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<pb facs="00057677_0001"/>
She<lb/>
(Earnlmian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.20<lb/>
Thursday November 1, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Senate Race Scenario<lb/>
Depends On Weather<lb/>
JON JORDAN - ECU Photo L?t<lb/>
Dinner To Go<lb/>
"Z.oTcTcep" S'Ude dem?"SM ?? ? ? ? ??-? ? " ?? ,? H.l.oween and ?,??<lb/>
Pee Dee In Pirate Purgatory<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
"I?MI Nfw. Editor<lb/>
The controversy surrounding<lb/>
the name of ECU's official<lb/>
mascot, Pee Dee recently reached<lb/>
the realm of the Department of<lb/>
Athletics and its director Ken<lb/>
Karr.<lb/>
"1 have talked to Chancellor<lb/>
(John) Howell about the situa-<lb/>
tion Karr said, "and 1 plan to<lb/>
review the situation thoroughly<lb/>
before the end of this semester<lb/>
However, Karr said the situa-<lb/>
tion would have to wait until<lb/>
other "priority projects" are out<lb/>
of the way. These projects, accor-<lb/>
ding to Karr, include "various<lb/>
work in getting jobs done at<lb/>
ECU<lb/>
Howell said he spoke to Karr<lb/>
and the athletic department<lb/>
about the issue and told them<lb/>
how he wanted the situation<lb/>
handled. "I know they are busy<lb/>
with football season and trying to<lb/>
balance the budget Howell<lb/>
said, "so I did not give them a<lb/>
deadline for the decision<lb/>
Howell said he felt confident<lb/>
that the athletic department<lb/>
would consider it by the end of<lb/>
the semesterand they certainly<lb/>
are not ignoring the situation<lb/>
he said.<lb/>
Greg Rideout, managing editor<lb/>
of The East Carolinian was pleas-<lb/>
ed to hear the Athletic Depart-<lb/>
ment had finally acknowledged<lb/>
the student's dismay with the<lb/>
name Pee Dee.<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
Muf)1( E41IO,<lb/>
If the weatherman gives us<lb/>
clear, blue skies and tempatures<lb/>
in the 60s or 70s on Nov. 6, then<lb/>
Gov. James B. Hunt Jr can<lb/>
pack his bags and affix senator to<lb/>
his name. But if it's gloomy and<lb/>
misty, Sen. Jesse Helms, R-N.C,<lb/>
can leave his shingle up another<lb/>
six years.<lb/>
The scenario belongs to Eddie<lb/>
Yandle, a political reporter for<lb/>
the Fayettevtlle Observer, who<lb/>
participated Tuesday night in an<lb/>
elections forum sponosored by<lb/>
the history and political science<lb/>
departments. Yandle said Presi-<lb/>
dent Ronald Reagan will bring<lb/>
James Martin and Jesse Helms<lb/>
into office if he gets more than 56<lb/>
percent of the state's vote.<lb/>
The two other panelists, Jack<lb/>
Claiborne, associate editor of the<lb/>
Charlotte Observer, and John<lb/>
Alexander, editorial page editor<lb/>
of the Greensboro News &amp;<lb/>
Record, both said a Hunt victory<lb/>
depended mainly on a good tur-<lb/>
nout at the polls. According to a<lb/>
Charlotte Observer poll, Hunt is<lb/>
trailing Helms slightly 473 per-<lb/>
cent. The poll has a three percen-<lb/>
tage point margin of error.<lb/>
Yandle believes Hunt's support<lb/>
is softer than Helms The gover-<lb/>
nor's backers only need a small<lb/>
reason not to go to the polls<lb/>
whereas, Yandle says, "most of<lb/>
the people supporting Sen. Helms<lb/>
are somewhat similiar to the<lb/>
mailman. Neither rain nor snow<lb/>
will keep them from their ap-<lb/>
pointed task on Election Day<lb/>
Both Yandle and Claiborne<lb/>
believe coat tails will play a role in<lb/>
North Carolina. Alexander<lb/>
believes Reagan's effects on<lb/>
lower offices will be similar to<lb/>
President Dwight D<lb/>
Eisenhower's. "When he ran for<lb/>
a second term in 1956, it's in-<lb/>
teresting to note that he did not<lb/>
have very long coat tails<lb/>
 To help their chances, North<lb/>
Carolina Democrats are distanc-<lb/>
ing themselves from Walter Mon-<lb/>
dale. Conversely, Reagan's<lb/>
popularity has been latched onto<lb/>
by both Martin and Helms. Alex-<lb/>
ander and Claiborne see this<lb/>
helping Martin more than Helms;<lb/>
both concede the Senate race has<lb/>
taken on a life of its own. Alex-<lb/>
ander expects Martin to win<lb/>
"comfortably and Claiborne<lb/>
sees him winning "going away<lb/>
Yandle sees Rufus Edmisten<lb/>
going to the governor's mansion<lb/>
in 1985, largely on the back of his<lb/>
strong, grass-roots organization.<lb/>
All three newspapermen<lb/>
believe Reagan's personality is<lb/>
the key to an almost sure victory.<lb/>
"President Reagan's popularity<lb/>
seems to transcend party lines<lb/>
Alexander says. "People seem to<lb/>
regard him as a statesmen hero<lb/>
who strides the political land-<lb/>
scape, leaving the dirty political<lb/>
battles to others<lb/>
Yandle thinks a major factor is<lb/>
the economy. "If America is do-<lb/>
ing well in their pocketbook, they<lb/>
will vote with that pocketbook.<lb/>
And as they perceive it, they are<lb/>
doing better than they were four<lb/>
years ago Also, the basic con-<lb/>
servatism of the state goes well<lb/>
with a Reagan presidency, Yan-<lb/>
dle says.<lb/>
These reasons, along with a<lb/>
"success" factor, seem to be<lb/>
what is attracting young people<lb/>
to Republican candidates. He's a<lb/>
"father figure says Alexander,<lb/>
who is almost "larger than life<lb/>
Republican commercial and cam-<lb/>
paign speeches have painted the<lb/>
Democrats as whiners and ne'er-<lb/>
do-wells, according to Claiborne.<lb/>
People 18-25 years old, all three<lb/>
panelists believe, are trying to<lb/>
align themselves with a winning<lb/>
team. The Charlotte Observer<lb/>
poll showed Reagan leading with<lb/>
every group except blacks.<lb/>
Because of strong Republican<lb/>
candidates this year, the election,<lb/>
according to Claiborne, could be<lb/>
pivotal. The 11 percent undecid-<lb/>
ed in the Charlotte Observer poll<lb/>
will probably decide the senate<lb/>
race. Claiborne sees them leaning<lb/>
towards Hunt. Martin in the<lb/>
governor's mansion would be the<lb/>
foundation for building a strong<lb/>
Republican party in the state.<lb/>
The outcome of the elections<lb/>
will be the topic of the Nov. 15<lb/>
"post mortem the third and<lb/>
final elections forum. Once<lb/>
again, the program will be held at<lb/>
the Willis building at 7:30 p.m.<lb/>
and sponsored by the political<lb/>
science and history departments<lb/>
and the N.C. Humanities Com-<lb/>
mittee with funds provided by the<lb/>
National Endowment for the<lb/>
Humanities.<lb/>
Gandhi "Not Afraid" Of Death, Recent Interview States<lb/>
rv art Fir rnHa ri'pn oi ??  .u. ? ?.  . .<lb/>
NEW DELHI, India (UPI)<lb/>
As head of a nation where pover-<lb/>
? reigns and violence breeds.<lb/>
Prime Minister Indira Gandhi<lb/>
was always a target, but she told<lb/>
United Press International just<lb/>
weeks before she was killed that<lb/>
she did not fear death.<lb/>
"No. I'm not afraid ? as you<lb/>
can see, I usually ride in an open<lb/>
car she said in an exclusive<lb/>
three-day interview less than<lb/>
three weeks before her assassina-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Asked about the seemingly lax<lb/>
security surrounding her simple<lb/>
white bungalow home on a quiet<lb/>
street ? where she was killed by<lb/>
two of her own bodyguards ?<lb/>
she flatly denied any fear.<lb/>
"I am frequently attacked<lb/>
she said. "Once a man poked a<lb/>
gun at me; another time in Delhi<lb/>
someone threw a knife at me.<lb/>
nd then, of course, there are<lb/>
always the stones, the bricks, the<lb/>
bottles ? especially at election<lb/>
time<lb/>
One of those stones hit its<lb/>
mark in 1967 as Gandhi spoke to<lb/>
a crowd in Orissa. It broke her<lb/>
nose and split her lip but the in-<lb/>
domitable Gandhi refused to<lb/>
leave the podium and simply pull-<lb/>
ed her sari up around her face to<lb/>
hide the blood.<lb/>
"Another time, in 1977 or<lb/>
1978, I was riding in a car that<lb/>
was attacked by black flags (pro-<lb/>
testors) who beat me with a stick<lb/>
across my back she said. "The<lb/>
man in front lost an eye. The<lb/>
other man in the car was not<lb/>
seriously hurt but he lost a lot of<lb/>
blood and it covered me so peo-<lb/>
ple thought I had been wounded.<lb/>
"And another time I was in a<lb/>
train and the protestors were<lb/>
waiting and pelted it with all sorts<lb/>
of things and the windows broke,<lb/>
but I'm not afraid<lb/>
In the mid-October interview,<lb/>
Gandhi spoke of her dream of<lb/>
making India "a better place<lb/>
of the hurt she felt at the hatred<lb/>
that sometimes surrounded her<lb/>
and of her lack of fear before the<lb/>
violence that often confronted<lb/>
her.<lb/>
Gandhi, who ruled the 700<lb/>
million people of India for more<lb/>
than 16 years, could lay claim to<lb/>
many achievements but she said<lb/>
she felt little sense of accomplish-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
"This job is never finished<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
When one crisis or problem has<lb/>
been resolved, she said, there is<lb/>
always another looming "so you<lb/>
find that you are like Alice in<lb/>
Wonderland ? you are running<lb/>
but you are still in the same place<lb/>
as far as others are concerned<lb/>
But concealed beneath the soft<lb/>
folds of her pastel sans was a<lb/>
backbone of steel.<lb/>
"Because of our economic<lb/>
management and grain manage-<lb/>
ment, we have been able to pre-<lb/>
vent people from dying she<lb/>
said matter of factly . "We still<lb/>
have the catastrophes, but we can<lb/>
meet them.<lb/>
"Our food production has<lb/>
kept up with the population so<lb/>
far but jobs, health<lb/>
servicesthere is so much to<lb/>
do Relaxing in the private<lb/>
cabin of her jet, she pulled off the<lb/>
glasses that she removed<lb/>
whenever a camera was in sight<lb/>
and shrugged when asked about<lb/>
the rigors of her 18-hour days.<lb/>
"I'm certainly not a<lb/>
workaholic she laughed. "I<lb/>
work long hours because I really<lb/>
don't like going to bed with a pile<lb/>
of papers left on my desk<lb/>
Gandhi said she welcomed the<lb/>
Reagan Predicts Realignment<lb/>
adulation of her followers, tens<lb/>
of thousands of whom turned out<lb/>
wherever she appeared but said,<lb/>
"there is also hatred among<lb/>
some.<lb/>
"We are taught that life is a<lb/>
mixture of good and bad, of<lb/>
sunlight and shadow, happiness<lb/>
and sorrow said Gandhi,<lb/>
whose greatest sorrow was the<lb/>
death of her son, Samjay, in a<lb/>
stunt plane accident in June 1980.<lb/>
"I feel I have to fight evil, I<lb/>
have to fight what is wrong but<lb/>
you cannot be bothered about<lb/>
what is happening to you in con-<lb/>
sequence ? you have to go on<lb/>
with your job she said. "When<lb/>
you are small, you may cry at a<lb/>
very small hurt that when you are<lb/>
older would mean nothing bit<lb/>
there are still the bigger hurts.<lb/>
"Some criticisms are<lb/>
justified she said. "But when I<lb/>
feel that peole have been very un-<lb/>
fair, it does hurt<lb/>
Asked about her dream for In-<lb/>
dia, Gandhi lowered her voice to<lb/>
a whisper and stared at her con-<lb/>
stantly fluttering hands.<lb/>
"I want it to be a better place.<lb/>
When I say a better place, I mean<lb/>
not only materially, not only a<lb/>
better standard of living she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"There's been so much ad-<lb/>
vance in knowledge. We've got<lb/>
the scientific knowledge; we've<lb/>
got the capability, we can do so<lb/>
much.<lb/>
"Now we must concentrate on<lb/>
that knowledge on being better<lb/>
people, on making the world a<lb/>
much better place in every possi-<lb/>
ble way. And if the rest of the<lb/>
world can't do it or won't, at<lb/>
least India should try her best<lb/>
(UPI) ? President Reagan is<lb/>
predicting more than his reelec-<lb/>
tion next week and says he<lb/>
believes voters are ready to desert<lb/>
the Democratic Party for good<lb/>
and make the GOP the majority<lb/>
party of America.<lb/>
"I believe that next Tuesday<lb/>
we'll see a large number of voters<lb/>
joining our Republican ranks for<lb/>
the first time he told 250 cam-<lb/>
paign workers visiting the White<lb/>
House Tuesday. "This is no mere<lb/>
political cycle, nor has it anything<lb/>
to do with the personalities of the<lb/>
candidates<lb/>
"I think our meeting today<lb/>
reflects what could be a new<lb/>
phenomenon observers have been<lb/>
noticing Reagan said.<lb/>
"That is, if everything turns<lb/>
out right, a historic electoral<lb/>
realignment If true, it would be<lb/>
only the second such shift of the<lb/>
20th century.<lb/>
A new NBC News poll gave<lb/>
Reagan reason to be optimistic.<lb/>
He leads Walter Mondale, 58 per-<lb/>
cent to 34 percent, a gap of 24<lb/>
Percentage points. The poll show-<lb/>
ed 60 percent of the voters give<lb/>
Reagan a positive job approval<lb/>
rating, and 60 percent trust him.<lb/>
Some 69 percent said he was a<lb/>
strong leader.<lb/>
NBC's Tom Brokaw said the<lb/>
poll showed Reagan had an<lb/>
"overpowering lead" and that<lb/>
there was "no real move toward<lb/>
Mondale" and "no weakness in<lb/>
Reagan's numbers<lb/>
Mondale, who has stopped<lb/>
talking about the polls, cam-<lb/>
paigned in his home state of Min-<lb/>
nesota, where polls show he may<lb/>
have the best chance of winning<lb/>
electoral votes anywhere but the<lb/>
District of Columbia.<lb/>
He traveled north to Duluth,<lb/>
Minn where there was two in-<lb/>
ches of snow on the ground, and<lb/>
told hecklers to "shut up" for the<lb/>
second day in a row.<lb/>
A group of about .100 pro-<lb/>
Reagan supporters sat together<lb/>
holding signs, for the most part<lb/>
in silence. As Mondale started to<lb/>
recall the sacrifices his mother<lb/>
made for her children after the<lb/>
death of his father, some of the<lb/>
Reagan backers began saying:<lb/>
"Awww in mock sympathy.<lb/>
Mondale snapped: "Shut up,<lb/>
will ya touching off an ovation<lb/>
from the crowd.<lb/>
In Portland, Ore, Monday,<lb/>
Mondale told another heckler to<lb/>
"please shut up<lb/>
Mondale attacked Reagan on<lb/>
social issues, warning: "A few<lb/>
weeks before the 1984 election,<lb/>
Mr. Reagan is promising once<lb/>
again not to cut Social Security,<lb/>
but don't you believe him. Vote<lb/>
for someone who'll defend it with<lb/>
everything he's got, Walter Mon-<lb/>
dale<lb/>
Included in the text of Mon-<lb/>
dale's speech handed to reporters<lb/>
in advance, but passed over in<lb/>
delivery during the raucous rally,<lb/>
were the words: "Don't vote for<lb/>
an enemy of Social Security<lb/>
Mondale's final stop Tuesday<lb/>
was Chicago's traditional tor-<lb/>
chlight parade, a fixture of the ci-<lb/>
ty every political year that began<lb/>
with Mayor Richard Daley<lb/>
decades ago.<lb/>
Reagan's views that voters are<lb/>
realigning themselves with the<lb/>
Republican Party picks up a<lb/>
theme sounded by Republican<lb/>
National Chairman Frank<lb/>
Fahrenkopf in a National Press<lb/>
Club speech Oct. 17.<lb/>
Fahrenkopf predicted that<lb/>
Election Day would see the big-<lb/>
gest party realignment since<lb/>
millions of voters made the<lb/>
Democrats the majority party in<lb/>
1936, when Franklin Roosevelt<lb/>
was president.<lb/>
Democratic National Commit-<lb/>
tee Chairman Charles Manatt has<lb/>
said he doesn't believe that will<lb/>
happen and compared this year<lb/>
to 1956, when Eisenhower was<lb/>
reelected. Manatt, who says<lb/>
parenthetically he believes Mon-<lb/>
dale will win, said that in 1956<lb/>
Democrats lost but they came<lb/>
back "stronger than ever" two<lb/>
years later.<lb/>
JOM JORDAN ? KCU mot Lab<lb/>
Newton's Vehicle<lb/>
This Law of Motion car is at present idle, saving up its potential energy to unleash in a kinetic freniv ont on<lb/>
the 264 by-pass. But don't drop it from the Empire State Building, okay?<lb/>
? - ? A debate will be held between<lb/>
?w?!Eu I ? Co" YouB Democrats'<lb/>
"l0"18 national president and the<lb/>
Ll"Ji'rI College Republicans' national<lb/>
L?- l president on Sunday, Nov. 4<lb/>
pon1U at 7:30 p.m. in the NCSU<lb/>
Ballroom.<lb/>
?Students respond to the<lb/>
various candidates. See<lb/>
Editorials, page 5.<lb/>
?<lb/>
!<lb/>
? ????????B<lb/>
?!?'<lb/>
-????<lb/>
MM<lb/>
4MMMta<lb/>
mm .?I m?. m . mm<lb/>
f'<lb/>
<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057677_0002"/><lb/>
2 THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER I. 1984<lb/>
Senior Class Vice-President<lb/>
Applications no De.ng accepted tor senior<lb/>
ciass vice president Apply at SGA office in<lb/>
Menaennall ana be at our meeting on Wed<lb/>
7 00 in 23 of Menaennall<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
College republicans meet Thursday at 1 00<lb/>
in Mendenhall coffeehouse if you tellas<lb/>
anf to earn money worfc.ng tor our car<lb/>
a'dates on election aay be tnere'<lb/>
Free Throw Contest<lb/>
There win be a tree thro contest held tor an<lb/>
you expert hoopsters Nov 13 This in<lb/>
tramural sponsored event will be held in<lb/>
memorial gym To register come by room<lb/>
204 memorial gym or call '57 437 Par<lb/>
ficipate rather than specfate<lb/>
RUGBY<lb/>
Saggers tans ect the team will be hoidmg<lb/>
? s fmal home match this weekend sat Nov<lb/>
3<lb/>
Helms Rally<lb/>
4,one nerested in meeting with senator<lb/>
Helms cease call '52 834 aa ask tor Base<lb/>
War e Senator Helms will be .n town on<lb/>
NOv 3 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Special Events Committee<lb/>
The Student Union Special Events Commit<lb/>
