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<pb facs="00057675_0001"/>
?rf?<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No. 18<lb/>
Thursday October 25, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
14 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Gov. James B<lb/>
Hospital while<lb/>
JON JORDAN ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Hunt. Jr spoke to staff members at the ECU School of Medicine and Pitt Memorial<lb/>
visiting Greenville Tuesdav.<lb/>
Art Damaged By Vandals<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nfwi I dii cm<lb/>
An incident of vandalism last<lb/>
weekend which caused approx-<lb/>
imately $10,000 worth of damage<lb/>
in the Jenkins Fine Arts Building<lb/>
has caused evening access to the<lb/>
building to be limited.<lb/>
According to Gene McAbee of<lb/>
the Department of Public Safety,<lb/>
the vandalism was reported at<lb/>
2:40 a.m. Sunday, Oct. 20. One<lb/>
sculpture worth $7,500 was<lb/>
destroyed, as were a number of<lb/>
smaller sculptures. In addition, a<lb/>
glass case on the 2nd floor was<lb/>
turned over and shattered and a<lb/>
caws on ttic 1st floor was broken.<lb/>
McAbee said three juveniles<lb/>
were found in the building at the<lb/>
time the vandalism was<lb/>
discovered but can't be connected<lb/>
with the incident. He added .hat<lb/>
anyone with information should<lb/>
contact the Department of Public<lb/>
Safety.<lb/>
As a response to the van-<lb/>
dalism, Edward Levine, dean of<lb/>
the School of Art, has ordered<lb/>
the building locked between 1<lb/>
and 7 a.m. Monday through Fri-<lb/>
day, and between midnight and 7<lb/>
a.m. on Saturday and Sunday.<lb/>
The building had been left open<lb/>
all night for the past several<lb/>
years.<lb/>
"We want to try to curtail this<lb/>
kind of activity he said.<lb/>
"We've had sporadic vandalism<lb/>
for the last couple of months and<lb/>
the faculty members don't recall<lb/>
ever having so much<lb/>
The destruction, Levine said,<lb/>
"is very difficult to understand<lb/>
Norman Keller, a faculty<lb/>
member, owned the $7,500<lb/>
sculpture. "I'd been working on<lb/>
it for over 10 years and had just<lb/>
finished it this summer he said.<lb/>
"A good piece of my life was tied<lb/>
up in that stone<lb/>
The sculpture was marble and<lb/>
weighed approximately 900 lbs<lb/>
Keller said. In addition, five<lb/>
students' works were destroyed.<lb/>
"Every stone in the process of be-<lb/>
ing carved by students was<lb/>
broken he said.<lb/>
Keller said it must have taken<lb/>
"quite some time" to destroy the<lb/>
works. "Whoever did it racked<lb/>
up a healthy destruction binge.<lb/>
'It seems like every<lb/>
Homecoming weekend we get a<lb/>
great increase in vandalism at the<lb/>
School of Art Keller added. He<lb/>
said this act of vandalism was<lb/>
"the straw that broke the camel's<lb/>
back" and everyone in the school<lb/>
will end up suffering because of<lb/>
it. "<lb/>
"It ends up affecting 750<lb/>
students he said. "I hope the<lb/>
police manage to pin this thing<lb/>
ECU Capital Requests<lb/>
Approved By UNC Board<lb/>
ByG.J.RIDEOLT<lb/>
Mantling Editor<lb/>
The UNC Board of Governors<lb/>
approved capital improvement<lb/>
requests for ECU totaling $19<lb/>
million in a Friday meeting at<lb/>
Chapel Hill. The total operation<lb/>
and capital improvement budget<lb/>
for the entire 16-member system<lb/>
is a record $1 billion. The budget<lb/>
requests now go to the Advisory<lb/>
Budget Commission which makes<lb/>
recommendations to the General<lb/>
Assembly, scheduled to convene<lb/>
in February 1985.<lb/>
The major item for ECU is a<lb/>
sports medicinephysical educa-<lb/>
tion facility with a projected cost<lb/>
of $8 million. The facility would<lb/>
be the first major expansion of<lb/>
the sports facilities in 17 years.<lb/>
Chancellor John M. Howell said<lb/>
the new building would take the<lb/>
pressure off of other sports<lb/>
buildings.<lb/>
Howell expects to have an ex-<lb/>
panding sports medicine program<lb/>
at ECU in the future. The<lb/>
medical facilities already here<lb/>
makes this area ideal for such a<lb/>
program, Howell said.<lb/>
Other requests made by the<lb/>
Board of Governors include a<lb/>
biotechnology lab, with a cost of<lb/>
SI.9 million and a building to<lb/>
house a nuclear magnetic<lb/>
resonance machine at a cost of<lb/>
close to $1 million. These two<lb/>
items, upon approval, will be<lb/>
built with funds from the medical<lb/>
family practice plan. The NMR<lb/>
building requires special con-<lb/>
struction materials.<lb/>
Another item for ECU includes<lb/>
a birthing center at the School of<lb/>
Medicine, which carries a price of<lb/>
$1.25 million. The present center<lb/>
is overcrowded, according to<lb/>
Howell.<lb/>
Howell is optimistic about get-<lb/>
ting the items approved by the<lb/>
Board of Governors passed by<lb/>
the General Assemblv. He feels<lb/>
they are basically needed.<lb/>
Major renovations requested<lb/>
by ECU for the 1985-87 capital<lb/>
improvement funds are:<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
million for<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
gymnasium, $3.8<lb/>
improvement of<lb/>
Graham building (geology),<lb/>
$1.35 million for updating of the<lb/>
facilities.<lb/>
Old Cafeteria building<lb/>
$595,000 for repairs.<lb/>
The Board of Governors also<lb/>
approved a 7 percent faculty<lb/>
salary increase. Howell says the<lb/>
board hopes to correct the im-<lb/>
balance that occured last year<lb/>
when the General Assembly gave<lb/>
public school teachers 5 percent<lb/>
more money than university<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
Hunt Campaigns At ECU,<lb/>
Discusses Tobacco At Rally<lb/>
(UPI) ? While making a cam-<lb/>
paign swing through eastern<lb/>
North Carolina Tuesday, Gov.<lb/>
James Hunt pledged to push for<lb/>
laws to rescue the state's<lb/>
beleagured tobacco industry and<lb/>
accused Sen. Jesse Helms of fail-<lb/>
ing to stand up for farmers.<lb/>
Both Helms and Hunt wooed<lb/>
voters in North Carolina's tobac-<lb/>
co country. Helms, chairman of<lb/>
the Senate Agriculture Commit-<lb/>
tee, told farmers Congress will<lb/>
kill the tobacco and peanut pro-<lb/>
grams unless he is elected to a<lb/>
third term.<lb/>
Hunt proposed a four-point<lb/>
tobacco program and charged<lb/>
that Helms has done nothing to<lb/>
help farmers.<lb/>
"My opponent says farmers<lb/>
ought to vote for him because he<lb/>
is chairman of the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Committee. Yet I<lb/>
haven't heard him propose a<lb/>
single new idea about how to save<lb/>
our tobacco program Hunt<lb/>
told farmers in a Greenville<lb/>
tobacco warehouse.<lb/>
"The real question in this race<lb/>
is not which candidate can best<lb/>
maintain the status quo. The<lb/>
status quo is killing our<lb/>
farmers Hunt said.<lb/>
Hunt proposed that the federal<lb/>
government reduce its tobacco<lb/>
stockpile by offering discounts to<lb/>
companies that buy tobacco col-<lb/>
lected from previous seasons.<lb/>
Under the tobacco program,<lb/>
the Flue-cured Tobacco Stabiliza-<lb/>
tion Corp. buys tobacco from<lb/>
farmers who cannot sell their<lb/>
crop for the minimum price.<lb/>
The federally financed agency<lb/>
now has stockpiled nearly $1.5<lb/>
billion worth of tobacco, chiefly<lb/>
because rising foreign imports<lb/>
have cut into the domestic<lb/>
market. Farmers pay storage and<lb/>
interest charges on the stockpiled<lb/>
tobacco.<lb/>
"I suggest that for every pound<lb/>
of tobacco companies buv from<lb/>
1982 and 1983 crops, they be<lb/>
given a pound of pre-1983 tobac-<lb/>
co, with the Commodity Credit<lb/>
Corp. absorbing the losses<lb/>
Hunt said.<lb/>
"The two programs of greatest<lb/>
interest to the most North Caroli-<lb/>
nians ? tobacco and peanuts ?<lb/>
both of those programs will be<lb/>
killed if North Carolina loses its<lb/>
chairman of the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Committee Helms<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Hunt also visited the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine Pitt<lb/>
Memorial Hospital where he talk-<lb/>
ed with staff and patients. "I<lb/>
would like to see organized<lb/>
recognition of medical services<lb/>
he said, adding that he was<lb/>
"pleased" to see the medical<lb/>
school serving eastern North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Hunt spent several hours in the<lb/>
Greenville area, speaking to<lb/>
senior citizens at the Holiday Inn.<lb/>
A large number of med school<lb/>
staff members turned out to greet<lb/>
him, along with Dr. William<lb/>
Laupus, dean of the School of<lb/>
Medicine. He toured the facilities<lb/>
brieflv.<lb/>
Almost All Counties<lb/>
Represented In Fall<lb/>
Enrollment Of 13,827<lb/>
ECU New, Bureau<lb/>
Except for four small moun-<lb/>
tain counties, every county in<lb/>
the state of North Carolina is<lb/>
represented in ECU'S student<lb/>
body this fall.<lb/>
And there are ECU students<lb/>
from 46 of the 50 states plus<lb/>
the District of Columbia, the<lb/>
Canal Zone and Puerto Rico.<lb/>
The 156 foreign students on<lb/>
campus come from 45 dif-<lb/>
ferent countries.<lb/>
As usual, the bulk of<lb/>
ECU's student enrollment ?<lb/>
67.8 percent of the in-state<lb/>
total of 11,364 students ?<lb/>
comes from eastern North<lb/>
Carolina, counties lying to the<lb/>
east of Interstate 95, according<lb/>
to figures compiled by-<lb/>
Registrar Gilbert Moore.<lb/>
Leading the list is Pitt<lb/>
County with 2,109 students<lb/>
followed by Wake with 958<lb/>
and Lenoir with 478.<lb/>
Cumberland and Wayne coun-<lb/>
ties also have more than 400<lb/>
students each at ECU. Two<lb/>
populous Piedmont counties,<lb/>
Mecklenburg with 338 and<lb/>
Guilford with 330, ranked in<lb/>
the top 10 in-state counties for<lb/>
ECU students this year.<lb/>
Overall, the fall semester<lb/>
enrollment is 13.827. Of this<lb/>
number 2.30'7 are from out-of-<lb/>
state, Moore said.<lb/>
The only four in-state coun-<lb/>
ties not represented this year<lb/>
are Alleghany, Cherokee,<lb/>
Graham and Yancev.<lb/>
Easy Rider<lb/>
JENNIFER JENDRASIAK - ECU Phcto Lab<lb/>
a hDarlinrslTl;0,h0a7iTln f " ?ne "dvntage!?those who ?" ? ?eing able to find<lb/>
crTge ta February " fr?m c)?r00m' Ho?? chances ? 8?? "ha, this will<lb/>
College Presidents' Jobs Difficult, Stressful, Constrained<lb/>
(CPS) ? "The American col<lb/>
lege and university presidency is<lb/>
in trouble a new study reports.<lb/>
Things are so bad, the study<lb/>
says, that qualified applicants<lb/>
don't want to become college<lb/>
Presidents, and, in some cases,<lb/>
incumbent presidents want to get<lb/>
out of their jobs.<lb/>
The study, conducted by the<lb/>
Commission on Strengthening<lb/>
Presidential Leadership, warns<lb/>
tre president's job has become<lb/>
too difficult, stressful and con-<lb/>
strained at many institutions.<lb/>
Colleges have "unnecessarily<lb/>
and unwisely" diminished the<lb/>
P?er of their presidents in the<lb/>
Past 20 years through increased<lb/>
government controls and meddl-<lb/>
"j by faculty and governing<lb/>
b0?rds, the study says.<lb/>
The study adds the problems<lb/>
are driving away the top<lb/>
academic officials most qualified<lb/>
for the job.<lb/>
"Institutions must ask 'how<lb/>
can we make the presidency at-<lb/>
tractive to qualified applicants<lb/>
suggests Nancy Axelrod,<lb/>
spokeswoman for the commis-<lb/>
sion's sponsor, the Association<lb/>
of Governing Boards of Colleges<lb/>
and Universities.<lb/>
"Presidential search commit-<lb/>
tees cannot simply sit back and<lb/>
wait for applications she adds.<lb/>
"They must carefully seek out<lb/>
candidates who qualify for the<lb/>
position<lb/>
But only about half of the na-<lb/>
tion's best-qualified academic of-<lb/>
ficers want to become a college<lb/>
president, the study claims.<lb/>
And while finding presidential<lb/>
applicants is frustrating, retain-<lb/>
ing qualified presidents is often<lb/>
harder.<lb/>
Presidents are stymied by<lb/>
federal and state controls, par-<lb/>
ticularly "sunshine" laws requir-<lb/>
ing that they conduct official col-<lb/>
lege business in open meetings,<lb/>
the report asserts.<lb/>
Increased faculty influence in<lb/>
hiring teachers and governing<lb/>
board intervention in daily<lb/>
decision-making also discourages<lb/>
presidents.<lb/>
"The power of a governing<lb/>
board and how it relates to the<lb/>
president in many cases reduces<lb/>
the power of the president<lb/>
maintains Larisa Wanserski, an<lb/>
AGB spokesman.<lb/>
Governing board actions can<lb/>
"isolate (a president) from the<lb/>
public, making it hard for him or<lb/>
her to make decisions Wanser-<lb/>
ski says.<lb/>
The beleagured presidents<lb/>
often react by resigning.<lb/>
During any two-year period,<lb/>
the study reveals, about 30 per-<lb/>
cent of the nation's college<lb/>
presidents are leaving or thinking<lb/>
of leaving their positions. A<lb/>
fourth of them are dissatisfied<lb/>
with their jobs.<lb/>
The average president stays at<lb/>
a college seven years, Wanserski<lb/>
says, not enough time to imple-<lb/>
ment long-term plans for an in-<lb/>
stitution.<lb/>
"Colleges need to look at the<lb/>
position and make it as attractive<lb/>
and desirable as it once was she<lb/>
asserts.<lb/>
To do it, the study recom-<lb/>
mends governing boards review<lb/>
their provisions for presidential<lb/>
support yearly, evaluate their<lb/>
president in "ways that do not<lb/>
encourage organized attacks<lb/>
upon them and do not unduly<lb/>
embarrassor weaken them<lb/>
and make changes necessary to<lb/>
attract and retain suitable<lb/>
presidents.<lb/>
Boards should scrutinize<lb/>
presidential qualifications as well<lb/>
as the office itself, suggests<lb/>
Debra McCarthy of Higher<lb/>
Education Administrative Refer-<lb/>
ral Service, which helps track<lb/>
down presidential candidates for<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
"There's a time for<lb/>
everything she contends.<lb/>
"What was needed in a president<lb/>
15 or 20 years ago was fine for<lb/>
that time. Now, it's time for<lb/>
something else<lb/>
McCarthy says most colleges<lb/>
are looking for presidents with<lb/>
administrative experience rather<lb/>
than strictly academic<lb/>
background.<lb/>
"Some say there's more em-<lb/>
phasis on managerial ability<lb/>
agrees Axelrod. "The managerial<lb/>
part has become more important<lb/>
for administration and fundrais-<lb/>
ing, but academic background is<lb/>
still important, too<lb/>
In particular, the study says<lb/>
each president "has a respon-<lb/>
sibility for maintaining andor<lb/>
creating an effective presidency<lb/>
? particularly, but by no means<lb/>
exclusively, in relation to the<lb/>
board<lb/>
Colleges gradually have dimin-<lb/>
shed their president's role to try<lb/>
to guarantee their own survival,<lb/>
the study concludes.<lb/>
-ii -?1rff-Tnfr"? B,m ?x -n ?- A Tt ,?, a- -1 fc ii ?,<lb/>
?? ? ??M??MM?fcjdfc. Pi i m ??-??.<lb/>
.i?; ? <lb/>
i<lb/>
SI<lb/>
4<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
ts rtconlzing ail black students wtio havt ac<lb/>
cumlatM a gpa of 3 0 or above You will be given<lb/>
a certificate of achievement during our achieve<lb/>
ment day awards cermony on Nov IB at 3 00 it<lb/>
you have the qualifications write Omega Psi<lb/>
Phi.P O Box 30) 4. GrennvMle. N C 27834<lb/>
S.A.M.<lb/>
The Society for Advancement of Management<lb/>
would hhe to remind ail members of our car<lb/>
wash ? Saturday Oct 27 from 10 ? 2, at the<lb/>
Trade Station ? corner of 14 st and 264 bypass<lb/>
Everyone ? let us wash your car cheap, and help<lb/>
support the S A M Only 1 50 at time of wash<lb/>
Alpha Sigme Phi<lb/>
The little sisters of Alpha Signa Phi would like<lb/>
to say thanks for another successful homecom<lb/>
Ing and champagne breao'ajt ? start resting up<lb/>
tor n?t year everyone Brothers and little<lb/>
sisters be creative a' the Halloween party ?<lb/>
Saturday nigh Ae would like to remind all girls<lb/>
Interviewed a' lift! sister rush that they are m<lb/>
vifed and encouraged to come so we can all ge' to<lb/>
know each other See you there<lb/>
Prime Time<lb/>
Campus Crusade for Christ .s sponsoring<lb/>
"Prime Time" this Thursday at 7 p m in the<lb/>
Jenkins Auo ? Art Bigd Please iom us for fun.<lb/>
fellowship and bible study We are looking for<lb/>
ward to meeting you<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
The American Society tor Personnel Ad-<lb/>
ministration will hold a meeting on 1 ues . Oct 30<lb/>
at 4 00 n Vendenhaii Student Center -<lb/>
Multipurpose room New members are<lb/>
welcome1 Refreshments will be served<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
The ECU delegation of the NC Student<lb/>
Legislature will mee' again on Mon Oct 2? in<lb/>
Mendenha Rm 247 at 7 00c m .ve're planning<lb/>
lots of fun projects ana we need everyone 'here<lb/>
to set up committees tnfo on the organization-s<lb/>
read'y available to everyone Just ca'l James.<lb/>
'52 ? 5642 or Sandi. 7S6 ? 8649 or Tmw. 758 -<lb/>
7614<lb/>
NCSL<lb/>
Don-t forget our ragin end ? of ? the -<lb/>
weekend happy hour at the B'ue Moon at 8 00<lb/>
Sunoa<lb/>
Free Throw Contest<lb/>
There will be a tree throw contest held for all<lb/>
you exper hoopsters November 13 This in<lb/>
trjmu'n sponsored event will be held m<lb/>
Memorial Gym To register come by room 204<lb/>
Memorial gym or call 757-638 Parficapate<lb/>
?-a'her han spec'ate<lb/>
Onega Pso Phi<lb/>
The brothers of Omega Ps Ph- frat, mc .<lb/>
won e ke to announce a he oween costy-e par<lb/>
ry - Menoenhall's Muiti Purpose room wednes<lb/>
day Oct 31 Prizes will be raffleo 8 p m 12am<lb/>
Bes costume wins 25 00 2nd and 3rd cash pr zes<lb/>
also Free refreshments<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
L'ttie sisters and Lil vs pledges are reminded<lb/>
about the wild the paiama party this fr.dav night<lb/>
with the brothers II s lock out from 8 10 then we<lb/>
let the guys n Pledges should bring their pledge<lb/>
books possible Also remember that Saturday<lb/>
Is PUSH Souiitat.on Day Come out to the<lb/>
house and wear our ersey<lb/>
Phi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Alright Pi Kapps This is the weekend<lb/>
Tonight sociai with the Aidha Phi's Friday<lb/>
our w id paiama party with the little Sisters and<lb/>
Saturday our woodcut, PUSH Souicitatic- and<lb/>
chid and beer dmner Also brothers cnner from<lb/>
the pledges is tonight at 6 30 Forma!<lb/>
brotherhood mis monday is 7 00 p m at the<lb/>
house<lb/>
something new<lb/>
Looking or something new to do this friday6<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union will be holding its fall<lb/>
social this friday at 8 p.m Admission is only<lb/>
81 00. and there will be refreshments 'and a lot of<lb/>
dancing available Bring a friend and join us at<lb/>
the BSU ion 10th st next to Wendy's; this friday<lb/>
