of<lb/>
activities for students to get in-<lb/>
volved in. There are opportunities<lb/>
to earn money, get in shape, and<lb/>
to meet a lot of new people while<lb/>
you are here in school.<lb/>
For one, the excellent in-<lb/>
tramural system at ECU gives<lb/>
students the opportunity to par-<lb/>
ticipate in various sports. It also<lb/>
provides employment oppor-<lb/>
tunities, co-recreational sports<lb/>
(both men and women), and<lb/>
sports medicine services (besides<lb/>
helping you keep in shape).<lb/>
Throughout the semester, frater-<lb/>
nities, sororites, dorms, clubs,<lb/>
and various independent teams<lb/>
compete against each other. There<lb/>
are also ten active sport clubs on<lb/>
campus. These include: Archery,<lb/>
Raquetball, Rugby (men and<lb/>
women), Soccer, Surfing,<lb/>
Lacrosse, Frisbee, and Team<lb/>
Handball(men and women).<lb/>
These clubs are an ideal way to<lb/>
make new friends and at the same<lb/>
time feel a part of ECU.<lb/>
You don't necessarily have to<lb/>
go far to find something to do<lb/>
near campus either. Within walk-<lb/>
ing distance of most dorms are<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
(which has everything from bowl-<lb/>
ing to video games), the park and<lb/>
the Town Commens near Tar<lb/>
River, and the various shops sur-<lb/>
rounding the downtown area.<lb/>
Since not everyone here packs<lb/>
up and heads home on the<lb/>
weekends, you may be inclined to<lb/>
feel bored and restless. Instead of<lb/>
wasting a weekend just sitting<lb/>
around watching TV, it's a great<lb/>
chance to catch up on<lb/>
homework??<lb/>
There are many clubs on the<lb/>
ECU campus, some which relate<lb/>
directly to your major. For the<lb/>
campus politicians, The SGA<lb/>
(Student Government Assoc.) is a<lb/>
good way to learn a little about<lb/>
the legislature while getting direct-<lb/>
ly involved with other campus ac-<lb/>
tivities and organizations.<lb/>
If you have a way to get around<lb/>
town, there are spas, roller<lb/>
skating rinks, movie theatres and<lb/>
a fairly large number of shopping<lb/>
centers.<lb/>
So don't get depressed yet<lb/>
Greenville newcomers, there is<lb/>
much more to do here besides par-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
The Plantation Mistress And Southern Belles<lb/>
(UPI) ? Single daughters of<lb/>
planters swirled across ballroom<lb/>
floors in hooped skirts, using flir-<lb/>
tation to catch the attention of<lb/>
eligible young men who would<lb/>
fight for the right to become their<lb/>
husbands.<lb/>
The scene is perhaps the only<lb/>
accurate stereotye that has been<lb/>
applied to southern plantation<lb/>
women prior to the Civil War.<lb/>
The rest of the picture has been<lb/>
somewhat fuzzy historically.<lb/>
Catherine Clinton's The Plan-<lb/>
tation Mistress sets the record<lb/>
straight with in-depth research in-<lb/>
to the lives of southern plantation<lb/>
owners' wives. Clinton's research<lb/>
turns to letters, journals, books,<lb/>
and public records to unravel the<lb/>
attitudes and everyday lives of<lb/>
women whose past has been ig-<lb/>
nored except in fiction.<lb/>
Young girls did, indeed, play<lb/>
the debutante in hopes of making<lb/>
the right match. They knew ? as<lb/>
did their mothers that southern<lb/>
women were legal non-entities,<lb/>
totally dependent on men for<lb/>
identity and power.<lb/>
Once married, however, their<lb/>
lives changed shockingly and<lb/>
usually for the worse.<lb/>
Many were taken to new ter-<lb/>
ritories where land was cheap and<lb/>
the men felt their fortunes were<lb/>
waiting to be made. Young brides<lb/>
pined in vain for the security of<lb/>
Unique Claims<lb/>
(UPI) ? Beginning next year,<lb/>
Taiwanese men will be able to<lb/>
claim tax deductions for their<lb/>
mistresses ? but only if the<lb/>
women are under 20 or over 60<lb/>
years old.<lb/>
Expenses for concubine upkeep<lb/>
became eligible for tax deductions<lb/>
in a new provision to the income<lb/>
tax law announced recently by the<lb/>
Finance Ministry.<lb/>
The provision adds "family<lb/>
members" to the list of people<lb/>
taxpayers can claim as<lb/>
dependents. Previously the<lb/>
defendents list was limited to<lb/>
"relatives<lb/>
According to Taiwanese civil<lb/>
law, "family members" include<lb/>
"people living together in the<lb/>
same household and aiming to live<lb/>
together until the end<lb/>
Concubines fall within this<lb/>
category.<lb/>
Taxpayers, who have been able<lb/>
to claim a dependent deduction of<lb/>
$750 for their wives, will now be<lb/>
able to deduct an extra $550 for<lb/>
each concubine ? and some men<lb/>
keep as many as four.<lb/>
The Finance Ministry said<lb/>
"family members" eligible for the<lb/>
deductions were restricted to<lb/>
those "below 20 years old and<lb/>
over 60 who have no ability to<lb/>
make a living<lb/>
A Finance Ministry official said<lb/>
he does not expect many people to<lb/>
file for such deductions since<lb/>
"first, most men do not want<lb/>
their spouses to know the ex-<lb/>
istence of their mistresses and se-<lb/>
cond, those who can afford keep-<lb/>
ing concubines probably won't<lb/>
mind paying a little more tax<lb/>
their parents and siblings, pouring<lb/>
out heartfelt homesickness in hun-<lb/>
dreds of letters.<lb/>
Separations from husbands<lb/>
were frequent, as well, as planta-<lb/>
tion owners delved into politics or<lb/>
the business of running other<lb/>
plantations. And, once alone on<lb/>
the plantation, the wife could not<lb/>
leave its boundaries without<lb/>
violating the strict social codes of<lb/>
her day.<lb/>
Social and sexual restrictions<lb/>
were inhibiting beyond belief.<lb/>
"Cultural prescriptions concer-<lb/>
ning behavior clearly divided<lb/>
along gender lines Clinton<lb/>
writes. "Morality ruled in the<lb/>
public domain; both sexes<lb/>
subscribed to the same ethical<lb/>
standards. In the private sphere,<lb/>
however, men might bend or<lb/>
break the rules at their own discre-<lb/>
tion. Such a division resulted in a<lb/>
strict regulation of women's ac-<lb/>
tivities and correspondingly lax<lb/>
attitutes toward male affairs<lb/>
In the absence of her husband<lb/>
from her plantation, the mistress<lb/>
was a virtual prisoner with the<lb/>
slaves and children. And her<lb/>
burdens for the household were<lb/>
overpowering. She was responsi-<lb/>
ble for the feeding and clothing of<lb/>
white and black family members<lb/>
alike.<lb/>
the numerous tasks of ante-<lb/>
bellum housekeeping kept planta-<lb/>
tion mistresses busy: gardening,<lb/>
dairy activities, salting, pork,<lb/>
preserving fruits and vegetables,<lb/>
mixing medicines, the making of<lb/>
candles, soap, rugs, pillows,<lb/>
linen, bedding, and so on<lb/>
One matron complained in a<lb/>
letter to her husband: "As for<lb/>
myself I am constantly astonished<lb/>
that after the fatigues of the day<lb/>
(which are not trifing) that I am<lb/>
able to sleep sound and rise<lb/>
without a headache. For the last<lb/>
three or four days I have been<lb/>
very busy with my hogs and all the<lb/>
troubles that the season brings.<lb/>
Now at half past 10 o'clock I am<lb/>
watching a corn husking in fear<lb/>
lest some mischief my happen<lb/>
Women also lived in fear of<lb/>
childbirth and disease - whooping<lb/>
cough, smallpox, yellow fever and<lb/>
cholera.<lb/>
"The death and desolation on<lb/>
plague ridden plantations was<lb/>
enormous. Epidemics took their<lb/>
toll both in lives and in the mental<lb/>
health of the survivors; overwork<lb/>
and worry subjected women to<lb/>
fretful exhaustion if not actual<lb/>
disease. In 1833 a young<lb/>
woman reported to her cousin of<lb/>
the affliction within her home:<lb/>
'We have had three sick rooms for<lb/>
the last three weeksI have not<lb/>
taken off my clothes for the last<lb/>
month except to change<lb/>
The Plantation Mistress should<lb/>
be the starting point for historians<lb/>
and writers who want to accurate<lb/>
ly depict life in the Old South.<lb/>
752-1411<lb/>
HOI ChAcles<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
$<lb/>
THE CREAMERY<lb/>
Introducing our new money saving meal<lb/>
plan. Custom made to stretch your<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Stop by The Creamery and find out how<lb/>
just one dollar can earn you<lb/>
4 FREE MEALS of your choice and<lb/>
alot of FREE Pepsi Cola!<lb/>
Affordable<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