tee will meet on Tuesday. Nov 4. 1984. at<lb/>
5 30 pm m room 242 of Mendenhali Student<lb/>
Center All members and interested<lb/>
students are urged to attend<lb/>
Fencing Club<lb/>
The Pencmg Club of ECU would like to invite<lb/>
anyone interested to attend our meetings<lb/>
every Wed at 7 30 m Memorial Gym, room<lb/>
102<lb/>
APO<lb/>
Alpha Phi Omega would like to congradulafe<lb/>
the following persons on becoming APO<lb/>
pledges Angela Richardson. Chris Ervin,<lb/>
Kim Hoiloman. Donna Davis, Ricky Lewis,<lb/>
Keith Hall. Leanne Butrum, Jimmie<lb/>
Hackett Robert Boney Sandre Caskey<lb/>
Good iuck as pledges'<lb/>
Visual Arts<lb/>
T ne Sudent un on Visual Arts Comr- "ee<lb/>
w ii meet on Thursday, Nov 1 1984 at 3 00<lb/>
pm n room 238 at Mendenhali Studen'<lb/>
Ceer All members and 'n'erestea<lb/>
jti :e"s are jrgeo o aea<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
The Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
the National Honor Society of Nursing, will<lb/>
hold it s tali educational meeting on Thurs<lb/>
aay Nov 15 1984at6pm at the Ramaoa inn<lb/>
n Greenville The Program, presented Dy<lb/>
Dr Ann Belcher. RN. Pn D s entitled.<lb/>
The ten year plan Implications tor On<lb/>
coiogy Nursing Dr Beicher it director of<lb/>
Nursing Staff Developement at the Un.versi<lb/>
ty of Alabama Hospital m Birmingham<lb/>
Alabama Colleagues students spouses and<lb/>
friends are cordially invited For further in<lb/>
formation contact Lou Everett at the school<lb/>
Of NurS'hg<lb/>
Men's Flag Football<lb/>
ECU men's invitational flag football tourna<lb/>
ment' The entry fee is $15 00 and the event<lb/>
will be held on the 16,17 18 of Nov Register<lb/>
this week and next in the Intramral office<lb/>
room 20-4 Memorial gym The tournament is<lb/>
sponsured by all campus champs Bombs<lb/>
quad'1 and will use the money to cover ex<lb/>
penses on their trip to the National Col<lb/>
legiate flag football tournament<lb/>
Pre Season Basketball<lb/>
Register now for one of the most suctesful<lb/>
intramural events of the fall Registration<lb/>
for the tournament sponsored by Miller High<lb/>
Life is on Nov 26 27 Play begins the 30fh<lb/>
lust m time to let it all out before exams<lb/>
Register in room 204 memorial gym or call<lb/>
757 6387<lb/>
Student Dietetic Association<lb/>
Don't forget' The Student Dietetic Assoo<lb/>
tion will meet on Tuesday, Nov 6 at 5 30 pm<lb/>
m the dming hall of the home economics<lb/>
building If you were not able to participate<lb/>
? n our great "Fruit and vegetable float dur<lb/>
?ng homecoming them don't rmss becoming<lb/>
active m the other exciting activities SDA<lb/>
will plan' Several feature proiects will be<lb/>
discussed during the meeting Everyone is<lb/>
invited to attend! Please come<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There will be a CADP meeting Thursday<lb/>
Nov 1, 1984 at 4 00pm in room 218 ot Erw.n<lb/>
Hall AH interested students are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
AMA Membership Committee<lb/>
Reminder There will be an AMA Member<lb/>
ship Commettee meeting in Menaennall<lb/>
inext to the banki on Monday Nov. 5th at<lb/>
2pm Anyone interested in making posters<lb/>
for this membership drive please come'<lb/>
Surfing<lb/>
The contest last Sat was a big success! ECU<lb/>
took 2nd out of 6 teams All results will b?<lb/>
given at the meeting this Thursday night at<lb/>
8 00 in 221 Mendenhali Another video of<lb/>
Hawaii's North Shore Surfing will be shown<lb/>
Team t shirts will also b sold at the<lb/>
meeting Plans for the Thanksgiving trip to<lb/>
Florida will be fmaliied The traditional<lb/>
team sooa" will follow the meeting Guys<lb/>
and gals and any newcomers are all<lb/>
welcomel<lb/>
Circle K<lb/>
ECU Circle K Club invites you to come out<lb/>
and join us this coming and every Tuesday<lb/>
night at 7 00 pm in Mendenhali room 221 for<lb/>
fun and socializing Hope to see you there<lb/>
Rugby<lb/>
Ruggers, fans, ect The team will<lb/>
be holding it's final home match<lb/>
this weekend Sat Nov 3 1984 at<lb/>
2 00pm behind the Allied Health<lb/>
bid We will attempt to dethrone<lb/>
no 1 ranked UNC G Sacrafices<lb/>
will be made and profices forfill<lb/>
ed Come on out and support the<lb/>
team Practice this week man<lb/>
datory i<lb/>
meeting before state convention!<lb/>
Please come we need your help<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
The Beta Zi pledges of Pi Kappa Phi are hav<lb/>
ing a happy hour tonight at grumpy's star<lb/>
ting at 9 00 Stop by and party with the Pi<lb/>
Kapps before the weekend gets started<lb/>
Campus Cocaine Usage Increases<lb/>
(CPS) ? The teenage cocaine<lb/>
experimenter of the '70s has<lb/>
taken hi cocaine habit to college,<lb/>
experts say, and he many be in<lb/>
trouble.<lb/>
Cocaine ? once labeled the<lb/>
drug of the rich ? is now becom-<lb/>
ing so popular on campuses<lb/>
around the country that resear-<lb/>
chers call its rapid growth the na-<lb/>
tion's number-one substance<lb/>
abuse problem.<lb/>
"Obviously, cocaine use is<lb/>
growing on campuses says Dr.<lb/>
Ronald Linder, UCLA health<lb/>
science professor. "And the pro-<lb/>
blem is getting worse<lb/>
"There didn't used to be any<lb/>
problems with coke. Now there<lb/>
are lots concurs Dr. John<lb/>
Jones, University of California-<lb/>
Davis senior student health physi-<lb/>
cian, "use has increased in the<lb/>
last two or three years for sure<lb/>
About 25 million people have<lb/>
tried coke, the annual U.S.<lb/>
Government Survey on Drug<lb/>
Abuse reports. Five-to-six million<lb/>
use it monthly, while one-to-three<lb/>
million are severely dependent on<lb/>
the durg.<lb/>
Just how many of them are on<lb/>
campus is hard to tell.<lb/>
Though few studies are done<lb/>
on college cocaine abuse, Jones<lb/>
believes the influx of cocaine<lb/>
abuse patients at his off-campus<lb/>
clinic probably reflects an in-<lb/>
crease among college-age abusers<lb/>
similar to the national averages.<lb/>
"Four years ago, there were<lb/>
none (cocaine abusers). Now 12<lb/>
percent to 13 percent of our pa-<lb/>
tients have cocaine problems<lb/>
he reveals.<lb/>
And a 15-year analysis of co-<lb/>
caine use at Arizona State<lb/>
University by ASU Professor<lb/>
Thomas Dezelsky shows the<lb/>
number of students who have<lb/>
tried cocaine once has rocketed<lb/>
from 3 percent in 1970 to 44 per-<lb/>
cent in 1984.<lb/>
Coke's new popularity may<lb/>
stem from recent college-bound<lb/>
high school graduates, claims Dr.<lb/>
Lloyd Johnston, University of<lb/>
Michigan researcher.<lb/>
Johnston's yearly surveys of<lb/>
high school seniors chart a rapid<lb/>
rise in coke use among college<lb/>
bound seniors from 1976 to 1981.<lb/>
"Colleges may be reaping the<lb/>
casualties of this period of in-<lb/>
creased incidence Johnston<lb/>
says. "There's a lag time between<lb/>
when people become involved in<lb/>
coke and when they get in trouble<lb/>
and wind up in a clinic. Follow-<lb/>
up studies show coke use con-<lb/>
tinues to rise after high school<lb/>
"It's a recreational drug says<lb/>
UC-Davis' Jones. "There's a<lb/>
casual attitude about it. Students<lb/>
use it to study instead of am-<lb/>
phetamines<lb/>
Once thought harmless, co-<lb/>
caine is a strong reinforcing<lb/>
agent, drawing people to pursue<lb/>
its effects, Jones adds.<lb/>
Along with its euphoric high,<lb/>
cocaine users experience paranoia<lb/>
and irritability, often feel<lb/>
depressed, socially isolated and<lb/>
United Way Offices<lb/>
Designed By Students<lb/>
ECL News Bureau<lb/>
A brighter, cleaner and more<lb/>
functional layout for the Pitt<lb/>
County United Way's downtown<lb/>
Greenville offices has been<lb/>
created by a class of ECU en-<lb/>
vironmental design students on<lb/>
the lookout for public service<lb/>
projects that test their design<lb/>
skills.<lb/>
"Working within the limits of<lb/>
a very small budget, the students<lb/>
presented a whole new office<lb/>
layout complete with selections<lb/>
of colors for re-upholstery,<lb/>
blinds, wallcoverings and new<lb/>
elements such as shelves and art-<lb/>
work said environmental<lb/>
design professor Mindy<lb/>
Machanic who led the class pro-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
"Their proposals address the<lb/>
year-round needs of the United<lb/>
Way office staff for privacy,<lb/>
good circulation and adequate<lb/>
work and storage space she ex-<lb/>
plained. "One especially exciting<lb/>
suggestion is for a unique recep-<lb/>
tion seating space with a built-in<lb/>
planter area in front of an angled<lb/>
desk<lb/>
Development of the plans re-<lb/>
quired a two-step process with in-<lb/>
dependent teams of students pro-<lb/>
ducing basic design concepts<lb/>
followed by detailed design pro-<lb/>
posals. The Final plans were<lb/>
drawn following class discussion<lb/>
of each team's work.<lb/>
Students recently presented the<lb/>
United Way staff with their plans<lb/>
including interior renderings, col-<lb/>
or and finish samples, and budget<lb/>
proposals. Mrs. Lou Walker,<lb/>
United Way executive director,<lb/>
commended the students for their<lb/>
work.<lb/>
"They really created a dif-<lb/>
ferent look for the office, in spite<lb/>
of a tiny budget and restrictions<lb/>
on changes to the paneling,<lb/>
carpet and other structural<lb/>
features she said. "We're all<lb/>
quite pleased with their pro-<lb/>
posals<lb/>
"Thafwas a great project to in-<lb/>
troduce the students to real<lb/>
budgets and real office<lb/>
concerns said Machanic. "We<lb/>
hope to continue with public ser-<lb/>
vice projects like this for our<lb/>
students. Our next project will in-<lb/>
volve work at the ECU Interna-<lb/>
tional Student House<lb/>
- ?" ?" ? ? mmmmwmimmmxmmmW0f<lb/>
unable to deal with stress and<lb/>
pressure.<lb/>
Physiological effects can in-<lb/>
clude high blood pressure, con-<lb/>
vulsions and eye and nasal pro-<lb/>
blems.<lb/>
At UCLA, coke abuse ranks<lb/>
just behind alcohol and mari-<lb/>
juana use, says Bonnie<lb/>
Leibowitz, UCLA health<lb/>
educator.<lb/>
"LA is the hub of drug use in<lb/>
the nation and UCLA is the<lb/>
center of that she explains.<lb/>
"Our students are from fairly<lb/>
well-off families. THe cost of the<lb/>
drug is not so prohibitive for<lb/>
them<lb/>
"The New York City price of<lb/>
coke dropped 50 percent last<lb/>
year says Dr. Arnold M.<lb/>
Washton, research director for<lb/>
the 800COCAINE National<lb/>
Hotline. "One gram of coke<lb/>
costs $60 to $70. It's cheaper than<lb/>
an ounce of grass<lb/>
"The expense is getting easier<lb/>
for (students) to handle in this<lb/>
community says Duke Engel of<lb/>
Independence Center, a Lincoln,<lb/>
Neb clinic near the University<lb/>
of Nebraska. "The prime people<lb/>
coming into the clinic with pro-<lb/>
blems are 19 to 30 years old<lb/>
And more are coming in,<lb/>
UCLA's Linder says<lb/>
"The best indicator of severity<lb/>
and escalation of the problem can<lb/>
be measured by the number of<lb/>
treatment centers and the number<lb/>
of patients they treat he claims.<lb/>
"There are a lot<lb/>
Yet "most schools don't have<lb/>
real drug abuse policies<lb/>
Washton points out.<lb/>
At the University of Tennessee,<lb/>
drug and alcohol abusers are<lb/>
referred to the student counseling<lb/>
center.<lb/>
And University of Alabama<lb/>
drug and alcohol abuse is handl-<lb/>
ed by the student health center or<lb/>
the mental health clinic.<lb/>
Some schools refer drug abuse<lb/>
patients to off-campus communi-<lb/>
ty resources.<lb/>
Clemson students go to a coun-<lb/>
ty drug abuse program. The<lb/>
University of Nebraska-Lincoln<lb/>
uses Engel's Independence<lb/>
Center, affiliated with Lincoln<lb/>
General Hospital.<lb/>
"The hotline has lots of con-<lb/>
tact with students from small col-<lb/>
leges he stresses. "Coke is not<lb/>
only available in larger schools,<lb/>
but also in remote areas you<lb/>
wouldn't suspect, like Wyoming,<lb/>
South Dakota and Alaska<lb/>
DONNA EDWARDS<lb/>
Owrver<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
We Carry A Complete Line<lb/>
of Dog, Cat, and Fish Supplies<lb/>
Gold Fish 4$ 1.00<lb/>
Ferretts $55<lb/>
Large Selection of Salt Water Fish<lb/>
Master Card and Visa are accepted and financing<lb/>
is available.<lb/>
511 EVANS ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE. NX. 278341<lb/>
PHONT 756 9222<lb/>
MJIlllUIllllllllltilUlllllllllllllltllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllllHIllllltlllllllllllllliiiiiiiiiiiiiiitttiiiHiiiiiiiiiittllll<lb/>
V&amp;<lb/>
 CoUHTRVjCogKIMfi<lb/>
 Students! <lb/>
j Come by now and sign up for J<lb/>
 meal plan before prices go up! 1<lb/>
 Daily Specials - $2.25 plus tmx <lb/>
 512 E. 14th St. Near Dorms j<lb/>
 Call for Take Oats - 752-0476 <lb/>
 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 1 l:00am-? :00pm <lb/>
iiiiiMnimiiHiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiniiiiiiiiiiiiiihiiiiiiiiiiimiHiiiiiiiniiiimrimniiiiimriiiiiiiirmiTniiff<lb/>
mmmmmmm n n n<lb/>
?MMMM-MMMMMNI<lb/>
Meditation<lb/>
The Buddhist Meditation and Study Group<lb/>
will meet Tuesday. Nov 6 at 7pm m room<lb/>
212 ot mendenhali student center After<lb/>
meditation basic beliefs from Buddihism<lb/>
will be discussed<lb/>
Love<lb/>
IS something missing in your life right now<lb/>
butyou iust cant put your finger on it<lb/>
Everyone needs love and understanding<lb/>
You can fill this empty space by making an<lb/>
encounter with Christ weekend Nov 15 18<lb/>
Meet students within H C and enioy a relax<lb/>
mg weekend with people who really care<lb/>
about you' For more mfo contact Fr Terry<lb/>
at 752 4214 or Colleen Pirone at 752 4975 it<lb/>
promises to be a fantastic experience'<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Alpha Omicron P. will be hiving informal<lb/>
rush Nov 5 9 The first party will feature a<lb/>
Mary Kay cosmetic representative Monday<lb/>
at 7 00 interested parties may can 757 0769<lb/>
tor information and rides<lb/>
Pre-Med Students<lb/>
The Biology Club will rave its next meet.ng<lb/>
on Wed Nov 71984 The meeting will be<lb/>
held m room Bn 102 m the B'Oiogy Complex<lb/>
at 7 00pm Representatives form tne<lb/>
Stanley M Kaplan Course will be speaking to<lb/>
us about their program This course is<lb/>
designed to aid m study and preparedness<lb/>
for the Medical College Admissons Test<lb/>
(MCATi They will also be administering a<lb/>
one hour simulated Kaplan Course to<lb/>
demonstrate the benefits that the course of<lb/>
ters Pre med students who must take the<lb/>
MCAT before applying to the Medical<lb/>
School(s) of their choice All persons in<lb/>
terested in this course or anyone nterested<lb/>
in the medical field is urged to attend<lb/>
M.S.O.<lb/>
The Minority Student Organization will have<lb/>
a meeting Thursday Nov 1 1984 in room 221<lb/>
mendenhali Time's 4 30pm Ae are as? "g<lb/>
all minority students to please come out anc<lb/>
get involved1<lb/>
Quakers<lb/>
Quakers Fr.ends Un.verS'ty Fellowsn c <lb/>
hold meet,ng for worship at 10 Warn Sunja,<lb/>
Nov 4th at 2405 east 3rd st For more into<lb/>
call P Kl.nger 758 34! 1<lb/>
Presbyterians<lb/>
Need a Dreak F.nd support song ana mun<lb/>
chies w,th other students on Tuesday nights<lb/>
at 7 30pm We meet at the Method s" S'u<lb/>
dent Center 501 East Fiflt! Street across<lb/>
from Garrett Dorm Call 752 7240 for more<lb/>
information<lb/>
Real Estate<lb/>
There w ii be an organisational meet.ng of<lb/>
Rho Eps -on on Monday Nov 5 a' 3 00 n<lb/>
Raw 103 Ail persons n'e'es'po a-?<lb/>
couraged ta a'fena Itiis meefng so pm<lb/>
future activities canbe made <lb/>
newcomers are weicot- <lb/>
The Holiday Proiect<lb/>
The Holiday Proiect is a non protit pub <lb/>
corporation that is working toward racing<lb/>
linanoai assistance With the funds ra sec<lb/>
by volunteers the Monday Proiect w.n pro<lb/>
v.de gifts at Christmas for people in a'ea<lb/>
facilities who would normally be without ?<lb/>
you are interested in contributing etner<lb/>
voluntarily or financially please contact oee<lb/>
at 757 0212<lb/>
Motorcycle Club<lb/>
j and 8 Marley Oav dson and Frog Le.e<lb/>
Motorcycle Club are sponsoring ?n? 2nd a"<lb/>
nual toy run Sat Nov 17 Rendezvous<lb/>
9 30am at J and E Haney Davidson loo<lb/>
Dickinson ave Free eats and Drinks<lb/>
Departure time 2 OOpm on a 5 mne pa'aoe<lb/>
route Contr.bufions go to the Saivat'On A'<lb/>
n-? and dollar donations to the Bonaic<lb/>
McDonald Mouse All bikers invited tr ng a<lb/>
toy<lb/>
Alpha Phi big Brothers<lb/>
am big brothers are asked to come out to the<lb/>
house today at 4 00 to rake ano clean the<lb/>
yard remember the party at Donna s fr,aay<lb/>
afternoon and our dinner out meeting if <lb/>
Sunday night at the Western S Zler on 10th<lb/>
st starting at a 00 it you cannot attena trie<lb/>
meet ng Sunday please can Bob at 758 004!<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi Little Sisters<lb/>
Li'tie sisters and little S'Ster pledges a-r<lb/>
reminded ot tne brother pledges nappy hour<lb/>
at Grumpy s ton.ght starting at 9 00pm anc<lb/>
the brothers car wash IMS Saturday sta" ng<lb/>
at 9 00am come on out and me' ???<lb/>
brothers Ne? "esste' pledge mee' ng ?<lb/>
Sunday a1 5 00 and little Sisters meeting j<lb/>
6 00<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
E ? i ne s reminded Our c rwash this Sa'<lb/>
at tne Texaco station beside Dom.no s or<lb/>
Chanes St Brother Glean Barnes w-<lb/>
s Iti , Sa' - vVasn.ngtor Be a' the -<lb/>
Of 6 30pm ano be ready To pa'1? ?? ?-?<lb/>