night we'll be lookmg for you!<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
The brothers of Kappa Alpha Psi fraternity<lb/>
Inc win be sponsoring a happy hour from 9 30<lb/>
pm until at the wiz FREE BEER until 12 00!<lb/>
Come out and party with the Nupes! I<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
The NAACP urges students who have not ob<lb/>
tamed absentee ballots to do so before Nov 1<lb/>
Absentee baiiot request cards will be available<lb/>
at the information desk in Mendenhall student<lb/>
center<lb/>
APO<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega is requestion all brothers to<lb/>
attend meetings We need you! All brothersnot<lb/>
participating and paying fees by Oct 25 will be<lb/>
asked to appear before the exectlve board APO<lb/>
would also like to congratulate the following per<lb/>
sons on receiving bids to pledge this semester;<lb/>
Robert Bomey. Leanne Butrum, Sandre Caskey,<lb/>
Donna Davis, Jimmie Hackeft, Keith Hall. Kim<lb/>
Holloman, Vivian Joyner, Ricky Lewis. Angela<lb/>
Richarson<lb/>
Residence Life<lb/>
The Department of Residence Life is now ac<lb/>
ceptlng applications from students who w;sh to<lb/>
apply for Resident Advisor positions Students<lb/>
need do have the following qualifications (1) to<lb/>
be a full time student !2) to have a minimum<lb/>
grade ppoint average of 2 2 (3) to have a clear<lb/>
ludicial record (4! to have a time schedule that<lb/>
hi free of other commitments that conflict with<lb/>
work (S) to have lived In a residence hall en<lb/>
viror m?nt (A) must reside in residence hall dur-<lb/>
ing employment Application deadline for<lb/>
employment for Spring IMS Is November 1, 1M4<lb/>
if interested in applying for a position, appllca<lb/>
tiorts are available In 214 Whichard and any<lb/>
??aidance Hall Office<lb/>
Know about O.T.?<lb/>
This Thursday at 7 00pm in MendenhaH's<lb/>
multipurpose room is your big chance to find out<lb/>
about 0 t (Occupational Therapy) and to talk to<lb/>
students wno are already in the program<lb/>
Anyone who is interested is welcome' Look for<lb/>
evr ad in today s paper P S There's an OT club<lb/>
meeting Tue at 5 45 In rm. 203 Allied Health, and<lb/>
you're invited<lb/>
College Repub<lb/>
College Republicans will hold a special<lb/>
meeting tonight at 5 90 In room 241 of<lb/>
II.<lb/>
ISA<lb/>
ISA - Halloween Party Everybody Is<lb/>
Invited' 11 Saturday, Oct. 27 at the International<lb/>
House. Costume contest Come and Join us, you<lb/>
may win the price<lb/>
Videl Game Benefit<lb/>
The March of Dimes with the assistance of<lb/>
Zeta Phi Beta Sorority are sponsoring a video<lb/>
game benefit on October 28, 1984 The benefit<lb/>
will be held at Baliy's Aladdin's Castle in the<lb/>
Carolina East Mali from 2 4 pm The admission<lb/>
fee is 81 00 and I 50 for high score competition<lb/>
Division 1 Ages 8 12. Division 11 ages 13 18,<lb/>
Division HI ages 19 over Prizes will be award<lb/>
ed and gift certificates will be given from Alad<lb/>
din s Castle and the Student Supply Store All<lb/>
proceeds go to the March of Dimes<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
2 home matches this weekend, ECU rugby club<lb/>
will be hosting Cambell University and the U S<lb/>
MarmeCorps team from Camp Leieune The<lb/>
games start at 2 00 pm Saturday. Oct 27<lb/>
Everybody s gonna be there, sacrifices will be<lb/>
made<lb/>
Surfing Contest<lb/>
The 1984 ECU invitational Surfing Contest will<lb/>
be heia this Saturday at the Islander Motel in<lb/>
Emerald isle. N C Competition will begin at<lb/>
9 00 am sharp and last until about 2 00 in the<lb/>
afternoon Several schools are expected to com<lb/>
pete including arch rival UNC W Come out and<lb/>
enioy the sun and fun!<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
There is a meeting thursday at 8 30 in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse The video of Hawaii's<lb/>
North Shore should be availlabie for the meeting<lb/>
Team t shirts will be in and sold first come,<lb/>
first serve at the meeting Don't forget ihe big<lb/>
contest this Saturday at Emerald isle Contact<lb/>
Johnny Ghee at 758 6667 if you want to par<lb/>
ticipate<lb/>
Grand Prize<lb/>
Grand Pr fe S200 's? anneal Lambda Chi<lb/>
Aiphrt a- Beau's We' t shirt contest Thursday<lb/>
Oc 25 at 9 00 In'ereved contestants contact<lb/>
Lambda Ch. Alpha at '52 6159 by Weds at 12 0C<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
The 1984 pledge class of Delta S'gma Phi will<lb/>
be hold ng happy hour at the Blue Moon Cafe on<lb/>
Saturday Oct 27 from 9pm to lam Happy hour<lb/>
prices Come party with the best<lb/>
Students for IKE<lb/>
Anyone who is mtrested in information concer<lb/>
mng 4th district congressman ike Andrews<lb/>
piease contact Jet? Clonmger (ECU Coor<lb/>
onator 752 5198<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi will meet on Thursday OC<lb/>
25 n Brewster C 103 at 7 00 This is a very im<lb/>
portant meeting make every effort to be there<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
interested in international policy and reguia<lb/>
'ons attecng high ?echnelogv exporting4 if so.<lb/>
th.s position mj, be for you NASA will be infer<lb/>
vewing on campus It! November tor Spring<lb/>
'985 Contact the Cooperative Education Office<lb/>
313 Raw! Building as soon as poovble<lb/>
Sigme Nu<lb/>
Come on down to the Sigma Nu little sister hap<lb/>
py hour at Grumpy's Thurs OCT 25. 900 until<lb/>
Door Prizes and lots of fun! Only ?1 00 admls<lb/>
sion See ya there!<lb/>
Catholic Students<lb/>
Sunday Mass is celebrated at 11130 am in the<lb/>
Biology lecture Hall (rm 103) and at 9:00 pm at<lb/>
the Newman center, 953 E 10th st For informa<lb/>
tion call Fr. Terry 752 4216<lb/>
CO-Rec Basketball<lb/>
Registration for intramural Co-Rec basketball<lb/>
will begin on Oct 29 and end Oct. X. To register<lb/>
come by room 204 Memorial Gym between the<lb/>
hours of 8 00 am and 5:00pm. For more Infor<lb/>
mat.on call 757 6387 Partkaiparte rather than<lb/>
specfate<lb/>
Snow ski<lb/>
Snow ski during Christmas break Any persons<lb/>
interested in snowsking December 30 through<lb/>
January 4 at Snowshoe, w V should call Jo<lb/>
Saunders at 757 6000 to get your name on the list<lb/>
for the trip Beginners to hotdoggers are<lb/>
welcome ski instruction Is available for all<lb/>
levels of ability Price depends on ski package<lb/>
Space for housing on slopes and transporfalon Is<lb/>
limited You are Invited to come by memorial<lb/>
gym 108 on Oct 30 at 4 00 p m To register, see<lb/>
the slides and talk skiing! A $5 00 deposit at this<lb/>
time will reserve your space<lb/>
Track meet<lb/>
Register for the Intramural track meet on Oct<lb/>
22 through the 25th The meet will be held on Oct<lb/>
30 The team captains meeting will be held on<lb/>
the 29th at 7 00 pm in the biology building room<lb/>
103 To sign up come by room 204 memorial gym<lb/>
or for more information call 757 6387<lb/>
Scuba Diving<lb/>
Thanksgiving vacation Dive Cozumel.Mex<lb/>
ico 8 Days. 7 nights on the beautiful Yucatan<lb/>
Penninsula Drift diving on the Palancar reef<lb/>
will be one of the most exiting experiences<lb/>
From Raleigh, price including air fare, meals,<lb/>
lodging and diving 1820 00 Special price for non<lb/>
divers J720 00 Air travel provided by Mexicana<lb/>
and Eastern For registrations and further in<lb/>
formation call Ray Scharf.Dir of Acquatics<lb/>
757 6441<lb/>
Helmsbusters<lb/>
Students interested in joining the students for<lb/>
Jim Hunt should please contact Scott Thomas at<lb/>
752 1793 or David Brooks at 752 5198<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
The Student Union Recreation Committee<lb/>
willmeet on Monday. October 29. 1984, a' 3 00<lb/>
pm in room 243 of Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
All members and interested students are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
Halloween costume<lb/>
Halloween costume contest to be held from<lb/>
4 00 5 00 pm on Oct 31 in the multi purpose<lb/>
room at Mendenhall Cash prizes will be award<lb/>
ed Tickets are $1 00 and may be picked up at<lb/>
Mendenhall or at the office at the Methodist Stu<lb/>
dent Center Sponsored by Wesley Foutrtdation<lb/>
TaiiTnr<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
Nobody else makes<lb/>
fine photography<lb/>
this simple.<lb/>
Programmed automation?<lb/>
just focus and shoot1<lb/>
Shutter-priority automation<lb/>
plus manual mode<lb/>
Fully automatic flash with<lb/>
optional Speedlite 188A<lb/>
Optional Power Winders A2. A<lb/>
and Motor Drive MA available<lb/>
for rapid sequence shooting<lb/>
Includes Canon USA Inc<lb/>
one-year limited warranty<lb/>
registration card<lb/>
Spe?diite '88A dnc<lb/>
Pnwp .V'dp' AT shown optional<lb/>
$219.95<lb/>
art 4 camera hop<lb/>
' 518 SOUTH COTAMCHC STBEE f<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NC 27934<lb/>
n? ffliw<lb/>
If Killian's Irish Red<lb/>
is a ten,<lb/>
German beer is a nein.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
4 'General Manager<lb/>
99<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is now accep-<lb/>
ting applications for the General Manager's<lb/>
position through November 2nd. Interested<lb/>
persons should apply on the second floor of<lb/>
the Publication building, located across from<lb/>
Joyner Library.<lb/>
This is an excellent opportunity to work with a quality staff<lb/>
while gaining valuable experience in a wide realm of business ap-<lb/>
plications.<lb/>
Minority Student<lb/>
Minority Student Or. dilation formerly souls<lb/>
will have a meeting Thursday. Oct 25 out 4 30<lb/>
pm It will be held in room 242 at Mendenhall<lb/>
We urge all minority students to come out and<lb/>
Participate<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
PPHA will hold a scheduled meeting "vjrsdav<lb/>
Oct 2S. 1984 at 5 45 pm in room 22' Vendenhai!<lb/>
Student center All members and perspective<lb/>
members please make plans to attend<lb/>
Delta Sigme Phi<lb/>
There will be a mandatory meeting (or all<lb/>
brothers, little sisters, and pledges this Sunday.<lb/>
Oct 28th, at 8 00 pm at the house See you<lb/>
there<lb/>
Health Careeres Day<lb/>
Nurses. Medical Techs. Physical Therapists.<lb/>
Occupational Therapists. Social Workers, and<lb/>
Slap majors Representatives trom various<lb/>
hospitals and health agencies will be on campus<lb/>
to talk with you abou' employment possibilities!<lb/>
Different organizations will be here on the<lb/>
following dates November 2 Nurs!ng Building<lb/>
I X 12 30pm November 5 Allied Health<lb/>
Building 1 30 4 30pm Mark your calendar and<lb/>
tell another friend about this In case they do not<lb/>
see the announcement<lb/>
$1fataSl<lb/>
Too<lb/>
Hats<lb/>
Wool and Cotton Socks<lb/>
Laurel Burch Earrings<lb/>
Handmade Wool Sweaters<lb/>
Specializing in Natural Fiber<lb/>
Clothing for Women<lb/>
116 E. 5th St. Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30<lb/>
Next Door to Book Barn 757-3944<lb/>
WAg-<lb/>
 CAR ?.H ?? vAV<lb/>
and th- Suth?-rn FlutCured<lb/>
Tobacco Festival, Inc.<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
y.<lb/>
Now don't get us<lb/>
wrong. The Germans<lb/>
make some pretty fine<lb/>
beers. But none of<lb/>
them slow-roast their<lb/>
malt like we do.<lb/>
So no German beer<lb/>
can boast the color,<lb/>
the character, the rich,<lb/>
incredibly smooth taste<lb/>
ofKillian'sRedAle<lb/>
So the next time f<lb/>
you're about to order<lb/>
your favorite German<lb/>
beer, try a Killian's<lb/>
Red, instead.<lb/>
And go from a nein<lb/>
to a ten.<lb/>
L<lb/>
KSmDsM)<lb/>
tuMUiWC?Ciiii i CiHi Cwtam?M.WmmmH0ttmtamt<lb/>
I?7?<lb/>
Saturday, October 27, 1984<lb/>
CAROLINA OPRV HOUSE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, NC<lb/>
? Gates Open at 10:30 a.m. ?<lb/>
? Show Begins at 12 .Noon ?<lb/>
Featuring Special Entertainment By:<lb/>
The Bill Lyerly Band, playing music<lb/>
from their two albums "Prodigal Son"<lb/>
and "Higher Ground<lb/>
The Green Grass Cloggers, high step-<lb/>
pin' and swingin<lb/>
The Too Wet To Plow String Band, a<lb/>
down-home band playing all-time<lb/>
favorites.<lb/>
FOR YOUR INFORMATION<lb/>
? Bring your lounge chairs and blankets.<lb/>
? Food and Beer will be available<lb/>
? RAIN LOCATION:<lb/>
Farmers Warehouse<lb/>
North Greene Street<lb/>
Greenville, North Carolina<lb/>
TICKET LOCATIONS:<lb/>
Rainbow Records in Kinston, New Bern,<lb/>
Havelock and Morehead City<lb/>
Apple Records in Greenville<lb/>
Carolina Opry House in Greenville<lb/>
Competition In:<lb/>
FIDDLIN'<lb/>
Adult<lb/>
1st Place $150.00<lb/>
Runner-Up $100.00<lb/>
Junior Division<lb/>
1st Place$ 50.00<lb/>
Runner-Up Merchandise<lb/>
BANJO<lb/>
1st Place$ 50.00<lb/>
Runner-Up Merchandise<lb/>
FLA T PICK IN GI IT A R<lb/>
1st Place$ 50.00<lb/>
Runner-Up Merchandise<lb/>
BLUE GRASS BAND<lb/>
1st Place$100.00<lb/>
Runner-Up Merchandise<lb/>
HORSESHOE PITCHING CONTEST<lb/>
12:00-4:00 p.m.<lb/>
Two (2) horseshoe pitching playing fields<lb/>
will be set up. Copies of the rules will be<lb/>
available on the day of the Fiddlers Con<lb/>
vention. Registration is limited. You may<lb/>
pre-register by filling out and mailing in<lb/>
the attached Registration Form. Depend<lb/>
ing on the number of entries, we are plan<lb/>
ning a men's, women's and junior division.<lb/>
Prizes will be awarded. This event will not<lb/>
be held in the event of inclement weather.<lb/>
For Further information and to register contact:<lb/>
Lynn Caverly Jobes<lb/>
Cured Tobacco Festival, Inc<lb/>
Greenville, NC 27835-7366<lb/>
(919)757-1604<lb/>
Adults - $5.00 Children Under 12 - $1.00<lb/>
- m T -1 - ?I ? afci ajp<lb/>
? '????'<lb/>
.a ajwj ? tailm<lb/>
?. ??<lb/>
mm<lb/>
??MaaaaaaajatSjjaaaatV<lb/>
tfte<lb/>
!WBaM8jajMM8j<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?? - tm t<lb/>
Theft,<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
Column<lb/>
Wl<lb/>
Th<lb/>
an(<lb/>
pre<lb/>
Former Pn<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI)<lb/>
? Former President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter praised Gov. James Hunt<lb/>
and criticized conservative<lb/>
religious leaders for siding with<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms in North<lb/>
Carolina's Senate campaign<lb/>
"I object very strongly to the<lb/>
mixing of politics and religion<lb/>
and believe that the separation of<lb/>
church and state ought to be ab-<lb/>
solute said Carter, who visited<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
with his daughter Amy Tuesdav<lb/>
"I think it's a serious mistake<lb/>
what has been done in recent<lb/>
times with the Jerry Falwell right-<lb/>
wing evangelical television move-<lb/>
ment on the one hand aligned<lb/>
with the Republican Party on the<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
Campaign At<lb/>
Book Store<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
sunwnur<lb/>
Students interested in becorr.<lb/>
ing involved with a cornmunin<lb/>
service will have their chance ?<lb/>
the United Way. "The United<lb/>
Way is a source of essential help<lb/>
for the less fortunate in our com-<lb/>
munity. It provides dignity and<lb/>
affords basic human needs for<lb/>
those who cannot help<lb/>
themselves said ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John How ell.<lb/>
The United Way is currently in<lb/>
the process of its annual fund<lb/>
drive. Mimi Quick, the United<lb/>
Way chairman for main campus,<lb/>
along with SGA President John<lb/>
Rainey and Vice President Mike<lb/>
McPartland have come up wuh a<lb/>
way to gel the students involved<lb/>
in the project.<lb/>
On Tuesday, Oct. 30, from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m there will be a<lb/>
one-day campaign for students.<lb/>
A table will be set up in front of<lb/>
the Student Supply Store for<lb/>
students to give contributions to<lb/>
the drive. United Way literature<lb/>
will be available ?<lb/>
Quick said she "has found<lb/>
students to be concerned with the<lb/>
needs of others She added that<lb/>
she feels students would like to<lb/>
get involved with the organiza-<lb/>
tion. "Sharing a pan of what you<lb/>
do have with people who have<lb/>
less provides a chance to show<lb/>
you care she said.<lb/>
The campaign will end on Nov.<lb/>
1, however, contributions will<lb/>
not be refused after that date.<lb/>
Seventy-two percent of the total<lb/>
ECU goal of S35,000 has been<lb/>
met. The main campus goal is<lb/>
$23,000. while the goal for the<lb/>
School of Medicine is $12,000<lb/>
The med school has collected 71<lb/>
percent of its goal, while the main<lb/>
campus has collected approx-<lb/>
imately 75 percent.<lb/>
Quick said she feels the<lb/>
amount collected is "very good<lb/>
for this point in the campaign<lb/>
Several schools and departments<lb/>
have exceeded their goals, she<lb/>
said. However, several schools<lb/>
have not yet reported their totals.<lb/>
"I feel confident that the goal<lb/>
will be achieved Quick said,<lb/>
adding that support is important<lb/>
to the overall contributions and a<lb/>
successful campaign.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
-Typesetters -<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Immediately<lb/>
At The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Apply at 2 Floor<lb/>
Old South Building.<lb/>
Ot!<lb/>
br<lb/>
coi<lb/>
tn<lb/>
cnt<lb/>
Pai<lb/>
He<lb/>
Tin<lb/>
km<lb/>
gre<lb/>
"I<lb/>
ODI<lb/>
grq<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
f<lb/>
jTj<lb/>
A<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25.1984<lb/>
T<lb/>
?<lb/>
now accep-<lb/>
Managi<lb/>
Interested<lb/>
floor of<lb/>
tcross from<lb/>
I Theft, Trespassing Increase At Homecoming<lb/>
Iks<lb/>
aters<lb/>
i( liber<lb/>
men<lb/>
t 10:00-5:30<lb/>
757-3944<lb/>
: r'<lb/>
?n In:<lb/>
<lb/>
Unit<lb/>
- 50.00<lb/>
- M).00<lb/>
, i r 1 i i?i$ 50.00 Men nandise 50.00 M -? nandise<lb/>
! 4K$ 50.00 rchandise<lb/>
IS U$100.00 Merchandise<lb/>
L- Hli,( OSTEST<lb/>
I KM:00 i.m.rig fields<lb/>
: ?th rules will be<lb/>
' the? r iddler's Con-<lb/>
s limited. You may<lb/>
i mailing in " i- Depend-s, ? e are plan-<lb/>
andjunior division.<lb/>
ThS event will not ement weather.<lb/>
formation and to register contact:<lb/>
(rerly Jobes<lb/>
ibacco Festival, Inc<lb/>
e, NC 27835-7366<lb/>
1604<lb/>
;r 12-$1.00<lb/>
I<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
Column<lb/>
Campus Public Safety Officers<lb/>
experienced a busy Homecoming<lb/>
weekend with several arrests for<lb/>
trespassing and traffic offenses.<lb/>
The number of reported larcenies<lb/>
and vandalisms was up from the<lb/>
previous week.<lb/>
17-23 were:<lb/>
a bicycle was<lb/>
Crimes for Oct.<lb/>
Oct. 17,2p.m. -<lb/>
reported stolen from the front of<lb/>
Belk dorm. 4:55 p.m. ? a vehicle<lb/>
parked south of Belk dorm was<lb/>
damaged as a result of a break-in<lb/>
Oct. 18, 12:30 a.m. Brian<lb/>