Mon-Thurs 7-12am<lb/>
Fri-Sat 7-2:30am "Go Pirates"<lb/>
The Olde Towne Inn<lb/>
SALUTES<lb/>
The Pirates<lb/>
All ABC Permits<lb/>
In exchange for your ECU<lb/>
ticket stub, buy one sand-<lb/>
wich of your choice, get one<lb/>
of equal or lesser value<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
'THREE LUNCHEONDINNER<lb/>
SPECIALS DAILY"<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
4pm until 7pm<lb/>
10pm until 2am<lb/>
This Week's<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Oil &amp; Filter Change $13.50<lb/>
FRAM Oil Filter &amp; Valvoline Oil<lb/>
. Good Thru Sept 13th<lb/>
2616 E.TENTH JT. 758 7676<lb/>
WELCOME TO GREENVILLE AND ECU<lb/>
When you get settled in, come and visit us Sunday<lb/>
morning.<lb/>
JARVIS 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/>
11:00am Worship<lb/>
Phone:752-3101<lb/>
"A place to 90 and grow<lb/>
a<lb/>
Belvoir<lb/>
Factory Outlet<lb/>
i ai?d In Old Bekoir Schoolhouse Hx il<lb/>
Thurs &amp; Fn 1<lb/>
TovvU Toqo -c<lb/>
SPO?TSWEARr Q PLAY ?'WEAfl<lb/>
I rxrated Between Bethe! &amp; Twtoroon Hx M<lb/>
Hours 9 5 Mon Sal Wv Accep' Vis?j &amp;. Maslev a'd<lb/>
We Also Wholesale<lb/>
loOjtUff lugs<lb/>
Factorv Outlet<lb/>
Located in Old Grimesland School House<lb/>
On Hwv 33 Hours: ed. Fit 9:30-5<lb/>
Sat 9:30-3:00<lb/>
Shop Our Outlet Store Nearest You For Back-To-School Specials<lb/>
j3E<lb/>
"Good irref uw braa<lb/>
tklow thermal were" $.?<lb/>
Hooded Name<lb/>
Brand T-Shirts<lb/>
With Sleeves And Prints<lb/>
13<lb/>
Girls Jeans<lb/>
Reg $18<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
Group Of<lb/>
Assorted Tops<lb/>
For School Days Ahaad<lb/>
Mm Each<lb/>
Boys<lb/>
Camouflage Pants<lb/>
Reg $12 99<lb/>
$9.99<lb/>
All Summer Merchandise<lb/>
12 off<lb/>
Off Reg. Price<lb/>
Many More Items Arriving For Girls. Boys, Ladies And Men For Fall At<lb/>
Discount Prices.<lb/>
Infant Sleepers<lb/>
Irregs. 1<lb/>
Gift Sets<lb/>
$2.99 To $4.99<lb/>
RUSH '84<lb/>
Monday Sept. 10 Original Bunny Nite<lb/>
Tuesday Sept. 11 Toga Tuesday<lb/>
Wednesday Sept. 12 ECU Night<lb/>
1984 Intramural Champions<lb/>
Kappa Sigma 700 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Beside Darryls<lb/>
Classified<lb/>
. "fl'ta0mtf<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
LOANS ON A BUYING TV's, Stereos,<lb/>
cameras, typewriters, gold &amp; silver, vi<lb/>
anything else of value Southern Pawn ai<lb/>
Shop, 752 2464 R<lb/>
CAPTURE YOUR COLLEGE DAYS<lb/>
AND NIGHTS on video cassette VHS<lb/>
or BETA, excellent color pictures and<lb/>
swell mi Fi Audio Join our video club<lb/>
and enjoy the Jacksons, Michael, Jer<lb/>
maine, Prince, Pink Floyd, Van<lb/>
Haien, Cyndi Lauper, The<lb/>
Pretenders, Cheech &amp; Chong, The<lb/>
Time, Tne Alan Parson Project,<lb/>
Duran, Duran, and much, much<lb/>
more We make video's ? John<lb/>
Deaver video Recording Services<lb/>
Call 758 6344<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE neat fast<lb/>
reasonable Call 355 2062<lb/>
SIGMA NU LITTLE SISTER CAR<lb/>
WASH Sat , Sept. 8 9 00 a m<lb/>
Texaco, corner of 14th and Cotancr<lb/>
TO THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA NU<lb/>
wishing you lots of luck ?lttl <lb/>
Love, Sigma Nu Lit Sisters<lb/>
YES FANS oon't delay: Get our<lb/>
tickets now at Appie Recoras for YES<lb/>
in Greensboro Friday. Sept 14 Roac<lb/>
Trips Unlimited is Greenv lie's con<lb/>
cert bus<lb/>
FRESHMEN Mom and dac paid z <lb/>
bucks for our Frehsman Recorc sc<lb/>
pick it up from 12 5 pm at me Year<lb/>
nook office<lb/>
1<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: (l) book. Modern Times, by<lb/>
Paul Johnson. (2) Glass marked ZBT<lb/>
Charter Banquet, December 6, 1983 11<lb/>
found, please return immediately to<lb/>
Joe Admire, 103 Umstead, 758 7906<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
rent, '2 utilities, Cad 355 6933a"e'<lb/>
 00 p.m on weekdays<lb/>
FEMALE STUDENT NEEDED<lb/>
to share furnished conaoCeT-3<lb/>
airheat, washerdryer,$ SC X<lb/>
plus ' 3 utilities. Apt. 11Car"<lb/>
Court. Call 758-7090 after5 pm 1<lb/>
PART-TIME SOCCER COACHES<lb/>
for various Pitt County Scnoois Con<lb/>
tact Alice or Barry at 752 6106 n<lb/>
teresteo<lb/>
F?MAkE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
immediately. Rent $105, 3 utilities.<lb/>
Call 758 6224 Ask for Karen or Nanc ?<lb/>
OVERNIGHT DORM COUNSELOR<lb/>
ull time or parttime. Will monitor ac<lb/>
tivities of mentally, physica ?<lb/>
and'or emotionally handicapped<lb/>
clients in resident aorm ana prepare<lb/>
reports. Hours: 4 p.m. to 8 a.m. Full<lb/>
time Sunday through Thursoa ?<lb/>
59 300yr. Parttime Fri. ana Sat ?<lb/>
$3 35hr. Apply in person at Easfe<lb/>
Carolina Vocational Center Sta<lb/>
Road, Greenville, N.C. AA EEO<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
Non-smoker, washer dryer pro. ded<lb/>
new mobile home Rent $165 :<lb/>
utilities, private room ana privare<lb/>
oath. Call 756-6151<lb/>
PARTTIME WORD PROCESSOR<lb/>
local iaw firm: IBM PC AT Sa a<lb/>
commensurate with experience Call<lb/>
758-6200.<lb/>
DISABLED MAN seeks par" m?<lb/>
help: half day or whole day wee. ?<lb/>
Light housekeeping, shopping Wus1<lb/>
be able to drive shift car Call 756-4&amp;;<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA MONEY? freelance<lb/>
artist needea for local siikscree-<lb/>
firm. Will pay cash for designs Ca<lb/>
756-9058<lb/>
,)<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Sea Storv on sale<lb/>
Book Barn and otl<lb/>
Gordon Fulps<lb/>
?<lb/>
UNB<lb/>
Tempoi<lb/>
ssw?vw-x?<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
7 i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0015"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 19M<lb/>
15<lb/>
Think<lb/>
ed ith other campus ac-<lb/>
and organizations.<lb/>
u have a va to get around<lb/>
here are spas, roller<lb/>
rinks, movie theatres and<lb/>
v number of shopping<lb/>
get depressed yet<lb/>
nters, there is<lb/>
ere besides par-<lb/>
Belles<lb/>
historians<lb/>
ant to accurate-<lb/>
the Old South.<lb/>
me Inn<lb/>
ur ECU<lb/>
h u sand-<lb/>
re , get one<lb/>
Is r alue<lb/>
)N DINNER<lb/>
il V<lb/>
m<lb/>
r<lb/>
lunny Nite<lb/>
;day<lb/>
;ht<lb/>
pions<lb/>
hSt.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Do People Really Believe?<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
LOANS ON &amp; BUYING TV's, Stereos,<lb/>
cameras, typewriters, gold &amp; silver,<lb/>
anything else of value. Southern Pawn<lb/>
Shop, 752 2464.<lb/>
CAPTURE YOUR COLLEGE DAYS<lb/>
AND NIGHTS on video cassetteVHS<lb/>
or BETA, excellent color pictures and<lb/>
swell Hi-Fi Audio. Join our video club<lb/>
and enjoy the Jacksons, Michael, Jer<lb/>
maine. Prince, Pink Floyd, Van<lb/>
Halen, Cyndi Lauper, The<lb/>
Pretenders, Cheech &amp; Chong, The<lb/>
Time, The Alan Parson Project,<lb/>
Duran, Duran, and much, much<lb/>
more. We make video's ? John<lb/>
Deavc Video Recording Services.<lb/>
Call 758 6344.<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE neat fast<lb/>
reasonable. Call 355 2062.<lb/>
SIGMA NU LITTLE SISTER CAR-<lb/>
WASH Sat Sept. 8 9:00 a.m. until.<lb/>
Texaco, corner of 14th and Cotanch.<lb/>
TO THE BROTHERS OF SIGMA NU<lb/>
wishing you lots of luck with Rush!<lb/>
Love, Sigma Nu Lil' Sisters.<lb/>
YES FANS don't delay! Get your<lb/>
tickets now at Apple Records for YES<lb/>
in Greensboro Friday, Sept. 14. Road<lb/>
Trips Unlimited is Greenville's con-<lb/>
cert bus.<lb/>
FRESHMEN! I Mom and dad paid big<lb/>
bucks for your Frehsman Record, so<lb/>
pick it up from 12-5 pm at the Year-<lb/>
book office.<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: (l) book. Modern Times, by<lb/>
Paul Johnson. (2) Glass marked ZBT<lb/>
Charter Banquet, December 6, 1983. If<lb/>
found, please return immediately to<lb/>
Joe Admire, 103 Umstead, 758-7906.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED Vj<lb/>
rent, 'A utilities, Call 355-6933after<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. II Cannon<lb/>
Court. Call 758-7090 after 5 pm.<lb/>
PART-TIME SOCCER COACHES<lb/>
for various Pitt County Schools. Con-<lb/>
tact Alice or Barry at 752-6106 if in-<lb/>
terested.<lb/>
FEMAIJE . ROOMMATE NEEDED<lb/>
S mediately. Rent $105, V3 utilities.<lb/>
II 758 6224. Ask for Karen or Nancy.<lb/>
OVERNIGHT DORM COUNSELOR<lb/>
full time or parttime. Will monitor ac-<lb/>
tivities of mentally, physically,<lb/>
andor emotionally handicapped<lb/>