reception Next brotherhood will oe Sunaa,<lb/>
- Opnr a1 Mendenhali<lb/>
Ice Hockey<lb/>
 be a practice for all membe's -?<lb/>
? -exkey team on Tues Nov 6 a' <lb/>
?I "e Dae' Bocne ct a "?<lb/>
H iborougti Tr" s ii oe to prepare ?<lb/>
N C 'a'e jde on Nov 8 and the UNC<lb/>
game on Nov '3 The t me has come for w I<lb/>
defeat the ACC teams Al those rtterntec<lb/>
snouid contact George at 752 8525 as soc" as<lb/>
poossbie<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
The K -ng Youth Fei'owsn p sponsored - , -<lb/>
Pentecostal Hoiness Cnurc w -ae a B<lb/>
lY Genes s 4 9 'uesaa. Nov 6 a-<lb/>
8 00pm. n 242 Menoenhai' For more -? i<lb/>
- contact -ac? a '52 840 or k?, ?<lb/>
758 9190<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Pr E'a S v?"a w oe nav ng a ge"era<lb/>
???? netting Tuesday Nov 6 9?4 ??<lb/>
? n Venaenra'i Ask informal :r<lb/>
s? tor room<lb/>
-?S ? Bulf V4X. &amp; Wm<lb/>
MUUHuLN-<lb/>
MorTy.Mike&amp; JOfTs<lb/>
(919'752 iM6<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
301 i.ant St<lb/>
2nd f kxo Manges Stag<lb/>
Cyw.iie N C 27fU<lb/>
Kim Shirley<lb/>
(919)752 7637<lb/>
r Appointment<lb/>
B rhA?n&amp; Woman<lb/>
iWl<lb/>
anorr<lb/>
PRDGRAM<lb/>
Nobody else makes<lb/>
Tine photography<lb/>
this simple.<lb/>
? Programmed automation-<lb/>
just 'ocus ana shoo:1<lb/>
? Snutter-pnority automation<lb/>
plus manuai moae<lb/>
? Fully automatic flash with<lb/>
optional Speediite 188A<lb/>
? Optional Power Wmoers a; a<lb/>
and Motor Drive MA available<lb/>
for rapid sequence snoo'mg<lb/>
? Includes Canon USA inc<lb/>
one-year limited warranty<lb/>
registration card<lb/>
Srwtv it I88A n<lb/>
$219.95<lb/>
 am ict'Orva<lb/>
ortcoeiero hop<lb/>
518 SOUTH COTANCHC STRCEf<lb/>
GRFEWVit.Lt; HC 1T934<lb/>
BMMI<lb/>
tbrf<lb/>
. - V<lb/>
jee<lb/>
-?' h<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/>
m<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
mm an<lb/>
P?-s<lb/>
<lb/>
Listen For The Bells<lb/>
WZMB B<lb/>
B) JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
stl<lb/>
NewiMllor<lb/>
Chnstmas in November, a<lb/>
month-long series of giveaways i<lb/>
sponsored by WZMB, the cam hi<lb/>
Pus radio station, will begin to- b<lb/>
day.<lb/>
According to Susan Duncan, hi<lb/>
ZMB general manager, ap- I<lb/>
proximately 300 items will be<lb/>
given away throughout the <lb/>
month of November. These items<lb/>
have been donated by local wj<lb/>
business and include a keg of<lb/>
beer, 15 foot-long subs, movie a<lb/>
passes and t-shirts. si<lb/>
WZMB listeners will call in <lb/>
ipon hearing a cue of sleigh bells.<lb/>
aid Mary Lou Dingman, assis- i<lb/>
ant general manager promo-<lb/>
tions. A caller specified by the<lb/>
disc jockey will then be awarded<lb/>
the prize<lb/>
Dingman said listeners do not<lb/>
have to be students in order to<lb/>
win. "This is geared toward i<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
B HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
Uaiu: Sr?t hduor<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Phi Sym-<lb/>
posium Committee is soliciting<lb/>
abstracts of papers from faculty j<lb/>
and students to be considered for<lb/>
presentation during the annual<lb/>
symposium in Februarv.<lb/>
The theme of the sympos;r is<lb/>
What's Right With America ?<lb/>
What's Wrong. Trenton Da-<lb/>
president of the ECL Phi Kar<lb/>
Phi Chapter and symp<lb/>
planning committee cha "<lb/>
said the topic was chosen as, "a -<lb/>
timely and significant the-<lb/>
which lends itself to treatment b<lb/>
all academic and professional <lb/>
Health Careers<lb/>
ECU New B-r?<lb/>
The annual Health Career i<lb/>
Days At ECL will be held Fnda.<lb/>
Nov. 2 and Monday Nov. 5. to<lb/>
acquaint students and gradua<lb/>
of ECU with job openlng<lb/>
health care delivers.<lb/>
Personnel recruiters from<lb/>
hospUaU, YvcaUh treatment<lb/>
centers and government agencies<lb/>
will meet interested students and<lb/>
alumni on Friday from 9:30 a.m.<lb/>
to 12:30 p.m. at the ECL Nursing<lb/>
Building. The site for Monda<lb/>
the Carol Belk Allied Health<lb/>
Building from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Furnev James, director of the<lb/>
e<lb/>
o<lb/>
O'<lb/>
OAKWOODl<lb/>
PROUDLY SI<lb/>
THE PIRATI<lb/>
EAST CAR4<lb/>
UNIVER!<lb/>
o per- of the g<lb/>
North Ccc no tot ?e5<lb/>
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he p "g " ea ta a :re"<lb/>
M<lb/>
GO PIRi<lb/>
?)<lb/>
HOI<lb/>
V<lb/>
626 W Gree. e 31<lb/>
o<lb/>
<lb/>
East Carolinu<lb/>
call<lb/>
K<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOv HV1BER l lM<lb/>
The HolidayProiect<lb/>
' ' Public<lb/>
fd I a.vng<lb/>
W ?'ea<lb/>
H ?  pro<lb/>
?- ptc i area<lb/>
- fhouf if<lb/>
B e'tfter<lb/>
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e Club<lb/>
n l evu<lb/>
Kl fru :ici an<lb/>
Rendezvous<lb/>
iiv dsan loos<lb/>
ans<lb/>
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1 11 on Ar<lb/>
" 1 on?a<lb/>
? VA tM ng a<lb/>
-8iothers<lb/>
? ? nit<lb/>
<lb/>
IS fl ' ,<lb/>
<lb/>
Ittend The<lb/>
?' ' S8 0OS<lb/>
?tie Sisters<lb/>
jes are<lb/>
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?? . . .<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
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?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? 'he<lb/>
N<lb/>
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pVec<lb/>
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a B<lb/>
N ? 6 at<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ' g m a<lb/>
- jenerai<lb/>
?84 a-<lb/>
Morty. Mike &amp; Jom?<lb/>
i? (9f9)752 idtt<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
JT A STYLE<lb/>
m Bot Mai &amp; W<lb/>
Sfet<lb/>
! p D j j<lb/>
C3RAM<lb/>
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? ?lomal r<lb/>
? A ?"<lb/>
1<lb/>
r ? A<lb/>
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i ?A Inc<lb/>
$21995<lb/>
lero hop<lb/>
?<lb/>
iters<lb/>
r AiVr<lb/>
r77<lb/>
10:00-5:30<lb/>
757-3944<lb/>
Usten For The Bells<lb/>
ill WZMB Begins Giveaways<lb/>
<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nrm r dlliM<lb/>
Christmas in November, a<lb/>
month-long series of giveaways<lb/>
sponsored by WZMB, the cam-<lb/>
Pus radio station, will begin to-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
According to Susan Duncan,<lb/>
WZMB general manager, ap-<lb/>
proximately 300 items will be<lb/>
given away throughout the<lb/>
month of November. These items<lb/>
have been donated by local<lb/>
business and include a keg of<lb/>
beer, 15 foot-long subs, movie<lb/>
passes and t-shirts.<lb/>
WZMB listeners will call in<lb/>
upon hearing a cue of sleigh bells,<lb/>
said Mary Lou Dingman, assis-<lb/>
tant general manager promo-<lb/>
tions. A caller specified by the<lb/>
disc jockey will then be awarded<lb/>
the prize.<lb/>
Dingman said listeners do not<lb/>
have to be students in order to<lb/>
win. "This is geared toward<lb/>
students because we are a campus<lb/>
station, but a lot of our listeners<lb/>
are not students she said.<lb/>
Prizes will be given away at<lb/>
least once every two or three<lb/>
hours throughout all WZMB's<lb/>
broadcast time, Dingman said.<lb/>
"I've been glad that businesses<lb/>
have been so generous and recep-<lb/>
tive to working with us<lb/>
Dingman said, adding that the<lb/>
urpose of the contest is "to let<lb/>
people know what WZMB is and<lb/>
what we're trying tc do<lb/>
WZMB, located at 91.3 FM, is<lb/>
a student-run, non-profit radio<lb/>
station specializing in alternative<lb/>
music. The station broadcasts<lb/>
from 6 a.m. to 2 a.m. on<lb/>
weekdays and from 6 a.m. to 4<lb/>
a.m. on Fridays and Saturdays.<lb/>
"When we use "alternative<lb/>
we mean we're playing different<lb/>
music, cuts you wouldn't hear on<lb/>
commercial radio Dingman<lb/>
said. "We think college students<lb/>
have the right to hear different<lb/>
music; college is supposed to ex-<lb/>
pose you to new and different<lb/>
things<lb/>
One aspect of WZMB's album-<lb/>
oriented format, Duncan said, is<lb/>
that different cuts from albums<lb/>
are played, cuts that are not<lb/>
among those in the Top 40.<lb/>
Although this is the case, Dun-<lb/>
can said many of the student DJ's<lb/>
"pick the hits before they're<lb/>
hits playing songs that later<lb/>
become popiriar.<lb/>
The station does not limit itself<lb/>
to rock, Dingman said, also play-<lb/>
ing jazz, new wave, classical and<lb/>
soul music. "The people that do<lb/>
the different shows are experts<lb/>
and they will give you the best of<lb/>
what there is she said.<lb/>
"We are doing the Christmas<lb/>
in November promotion for<lb/>
students and we are looking for-<lb/>
ward to a lot of student participa-<lb/>
tion and a lot of winners Dun-<lb/>
can said.<lb/>
w fswsfs&amp;JWs.??"?'? -? " sssssvsfrMMWSSsssM -jf3fittf<lb/>
Honor Board Action<lb/>
arj<lb/>
Classification<lb/>
Charge<lb/>
Decision<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Freshman<lb/>
Damaging public property;<lb/>
Attempting to steal? (blue light<lb/>
phones)<lb/>
Unauthorized entering of a<lb/>
Residence Hall;<lb/>
Non-cooperation with campus<lb/>
policeman;<lb/>
Public intoxication<lb/>
Unauthorized entering of a<lb/>
Residence Hall; Damaging<lb/>
public property;<lb/>
Disorderly conduct;<lb/>
Non-cooperation with campus<lb/>
policeman (2 counts);<lb/>
Public intoxication (2 counts);<lb/>
City ordinance violation (releas-<lb/>
ing false fire alarm).<lb/>
Probation until Dec85; $250<lb/>
fine(with the option of work-<lb/>
ing it off in man-power labor)<lb/>
Written reprimand; Probation<lb/>
unUI Dec '85; $75 fine; 10 hrs<lb/>
work; Found not guilty of public<lb/>
intoxication<lb/>
Written reprimand; Probation<lb/>
until Dec. '85; ECU ID revok-<lb/>
ed; $250 fine; 20 hrs. work<lb/>
'SSMWSSMSww,s,xmjA,Msss,ssssss,ss,sss?s<lb/>
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Committee Announces Symposium Date<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
The Phi Kappa Phi Sym-<lb/>
posium Committee is soliciting<lb/>
abstracts of papers from faculty<lb/>
and students to be considered for<lb/>
presentation during the annual<lb/>
symposium in February.<lb/>
The theme of the symposium is<lb/>
What's Right With America ?<lb/>
What's Wrong. Trenton Davis,<lb/>
president of the ECU Phi Kappa<lb/>
Phi Chapter and symposium<lb/>
planning committee chairman<lb/>
said the topic was chosen as, "a<lb/>
timely and significant theme<lb/>
which lends itself to treatment by<lb/>
all academic and professional<lb/>
disciplin We encourage all<lb/>
faculty J students to consider<lb/>
present a paper he said.<lb/>
Topiv 'gested by the com-<lb/>
mittee ude: Education,<lb/>
Politics ass Communication,<lb/>
Freedom 3overnment, Business<lb/>
and Inc , Values, Ethics, En-<lb/>
viron: al Protection,<lb/>
Econoi ystems, Values, and<lb/>
U.S. ie Policy. "Each<lb/>
disciplin hould deal with the<lb/>
theme f- a a creative approach<lb/>
with inr. .ative and constructive<lb/>
ideas th topics offer he said.<lb/>
The Symposium committee<lb/>
selected .he theme based on the<lb/>
variety of specialization at ECU.<lb/>
Health Careers Days Set<lb/>
K"l Nr?s Bureau<lb/>
The annual Health Careers<lb/>
Days At ECU will be held Friday,<lb/>
Nov. 2 and Monday Nov. 5, to<lb/>
acquaint students and graduates<lb/>
of ECU with job openings in<lb/>
health care delivery.<lb/>
Personnel recruiters from<lb/>
hospitals, health treatment<lb/>
centers and government agencies<lb/>
will meet interested students and<lb/>
alumni on Friday from 9:30 a.m.<lb/>
to 12:30 p.m. at the ECU Nursing<lb/>
Building. The site for Monday is<lb/>
the Carol Belk Allied Health<lb/>
Building from 1:30 p.m. to 4:30<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Furney James, director of the<lb/>
Career Planning and Placement<lb/>
Service at ECU said graduates as<lb/>
well as juniors and seniors are in-<lb/>
vited to participate and discuss<lb/>
details about employment<lb/>
possibilities. Freshmen and<lb/>
sophomores considering a nurs-<lb/>
ing or allied health major are also<lb/>
invited to attend and meet the<lb/>
representatives to learn more<lb/>
about careers in health and<lb/>
paramedical fields. No prior ap-<lb/>
pointments are necessary.<lb/>
Among the areas of employ-<lb/>
ment to be represented are nurs-<lb/>
ing, physical and occupational<lb/>
therapy, medical technology,<lb/>
social and corrections work,<lb/>
special education, ar.d dietetics.<lb/>
f<lb/>
O<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
OAKWOOD HOMES<lb/>
PROUDLY SUPPORTS<lb/>
THE PIRATES AND<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Just like ECU. Ookwood Homes has been<lb/>
o part of the growth of Greenville and eastern<lb/>
North Carolina for years Quality and service<lb/>
- the hallmark of two great institutions! Both<lb/>
helping friends to a better life<lb/>
"GO PIRATES"<lb/>
til<lb/>
O<lb/>
HOMES<lb/>
o o<lb/>
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!Q O!<lb/>
After a formal presentation of<lb/>
the paper, Davis said, the student<lb/>
winner will have a chance to<lb/>
answer various questions from<lb/>
the audience concerning the<lb/>
topic believe we'll get a large<lb/>
response because everyone has an<lb/>
opinion on what is right and<lb/>
wrong with America.<lb/>
Also as an added incentive to<lb/>
students, two selected papers<lb/>
from students will receive cash<lb/>
awards of $100 each. "The best<lb/>
paper submitted will be included<lb/>
in the Symposium program. I<lb/>
realize $100 is not much money<lb/>
he said, "but it is quite an honor<lb/>
for one to present his paper to the<lb/>
Symposium<lb/>
Students will need to have a<lb/>
rough draft available by Jan. 10.<lb/>
"Though an abstract is not<lb/>
necessary from the students, they<lb/>
may still submit one to us<lb/>
Davis said.<lb/>
Faculty members are also en-<lb/>
couraged to present a paper, but<lb/>
they will need to submit a one-<lb/>
page abstract before Nov. 21.<lb/>
"The advantage of a faculty-<lb/>
member submitting a paper<lb/>
Davis said, "is it can count<lb/>
towards their tenure and promo-<lb/>
tion Also, selected papers will<lb/>
be published in a campus journal<lb/>
The ProceedingsIt is always<lb/>
good for anyone to have their<lb/>
work published he added. An-<lb/>
nouncement of the faculty papers<lb/>
will be released in early<lb/>
December.<lb/>
I<lb/>
2510 E. 10th St. Next To Pizza Hut<lb/>
"If you have to do your own Laundry, do it in style<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
S1H Abortion from 1? to 18 weeks at addi-<lb/>
tional cost Pregnanc 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/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 W?st Morgan St.<lb/>
RoUigh, NC<lb/>
PAPA<lb/>
KATZ<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
Draft Nite<lb/>
All the Draft You Can Drink<lb/>
Ladies $2.00<lb/>
$1.00 with date between<lb/>
8:30-10:00<lb/>
Membership Availale At<lb/>
The Door For $1.00<lb/>
Men $3.00<lb/>
If Killian's Irish Red<lb/>
is a ten,<lb/>
German beer is a nein.<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 nch,<lb/>
incredibly smooth taste<lb/>
of Killian's Red Ale<lb/>
So the next "time<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/>
inLUANSKET)<lb/>
r?Ti ??? ?? j cfc?(iiii.iwi kMMMt?? ???. !?-<lb/>
"V<lb/>
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What.  Hi. ritj 1 KM 1  . it-<lb/>
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. i -SL.rt- SOC " - ? ? '?? ' jUSt! r<lb/>
ail st ?r: <lb/>
. Better race re at<lb/>
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. - e?' ?? :re ?? 1 ?<lb/>
Wheni Mtiere sloes . - "?? rganization Beet<lb/>
Tie schedule for the I  - is<lb/>
. ?  t-  - ? - - - g St udent<lb/>
Cent . <lb/>
. Mow caber a, -  H.S.C.<lb/>
. Nc.Der IS, - - H.S.C.<lb/>
. Roveatoer 29, - s.c.<lb/>
. December b . -  v.<lb/>
Who<lb/>
. - f r . .  - 51<lb/>
v Ml 1 It ion<lb/>
"<lb/>
MINORITY STUDENT ORGANIZATION<lb/>
How<lb/>
M ct-rsnip is open i I - - ??<lb/>
t tist Carolina University -<lb/>
.  -evo in the uu ses of tin<lb/>
' .a' i it'<lb/>
. hcv a aesT"e to ??  1 a<lb/>
the yaais r the oryanizaf<lb/>
an  '( onn? a ner' f the Hi t "?<lb/>
.Jf<lb/>
All interested persons are invited to attend the<lb/>
meeting today. No. 1 at 4:30 Room 221<lb/>
Mendenhail<lb/>
? ??'??.<lb/>
?0M<lb/>
mm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0004"/><lb/>
QKre Eafit t&amp;wcalMan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. - , ,rmu.<lb/>
Greg Rideout. ???,&amp;??,<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. .??w jt pIFTR7A?<lb/>
D J . I . rit I KZAK, Director oj Adverimng<lb/>
RANDY MEWS, ? ANTHONY Martin s<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. ?, ToM NoRTON rd( <lb/>
BILL AUSTIN, cn-t. w M(KE MAyo namum<lb/>
November I, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Responsibility<lb/>
Reagan Must Answer Press<lb/>
Government officials must meet<lb/>
the press and answer for their ac-<lb/>
tions. The present administration<lb/>
doesn't seem to believe this. We<lb/>
now have an administration happi-<lb/>
ly shirking the responsibility of<lb/>
facing the public, and the press is<lb/>
having a hard time finding a way<lb/>
to make it do so.<lb/>
New York Times columnist<lb/>
James Reston notes that Reagan<lb/>
has "the best public relations<lb/>
team" ever to move to<lb/>
Washington. They duck the press<lb/>
better than anyone since Nixon.<lb/>
Letting him face the public in an<lb/>
unprepared way, they know, will<lb/>