Former President Praises Hunt<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C. (UPI)<lb/>
? Former President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter praised Gov. James Hunt<lb/>
and criticized conservative<lb/>
religious leaders for siding with<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms in North<lb/>
Carolina's Senate campaign.<lb/>
"I object very strongly to the<lb/>
mixing of politics and religion<lb/>
and believe that the separation of<lb/>
church and state ought to be ab-<lb/>
solute said Carter, who visited<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
with his daughter Amy Tuesday.<lb/>
"I think it's a serious mistake<lb/>
what has been done in recent<lb/>
times with the Jerry Falwell right-<lb/>
wing evangelical television move-<lb/>
ment on the one hand aligned<lb/>
with the Republican Party on the<lb/>
United Way<lb/>
Campaign At<lb/>
Book Store<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Sun Writer<lb/>
Students interested in becom-<lb/>
ing involved with a community-<lb/>
service will have their chance with<lb/>
the United Way. "The United<lb/>
Way is a source of essential help<lb/>
for the less fortunate in our com-<lb/>
munity. It provides dignity and<lb/>
affords basic human needs for<lb/>
those who cannot help<lb/>
themselves said ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell.<lb/>
The United Way is currently in<lb/>
the process of its annual fund<lb/>
drive. Mimi Quick, the United<lb/>
Way chairman for main campus,<lb/>
along with SGA President John<lb/>
Rainey and Vice President Mike<lb/>
McPartland have come up with a<lb/>
way to 8.et the students involved<lb/>
in the project.<lb/>
On Tuesday, Oct. 30, from 9<lb/>
a.m. to 4 p.m there will be a<lb/>
one-day camnaign for students.<lb/>
A table will be set up in front of<lb/>
the Student Supply Store for<lb/>
students to give contributions to<lb/>
the drive. United Way literature<lb/>
will be available ?<lb/>
Quick said she "has found<lb/>
students to be concerned with the<lb/>
needs of others She added that<lb/>
she feels students would like to<lb/>
get involved with the organiza-<lb/>
tion. "Sharing a part of what you<lb/>
do have with people who have<lb/>
less provides a chance to show<lb/>
you care she said.<lb/>
The campaign will end on Nov.<lb/>
1, however, contributions will<lb/>
not be refused after that date.<lb/>
Seventy-two percent of the total<lb/>
ECU goal of $35,000 has been<lb/>
met. The main campus goal is<lb/>
$23,000, while the goal for the<lb/>
School of Medicine is $12,000.<lb/>
The med school has collected 71<lb/>
percent of its goal, while the main<lb/>
campus has collected approx-<lb/>
imately 75 percent.<lb/>
Quick said she feels the<lb/>
amount collected is "very good<lb/>
for this point in the campaign<lb/>
Several schools and departments<lb/>
have exceeded their goals, she<lb/>
said. However, several schools<lb/>
have not yet reported their totals.<lb/>
"I feel confident that the goal<lb/>
will be achieved Quick said,<lb/>
adding that support is important<lb/>
to the overall contributions and a<lb/>
successful campaign.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
-Typesetters ??<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Immediately<lb/>
At The East<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Apply at 2 Floor<lb/>
Old South Building.<lb/>
other he said. "This<lb/>
breakdown is not good for our<lb/>
country, and I predict that it is a<lb/>
transient phenomenon<lb/>
At a news conference, Carter<lb/>
criticized Helms' stance on the<lb/>
Panama Canal treaty, which the<lb/>
two-term conservative opposed<lb/>
as a "giveaway and said<lb/>
Helms' view was "typical" of his<lb/>
judgements.<lb/>
"I think Jim Hunt is one of the<lb/>
finest public servants I have ever<lb/>
known in my life and will make a<lb/>
great U.S. senator Carter said.<lb/>
"I think Sen. Helms is just the<lb/>
opposite<lb/>
Carter's comments were<lb/>
greeted by applause from a crowd<lb/>
of more than 450 people at the<lb/>
campus of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina. Carter visited<lb/>
the university to deliver the 1984<lb/>
Weil Lecture on American<lb/>
Citizenship.<lb/>
The former president declined<lb/>
to predict whether President<lb/>
Reagan or Democratic presiden-<lb/>
tial nominee Walter Mondale,<lb/>
Carter's vice president, would<lb/>
win North Carolina or the rest of<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
"I think it would be a mistake<lb/>
for anyone to say the South is be-<lb/>
ing written off either because<lb/>
Reagan is taking it for granted or<lb/>
because Mondale has given up on<lb/>
it he said.<lb/>
Amy Carter Eyes UNC-CH<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL, N.C.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Amy Carter, the<lb/>
freckled-faced daughter of<lb/>
former President Jimmy<lb/>
Carter, is taking a close look<lb/>
at the University of North<lb/>
Carolina to decide whether she<lb/>
wants to become a Tar Heel<lb/>
next fall.<lb/>
While Carter visited with<lb/>
university officials and held a<lb/>
news conference Tuesday,<lb/>
Amy quietly strolled around<lb/>
campus escorted by a student<lb/>
guide, a security guard and<lb/>
several reporters. The<lb/>
reporters were asked not to<lb/>
talk to the 17-year-old high<lb/>
school senior.<lb/>
"It hasn't exactly been a<lb/>
typical day on campus said<lb/>
Judith McLaurin, secretary to<lb/>
the University's chancellor.<lb/>
Amy, wearing a sweatshirt<lb/>
and baggy jeans, visited<lb/>
Morehead Planetarium and<lb/>
Observatory and peeked into<lb/>
an astronomy lab class then<lb/>
stopped to feed birds at the<lb/>
school's arboretum.<lb/>
WHY RENT ?<lb/>
For less than dorm or apartment rent<lb/>
you could:<lb/>
1. Buy your own home<lb/>
2. Enjoy peace and privacy<lb/>
3. Invest in the future<lb/>
STOP BY AND SEE HOW<lb/>
@<lb/>
t ? <lb/>
HOMES<lb/>
626 W. Greenville Blvd. 756 - 5434<lb/>
5TH STREET<lb/>
IMPORT SERVICE<lb/>
l<lb/>
WE REPAIR TOYOTA, HONDA, VW,<lb/>
FIAT, PORSCHE, VOLVO, DATSUN,<lb/>
LOTUS, MERCEDES, BMW, AUDI<lb/>
AND OTHERS<lb/>
EXPERT WORKMANSHIP<lb/>
DIAL<lb/>
758-1534<lb/>
1007 E. 5TH<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
Russell Hart of Jones dorm was<lb/>
arrested for DWI. 4:46 p.m. ?<lb/>
Gina Freeman of Mt. Judea,<lb/>
Arkansas was arrested for selling<lb/>
magazine subscriptions without a<lb/>
permit in Aycock dorm. 7:10<lb/>
p.m. ? A bicycle was reported<lb/>
stolen from the northeast corner<lb/>
of Belk dorm. 8 p.m. ? June<lb/>
Thomas of Slay dorm was ar-<lb/>
rested for damage to personal<lb/>
property.<lb/>
Oct. 19, 2p.m. ? a wallet was<lb/>
reported stolen from a room on<lb/>
the 2nd floor of Aycock dorm. 4<lb/>
p.m. ? Karen Rigante of Green-<lb/>
ville was arrested for a stop sign<lb/>
violation. 10 p.m. ? A 1971<lb/>
Volkswagen was reported stolen<lb/>
from east of Scott dorm. The<lb/>
vehicle was later recovered at the<lb/>
bottom of College Hill Drive. 11<lb/>
p.m. ? Campus police pursued<lb/>
an unidentified male along the<lb/>
railroad tracks near Charles<lb/>
Blvd. A stolen bicycle and a<lb/>
wheel from a second bicycle were<lb/>
recovered; the suspect escaped.<lb/>
The owner of the unregistered<lb/>
bicycle has not been identified.<lb/>
2:50 a.m. ? an incident of exten-<lb/>
sive vandalism was reported in<lb/>
Jenkins Art Building. 7:12 p.m.<lb/>
? a wallet was reported stolen<lb/>
from a vehicle parked in the day<lb/>
student parking area at 10th St.<lb/>
and College Hill Drive.<lb/>
Oct. 21, 2:30 a.m. ? James<lb/>
Ebron of Greenville was arrested<lb/>
for trespassing. 9 p.m. ? money<lb/>
was reported stolen from a hand-<lb/>
bag in a room on the 10th floor<lb/>
of White dorm. 10p.m. ? a ring<lb/>
was reported stolen from the<lb/>
bathroom on the 10th floor of<lb/>
White dorm.<lb/>
Oct. 22, 6:55 a.m. ? a break-<lb/>
ing and entering and larceny<lb/>
from a vehicle was reported in the<lb/>
5th and Reade St. freshmen lot.<lb/>
1:30 p.m. ? A bicycle was<lb/>
reported stolen from between<lb/>
Garrett dorm and Jenkins Art<lb/>
Building. 10:30 p.m. ? four<lb/>
Marines from Camp Lejeune<lb/>
were arrested for trespassing in<lb/>
White dorm.<lb/>
Oct. 23, 1:46 a.m. ? A vehicle<lb/>
was found vandalized in the 5th<lb/>
and Reade St. freshmen lot.<lb/>
SPRING<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
Help us sponsor your<lb/>
Ft. Lauderdale trip<lb/>
and you go for free!<lb/>
(8W) 368-2006 TOM. FREE<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$185 Abortion from 13 to 18 weeks at addi<lb/>
tional cost Pregnancy Test, Birth Control.<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 832-0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 1-800-532-5384) between 9AM and<lb/>
5P.M. weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
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917 Wast Morgan St.<lb/>
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It's a very special condominium com-<lb/>
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Rent: $150.00 per month per student<lb/>
(75tmore per day than the dorm)<lb/>
Purchase: Under $60,000 about Vi the price per<lb/>
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Oct. 26 Thru 31 7:00 TO 11 PM<lb/>
Please stop by our office at<lb/>
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Call for an evening or Sunday appointment.<lb/>
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? - tt??.<lb/>
? <lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0004"/><lb/>
2tf?e East (Sarolintati<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher, g?.?Managfr<lb/>
GREG RIDEOUT, Uanaginn td,ror<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, ???, j.t. Pietrzak. amm<lb/>
Randy Mews. ?? m? Anthony Martin, m. Manag?<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. ??? u. Tom Norton, cm m?<lb/>
Bill Austin. omm m mike Mayo. r,u?, a.<lb/>
October 25, N84<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Push Forward<lb/>
Scholars Program Begins New Era<lb/>
A university exists as an environ-<lb/>
ment for learning and research. It<lb/>
is a place where young adults learn<lb/>
to think; a place for them to<lb/>
mature and grow academically.<lb/>
Academia is where scholars in-<lb/>
vestigate the problems and con-<lb/>
cerns of our times. ECU strives to<lb/>
be such a place.<lb/>
The struggle has been long. Not<lb/>
more than 20 years ago we were<lb/>
still considered a teachers college;<lb/>
we were not a place where the best<lb/>
students came to study, nor were<lb/>
we the campus where professors<lb/>
hovered on the cutting edge of<lb/>
discovery in their fields. We were<lb/>
ECTC and ECC. Now we are a<lb/>
university, and one that is on the<lb/>
go.<lb/>
With the announcement last Fri-<lb/>
day of a major, $1 million scholar-<lb/>
ship program, ECU is seeking to<lb/>
become a major institution of<lb/>
higher learning. We have under-<lb/>
taken an effort to bring the best<lb/>
and the brightest to Greenville,<lb/>
where they will be offered the best<lb/>
we have ? honors programs,<lb/>
studies abroad, seminar-size<lb/>
classes. We seek these types of peo-<lb/>
ple to say to the world, "Hey,<lb/>
we're here to stay<lb/>
The entrance in fall 1985 of five<lb/>
university scholars will mean<lb/>
several things. One, that no longer<lb/>
can Duke or Carolina have dibs on<lb/>
the state's brightest high schoolers.<lb/>
We may not be able to offer them<lb/>
quite as much, but ECU can offer<lb/>
the chance for five youngsters to<lb/>
set the mark by which others are<lb/>
judged. And as the quality of ECU<lb/>
students rises each year because of<lb/>
these people, so will the reputation<lb/>
of this university.<lb/>
Two, if we are to seek the best,<lb/>
our professors must do their best.<lb/>
You must fulfill all aspects of be-<lb/>
ing an academic: teaching,<lb/>
research and service. To be slack in<lb/>
one is to cheat the university, the<lb/>
students and yourself. We have<lb/>
some professors who today excel in<lb/>
all three. But, at the ECU of<lb/>
tomorrow that our chancellor and<lb/>
trustees envision, more and more<lb/>
of the faculty must sit firmly in this<lb/>
category.<lb/>
Three, admissions standards<lb/>
must be tougher. Our average SAT<lb/>
scores now are among the lowest in<lb/>
the UNC system; they are<lb/>
somewhere in the 800 range.<lb/>
Nothing less than 1000 will do for<lb/>
the ECU of tomorrow. The<lb/>
students that the university<lb/>
scholars program seeks demand<lb/>
this.<lb/>
We are making headway. With<lb/>
this program, which Chancellor<lb/>
Howell calls the highlight of his<lb/>
tenure, we march onward. On the<lb/>
backs of the Monitor discovery<lb/>
and the wings of the soaring<lb/>
School of Medicine, we add each<lb/>
day a new achievement. We must<lb/>
continue to do so.<lb/>
Soon, because of the efforts of<lb/>
past, present and future ad-<lb/>
ministrations, we will be an institu-<lb/>
tion with nationwide recognition.<lb/>
East Carolina University will be a<lb/>
part of the nation's life.<lb/>
Here's something by Walter Lip-<lb/>
pmann, a prominent political com-<lb/>
mentator of the 20th century, for<lb/>
President Reagan to mull over.<lb/>
In a modern executive state, the<lb/>
chief executive office must be elec-<lb/>
tive. But as heredity, prescription,<lb/>
consecration, rank and hierarchy<lb/>
are dissolved by the acids of<lb/>
modernity, the executives become<lb/>
totally dependent on election.<lb/>
They have no status and no tenure<lb/>
which reinforce their consciences,<lb/>
which invest them with power to<lb/>
withstand the tides of popular opi-<lb/>
nion and to defend the public in-<lb/>
terest.<lb/>
Doonesbury by garry trudeau<lb/>
okay, here's how ttujorks. WHEN<lb/>
mCrVPrttTOUCHESPOUIN, REMAN<lb/>
fSHUSREP ACROSS THE LAWN. YOU<lb/>
I THEN SHOUT YOUR QUESTION HE STOPS,<lb/>
1 CUPS HIS EAR, ANP SAYS, "I CANT<lb/>
" . HEAR"<lb/>
HE THEN WAVES AND SMILES. LATER, THE<lb/>
PICTURES WILL 60 ON THE EVENING<lb/>
NEWS, CREATTN3THE IMPRESSON THAT<lb/>
REAGAN IS ACCESSIBLE, THAT HE W0ULP<lb/>
HAVEANSWEREPTHE QUESTION IFHE'P<lb/>
? -? V H&amp;RD IT.<lb/>
SAT3V WE'VE NO CHOICE. NOT<lb/>
ANPBVm- AS IONS AS THERE<lb/>
ONE JUST EXISTS A CHANCE<lb/>
60ES ALONG HE'LL GIVE US A SUB-<lb/>
WTTH THIS 7 5TANTIVE REPLY.<lb/>
( ONCE. THE REPORTER<lb/>
YOU MEAN, RETIRED THE NEXT<lb/>
IT'S IT'S PAY. IT'SKNPOF<lb/>
HAPPENEP7 UKE WINNING<lb/>
THE LOTTERY.<lb/>
<lb/>
Mm?<lb/>
NO!SIRIM6AN S0M6<lb/>
DO W) 7HNI<lb/>
WTi<lb/>
saw?5<lb/>
tmsmsL<lb/>
"JESS<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Mick LaSalle Lauds Helms<lb/>
I was drifting to sleep, waiting for<lb/>
my woman to walk in with breakfast.<lb/>
But when she came through the door,<lb/>
she was wearing my robe and reading<lb/>
my copy of the Sunday News.<lb/>
"I'm sorry, Michael. I swear I'll<lb/>
get your breakfast, but I started<lb/>
reading this. I know you lived there<lb/>
for awhile. Do you know anything<lb/>
about the Senate race in North<lb/>
Carolina?"<lb/>
I yawned. "Since when are you in-<lb/>
terested in politics, baby?"<lb/>
"I'm not, but ? it says here that<lb/>
this guy Jim Hunt is leading Jesse<lb/>
Helms in the polls by 10 points<lb/>
I sprung up and smacked her across<lb/>
the mouth. "Don't you even say<lb/>
that I growled.<lb/>
"No, really, it's true she said,<lb/>
blinking back tears. "Look<lb/>
I looked. Then turned around and<lb/>
put my fist through the paneling.<lb/>
The rest of the morning was shot.<lb/>
"I'm going back down there I<lb/>
finally said.<lb/>
I guess the thought of that was too<lb/>
much for her. "Oh great, Michael<lb/>
she sort of sobbed and screamed at<lb/>
the same time. "Desert us New York<lb/>
girls again<lb/>
I shook my head. "What else can I<lb/>
do? Jesse Helms is the only honest<lb/>
guy in the Senate; he's one of the<lb/>
finest men in a state of fine people;<lb/>
he's the only politician in this country<lb/>
that you could also call 'a statesman<lb/>
I can't let him lose to Jim Hunt: some<lb/>
crooked pretty-boy wheeler-dealer<lb/>
wimp. All Hunt wants is to become<lb/>
president someday, and meanwhile he<lb/>
ain't even qualified to be senator<lb/>
She was on the ground now, pull-<lb/>
ing at the cuffs of my pajamas. "So<lb/>
say that. But don't go! Put it in<lb/>
writing! You're a writer! I got the ad-<lb/>
dress of that paper you used to<lb/>
write for Do anything, but just<lb/>
don't leave Send a letter to that<lb/>
East Carolinian<lb/>
I thought about it for a couple of<lb/>
minutes. She was hyper-ventilating by<lb/>
now. I picked her up by her<lb/>
underarms and plopped her on the<lb/>
bed. I took one of the silk neckties<lb/>
from the bed post and handed it to<lb/>
her. She blew her nose in it.<lb/>
"All right, you win, stop blubber-<lb/>
ing I said. "Maybe it would be the<lb/>
best for all concerned. Go get me the<lb/>
portable and some paper<lb/>
Mick LaSalle<lb/>
(Al Agate)<lb/>
Alumnus<lb/>
Brown Explains<lb/>
1 am a member of the Brown<lb/>
University group, "Students for<lb/>
Suicide Tablets Much of the<lb/>
publicity has distorted our message<lb/>
by emphasizing the word "suicide<lb/>
For example, a New York Times<lb/>
headline read, "Students to Vote on<lb/>
Suicide It is important that our<lb/>
ideas be understood.<lb/>
Our referendum, which passed by a<lb/>
60 percent majority and is not bin-<lb/>
ding on the university, requests that<lb/>
"suicide tablets be stocked at<lb/>
Brown's health services for optional<lb/>
student use in the event of a nuclear<lb/>
war This is not a suicidal or<lb/>
defeatist approach to the threat of<lb/>
nuclear war. It is aimed at dispelling<lb/>
the notion that we could survive such<lb/>
a holocaust. Hoping for survival is<lb/>
dangerous because it makes the idea<lb/>
of nuclear war more acceptable, and<lb/>
thus increases the chances that it<lb/>
could occur.<lb/>
Many Brown students voted for the<lb/>
referendum to express their fear and<lb/>
despair in a purely symbolic way.<lb/>
Others actually want Brown to<lb/>
stockpile the pills, because they con-<lb/>
sider the threat of nuclear war a very<lb/>
real one. Would the idea of suicide<lb/>
seem so bizarre if you were dying a<lb/>
slow, painful death from radiation<lb/>
sickness? Would it be dangerous to<lb/>
stockpile poison on a college campus?<lb/>
Well, the chemistry building at<lb/>
Brown is already chock-full of deadly<lb/>
substances, including cyanide, that<lb/>
could be used by some unbalanced<lb/>
person to harm himself or others.<lb/>
Suicide pills could be secured in a<lb/>
vault. By stockpiling real pills, we<lb/>
would emphasize that nuclear war is a<lb/>
real threat. The missiles sure are real.<lb/>
Is stockpiling suicide pills tanta-<lb/>
mount to accepting nuclear war?<lb/>
Hardly. Who wants to kill himself?<lb/>
By equating nuclear war with suicide,<lb/>
we are urging people to stop it. What<lb/>
can be done? Well, a mutual,<lb/>
verifiable freeze on the production of<lb/>
nuclear weapons would be a start.<lb/>