clients in resident dorm and prepare<lb/>
reports. Hours: 4 p.m. to 8 a.m. Full<lb/>
time Sunday through Thursday ?<lb/>
$9,300yr. Parttime Fri. and Sat. ?<lb/>
$3.35hr. Apply in person at Eastern<lb/>
Carolina Vocational Center, Station<lb/>
Road, Greenville, N.C. AAEEO.<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/>
PARTTIME WORD PROCESSOR for<lb/>
local law firm: IBM PC AT Salary<lb/>
commensurate with experience. Call<lb/>
758-6200<lb/>
DISABLED MAN seeks parttime<lb/>
help: half day or whole day-weekly.<lb/>
Light housekeeping, shopping. Must<lb/>
be able to drive shift car. Call 756-4840<lb/>
for details.<lb/>
NEED EXTRA MONEY? Freelance<lb/>
artist needed for local silkscreening<lb/>
firm. Will pay cash for designs. Call<lb/>
756-9058.<lb/>
<lb/>
S<lb/>
h<lb/>
?<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
THE ALUMNI OF KAPPA DELTA<lb/>
would like to wish the best of luck to<lb/>
all who are included in the Fall 1984<lb/>
Rush and that all your dreams may<lb/>
come true.<lb/>
SARAH, I love you. Jeff.<lb/>
RANDALL F. With all my hugs and<lb/>
kisses I'm hoping all your birthday<lb/>
wishes come true. Happy Birthday<lb/>
this Saturday and remember, I love<lb/>
you! Donna H.<lb/>
ALPHA DELTA PI Pref night is here.<lb/>
Are you all ready to jam Let's see if<lb/>
you all remember how to party-Let's<lb/>
get wild Pi Kapps<lb/>
TWEET the Roses were red, the sky<lb/>
was blue, thanks a bunch, from me to<lb/>
you!<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
1980 FAIRMONT 2 door, with blue<lb/>
vinyl top, good tires. Call 752-3837 or<lb/>
7568745.<lb/>
SCHWINN LIGHT WEIGHT BIKE 10<lb/>
speed, quick release front and rear,<lb/>
leather saddle, center point brakes<lb/>
front and rear, high frame. Call<lb/>
752 3837 or 756-8745.<lb/>
FOR SALE:<lb/>
tress and<lb/>
752-1649.<lb/>
New Box Springs, mat-<lb/>
bed frame. $50. Call<lb/>
FOR SALE: Photographic enlarging<lb/>
and film developing equipment, $235.<lb/>
Call 758-1598 after 6 pm.<lb/>
YARD SALE: furniture, clothes,<lb/>
household items, etc. 317 Glenwood<lb/>
Ave Sat Sept. 8 from 8 ami pm.<lb/>
1980 RENAULT LECAR 38,000 miles<lb/>
great condition. Must Sell 758 4655.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Dr. David L. Hocking<lb/>
wants every one to know that God<lb/>
truly exists, and the reports of His<lb/>
death have been greatly exag-<lb/>
gerated.<lb/>
Hocking, senior pastor of the<lb/>
non-denominational Calvary<lb/>
Church in Santa Ana, Calif said<lb/>
talks he has had with laymen<lb/>
about God prompted him to write<lb/>
The Nature of God in Plain<lb/>
Language Word Publications, 180<lb/>
pp $8.95.)<lb/>
"I took the questions that<lb/>
laymen asked me about God and<lb/>
formulated them into a book<lb/>
said Hocking in a telephone inter-<lb/>
view. "I wanted to communicate<lb/>
with the average man on the street<lb/>
about the wonder and beauty of<lb/>
God's love for us all<lb/>
"God is the great unknown to<lb/>
many of us Hocking writes.<lb/>
"We want to believe that He ex-<lb/>
ists, but to most of us He seems<lb/>
unknowable and impersonal<lb/>
Hocking writes of one person<lb/>
who told him, "Of course I<lb/>
believe in God, but I don't want<lb/>
Him telling me what to do<lb/>
The book is written in a clear,<lb/>
direct style, devoid of the<lb/>
theological jargon that creeps into<lb/>
most books that attempt to ex-<lb/>
plore the subject of God's ex-<lb/>
istence. Each chapter concludes<lb/>
with a series of probing questions<lb/>
that make the book ideal to be us-<lb/>
ed as a tool for group discussion.<lb/>
Hocking does not duck the hard<lb/>
questions that philosophers and<lb/>
theologians have been asking for<lb/>
centuries: Does God exist? If so,<lb/>
where is God, and why does it<lb/>
matter to us? His answers have a<lb/>
special authenticity to them<lb/>
because they come from his own<lb/>
life experiences and those of the<lb/>
searching, questioning people he<lb/>
has encountered.<lb/>
Hocking said the modern world<lb/>
views God as being far away and<lb/>
unrelated to the events of our<lb/>
everyday lives. This lack of<lb/>
knowledge concerning God has<lb/>
led us away from true meaning<lb/>
and purpose in our lives, and has<lb/>
plunged us into mental and<lb/>
spiritual darkness, he said.<lb/>
"To many people, God is a<lb/>
security blanket writes Hock<lb/>
ing. "He is no more personal to<lb/>
them than a chair or table. They<lb/>
hope He exists, but they have little<lb/>
knowledge of Him and no per-<lb/>
sonal contact with Him. To such<lb/>
people, God is an 4it' rather than<lb/>
'He They regard God as the<lb/>
'force' which they hope will be<lb/>
'with them<lb/>
Hocking said the basic ques-<lb/>
tions of life can only be answered<lb/>
by a knowledge of God. While<lb/>
people throughout the world re-<lb/>
main very religious, he said,<lb/>
tremendous differences exist in<lb/>
their concepts of God.<lb/>
"I have a little saying to the ef<lb/>
feet that the root of most of our<lb/>
problems in life is a misunderstan<lb/>
ding or misconception of who<lb/>
God is and what He can do said<lb/>
Hocking. "Through my work in<lb/>
counseling people on their per-<lb/>
sonal and family lives, I began to<lb/>
see that so many of our problems<lb/>
were directly related to this lack of<lb/>
knowledge about God and his at-<lb/>
tributes<lb/>
Hocking took the questions<lb/>
laymen asked him about God and<lb/>
began to research for answers<lb/>
through prayer, meditation and<lb/>
study, using mainly the Bible. The<lb/>
book is full of scriptual<lb/>
references, sometimes two or<lb/>
three to a page, taken from the<lb/>
New King James Version.<lb/>
"When people ask me where I<lb/>
was educated, I tell them I was<lb/>
educated in the Bible said<lb/>
Hocking. He graduated from Bob<lb/>
Jones University in Greenville,<lb/>
S.C. and received his doctorate in<lb/>
theology from Grace Lake<lb/>
Seminary in Wisconsin.<lb/>
Hocking grew up in Long<lb/>
Beach, Calif and spent four<lb/>
years as minister of a church in<lb/>
Columbus, Ohio. He is the radio<lb/>
bible teacher on the nationwide<lb/>
BIOLA hour. He has been pastor<lb/>
of Calvary, a 3,000-member<lb/>
church, for the past two years.<lb/>
FOOTBALL TICKETS FOR<lb/>
SALE 2 reserved seats for this<lb/>
Sat. game. Section 26 Row B.<lb/>
Paid $11.00 a piece but will sell<lb/>
for $10.00 a piece or less. Call<lb/>
752-9787<lb/>
FOR SALE: FRENCH PROVINCIAL<lb/>
dining room set with four chairs; oak<lb/>
wood and rattan. Asking $200.00, but<lb/>
negotiable. Call after 5 p.m. 758-7090.<lb/>
GIRLS BICYCLE FOR SALE Good<lb/>
shape. $80. Negotible. Call 758-5012.<lb/>
PERFECT FOR DORM ROOM: 1.6<lb/>
cu. ft. refrigerator excellent condi-<lb/>
tion. $69. Call Ron at 758-4850 (after 5<lb/>
p.m. please).<lb/>
19" COLOR TV cable ready, excellent<lb/>
condition. $75. Call 752-1866.<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
f<lb/>
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THE CLASS OF 1988<lb/>
TO ECU<lb/>
Doors Open: DST 9:00-2:00 a.m. Est. 8:30-1:00 ?.m<lb/>
MONDAY ?<lb/>
TUESDAY -<lb/>
CLOSED ? Open for private dorm socials and special Mondays, i.e.<lb/>
first week of each semester.<lb/>
WEDNESDAY -<lb/>
THURSDAY ?<lb/>
FRIDAY ?<lb/>
SATURDAY ?<lb/>
SUNDAY -<lb/>
CRAZY TUESDAY ? Different events each week from Bikini Contest to<lb/>
Ait Band Contest to Draft Nite. Each Tuesday is always different<lb/>
&amp; always fua .<lb/>
HUMP NrTE ? Pre admission to ECU student ($1.00 18 yr. adm )<lb/>
All cans 55 till 1 1:00 p.m 80 till closing.<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE ? $100 admission for ECU students ($2.00<lb/>
18 yr. adm.). All cans 55 till 11:0O p.m 80? till closing.<lb/>
End of the Week Party ? Friday Afternoon-3:30 till 7:30 - Free<lb/>
admission ;$1.00 18 yr. adm). All cans 55 till 5:15 p.m 80? 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/>
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LADIES NITE ? For 15 years our favorite way to wrap up the weekend<lb/>
Free admission for ladies ($1.00 18 yr. adm.), &amp; Nickel Draft while il<lb/>
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Help set policies for<lb/>
operation of WZMB,<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057661_0016"/><lb/>
16<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
A Hot Item<lb/>
Corvettes Are Likely Targets<lb/>
(UPI) ? The sporty Chevrolet<lb/>
Corvette is popular with car<lb/>
thieves and Boston is tops for<lb/>