show his ignorance and his inabili-<lb/>
ty to grasp facts. We are in the age,<lb/>
as the Doonesbury comic strip<lb/>
laments, of the helicopter question<lb/>
? a shouted interrogative that gets<lb/>
a quip reply.<lb/>
Reporters can't seem to pierce<lb/>
the Reagan armor; maybe thev<lb/>
aren't trying hard enough. But, the<lb/>
sad fact is that the public doesn't<lb/>
want to hear that Reagan constant-<lb/>
ly makes mistakes; no one is hear-<lb/>
ing when print journalists correct<lb/>
the president's gaffes. It is TV they<lb/>
listen to, and it is there that the ad-<lb/>
ministration is at its best. Quick<lb/>
snippets and paid commercials<lb/>
have taken the place of the colum-<lb/>
nist's insight. Americans" don't<lb/>
want to know. They want image,<lb/>
not substance.<lb/>
What can be done? Well,<lb/>
nothing as long as Americans<lb/>
refuse to hear anything that<lb/>
doesn't directly affect them. The<lb/>
United States is beginning a selfish<lb/>
phase, one that could have sad<lb/>
repercussions if not reversed. We<lb/>
just continue to sweep the bad<lb/>
under the rug.<lb/>
The prospects for a second<lb/>
Reagan term are even darker. He<lb/>
will be free from answering to<lb/>
anyone but himself. The public is<lb/>
quick now to place journalists in a<lb/>
low-regard category. But, if<lb/>
something happens that irks them,<lb/>
and no one is there to investigate,<lb/>
they'll be crying for help. Let's<lb/>
hope by that time the power of the<lb/>
press has not been badly eroded. If<lb/>
it has, no one will be there to<lb/>
answer their call.<lb/>
YOU KNOW n$ A<lb/>
BAP m WHEN<lb/>
60 MINUTES<lb/>
SHOWS UPAT<lb/>
VOURPOOR<lb/>
.Burns A WORSE W Ml?<lb/>
wesiMmw shows up<lb/>
ATTWeRS<lb/>
Veer Right At Election<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Helms Is The Man<lb/>
The most outrageous and absolutely<lb/>
hilarious advertisement in the Helms-<lb/>
Hunt senate race, occurred a few weeks<lb/>
ago. The ad says something like.<lb/>
"Jesse Helms is out to push 'his'<lb/>
religious views on 'your' children 1<lb/>
know desperation when I hear it.<lb/>
Jesse Helms is supported by a great<lb/>
many people. Some of these people are<lb/>
church affiliated people and religious<lb/>
leaders. Jim Hunt is supported bv a<lb/>
great many people also. Some of these<lb/>
people are also church people and<lb/>
religious leaders. Yet with Jesse Helms<lb/>
it is a crime. Why is this?<lb/>
Jesse Helms and his supporters do<lb/>
not want to force "their" religious<lb/>
views on anyone. They do want to pro-<lb/>
tect "our" religious rights in this coun-<lb/>
try. Notice that I said "our" rights in-<lb/>
stead of "theirs Most of the people<lb/>
in this state believe in God and support<lb/>
school prayer. That is proven. It is time<lb/>
the Democrats stop telling us what we<lb/>
believe in.<lb/>
The tales of Jim Hunt being a pro-<lb/>
gressive successful governor are also<lb/>
somewhat less than accurate. In<lb/>
1972-73, North Carolina teacher salary<lb/>
levels were ranked 27th in the United<lb/>
States. After 10 years, including eight<lb/>
years of Jim Hunt, the teacher salary<lb/>
levels dropped to 44th in the nation.<lb/>
Also, SAT scores are still some 68<lb/>
points below the national average. Is<lb/>
this progressive?<lb/>
Jim Hunt is proud of the fact that<lb/>
the state budget has been balanced<lb/>
under his administration. He doesn't<lb/>
mention, of course, that the state con-<lb/>
stitution requires a balanced budget.<lb/>
Jesse Helms has been a strong leader<lb/>
in the Senate. He stands up strong for<lb/>
his constituency. If Jim Hunt wins,<lb/>
look what we have lost. We stand a big<lb/>
chance of losing the conservative con-<lb/>
trol of the Senate. President Reagan<lb/>
then will have neither house of Con-<lb/>
gress to help him. We aJso will no<lb/>
longer have a North Carolina senator<lb/>
as chairman of the Senate Agricultural<lb/>
Committee. Perhaps the worst pro-<lb/>
blem of a Jim Hunt victory is that we<lb/>
would no longer have our Jesse Helms<lb/>
to counter the extreme liberal side of<lb/>
the Senate. Radical senators like Ted<lb/>
Kennedy, would lose a vital opposition<lb/>
and would gain more power. We need<lb/>
Jesse Helms.<lb/>
One last issue which is important to<lb/>
me and so many other people is the<lb/>
abortion issue. Let us be realistic.<lb/>
Abortion is the most hateful, uncaring<lb/>
form of murder on earth. Tiny children<lb/>
are brutally dismembered and sucked<lb/>
from the wombs of their mothers to be<lb/>
discarded like garbage. Even so, Jim<lb/>
Hunt, Walter Mondale and Geraldine<lb/>
Ferraro, all civil rights supporters,<lb/>
refuse to allow legislation to outlaw<lb/>
abortion. Perhaps Jim, Fritz and Gerry<lb/>
would have liked to have been aborted.<lb/>
Abortion is an abomination and our<lb/>
senator, Jesse Helms, is against abor-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
As The East Carolinian said in its<lb/>
Oct. 30 editorial, "On Nov. 6, help tell<lb/>
America that North Carolinians are<lb/>
honest, compassionate, caring, tough<lb/>
people Vote for Jesse Helms in the<lb/>
Senate election.<lb/>
Billy Green<lb/>
Senior, Finance<lb/>
Wrong, Jesse<lb/>
Sen. Helms should check his facts ?<lb/>
or his memory - before calling anyone<lb/>
a "consummate liar<lb/>
In 1981, Sen. Helms sponsored<lb/>
several measures that would necessitate<lb/>
banning the use of intrauterine devices<lb/>
(IUDs). Both S.1741 and S.J. Res. 19<lb/>
define human life as beginning the mo-<lb/>
ment the ovum is fertilized. S. 158<lb/>
defines "person" to include the un-<lb/>
born. IUDs prevent the implantation<lb/>
of the fertilized ovum (a human being<lb/>
according to Sen. Helms) in the uterus!<lb/>
This is early abortion.<lb/>
If I know this, why doesn't Sen.<lb/>
Helms? Or maybe he doesn't<lb/>
remember those bills. Sen. Helms owes<lb/>
Gov. Hunt an apology.<lb/>
Sharon G. Egan<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
By DENNIS KILCOYNE<lb/>
Well, here it comes. The end of an<lb/>
18-month campaign everybody is weary<lb/>
of, including activists like me.<lb/>
But this isn't just any election. It may<lb/>
be the most memorable we will have<lb/>
ever lived through. Analysts say this<lb/>
may become the most lopsided<lb/>
presidential race in history. The senate<lb/>
contest in this state is outranked in im-<lb/>
portance only by the Reagan-Mondale<lb/>
battle. And for a change, the<lb/>
governor's race is a serious, down-to-<lb/>
the-wire fight. The outcomes of these<lb/>
crucial elections will have lasting effect<lb/>
on our state and nation. And in my opi-<lb/>
nion the only rational choice is<lb/>
Republican.<lb/>
In the presidential race we have a<lb/>
popular and successful incumbent and a<lb/>
challenger who played a crucial role in<lb/>
the malaise of the Carter administra-<lb/>
tion. Reagan has presided over the na-<lb/>
tion's most explosive economic<lb/>
recovery since WWII, a program of<lb/>
peace through renewed military<lb/>
strength, and a blooming national pride<lb/>
unlike anything we have seen.<lb/>
Americans, particularly young folks<lb/>
like us, are feeling good about their na-<lb/>
tion and themselves, a condition even<lb/>
Mondale credited Reagan with. Mon-<lb/>
dale, on the other hand, was an ar-<lb/>
chitect of the disastrous Carter ad-<lb/>
ministration policies. And did you<lb/>
know that Mondale's U.S. Senate<lb/>
voting record was even more left-wing<lb/>
than that of the radical George<lb/>
McGovern. Mondale is out of touch<lb/>
with the feelings of college students. He<lb/>
represents high inflation, high taxes,<lb/>
unemployment, weakness, and g m.<lb/>
As President Reagan has said. Why<lb/>
would we ever want to go back to . ere<lb/>
we were just four short years ago.<lb/>
In the emotional Senate race, rtfy<lb/>
one thing is certain. After the demon,<lb/>
one set of activists will be depr j<lb/>
another will be euphoric. ,th<lb/>
Reagan's popularity increasing, i; nay<lb/>
pull Jesse Helms to victory. Like hi- i or<lb/>
not, you have to admit he is a ma of<lb/>
principles. Witness his stand agains; he<lb/>
King holiday. As our former Senator,<lb/>
Sam Ervin, said, "I admire Sen. Helms<lb/>
because he is very courageous. Many<lb/>
men in public life are intelligent. But<lb/>
there are few courageous<lb/>
Jim Hunt, on the other hand, is<lb/>
about as unprincipled a politician as<lb/>
we've seen. Like his crony, former Sen.<lb/>
Bob Morgan, he cannot rise above the<lb/>
level of the good ole' bov network.<lb/>
Always testing the political winds. Hunt<lb/>
has difficulty deciding where he stands<lb/>
on issues. But deep down he is an in-<lb/>
stinctive liberal, willing to accom-<lb/>
modate himself to America's left-wing<lb/>
establishment. If he makes it to the<lb/>
Senate, he will be compelled to do the<lb/>
bidding of those who got him elected ?<lb/>
the union bosses who are unconcerned<lb/>
about North Carolina's welfare, and<lb/>
the defeatists, for instance. And ? the<lb/>
worse for North Carolina ? he will not<lb/>
get Helms' seat on the Agriculture<lb/>
Committee, for there are many other<lb/>
senior Senators waiting in line for that<lb/>
post. Only Helms' power and influence<lb/>
can preserve the agricultural programs<lb/>
crucial to our state's economv. Only<lb/>
Helms can give us the principled leader-<lb/>
ship we need.<lb/>
Jim Martin versus Rufus Edmisten.<lb/>
What an easy choice! Martin has had<lb/>
the momentum from day cne and now<lb/>
leads Edmisten in the polls. The people<lb/>
of North Carolina are realizing what<lb/>
the voters of his ninth congressional<lb/>
district have known for yearv Jim v<lb/>
tin's record in Congress proves h<lb/>
man of ability, honesty and fairne<lb/>
Governor, Jim Martin will work su<lb/>
cessfully with Democrats, a he<lb/>
Congress.<lb/>
Edmisten's character and perl<lb/>
mance as Attorney General are the<lb/>
reasons why he may lose. Demo.<lb/>
are deserting him in drovev S<lb/>
employees who are not Edmisten<lb/>
tisans are fleeing in terror to th<lb/>
Martin camp, convinced they will<lb/>
their jobs if Edmisten is elected. And<lb/>
his record as Attorney General is one"<lb/>
constant avoidance and neglect or t<lb/>
enforcement, claiming always. '<lb/>
not m jurisdiction The choice<lb/>
governor is between vindicmene<lb/>
incompetence or inspiring leade-<lb/>
An even easier choice is for our<lb/>
district congressional seat. Ability<lb/>
issue in this race, and Republican Herb<lb/>
Lee Offers vigorous leadervh.r and<lb/>
strong support for President Re<lb/>
Incumbent Democrat Walter Jones<lb/>
weary veteran who should be re-<lb/>
man whose leadership has a ati<lb/>
Many voters believe Jones v stffl rr?<lb/>
conservative he was when fin<lb/>
in 1966. NO! In the last few yea-<lb/>
been captured by the Washingto<lb/>
establishment and now votes wit<lb/>
liberal Geraldine Ferarro 80 per.<lb/>
the time. I know, because I researched<lb/>
his record.<lb/>
All considerations might lead you I<lb/>
believe I'm a partisan Republican. N<lb/>
way. I'm a conservative first, and 1<lb/>
simply believe that from President<lb/>
Congress, from U.S. Senate to state<lb/>
Senate, the Republican alternative -<lb/>
superior. It's a choice betweer<lb/>
Republican success and Democr<lb/>
malaise. And nothing succeeds like suc-<lb/>
cess.<lb/>
(Editor's note: A Democrat will tt<lb/>
you why you should vote for his par<lb/>
on Tuesday.<lb/>
Electoral College Flunks The Test<lb/>
Hv IIVK.ILTD irkinn a . ? <lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
During this era of rapid technological<lb/>
advancement, one anachronism after<lb/>
another is rapidly abolished. Yet one of<lb/>
the most untimely systems still remains<lb/>
in place ? the Electoral College.<lb/>
Most Americans assume that when<lb/>
they cast their votes on Election Day,<lb/>
they are voting for the a presidential<lb/>
candidate. In actuality, they are voting<lb/>
for a slate of electors who then vote to<lb/>
select the president. These electors serve<lb/>
no logical purpose and are an impedi-<lb/>
ment to the democratic process<lb/>
Adjectives such as "archaic<lb/>
undemocratic, complex, ambiguous in-<lb/>
direct and dangerous" have been used<lb/>
to describe the Electoral College ? apt<lb/>
descriptions.<lb/>
When the Founding Fathers devised<lb/>
the Electoral College, they did so for<lb/>
legitimate reasons. They were uncertain<lb/>
of how citizens would respond to the<lb/>
freedom of the newly founded<lb/>
democracy and thus were conservative<lb/>
in their estimates of the public and the<lb/>
policies they set.<lb/>
The option of having the executive<lb/>
chosen by the legislature was rejected as<lb/>
leaning too much towards dictatorship.<lb/>
On the other hand, the framers were<lb/>
hesitant to allow the executive to be<lb/>
elected directly, fearing this would pro-<lb/>
vide him with too much power.<lb/>
As a result of sentiments such as this<lb/>
the system of electors was developed.<lb/>
State legislatures were entrusted with<lb/>
selecting a predetermined number of<lb/>
electors. Based on what they believed to<lb/>
be best, these electors would select the<lb/>
president and vice president.<lb/>
From the beginning, the number of<lb/>
electors possessed by each state has<lb/>
been the same as the total of represen-<lb/>
tatives and senators it has. The presi-<lb/>
dent was the individual with the highest<lb/>
number of electoral votes, while the<lb/>
vice president was the man who came in<lb/>
second.<lb/>
Many flaws in the system became<lb/>
readily apparent.<lb/>
In the election of 1796, John Adams,<lb/>
a Federalist, was elected president ?<lb/>
with Thomas Jefferson, a Republican,<lb/>
as his vice president.<lb/>
By 1860, all the states had modified<lb/>
the procedure, allowing the electors to<lb/>
be chosen by direct election and party<lb/>
representatives.<lb/>
Under current Electoral College pro-<lb/>
cedures, there are a total of 538 votes; a<lb/>
majority of 270 is required for a can-<lb/>
didate to win. Each state's electors are<lb/>
chosen by popular vote. For example, if<lb/>
a Republican candidate wins the most<lb/>
votes, a block of electors is<lb/>
automatically selected to cast votes for<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Electoral votes are cast the first Mon-<lb/>
day after the second Wednesday in<lb/>
December. The votes are then counted<lb/>
in a joint session of Congress. If a ma-<lb/>
jority of the electoral vote is not receiv-<lb/>
ed by a candidate, the election goes to<lb/>
the House of Representatives, where a<lb/>
president is selected from the three top<lb/>
candidates. The vice presidential race is<lb/>
decided between the two top candidates<lb/>
by the Senate.<lb/>
An obvious flaw is that each state<lb/>
delegation has only one vote; if they<lb/>
cannot reach a consensus, they lose that<lb/>
vote. For a state to lose its voice in the<lb/>
selection of this country's executive is a<lb/>
breach of democracy.<lb/>
Furthermore, it is entirely possible<lb/>
for a candidate to win election without<lb/>
earning a majority of the popular vote<lb/>
another violation of the basic tenets of<lb/>
democracy. Fourteen presidents have<lb/>
been elected to office without winning a<lb/>
majority.<lb/>
In addition, electoral votes are not in-<lb/>
dicative of the amount of popular vote<lb/>
received. In 1948, Harry Truman had<lb/>
49.5 percent of the popular vote and 57<lb/>
percent of the electoral vote, while his<lb/>
opponent Thomas Dewey received 45.1<lb/>
percent of the popular vote and 35.6<lb/>
percent of the electoral vote. This elec-<lb/>
tion could have been thrown into the<lb/>
House by a shift of less than .6 percent<lb/>
of the popular vote for Truman in two<lb/>
states.<lb/>
Electors also have a certain amount<lb/>
of freedom of choice. An elector is sup-<lb/>
posedly legally bound to vote for the<lb/>
candidate of his party. However,<lb/>
penalties provided by some states for<lb/>
those who do not vote as they should<lb/>
are usually not enforced.<lb/>
If the electors vote as they wish, it is<lb/>
unjust; if they are mere rubberstamps,<lb/>
it is a waste of time and money.<lb/>
With the swing in population to the<lb/>
Sunbelt states, some states are alloted<lb/>
more electoral votes per person than<lb/>
others, also an unfair situation.<lb/>
A system which allows a candidate to<lb/>
take office without receiving a majority<lb/>
of the vote, which allows electors to<lb/>
vote against the will of the general<lb/>
public and which makes some votes<lb/>
count for more in a nation of "one per-<lb/>
son, one vote" is clearly undemocratic,<lb/>
unnecessary and unconstitutional. It is<lb/>
time for the Electoral College to be<lb/>
abolished ? it no longer serves the pur-<lb/>
pose for which it was created and is, in<lb/>
fact, a potential hazard to the<lb/>
democratic election system in this coun-<lb/>
try.<lb/>
!<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Campus F<lb/>
E.C.<lb/>
The East Carolinian has pulU<lb/>
one. I have always enjoved<lb/>
telhgent, logical editorialsbut<lb/>
dorsement of President Reagan<lb/>
reeling Not only is it unknown<lb/>
East Carolinian to share cons<lb/>
views, but I was amazed<lb/>
ridiculous claims about the pre?<lb/>
past administrations The I<lb/>
nian claims that a Derm <lb/>
ministration of four vr<lb/>
Reagan with lots of problem?<lb/>
pie would wake up, maybe<lb/>
see that President Ford had<lb/>
ith real inflation problem<lb/>