Reagan's strategy of "negotiation<lb/>
from strength" has accomplished<lb/>
nothing. If we increase our stockpile<lb/>
of nuclear weapons, why would the<lb/>
Soviet Union want to decrease theirs?<lb/>
Reagan claims that he has brought<lb/>
America back from a position of<lb/>
weakness to one of strength. This is<lb/>
misleading. The United States has<lb/>
never been strategically weaker than<lb/>
the Soviet Union. We have been at<lb/>
parity with each other since the '60s,<lb/>
when we lost our strategic superiori-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
But arms control is not enough.<lb/>
Even if both sides cut their stockpile<lb/>
of nuclear warheads by half, there<lb/>
would still be enough firepower with<lb/>
which to destroy ourselves. Better<lb/>
relations with Moscow are essential.<lb/>
This means more than simply meeting<lb/>
with the Soviets. It entails, among<lb/>
other things, a re-evaluation of our<lb/>
position in the world vis-a-vis the<lb/>
Soviet Union and the Third World.<lb/>
Should we continue to confuse inter-<lb/>
nal, polar revolutions with Soviet ex-<lb/>
panionism? Why did the administra-<lb/>
tion smother (for six months) a<lb/>
government report stating that the<lb/>
Soviets are not controling Nicaragua?<lb/>
Our dogmatic, inflexible approach to<lb/>
leftist governments is, ironically,<lb/>
pushing these countries towards the<lb/>
Soviet Union and developing new op-<lb/>
portunities for a conflict that could<lb/>
go nuclear.<lb/>
These ideas are not new, and they<lb/>
are only some of the ways in which to<lb/>
avoid nuclear war. But the Reagan<lb/>
administration has done nothing in<lb/>
this direction. The purpose of re-<lb/>
questing suicide pills for use after a<lb/>
nuclear war is to show the urgency of<lb/>
the problem, to show that students<lb/>
are afraid, that they consider nuclear<lb/>
war a distinct possibility in their<lb/>
future, and that they consider such a<lb/>
war unendurable. The government<lb/>
must discard "defensive" Star Wars<lb/>
weapons projects and dubious civil<lb/>
defense plans. We must act now,<lb/>
before a war is started, to prevent<lb/>
nuclear suicide.<lb/>
James R. Knebelman, '85<lb/>
Brown University<lb/>
Helms Assailed<lb/>
In response to Cynthia Mills' letter,<lb/>
I would like to offer some thoughts<lb/>
and, also, facts. In her letter blasting<lb/>
David Brooks, she invalidly claims<lb/>
that he is "a victim of liberal indoc-<lb/>
trinization" just because of his<lb/>
criticisms of Jesse Helms. It seems to<lb/>
me that Mills has been indoctrinated<lb/>
by Helms' favorite pastime, labeling<lb/>
most opposition Democrats as<lb/>
liberals. This was evident in one of<lb/>
the Hunt-Helms debates, where<lb/>
Helms labeled Hunt a "Mondale<lb/>
liberal Facts show Gov. Hunt's<lb/>
record and his future Senate plans<lb/>
widely disprove the liberal label.<lb/>
I have to agree with Ms. Mills<lb/>
about character assassination<lb/>
sometimes by the press, but I ques-<lb/>
tion her claim when she stated that<lb/>
Helms is not a racist and a bigot. It is<lb/>
a fact that Helms remains a steadfast<lb/>
critic of the Voting Rights Act and<lb/>
has led the fight against a national<lb/>
holiday in recognition of Dr. Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr claiming Dr. King<lb/>
had "communist sympathies Also.<lb/>
Helms stated in 1968 that "crime<lb/>
rates and irresponsibility among<lb/>
Negroes are facts of life which must<lb/>
be faced<lb/>
In reference to equal rights among<lb/>
women, Jesse Helms has voted<lb/>
against the Equal Rights Amend-<lb/>
ment. Being the steadfast critic of<lb/>
abortion, he even voted to deny<lb/>
counseling, medical and legal services<lb/>
to rape victims and opposed restoring<lb/>
the Social Security minimum<lb/>
benefits, where four out of five reci-<lb/>
pients are poor, elderly women. In<lb/>
reference to education. Helms r<lb/>
consistently voted against college<lb/>
loans for students, the Elementary<lb/>
and Secondary Education Act. voca<lb/>
tional education, and even educa-<lb/>
tional programs for the handicapped<lb/>
and Head Start budgets. In speaking<lb/>
about public education Hcrns<lb/>
retorted. "I ain't got no dog in Vfta<lb/>
fight (September 1983)<lb/>
The facts mentioned here are there,<lb/>
in ink, and are only a part of Jesse<lb/>
Helms' unfair and dirty politic-<lb/>
Though I respect Ms. Mills' opinion.<lb/>
1 do not see how Jesse Helms ha-<lb/>
helped, or will help. North Carolina<lb/>
citizens. I am referring to the minor:<lb/>
ty, elderly, handicapped, and other<lb/>
portions of the populations who have<lb/>
been hurt by Jesse Helms. Quoting<lb/>
Cynthia Mills, if you really want<lb/>
to know about the conservative ideal-<lb/>
of Sen. Helms and many others, read<lb/>
something besides the News and<lb/>
Observer I quite agree, just read<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms' voting record in the<lb/>
U.S. Senate.<lb/>
Ricky Lewis<lb/>
Junior, Med Tech<lb/>
Hardy Ha Ha<lb/>
I'm writing in reference to Sandy<lb/>
Hardy's letter, which you published<lb/>
Oct. 18, concerning the furor over the<lb/>
issue of a debate between the Young<lb/>
Democrats and the College<lb/>
Republicans. I am affiliated with<lb/>
neither of these organizations but<lb/>
have known and respected Mr. Hardy<lb/>
and his fine family for many years.<lb/>
Hence, I was appalled at Hardy's<lb/>
mention of the Young Democrats'<lb/>
use of "slander" being so closelv<lb/>
followed by his reference to the YD's<lb/>
as a "measley organization Is this a<lb/>
double standard?<lb/>
Later in his letter, Hardy<lb/>
challenges the Young Democrats to<lb/>
an arm wrestling match. This is exact-<lb/>
ly the sort of empty rhetoric and silly<lb/>
one-liners used by President Reagan<lb/>
and his administration to "laugh<lb/>
off" issues that could prove to be an<lb/>
embarassment to the Republicans.<lb/>
I also found Hardy's suggestion<lb/>
that the debate is none of The East<lb/>
Carolinian's business most improper.<lb/>
What is the business of a newspaper<lb/>
in a free society if not to cover issues<lb/>
pertinent to its readership?<lb/>
Finally, what is a "subliminal<lb/>
threat?" I'm sure Vice President<lb/>
Bush will let you use one of his many<lb/>
dictionaries if you need.<lb/>
Webb Spilman<lb/>
Sophomore<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes let-<lb/>
ters expressing all points of view.<lb/>
Mail or drop them by our office in the<lb/>
Publications Building, across from<lb/>
the entrance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
Pitt Coun<lb/>
By LESLIE TODD<lb/>
E t e?? hmi<lb/>
An unusual tract of forest land<lb/>
highly valued by ECU scientists<lb/>
for its environmental diversify<lb/>
will remain open for use as an<lb/>
outdoor classroom thanks to the<lb/>
generosity of a retired Winterville<lb/>
school teacher.<lb/>
Mrs. Reed Parker Ellis, who<lb/>
grew up not far from the wooded<lb/>
property east of Falkland, recen<lb/>
ly renewed a lease agreement with<lb/>
ECU that allows faculty and<lb/>
students to use the property for<lb/>
laboratory exercises, field<lb/>
demonstrations and individual<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
For a token payment of one<lb/>
dollar per year, ECU biologi<lb/>
can conunue to explore the<lb/>
relatively unspoiled forest w<lb/>
boasts some unusual plants, in-<lb/>
cluding mountain laurel and<lb/>
galax, rarely seen in this par<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"Mj husband and I have<lb/>
always enjoyed the things<lb/>
nature, and we like the idea<lb/>
the property can be preserved<lb/>
used for study said Mrs Hlis,<lb/>
who still visits the site to enjoy<lb/>
the springtime flowers<lb/>
The 100-acre tract was<lb/>
chased by her father in 1918 fi<lb/>
descendants of Robe Vv<lb/>
Jr a Pitt County doctor and<lb/>
farmer who served in the North<lb/>
Carolina Assembly in the late<lb/>
1700's and early 1800's. V<lb/>
cleared for farmin<lb/>
has long been a fa pot for<lb/>
family outings. sad<lb/>
Ellis joined groups of I<lb/>
residents who gatherr<lb/>
pick wildflower-<lb/>
yami<lb/>
Absentee<lb/>
Ballots<lb/>
Absentee Ballots can be notarized<lb/>
bv the following people a: I<lb/>
tf<lb/>
Mar) M<lb/>
20" Ma<lb/>
v ?<lb/>
Z2 Spilman<lb/>
Mrs Van He?<lb/>
Jor.e: I -<lb/>
Ra r v<lb/>
Joyner<lb/>
Pau oc Manl<lb/>
ECl Cred<lb/>
Patricia Norn<lb/>
104Ragsdaie<lb/>
5<lb/>
Finos<lb/>
Den:?e Mewfa<lb/>
Personnel Of)<lb/>
Nir.a B.<lb/>
319 Bdk<lb/>
Shea B .<lb/>
Brod KD56<lb/>
Linda Ingails<lb/>
B:j N -<lb/>
zzz:<lb/>
htuikiiw<lb/>
Up-to-the-minute<lb/>
styling for the<lb/>
Man of the Hour.<lb/>
The pesr grey i ?? i<lb/>
features soft.??:?? I<lb/>
lapels, impeccar .<lb/>
trousers anc<lb/>
exquisite ta kyring<lb/>
makes fi Biass a mas<lb/>
ter of American style<lb/>
Since it's your turn to<lb/>
celebrate vh not ac I<lb/>
with designer Bair?<lb/>
Sharpes<lb/>
Carolina East Center<lb/>
756-6736<lb/>
r<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0005"/><lb/>
OLP A W?5<lb/>
xNewecxv<lb/>
S WITH BO0&amp;<lb/>
VASOAI<lb/>
STAGE AS.<lb/>
0Kf<lb/>
I .<lb/>
Helms<lb/>
i<lb/>
ai ?<lb/>
rapped<lb/>
in<lb/>
olina<lb/>
? hei<lb/>
6<lb/>
deals<lb/>
:ne<lb/>
Hdrd Ha Ha<lb/>
Sandy<lb/>
Nht'd<lb/>
? ?ver the<lb/>
e <lb/>
B ;<lb/>
:<lb/>
but<lb/>
id Mr Hardy<lb/>
ears.<lb/>
? Hardy's<lb/>
rats'<lb/>
closely<lb/>
the D's<lb/>
Hardy<lb/>
its to<lb/>
exact-<lb/>
and silly<lb/>
lent Reagan<lb/>
"laugh<lb/>
-1- to be an<lb/>
? Itcans<lb/>
iggestion<lb/>
I i '<lb/>
iper.<lb/>
newspaper<lb/>
??' issues<lb/>
"subliminal<lb/>
President<lb/>
ne of his manv<lb/>
x<lb/>
I"<lb/>
<lb/>
that <lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
man n elt omes let-<lb/>
?  oj view.<lb/>
?" ur office in the<lb/>
Building, across from<lb/>
mtrance of Joyner I ibrary.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
Pitt County Forest Is Unique Classroom<lb/>
"<lb/>
B LESLIE TODD<lb/>
H t St?i lUrrau<lb/>
An unusual tract of forest land<lb/>
highly valued by ECU scientists<lb/>
for its environmental diersit<lb/>
ill remain open for use as an<lb/>
outdoor classroom thanks to the<lb/>
generosity of a retired Winterville<lb/>
school teacher.<lb/>
Mrs Reed Parker Ellis, who<lb/>
grew up not far from the wooded<lb/>
property east of Falkland, recent-<lb/>
ly renewed a lease agreement with<lb/>
ECU that allows faculty and<lb/>
students to use the property for<lb/>
laboratory exercises, field<lb/>
demonstrations and individual<lb/>
research projects.<lb/>
For a token payment of one<lb/>
dollar per year. ECU biologists<lb/>
can continue to explore the<lb/>
relatively unspoiled forest which<lb/>
boasts some unusual plants, in-<lb/>
cluding mountain laurel and<lb/>
galax. rarely seen in this part of<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"M husband and 1 have<lb/>
aluas enjoyed the things ot<lb/>
nature, and we like the idea that<lb/>
the property can be preserved and<lb/>
used for study said Mrs. Ellis,<lb/>
who still visits the site to enjoy<lb/>
the springtime flowers.<lb/>
The 100-acre tract was pur-<lb/>
chased bv her father in 1918 from<lb/>
descendants of Robert Williams<lb/>
Jr a Pitt County doctor and<lb/>
farmer who served in the North<lb/>
Carolina Assembly in the late<lb/>
I700's and early 1800's. Never<lb/>
cleared for farming, the propert)<lb/>
has long been a favorite spot for<lb/>
famiU outings. As a child, Mrs.<lb/>
Ellis joined groups oi local<lb/>
residents ,ho gathered there to<lb/>
pick wildflowers.<lb/>
???zaamBga?<lb/>
According to ECU biologist<lb/>
Dr. Vince Bellis, a variety of<lb/>
natural features and a lack of<lb/>
destructive logging activity in re-<lb/>
cent decades make the Ellis pro-<lb/>
perty locally unique and of great<lb/>
value for environmental studies.<lb/>
"One special beauty of this<lb/>
property is that it has been logged<lb/>
selectively and at a number of<lb/>
different times rather than simply<lb/>
clear-cut said Bellis. "This<lb/>
gives students an opportunity to<lb/>
observe both young and relatively<lb/>
mature forest environments<lb/>
within a short distance of each<lb/>
other. They can see everthing<lb/>
from young pines on the edge of<lb/>
the property to huge beech trees<lb/>
in the ravines that are 150 to 200<lb/>
years old<lb/>
From a botanist's point of<lb/>
view, some of the most in-<lb/>
teresting areas on the property<lb/>
are steep, north-facing ravines<lb/>
where constant shade and seeping<lb/>
springs create a cool, moist en-<lb/>
vironment. Here grow dense<lb/>
stands of mountain laurel and<lb/>
galax, plants that are normally<lb/>
associated with the cool climate<lb/>
of the Blue Ridge mountains. The<lb/>
ravines also provide an ideal en-<lb/>
vironment for certain mosses,<lb/>
ferns and liverworts not com-<lb/>
monly found in the Pitt County<lb/>
area.<lb/>
"The presence of these small<lb/>
pockets of plants and animals<lb/>
outside their normal range invites<lb/>
some interesting scientific ques-<lb/>
tions sas Bellis. "How and<lb/>
when did they first become<lb/>
established here9 Are the in-<lb/>
dividuals found here genetically<lb/>
different from those in the major<lb/>
areas of distribution?"<lb/>
ECU scientists identify three<lb/>
distinct forest environments on<lb/>
the Ellis property. The higher<lb/>
elevations are dominated by a<lb/>
mixture of loblolly pines and<lb/>
hardwoods including several<lb/>
types of oak, two types of<lb/>
hickory, sweetgum, dogwood,<lb/>
sourwood, American holly and<lb/>
sassafrass.<lb/>
A lower elevation hardwood<lb/>
forest contains many of these<lb/>
same trees but certain species<lb/>
such as white oak, holly and iron-<lb/>
wood become more abundant.<lb/>
Black walnut and mulberry ap-<lb/>
pear at this level with mountain<lb/>
laurel, tulip trees and American<lb/>
beech being abundant on the<lb/>
north-facing ravines.<lb/>
The lowest elevations are<lb/>
found along the floodplain of Ot-<lb/>
ter Creek, a year-round stream<lb/>
fed by spring waters that<lb/>
meanders along for several miles<lb/>
before flowing into the Tar<lb/>
River. Bald cypress, river birch,<lb/>
basswood, and possum haw are<lb/>
some of the species that<lb/>
characterize this low-lying area.<lb/>
According to Mark Brinson,<lb/>
director of graduate studies in<lb/>
biology at ECU, the property has<lb/>
been used as an outdoor<lb/>
laboratory for ecology classes for<lb/>
well over 10 years Common field<lb/>
exercises include statistical<lb/>
sampling methods, soil studies,<lb/>
leaf fall and leaf decomposition<lb/>
studies, and vegetation analysis.<lb/>
Field trips to the area number<lb/>
about five or six each semester.<lb/>
Other courses to utilize the<lb/>
Ellis property include field<lb/>
botany, field zoology, mycology<lb/>
(the study of fungi), and en-<lb/>
vironmental biology. At least one<lb/>
graduate level thesis has been<lb/>
prepared using research perform-<lb/>
ed on the property.<lb/>
"This area is unparalleled in<lb/>
Pitt County for its community of<lb/>
several distinct forest types that<lb/>
are in a relatively advanced state<lb/>
of ecological development<lb/>
comments Brinson in a<lb/>
memorandum describing the pro-<lb/>
pertv "Future access to this gem<lb/>
of natural beauty is highly valued<lb/>
by the biology faculty and is con-<lb/>
sidered an irreplaceable compo-<lb/>
nent of quality education at<lb/>
ECU "<lb/>
Otter Creek is part of the forest near Falkland utilized b EC I<lb/>
students to study subjects such as biology and botanv.<lb/>
7<lb/>
,<lb/>
Absentee<lb/>
Ballots<lb/>
Absentee Ballots can bo notarized<lb/>
bv the following people at ECU<lb/>
Man M<lb/>
207 Vl ?<lb/>
 I spiiiriaii<lb/>
Mrs  H-??? lerson<lb/>
l<lb/>
Ra pi v ??<lb/>
i .<lb/>
Pa tin i Mattl<lb/>
EC1 Cred<lb/>
Pati ? N ? man<lb/>
 Ragsdale<lb/>
Sandra Hall<lb/>
Financial Aid Ofl<lb/>
Mewborn<lb/>
Personnel Ofl i<lb/>
Nina H. ml<lb/>
319 Belli<lb/>
Sheila Bl i<lb/>
Brod AD56<lb/>
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The<lb/>
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We have new and used skiis<lb/>
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Students Welcome<lb/>
Weekday's $5.00<lb/>
Weekends $7.00<lb/>
Indian Trails Country Club<lb/>
Griffon, NC<lb/>
Opry<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
60's &amp; 70's Rock &amp; Roll Revue<lb/>
And Enjoy<lb/>
HOGG AND THE ROCKERS<lb/>
The peart grey tuxedo<lb/>
?? i'ure.s softly-peaked<lb/>
lapels impeccably-cut<lb/>
;ers and the<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057675_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL IN! AN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
Tobacco Talks<lb/>
At Rural Rally<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Newi l-dtiot<lb/>
Politicians depend a lot on<lb/>
style. And style varies with the<lb/>
audience. When you're Gov.<lb/>
James Hunt, you're in eastern<lb/>
North Carolina, the place is a<lb/>
tractor dealership and the subject<lb/>
is tobacco, well, the style is<lb/>
down-home and rural.<lb/>
Tuesday's Democratic rally at<lb/>
Waller Tractor in Winterville was<lb/>
aimed at farmers in general, but<lb/>
specifically at tobacco farmers.<lb/>
Take a warehouse full of 500<lb/>
farmers and a gaggle of politi-<lb/>
cians and you've got the friendly<lb/>
atmosphere of a political rally,<lb/>
country style.<lb/>
Those attending the rally<lb/>
warmed up with plates of<lb/>
barbecue and slaw and some<lb/>
good foot-stomping fiddle music.<lb/>
But the real warming-up credit<lb/>
lies with the politicians<lb/>
themselves, the guys who really<lb/>
depend on these people for votes.<lb/>
One by one, they got up on the<lb/>
trailer which served as the stage,<lb/>
spouting colloquialisms in<lb/>
Southern accents that could be<lb/>
cut with a knife and in the pro-<lb/>
cess doing a lot of cutting on each<lb/>
other.<lb/>
The point was, the politicians<lb/>
wanted to show that they were<lb/>
paisanos. And the farmers<lb/>
"anted to feel that they really<lb/>
were. So there were a lot of jokes<lb/>
about people's farms, and the<lb/>
Med Student<lb/>
From Grenada<lb/>
Speaks Today<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
EClT is participating in a na-<lb/>
tionwide Student liberation Day<lb/>
today as proclaimed by President<lb/>
Reagan, according to Dennis Kil-<lb/>
coyne, campus coordinator for<lb/>
the event.<lb/>
Kilcoyne invited a medical stu-<lb/>
dent from Grenada, who was<lb/>
rescued in the invasion last year.<lb/>
Through the efforts of the SGA<lb/>
and United Students of America,<lb/>
Mark Soloman will visit ECU to-<lb/>
day and prevent a non-partisan<lb/>
view of hi- experience. Soloman<lb/>
will be in Hrewster C103 from 2-4<lb/>
p.m. and students will be en-<lb/>
couraged to voice opinions on the<lb/>
incider Kilcoyne said.<lb/>
"The only reason the SGA<lb/>
heloed fund this event Kilcoyne<lb/>
saui, "was because of the non-<lb/>
par tisan nature of Soloman's<lb/>
visit. He wants to educate the<lb/>