cities where autos are most likely<lb/>
to be stolen, a consumer magazine<lb/>
says.<lb/>
Other cars found especially ap-<lb/>
pealing to thieves were the<lb/>
Cadillac Seville, Eldorado or<lb/>
DeVille, the BMW 3201, the Audi<lb/>
4000S and 5000S, the Lincoln<lb/>
Continental Mark VI and the<lb/>
Pontiac Firebird.<lb/>
The Corvette Tuesday topped<lb/>
Consumer Magazine's list of most<lb/>
stolen cars in America while<lb/>
Boston headed the list of cities<lb/>
where autos are most likely to be<lb/>
stolen.<lb/>
Motorist who like to see their<lb/>
cars where they last parked them<lb/>
may want to invest in the Subaru<lb/>
DL and the Pontiac Phoenix.<lb/>
Other makes with a slim chance of<lb/>
being stolen are the Ford Fair-<lb/>
mont, Honda Civic and the<lb/>
Toyota Corolla, the magazine<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Boston ranked first among the<lb/>
cities for car thefts with popula-<lb/>
tions of at least 50,000.<lb/>
Other high-risk cities were<lb/>
Hartford, Conn Cleveland; Pro-<lb/>
vidence, R.I Detroit and<lb/>
Southfield, Mich Newark,<lb/>
Cam den and Lawrence, N.J and<lb/>
Inglewood, Calif.<lb/>
The magazine said the highway<lb/>
Data Loss Institute arrived at the<lb/>
car theft figures by averaging the<lb/>
number of thefts against the<lb/>
number of models on the road.<lb/>
IHt t<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT ECU Photo Lr.<lb/>
According to a consumer magazine, Chevrolet Corvettes are likely targets for thieves in Boston and some of the larger cities<lb/>
Coping With Old Problems<lb/>
Anorexia and Bulimia has<lb/>
become increasingly common in<lb/>
our thin-is-in society. Although<lb/>
they are primarily female eating<lb/>
disorders, they also affect males,<lb/>
scientists say.<lb/>
Major reasons for binging,<lb/>
purging and compulsive starva-<lb/>
tion among men and women ap-<lb/>
pear similar except for one thing:<lb/>
more male victims may be<lb/>
homosexual and uncomfortable<lb/>
about it, according to a team at<lb/>
Massachusetts General Hospital.<lb/>
"It's not unlike the issues for<lb/>
females. What was novel about<lb/>
this particular thing was the con-<lb/>
flicted homosexuality, which was<lb/>
not noted among females said<lb/>
Dr. David Herzog, head of the<lb/>
hospital's eating disorders unit<lb/>
and a principal author of the<lb/>
study.<lb/>
Anorexia, or more precisely,<lb/>
anorexia nervosa, affects an<lb/>
estimated one in 100 to one in 250<lb/>
teenage girls, but grown women<lb/>
also are victims. Anorectics sever-<lb/>
ly restict their food intake, many<lb/>
times becoming skeleton-like and<lb/>
risking death.<lb/>
Some scientists estimate 1<lb/>
million to 3 million Americans<lb/>
have Bulimia, uncontrolled eating<lb/>
followed by use of laxatives or<lb/>
self-induced vomiting.<lb/>
Many victims of both syn-<lb/>
dromes have intense fear of<lb/>
fatness and an unjustified feeling<lb/>
they are overweight. Since pro-<lb/>
longed starvation inhibits sexuali-<lb/>
ty and holds off menstruation in<lb/>
females, psychiatrists who have<lb/>
studied young female victims say<lb/>
the girls may actually fear sexual<lb/>
maturity and adulthood.<lb/>
Males make up an estimated 4<lb/>
to 14 percent of anorectics, the<lb/>
Massachusetts team wrote in the<lb/>
American Journal of Psychiatry,<lb/>
and have been infrequently<lb/>
studied. Bulimia among men and<lb/>
boys has been explored even less.<lb/>
In two studies of university<lb/>
students, males made up 0.4 to 5<lb/>
percent of Bulimics.<lb/>
Herzog and colleagues studied<lb/>
13 anorectic males age 16 to 32<lb/>
and 14 Bulimic males age 13 to 41,<lb/>
comparing them to the first 142<lb/>
females evaluated after the unit<lb/>
opened in 1981.<lb/>
"There were significant dif-<lb/>
ferences between the overall male<lb/>
and female samples in sexual<lb/>
behavior the team wrote.<lb/>
"Males with eating disorders<lb/>
were significantly more likely to<lb/>
have had no sexual relations and<lb/>
to report being homosexual and<lb/>
were significantly less likely to be<lb/>
currently involved in an active<lb/>
heterosexual relationship<lb/>
"Not only were the males in our<lb/>
sample extremely limited in their<lb/>
sexual activity both in terms of<lb/>
past and current sexual activity,<lb/>
they were significantly more<lb/>
limited than were their female<lb/>
counterparts<lb/>
Twenty-six percent of the males<lb/>
were homosexual, compared with<lb/>
4 percent of the females. Of the<lb/>
seven homosexual men, five<lb/>
acknowledged they felt conflicted<lb/>
about their sexuality.<lb/>
Herzog said homosexuals might<lb/>
be more at risk than other males<lb/>
because of the pressure to be thin<lb/>
and attractive.<lb/>
The disorders may go<lb/>
undetected among males because<lb/>
they suffer fewer secondary symp-<lb/>
toms, the team wrote. Women,<lb/>
when starved, may stop<lb/>
menstruating.<lb/>
The researchers said males may<lb/>
also be reluctant to seek help for<lb/>
"these stereotypically female<lb/>
disorders" and ma also feel<lb/>
ashamed or anxious about<lb/>
aknowledging sexuality-related<lb/>
problems to a professional.<lb/>
Other studies have found that<lb/>
boys afflicted with anorexia tend-<lb/>
ed to be poor students and were<lb/>
more resistant to therapy than<lb/>
female anorectics.<lb/>
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Think Big<lb/>
Gdlf ALPHA SIG<lb/>
Alpha Sigma Phi Fraternity<lb/>
To barter ths man<lb/>
frttbrt Printing 1v<lb/>
Jones Wl<lb/>
Temple<lb/>
B RNm Mr VA<lb/>
Despite completing on.<lb/>
throwing two interceptions in<lb/>
loss to Florida State. Ron <lb/>
Carolina's starting quarterback h<lb/>
Temple in their season opener 5<lb/>
'It"s time we decided on one <lb/>
head coach Ed Eirn<lb/>
afternoon press conference<lb/>
me and executed better wru<lb/>
feme (against Florida<lb/>
R .bbie Bare? -tar<lb/>
.placed him or. I<lb/>
the remainder of t:<lb/>
amount in the second half,<lb/>
given the opportur '<lb/>
tire game<lb/>
"Robbie showed<lb/>
"but Ron wa<lb/>
better<lb/>
Emory said Bar<lb/>
ins might even get a loot<lb/>
Darrell Speed, but<lb/>
based on the prodi.<lb/>
at the Pirate helm.<lb/>
Other tha:<lb/>
gesi era goir<lb/>
negative effect the<lb/>
on his p<lb/>
"Tf we had won in !c<lb/>
age to pla<lb/>
Jones Face<lb/>
B XOlTPcUhRs<lb/>
When Ron J<lb/>
for the Pirate this S<lb/>
the Temple 0<lb/>
game<lb/>
The f:<lb/>
ed the starter in this Sa<lb/>
by Cc ach Ed Emoi<lb/>
Florida State<lb/>
"Ron Jones exe.<lb/>
nst Florida Sta En<lb/>
"and he will si .<lb/>
against Temple<lb/>
 at<lb/>
NEil .OMMSOH - ECU e<lb/>
Ron Jones ill start aganit Teml<lb/>
saturdav night.<lb/>
Sherma<lb/>
Bv 1 ONV BROWS<lb/>
Great exj<lb/>
opening of the '84 ECl<lb/>
schedule, according to Dr Pat<lb/>
Sherman, me:<lb/>
head coach<lb/>
"I see a great deas of in<lb/>
ment over las: year's teams<lb/>
overall strength she -<lb/>
"Despite hav.ng few juni<lb/>
seniors to serve in leade<lb/>
roles, the improvement I've seen<lb/>
in our returning players will help<lb/>
greatlv.<lb/>
"The number one rated dm<lb/>
player graduated, she said.<lb/>
each of the returning nine<lb/>
move up at leas: one positio<lb/>
The first cut has been made.<lb/>
two more must go to get down to<lb/>
the 12 man limit. Survivors.so far<lb/>
are: David Creech. Dan LaMont,<lb/>
Galen Treble. Greg Willis. John<lb/>
Anthony, Scott Avery. Davis<lb/>
Baglev, Pat Campanaro. Hank<lb/>
Kinne, John McDade. Bill Paul.<lb/>
Kevin Plum, David Turner and<lb/>
Greg Loyd.<lb/>
"Creech, LaMont, Treble ana<lb/>
Willis currently are the top four in<lb/>
overall ability Sherman stated.<lb/>
"but as the season progresses that<lb/>
rating could easily change as we<lb/>
? ? mw<lb/>
-i mnt<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
????? ?<lb/>
mmtm<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0017"/><lb/>
<lb/>
?"?bfe<lb/>
8H AM HUMBERT ECU Photo Lah<lb/>
of ihe target citii 5.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR<lb/>
DAILY<lb/>
4:00-7:00<lb/>
Sept. 6<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
Band<lb/>
out<lb/>
I<lb/>
SIG<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
Page 17<lb/>
Jones Will Get Start Against<lb/>
Temple Despite FSU Debut<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Sports Uiior<lb/>
Despite completing only six of 18 passes and<lb/>
'rowing two interceptions in last weekend's 48-17<lb/>