sion How can anyone tell me t<lb/>
economy would have been d<lb/>
Ford had been re-elected? P-<lb/>
Nixon was also questioned<lb/>
tion. The roots of the ecc 1<lb/>
blems go back much far' I<lb/>
administration, and no one r <lb/>
be blamed The only thing h .<lb/>
accomplished is taking<lb/>
fiation and the pains of mt- <lb/>
and tuking them in the iargev:<lb/>
in history, a temporar.<lb/>
next four yearv ti<lb/>
record inflation a<lb/>
result of the del . I<lb/>
It is also claimed that Re. j<lb/>
wasteful spending Ma<lb/>
education a waste0 Rea<lb/>
education by 25 percent<lb/>
just talking about studa<lb/>
public schools across the cou<lb/>
sues are too big. many tea j<lb/>
ery poor and teache-<lb/>
ridiculousiy low<lb/>
Reagan loves to attack Dc<lb/>
being big taxers and spende<lb/>
too will have to raise :ae<lb/>
reduce the deficit, <lb/>
fair Nftare on a<lb/>
budget<lb/>
Reaga:<lb/>
be getting out of I<lb/>
good Just look at Leba<lb/>
pie. A bunch or" soldi 1<lb/>
ing to keep peace - -<lb/>
themselves from terrorists Reaga<lb/>
other faults, also. He I i<lb/>
recently, to talk ? -<lb/>
has opposed many a:<lb/>
he is very chummy with j <lb/>
and other right-wing reiig: j<lb/>
The ever so .<lb/>
1<lb/>
1<lb/>
f<lb/>
- .<lb/>
N $<lb/>
si<lb/>
Csl<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
r<lb/>
??'?? ?T  "?' " - ?<lb/>
f<lb/>
-I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0005"/><lb/>
r<lb/>
A WORSE W UN?N<lb/>
5W SHOWS UP<lb/>
AT TORS<lb/>
c7oft<lb/>
r<lb/>
Mto<lb/>
years: Jim Mar-<lb/>
- ?s proves him a<lb/>
md fairness. As<lb/>
i will work sue-<lb/>
as he did in<lb/>
and pertor-<lb/>
al arc the chief<lb/>
se. Democrats<lb/>
droves. State<lb/>
: not Edmisten par-<lb/>
ror to the Jim<lb/>
ey will lose<lb/>
elected. And<lb/>
?eral is one of<lb/>
lect of law<lb/>
ays, "That's<lb/>
IK 1 . r <lb/>
The choice for<lb/>
:tiveness and<lb/>
y adership.<lb/>
ice in tor our first<lb/>
seal Ability is the<lb/>
d Republican Herb<lb/>
eadership and<lb/>
- President Reagan.<lb/>
t Democrat V liter Jones is a<lb/>
? e retired, a<lb/>
has a atrophied.<lb/>
beficve Jones m stilf the<lb/>
en first elected<lb/>
the last feu years he has<lb/>
the V ashington leftist<lb/>
and now votes with ultra-<lb/>
80 percent of<lb/>
e I researched<lb/>
ms might lead you to<lb/>
an Republican. No<lb/>
scrvative first, and 1<lb/>
from President to<lb/>
U.S. Senate to state<lb/>
Republican alternative is<lb/>
a choice between<lb/>
and Democrat<lb/>
: nothing succeeds like suc-<lb/>
A Democrat wilt tell<lb/>
i should r nis party<lb/>
The Test<lb/>
ther violation of the basic tenets of<lb/>
emocracy. Fourteen presidents have<lb/>
sen elected to office without winning a<lb/>
najor<lb/>
In addition, electoral votes are not in-<lb/>
dicative ot the amount of popular vote<lb/>
Received. In 1948, Harry Truman had<lb/>
f9.5 percent of the popular vote and 57<lb/>
bercent of the electoral vote, while his<lb/>
bpponent Thomas Dewey received 45.1<lb/>
bercent of the popular vote and 356<lb/>
percent of the electoral vote. This dee-<lb/>
pen could have been thrown into the<lb/>
louse by a shift of less than .6 percent<lb/>
f the popular vote for Truman in two<lb/>
Ttates.<lb/>
Electors also have a certain amount<lb/>
If freedom of choice. An elector is sup-<lb/>
nedly legally bound to vote for the<lb/>
mdidate of his party. However,<lb/>
snalties provided by some states for<lb/>
kose who do not vote as they should<lb/>
re usually not enforced.<lb/>
if the electors vote as they wish, it is<lb/>
bust; if they are mere rubberstamps,<lb/>
jis a waste of time and money.<lb/>
With the swing in population to the<lb/>
nbelt states, some states are alloted<lb/>
re electoral votes per person than<lb/>
iers, also an unfair situation.<lb/>
A system which allows a candidate to<lb/>
ice office without receiving a majority<lb/>
the vote, which allows electors to<lb/>
te against the will of the general<lb/>
Ibiic and which makes some votes<lb/>
unt for more in a nation of "one per-<lb/>
i. one vote" is clearly undemocratic,<lb/>
necessary and unconstitutional. It is<lb/>
ie for the Electoral College to be<lb/>
Johshed ? it no longer serves the pur-<lb/>
se for which it was created and is, in<lb/>
a potential hazard to the<lb/>
nocratic election system in this coun-<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 1984<lb/>
E. C. Editorial Ridiculous, Illogical, Unintelligent<lb/>
: Carolinian has pulled a fast Democratic n?rtv ?ffc ? .a ?<lb/>
The East Carolinian has pulled a fast<lb/>
one. have always enjoyed the in-<lb/>
telligent, logical editorials, but the en-<lb/>
dorsement of President Reagan left me<lb/>
jeeimg. Not only is it unknown for The<lb/>
fcast Carolinian to share conservative<lb/>
viewS but I was amazed at the<lb/>
ridiculous claims about the present and<lb/>
Past administrations. The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian claims that a Democratic ad-<lb/>
ministration of four years ago left<lb/>
Reagan with lots of problems. If peo-<lb/>
ple would wake up, maybe they would<lb/>
see that President Ford had to deal<lb/>
with real inflation problems and reces-<lb/>
sion. How can anyone tell me that the<lb/>
economy would have been different if<lb/>
Ford had been re-elected? President<lb/>
Nixon was also questioned about infla-<lb/>
tion. The roots of the economic pro-<lb/>
blems go back much farther than one<lb/>
administration, and no one person can<lb/>
be blamed. The only thing Reagan has<lb/>
accomplished is taking the pains of in-<lb/>
flation and the pains of interest rates<lb/>
and sticking them in the largest deficits<lb/>
in history, a temporary solution. In the<lb/>
next four years, this country will see<lb/>
record inflation and interest rates as a<lb/>
result of the deficits.<lb/>
It is also claimed that Reagan has cut<lb/>
wasteful spending. Maybe, but is<lb/>
education a waste? Reagan has cut<lb/>
education by 25 percent, and I'm not<lb/>
just talking about student loans. In<lb/>
public schools across the country, class<lb/>
sizes are too big, many teachers are<lb/>
very poor and teacher salaries are<lb/>
ridiculously low.<lb/>
Reagan loves to attack Democrats as<lb/>
being big taxers and spenders, but he<lb/>
too will have to raise taxes to try and<lb/>
reduce the deficit, and he spends his<lb/>
fair share on a ridiculous military<lb/>
budget.<lb/>
Reagan's strongest ability just may<lb/>
be getting out of his mistake looking<lb/>
good. Just look at Lebanon, for exam-<lb/>
ple. A bunch of soldiers are really go-<lb/>
ing to keep peace by defending<lb/>
themselves from terrorists. Reagan has<lb/>
other faults, also. He has refused, until<lb/>
recently, to talk with the Soviets; he<lb/>
has opposed many arms treaties, and<lb/>
he is very chummy with Jerrv Falewell<lb/>
and other right-wing religious fanatics.<lb/>
The "ever so weakening"<lb/>
Democratic party offers a candidate<lb/>
that is far superior to President<lb/>
Reagan. His name is Walter Mondale.<lb/>
Unfortunately, it does look as though<lb/>
President Reagan will "kick ass" on<lb/>
Nov. 6. Uh, well, here we go again.<lb/>
Bern McCrady<lb/>
Sophomore, G.C.<lb/>
Tobacco Talk<lb/>
Tobacco. It is North Carolina's cash<lb/>
crop. Jesse Helms has run commercials<lb/>
explaining how he saved the tobacco<lb/>
program. How did the tobacco pro-<lb/>
gram get in such bad shape? Senator<lb/>
Helms' repeated "no" votes have<lb/>
angered his fellow senators. To "get<lb/>
even with Jesse senators from all<lb/>
across our nation vote against legisla-<lb/>
tion that is beneficial to North<lb/>
Carolina. Helms may not have saved<lb/>
the tobacco program if he hadn't<lb/>
received help from congressmen like<lb/>
Charlie Rose, Tim Valentine and<lb/>
Charlie Whitley. Even now, the tobac-<lb/>
co program's future is very unstable.<lb/>
Jesse Helms may be experienced, but<lb/>
nis type of experience is definitely not<lb/>
what North Carolina now needs. Jim<lb/>
Hunt has led North Carolina to pro-<lb/>
sperity. Jim Hunt is fighting for what<lb/>
is best for North Carolina. When Jim<lb/>
Hunt is elected to the U.S. Senate,<lb/>
North Carolina will be weli<lb/>
represented.<lb/>
Ross Ren frow<lb/>
Sophomore, G.C.<lb/>
Right Talks<lb/>
Without freedom, there is no real<lb/>
peace. Contrary to what a recent let-<lb/>
teradvertisement in the Oct. 11 East<lb/>
Carolinian ? obviously propulgated<lb/>
by the radical left ? would lead you to<lb/>
believe, the Reagan administration is<lb/>
not trying to foment uprising and<lb/>
revolution in Central America. Rather,<lb/>
through a balanced program of<lb/>
Economic development and military<lb/>
assistance, our government is trying to<lb/>
strengthen those countries with<lb/>
democratic forms of government.<lb/>
Nicaragua, the new "darling" of the<lb/>
liberal torchbearers here in the United<lb/>
States, is the real culprit of unrest in<lb/>
Central America. Is it not ironic that<lb/>
these radical whiners bitch, moan and<lb/>
bellyache about President Reagan's<lb/>
support of the contras, yet turn a cheek<lb/>
at the Marxist Sandinistas support of<lb/>
the war-mongering Communist rebels<lb/>
who are trying to forcibly overthrow<lb/>
the democratically elected government<lb/>
of El Salvador?<lb/>
Four years after the debacle of<lb/>
weakness, humiliation and loss of<lb/>
honor during the Carter-Mondale<lb/>
years, America is back strong, free<lb/>
and proud. Keep it that way, vote<lb/>
Republican.<lb/>
Charles D.<lb/>
BSBA '83<lb/>
Atlanta<lb/>
Shavitz<lb/>
Why Art?<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
To the art school vandals:<lb/>
Due to your extreme immaturity and<lb/>
stupidity, you have successfully<lb/>
prevented serious art students from en-<lb/>
joying the privilege of having access to<lb/>
a facility 24 hours a day. You may not<lb/>
have any idea what we do, but with our<lb/>
schedules and workload, it is<lb/>
necessary, more times than not, to<lb/>
work past 1 a.m. In case you are'not<lb/>
aware, the art building is now closed<lb/>
TODAYI AM FORMALLY PLAC1N6<lb/>
MY MANHOOD IN A BUND TRUST<lb/>
SO THAT I CAN CONTINUE TO<lb/>
 SERYB RONALD REA6AN UJITHOUT<lb/>
I COMPROMISING Sif<lb/>
? MYSELF. (f -r?ci<lb/>
I TURN OVER Mi? MANHOOD'MTU<lb/>
GREAT RELUCTANCE. A5I TOLD<lb/>
IOALTBR MONDALE, IV LAY My<lb/>
RECORD ON MANHOOD UPA6AINST<lb/>
HSANYDAY' r<lb/>
 Sk<lb/>
1-7 a.m. on weekdays and 12-7 a.m. on<lb/>
weekends.<lb/>
Not only have you disrupted the<lb/>
work schedule of 750 art students, you<lb/>
have also destroyed personal property<lb/>
and years of dedicated work. By<lb/>
destroying those sculptures, you have<lb/>
destroyed a part of the artists<lb/>
themselves.<lb/>
We hope that someday you will<lb/>
realize the seriousness of your actions.<lb/>
Rick Higgins<lb/>
Junior, Comm. Arts<lb/>
Walter Stanford<lb/>
Junior, Comm. Arts<lb/>
Richard Barnes<lb/>
Junior, Comm. Arts<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
M VICE PRSSIDWT. FOR<lb/>
THE RECORD, COULD YOU<lb/>
TELLUS JUSTUHAT YOU<lb/>
MEAN BY "MANHOOD'? n ' I<lb/>
HJEIL. ACCORD<lb/>
INGTOTHB<lb/>
AMBKJCAN<lb/>
H&amp;VTA6E<lb/>
DICTIONARY<lb/>
THAT'S CKAY,<lb/>
SIR, I CAN<lb/>
LOOK IT UP<lb/>
YOU'KNOU, TH6RE ARE SO<lb/>
MAM MARVELOUS POtXieS<lb/>
C0MIN6 OUT OF THIS ADMIN-<lb/>
, iswavon, rrs just a joy<lb/>
: to serve ms sisr?i<lb/>
BUT IDONT THINK A PRESIDENT<lb/>
SHOULD EVER HAVE TDLOOKOVER<lb/>
HIS SHOULDER, AlMJAYS 14J0WER-<lb/>
ING IF HIS VICE PRESIDENT<lb/>
HAS A MIND OF &amp;- c " <lb/>
IT IS THUS A GREAT HONOR FOR<lb/>
ME TO SIGN THIS DOCUMENT<lb/>
PLACING MY MANHOOD IN A<lb/>
BUND TRUST, K)BE ADMIN-<lb/>
ISTERED BY OLD<lb/>
FAMILY FRIENDS'<lb/>
I'LL TAKE THAT<lb/>
P?NN0UJ,G6OR3e<lb/>
YOU BET, MR<lb/>
PRESIDENT' i<lb/>
j"??<lb/>
uMu.miwmmiM,iifffff?ffr.yivl?mr.l.JJlimUM,mm<lb/>
 MMMMMMMMMMfia . in<lb/>
CHRISTMAS<lb/>
???????? i mmm ???<lb/>
Over 200 Christmas presents<lb/>
through the month of November<lb/>
91,3fm <lb/>
ECU<lb/>
V<lb/>
JOIN THE SPRIT AND CALL<lb/>
757-6657<lb/>
When you hear them sleigh bells<lb/>
ringin' be the right caller<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
WIN<lb/>
WZMB wishes to thank these area merchants for making a<lb/>
November Christmas possible<lb/>
Carolina Opry House<lb/>
Subway<lb/>
J.B. 's Island Seafood<lb/>
Pirates Chest<lb/>
Bucaneer Movies<lb/>
Piquant Alley<lb/>
Blue Moon Cafe<lb/>
Apple Records<lb/>
Shirt Printery<lb/>
Pappa Katz<lb/>
Record Bar<lb/>
Frank's Pizza<lb/>
Olde Towne Inn<lb/>
Jeffreys Beer A Wine<lb/>
Marsh's Surf A Sea<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
For Heads Only<lb/>
??? <lb/>
fepst<lb/>
.?. Hodges?Bonds<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Wash Pub<lb/>
 'SSSS,  SSSSs<lb/>
?? ? I<lb/>
9<lb/>
-??!? m ?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
i<lb/>
K I<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0006"/><lb/>
-iyiJA?ICUANNOVEMBER I, 1984<lb/>
Eradicating Negative Images<lb/>
Organization Changes Name<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
sur Mnm<lb/>
The Society of United Liberal<lb/>
Students recently changed its<lb/>
name to the Minority Student<lb/>
Organization.<lb/>
"The name SOULS was work-<lb/>
ing more as a negative force<lb/>
rather than a positive one and the<lb/>
title MSO better states what the<lb/>
organization is all about said<lb/>
Jimmie Hackett, MSO president.<lb/>
The organization's name was<lb/>
changed from SOULS to MSO so<lb/>
people can automatically identify<lb/>
it, where they could not before,<lb/>
Hackett said.<lb/>
According to Hackett, the pur-<lb/>
pose of MSO is to pull together<lb/>
minorities and non-minorities to<lb/>
"make the campus community a<lb/>
better place for both One<lb/>
group activity is the showing of<lb/>
minority-related films to the cam-<lb/>
pus community in order to aid in<lb/>
a better understanding of minori-<lb/>
ty students<lb/>
Among the minority-related<lb/>
films scheduled for next semester<lb/>
are, .4 Raisin in the Sun,<lb/>
Watermelon Man and Guess<lb/>
Who's Coming To Dinner. The<lb/>
films will be sponsored by MSO<lb/>
and the Minority Arts Commit-<lb/>
tee.<lb/>
A membership drive is planned<lb/>
this week in order to promote the<lb/>
organization under its new name.<lb/>
Information will be available in a<lb/>
booth at the Student Supply<lb/>
Store. There will be a meeting to-<lb/>
day at 4p.m. in Mendenhall<lb/>
221 to inform students of the<lb/>
organization's purpose and<lb/>
goals.<lb/>
Throughout the semester,<lb/>
meetings will be held on<lb/>
Thursdays at 4:30. In addition, a<lb/>
carwash will be held Nov. 3, a<lb/>
doughnut sale Nov. 10 and a ball<lb/>
honoring Martin Luther King,<lb/>
Jr will be held in January.<lb/>
"We want the minority<lb/>
students to become a part of the<lb/>
campus Hackett said.<lb/>
MSO is open to all students<lb/>
who understand and believe in<lb/>
the purposes of the organization,<lb/>
Hackett said. Interested students<lb/>
should attend today's meeting or<lb/>
contact Hackett at 757-6611, Ext.<lb/>
220.<lb/>
e srops foR Coffee . . jUyjcN y.<lb/>
Perecnve" onus,<lb/>
1<lb/>
No MEEp opl you<lb/>
TO CxX VNVOUVP.<lb/>
To 14(4 -rbrH<lb/>
NCSL Devises New Constitution<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Staff Whur<lb/>
The ECU chapter of the North<lb/>
Carolina Student Legislature<lb/>
recently attended its monthly in-<lb/>
terim council. During interim<lb/>
council meetings, NCSL<lb/>
members from different schools<lb/>
come together, listen to speakers<lb/>
and pass resolutions.<lb/>
A new constitution was devised<lb/>
during the October meeting. The<lb/>
NCSL charter was updated and<lb/>
the constitution was rewritten so<lb/>
the two would correlate, accor-<lb/>
ding to Kirk Shelley, regional<lb/>
chairman for the organization.<lb/>
Shelley said NCSL's major<lb/>
event is the annual session, held<lb/>
in the old Capitol building in<lb/>
Raleigh in March. This session is<lb/>
comparable to a mock General<lb/>
Assembly. "The session is filled<lb/>
with intense debate Shelley<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Along with debated issues, bills<lb/>
are voted on and passed, then<lb/>
signed by the student governor.<lb/>
These bills are compiled and<lb/>
given to the N.C. General<lb/>
Assembly for consideration.<lb/>
Elections of state officers are also<lb/>
held during the March session.<lb/>
An interim council was spon-<lb/>
sored at ECU in January and<lb/>
Shelley said efforts are being<lb/>
made to sponsor another in the<lb/>
future. Individual chapters bid<lb/>
for the location of the interim<lb/>
councils.<lb/>
ECU was voted as having the<lb/>
most improved large school<lb/>
delegation during the last coun-<lb/>
cil, Shelley said.<lb/>
The NCSL is a non-partisan<lb/>
body. "It's not so much a policy-<lb/>
making organization but a learn-<lb/>
ing experience Shelley said.<lb/>
"The General Assembly really<lb/>
listens to us<lb/>
NCSL meetings are held Mon-<lb/>
days at 7 p.m. in Mendenhall.<lb/>
Support<lb/>
The<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
<lb/>
FISHERMAN<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
v<lb/>
THE ORIGINAL FAMILY STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Come To Western Sizziin For<lb/>
Bigger, Juicy Beef Tips<lb/>
JUST ASK FOR THE NO. 3!<lb/>
s<lb/>
Pitt Juveniles Counselors<lb/>
Seek ECU Volunteers<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
Two programs run by the Pitt<lb/>
County Juvenile Counselor's Of-<lb/>
fice are in need of volunteers, ac-<lb/>
cording to Pitt County<lb/>