students on the experience and<lb/>
hear their views on it<lb/>
Another medical student who<lb/>
was involved in the Grenada in-<lb/>
vasion recently wrote to The E'ast<lb/>
Carolinian and expressed his<lb/>
views on Student Liberation Day.<lb/>
Morty Weissfelner of St.<lb/>
George's University School of<lb/>
Medicine said, "the liberation of<lb/>
the Reagan Administration came<lb/>
at a terrible cost: dozens of young<lb/>
American, Cuban and Grenadian<lb/>
lives. Instead of celebrating the<lb/>
liberation of students, their ac-<lb/>
tions only encourage the decima-<lb/>
tion of students. The publicity<lb/>
from their ralliesencourages<lb/>
the worst tendencies of our<lb/>
go eminent to believe it will be<lb/>
politically acceptable to send us<lb/>
off to war<lb/>
"If the oiganizers behind 'Stu-<lb/>
dent I iberation Days' mean to<lb/>
suggest through their mindless<lb/>
celebration of the invasion of<lb/>
Grenada that students support<lb/>
military adventures I suggest<lb/>
they ask their students first<lb/>
Kilcoyne responded to<lb/>
Weissfelner's letter by saying, "It<lb/>
is true a lot of other universities<lb/>
are holding rallies across the<lb/>
United States today, but the<lb/>
coordinators of this program felt<lb/>
it would be best if we obtained an<lb/>
individual who would remain<lb/>
non-partisan on the Grenada<lb/>
issue and simply educate the<lb/>
students on his experience<lb/>
size of their feet and whose wife<lb/>
was really the man of the house.<lb/>
And the audience loved it.<lb/>
And as each successive<lb/>
representative or congressman<lb/>
stepped on the stage, they pulled<lb/>
the crowd along, addressing their<lb/>
concerns, drawing out their<lb/>
responses and making them laugh<lb/>
and feel at home.<lb/>
Jim Hunt showed a different<lb/>
style. Gone was the convoluted<lb/>
rhetoric of B-l bombers and Cen-<lb/>
tral American policy. What<lb/>
counted was the cash crop, the<lb/>
tobacco. And Hunt talked prices<lb/>
and price supports. He addressed<lb/>
farming as a capital-intensive<lb/>
operation. He talked to the peo-<lb/>
ple about what they wanted to<lb/>
hear.<lb/>
In a state like North Carolina,<lb/>
there are many interests and con-<lb/>
cerns. To get the voters, you've<lb/>
got to pinpoint these. To talk<lb/>
tobacco, a congenial atmosphere<lb/>
and straight talk are necessities.<lb/>
That's exactly what it was at<lb/>
Tuesday's rally.<lb/>
A I OPPORTUNITY<lb/>
 "Production Manager<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN is now accep-<lb/>
ting applications through October 26th for the<lb/>
Production Manager's position. All interested<lb/>
3! ? persons are encouraged to apply. Don't pass<lb/>
up this opportunity to gain valuable experience<lb/>
and work for Eastern Nortn Carolina's<lb/>
number one college newspaper.<lb/>
Stop by the Publication building located across from Joyncr I.ibrar<lb/>
Experience prefered, but not necessary<lb/>
This 14-foot-tall puppet was one of several featured in a Wednes-<lb/>
day puppet show as part of an ECU commemoration of Central<lb/>
America Week.<lb/>
WINTER<lb/>
BREAK<lb/>
Help us sponsor your<lb/>
school's winter break<lb/>
ski trip and ski free!<lb/>
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By shopping our Downtown store<lb/>
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Monday through Saturday. 11 am to 4 pm<lb/>
T-mmute guarantee applies I 1:30 AM to 1:30 PM<lb/>
on orders of five or less per table or three or less<lb/>
per carryout customer<lb/>
2601 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
ATTENTION ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
Get Your Spring Semester Application in NOW!<lb/>
Pirates Landing<lb/>
offers a new concept in student housing<lb/>
$170.00per month (including utilities) <lb/>
$150.00per month for 1 year leases. I?<lb/>
remco<lb/>
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? Furnished<lb/>
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? Outdoor Grills<lb/>
Common Area<lb/>
? 2 large bathrooms<lb/>
? Storage closet<lb/>
? Kitchenette &amp; Microwave<lb/>
Convenient &amp; Economical<lb/>
? Two Blocks from Campus &amp; Downtown<lb/>
Utilities Included in Rent<lb/>
Energy Efficient<lb/>
Laundry Facilities on Site<lb/>
Free Maid Service<lb/>
Cable TV Available<lb/>
Central Heat &amp; Air<lb/>
REMCO EAST INC ? P.O. Box 6026 ? Greenville. NC 27834 ? 91 9 758 6061<lb/>
m<lb/>
??<lb/>
?<lb/>
VHBkMMWMM<lb/>
T .<lb/>
im i <lb/>
eern<lb/>
'A nyth<lb/>
B MAS VIM REH<lb/>
mbination<lb/>
- and lavish dance<lb/>
? rs, the McGinni<lb/>
n thing (<lb/>
ight acapa ? <lb/>
i he ludience remained<lb/>
'hilc I twcstrucl<lb/>
erwelm .<lb/>
lure<lb/>
the st<lb/>
lv? ai Bill) (<lb/>
liner to stop Hope (M<lb/>
iinningham), the girl he<lb/>
om marrying another<lb/>
B<lb/>
Iim Da<lb/>
s fate w<lb/>
lentials<lb/>
It do<lb/>
. j<lb/>
' i<lb/>
-<lb/>
Ml Thi <lb/>
?<lb/>
Autho<lb/>
In Rock ' 'Roll i onjiJeniiai. svmiv<lb/>
c did 1 . 11<lb/>
? -he eie u- a frank. ?il metimesl<lb/>
f ihe stars - .<lb/>
of little k<lb/>
I<lb/>
Rock W RollC onfiden: .<lb/>
?<lb/>
? them in<lb/>
is they a<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
'ho in<lb/>
Sh?<lb/>
? pt John<lb/>
?<lb/>
ke Alice . v hoofs (<lb/>
ammabk I <lb/>
<lb/>
? ?. -<lb/>
subi<lb/>
dirij<lb/>
cy k of w<lb/>
? <lb/>
net. George Albertine shows what sariorii<lb/>
A<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
?<lb/>
p<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0007"/><lb/>
ORTUNITY<lb/>
oduction Manager<lb/>
R01 INI AN is now accep-<lb/>
ktober 26th for the<lb/>
tion. All interested<lb/>
. . App. Don't pass<lb/>
. un valuable experience<lb/>
n North Carolina's<lb/>
sp per.<lb/>
'nrr I ibrarv<lb/>
, i m i<lb/>
?;<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
R<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
A EAST CENTER<lb/>
?49<lb/>
wfh vvgs,<lb/>
sproy on hair<lb/>
crs hafs. ears,<lb/>
whips, make-up<lb/>
Dsfumes masks<lb/>
:nd much more!<lb/>
RRE.LTD.<lb/>
STUDENTS<lb/>
Ipplication in NOW!<lb/>
lilities)<lb/>
ses.<lb/>
OU<lb/>
ent housing<lb/>
r?<lb/>
remco<lb/>
east<lb/>
mc<lb/>
Common Area<lb/>
? - irge batl rooms<lb/>
? ?- aset<lb/>
? ? "? Microwave<lb/>
i<lb/>
lable<lb/>
e NC 27834 ? 919 758 6061<lb/>
mm0mtt <lb/>
? -mm<lb/>
IHb tAST ktl IN)AN<lb/>
Style<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
Page?<lb/>
'Anything Goes9 Fanciful And Fun<lb/>
B DAN MAURER<lb/>
?IMal NaMMi tdltor<lb/>
With a combination of side-<lb/>
splitting humor and lavish dance<lb/>
numbers, the McGinnis Theatre's<lb/>
production of Anything Goes<lb/>
brought a capacity crowd to their<lb/>
tec: The audience remained in<lb/>
stitches while being awestruck bv<lb/>
the productions overwelming<lb/>
grandure.<lb/>
l'he story, set in the 1930s,<lb/>
revolves around Billy Crocker<lb/>
(played bj Paris Pete), a young<lb/>
stockbroker who sails a trans-<lb/>
atlantic Una to stop Hope (Mary-<lb/>
Kate Cunningham), the girl he<lb/>
loves, from marrying another<lb/>
man Sound a little off the wall?<lb/>
li gets better when Billy borrows<lb/>
a ticket and passport from a not-<lb/>
too-well-know gangster named<lb/>
Moonface, played by Tim David-<lb/>
son. -V fate would have it, these<lb/>
dentials belong to none other<lb/>
tn public enemy number one,<lb/>
vike Eyes Johnson.<lb/>
It doesn'l stop there. The story<lb/>
implicated even further with<lb/>
appearance of a "hot" night<lb/>
lb performer named Reno<lb/>
played by Janice<lb/>
whose wild ways set<lb/>
hip is eai<lb/>
gives an exceptional pro-<lb/>
a the impetuous<lb/>
cker He has a fine singing<lb/>
voice thai proes itself in such<lb/>
igs as "It's Delovely" and<lb/>
'All I brought The Night but<lb/>
t's his comedic talents that make<lb/>
ter memorable. While<lb/>
cr has the funniest lines.<lb/>
d . tend Li be the focal point<lb/>
in most of the production's com-<lb/>
ical scenes, and from there he<lb/>
seems to orchestrate the humor.<lb/>
While Pete may set the tempo,<lb/>
its Davidson's excellent<lb/>
character-acting that sets the<lb/>
tone. His hilarious portrayal of<lb/>
the pathetic but lovable gangster<lb/>
comes ever so close to stealing the<lb/>
show. Dressed as a parson and<lb/>
sporting an authentic Brooklyn<lb/>
accent, Davidson and his antics<lb/>
keep the audience entertained.<lb/>
As for the show's leading<lb/>
ladies, they are unbeatable.<lb/>
Schreiber hands in a performance<lb/>
Ethel Mermen would be proud<lb/>
of. Her strong voice seems to hit<lb/>
home with the audiences and<lb/>
helps add depth to the character.<lb/>
Cunningham is wounderful as the<lb/>
pretty Ms. Hope. Her beautiful<lb/>
voice is<lb/>
The show's mainstay is its<lb/>
lavish dance numbers. The<lb/>
show's dancers, led by Jennifer<lb/>
Paulson (who also played David-<lb/>
son's sidekick Bonnie), perform-<lb/>
ed wounderfully choreographed<lb/>
routines reminiscent of the<lb/>
'30s. Probably the most spec-<lb/>
tacular aspect of the production<lb/>
was the flashy, sequened<lb/>
costumes designed by Keith<lb/>
Lewis.<lb/>
Anything Goes will be per-<lb/>
formed Oct. 25-27 and 29.<lb/>
Reserved seat tickets are available<lb/>
at the McGinnis Theatre Box Of-<lb/>
fice from 10 a.m. to 4 p.m<lb/>
Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Reservations mav be made by<lb/>
calling 757-6390.<lb/>
Sonja Hodges, Jennifer Paulson and Monica Smith (from left to right) in the title number from the Production of Anything Goes.<lb/>
Author Profiles Rock's Legends<lb/>
In Rock VN 'Roll Confidential. Penny Stallings does for the music<lb/>
world what she did for the Hollywood scene in Flesh and Fantasy<lb/>
? she gives us a frank, witty, sometimes cynical, but always affec-<lb/>
tionate portrayal of the stars ? complete with gossip, trivia and a<lb/>
ssortment of little known facts. RockW'Roll Confidential<lb/>
will be published by Little, Brown on Oct. 31st, ($24.95, cloth;<lb/>
I ? 95, pb).<lb/>
. Rock 'N 'Roll Confidential, Stallings traces the legends of hun-<lb/>
: ? ock stars and illustrates their ups and downs with 1,000<lb/>
graphs ? many of them never before published. She shows<lb/>
he tars as they appeared in their parents' scrapbooks (before<lb/>
their nose jobs, dye jobs and other changes created their own uni-<lb/>
tar look") and recounts their days of struggle (Chubby<lb/>
ckers put in time as a chicken plucker). Stallings catalogues the<lb/>
fashions that created the unique images (Time magazine described<lb/>
s Jo as "5 inches of hot buttered yak wool"), and the rock<lb/>
lones vho imitated them. She pfiles the moguls and managers<lb/>
v h i helped catapult the stars to tame and includes a roll call of the<lb/>
late greats whose careers were cut short through tragic accidents<lb/>
and careless blunders. She records the great rock rumors (Yoko<lb/>
? mo is a sorceress who kept John Lennon under her spell for over<lb/>
ars through the use of hypnosis), the banned record albums<lb/>
Alice Cooper's School's Out which the FTC quarantined<lb/>
ecause of the inflammable bikini panties that adorned the album),<lb/>
the evolution of rock'n'roll movies.<lb/>
Penny Stallings takes the less conventional, slightly irreverent<lb/>
il more complete route to explain the phenomenon or rock, and<lb/>
ibtlj and entertainingly transforms the gossip and trivia surroun-<lb/>
ling the rock stars into a social and cultural document. This en-<lb/>
lopedk work of witty, silly scholarship is a book all rock fans,<lb/>
irdless of ag will read, enjoy and trade trivia about.<lb/>
1. Who came closest to deposing Elvis as the king of rock'n'roll?<lb/>
2. According to a Village Voice critic, who has the worst teeth in<lb/>
rock'n'roll?<lb/>
3. This rock star had nightmares about losing his hair.<lb/>
4. Which record label is "the Sound of Young America?"<lb/>
5. He gave up an opportunity to play for the Philadelphia Phillies<lb/>
in order to become a rock star.<lb/>
6. This rock'n'roll personality's record collection features discount<lb/>
classical albums purchased through TV ads.<lb/>
7. This rock star was the model for Bob Dylan's "Don't Look<lb/>
Back "Like A Rolling Stone "Vision of Johanna and "Just<lb/>
Like A Woman<lb/>
8. This recording star was unable to sing for four years due to a<lb/>
nose job.<lb/>
9. Which of these cross-over stars has never released a rock'n'roll<lb/>
record ? A. Ted Knight B. Regis Philbin C. Muhammed Ali D.<lb/>
Henry Winkler E. Goldie Hawn F. Richard Chamberlin G. Far-<lb/>
rah Fawcett<lb/>
10. This fashion trend has withstood the test of time for over 30<lb/>
years.<lb/>
11. This rocker has made the greatest impact on black hairstyles.<lb/>
12 In "Go Your Own Way which two members of the band are<lb/>
Heel wood Mac singing about?<lb/>
13 Who holds the record for the most banned and bowdlerized<lb/>
aibum covers?<lb/>
14 Which synthetic pop group can be called the biggest con job in<lb/>
all of rock'n'roll?<lb/>
Men's Fashions Consistent During The '80s<lb/>
BRYAN HUMUKT ? CCU WH Lak<lb/>
fct George Albertine shows what sartorial prowness is all about.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Reliable clothes continue as the staple of menswear,<lb/>
says an authority on masculine clothing.<lb/>
"I used to predict a major change ? that men would give up<lb/>
suits said Charles Hix. "I said there would be more casual dress<lb/>
for the office. But I recant.<lb/>
"Society will not let the man out of that uniform Segments of<lb/>
that "uniform" include neckties and hats. "I predicted, too, that<lb/>
the necktie would go said Hix in an interview. "I no longer think<lb/>
so<lb/>
"Hats? They have become optional; you don't see them worn as<lb/>
a must. But bald men love hats for an obvious reason. "I see a lot<lb/>
of men turning to caps and to berets.<lb/>
"With women back in hats again, who knows but what men will<lb/>
do the same<lb/>
ilix, 42, has written extensively through the years on menswear.<lb/>
His latest offering is the book, Man Alive! Dressing The Free Way,<lb/>
(Simon and Schuster, $17.95).<lb/>
"Not every job entails wearing a suit and tie said Hix. "But in<lb/>
many occupations if you don't you'll be at a disadvantage<lb/>
"Thus a man who does not dress to the high expectations of<lb/>
others is not perceived as totally reliable. And being reliable is a<lb/>
very critical issue in the business world<lb/>
Hix, in his book, discusses some of the symbols of reliable dress,<lb/>
or what he calls the "security system<lb/>
He mentions details on a suit jacket. "Lapels today mean ab-<lb/>
solutely nothing he writes. "Many of a suit's buttons are still<lb/>
there purely for meaningless show. Some pockets are sewn shut,<lb/>
never to carry anything.<lb/>
"And what is more illogical than a necktie, a piece of cloth mor-<lb/>
bidly akin to a noose?"<lb/>
"Creased trousers are another affront to logic because they can-<lb/>
not be maintained except as an exercise in futility<lb/>
The section on reliable clothes is just one in the Hix book. He<lb/>
discusses off-duty garb, earthy clothes, sporty clothes, clothes that<lb/>
are smart, crisp, easy, and powerful.<lb/>
Hix showed up for the interview in non-reliable clothes (by, say,<lb/>
Wall Street standards) of pullover sweater, sports shirt, gray slacks<lb/>
and no tie.<lb/>
"I thought of suit and tie for the interview he said. "Then 1<lb/>
thought, no, I won't be a hypocrite. It's a hot and humid day, she<lb/>
will understand<lb/>
The Hix book is lavish with photographs, the work of Stephen<lb/>
AuCoin.<lb/>
"You've got a lot of nearly nude men in the pictures I said.<lb/>
"Those are to get attention said Hix, who includes a whole<lb/>
sevtion titled "Sexy<lb/>
"Actually it's an effort to get men to think of clothing in a dif-<lb/>
ferent sense. They forget that women like to look at attractive men.<lb/>
Men used to turn off at this idea. But not anymore<lb/>
"If we're adept (as our own designers) we can augment our ap-<lb/>
peal. If we're inept we can diminish it. Don't flub it<lb/>
OK for the attention-getting photographs, but what about using<lb/>
some realistic figures instead of all those professional models who<lb/>
look like young gods.<lb/>
"Chubbies don't look good in clothes he said. "1 believe men,<lb/>
as well as women, have got to work themselves into decent shape!<lb/>
And I don't see unattractive looking women in those women's<lb/>
fashion magazines<lb/>
Hix, a native of Northville, Mich a Detroit suburb, graduated<lb/>
from the University of Michigan with Phi Beta Kappa key and<lb/>
awards for creative writing.<lb/>
His previous books on menswear are Looking Good and Dress-<lb/>
ing Right. He also wrote Working Out, a shape-up guide for men.<lb/>
Society generally demands that clothes for the job be reliable and<lb/>
also wants men attentive to their appearance. "Let's face it said<lb/>
Hix, "There are men who have absolutely no interest in clothes. I<lb/>
won't reach them. And I'm not expecting to affect the dress of the<lb/>
David Rockefellers of this world, the men who have succeeded<lb/>
already at everything<lb/>
"I hope to reach the younger group, from the late teens to the<lb/>
early 40s. And if you think a lot of men aren't interested in clothes,<lb/>
look around you at the men's shops, the department store sections<lb/>
devoted strictly to menswear, a lot of it designer stuff<lb/>
"You don't think all that is show, do you? Stores aren't going to<lb/>
give space to something that won't sell<lb/>
i<lb/>
?bw ?????? ??awBBMBwaai<lb/>
? ? ? j?-mmmmm0,mimm ? ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
J<lb/>
8THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
?<lb/>
Survey Categorizes Sex Types<lb/>
(UPI) - 'There is no such<lb/>
thing as normalcy" regarding<lb/>
sexual behavior in America<lb/>
because there is a smorgasbord of<lb/>
different styles, a survey showed<lb/>
yesterday.<lb/>
The results, part of which will<lb/>
be published in Sunday's Parade<lb/>
Magazine, came from the<lb/>
responses of 1,100 males and<lb/>
females, 18 to 60, a group said to<lb/>
represent a cross-section of the<lb/>
U.S. population.<lb/>
"The big surprise in this study<lb/>
is how our sexual behaviors<lb/>
cluster, and that there is no such<lb/>
thing as normalcy and that no<lb/>
one style predominates said<lb/>
Dr. Carol C. Flax, a sex therapist<lb/>
and researcher who helped design<lb/>
the survey.<lb/>
Earl Ubell, Parade's health<lb/>
editor and co-designer of the<lb/>
report, said, "Men's and<lb/>
women's patterns of sexual ac-<lb/>
tivity areremarkably similar<lb/>
Ubell said eight different com-<lb/>
binations of sexual styles are<lb/>
possible, but they all have three<lb/>
components: life satisfaction,<lb/>
sensuality and eroticism. The<lb/>
report described the sex styles as<lb/>
follows:<lb/>
? Pansexual. Twenty percent of<lb/>
those surveyed take sex in all<lb/>
forms, "are very sensual and are<lb/>
aroused by traditional foreplay<lb/>
Men and women in this category<lb/>