s to Florida State, Ron Jones will be East<lb/>
arolina's starting quarterback when the Pirates host<lb/>
Temple in their season opener Saturday night.<lb/>
"It's time we decided on one quarterback ECU<lb/>
ead coach Ed Emory said in a Tuesday mid-<lb/>
ternoon press conference. "Ron was more produc-<lb/>
e and executed better when he was running the of-<lb/>
fense (against Florida State)<lb/>
Robbie Bartlett started against the Seminoles, but<lb/>
ones replaced him on ECU's third series and played<lb/>
e remainder of the first half. Both played an equal<lb/>
amount in the second half, yet Bartlett was only<lb/>
given the opportunity to attempt two passes the en-<lb/>
? ire game.<lb/>
"Robbie showed poise in Tallahassee Emory<lb/>
said, "but Ron was quicker and handled the option<lb/>
better<lb/>
Emory said Bartlett will play aginst Temple, and<lb/>
( l fans might even get a look at third candidate<lb/>
Oarrell Speed, but the decision to start Jones was<lb/>
aed on the productivity of the offense while he was<lb/>
at the Pirate helm.<lb/>
Other than the quarterback situation, Emory's big-<lb/>
gest concern going into the Temple game is the<lb/>
legative effect the score of the FSU game will have<lb/>
on his players.<lb/>
"If we had won in Tallahassee it would been an ad-<lb/>
age to play Temple, but now it's a<lb/>
disadvantage the fifth-year coach said. "They<lb/>
didn't play over the weekend, so they've had all year<lb/>
to prepare for us.<lb/>
"They're a low-key ball club Emory continued,<lb/>
"but they're one of the most powerful teams in the<lb/>
East. We couldn't be playing a tougher team at this<lb/>
stage in our season<lb/>
Emory made note of Temple's near upsets of Penn<lb/>
State and Georgia last year, and said the Pirates<lb/>
would have to play far better than they did aginst<lb/>
FSU if they plan on beating the Owls.<lb/>
Temple is led by ECAC rookie of the year and<lb/>
Associated Press all-East choice Paul Palmer, who<lb/>
led the Owls in rushing, receiving and scoring last<lb/>
year. Palmer, however, didn't give the Pirates any<lb/>
problems last year as he only managed 23 yards on 11<lb/>
carries.<lb/>
In that game, the Pirates improved their record to<lb/>
5-1 on the 1983 season, as former ECU and present<lb/>
Canadian League quarterback Kevin Ingram com-<lb/>
pleted 12 of 19 passes to lead his team to a 24-11 vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
Although many people are writing the Pirates off<lb/>
this year after their dismal performance against<lb/>
Florida State, Emory is confident this year's team<lb/>
will produce.<lb/>
"We're exactly where we were last year ? 0-1. We<lb/>
have just as much speed, strength and talent as we<lb/>
did in 1983, but we're still inexperienced Emory<lb/>
said. "What people don't realize is it takes time for a<lb/>
team to blend together and to do things by habit in-<lb/>
stead of thinking about.<lb/>
"We're going to be a good football team, in fact,<lb/>
we're going to be as good as we were a year ago ?<lb/>
it's just a matter of time<lb/>
Jones Faces Biggest Challenge Yet<lb/>
B SCOTT POW ERS<lb/>
VuisUot Sports Fdiior<lb/>
When Ron Jones steps on the field<lb/>
the Pirates this Saturday against<lb/>
Temple Owls, it will be the biggest<lb/>
ie of his young college career.<lb/>
The freshman quarterback was nam-<lb/>
! the starter in this Saturday's game<lb/>
Coach Ed Emory because of his per-<lb/>
nance in last week's dissapointing<lb/>
ss to Florida State.<lb/>
- "Ron Jones executed well on offense<lb/>
tins! Florida State Emory said,<lb/>
and he will start for us this Saturday<lb/>
nst Temple<lb/>
0<lb/>
LWjL <lb/>
i<lb/>
-<lb/>
NEIL JOHNSON ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Ron Jones will start aganist Temple<lb/>
Saturday night.<lb/>
Jones, a redshirt last year,<lb/>
had an illustrious high school<lb/>
career at I.e. Norcom High in<lb/>
Portsmouth, Virginia. He was<lb/>
named player of the year by<lb/>
the Portsmouth Sports Club<lb/>
and was a second team all-<lb/>
state quarterback his senior<lb/>
year. He also was all-city in<lb/>
basketball and all-district in<lb/>
baseball, winning a total of<lb/>
seven varsity letters.<lb/>
He was slightly confused<lb/>
about being redshirted at first,<lb/>
but got over that quickly. "I<lb/>
knew about Kevin (former<lb/>
Pirate quarterback Kevin In-<lb/>
gram) before I came, but I<lb/>
didn't know about John<lb/>
Williams (last year's backup<lb/>
quarterback) he said.<lb/>
"I was a little discouraged<lb/>
about being redshirted at first,<lb/>
but the coaches said that I'd be<lb/>
helping the defense, so it was<lb/>
all right. I think that it worked<lb/>
to my advantage<lb/>
Jones was a highly recruited<lb/>
quarterback out of high<lb/>
school, but said he came to<lb/>
ECU because "it was like a<lb/>
home away from home.<lb/>
Everybody was so close, just<lb/>
like my team in high school<lb/>
When he First entered the<lb/>
game against FSU, he had a<lb/>
few problems. His first two<lb/>
passes were intercepted, one<lb/>
off of the hands of an ECU<lb/>
receiver.<lb/>
"The interceptions didn't<lb/>
really get me down, but they<lb/>
didn't help any either, because<lb/>
when I went in, I went in to<lb/>
move the football he said.<lb/>
One might expect that there<lb/>
would be some hard feelings<lb/>
between Jones and fellow<lb/>
quarterbacks Darrell Speec<lb/>
and Robbie Bartlett, all 01<lb/>
whom have been competing<lb/>
for the starting job, but that's<lb/>
not so.<lb/>
"We get along fine ? in the<lb/>
game or in practice he said.<lb/>
"The competition is good for all<lb/>
of us<lb/>
He knows that just because he<lb/>
is the starter this week, he can't<lb/>
afford not to do his job, because<lb/>
Speed and Bartlett are both ready<lb/>
to come in and do the job.<lb/>
"Right now, I have to do the<lb/>
job if I want to keep starting he<lb/>
said. "Both of the other quarter-<lb/>
backs are real good and will be<lb/>
ready to come in<lb/>
The 5-10, 180 pounder doesn't<lb/>
feel that his height puts him at any<lb/>
disadvantage in the ECU passing<lb/>
offense. "We run a sprint out<lb/>
type pass offense that I think is<lb/>
suited more for the smaller,<lb/>
quicker quarterback he said.<lb/>
Jones missed last year's spring<lb/>
game with a knee injury he sus-<lb/>
tained on the last day of practice<lb/>
before the game. He had never<lb/>
taken snap in a game situation un-<lb/>
til Saturday night, something that<lb/>
offensive coordinator Don Murry<lb/>
thinks may have put him at a<lb/>
disadvantage.<lb/>
"He needs playing time, game<lb/>
time Murry said. "He has the<lb/>
innate skills but hasn't had the op-<lb/>
portunity to develop them fully<lb/>
Jones knows that he has yet to<lb/>
reach his peak. "Right now I just<lb/>
have to get better and better every<lb/>
practice and every game he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
As far as the Temple game is<lb/>
concerned, Jones feels that the<lb/>
Pirates will be ready. "There<lb/>
shouldn't be any problems with us<lb/>
not being ready he said. "I<lb/>
know that we'll all be pumped<lb/>
up<lb/>
Concerning the rest of the<lb/>
season, Jones sounded a warning<lb/>
to future opponents. "We can't<lb/>
go by the first game. We lost it<lb/>
last year. But this team knows<lb/>
how to lose and what it feels like,<lb/>
and we don't want to feel that way<lb/>
any more<lb/>
EIL JOHNSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Pirate head coach Ed Emory should have plenty to tion for their home opener against Temple Saturday<lb/>
tell his players during practice this week in prepara- night. Game time is 7 p.m.<lb/>
Miami Ranked No. 1<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? The<lb/>
United Press International Board<lb/>
of Coaches Top 20 college foot-<lb/>
ball ratings, with first-place votes<lb/>
and records in parentheses (total<lb/>
points based on 15 points for first<lb/>
place, 14 for second, etc.).<lb/>
1. Miami (30) (2-0) 513<lb/>
2. Nebraska (4) (0-0) 425<lb/>
3. Texas (0-0) 337<lb/>
4. UCLA (0-0) 330<lb/>
5. Clemson (1-0) 311<lb/>
6. Auburn (0-1) 233<lb/>
7. Penn State (0-0) 230<lb/>
8. Ohio State (0-0) 221<lb/>
9. Michigan (0-0) 215<lb/>
10. Oklahoma (0-0) 198<lb/>
11. Alabama (0-0) 183<lb/>
12. Brigham Young (1-0) 172<lb/>
13. Arizona State (0-0) 168<lb/>
14. Iowa (1) (0-0) 133<lb/>
15. Notre Dame (0-0) 128<lb/>
16. Boston College (1-0) 76<lb/>
17. Southern Methdst (0-0) 66<lb/>
18. Washington (0-0) 65<lb/>