counselors Lena McLamb and<lb/>
Brenda Teel.<lb/>
"We need volunteers who are<lb/>
willing to work with juvenile of-<lb/>
fenders McLamb said.<lb/>
Volunteers are needed to help the<lb/>
juvenile make sure he is doing his<lb/>
job and following orders.<lb/>
Volunteers will be expected to<lb/>
work with the juvenile two or<lb/>
three hours a week, she said. The<lb/>
Juvenile Services Restitution Pro-<lb/>
gram is a process whereby an of-<lb/>
fender makes a money or service<lb/>
payment to the victim of his<lb/>
crime in order to help repay his<lb/>
"debt back to society<lb/>
Teel manages the Juvenile<lb/>
Court Volunteer Program and is<lb/>
soliciting help from ECU<lb/>
students. The program relies on<lb/>
individuals who can help reform<lb/>
a child's behavior and be a role<lb/>
model for him. "We want the<lb/>
Fraternity<lb/>
Accepts<lb/>
A wards<lb/>
By SUSAN TACKER<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
For the 20th consecutive time,<lb/>
ECU's Tau chapter of the Phi<lb/>
Sigma Pi National Honor Frater-<lb/>
nity has won the Joseph M. Tor-<lb/>
chia Outstanding Chapter Award<lb/>
at the national convention. This<lb/>
year's convention was held in<lb/>
Arlington, Va this past<lb/>
weekend.<lb/>
The award was accepted by<lb/>
Tau chapter President Ken<lb/>
Scruggs, ECU's official delegate<lb/>
to the convention.<lb/>
Two local members were also<lb/>
elected to national office. Mike<lb/>
Hosey, an alumnus and member<lb/>
of the Phi Sigma Pi Alumni<lb/>
chapter in Raleigh, was reelected<lb/>
alumni representative for a se-<lb/>
cond two-year term.<lb/>
Linda Wilson, Tau chapter<lb/>
historian, was elected national<lb/>
historian.<lb/>
Tau chapter was established at<lb/>
ECU in 1936, making it one of<lb/>
the university's oldest fraternal<lb/>
organizations. The fraternity<lb/>
went coed in 1977 and all<lb/>
members are known as<lb/>
"brothers<lb/>
Students in all majors are ac-<lb/>
cepted into Phi Sigma Pi. A 3.2<lb/>
grade point average is required.<lb/>
child to become a productive<lb/>
member of society and to stay out<lb/>
of future trouble through the<lb/>
volunteer's help she said. The<lb/>
most active organization from<lb/>
ECU is Gamma Sigma Sigma, a<lb/>
national service sorority, and<lb/>
Teel said this is an excellent op-<lb/>
portunity for students to gain<lb/>
valuable experience with<lb/>
juveniles.<lb/>
Interested applicants need to<lb/>
go to the Juvenile Court Office,<lb/>
located in the Pitt County Cour-<lb/>
thouse.<lb/>
r<lb/>
Lunch &amp;. Dinner<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Wed. k Thur.<lb/>
No 3 Beet T ips<lb/>
S3.29<lb/>
wirvTrraMna.1<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!<lb/>
Help Yourself To<lb/>
 FISH FILLETS Breaded n Seasoned From<lb/>
3 Favorrte Shoney s Recipes<lb/>
 BaHed FISH FILLETS<lb/>
 Hot Vegetables, indudinq Fried Ofcra<lb/>
 Seafood Chowder<lb/>
 French Fries<lb/>
 Hushpupp?es<lb/>
FREE Potato Fixins Bar<lb/>
With Your Meal<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY<lb/>
5 PM ? 9 PM<lb/>
5B0NEYS<lb/>
Onh<lb/>
$4-99<lb/>
S5 99 with Salad ft Fn &amp;<lb/>
Spcatf fr?n s Pncaa<lb/>
305<lb/>
NC27U4<lb/>
7M-21M<lb/>
Read<lb/>
The Classifieds<lb/>
1?rfsssssssssssssssssssss,<lb/>
<lb/>
wmim v.v'h.w??i?w?M???,i ?. ??mw??,?J7t,<lb/>
Entry Date Nov. 9th<lb/>
Grey Art Gallery, 10-5<lb/>
Categories are Painting, Sculpture,<lb/>
Ceramics, Photography, Design<lb/>
(metals, wood, fibers), Graphic Art, Il-<lb/>
lustration, Drawing, and Mixed Media.<lb/>
Entry fee $1 per work, limit 3 pieces per<lb/>
student. For more info, contact the<lb/>
Rebel office at 757-6502. A copy of the<lb/>
rules is posted on the Rebel office 2nd<lb/>
floor publications building. Prize<lb/>
money donated by the Attic and<lb/>
Budweiser.<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
'<lb/>
M????<lb/>
Regardless of who you support for President,<lb/>
think hard about the race for U.S. Senate.<lb/>
What's at staHe for YOU?<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
High technology. Diversification. New markets<lb/>
New ideas. An energetic commitment to progress<lb/>
Jim Hunt brought that approach to North Carolina<lb/>
and he'll take that approach to the U.S. Senate.<lb/>
Education<lb/>
Excellence. Tough standards. The best in math<lb/>
and science education. Making us able to compete<lb/>
worldwide. Jim Hunt brought that leadership to<lb/>
North Carolina. He'll take that fight to the U S<lb/>
Senate.<lb/>
Personal freedom<lb/>
The right to make your own personal<lb/>
judgements about birth control and abortion A<lb/>
strong stand against bills such as Jesse Helms'<lb/>
S. 158 which would outlaw the IUD and many<lb/>
forms of the pill, and make all abortions, even in<lb/>
cases of rape and incest, a crime. Jim Hunt stood<lb/>
up for personal freedom in North Carolina. He 'II<lb/>
stand up for personal freedom in the U.S. Senate<lb/>
even against the power of the New Right and Jerry<lb/>
Fa I well's Moral Majority.<lb/>
Think about it. And vote for your future.<lb/>
Vote for Jim Hunt<lb/>
Paid for by the Jim Hunt Committee<lb/>
Ifir t<lb/>
Marchil<lb/>
Every cootributioi<lb/>
?feflflLflL up<lb/>
f. fc<lb/>
Mw<lb/>
. cS<lb/>
Jfe'1<lb/>
1F'JHI<lb/>
<lb/>
Biehn R<lb/>
B Mikr HAM<lb/>
One ECl teacl<lb/>
work as a teat<lb/>
fessor in the T'<lb/>
Year Award. I first me: P<lb/>
ECT ? we uved to pla<lb/>
was ver happ when I heat<lb/>
my interview with Don.<lb/>
MH: How did<lb/>
DB: With grea<lb/>
from two standpoints: one. the<lb/>
decision. 1 think a lot i<lb/>
to make the d? -<lb/>
sit recognizes good - v<lb/>
and alumni only pa<lb/>
their pnmar energ<lb/>
athletic The fad s<lb/>
MH: Do ? ?<lb/>
DB: Av a ptc<lb/>
meone who cared a<lb/>
the class a opposed to som? b v <lb/>
motions. 1 think that an a: <lb/>
you walk into and church and hea<lb/>
those who just go through the moi<lb/>
spiritual experience and are joyful i<lb/>
I think a lot of people a<lb/>
because the are teaching ser<lb/>
way, I think tho? c irses oughl to K. j<lb/>
the student isn't iikely to appreciate whj<lb/>
work. So I'd like hat part of the '<lb/>
those teachers considered in a different w,<lb/>
encounter smaller classes and hae more<lb/>
students.<lb/>
MH. Hou. would you define your phiiosci<lb/>
DB: That's a tough one. 1 suppose :o bnnl<lb/>
in every student is m philosophy 1 must<lb/>
wanted to be a teacher; there's a teacher<lb/>
happy unless I'm teaching somebody som<lb/>
is very had to put your finger on Teachii<lb/>
teaching somebod to nde a bicycle - liter<lb/>
of a book You just have to try it and<lb/>
somebody who's right next to you with a<lb/>
fall down, trv it again My first experieao<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
m<lb/>
? i m m m ,<lb/>
?a-i<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
 11<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0007"/><lb/>
I IU t AM i -K()1 INJMSI<lb/>
Style<lb/>
N i mm k i ivm4<lb/>
Marching Pirates Keep Fans Enlightened<lb/>
RMAPfS<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
AT<lb/>
?? '<lb/>
??, HC 27U4<lb/>
S4-2TM<lb/>
Of?<lb/>
d<lb/>
re <lb/>
rry<lb/>
our future.<lb/>
int.<lb/>
jon jodoan<lb/>
E erj contribution counts <lb/>
ECU Photo L?b<lb/>
By DAMKI MAURFR<lb/>
AMtUasi tnlam i hi<lb/>
While Coach Emory's bos<lb/>
may have their ups and downs.<lb/>
the ECU Marching Pirates re-<lb/>
main a consistant source of ex-<lb/>
citement. For years they've heen<lb/>
captivating halftime fans with<lb/>
colorful sights and finely or-<lb/>
chestrated sounds that radiate en<lb/>
thusiasm and spirit.<lb/>
The Marching Pi-ates are led<lb/>
bv Thomas Goolsby, who is in his<lb/>
sixth year as Band Director.<lb/>
Goolsby, who arranges most of<lb/>
the Marching Pirate material, is<lb/>
responsible for fusing the band,<lb/>
colorguard, and Golden Girls in<lb/>
to one cohesive unit<lb/>
Goolsby does not undertake<lb/>
this seemingly impossible task<lb/>
alone, nor does he take full<lb/>
credit. He lends much of the<lb/>
credit to his staff oi student<lb/>
leaders. "We use some really ex-<lb/>
cellent student leaders Goolsby<lb/>
said. "It's absolutely impossible<lb/>
for me, as one individual, to do<lb/>
all the music, to do all the dance<lb/>
There's no way; nobody can do<lb/>
that<lb/>
The student leaders (two<lb/>
graduate am; nine<lb/>
undergraduate) are students who.<lb/>
while working their way through<lb/>
the band program, have excelled<lb/>
in leadership qualities as well as<lb/>
musical abilities<lb/>
Goolsby will occationally. -end<lb/>
his student leaders to local high<lb/>
schools whose band programs are<lb/>
in need oi help. This not only im-<lb/>
proves the quality of locah high<lb/>
school bands, but ultimately it<lb/>
gives his staff valuble teaching<lb/>
experience.<lb/>
This field experience is qi-kkly<lb/>
put to work in rehearsals. Due to<lb/>
the band's enormous sie, it must<lb/>
be broken down into smaller<lb/>
gro ips such as Golden Girls ol<lb/>
orguard, percussion, woodwind,<lb/>
and brass Goolby then assigns<lb/>
his student leaders to oversee<lb/>
the? sectional rehearsals. Once<lb/>
the? sectionals are complete, the<lb/>
entne band is brought together<lb/>
for giant group rehearsals. These<lb/>
gro ip rehearsals may go on for<lb/>
a weeks, as in the cast of<lb/>
this .ear's homecoming prepara-<lb/>
tion (loolsby said, "What sou<lb/>
sau af homecoming was the<lb/>
resi I oi seven weeks work<lb/>
Aftet witnessing the Mai hing<lb/>
Pii tes homecoming perfor-<lb/>
mai e, one might think 'hey<lb/>
I defeat any school in a mar-<lb/>
ching band competition. I ifor-<lb/>
tunateh for Goolsby and the<lb/>
bar, I, there are no such con<lb/>
on the collegiate level in the<lb/>
United States But while there is<lb/>
no forum in which the band can<lb/>
display, its outstanding talent,<lb/>
(ro Isb ?  sure of his band's<lb/>
abilities One reason<lb/>
Goolsby's confidence is the<lb/>
band's drumline. Though re<lb/>
are no band competitions I<lb/>
i- the International Collegiate<lb/>
Drumline Competition. I a-<lb/>
the Marching Pirate drun line<lb/>
con eted in Knoxville, Ten-<lb/>
whe e trios placed fifth in th ?<lb/>
tioi<lb/>
( the Mais long Pira<lb/>
? said, "It would h an<lb/>
awai 1 winning band wen I ere<lb/>
to be competitions, I'm q<lb/>
confident<lb/>
jcm jo?d?n ecu<lb/>
1 he I rader of th Pack<lb/>
A "breathy" group<lb/>
JON JORDAN - 1CU ?to Lab<lb/>
i. .<lb/>
Drumming things up ?<lb/>
Biehn Receives Top-Notch Teaching Honor<lb/>
Hkh HAMFK<lb/>
?n the back tor his outstanding<lb/>
tal Don Biehn, associate pro<lb/>
I heatre Art De it received the Teacher oi the<lb/>
? ' ; first met Don ten years ago. when tie first taught at<lb/>
plav th . and sing together. So naturally I<lb/>
? ? i py when I heard of the honor he received. I ollowing is<lb/>
? - . ; u react to getting the Teacher oj the Year Awai i<lb/>
ally is the highest honor a teachei can get<lb/>
me, the students had an input in making the<lb/>
on I think a lot of people don't believe students know enough<lb/>
lecision. And from the second standpoint, the turner<lb/>
d teaching So many university administrators<lb/>
? pav lip service to teaching excellence, when in fact,<lb/>
nergies are tied up in research, public relations, and<lb/>
the classroom is where it all begins.<lb/>
u ihink that an in recognize good teaching?<lb/>
revious student myself, it was always easy to spot so<lb/>
ut the material that they were imparting to<lb/>
a opposed to somebody who was just going through the<lb/>
I think that an appropriate analogy is a preacher. When<lb/>
? : ? ind church and hear a person preaching, there are<lb/>
ist go through the motions and those who are having a<lb/>
. joyful in sharing that with other people<lb/>
. i lot ol people at this university feel unappreciated<lb/>
ire teaching service courses and big sections. And in a<lb/>
I think those courses ought to be evaluated separately because<lb/>
lent isn't likely to appreciate what is very hard, tedious<lb/>
 s, I'd like to see that part of the evaluation change, with<lb/>
onsidered in a different way. than those of us who<lb/>
mallet classes and have more time to spend with our<lb/>
MH Hom would vou define your philosophy of teaching?<lb/>
J hat's a tough one. 1 suppose to bring out the most potential<lb/>
) student is mv philosophy 1 must also say that I've always<lb/>
to be a teacher; there's a teacher in my makeup I'm not<lb/>
v unless I'm teaching somebody something. But what I teach<lb/>
had to put vour finger on Teaching acting is kind of like<lb/>
rig somebody to ridea bicycle there's no way to learn it out<lb/>
book You just have to try it and get a suggestion from<lb/>
body who's right next to vou with a bicycle and try it again,<lb/>
town, try it auain. My first experience with teaching was very<lb/>
unsuccessful, i was seriously thinking of getting out ol it. Th,<lb/>
just quit teaching and went up to Ne ork C it and studied<lb/>
work oi two very old master teachei Sanford Meisner and i i<lb/>
Hagen. So when you ask me what my eaching philosophy is, it's<lb/>
really their teaching philosophy. I'm n genius, but at leas! I had<lb/>
the sense to go to the geniuses and see I w they taught from Mr<lb/>
Meisner's work. I u- eived a very detail d and specific techniqu<lb/>
teach comprised ol 95 lessons that he got from onstani<lb/>
Stanislavski and Ru hard Boleslavsky; and t om Ms. Hagei<lb/>
learned how to use my teaching eye mu h more effectively.<lb/>
MH: The teaching eve?<lb/>
DB: es, you reallv have to train your eye in a specific way to see<lb/>
certain behavioral characteristics in your actor.<lb/>
MH: Can vou give me an example7<lb/>
DB: es. Let's say that an actress is a i ng the given circumstai<lb/>
that she is returning from her father's funeral and the directo<lb/>
the scene tells the actress that he wants her to be crying when sin-<lb/>
enters the scene. It is not enough for the actress to reach the overall<lb/>
result oi crying. In other words, crying isn't enough. As the great<lb/>
actress LTeanora Duse would often exclaim to her director, "Yes, 1<lb/>
know you want me to cry in this scene, but which way do you want<lb/>
me to do it?" The point is, Duse had many different variations ol<lb/>
the same basic emotion. There are specific emotions that are ap<lb/>
Don Biehn<lb/>
propriate I . .  es and the gradai ns of those<lb/>
in be very subtle. Only an expei 1 teac<lb/>
these, as opposed a ?rage person on  e street who would<lb/>
say, "My God, th g We have to be more specific<lb/>
with emotiona nd I course, it's the teacher's<lb/>
sibility to disti . e different ones, sav a red or an<lb/>
orange II the scene needs a red, then th. - must be told. The<lb/>
actress always needs some t I look ai the work and guide it.<lb/>
MH: You, as a ?  e. om do<lb/>
vou teach a acting eye? How a<lb/>
students to dis . . between (ht red and tht range?<lb/>
DB: You don't. It's no- he student's responsibility to know. That's<lb/>
whv, in the theater, we have actors and directors Once you're liv-<lb/>
ing in a role, the modern acting technique that was developed bv<lb/>
Mt Stanislavski is ased on experiencing emotion, not portraving<lb/>
it. And with that new craft and skill that the modern actors now<lb/>
have, you're experiencing the emotion you're not capable oi look-<lb/>
ing at yourself. You're living in the plav It's very much like life in<lb/>
that vou don't look at yourself, you just live so that the director can<lb/>
then tell vou bv the excellence of his eve what adjustments vou need<lb/>
to make Ironically, some ol the best performances I thought I had<lb/>
as a young actor were objectively some oi the worst roles I plaved.<lb/>
Feeling good aftei a performance doesn't actually mean that the ac-<lb/>
ting was done justice You were just happv with the results.<lb/>
MH. So vou always need somebody to took  ti work?<lb/>
DB: Yes Dial's whv we have directors and actors<lb/>
MH A your relationship to your class similar to vou relationship<lb/>
with vour actors m a play '<lb/>
DB That depends on the level of a student's training. If I have a<lb/>
fully, or almost fully trained actor that is still a student of mine,<lb/>
there are great similarities with the wav I work with them as a direc<lb/>
tor oi the way 1 work with them as a teacher But no. realh the ac-<lb/>
ting coach and the director are two different people The directoi<lb/>
must be concerned with so many aspects of the production ? the<lb/>
lighting, costumes, set. sound, total picture. The acting coach can<lb/>
concentrate only and specifically on the behavior oi the people on<lb/>
the stage and the interrelationship oi that behavior Also, as a<lb/>
director, you reallv explore together with your actors a particular<lb/>
interpretation oi the plav that vou want to reach.<lb/>
MH: Do all the drama students who come to ECL study the<lb/>
Stanislavski method exclusively?<lb/>
DB: Yes It's called the Meisner interpretation oi the Stanislavski<lb/>
system. And in their senior year. Dr. Winchell teaches them part of<lb/>
See TFACHFR. Page 8<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER i.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 1, 194<lb/>
3-Hits Returns To New Deli<lb/>
By DANIEL MAURER<lb/>
IWmtm<lb/>
This weekend the Three Hits will provide the entertainment at the New Deli.<lb/>
The New Deli will rock this<lb/>
weekend with the energetic<lb/>
sounds of the Three Hits, a<lb/>
young band from Raleigh. The<lb/>
foursome originally formed while<lb/>
students at Appalachian State<lb/>