enjoy "pornography, erotic fan-<lb/>
tasies, oral sex, and anal sex<lb/>
? Satisfied erotic. "More than<lb/>
twice as many men as women<lb/>
comprised the 12 percent who<lb/>
make up this sexual style, and 20<lb/>
percent of them have had some<lb/>
homosexual experience This<lb/>
grouping is similar to pansexuals,<lb/>
except "they scored low on the<lb/>
sensuality trait<lb/>
? Unsatisfied erotic. "The men<lb/>
and women of this group, 13 per-<lb/>
cent of the sample, take sex<lb/>
wherever they can get it but they<lb/>
are more likelv to masturbate<lb/>
Visual Arts Forum Holds<lb/>
Annual Beaux Arts Ball<lb/>
By TIN A MAROSCHAK<lb/>
? f itim Ml lor<lb/>
Interested in seeing some of the<lb/>
most unique Halloween costumes<lb/>
in Greenville? On Wednesday,<lb/>
Oct. 31, the Visual Arts Forum<lb/>
will sponsor the 10th annual<lb/>
Beaux Arts Ball at the new Attic.<lb/>
The ball , which began in 1974<lb/>
as a minor event for mostly art<lb/>
students, has grown tremendous-<lb/>
ly to include students of other<lb/>
majors as well. One student said<lb/>
that as far as costumes go, the<lb/>
event is a very untraditional<lb/>
masquerade ball<lb/>
Costumes are mandatory and<lb/>
prizes will be given away for the<lb/>
three best ones. The first prize<lb/>
winner will receive $65 in cash<lb/>
and a $40 gift certificate from the<lb/>
Art &amp; Camera Shop. The second<lb/>
prize winner will receive a $40 gift<lb/>
certificate from the Art &amp;<lb/>
Camera Shop and dinner for two<lb/>
at Chicos. The third prize winner<lb/>
will receive a $20 gift certificat<lb/>
from the Art &amp; Camera Shop and<lb/>
dinner for two at the Olde Towne<lb/>
Inn.<lb/>
Admission is $3.50 in advance<lb/>
and $4.50 at the door. Tickets are<lb/>
available in Messick, room 106,<lb/>
Apple Records, and at the Stu-<lb/>
dent Organization Booth in<lb/>
Mendenhall (on Oct. 29 and 30).<lb/>
Doors open at 9 p.m. and the<lb/>
Pressure Boys will provide enter-<lb/>
tainment for the evening.<lb/>
SUPPORT<lb/>
THE<lb/>
PIRATES!<lb/>
Frustrated and seeking arousal by<lb/>
any means, they want sex fre-<lb/>
quently but cannot get it<lb/>
? Lonely erotic. "People who<lb/>
have had homosexual experience<lb/>
also congregate in this style, 12<lb/>
percent of those surveyed, and<lb/>
men outnumber women by more<lb/>
than two to one. These are<lb/>
lonesome people who respond<lb/>
more to sexual imagethan to<lb/>
their sexual partner<lb/>
? Satisfied sensualist. "These<lb/>
people are happy with their sex<lb/>
lives, their partners and<lb/>
themselves. Most are married,<lb/>
and they comprise 11 percent of<lb/>
the sample<lb/>
? Unsatisfied sensualist.<lb/>
"Generally, sex is not important<lb/>
to those of this sexual style, who<lb/>
are very unhappy in many aspects<lb/>
of their lives This group was<lb/>
eight percent of the sample.<lb/>
? Sexually conservative. "The<lb/>
overwhelming majority of this<lb/>
style 11 percent of the total, are<lb/>
married. Although sex is not cen-<lb/>
tral to their lives, they are other-<lb/>
wise happy<lb/>
? Nonsexual. "Thirteen percent<lb/>
of the respondents fall into this<lb/>
category. They score low on all<lb/>
three behavior traits and are very<lb/>
unhappy with their lives and<lb/>
bodies. These people have no in-<lb/>
terest in sex<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha Brothers<lb/>
Present Special Concert<lb/>
Tonight at 7:30 p.m. the<lb/>
brothers of the Zeta Psi chapter<lb/>
of Phi Mu Alpha will present a<lb/>
recital of American music in the<lb/>
A.J. Fletcher Recital Hall. This<lb/>
program is the first of many<lb/>
campus-wide activities the<lb/>
chapter will undertake this year<lb/>
to encourage and promote "the<lb/>
highest standards of creativity,<lb/>
performance, education and<lb/>
research in music in America<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha is a professional<lb/>
fraternity for men in music,<lb/>
founded not only to provide<lb/>
fellowship for students of music<lb/>
but also to encourage profes-<lb/>
sional development and advance<lb/>
the role and stature of music in<lb/>
American life.<lb/>
In addition to Thursday's<lb/>
recital, the brothers hope to in<lb/>
troduce a service on Valentine's<lb/>
Day, similar to the well known<lb/>
singing telegram whereby they<lb/>
will deliver a "message"<lb/>
anywhere on campus. All pro<lb/>
ceeds will go to a scholarship in<lb/>
the School of Music.<lb/>
Tonight's program will include<lb/>
various solo and ensemble per<lb/>
formances by the members of the<lb/>
Phi Mu Alpha choir and their<lb/>
probationary members. Admis-<lb/>
sion is free and everyone is in-<lb/>
vited to attend.<lb/>
ADVERTISE<lb/>
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 ' ?Si Fresh Seafood.<lb/>
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THEATRES<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square' Shopping Center<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9:00<lb/>
First Born-PG-13<lb/>
Starts Tomorrow<lb/>
b '<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
House of Hats<lb/>
Ml O ? ision Hats<lb/>
Accessories<lb/>
758-3025<lb/>
405 Evans St.<lb/>
Downtown Mall<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
Places In The Heart -PG<lb/>
Held Over 2nd Week 2:00-4:30-7:00-9:15<lb/>
enK??on.?- Little Drummer Girl -R<lb/>
"?" LATE SHOW KRI-SAT " '<lb/>
Open at 11:00pm &amp; Objects of Desire<lb/>
Starts at 11:30pm <lb/>
NO PASSES jjRATED X J<lb/>
COpyngtil 1984<lb/>
Krogef S.lv en<lb/>
OuantiTv Biqnts ??? ' ??<lb/>
OPEN 24<lb/>
600 Greenv<lb/>
HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
ille Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED iTFM POLiC'<lb/>
E.i'n of rnpse advertised i?m<lb/>
is required to De read .<lb/>
.(vanaoie tor saie m eacn Kroger<lb/>
S.1V on e?rept as specifically<lb/>
noted m tnis ad if we do run<lb/>
out of an item we win offer you<lb/>
your cnoice of a comDaracie<lb/>
item wnen avaiiaoie reflecting<lb/>
tne same savings c; 3 ramenech<lb/>
wnicn win entitle vou to pur<lb/>
cnase tne advertised item at<lb/>
tne advertised price within 50<lb/>
days Only one vendor coupon<lb/>
win De accepted per item<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Tnru sat<lb/>
Oct 27 1984<lb/>
X-DRY, PINK, COLD DUCK,<lb/>
BRUT SPUMANTE OR<lb/>
j. Roget<lb/>
Champagne<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
instant<lb/>
coffee<lb/>
10 oz<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
LIMIT 1 JAR PLEASE<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
BtlS<lb/>
East Carolinian advertising<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS CUT UP<lb/>
MIXED FRYER PARTS OR GRADE A<lb/>
whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
LIMIT 3 PKCS. PLEASE<lb/>
Jj<lb/>
A BEWITCHING<lb/>
Black cat<lb/>
cake<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Fresh<lb/>
cauliflower<lb/>
GREAT FOR<lb/>
JACK-O-LANTERNS<lb/>
Halloween<lb/>
Pumpkins<lb/>
Hd.<lb/>
Hicks<lb/>
(UPI) ? Every cx-movie star ? su j<lb/>
Rock Hudson in "Dynasty of<lb/>
Elliott Gould in a sitcom, and dieij<lb/>
Jane Wyman in a soap ? knows 1<lb/>
TV is where the action is. toul<lb/>
For every movie pan, there are exf<lb/>
a dozen TV roles. The tube is a tun<lb/>
warm security blanket, a financial on<lb/>
bonanza, a career extender. Most<lb/>
fading stars and newcomers wq<lb/>
would give their eye teeth for a or<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
BROKE? Xmas S js aroura tne<lb/>
corner Wind Chimes as a gifl s<lb/>
rightforyou HighQuahty Inexper<lb/>
sive and made inn Greenyi; Orders<lb/>
being aken now 758 7997<lb/>
FUJI DEL REY like new<lb/>
Shimano power shifters :rar<lb/>
deraiiers ? new spec ai zee res<lb/>
Chritophe Toe clipsstraps  $225<lb/>
call Connie 752 1472<lb/>
PIANO FOR SAE Wanted res<lb/>
sibie party to assume sma mon<lb/>
thly payments on spinel console<lb/>
piano Can be seer oca ? Write<lb/>
(include phone number Cr-<lb/>
Manager, PC Box 521<lb/>
BecKemeyer, IL 62219<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
LOST Pm Pursette ;Dn?a n r?g eye<lb/>
contacts osf n or around Spe<lb/>
Building Please ca 758 6740<lb/>
reward offereo<lb/>
REBE. WRITING CONTES'<lb/>
deadline s Oc 29 ?Monday Br<lb/>
entries by Reoei or Med a Board of<lb/>
fices by 5 p.m r zes adrzec<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
YANKEE Congratulations o my<lb/>
favorite bartencer Here comes e<lb/>
green. Blondie<lb/>
F.P your Southern part of Heaven<lb/>
maKes ?ne tell celest a . Unti r-e<lb/>
next totat eclipse<lb/>
CAK: Got to get that beeoe" So a<lb/>
you're doing ore, casa vr 5e<lb/>
the best MD from MO eve' L<lb/>
GJR.<lb/>
TONY: P -aes are Purple Bears<lb/>
are Red, Pen. ;oves Tony ac ucy<lb/>
Loves Free Happy Seventh anniver<lb/>
sary. Love ya Today and A'Aa.s<lb/>
Peni.<lb/>
HEY BEAv Malty told yo- :<lb/>
about the dirty nooks in the club<lb/>
house. ie's oea the ec?. ou1<lb/>
him. Love ya Mvtie<lb/>
MIKE. MIkfc AM) THE REST OF THF<lb/>
SIG EPS - THANKS FOR FAN<lb/>
tastic homfcoming: LOVF<lb/>
KATHV ND ELIZABETH<lb/>
CAPTAIN After the roof ac nol<lb/>
laying n the park I'm look nc I<lb/>
ward to Palling. I mean going to e<lb/>
ball. Here's fo your first P P<lb/>
NANCv HOMA The Ptv Taus hope<lb/>
you are feeing defer Come See LIS<lb/>
Soon<lb/>
MISSY CAYTON Congratuia' Una<lb/>
on Homecoming Queen 1984 85<lb/>
Your're looking great' The p-<lb/>
Taus<lb/>
IF THIS IS IT Get a 'ea F1<lb/>
Lauoeraaie Hey RB where'd you gc<lb/>
for fan break Alaska' He? Kreoe<lb/>
there s a arop off sunscren a or<lb/>
motion our of order get out of lawn<lb/>
Hey Rick who sings this let's do<lb/>
bingers i can't physically ac s<lb/>
Mysville e kill va The Buon<lb/>
gotta ourp! v ssing you pa <lb/>
you puke get a reai fraternity We<lb/>
have a real soror tv rn reu of<lb/>
babysitting, suitcase of Busch.<lb/>
tourists, gumbie sure enjoyed "e<lb/>
space center Ya'H shouia have<lb/>
gone Have you ever been t0<lb/>
vorid? Lite s a beach, ch ch. Hac<lb/>
great time We love yens War<lb/>
Homoshit and chunkDuster<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR Sigma Ph Epsilon<lb/>
?hd Sigma Sigma Sigma are having<lb/>
? happy hour on Tuesday Oct 23 af<lb/>
?p.m Come party wth us<lb/>
NEED M1<lb/>
NY G. - A .P.O.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS<lb/>
THANKS t"o everybody n Jarvia<lb/>
came out to help with the float<lb/>
:iai thanks to travis tor ItM<lb/>
trailer ano everpocv n House Coun<lb/>
?H (especianv cardboard com I<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
?TEREO System problem? Ab<lb/>
?ihltely no charge" for repair<lb/>
?BNmates at the Tech Shop Call<lb/>
ITNineTee" Eighty' We thought<lb/>
WRl'd like to know<lb/>
!<lb/>
j<lb/>
e I<lb/>
PC? I<lb/>
cesl<lb/>
senl<lb/>
' ot<lb/>
ne<lb/>
I<lb/>
-??<lb/>
? 1<lb/>
?????<lb/>
????MM<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057675_0009"/><lb/>
Mothers<lb/>
Concert<lb/>
id stature of music in<lb/>
life<lb/>
lit ion to Thursday's<lb/>
e brothers hope to in-<lb/>
ternee on Valentine's<lb/>
lai to the well known<lb/>
legram whereb they<lb/>
ber a "message"<lb/>
n campus All pro-<lb/>
. to a wholarship in<lb/>
Musk<lb/>
fogram will include<lb/>
li and ensemble per<lb/>
 !he members of the<lb/>
!r?ha choii and their<lb/>
I members Admis<lb/>
nd eersone is in-<lb/>
ihrarv<lb/>
m "<lb/>
MILDRENCiyn<lb/>
ANYTIME ?I'J<lb/>
IVIES<lb/>
ping C?nt?r<lb/>
V.<lb/>
? ? 1<lb/>
? eel<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
39<lb/>
KROCER<lb/>
instant<lb/>
coffee<lb/>
2<lb/>
29<lb/>
JAR PLEASE<lb/>
UP<lb/>
GRADE A<lb/>
c<lb/>
EASE<lb/>
great for<lb/>
:k-o-lanterns<lb/>
aiioween<lb/>
umpkins<lb/>
9<lb/>
lousing<lb/>
"<lb/>
ci Mf.<lb/>
oei<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN OCTOBER 23. IMU 9<lb/>
Hicks Heads For The Limelight<lb/>
(UPl) ? Every ex-movie star ?<lb/>
Rock Hudson in "Dynasty<lb/>
Elliott Gould in a sitcom, and<lb/>
Jane Wyman in a soap ? knows<lb/>
TV is where the action is.<lb/>
For every movie part, there are<lb/>
a dozen TV roles. The tube is a<lb/>
warm security blanket, a financial<lb/>
bonanza, a career extender. Most<lb/>
fading stars and newcomers<lb/>
would give their eye teeth for a<lb/>
successful series, or a succession<lb/>
of TV movies with those huge au-<lb/>
diences out there loving them.<lb/>
It takes guts and perhaps a<lb/>
touch of lunacy for a performer,<lb/>
expecially a relatively new face, to<lb/>
turn away from TV to concentrate<lb/>
on the feckless movie business.<lb/>
Steve McQueen gambled and<lb/>
won when he quit Wanted Dead<lb/>
or Alive. Jim Garner enjoyed sue-<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
BROKE? Xmas is just around the<lb/>
corner. Wind Chimes as a gift is<lb/>
right for you. High Quality, Inexpen<lb/>
sive and made inn Greenvill. Orders<lb/>
being taken now. 758 7997.<lb/>
FUJI DEL REY: like new ?<lb/>
Shimano power shifters, crank,<lb/>
derailers ? new specialized tires ?<lb/>
Chritophe toe clipsstraps ? $225.<lb/>
call Connie 752 1472.<lb/>
PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted respon<lb/>
sible party to assume small mon<lb/>
thly payments on spinetconsole<lb/>
piano. Can be seen locally. Write:<lb/>
(include phone number) Credit<lb/>
Manager, P.O. Box 521,<lb/>
Beckemeyer, IL. 62219.<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
LOST: Pink Pursefte containing eye<lb/>
contacts. Lost in or around Speight<lb/>
Building Please call 758 6740 ?<lb/>
reward offered.<lb/>
REBEL WRITING CONTEST:<lb/>
deadline is Oct. 29 ? Monday. Bring<lb/>
entries by Rebel or Media Board of<lb/>
fices by 5 p.m. Prizes awarded<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
YANKEE: Congratulations to my<lb/>
favorite bartender Here comes the<lb/>
green. Blondie<lb/>
F.P your Southern part of Heaven<lb/>
makes me fell ceesfiai. . Until the<lb/>
next total eclipse.<lb/>
CAK Got to get that beeper. So far<lb/>
you re doing pretty casual. You'll be<lb/>
the best MD from MD ever Love<lb/>
GJR<lb/>
TONY Pirates are Purple. Bears<lb/>
are Red, Peni Loves Tony and Lucy<lb/>
i-oves Fred Happy Seventh anniver-<lb/>
sary Love ya Today and Always.<lb/>
Peni<lb/>
HEY BEAV: Wally told your mom<lb/>
about the dirty books in the club<lb/>
house Let's beat the heck out of<lb/>
him Love ya, Myrtle.<lb/>
MIKE. MIKE AND THE REST OF THE<lb/>
SIG EPS ? THANKS FOR FAN-<lb/>
TASTIC HOMECOMING! LOVE.<lb/>
KATHY AND ELIZABETH.<lb/>
CAPTAIN: After the roof and not<lb/>
laying in the park, I'm looking for<lb/>
ward to balling, I mean going to the<lb/>
ball. Here's to your first. F.P.<lb/>
NANCY HOMA: The Phi Taus hope<lb/>
you are feeling better. Come See Us<lb/>
Soon<lb/>
MISSY CAYTON: Congratulations<lb/>
on Homecoming Queen 1984-85.<lb/>
Your're looking great! The Phi<lb/>
Taus.<lb/>
IF THIS IS IT: Get a real Ft.<lb/>
L.auderdale, Hey RB where'd you go<lb/>
for fall break Alaska? Hey Kredel<lb/>
there's a drop off, sunscren, major<lb/>
motion, our of order, get out of town,<lb/>
Hey Rick who sings this, let's do<lb/>
bingers, I can't physically do this,<lb/>
titysville, te kill ya. The Button, I<lb/>
gotta burp! Missing you, party till<lb/>
you puke, get a real fraternity We<lb/>
nave a real sorority, I'm tired of<lb/>
oabysitting, suitcase of Busch,<lb/>
tourists, gumbie, sure enjoyed the<lb/>
space center. Ya'll should have<lb/>
gone, Have you ever been to<lb/>
seaworld? Life's a beach, ch-ch, Had<lb/>
a great time. We love yens. Mary<lb/>
Lou Homoshit and chunkbuster.<lb/>
happy HOUR: Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
and Sigma Sigma Sigma are having<lb/>
a happy hour on Tuesday, Oct. 23 at<lb/>
9 p m. Come party with us.<lb/>
JENNY G. - A.P.O.<lb/>
THE BROTHERS.<lb/>
NEEDS YOU!<lb/>
THANKS: To everybody in Jarvis<lb/>
who came out to help witft the float.<lb/>
Special thanks to travis for the<lb/>
trailer and everbody in House Coun-<lb/>
cil (especially "cardboard commit-<lb/>
tee<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
STEREO: System problem? Ab-<lb/>
solutely "no charge" for repair<lb/>
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TRAVEL FIELD OPPORTUNITY:<lb/>
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TYPING NEEDED: If you need so<lb/>
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CAMPUS REPS NEEDED: Ski<lb/>
Free ? position involves marketing<lb/>
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high commissions. Call Summit<lb/>
Tours 1-800 325-0439<lb/>
PEOPLE TO BUY LIQUOR. Pi<lb/>
Kappa Phi fraternity will soliciting<lb/>
in front of all ABC stores Saturday<lb/>
for their national philanthropy<lb/>
P.U.S.H. (Play Units for Severly<lb/>
Handicapped) ? Won't you please<lb/>
help the Pi Kapps give a handicap<lb/>
ped child a P.U.S.H.<lb/>
cess in movies after leaving TV,<lb/>
but eventually he returned to the<lb/>
tube.<lb/>
Two years ago Catherine Hicks<lb/>
turned up her pretty tip tilted nose<lb/>
and walked away from TV to try<lb/>
her luck with movies.<lb/>
Catherine who?<lb/>
Hicks, Catherine Hicks; who<lb/>
played the title role in the ABC<lb/>
TV movie Marilyn: The Untold<lb/>
Story, a video biography of<lb/>
Marilyn Monroe. Catherine also<lb/>
may be remembered for the failed<lb/>
TV series Tucker's Witch.<lb/>
God knows Catherine was not a<lb/>
household name when she decided<lb/>
to drop TV, especially when of-<lb/>
fers were pouring in for new series<lb/>
and TV films. To the public she<lb/>
was just another pretty blonde.<lb/>
But producers and Hollywood in-<lb/>
siders detected and indefinable<lb/>
something in her personality, the<lb/>
way she photographed, the<lb/>
spunky underlying character that<lb/>
spelled stardom. Catherine<lb/>
recognized it in herself somehow<lb/>
and took the plunge.<lb/>
For two years she was absent<lb/>
from the tube. The assumption in<lb/>
some quarters was that she had<lb/>
been just another cutie caught up<lb/>
in Hollywood's revolving door.<lb/>
But no, Catherine is starring in<lb/>
two movies currently showing;<lb/>
Garbo Talks, and The Razor's<lb/>
Edge. She co-stars, moreover,<lb/>
with Ryan O'Neal in Fever about<lb/>
to shoot in Las Vegas.<lb/>
A smiling Catherine still isn't<lb/>
sure how success came so quickly.<lb/>
"At the time I didn't think it<lb/>
was a particularly difficult deci-<lb/>
sion to quit TV she said. "I had<lb/>
done Marilyn, Valley of the Dolls,<lb/>
and Tucker's Witch and it was<lb/>
time to move on to something<lb/>
else.<lb/>
"Looking back, I guess it took<lb/>
a lot of faith and belief in<lb/>
miracles. I was optimistic about<lb/>
getting good roles in movies,<lb/>
although I realized that 75 percent<lb/>
of acting parts today are in TV<lb/>
"I was visiting my old school,<lb/>
Notre Dame, last summer (1983)<lb/>
when my agent called and told me<lb/>
to fly to New York to see (Direc-<lb/>
tor) John Byrun and (Comedian)<lb/>
Bill Murray who was going to star<lb/>
in The Razor's Edge.<lb/>
"They had talked to hundreds<lb/>
of actresses in New York,<lb/>
Hollywood, and London. But I<lb/>