19. Florida State (1-0) 60<lb/>
20. Pittsburgh (0-1) 25<lb/>
Charley Pell, Florida; Danny<lb/>
Ford, Clemson; Bobby Bow den.<lb/>
Florida State.<lb/>
MIDLANDS ? Tom Osborne,<lb/>
Nebraska; Barry Switzer,<lb/>
Oklahoma; Jim Dickey, Kansas<lb/>
State; Warren Powers, Missouri;<lb/>
John Cooper, Tulsa; Mike Cot-<lb/>
tefried, Kansas.<lb/>
SOUTHWEST ? Fred Akers,<lb/>
Texas; Ken Hatfield, Arkansas;<lb/>
Jackie Sherrill, Texas A&amp;M; Sam<lb/>
Robertson, Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siana; Grant Teaff, Baylor; Bob-<lb/>
by Collins, Southern Methodist<lb/>
MOUNTAINS ? LaVell Ed-<lb/>
wards. Brigham Young; Farry<lb/>
Smith, Arizona; Joe Lee Dunn,<lb/>
New Mexico; Chuck Stobart,<lb/>
Utah; Al Kincaid, Wyoming;<lb/>
Leon Fuller, Colorado State.<lb/>
PACIFIC - Rich Brooks,<lb/>
Oregon; Claude Gilbert, San Jose<lb/>
State; Jack Elway, Stanford; Don<lb/>
James, Washington; Terry<lb/>
Donahue, UCLA; Jim Sweeney,<lb/>
Fresno State.<lb/>
Note: By agreement with the<lb/>
American Football Coaches<lb/>
Association, teams on probation<lb/>
by the NCAA are ineligible for the<lb/>
Top 20 and national champion-<lb/>
ship consideration by the UPI<lb/>
Board of Coaches. The teams cur-<lb/>
rently on probation are Arizona.<lb/>
Illinois and Kansas.<lb/>
Here by sections are the coaches<lb/>
who comprise the UPI College<lb/>
Football Board:<lb/>
EAST ? Don<lb/>
Virginia; Serafino<lb/>
Pittsburgh; Dick<lb/>
Syracuse; Jack Bicknell. Boston<lb/>
College; Jim Young, Army; Gary<lb/>
Tranguiil, Navy.<lb/>
MIDWEST '? Earle Bruce.<lb/>
Ohio State; Dave McClain,<lb/>
Wisconsin; Gerry Faust, Notre<lb/>
Dame; Mike White, Illinois;<lb/>
Hayden Fr, Iowa; Dan Simrell,<lb/>
Toledo.<lb/>
SOUTH ? Ray Perkins,<lb/>
Alabama; Vince Dooley, Georgia;<lb/>
Dick Crum, North Carolina;<lb/>
Nehlen, West<lb/>
"Foge" Fazio,<lb/>
MacPherson,<lb/>
Sherman Anticipating Pirate Tennis Season<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
Great expectations mark the<lb/>
opening of the '84 ECU tennis<lb/>
schedule, according to Dr. Pat<lb/>
Sherman, men's and women's<lb/>
head coach.<lb/>
"1 see a great deal of improve-<lb/>
ment over last year's teams in<lb/>
overall strength she said.<lb/>
Despite having few juniors and<lb/>
seniors to serve in leadership<lb/>
roles, the improvement I've seen<lb/>
in our returning players will help<lb/>
greatly.<lb/>
"The number one rated men's<lb/>
player graduated, she said, "so<lb/>
each of the returning nine will<lb/>
move up at least one position.<lb/>
The first cut has been made, but<lb/>
two more must go to get down to<lb/>
the 12 man limit. Survivors so far<lb/>
are: David Creech, Dan LaMont,<lb/>
Galen Treble, Greg Willis, John<lb/>
Anthony, Scott Avery. Davis<lb/>
Bagley, Pat Campanaro, Hank<lb/>
Kinne, John McDade, Bill Paul,<lb/>
Kevin Plum, David Turner and<lb/>
Greg Loyd.<lb/>
"Creech, LaMont, Treble and<lb/>
Willis currently are the top four in<lb/>
overall ability Sherman stated,<lb/>
"but as the season progresses that<lb/>
rating could easily change as we<lb/>
continuously evaluate the team<lb/>
Assistant coach Laura Redford,<lb/>
who played four years at ECU,<lb/>
feels that Greg Willis is the most<lb/>
consistent server, but notes that<lb/>
several men are close behind.<lb/>
"The biggest difference from<lb/>
last year is greater depth she<lb/>
said. "With nine men returning,<lb/>
each of the 12 players should be<lb/>
better this year<lb/>
On the women's side of the net,<lb/>
the clear leader in the eyes of<lb/>
Coach Sherman is Janet Russell,<lb/>
the only senior. "Russell is<lb/>
definitely our number one woman<lb/>
player she said. "We expect her<lb/>
experience to help greatly<lb/>
Now at the 12 player limit, the<lb/>
squad members are: Russell,<lb/>
Heidi Bunting, Ann Manderfield,<lb/>
Susie Brown, Sheila Feeley, Karla<lb/>
Hoyle, Susan Montjoy, Ty Myers,<lb/>
Kris Sammons, Laura Zaloudek,<lb/>
Cisi Bolton and Laura Conway.<lb/>
"Manderfield is rated second<lb/>
after the top two (Manderfield<lb/>
and Bunting). The abilities are so<lb/>
close it will take some competition<lb/>
to determine rankings.<lb/>
"Both teams worked hard dur-<lb/>
ing the summer and I see a lot of<lb/>
improvement Sherman said.<lb/>
"We're pleased with their pro-<lb/>
gress so far.<lb/>
Hopefully she's right, because a<lb/>
strong schedule is set for the fall<lb/>
for both squads, with the men<lb/>
opening at powerful Old Domi-<lb/>
nion.<lb/>
The home season opens on<lb/>
Tuesday, Sept. 25 as ECU hosts<lb/>
Campbell. Three home contests<lb/>
end the regular season for the men<lb/>
Sept. 15-16<lb/>
Sept. 21-22<lb/>
Sept. 25<lb/>
Sept. 28-29<lb/>
Oct. 2<lb/>
Oct. 5<lb/>
Oct. 11<lb/>
Oct. 26-28<lb/>
ECU MEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
FALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
atODU<lb/>
at Guilford<lb/>
CAMPBELL<lb/>
at UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN<lb/>
HIGH POINT<lb/>
N.C. STATE<lb/>
at ECAC-South tournament<lb/>
9p.m.<lb/>
TBA<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
TBA<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
3 p.m.<lb/>
TBA<lb/>
ECU WOMEN'S TENNIS<lb/>
FALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
Sept. 22 UNC-GREENSBORO 1 p.m.<lb/>
Sept. 24 ATLANTIC CHRISTIAN 3 p.m.<lb/>
Sept. 27 Campbell 3 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 3 UNC-WILMINGTON 3 p.m.<lb/>
Oct. 6 at Davidson 11a.m.<lb/>
Oct. 7 at UNC-Charlotte 12 noon<lb/>
Oct. 9 at Peace 2p.m.<lb/>
Oct 11 at High Point 3 D.m.<lb/>
with Atlantic Christian, High<lb/>
Point and N.C. State coming to<lb/>
Greenville. The ECAC-South<lb/>
tournament closes out the fall<lb/>
slate.<lb/>
ECAC-South members par-<lb/>
ticipating in men's tennis are:<lb/>
Navy, Richmond, William &amp;<lb/>
Mary, James Madison, George<lb/>
Mason and UNC-Wilmington.<lb/>
Each one is tough, so it will be<lb/>
quite a challenge for the young<lb/>
Pirate team.<lb/>
The women's schedule is equal-<lb/>
ly difficult, with such powers as<lb/>
Davidson and Peace College to<lb/>
contend with. The Lady Pirates<lb/>
are set to open their season<lb/>
hosting UNC-Greensboro on<lb/>
Sept. 22.<lb/>
Two other home contests are<lb/>
scheduled for the fall with Atlan-<lb/>
tic Christian on Sept. 24 and<lb/>
UNC-Wilmington on Oct 3.<lb/>
"We want all the fans to attend<lb/>
our matches that we can get<lb/>
said Sherman. "It really helps to<lb/>
have fans cheering us along. It's<lb/>
nice to have people who can see<lb/>
what effort the players put forth<lb/>
for ECU<lb/>
Over the summer a weight pro-<lb/>
gram was followed to strength<lb/>
specific muscles for tennis. So-<lb/>
called "tennis elbow" is<lb/>
sometimes caused by bad stroke<lb/>
techniques and hitting too much<lb/>
without proper conditioning as<lb/>
Sherman sees it, and so those are<lb/>
areas to be worked on to avoid in-<lb/>
juries.<lb/>
The women's team did lost<lb/>
three of last year's team member's<lb/>
to knee injuries, and one will<lb/>
undergo surgery soon. No serious<lb/>
physical problems have occurred<lb/>
since then, but two players are in-<lb/>
eligible for fall due to academic<lb/>
problems.<lb/>
With limited funds available for<lb/>
tennis, as well as all minor sports,<lb/>
recruiting is a problem for ECU.<lb/>
"We get most players by word-of-<lb/>
mouth or as volunteers Sher-<lb/>
man said. "Some write to us and<lb/>
we correspond with them through<lb/>
videotapes or other methods<lb/>
Kevin Plumb, from Ontario,<lb/>
Canada, was attracted by Coach<lb/>
Sherman's knowledge of the<lb/>
game. She has authored several<lb/>
publications on tennis and has<lb/>
been involved in the sport since<lb/>
the 50's.<lb/>
With the dedication shown by<lb/>
the teams so far, prospects are<lb/>
bright for a good season in the fall<lb/>
of '84.<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
v.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0018"/><lb/>
18<lb/>
JJJgjAgJjCAROLINlAN SEPTEMBER 6<lb/>
1984<lb/>
ECU Has Impressive Home Opener Record<lb/>
ECU AND HOME OPENERS:<lb/>
East Carolina sports an im-<lb/>
pressive 16-5 record in home<lb/>
openers since the Pirates moved<lb/>
into the friendly confines of<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium in 1963. The<lb/>
Pirates' first win in Ficklen was a<lb/>
20-10 defeat of Wake Forest on<lb/>
Sept. 21, 1963.<lb/>
ECU has captured 11 of its last<lb/>
12 home openers while Ed Emory<lb/>
is 3-1 in the season's first game in<lb/>