University. After a few personal<lb/>
changes and a short stint as a<lb/>
threesome, the band made its<lb/>
move to Raleigh, a location more<lb/>
accessible to the triangle's music<lb/>
scene.<lb/>
According to lead vocalist and<lb/>
bass player Sheila Valentine, the<lb/>
Three Hits offers a straight for-<lb/>
ward brand of pop music that<lb/>
blends a variety of concise ideas<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
SEARS SILVERTONE STEREO<lb/>
PLAYER: $25. Old Zenith TV, for<lb/>
parts, $20. Call 758 1598 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
PIANO FOR SALE: Wanted respon<lb/>
sible party to assume small monthly<lb/>
payments on spinetconsole piano.<lb/>
Can be seen locally. Write: (include<lb/>
phone number) Credit Manager,<lb/>
P.O. Box 521, Beckemeyer, IL<lb/>
62219<lb/>
FOR SALE: Canon AE 1 programm-<lb/>
ed with 1.8 lens and case, like new,<lb/>
$175 Canon AE 1 with 1.8 lens, like<lb/>
new, $160. Call 758 7820 after 5:30.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Commodore 64 Ex<lb/>
cellent condition. $170 Phone<lb/>
758 5221.<lb/>
ALVAREZ REGENT: acoustic<lb/>
guitar with case and leather strap.<lb/>
Hand made and in excellent condi<lb/>
tion Brown body and steel strings.<lb/>
$150 758-6996.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
RALLY. Meet Democratic Guber<lb/>
natorial candidate Rufus Edmisten<lb/>
at the King and Queen North, Sun-<lb/>
day. Nov. 4, 3 5 p.m. No charge.<lb/>
PHI TAU's: We threw down last<lb/>
night. Let's keep on jamming for the<lb/>
rest of the semester in everything.<lb/>
We can go as far as we want to.<lb/>
WALLY Mom says to come home<lb/>
right now before she tells dad. You<lb/>
know he'll bust your nuts if he finds<lb/>
out you've been smoking weed in the<lb/>
clubhouse Watch out, The Beav.<lb/>
JUNE. Boy, l thought the boys<lb/>
would never leave. Let's go upstairs<lb/>
and break and the whips and chains<lb/>
for a quickie. Love,<lb/>
Ward.<lb/>
AT THE BALL. Pas Encore Vu.<lb/>
Hands slide black lace up stockinged<lb/>
thighs. Further still, more lace en<lb/>
circles hips, framing the white skin<lb/>
and silky black of her body. Suede<lb/>
high heels may pierce the cool seat<lb/>
leather with each hot, impassioned<lb/>
thrust. The windows steam there<lb/>
is the smell of champagne on his<lb/>
breath.<lb/>
LISA: "Take a look at me now.<lb/>
There's just an empty space. And<lb/>
you coming back to me is Against all<lb/>
odds, but it's the chance I've got to<lb/>
take Your Teddy.<lb/>
VOTE: Jim Hunt for senator. He's<lb/>
got a bigger one than Jesse. Inciden<lb/>
tally, scientists have still been<lb/>
unable to find George Bush's<lb/>
-nanhood Have they looked in Mrs.<lb/>
Bush?<lb/>
$50 REWARD: for information<lb/>
leading to arrest and conviction of<lb/>
person responsible for hit and run on<lb/>
a burgundy Ford Tempo. This occur<lb/>
red on Tuesday, Oct. 30. Car was<lb/>
parked outside Cotton Dorm. Call<lb/>
7585506.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
STEREO: System problem? Ab<lb/>
solutely "no charge" for repair<lb/>
estimates at the Tech Shop. Call<lb/>
757 "Nineteen Eighty" We thought<lb/>
you'd like to know.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPIST: With 15<lb/>
years wants fulltime typing at home.<lb/>
IBM typewriter. Call 756 3660.<lb/>
ATTRACTIVE FEMALES: for<lb/>
waitress position and bartender. Ap<lb/>
ply in person 7 p.m. ? 8 p.m. at<lb/>
Beaus Nightclub.<lb/>
? m i???i<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
6101<lb/>
?N-13 - 141<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
1-MhI RcMab<lb/>
TRAVEL FIELD OPPORTUNITY:<lb/>
Gain valuable marketing experience<lb/>
while earning money. Campus<lb/>
representative needed immediately<lb/>
for spring break trip to Florida. Con-<lb/>
tact Bill Ryan at 1 800 282 6221<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Neat ? fast?<lb/>
reasonable ? call 355 2062<lb/>
$60 PER HUNDRED PAID for pro<lb/>
cessing mail at home! Information,<lb/>
send self addressed, stamped<lb/>
envelope. Associates, Box 95,<lb/>
Roselle, N.J. 07203<lb/>
EARN EXTRA MONEY: The law<lb/>
school selection service needs a<lb/>
campus representative. Earning<lb/>
potential great. Work around you<lb/>
schedule For additional informa<lb/>
tion call collect (303) 841 8305.<lb/>
NEED A RESUME: CA11 758-6899 OR<lb/>
758-0529 AFTER 6:30 P.M. SENIOR<lb/>
MARKETING MAJOR WITH<lb/>
SEVERAL YEARS OF BUSINESS EX-<lb/>
PERIENCE WILL WRITE RESUME<lb/>
AND OR COVER LETTERS.<lb/>
GREENVILLE STUDENT LAUN-<lb/>
DRY SERVICE: 11 Greenville Stu-<lb/>
dent Laundn Service pick-up, wash,<lb/>
dry, fold, hang, as well as deliver your<lb/>
laundry! Dry Cleaning, too! 758-3087.<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMATE WANTED: to<lb/>
share fully furnished trailer ? has<lb/>
washerdryer, microwave, color TV<lb/>
stereo ? $175month utilities includ<lb/>
ed. Call 752 7378 after 6:30 p.m.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT ? Large four<lb/>
bedroom two blocks from campus,<lb/>
two blocks from downtown. $400 mo.<lb/>
402 E. Fourth Str. Call 758 4183.<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
with simple and enjoyable dance<lb/>
rythms. With these ideas the<lb/>
band likes to mix moods<lb/>
throughout their show rather<lb/>
than remain mono-emotional.<lb/>
Valentine feels that music like<lb/>
hard rock tends to maintain a<lb/>
consistant feel or emotion,<lb/>
sometimes bordering on<lb/>
monotony. Pop, on the other<lb/>
hand, being as broad as it is, of-<lb/>
fers the band a greater opportuni-<lb/>
ty to shift moods and display a<lb/>
wider range of emotions in their<lb/>
music.<lb/>
Recording at Drive-in Studio in<lb/>
Winston-Salem with producer<lb/>
Don Dixon, the Three Hits pro-<lb/>
duced a four song demo tape call-<lb/>
ed "Little Gifts From that<lb/>
demo tape came their first single,<lb/>
"Sharp Focus" bw "Just One<lb/>
of the Guys The band has<lb/>
entered the studio with Dixon<lb/>
once again to record their latest<lb/>
songs "Picture Window<lb/>
"Pressure Dome and<lb/>
"Numbers These songs are a<lb/>
regular part of their show, which<lb/>
is about 80 percent original<lb/>
material.<lb/>
While in the studio the band<lb/>
sometimes utilizes keyboards to<lb/>
help fill out their sound, but<lb/>
drops them when playing live. At<lb/>
present the band has no plans to<lb/>
expand the role of keyboards.<lb/>
Valentine feels that lead guitarist<lb/>
Michael Klutz has such a vesitile<lb/>
guitar sound that it more than<lb/>
satisfies the groups needs.<lb/>
This weekend, November 2<lb/>
and 3, will mark the band's third<lb/>
appearance at the New Deli. The<lb/>
Three Hits have also appeared at<lb/>
the Attic where they opened for<lb/>
the Graphics just one week prior<lb/>
to the devastating fire.<lb/>
Having just come out of the<lb/>
studio, the band is fired up for<lb/>
their next live performance. If<lb/>
their music is anything like their<lb/>
enthusiasm, New Deli patrons are<lb/>
in for a hell of a show.<lb/>
LOST: Brown ECU spiral notebook<lb/>
containg Biochemistry and differen-<lb/>
tial equation notes in parking lot<lb/>
behind MendenhalI. Reward offered.<lb/>
Call Kerry 758 2682.<lb/>
ATiTC<lb/>
Thur. &amp; Fri.<lb/>
Nov. 1&amp;2<lb/>
Sa?. Nov. 3rd<lb/>
Pegasus Rox<lb/>
Sat. Nov. 3rd<lb/>
The ATTIC and<lb/>
Sergio Valenti Present<lb/>
a Preview of Tri-Star<lb/>
Pictures "Blame It<lb/>
On The Night"<lb/>
J<lb/>
ROOAAATE<lb/>
There Will Be A Drawing at 11:00pm<lb/>
Sat. Nov. 3rd for a "Blame It On The Night"<lb/>
Night on the town. Call for details.<lb/>
ightclut)<lb/>
presents<lb/>
WINTER GREEK<lb/>
KICK OFF with<lb/>
Lambda Chi Alpha &amp;<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon<lb/>
All Greek $1.00 Off Admission<lb/>
50CDraft<lb/>
2 for i High Balls<lb/>
Wet T-shirt Contest<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
Cash prizes &amp; complimentary bottle of<lb/>
champagne for all entrees.<lb/>
Beau's is a private dub for members A guests only<lb/>
AB ABC Permits. Membership! available at the door.<lb/>
O<lb/>
WASH<lb/>
HOUSE<lb/>
FOR THE BEST NACHOS IN<lb/>
TOWN COME BY THE WASH<lb/>
HOUSE!<lb/>
14th Street Location<lb/>
758-6001<lb/>
JOIN US FOR LUNCH<lb/>
All the goodness of Pizza Hut" Pan<lb/>
Pizza, in a personal size! Each<lb/>
freshly made, then baked in its<lb/>
own pan and served piping hot.<lb/>
Ready in just 5 minutes ?or your<lb/>
next ones free!<lb/>
Monday through Saturday 11 am to 4 pm.<lb/>
5-mmute guarantee applies 11:30 AM to I 30 PM<lb/>
on orders of five or less per table or three or less<lb/>
per carryout customer<lb/>
4fuT<lb/>
2601 East 10th Street<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
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The most exclusive address in Greenville.<lb/>
Completely furnished and accessorized<lb/>
with the finest interior appointments and<lb/>
exceptional amenities for the serious stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
It's a very special condominium com-<lb/>
munity. Private, convenient, and available<lb/>
now for rent or purchase.<lb/>
? Rent: $150.00 per month per student<lb/>
(75Pmore per day than the dorm)<lb/>
? Purchase: Under $60,000 about Vi the price per<lb/>
square foot than the other student<lb/>
condominiums.<lb/>
Please stop by our office at<lb/>
2820 E. 10th St. anytime<lb/>
between 9am-6pm MonFri.<lb/>
10am-5pm Sat.<lb/>
Call for an evening or Sunday appointment.<lb/>
Call 757-1971 for more information<lb/>
ALL units are 2 bedrooms, 2 and 2 Vx baths. a F1"e<lb/>
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Teacher<lb/>
Continued From Page 7.<lb/>
the Strasberg method. Strasberg ana M<lb/>
most influential leaders of the Group<lb/>
Meisner work that we teach here,<lb/>
because a talented student mas not be<lb/>
technique. And all we have to tell that sj<lb/>
ing you're not talented, or an actor,<lb/>
responsive to this wa of teaching " Wl<lb/>
truely believe that a student can learn h<lb/>
person to act in four ears It's like bas?<lb/>
how to play, but you have to have taler<lb/>
MH: Could you mention some actor a i<lb/>
trained by the method you e been tatkl<lb/>
DB: Mr. Meisner himself trained<lb/>
ward, Peter Falk. Diane Keaton,<lb/>
Pleschette, Lee Grant, Jon Yoight. Rob<lb/>
get comics, you get serious actors. Duv;<lb/>
his opening shows in the theater or<lb/>
respects Meisner. Mr. Strasberg I<lb/>
Pacino and Robert DeNiro. People i j<lb/>
trained both with Strasberg and<lb/>
the best in both technique-<lb/>
MH: Is this a scientific or str J<lb/>
DB: It's very structured and sciei <lb/>
along about the same time. Sta:<lb/>
the same conclusions, but one was re<lb/>
and one with the right. But there a a<lb/>
ski became ver interested in Pavlo.<lb/>
that one could condition behaior to<lb/>
needed a particular re<lb/>
MH: Stanislaiski left ? <lb/>
DB: He left us with a method<lb/>
ing the Depression, the Arr - j<lb/>
true discoer and creativity R-<lb/>
American theater from r<lb/>
lighting, writing. Also, the great a<lb/>
went and studied in lower Manhatta<lb/>
Boleslavskv who had iust come fro: -<lb/>
610 Arlington Blvd<lb/>
ti<lb/>
??<lb/>
f<lb/>
v .<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0009"/><lb/>
V<lb/>
FHE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 1, 1984<lb/>
Ki U MAN<lb/>
SUMA1BI R 1, 9g4<lb/>
New Deli<lb/>
lance<lb/>
the<lb/>
ds<lb/>
her<lb/>
b<lb/>
V<lb/>
"Numbers " Ihese songs are a<lb/>
regular part of then show, which<lb/>
is about 80 percent original<lb/>
material<lb/>
While in the studio the band<lb/>
sometimes utilizes keboards to<lb/>
help till oul their sound, but<lb/>
drops them when playing live. At<lb/>
present the band has no plans to<lb/>
expand the role of keyboards.<lb/>
Valentine feels that lead guitarist<lb/>
Michael klutz has such a esitile<lb/>
guitar sound that it more than<lb/>
-a sfies the groups needs.<lb/>
weekend, November 2<lb/>
nark the band's third<lb/>
at the New Deli The<lb/>
ee Hits have also appealed at<lb/>
ere the opened tor<lb/>
ne vveek prior<lb/>
he devastating fire<lb/>
Ha v ime out ol the<lb/>
the band is tired up for<lb/>
nance If<lb/>
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New Deli patrons are<lb/>
at<lb/>
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&amp;<lb/>
'US<lb/>
iREEK<lb/>
FF with<lb/>
oh <lb/>
na Phi Epsilon<lb/>
Ofi Admission<lb/>
alls<lb/>
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ay Night<lb/>
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members A guesu oory<lb/>
ips a enable i the door<lb/>
ON<lb/>
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accessorized<lb/>
ointments and<lb/>
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k and available<lb/>
itudent<lb/>
the dorm)<lb/>
ut Vi the price per<lb/>
r student<lb/>
Iffice at<lb/>
ime<lb/>
ionFri.<lb/>
iat.<lb/>
?r Sunday appointment.<lb/>
more information<lb/>
athS. or a ride<lb/>
lie<lb/>
?<lb/>
1<lb/>
Aims<lb/>
Continued From Page 7.<lb/>
the Strasberg method. Strasberg and Mr. Meisner were two of the<lb/>
most influential leaders of the Group Theater. It's primarily the<lb/>
Meisner work that we teach here. Sometimes it's unfortunate<lb/>
because a talented student may not be responsive to this popular<lb/>
technique. And all we have to tell that student is, "We're not sav<lb/>
ing you're not talented, or an actor. We're saying you're not<lb/>
responsive to this way of teaching With our new program we<lb/>
truely believe that a student can learn how to act. We can teach a<lb/>
person to act in four years. It's like baseball - anybody can learn<lb/>
how to play, but you have to have talent to be a professional.<lb/>
MH: Could you mention some actors and actresses who have been<lb/>
Irained by the method you've been talking about9<lb/>
DB: Mr Meisner himself trained such people as Joanne Wood-<lb/>
ward Peter Falk, Diane Keaton, Tony Randall, Susanne<lb/>
Pleschette, Lee Grant, Jon Voight, Robert Duvall, and more You<lb/>
get com.es, you get serious actors. Duvall still takes Mr. Meisner to<lb/>
his opening shows in the theater or in movies because Duvall<lb/>
respects Meisner. Mr. Strasberg has trained such people as Al<lb/>
Pac.no and Robert DeNiro. People like Dustin Hoffman have<lb/>
trained both with Strasberg and with Meisner. Hoffman brings out<lb/>
the best in both techniques.<lb/>
MH: Is this a scientific or structured technique?<lb/>
DB: It's very structured and scientific. Freud and Stanislavski came<lb/>
along about the same time. Stanislavski and Freud were reaching<lb/>
the same conclusions, but one was reaching them with the left brain<lb/>
and one with the right. But there was a beautiful fusion; Stanislav-<lb/>
ski became very interested in Pavlov's experiments. It became clear<lb/>
that one could condition behavior to such an extent that when you<lb/>
needed a particular response, you could get it.<lb/>
MH: Stanislavski left us with a method?<lb/>
DB: He left us with a method that was and still is incomplete. Dur-<lb/>
ing the Depression, the American theater artists were hungry for<lb/>
true discovery and creativity. Really the '30s was the golden era in<lb/>
American theater from many different standpoints: scene design,<lb/>
lighting, writing. Also, the great acting teachers of this country<lb/>
went and studied in lower Manhattan with a man named Richard<lb/>
Boleslavsky who had just come from Russia. And these American<lb/>
acting teachers, who were young actors themselves, learned from<lb/>
Mr. Boleslavsky and then improved upon his teachings. This is why<lb/>
Mr. Meisner and Mr. Strasberg have been so influential in<lb/>
American theater, because they had their own interpretation of<lb/>
Stanislavski. But Stanislavski is still truely the Einstein of theater,<lb/>
specifically, the art of acting.<lb/>
MH: What is the state of the acting department at ECU now?<lb/>
DB: It's very healthy. We're young, because when Mr. Loessin and<lb/>
Dr. Winchell hired me, we all had very specific and similar points<lb/>
of view. I think we are providing a consistent point of view to the<lb/>
student. This way the student doesn't go from one instructor and<lb/>
hear the truth with a capital T and then go to another class and hear<lb/>
a different truth and become very confused, which is what happen-<lb/>
ed to me. It's very easy to appear omnipotent in the arts, where you<lb/>
could really come across as knowing everything. And when you<lb/>
have four or five people in the same department who know<lb/>
everything, the student in invariably confused. I think we are really<lb/>
geared to the student. We, as I said, are not trying to be all things to<lb/>
all people; we're trying to train American actors to do American<lb/>
plays in the American theater or television. You'll find that most<lb/>
undergraduate programs are trying to do American theater, French<lb/>
theater, English theater, German or Irish theater, and they have a<lb/>
wonderfully broad and varying point of view. But when their<lb/>
students graudate, they don't get work because it's such a diffused<lb/>
point of view. We tell students beforehand that we want to train<lb/>
them to work. We call ourselves a practical program, and the word<lb/>
practical is emphasized because this profession is a hard profession<lb/>
in which to find work. Our obligation to students is to try our best<lb/>
to give them skills that they can use, and our obligation is to the<lb/>
parents ? it's the same thing. They're taking a risk in letting their<lb/>