didn't know that. I wasn't awed<lb/>
by Bill because I'd never heard of<lb/>
him. After an hour of talk, Bill<lb/>
said I was the one he wanted<lb/>
When The Razor's Edge was<lb/>
completed, Catherine returned to<lb/>
Hollywood and spent three mon-<lb/>
ths refusing TV offers. Out of the<lb/>
blue, Director Sidney Lumet, im-<lb/>
pressed with a reading she had<lb/>
done for him months earlier for<lb/>
The Verdict called from New<lb/>
York.<lb/>
Back she went to read with<lb/>
Anne Bancroft for Garbo Talks.<lb/>
Zap! Catherine had her second<lb/>
movie role, which she completed<lb/>
last May.<lb/>
There followed another four<lb/>
months of unemployment and<lb/>
determination not to give in to the<lb/>
blandishments of the terrible<lb/>
tube.<lb/>
Then, voila, along came the<lb/>
"fever" offer with O'Neal<lb/>
Curiously, Catherine was better<lb/>
paid in TV. And she lives with the<lb/>
insecurity that she may never<lb/>
work in another feature film as<lb/>
long as she lives.<lb/>
"Doing a TV series was a plea-<lb/>
sant surprise she said. "I liked<lb/>
working every day, coming home<lb/>
tired on Friday evenings like<lb/>
everyone else in the world. 1 don't<lb/>
like sitting around for months<lb/>
waiting for movies<lb/>
"But movies are unexplored<lb/>
territory for me. It takes a dif-<lb/>
ferent kind of acting. Movies<lb/>
magnify so that the demand for<lb/>
truthfulness is much greater.<lb/>
"Movies are scarier, too. The<lb/>
time, talent and money and effort<lb/>
are all put together. There's more<lb/>
demand for excellence<lb/>
"But the real reason I prefer<lb/>
movies is there's more magic in<lb/>
them<lb/>
Apply now in in Room 234 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center to be on the day represenative on the Student<lb/>
Union Board of Directors.<lb/>
The responsibilities of the members of the Board of<lb/>
Directors include:<lb/>
Selecting the Student Union President<lb/>
Approving committee chairpersons<lb/>
Approving the Student Union Budget<lb/>
Setting polocy for the Student Union<lb/>
DEADLINE TO APPL Y: Friday, November 1,1984<lb/>
Just Arrived In Paperback!<lb/>
Pet Sematary<lb/>
by Stephen King<lb/>
' 'The Most Frightening Book<lb/>
King Has Ever Written. "<lb/>
Available At<lb/>
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Greenville Square<lb/>
Shopping Center<lb/>
Open 7 Days<lb/>
A Week<lb/>
9:30-9:30<lb/>
jl. W!I XVH i<lb/>
T??.<lb/>
XT V -V<lb/>
Winterville J.C's<lb/>
presents<lb/>
8th Annual Haunted House<lb/>
Oct. 27-31st<lb/>
7:30 pm-untU Nightly<lb/>
-Thurs. ECU Night<lb/>
reduced Admission wID.<lb/>
Located: 21 miles east of<lb/>
Winterville on State Rd. 1709<lb/>
watch for signs.<lb/>
'LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN"<lb/>
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Free Admission<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
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Halloween Costume Contest<lb/>
Free Wine &amp; Beer<lb/>
Highballs 50C<lb/>
For Ladies 8:30-10:00<lb/>
Men Admitted at 10:00<lb/>
Best Costume<lb/>
Lady's 1st Prize $50<lb/>
Men's 1st Prize $50<lb/>
Prizes will be given<lb/>
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Corrections<lb/>
In the Oct. 23 issue ol I he 1 asi<lb/>
Carolinian Renee Roberson,<lb/>
2nd runnei up during last<lb/>
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Also, Mams Martin's perfor-<lb/>
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March 13, lVKS ai g pm ini<lb/>
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apologize tor the inconvenience<lb/>
Dance Auditions<lb/>
Dance auditions for the East<lb/>
olina Dance Theatie hae<lb/>
been scheduled for Monday and<lb/>
ruesday, Nov. 5 and b, in the<lb/>
Messick Theatre Arts Center.<lb/>
I he auditions will begin at 6:30<lb/>
p m each evening in Dance<lb/>
Studio 114.<lb/>
Each year the East Carolina<lb/>
Dance Theatre produces a con-<lb/>
cert representing ballet, jazz and<lb/>
dem styles The pieces are<lb/>
reographed b members of<lb/>
Da ce Faculty in the ECU<lb/>
Department of rheatre Arts, and<lb/>
? past nine sears the con-<lb/>
erts have plaved to "standing<lb/>
room onl " audiences.<lb/>
.  to Dance Coor-<lb/>
Patricia Weeks,<lb/>
:ers should be warmed up<lb/>
dance b 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
" se who wish to audition<lb/>
ild wear leotards and<lb/>
Soul Quartet<lb/>
Moving Up<lb/>
Hy DAN ID SMIHKRINCION<lb/>
Staff V nlrr<lb/>
mdei tai.vthe<lb/>
P? t hers,theNew<lb/>
il quartet.aren't the<lb/>
deserve tcbe.<lb/>
lebuialbumfail-<lb/>
5ieatethehave poor<lb/>
.Netg g e s t<lb/>
-e set,<lb/>
.?aed bel?local<lb/>
1ickily, HlackTop<lb/>
 th? fa thto sign the<lb/>
thers to a new contract in time<lb/>
a ire ne of these sets on<lb/>
nyl Seville-Ization recorded at<lb/>
a New Orleans night club called<lb/>
features a variety oi<lb/>
id immense talent. The<lb/>
? im has a "back-to-the basics"<lb/>
ind, opting to spotlight the<lb/>
Nevilles vocal talents instead of<lb/>
the overproduced syncopation<lb/>
thai nfiltrates so many of the re<lb/>
May be that's why<lb/>
Neville Brothers aren't<lb/>
popular Their records are too<lb/>
,e to real emotion for the<lb/>
rd-buving public.<lb/>
While well-known as fine<lb/>
alists, I think the Nevilles<lb/>
. e bee underrated as musi-<lb/>
tns. Charles Neville displays his<lb/>
. Is in "Caravan" with a<lb/>
rable soprano saxophone<lb/>
Brother Art's piercing<lb/>
keyb ards shine throughout the<lb/>
x rds, and Cyril's powerhouse<lb/>
. . ming provides the backbone<lb/>
: all the tune<lb/>
-s I've said before, these boys<lb/>
need v.o introduction as vocalists.<lb/>
Nevilles crooning style can<lb/>
rival the best of them as "All<lb/>
ese Things" Kr;ngs to mind the<lb/>
ink Sinatra ballads of the '50s.<lb/>
 always Cyril's raw, gritty<lb/>
ah tear at your heart song<lb/>
after song. On the Little Willie<lb/>
n classic "Fever the<lb/>
thers combine their voices for<lb/>
inredi ble results. The<lb/>
smoothness of art in the passion<lb/>
Cyril forms a chemistry that<lb/>
tingles the spine.<lb/>
The most curious thing about<lb/>
the album is that Aaron Nevill's<lb/>
als have been underplayed. In<lb/>
past, he was the undisputed<lb/>
leader of the group. Here, his<lb/>
solos are the weakest of the<lb/>
bunch Aaron destroys his own<lb/>
priceless performance with a sub-<lb/>
dued, mundane reading of "Tell<lb/>
It Like It Is "<lb/>
But, alas, this is a minor<lb/>
discrepancy. The Neville<lb/>
Brothers have travelled a long<lb/>
road since the '60s in their quest<lb/>
for commercial success, and sad-<lb/>
ly, to no avail.<lb/>
While Sevukke-lzation may<lb/>
no' be the perfect soul album, the<lb/>
Neville Brothers leave most of<lb/>
their contemporaries in the dust<lb/>
when it comes to sincerity. And<lb/>
that's the meaning of soul.<lb/>
footloose tights, and if thev have<lb/>
them, should bring ballet, pointe<lb/>
and or jazz shoes Some audi<lb/>
tions will also be in bare feet. The<lb/>
call-back date and time will be<lb/>
announced at the audition. ECU<lb/>
students, staff, faculty, and local<lb/>
residents are all invited to audi<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
The Dance Theatre concert is<lb/>
scheduled for Feb. 20-23 in the<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre at 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
757-6390.<lb/>
JAYCEES HAUNTED HOUSE<lb/>
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Oct. 26 thru il 7:00pm to 1 Ipm<lb/>
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East Tennessee v H<lb/>
made the switch l I<lb/>
jured starter Regfi<lb/>
banted to do a de<lb/>
W)se the game b<lb/>
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i? i, m m<lb/>
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THE EAST CAJtOt INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
OCTOBER 25. 1984<lb/>
Page 11<lb/>
6-0 South Carolina Awaits Pirates<lb/>
Tailback Jimmy Walden (36) had an impressive five-yard per carry<lb/>
average last Saturday, but fullback Bubba Bunn did itall.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Spurn Editor<lb/>
ECU head football coach Ed<lb/>
Emory said his team's meeting<lb/>
with ninth ranked South Carolina<lb/>
this weekend will be the toughest<lb/>
game of the year for his young<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
"South Carolina is off their<lb/>
best start in the school's<lb/>
history Emory said in his week-<lb/>
ly press conference. "I think<lb/>
they're one of the best teams in<lb/>
the country<lb/>
What impresses Emory most<lb/>
about the Gamecocks is they're a<lb/>
team molded by spirit and en-<lb/>
thusiasm, not individual stars.<lb/>
"South Carolina is playing the<lb/>
way we did last year (8-3)<lb/>
Emory said. "They're playing the<lb/>
game of football the way it<lb/>
should be played<lb/>
?mory said he doesn't know of<lb/>
another team in the country that<lb/>
plays with as much vigor and ex-<lb/>
citement as USC, and said play-<lb/>
ing in front of 76,000 people at<lb/>
USC's Wiiiams-Brice won't help<lb/>
matters.<lb/>
Last year at about this time<lb/>
ECU Faces Toughest Yet<lb/>
JIVYW cm ?  <lb/>
ECU (nationally ranked in<lb/>
several publications) faced fifth<lb/>
ranked Florida in front of apr-<lb/>
roximately 78,000 people, but<lb/>
Emory said the circumstances are<lb/>
a bit different for this weekend's<lb/>
game.<lb/>
Emory said teamwork is the<lb/>
biggest difference between last<lb/>
year's team and the one this year.<lb/>
"Last year we had team unity<lb/>
he said. "Everybody played<lb/>
together, and everybody knew<lb/>
how to work for one common<lb/>
goal ? victory.<lb/>
The philosophy is simple. Last<lb/>
year before the Florida game<lb/>
ECU was 5-1 and one of the best<lb/>
team's in the country ? and<lb/>
that's how they played. This<lb/>
year's team isn't enjoying the<lb/>
same success as a year ago, so<lb/>
thier desire is not at such a high<lb/>
level<lb/>
Although Emory doesn't exude<lb/>
the same confidence as he did<lb/>
about last year's team, he was<lb/>
pleased with the victory against<lb/>
East Tennessee State in last<lb/>
weekend's homecoming game.<lb/>
The best thing 1 can say about<lb/>
homecoming is that we won<lb/>
Emory said. "All the practices<lb/>
and all the scrimmages don't<lb/>
mean a thing unless you can put it<lb/>
all together on a Saturday after-<lb/>
noon<lb/>
Bubba Bunn romped for a<lb/>
career high 161 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns to lead the ground<lb/>
attack for the Pirates against ET-<lb/>
SU, although he had only rushed<lb/>
for 114 career yards prior to<lb/>
Saturday's contest.<lb/>
Last week in practice, Bunn<lb/>
made the transition from tailback<lb/>
to fullback to accomodate an in-<lb/>
jury to starter Reggie Branch,<lb/>
and now the possibility exists that<lb/>
he will start against the<lb/>
Gamecocks.<lb/>
Emory also utilized the talents<lb/>
of quarterbacks Ron Jones and<lb/>
Darrell Speed, and for the first<lb/>
time this season, they both had<lb/>
good games. The two combined<lb/>
to complete seven of 10 passes for<lb/>
101 yards and a touchdown.<lb/>
Ricky Nichols, who was<lb/>
responsible for ECU's only touc-<lb/>
down reception (46 yards from<lb/>
Jones), also had a good game as<lb/>
he moved up to sixth plae on the<lb/>
all-time ECU reception list.<lb/>
Although several players per-<lb/>
fromed well for the Pirate-<lb/>
was the 19th ranked Division<lb/>
I-AA Buccaneers that domin<lb/>
play thoughout the game T<lb/>
executed 83 palys compared to 50<lb/>
for ECU, they were ahead in fir-t<lb/>
downs 24-9 and they had pos<lb/>
sion of the ball for 17 more<lb/>
minutes than the Pirates.<lb/>
Emory said those statistics c<lb/>
cerned him, and that his team<lb/>
must improve this Saturdav<lb/>
"We let them get down near the<lb/>
goal line too many times It we<lb/>
do that against South Carolina,<lb/>
they're going to blow us out.<lb/>
The Gamecocks, under <lb/>
year coach Joe Morrison, tea<lb/>
with Washington and Brigham<lb/>
Young as the onlv unbeaten and<lb/>
untied teams in the nation at 6-0.<lb/>
Oklahoma and Texas are nexl<lb/>
with no losses and one tie<lb/>
Unfortunately, it doesn't lo<lb/>
as if the Pirates are going to be<lb/>
able to put an end to the Cocl<lb/>
winning streak. Game time is<lb/>
for 1:30 p.m. in Columbia. S (<lb/>
W mm Mlk - A -UT -w ineoestthingl can sav about lones), also had a good game as for 1:30 p.m. in Columbia<lb/>
Bradley's 214 Low Pirate Score Since 1976<lb/>
B RIC K McCORMAC enough to be doino better h?i he ho, ? a- u?? uJT? .  <lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Staff WMtaf<lb/>
Mike Bradley shot a three-<lb/>
round total of 214 in last<lb/>
weekend's John Ryan Memorial<lb/>
Golf Tournament, which is the<lb/>
lowest total in a three day tourn;<lb/>
ment for a ECU golfer since<lb/>
1976.<lb/>
"1 was pleased with the way I<lb/>
played Bradley said. "The<lb/>
course was in good shape and the<lb/>
greens weren't too slow or fast. If<lb/>
you look at the team totals many<lb/>
of the scores were good<lb/>
According to ECU golf coach<lb/>
Bob Helmick. Bradley's 214 total<lb/>
could have been lower. "Mike<lb/>
Bradley had two birdies the first<lb/>
day and five each of the last two<lb/>
days, yet he finished one shot<lb/>
over par Helmick said.<lb/>
"Michael is playing well<lb/>
enough to be doing better, but he<lb/>
is young and is still making minor<lb/>
mental errors that keep him from<lb/>
??? -<lb/>
<lb/>
Mike Bradley<lb/>
being under par<lb/>
While Bradley realizes he could<lb/>
have done better, he was not<lb/>
disappointed with his perfor-<lb/>
mance. "If you had told me<lb/>
before the tournament that I was<lb/>
going to make 12 birdies, I would<lb/>
have thought that I would finish<lb/>
in the top three or maybe even<lb/>
win the tournament Bradley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I bogeyed the first hole all<lb/>
three days, so I was always down<lb/>
and working hard to get strokes<lb/>
back Bradley continued.<lb/>
Bradley cited the second round<lb/>
as possibly the key to his fifth<lb/>
place finish. "1 was three over<lb/>
par after 12 holes, but I kept my<lb/>
patience and worked hard and<lb/>
made three birdies to come in at<lb/>
even par Bradley said.<lb/>
Bradley was a CO-MVP last<lb/>
year as a freshman, and has im-<lb/>
proved tremendously this season<lb/>
Bunn Switches To Tailback,<lb/>
Rips ETSU For 161 Yards<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Junior fullback Bubba Bunn<lb/>
had only rushed for 116 yards in<lb/>
his entire career prior to ECU's<lb/>
homecoming game, but he ripped<lb/>
the East Tennessee State defense<lb/>
tor 161 yards and two<lb/>
uchdowns on just 14 carries last<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Bubba's performance sparked<lb/>
the Pirate squad to a 24-6 victory<lb/>
over the Division 1-AA 19th<lb/>
ranked Buccaneers. "He had a<lb/>
heck of a game said Robrt Bar-<lb/>
row, ECU's running back coach.<lb/>
"We knew he had the ability, and<lb/>
he showed super effort<lb/>
Bubba scored ECU's first<lb/>
touchdown in the second quarter<lb/>
on a 29-yard burst up the middle,<lb/>
hile getting the Pirates' final<lb/>
TD on a 42-yard gallop with just<lb/>
over a minute left to play. "We<lb/>
just wanted to run the clock out,<lb/>
but Bubba made a great effort<lb/>
and scored Coach Emory<lb/>
stated. "There's no question in<lb/>
my mind about Bubba Bunn be-<lb/>
ing the player of the game<lb/>
When asked about his perfor-<lb/>
mance Saturday, Bunn said he<lb/>
as glad to get the chance to play<lb/>
and to contribute to the team. "I<lb/>
was very pleased to do so well, it<lb/>
really gave me a chance to prove<lb/>
myself<lb/>
Although Bunn had an<lb/>
outstanding game, he gave a lot<lb/>
of credit to the offensive line.<lb/>
"When you can get into the<lb/>
secondary without even being<lb/>
touched, you're going to have a<lb/>
big day Bunn remarked.<lb/>
"He's strong, he's quick, he<lb/>
shows good balance and good<lb/>
foot agility ECU offensive<lb/>
coordinator Don Murray said.<lb/>
"He can do things as the great<lb/>
backs can<lb/>
A lot of Bunn's agility comes<lb/>
from the fact that he was a<lb/>
tailback only one week before the<lb/>
East Tennessee State game. He<lb/>
made the switch to fill if for in-<lb/>
jured starter Reggie Branch. "I<lb/>
banted to do a decent job there<lb/>
Bubba said. "I didn't want us to<lb/>
lose the game because of the<lb/>
fullback spot<lb/>
Bubba said that the switch to<lb/>
fullback wasn't that hard. "It's<lb/>
still a running back position, and<lb/>
1 have confidence being back<lb/>
there<lb/>
"Bubba is big and strong and<lb/>
can play both tailback as well as<lb/>
fullback Coach Barrow<lb/>
remarked.<lb/>
Bubba says that fullback is a<lb/>
tough position because of the<lb/>
blocking responsibilities.<lb/>
"You've got to get in there and<lb/>
block those big guys on the<lb/>
defensive line However, the<lb/>
tailback position is not an easy<lb/>
one either. "There's more runn-<lb/>
ing involved in the tailback spot,<lb/>
and you usually carry the ball<lb/>
more also Bubba said. "I don't<lb/>
have a preference to either posi-<lb/>
tion, I just have a love for being a<lb/>
running back<lb/>
"He's had some academic and<lb/>
other problems over the last two<lb/>
years, but he has come on to con-<lb/>
tribute to the team Coach<lb/>
Emory commented.<lb/>
"I let football get too big in my<lb/>
life Bubba said. "Football will<lb/>
fall into place, studying dosen't<lb/>
? you have to put out that added<lb/>
effort<lb/>
Not playing much might be dif-<lb/>
ficult for some people, but not<lb/>
Bubba Bunn. "It takes a special<lb/>
type of person ? to not play<lb/>
much ? and to keep such a<lb/>
positive frame of mind Coach<lb/>
Barrow explained. "He's shown<lb/>
a great attitude all year long<lb/>
Bubba works out on the<lb/>
weights twice a week. In addi-<lb/>
tion, he studies films to ready<lb/>
himself for his new fullback posi-<lb/>
tion. He expressed that football<lb/>
at the collegiate level is much<lb/>
more competitive. "It's like a big<lb/>
race every day Bunn said.<lb/>
"You've got to learn to become a<lb/>
real good practice player<lb/>
The 5'11 206-pound fullback<lb/>
had an impressive athletic career<lb/>
at Goldsboro High School.<lb/>
Besides being Goldsboro's all-<lb/>
time leading rusher, he was a<lb/>
three-time conference champ in<lb/>
wrestling and was an all-<lb/>
conference selection in track for<lb/>
three straight years. However,<lb/>
Bubba thought it would be best<lb/>
to stick with one sport at the col-<lb/>
lege level.<lb/>
Being a highly sought after<lb/>
high school player, Bubba was<lb/>
recruited by some top college<lb/>
powers such as Clemson, N.C.<lb/>
State, Colorado and UNC. Bub-<lb/>
ba chose ECU because "it is a<lb/>
program on the move and Coach<lb/>
Emory has such a positive at-<lb/>
titude. Every year the program<lb/>
here was getting bigger and big-<lb/>