Ficklen since becoming head<lb/>
coach in 1980.<lb/>
ECU AND FICKLEN<lb/>
STADIUM: Saturday's home<lb/>
opener with the Temple Owls will<lb/>
mark ECU's 22nd season in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium. During the<lb/>
previous 21 years the Pirates have<lb/>
put together 16 winning seasons<lb/>
and 10 undefeated seasons, in-<lb/>
cluding 1983's 4-0 mark.<lb/>
The Pirates also own an eight-<lb/>
game winning steak in Ficklen<lb/>
stretching over the last two<lb/>
seasons. The last time ECU lost a<lb/>
home game was Nov. 14, 1981 ?<lb/>
a 31-21 setback to William &amp;<lb/>
Mary.<lb/>
ECU has suffered through only<lb/>
five losing seasons in Ficklen's<lb/>
21-year historv. Those are:<lb/>
1968 - 2-3 record<lb/>
1969 ? 1-4 record<lb/>
1970? 1-3 record<lb/>
1971 ? 3-4 record<lb/>
1980 ? 2-3 record<lb/>
Owls will be the first of two Penn-<lb/>
sylvania independents East<lb/>
Carolina will play in 1984. The<lb/>
other is the University of Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh, which ECU visits on Oct.<lb/>
6 in Pitt Stadium.<lb/>
IMPRESSIVE: Even with the<lb/>
Pirates' 48-17 season-opening loss<lb/>
to Florida State, ECU still sports<lb/>
an impressive 15-8 record in its<lb/>
last 23 games (.652 winning<lb/>
percentage). The Pirates have now<lb/>
won 11 of their last 15 games<lb/>
dating back to Nov. 6, 1982, a<lb/>
40-24 victory over Texas-<lb/>
Arlington in Arlington, TX. That<lb/>
works out to a .733 winning<lb/>
percentage.<lb/>
TEMPLE NO. 1: The Temple TEMPLE ON A ROLL: Temple,<lb/>
Adapted Program Introduced<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
SUff Writer<lb/>
In recent columns written for<lb/>
the East Carolinian, the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Intramural-Recreational<lb/>
Services has tried to inform the<lb/>
ECU public about several of the<lb/>
major programs being offered.<lb/>
There is one program which has<lb/>
not yet been mentioned ? the<lb/>
Adapted Intramural Program.<lb/>
This is perhaps one of the most<lb/>
beneficial and least publicized<lb/>
programs the IRS offers.<lb/>
The IRS Department works<lb/>
closely with the Office of Han-<lb/>
dicapped Student Services and the<lb/>
Cooridnator of Adapted Physical<lb/>
Education Programs in providing<lb/>
a variety of recreational activities<lb/>
for all handicapped individuals.<lb/>
Specialized services and programs<lb/>
have been developed for mobility,<lb/>
as well as visual and hearing im-<lb/>
paired individuals. Organized<lb/>
sport tournaments as well as in-<lb/>
formal recreational activities such<lb/>
as canoeing, exerciseweight<lb/>
The Department of Intramural-<lb/>
Recreational Services would like<lb/>
to reiterate the importance of par-<lb/>
ticipation for all. The Adapted In-<lb/>
tramural Program is just one of<lb/>
the many services the IRS depart-<lb/>
ment offers to all the ECU facul-<lb/>
ty, staff and students. Check into<lb/>
Intramurals ? we have something<lb/>
for everyone.<lb/>
under second year coach Bruce<lb/>
Arians, brings a two-game winn-<lb/>
ing streak into Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
dating back to the 1983 season. In<lb/>
their final two games of '83, the<lb/>
Owls defeated Louisville 24-7 and<lb/>
Rutgers 24-23. Temple, in fact,<lb/>
has won three of their last five<lb/>
games, with the only losses com-<lb/>
ing against Georgia and West<lb/>
Virginia. Besides independent<lb/>
East Carolina, the Owls will take<lb/>
on other Division I powers such<lb/>
Pittsburih, Florida State, Boston<lb/>
College, Virginia Tech and West<lb/>
Virginia during the 1984 season.<lb/>
PALMER IMPRESSIVE: One of<lb/>
Temple's top returnees for 1984 is<lb/>
tailback Paul Palmer, who earned<lb/>
ECAC "Rookie of the Year"<lb/>
honors a year ago.<lb/>
Palmer led the Owls in three<lb/>
categories in 1983:<lb/>
? Rushing ? 141 carries for 628<lb/>
yards (4.5 average), 6 TDs<lb/>
? Receiving ? 33 receptions for<lb/>
271 yards (8.2 average), two TDs<lb/>
? Scoring ? 50 points (eight<lb/>
touchdowns and one two-point<lb/>
conversion)<lb/>
Palmer was also second in<lb/>
kickoff return yardage with 125<lb/>
yards on seven attempts for an<lb/>
average of 17.9. His long was 24.<lb/>
Palmer, an Associated Press all-<lb/>
East choice, did not have a good<lb/>
game against the Pirates in 1983.<lb/>
He rushed for only 23 yards on<lb/>
11 carries, caught three passes for<lb/>
only six yards and returned two<lb/>
kickoffs for 30 yards.<lb/>
COMMON OPPONENTS: East<lb/>
Carolina and Temple share two<lb/>
common opponents on their 1984<lb/>
schedules. The Pirates opened<lb/>
1984 with Florida State and will<lb/>
meet Pittsburgh on Oct. 6. The<lb/>
Owls also travel to Tallahassee,<lb/>
FL to meet the Seminoles while<lb/>
hosting Pittsburgh in<lb/>
Philadelphia's Veterans Stadium<lb/>
Sept. 22.<lb/>
Pitt beat the Owls 35-0 in 1983.<lb/>
TEMPLE VS. THE STATE OK<lb/>
NORTH CAROLINA: Temple<lb/>
has met only four North C arolina<lb/>
schools in its 85 years of inter-<lb/>
collegiate football. The Owls are<lb/>
on the short side of a 1-3 record,<lb/>
with two of those losses being to<lb/>
1 atarolina.<lb/>
I he lone victory came against<lb/>
Wake Forest in 1930 (36-0)<lb/>
E( I VS THE STATE OF PENN-<lb/>
SYLVANIA: Temple is the only<lb/>
Pennsylvania school 1 I<lb/>
Carolina has ever faced in its<lb/>
48-year football history The<lb/>
Pirates sport a 2-0 record against<lb/>
the Owls (23-10 in 1982 and 24-11<lb/>
in 1983)<lb/>
The Pirates will play Pittsburgh<lb/>
later in 1984 and Penn State joins<lb/>
ECU's schedule in 1985 and 1986.<lb/>
training, swimming<lb/>
horseback riding are offered<lb/>
and<lb/>
Saturday Sellout<lb/>
Wins Oldsmobile<lb/>
By DEE PERRY &amp;<lb/>
BILL MITCHELL<lb/>
SMI Urilm<lb/>
During Saturday's game with<lb/>
Temple University, if Ficklen<lb/>
stadium sells out its capacity of<lb/>
35,000, someone in attendance<lb/>
will win a 1984 Oldsmobile at<lb/>
half time.<lb/>
At this years home opener Sept.<lb/>
8 at 7:00 a 1984 Firenza SX Coupe<lb/>
(special Pirate edition) will be<lb/>
given away in a drawing com-<lb/>
pliments of Buddy Holt and Holt<lb/>
Oldsmobile of Greenville.<lb/>
With the interest in ECU foot-<lb/>
ball, hopefully there will be a<lb/>
sellout, a first for the Pirates. The<lb/>
rest of the home games have a<lb/>
good chance of being sold out<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Season ticket sales have been<lb/>
going good, but there still needs to<lb/>
be a lot of walk-up ticket sales and<lb/>
students coming to the game.<lb/>
Things were at a peak for<lb/>
everyone before the FSU game,<lb/>
and the fans might be a little let<lb/>
down now. However, the coaches<lb/>
and players have experienced no<lb/>
let down.<lb/>
According to Dave Hart, the<lb/>
plan to give the car away is to help<lb/>
"involve people in the social at-<lb/>
mosphere of game day This is<lb/>
also the plan behind other promo-<lb/>
tional events, such as the tailgate<lb/>
contest and free limousine use.<lb/>
Dave Hart also states that "the<lb/>
football program needs the<lb/>
students' enthusiasm at the<lb/>
games. They spread the excite-<lb/>
ment in the stadium that helps the<lb/>
Pirates win<lb/>
The closest ECU has ever come<lb/>
to a sellout was homecoming last<lb/>
year against East Tennessee State<lb/>
with a crowd of 33,767.<lb/>
Ficklen originally started with<lb/>
only the south stands, but was ex-<lb/>
panded to a capacity of 20,000 in<lb/>
1968. Then in 1978 it was expand-<lb/>
ed to its present capacity of<lb/>
35,000.<lb/>
The ECU athletic department<lb/>
wishes to thank Buddy Holt and<lb/>
Holt Oldsmobile for donating the<lb/>
car and being such a staunch sup-<lb/>
porter of Pirate athletics.<lb/>
4V<lb/>
LOSE<lb/>
WEIGHT TO<lb/>
FEEL GREAT!<lb/>
Lose 16-28 lbs. in 6 weeks<lb/>
No shots No drugs No contracts<lb/>
Call 756-8889<lb/>
HOURS:<lb/>
7:30-1:30<lb/>
3:00-5:30<lb/>
ADDRESS:<lb/>
The Weigh Station<lb/>
214 E. Arlington Blvd.<lb/>
Greenville, NC<lb/>
FREE REGISTRATION<lb/>
WITH COUPON<lb/>
LAMPS - LAMPS - LAMPS<lb/>
We've got lamps for just about any need!<lb/>
ONLY<lb/>
The Polaris Magnifier Lamp<lb/>
Des . "or the hot I<lb/>
student and many home us<lb/>
PAIR'S<lb/>
$<lb/>
24<lb/>
95<lb/>
107 Trade Street<lb/>
Phone 756-2291<lb/>
Mc -Fri 8.30-5.30<lb/>
Saturday 8 30-1230<lb/>
FRIDAY SEPT. 14<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 7:00<lb/>
AT THE GREENLEAF<lb/>