ger, and I wanted to be a part of<lb/>
the growth at ECU<lb/>
Looking to next week's game<lb/>
at South Carolina, Bubba feels<lb/>
ECU can hold its own against the<lb/>
top ten team. "I'm real op-<lb/>
timistic Bubba said. "We have<lb/>
to let it all hang out and play to<lb/>
our best ability<lb/>
Bubba has two sisters and two<lb/>
brothers. His older brother Dan-<lb/>
ny played football at UNC a few<lb/>
years ago. "He helped me deal<lb/>
with the pressure and politics of<lb/>
college football Bubba said.<lb/>
Moreover, Bubba's biggest in-<lb/>
spiration comes from his mother.<lb/>
She raised the five children as a<lb/>
single parent. "She was a mother<lb/>
and a father to us Bubba said.<lb/>
"She has always served as an in-<lb/>
spiration for me ? she's the<lb/>
greatest person in my life<lb/>
In the future, Pirate fans will<lb/>
will see a lot more exciting runn-<lb/>
ing from Bubba Bunn. "Bubba<lb/>
will continue to improve and get<lb/>
more and more playing time<lb/>
Coach Don Murray exclaimed.<lb/>
"He was merely waiting his turn<lb/>
to show Pirate fans what he's<lb/>
capable of doing<lb/>
"I knew he had the potential,<lb/>
so I wasn't surprised to see what<lb/>
he 'did Oast Saturday) com-<lb/>
mented Essray Taliaferro ?<lb/>
teammate and good friend of<lb/>
Bunn.<lb/>
According to Barrow, the<lb/>
Pirate coaching staff is expecting<lb/>
to use Bunn a lot more in the<lb/>
future ? so it should be no<lb/>
suprise for Pirate fans to one day<lb/>
see number 27 make his mark in<lb/>
Pirate football history.<lb/>
as his score of 214 is seven shots<lb/>
better than either of his two tour-<lb/>
naments at Duke last year.<lb/>
With this being the last tourna-<lb/>
ment of the fall season, Bradley is<lb/>
looking forward to playing in the<lb/>
Gator Bowl Invitational in Dec.<lb/>
at Ponte Verde, Fla.<lb/>
"The Gator Bowl is a new<lb/>
tournament, and is played on one<lb/>
of the finest golf layouts in the<lb/>
country Bradley said. "The<lb/>
scores will be higher because the<lb/>
course is so tough, but I'm look-<lb/>
ing forward to playing<lb/>
Also in the future for Bradley<lb/>
and the rest of the Pirate golfers<lb/>
is the spring season in which the<lb/>
ECAC South and NCAA tour-<lb/>
naments are played.<lb/>
"I'm looking looking forward<lb/>
to the spring. This is my second<lb/>
year and I want to do as much as<lb/>
possible to help the team<lb/>
Bradley proclaimed. "I have<lb/>
some rough edges still, but 1 have<lb/>
a lot of time between now and the<lb/>
spring to work on my game<lb/>
"In the spring, Michael will be<lb/>
under par for at least one tourna-<lb/>
ment, and he may even win a<lb/>
tournament Helmick said. "I<lb/>
feel he is capable of being as good<lb/>
a golfer as ECU has produced in<lb/>
the past ten years<lb/>
Bradley began playing golf<lb/>
when he was ten or eleven, and<lb/>
taught himself how to play. "I<lb/>
tend to play more on feel, it just<lb/>
comes to me naturally Bradley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The PGA .tour possibly lies in<lb/>
the future for Bradley, but he re-<lb/>
mains realistic about his chances.<lb/>
"There are so many good players<lb/>
on the pro tour, that it's a<lb/>
longshot of making it.<lb/>
"I plan to enjoy m (<lb/>
career, and see what happens ?<lb/>
if the opportunity presents it-<lb/>
I plan to give it a shot, but if i<lb/>
don't make it 1 won't be too<lb/>
disappointed because I rea<lb/>
how hard it is<lb/>
One of the most difficult thin-<lb/>
about being a member of the g<lb/>
team is that coach HelmklTrc<lb/>
quires all team members to have a<lb/>
2.0 grade point average. "It's .<lb/>
easy to miss so much school and<lb/>
stay caught up in your elassc-<lb/>
You just have to work hard and<lb/>
try to get caught up Bradk<lb/>
said.<lb/>
. "I enjov golf and it's big pa<lb/>
of my life ? but it'v not the 01<lb/>
thing. If I do bad in a golf tour-<lb/>
nament it's not the end of the<lb/>
world<lb/>
<lb/>
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12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
OCTOBER 25, 1984<lb/>
Pirates Prepare For Red Hot Gamecocks<lb/>
Winning at Home: Both victories<lb/>
for East Carolina during the 1984<lb/>
season have been in Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium. There was a 34-27 win<lb/>
over Georgia Southern on Sept.<lb/>
22 and last week's victory over<lb/>
East Tennessee State.<lb/>
The two triumphs upped the<lb/>
Pirate's record in Ficklen over<lb/>
the last three years to an im-<lb/>
pressive 10-1 (.909). ECU's only<lb/>
loss at home since the 1981<lb/>
season was a 17-0 setback at the<lb/>
hands of the Temple Owls on<lb/>
Sept. 8, 1984.<lb/>
The Pirates have one home<lb/>
game remaining in 1984 ? Nov.<lb/>
10 against Southern Miss.<lb/>
On the Road Again: Saturday's<lb/>
1:30 p.m. kickoff with the South<lb/>
Carolina Gamecocks in W illiams-<lb/>
Brice Stadium will mark the sixth<lb/>
road game for ECU this season.<lb/>
The Pirates, an impressive 7-6 on<lb/>
the road over the last two<lb/>
seasons, have yet to win a game<lb/>
in an opponent's stadium this<lb/>
season.<lb/>
ECU is 0-5 on the road in 1984<lb/>
and face one more road contest<lb/>
after the Gamecocks ? the<lb/>
Pirates travel to Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana on Nov. 3. This is the<lb/>
third straight season that the<lb/>
Pirates have faced the task of<lb/>
seven games away from home,<lb/>
but that will change in 1985. For<lb/>
the first time since the 1981<lb/>
season ECU will play five home<lb/>
games, facing Miami-Florida,<lb/>
South Carolina, Tulsa, Temple,<lb/>
and a team to be announced.<lb/>
Bunn Arrives: With the fullback<lb/>
position hurting a little entering<lb/>
last week's Homecoming game<lb/>
with East Tennessee State, junior<lb/>
Bubba Bunn decided to ease the<lb/>
pain a bit.<lb/>
Starter Reggie Branch and<lb/>
backups Anthony Simpson and<lb/>
Bobby Clair were nursing ankle<lb/>
injuries, so Bunn was moved<lb/>
from tailback to fullback last<lb/>
week during practice.<lb/>
What Bunn responded with<lb/>
was 161 yards rushing on 14 car-<lb/>
ries and two touchdowns on runs<lb/>
of 29 and 42 yards. The effort<lb/>
earned the junior from<lb/>
Goldsboro ECAC Player of the<lb/>
Week honors.<lb/>
The effort was the best by an<lb/>
ECU back since Tony Baker<lb/>
rushed for 135 yards in ECU's<lb/>
40-6 victory over William and<lb/>
Mary on Nov. 12, 1983. In that<lb/>
game Baker also rushed for two<lb/>
touchdowns. Entering the game,<lb/>
Bunn had only rushed for 116<lb/>
yards on 26 carries in his previous<lb/>
two seasons with the Pirates.<lb/>
Blanked: East Tennessee State's<lb/>
two field goals last week marked<lb/>
the first time this season that the<lb/>
Pirates defense kept an opponent<lb/>
out of the end zone. The effort<lb/>
marked the first time the ECU<lb/>
defense has accomplished that<lb/>
feat since holding Missouri of the<lb/>
Big Eight Conference to two field<lb/>
goals during last year's victory in<lb/>
Columbia, Mo.<lb/>
Second Quarter Blues Snapped:<lb/>
The Pirates' two touchdowns in<lb/>
the second quarter of last week's<lb/>
victory marked the first time this<lb/>
season that ECU had scored a<lb/>
touchdown during that quarter.<lb/>
Prior to Bubba Bunn's 29-yard<lb/>
scoring run and quarterback Ron<lb/>
Jones' 46-yard scoring pass to<lb/>
flanker Ricky Nichols, the<lb/>
Pirates sole offensive output in<lb/>
the second quarter had been two<lb/>
Jeff Heath field goals against<lb/>
Georgia Southern and Tulsa.<lb/>
The touchdowns were the first<lb/>
scored by ECU in that period<lb/>
since the William and Mary game<lb/>
last season.<lb/>
216 h TKNTH 1<lb/>
TSt-HVM<lb/>
??M-1I1J<lb/>
TSt-ltll<lb/>
Your One Stop Automotive Service Center.<lb/>
We stock a complete line of automotive parts nj<lb/>
and accessories in our parts dept.<lb/>
S6U I.TINTH ST 758 7676<lb/>
Efficient Passing: Sophomore<lb/>
Darrell Speed and freshman Ron<lb/>
Jones combined to complete<lb/>
7-of-10 passes for 101 yards last<lb/>
week for an impressive 70 percent<lb/>
completion rate. Speed, who<lb/>
started the game, was 4-of-6<lb/>
while Jones came in off the bench<lb/>
and connected on three of his<lb/>
four attempts, including a<lb/>
46-yard scoring strike to Ricky<lb/>
Nichols in the second quarter.<lb/>
The two-quarterbacks system<lb/>
was the second straight week<lb/>
Head Coach Ed Emory has used<lb/>
his two young quarterbacks in the<lb/>
same game. The same occured<lb/>
during ECU's 31-20 loss to Tulsa<lb/>
on Oct. 13.<lb/>
Alone at the Top: With their 6-0<lb/>
record, the South Carolina<lb/>
Gamecocks stand alone at the top<lb/>
of the NCAA Division I-A in-<lb/>
dependents list. The Gamecocks<lb/>
are the only major Division I-A<lb/>
independent that remains<lb/>
unbeaten and untied. In fact, the<lb/>
Gamecocks, under second-year<lb/>
Head Coach Joe Morrison, team<lb/>
with Washington and Brigham<lb/>
Young as the nation's only<lb/>
unbeaten and untied Division I-A<lb/>
schools. Oklahoma and Texas are<lb/>
next with no losses and one tie.<lb/>
Home Sweet Home: Incredibly,<lb/>
Saturday's game with ECU will<lb/>
mark the Gamecocks' sixth home<lb/>
game this season. South Carolina<lb/>
did not make a road trip until last<lb/>
week's 36-32 victory over Notre<lb/>
Dame in South Bend, Ind which<lb/>
was televised live by ESPN.<lb/>
6-0 Is a Record: South Carolina<lb/>
has never won six games in a row<lb/>
to start a season in the school's<lb/>
history. The closest the<lb/>
Gamecocks have come is a 6-1<lb/>
final season record during the<lb/>
1920 season. In 1928, the<lb/>
Gamecocks ran off five straight<lb/>
wins only to finish with two<lb/>
losses, two ties and just one vic-<lb/>
tory in their last five games.<lb/>
Nichols Continues to Move Up:<lb/>
With his three receptions for 60<lb/>
yards against ETSU last week,<lb/>
senior flanker Ricky Nichols con-<lb/>
tinued his climb in the ECU<lb/>
record book.<lb/>
He now has 54 career recep-<lb/>
tions to his credit, moving him in-<lb/>
to sixth place on the all-time<lb/>
school reception list, just four<lb/>
short of fifth place Tim Dameron<lb/>
(1970-72).<lb/>
Morrison Successful: South<lb/>
Carolina Head Coach Joe Mor<lb/>
rison has turned the Gamecocks<lb/>
around in just his second season<lb/>
Morrison, who arrived in Col<lb/>
umbia in 1983 from New Mexico,<lb/>
where he guided the Lobos to a<lb/>
10-1 mark in 1982, has compiled<lb/>
an impressive 11-6 record in his<lb/>
two seasons with the Gamecocks.<lb/>
With six victories in six games,<lb/>
the Gamecocks are guarenteed of<lb/>
their first winning season since<lb/>
1981, when the Gamecocks<lb/>
posted a 6-5 record under Head<lb/>
Coach Jim Carlen.<lb/>
The<lb/>
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GREENVILLE<lb/>
THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO<lb/>
BECOMING A NURSE IN THE ARMY.<lb/>
And they're both repre-<lb/>
sented by the insignia you wear<lb/>
as a member of the Army Nurse<lb/>
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I l S1 t AROIONIAN (KTOBHR23, 1984<lb/>
I<lb/>
Jordan Looked On To Revive Chicago Bulls<lb/>
CHICAGO (UPI) - Every General Man,o,r dh tu? rutJ,  <lb/>
CHICAGO (UPI) - Every<lb/>
couple of years, an NBA rookie<lb/>
comes along who is expected to<lb/>
lead his franchise out of losing<lb/>
doldrums toward a berth in the<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
Sometimes the rookie can do<lb/>
it: a Lew Alcindor with<lb/>
Milwaukee, a Larry Bird with<lb/>
Boston.<lb/>
The Chicago Bulls are looking<lb/>
at Michael Jordan, the 6-foot-6<lb/>
Olympic hero and North<lb/>
Carolina All-America, as a sa -<lb/>
of the franchise.<lb/>
The Bulls have not only been<lb/>
second class NBA citizens as far<lb/>
as their record has been concern-<lb/>
ed they haven't made the<lb/>
playoffs in seven seasons ? but<lb/>
they have grown out of favor in<lb/>
victorv starved Chicago.<lb/>
Attendance dipped to around<lb/>
5,000 a game last year as the<lb/>
Bulls' mediocre play ? they dip-<lb/>
ped to 29-53 failed to create<lb/>
the kind of interest that the<lb/>
Chicago Cubs had done in<lb/>
baseball<lb/>
"We realized that when we<lb/>
dratted Michael Jordan, we were<lb/>
not drafting for our major need<lb/>
which was a center said<lb/>
General Manager Rod Thorn<lb/>
"But when you have a player of<lb/>
his ability available in the draft,<lb/>
you take him<lb/>
Jordan, who will play both<lb/>
guard and forward in the pros,<lb/>
will be counted on to score<lb/>
points; set up plays; play defense<lb/>
and, possibly most important of<lb/>
all, dazzle fans back into the<lb/>
Chicago stadium.<lb/>
"The thing people have to<lb/>
understand is that this is not just<lb/>
Michael Jordan's team says<lb/>
Jordan, the No. 3 choice in the<lb/>
June NBA collegiate draft. "This<lb/>
is a team. I just want to fit in and<lb/>
contribute<lb/>
But during the preseason ex-<lb/>
hibition campaign, Jordan show-<lb/>
ed the flashes of brilliance that<lb/>
millions saw at the L os Angeles<lb/>
Olympics and during his stellar<lb/>
three-year career with the Tar<lb/>
Heels.<lb/>
Just whether Jordan's abilities<lb/>
will be able to turn the franchise<lb/>
into a winner or start drawing<lb/>
fans back to the stadium remains<lb/>
a major question. The club did<lb/>
have Reggie Theus, who also was<lb/>
a stylish player capable of rous-<lb/>
ing a crowd, for several years but<lb/>
Theus couldn't turn the club into<lb/>
a winner or hometown favorite<lb/>
and was traded to Kansas City.<lb/>
Jordan, who turned down a<lb/>
chance to play a senior year with<lb/>
Coach Dean Smith at UNC to<lb/>
enter his name in the draft, does<lb/>
have the style and exciting moves<lb/>
to thrill a crowd but it may not be<lb/>
enough to turn the club into an<lb/>
instant winner.<lb/>
"I don't think there is any<lb/>
question that Michael Jordan is<lb/>
one of the most exciting players<lb/>
to come into the NBA in years, "<lb/>
said Coach Kevin Loughery.<lb/>
"We understand that there are<lb/>
other things we are going to have<lb/>
to improve on, however, if we are<lb/>
to be a winner<lb/>
Jordan, who signed a reported<lb/>
seven year, multimillion dollar<lb/>
contract in September, actually<lb/>
will be playing a position that<lb/>
may be the Bulls' strongest. The<lb/>
club already has guards Quintin<lb/>
Dailey, Ennis Whatley and Ron-<lb/>
nie Lester ? all former No. 1<lb/>
draft choices.<lb/>
Loughery has considered team<lb/>
ing Dailey, the team's sixth man<lb/>
last year, with Jordan to<lb/>
capitalize on both players' scor-<lb/>
ing ability. But he still faces pro-<lb/>
blems getting a frontcourt sup-<lb/>
porting cast for his talented<lb/>
guard tandem.<lb/>
Chicago still has journeyman<lb/>
Dave Corzine at center but did<lb/>
move to give him relief by trading<lb/>
promising guard Mitchell Wig-<lb/>
gins to Houston for veteran<lb/>
center Caldwell Jones<lb/>
"The group we have this year<lb/>
seems to be together as a team<lb/>
Corzine notes. "I like that feel<lb/>
ing. It's something that goes<lb/>
hand-in-hand with a winning<lb/>
season<lb/>
The team's leading scorer last<lb/>
year, forward Orlando<lb/>
Woolndge, also returns for a<lb/>
fourth season. But the major<lb/>
question mark is the other for-<lb/>
ward spot.<lb/>
Jordan, college basketball's<lb/>
player of the year last year, could<lb/>
conceivably play some in the<lb/>
frontcourt but his style and size<lb/>
dictate that he remain in the<lb/>
backcourt.<lb/>
The Bulls, who have never won<lb/>
an NBA championship, have<lb/>
been in and out of negotiations<lb/>
with forward David Greenwood<lb/>
since the end of last season<lb/>
Greenwood was eligible to<lb/>
become a free agent but hasn't<lb/>
signed with another club Realiz-<lb/>
ing his market value may have<lb/>
diminished, the club reportedlv<lb/>
reduced its original offer to<lb/>
Greenwood in recent weeks<lb/>
Regardless of his surrounding<lb/>
cast, Jordan will draw attention<lb/>
in other NBA cities because of his<lb/>
Olympic success He is also<lb/>
prepared for the rigors of NBA<lb/>
traveling and the possibihtv<lb/>
consistent losing.<lb/>
"If 1 survived the Olympic<lb/>
and Bobbv Knight Jordan sa-<lb/>
of his ISA team coach, "then I'll<lb/>
be readv for anything "<lb/>
Soccer Gets Underway<lb/>
Bv IKNNFTTK ROTH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Now that flag football is over,<lb/>
intramural teams have taken to<lb/>
the fields again to kick around<lb/>
with soccer.<lb/>
Although these round ball mat-<lb/>
ches have just begun, there are a<lb/>
few teams who have already<lb/>
come out on top. These are the<lb/>
starting favorites:<lb/>
Men's Independent: The Bones,<lb/>
Omni. Nads.<lb/>
Residence Hal! women: L'mstead<lb/>
Jockettes. Sorority: Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma.<lb/>
Fraternity: Tau Kappa Epsiion.<lb/>
Both women's Independent<lb/>
and men's Residence Hall divi-<lb/>
sions seem to be up for grabs at<lb/>
this earh date<lb/>
( o-Rec flag root ball is well<lb/>
underuav as :eanis battle it out<lb/>
for top honors on the gridiron.<lb/>
At this point, it looks as though<lb/>
the favorite Third Regiment will<lb/>
chalk up another championship.<lb/>
Teams picked to dethrone the<lb/>
troop are: KA Rebels. Spoilers,<lb/>
Chaos. Love Brokers.<lb/>
While manv of you were lying<lb/>
in bed dreaming of a Pirate foot-<lb/>
' all '?  ? ry, 'here were a number<lb/>
of brave running anywhere<lb/>
trom 2? to 5.0 miles homecom-<lb/>
ing morning. These participants<lb/>
ran in the intramural Cross Cam-<lb/>
pus Run. Sixty men entered the<lb/>
2.5 mile race and 1? females.<lb/>
( ongratulations are in order to<lb/>
ivho participated and especial-<lb/>
!v to ECU student Greg Richard-<lb/>
son who won the 2.5 mile event<lb/>
with a time of 14:24. and Kathy<lb/>
Handy who boasted a time of<lb/>
19:36 ro lead the women.<lb/>
In the 5.0 mile race, Bill White<lb/>
in the Alumni division captured<lb/>
first place honors out of 23 male<lb/>
participants with a time of 28:06.<lb/>
Jeannie Stes, first of only five<lb/>
female participants blew by with<lb/>
a time of 34:42. All the races were<lb/>
tight with the victors crossing the<lb/>
tape only seconds before the<lb/>
chasers passed by.<lb/>
Co-Rec basketball begins Nov.<lb/>
5 but registration starts next week<lb/>
UNC Back<lb/>
Wins Honor<lb/>
GREENSBORO, N.C. (UPI)<lb/>
North Carolina tailback<lb/>
William Humes, who scored the<lb/>
?vinning touchdown in the Tar<lb/>
Heels' win over North Carolina<lb/>
State, was named the Atlantic<lb/>
Coast Conference's offensive<lb/>
ack of ther week Monday.<lb/>
Humes rushed for 156 yards on<lb/>
27 carries, scored three times and<lb/>
ran for a two-point conversion in<lb/>
his first start for North Carolina.<lb/>
On the Tar Heels' 74-yard winn-<lb/>
ing drive, the sophomore from<lb/>
Asheville. N.C. carried on eight<lb/>
of 13 plays.<lb/>
Oct. 29-30. Come bv rooom 204<lb/>
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</div></body></text></TEI>