ON S. MEMORIAL<lb/>
Tickets Available A-<lb/>
This Way Up<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Christian Bookstore<lb/>
WBZQ<lb/>
WRQR<lb/>
All Proceeds Of Concert Go To This Way Up A Nonprofit<lb/>
Christian Nightclub In Downtown Greenville-Corner Of<lb/>
5th and Cotanche<lb/>
11 ii ? in?ir???? , .    - Zm<lb/>
The<lb/>
ECU - TEMPLE<lb/>
CLEMSON - VIRGINIA<lb/>
DLKE - INDIANA<lb/>
MARYLAND SYRACI sh<lb/>
WAKE FORES1 IR(,IM<lb/>
ALABAMA BOWON i<lb/>
FLORIDA I S!<lb/>
MISSOURI Ml IM)s<lb/>
NOTRE DAMI pi rim <lb/>
PLNNSTAIF R17(,FR<lb/>
Moorman<lb/>
RAl EIGH N '<lb/>
North Carolina S<lb/>
freshman football<lb/>
with rape and I<lb/>
ed Tuesday on S5.0O<lb/>
Pero Rob t M<lb/>
Danville, Va harg<lb/>
first-degree I<lb/>
degree rape stemn . I<lb/>
cident early Saturday A<lb/>
arrested Moorma<lb/>
he remained in 'he W<lb/>
Jail under $:? ??<lb/>
heanr<lb/>
Judge I V. Pa - ? n<lb/>
reduce tht bond v<lb/>
after del i<lb/>
ball coach Tom Ree<lb/>
guarantee Moorman<lb/>
at hi; trial.<lb/>
Reed planned<lb/>
Bruce R Poull<lb/>
chancellor, to de<lb/>
man will be a<lb/>
fielc Moorman,<lb/>
recruited quai<lb/>
Washington High Sv<lb/>
wile, has been sid<lb/>
weeks by a<lb/>
suffered in practice<lb/>
Following M<lb/>
Reed had said V.<lb/>
not actively par ?<lb/>
Moorman lee<lb/>
team to the state sen<lb/>
senior last year. H<lb/>
1.27"7 yards and 1?<lb/>
and ran for 955<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
RALEIGH. N<lb/>
Athletic oi'<lb/>
Carolina State Univei<lb/>
Thursdi<lb/>
JAME<lb/>
?The Piai<lb/>
S2.00<lb/>
FRIX<lb/>
1 AHi<lb/>
UN 1 H<lb/>
5H0NEY6 FIS:<lb/>
ALL-YOU<lb/>
Help Yourse I 1<lb/>
 FISH FILLETS P'ead<lb/>
3 Favorite Soev J<lb/>
 BaKtV F "P,LLET!<lb/>
 Hot Vegetal) es<lb/>
 SeatoodCho ?<lb/>
 French Fries<lb/>
 HushpupDes<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PM<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
i <lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057661_0019"/><lb/>
ecord<lb/>
H CAROLINA: Temple<lb/>
rl only tour North Carolina<lb/>
5 sears of inter-<lb/>
football. The Owls are<lb/>
of a 1-3 record,<lb/>
-v osses being to<lb/>
came againt<lb/>
)30(36-0).<lb/>
HI ST ATI OK PENV<lb/>
1 nple is the only<lb/>
school I .a v t<lb/>
faced in its<lb/>
history. The<lb/>
ord against<lb/>
982 and 24-11<lb/>
ay Pittsburgh<lb/>
State joins<lb/>
85 and 1986.<lb/>
i-LAMPS<lb/>
out any need!<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
24<lb/>
95<lb/>
le Street<lb/>
2 30<lb/>
'?.<lb/>
'<lb/>
y;y<lb/>
rrj<lb/>
ad<lb/>
tig<lb/>
et<lb/>
IT-<lb/>
$<lb/>
OS<lb/>
te-<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
SEPTEMBER 6, 1984<lb/>
19<lb/>
The Panel Of Experts Pick 'em<lb/>
ECU ?TEMPLE<lb/>
CLEMSON - VIRGINIA<lb/>
DUKE - INDIANA<lb/>
MARYLAND - SYRACUSE<lb/>
WAKE FOREST - VIRGINIA TECH<lb/>
ALABAMA ? BOSTON COLLEGE<lb/>
FLORIDA - LSU<lb/>
MISSOURI - ILLINOIS<lb/>
NOTRE DAME - PURDUE<lb/>
PENN STATE - RUTGERS<lb/>
RANDY MEWS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
VirgmaTech<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Perdue<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Boston College<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Missouri<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
JENNIFER<lb/>
JENDRASIAK<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Wake Forest<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
SAD SAM<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Indiana<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Virginia Tech<lb/>
Alabama<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Illinois<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
Penn State<lb/>
Moorman Story Tops Football Notes<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) ? A<lb/>
North Carolina State University<lb/>
freshman football player charged<lb/>
with rape and burglary was releas-<lb/>
ed Tuesday on $5,000 bond.<lb/>
Percy Robert Moorman, 18, of<lb/>
Danville, Va is charged with<lb/>
first-degree burglary and second-<lb/>
degree rape stemming from an in-<lb/>
cident early Saturday. Authorities<lb/>
arrested Moorman Monday and<lb/>
he remained in the Wake County<lb/>
Jail under $10,000 bond until his<lb/>
hearing.<lb/>
Judge L.W. Payne agreed to<lb/>
reduce the bond for Moorman<lb/>
after defense attorneys said foot-<lb/>
ball coach Tom Reed would<lb/>
guarantee Moorman's appearance<lb/>
at his trial.<lb/>
Reed planned to speak with<lb/>
Bruce R. Poulton, the university's<lb/>
chancellor, to determine if Moor-<lb/>
man will be allowed back on the<lb/>
field. Moorman, a highly<lb/>
recruited quarterback from<lb/>
Washington High School in Dan-<lb/>
ville, has been sidelined in recent<lb/>
weeks by a dislocated shoulder<lb/>
suffered in practice.<lb/>
Following Moorman's arrest,<lb/>
Reed had said Moorman would<lb/>
not actively particpate in football.<lb/>
Moorman led his high school<lb/>
team to the state semifinals as a<lb/>
senior last year. He passed for<lb/>
1,277 yards and 13 touchdowns<lb/>
and ran for 955 yards and 10<lb/>
touchdowns.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI) -<lb/>
Athletic officials at North<lb/>
Carolina State University an-<lb/>
nounced Tuesday the Wolfpack's<lb/>
Sept. 22 game with Wake Forest<lb/>
has been rescheduled for televi-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
The game in N.C. State's<lb/>
Carter-Finley Stadium was added<lb/>
to the Atlantic Coast<lb/>
Conference's television package<lb/>
and will start at 12:15 p.m. in-<lb/>
stead of 7 p.m officials said.<lb/>
Wolfpack coach Tom Reed also<lb/>
announced the election of outside<lb/>
linebacker Frank Bush and offen-<lb/>
sive tackle A.V. Richards as co-<lb/>
captains for the 1984 season.<lb/>
The two seniors were chosen by<lb/>
a vote of players.<lb/>
Bush, a native of Athens, Ga<lb/>
is a three-year starter on defense<lb/>
and led the team in quarterback<lb/>
sacks last season. Richards, who<lb/>
is from Henderson, was moved to<lb/>
offensive tackle last season and is<lb/>
a three-year letterman.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
DURHAM, N.C. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Duke coach Steve Sloan Tuesday<lb/>
announced the selection of Drew<lb/>
Walston as the starting quarter-<lb/>
back in the Blue Devils' season<lb/>
opener Saturday against Indiana.<lb/>
Walston, a junior from College<lb/>
Park, Ga has played in a backup<lb/>
role for the past two seasons and<lb/>
served as a holder for Duke<lb/>
placekickers.<lb/>
Sloan said senior Ron Sally also<lb/>
will see action against Indiana.<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
INDIANAPOLIS (UPI) ? No<lb/>
suds will be flowing Saturday at<lb/>
the Purdue-Notre Dame football<lb/>
game in the Hoosier Dome.<lb/>
A ban against the sale of beer at<lb/>
the game was requested by of-<lb/>
ficials at th University of Notre<lb/>
Dame at South Bend, which lists<lb/>
the date as a home game on the<lb/>
school's schedule.<lb/>
"We just felt in light of the fact<lb/>
that this is a college game, that<lb/>
this (sale of beer) didn't seem to<lb/>
fit the Rev. E. William<lb/>
Beauchamp said Tuesday.<lb/>
"Most of the student body is<lb/>
under age (21 in Indiana) he<lb/>
said. "We don't serve beer at our<lb/>
stadium. We think it's un-<lb/>
necessary and inappropriate for<lb/>
college football<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
WINSTON-SALEM, N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Wake Forest football<lb/>
coach Al Groh Tuesday named<lb/>
Jamie Harris as the starting<lb/>
quarterback for Saturday's<lb/>
opener with Virginia Tech.<lb/>
Harris, a sophomore from Dan-<lb/>
ville, Va had been battling with<lb/>
junior Foy White for the starting<lb/>
spot since spring practice last<lb/>
March.<lb/>
Groh said both Harris and<lb/>
White "played on a first-team<lb/>
level during our entire training<lb/>
camp<lb/>
Although Harris will be the<lb/>
starter, Groh said he expected<lb/>
White to play against Virginia<lb/>
Tech Saturday night in Winston-<lb/>
Salem.<lb/>
The 6-foot-l, 193-pound Harris<lb/>
transferred to Wake Forest last<lb/>
fall from Georgia. He has not ap-<lb/>
peared in a regular season game<lb/>
since his senior year at George<lb/>
Washington High School in Dan-<lb/>
ville.<lb/>
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Will it be Randolph Siegfried<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>