children study this profession. I think we have a very strong depart-<lb/>
ment in all aspects because Edgar Loessin is a person who has<lb/>
worked in the real world and is not an "academic-only" person. He<lb/>
worked in the real world for years and has an appreciation for sen-<lb/>
ding students out into the real world.<lb/>
MH: What are your plans for the future? Visions?<lb/>
DB: I hope to stay here in Greenville, at ECU, for a long time<lb/>
When I first taught here, this was my first job in 1973 after I had<lb/>
been in the army and gotten out of graduate school. I taught here<lb/>
from 1973 to '77. Then I quit teaching and went back to New York<lb/>
to study with the master teachers. Well, it's no coincidence that I've<lb/>
returned, because I've always loved Greenville and ECU I think<lb/>
it's a university that doesn't try to be pretentious. In the theater if<lb/>
you re training theater students, if there's a pretension to the<lb/>
university that you're working for, it will translate directlv to the<lb/>
stage. I think ECU is willing to take risks with their staff and facul-<lb/>
ty members, and I think they're enthusiastic about new programs<lb/>
practical programs. B '<lb/>
As far as visions are concerned, I suppose I reallv only have one<lb/>
vision: to make our Professional Actor Training Program an ex-<lb/>
cellent training program for anyone interested in learning how to<lb/>
J?' ,You m"8ht remember that Jimmv Stewart and<lb/>
Henry Fonda were classmates in college and they were not major-<lb/>
ing in drama; they tried out for a few plavs, realized thev had some<lb/>
talent and enjoyed this thing called acting.<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057677_0010"/><lb/>
rHEEASTCAROl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
Worst Road Record In School's History Possible<lb/>
MICHAEL SMITH - ECU PfcOtO L?b<lb/>
rone Johnson (47) and the rest of the ECU football team will hae<lb/>
hi tuts full against Southwestern Lousiana this weekend.<lb/>
i Ian waring, ECU<lb/>
Prepare For Pack<lb/>
tis Rl( K McCORMAC<lb/>
suff ? nlrf<lb/>
. t . I Lady Pirate basket-<lb/>
team, under first year coach<lb/>
Mnwaring, has been<lb/>
r .ard in preparation for<lb/>
which opens Nov.<lb/>
he Dogwood Classic.<lb/>
vari lg plans for the Lad<lb/>
un with the ball on o-<lb/>
- as many points as<lb/>
ansition. "We want<lb/>
ball up the court, and<lb/>
e before the other team<lb/>
i k not run and gun. but<lb/>
tnd lo k<lb/>
I i defense, the Ladv Pirates<lb/>
working hard on their<lb/>
oj. defense According to<lb/>
taring, the destroy defense<lb/>
to "keep the offense from<lb/>
what they want to do, and<lb/>
em to do what we (ECU)<lb/>
low them<lb/>
. waring has been stressing<lb/>
three R's of Ladv Pirate<lb/>
'ball<lb/>
react, rebound and<lb/>
M want them to react on<lb/>
e. get the rebound and then<lb/>
?. itf. the ball on offense.<lb/>
practice, Manwaring has<lb/>
een stressing the need for<lb/>
: ads Pirates to get good re-<lb/>
ng position. "We have to<lb/>
 etting good position for<lb/>
ids because we are so<lb/>
Manwaring said. "We<lb/>
irue center on our team.<lb/>
l si player on our roster is<lb/>
? feet tall<lb/>
ile the Lady Pirates will be<lb/>
n in the size department, they<lb/>
will  t be short on talent. "1 in-<lb/>
heritited some talented ball<lb/>
players in both the returnees and<lb/>
SW Lousiana Awaits Pirates<lb/>
?  i:I, iK.m In<lb/>
Bv RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Sporti Kdltor<lb/>
ECU football coach Ed Emory<lb/>
was in a perfect position to<lb/>
salvage a dismal season last<lb/>
weekend against South Carolina,<lb/>
but his team's inability to take<lb/>
advantage of good field position<lb/>
enabled the the fifth ranked<lb/>
Gamecocks to roll to a 42-20 vic-<lb/>
tory.<lb/>
"We went down there to give<lb/>
our program some credibility<lb/>
Emory said in his weekly press<lb/>
conference, "but we ended up<lb/>
boosting them to number five in<lb/>
the country.<lb/>
"1 didn't feel too bad after the<lb/>
game Emory continued, "but<lb/>
when 1 looked at the film on Sun-<lb/>
day, 1 wasn't so happy<lb/>
The Pirates had the ball seven<lb/>
times inside the 30-yard line, but<lb/>
only converted three of those op-<lb/>
portunities into scores. "We ran<lb/>
87 offensive plays, and they only<lb/>
had 67 Emory remarked.<lb/>
"Anytime you do that, you<lb/>
should win the ball game<lb/>
The offensive line was the<lb/>
primary reason the Pirates did<lb/>
not have success moving the ball.<lb/>
Seven linemen were injured dur-<lb/>
ing the course of the game, and<lb/>
Emory said if the team hadn't<lb/>
traveled by bus to Columbia, he<lb/>
would have had to use defensive<lb/>
players as substitutes.<lb/>
the recruits Manwaring said.<lb/>
"We have some really fine<lb/>
guards and forwards ? players<lb/>
who can really score from the<lb/>
outside. This year we will have<lb/>
good bench strength, which is<lb/>
something we have never had<lb/>
before<lb/>
The I adv Pirates base been<lb/>
selected as an honorable mention<lb/>
team in the pre-season poll put<lb/>
out bv Women's Court, a<lb/>
magazine about women's basket-<lb/>
ball. "1 was mildly suprised by<lb/>
the honorable mention Man-<lb/>
waring said. "It was due to the<lb/>
fact that we won the conference<lb/>
tournament last year, and we<lb/>
have some experienced players<lb/>
returning as well as some good<lb/>
recruits<lb/>
N.C. State, the Lady Pirate's<lb/>
opponent in their season opener,<lb/>
was ranked No. 12 in the<lb/>
Women's Court poll, but open-<lb/>
ing with a ranked team does not<lb/>
intimidate Manwaring.<lb/>
"There is no better time for us<lb/>
to play them she said. 'They<lb/>
haven't seen us play under me,<lb/>
and they won't know what to ex-<lb/>
pect.<lb/>
"1 think the players hae a<lb/>
positive attitude Manwaring<lb/>
continued. "We will be prepared<lb/>
for our first game when the jump<lb/>
ball goes up. Whichever team<lb/>
that is prepared best at that par-<lb/>
ticular time is usually the team<lb/>
that wins.<lb/>
"1 think my players are going<lb/>
to know so much more than the<lb/>
other team that we'll be able to<lb/>
attack them right from the start<lb/>
? N.C. State is in trouble<lb/>
Indians Boot ECU<lb/>
H SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
vtiManl Sport rdltnr<lb/>
py second half play and<lb/>
goals once again did in the<lb/>
occer team as they fell to<lb/>
William &amp; Mary 4-1 at Minges<lb/>
r field yesterday afternoon.<lb/>
"We moved the ball well in the<lb/>
alt Head Coach Steve<lb/>
commented. "We had a<lb/>
? opportunities, but we<lb/>
apitalize<lb/>
earn gave up what Brody<lb/>
two "rediculous" goals<lb/>
n the first half and scored<lb/>
? their own as leading scorer<lb/>
?: "Mad Dog" Colgan put<lb/>
ates on the board to cut<lb/>
the halftime margin to 2-1.<lb/>
i he second half, however, was<lb/>
a different story. After a goal by<lb/>
the Indians upped the margin to<lb/>
3-1, the booters could generate<lb/>
no more offense and another<lb/>
"rediculous" goal by William &amp;<lb/>
Mary late in the game provided<lb/>
the final margin.<lb/>
That final goal came on a ball<lb/>
was kicked toward the goal,<lb/>
but goalie Jesse Daugherty lost<lb/>
control of it while he was on the<lb/>
ground and an Indian player easi-<lb/>
ly tapped it in.<lb/>
"We didn't use our minds out<lb/>
there today Brody commented,<lb/>
"but we had real good hustle and<lb/>
real good effort from our<lb/>
players. We just lost our com-<lb/>
posure in the second half<lb/>
While Brody admitted that the<lb/>
Indians did have better skills than<lb/>
his young team, he added that he<lb/>
felt that his team could have<lb/>
played much better than they did.<lb/>
The loss dropped the booters<lb/>
to 2-14-1 on the year, and extend-<lb/>
ed their losing streak to six<lb/>
games.<lb/>
The team will attempt to break<lb/>
their recent dry spell when they<lb/>
travel to N.C. Wesleyan to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the N.C. Wesleyan<lb/>
Classic Nov. 3 and 4. The booters<lb/>
will then close their season with<lb/>
consecutive home matches<lb/>
against UNC-Wilmington and<lb/>
Christopher Newport on Nov. 5<lb/>
and 7.<lb/>
A total of three centers were<lb/>
used, and Emory said that also<lb/>
affected the play of the offense,<lb/>
and in particular, starting<lb/>
quarterback Darrell Speed.<lb/>
"When you have a young and in-<lb/>
experienced quarterback like<lb/>
Darrell Speed trying to deal with<lb/>
the pressure of playing in front of<lb/>
74,000 people, taking the snap<lb/>
from three different centers is<lb/>
certainly going to hinder his per-<lb/>
formance<lb/>
The injuries to the offensive<lb/>
line had a definite affect on<lb/>
Speed as he had the worst game<lb/>
of his career while at ECU. He<lb/>
only completed seven of 18<lb/>
passes, threw three interceptions<lb/>
and was sacked six times.<lb/>
Despite a lackluster perfor-<lb/>
mance by the offense, Emory<lb/>
called his defensive unit the<lb/>
"worst tackling team in<lb/>
America" as the Gamecocks' 559<lb/>
yards worth of offense was the<lb/>
second highest total in school<lb/>
history.<lb/>
Emory noted South Carolina's<lb/>
first two touchdowns in par-<lb/>
ticular, saying neither play<lb/>
should have picked up a single<lb/>
yard.<lb/>
USC's first score came when<lb/>
Pirate defenders appeared to<lb/>
have quarterback Allen Mitchell<lb/>
wrapped up behind the line of<lb/>
scrimmage, but at the last mo-<lb/>
ment he pitched the ball to Kent<lb/>
Hagood (12 carries, 118 yards)<lb/>
who went down the left sideline<lb/>
untouched for a 74-yard<lb/>
touchdown.<lb/>
The Pirates came back to take<lb/>
a 10-7 lead early in the second<lb/>
quarter, but then Mitchell was<lb/>
replaced by reserve quarterback<lb/>
Mike Hold. On his first play<lb/>
from scrimmage, Hold connected<lb/>
with Ira Hillary for a 71-yard<lb/>
touchdown bomb.<lb/>
"We we were in the simplis!<lb/>
coverage for that kind of a call<lb/>
Emory explained, "but the per-<lb/>
son covering Hillary just didn't<lb/>
play the ball the way he was sup-<lb/>
posed to<lb/>
Although ECU didn't execute<lb/>
well as a team, Henry Williams<lb/>
made Pirate fans reminisce about<lb/>
last year as he had his best in-<lb/>
dividual performance of the '84<lb/>
season. He returned two kickoffs<lb/>
for 82 yards (one of which Emory<lb/>
says should have gone all the<lb/>
way), while also returning five<lb/>
punts for 83 yards.<lb/>
One of those punt returns ap-<lb/>
peared to have gone for a 78-yard<lb/>
touchdown return as Williams<lb/>
amazed Gamecock fans with his<lb/>
shifty moves and 4.23 speed, but<lb/>
an official marked the ball at<lb/>
midfield saying Wiliams had<lb/>
stepped out of bounds.<lb/>
"There wasn't a referee<lb/>
anywhere near the sideline to<lb/>
make the call Fmorv exclaim-<lb/>
ed. "I was standing less than five<lb/>
feet where they marked the ball,<lb/>
and there is no way he stepped on<lb/>
the line<lb/>
Emory said his team should<lb/>
have won the game, but despite<lb/>
the loss, he hopes to continue the<lb/>
series. "It was a positive thing for<lb/>
ECU to play a program the<lb/>
caliber of South Carolina's. They<lb/>
have great fans, a ereat stadium<lb/>
and I think it will be a great game<lb/>
when they come to Ficklen<lb/>
(Stadium) in 1985<lb/>
the Pirates currently stand 2-7<lb/>
on the vear, and will play their<lb/>
final road game of the season<lb/>
Saturday at 2 p.m. against<lb/>
Southwestern Lousiana.<lb/>
The Ragin' Cajuns are 4-4 on<lb/>
the year, coming off a 13-7 vic-<lb/>
tory over Southern Mississipi and<lb/>
have won three of their last four<lb/>
games.<lb/>
According to Emory, SW Lou-<lb/>
siana is a team that is solid at<lb/>
every position, and says his<lb/>
Pirates cannot make the same<lb/>
mistakes as they did against<lb/>
South Carolina if they plan on<lb/>
winning the game.<lb/>
If Emory is not successful on<lb/>
Saturday, it will mark the first<lb/>
time an ECU team has failed to<lb/>
win on the the road prior to 1960.<lb/>
Records before that time did not<lb/>
distinguish between home and<lb/>
awav eames.<lb/>
Nichols Has Big Day Against Cocks<lb/>
Bv SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
stiff U rllrr<lb/>
Despite a loss to fifth ranked<lb/>
South Carolina last Saturday,<lb/>
senior flanker Ricky Nichols had<lb/>
a big day receiving for ECU.<lb/>
Nichols hauled in four passes<lb/>
for 9 5 yards and two<lb/>
touchdowns. With 2:59 remain-<lb/>
ing in the first quarter, Darrell<lb/>
Speed hooked up with Nichols on<lb/>
a M-vard bomb. The pass play<lb/>
shocked the 73,800 fans and<lb/>
deadlocked the game at 7-7. The<lb/>
completion was also the longest<lb/>
career reception for the<lb/>
Chesapeake, Va. native.<lb/>
The South Carolina offense<lb/>
then got on track in the second<lb/>
period scoring two touchdowns.<lb/>
Nichols credited the Gamecocks<lb/>
for their play. "They just wanted<lb/>
it more he exclaimed. "They<lb/>
stopped us on offense, and kept<lb/>
their momentum going<lb/>
Nichols caught his second<lb/>
touchdown with just 2:28 to play<lb/>
in the game. It was a nine-yard<lb/>
pass from quarterback Ron<lb/>
Jones, capping a seven play,<lb/>
53-yard scoring drive.<lb/>
Nichols was the leading<lb/>
receiver in the Pirate-Gamecock<lb/>
contest. Aside from his 95 yards<lb/>
receiving, he added 20 yards on<lb/>
the ground on a flanker reverse.<lb/>
"This was Ricky Nichols' best<lb/>
effort since he caught the winning<lb/>
touchdown pass to upset<lb/>
Missouri last year stated ECU<lb/>
sophomore David McGinness,<lb/>
one oi the Pirate faithful who<lb/>
made the trip to Columbia.<lb/>
"I felt good about my perfor-<lb/>
mance against South Carolina<lb/>
Nichols said. "I've tried to make<lb/>
things happen and make big plays<lb/>
all year<lb/>
Nichols' strong point is his<lb/>
ability to play consistent football.<lb/>
In his freshman year (1981), he<lb/>
was second on the Pirates with<lb/>
nine receptions for 206 yards and<lb/>
a 22.9 yard average. As a<lb/>
sophomore, Nichols totaled 206<lb/>
yards on 13 receptions for a 20.4<lb/>
yard average. Last year Nichols<lb/>
caught 15 passes for 222 yards<lb/>
and a 14.8 yard average. He was<lb/>
third best for ECU in '83. Also,<lb/>
he totaled six touchdowns in his<lb/>
first three years.<lb/>
"He's been our most consis-<lb/>
tent receiver all year long ECU<lb/>
receiver coach Ken Matous<lb/>
remarked. "He's our big play<lb/>
receiver<lb/>
Nichols, who was named co-<lb/>
offensive player of the game<lb/>
against South Carolina, possesses<lb/>
excellent speed ? running a 4.3<lb/>
second 40-yard dash. "His speed<lb/>
and catching ability always make<lb/>
him a threat Matous said. "He<lb/>
also is smart and has good field<lb/>
sense ? he makes adjustments<lb/>
well too<lb/>
Preparing each week is no easy<lb/>
task for any collegiate athlete,<lb/>
and the same holds true for<lb/>
Nichols. "I try to practice very<lb/>
hard each week Ricky said.<lb/>
"It's like rehearsing ? I do it in<lb/>
practice and try to do it again in<lb/>
the game<lb/>
With the move of senior split<lb/>
end Stefon Adams to defense,<lb/>
Ricky knew he'd be in for a tough<lb/>
time. "I started playing both<lb/>
positions (flanker and split end),<lb/>
and I had to work harder than<lb/>
ever Nichols stated. "It also<lb/>
meant that 1 would get more<lb/>
playing time<lb/>
Being in his senior year, Ricky<lb/>
assumed the role of a leader.<lb/>
"Seniors are supposed to be<lb/>
leaders for the younger players.<lb/>
They (the young players) aren't<lb/>
used to playing in front of 70.000<lb/>
fans<lb/>
Ricky had an outstanding<lb/>
career at Great Bridge High<lb/>
School in Chesapeake. Va. In<lb/>
1981, he was Norfolk Sports<lb/>
Club "metro plaver of the year<lb/>
He was second team all-state, all-<lb/>
district, all-Tidewater and all-<lb/>
region as a defensive back and<lb/>
flanker. Ricky also played<lb/>
baseball while in high school. He<lb/>
was urged to run track, but<lb/>
preferred baseball.<lb/>
He also played baseball for the<lb/>
Pirates last spring as a center-<lb/>
fielder, but his speed on the bases<lb/>
was most impressive. One<lb/>
baseball scout called Nichols<lb/>
"perhaps the fastest from<lb/>
homeplate to first base in this<lb/>
country<lb/>
Despite his accomplishments in<lb/>
high school, Ricky didn't think<lb/>
he would be able to play college<lb/>
athletics. Because he didn't star:<lb/>
football until his junior vear.<lb/>
Nichols wasn't heavily recruited.<lb/>
"I didn't even think about col-<lb/>
lege until my junior year Rivky<lb/>
remarked. "I didn't expect to be<lb/>
playing college football at all<lb/>
Next week the Pirates face<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana,<lb/>
Ricky has great respect for the<lb/>
team that he ha faced three times<lb/>
during his collegiate career.<lb/>
"They've got a good secondary<lb/>
down there he said. "It's hard<lb/>
to get deep on them ? thev all<lb/>
have good speed<lb/>
Ricky gets his inspiration from<lb/>
his father, a person who has in-<lb/>
fluenced Ricky's football career<lb/>
greatly. "He tells me to alwas<lb/>
work hard Ricky said. "He<lb/>
tells me to have confidence in<lb/>
myself<lb/>
Rickv is fifth in career recep-<lb/>
tions tor ECU. and needs just<lb/>
more to become the Pirates<lb/>
fourth career reception leader.<lb/>
Also, he is currently fourth on<lb/>
ECU's career yardage receiving,<lb/>
needing just J06 yards to move to<lb/>
second on the illustrious list.<lb/>
Ricky Nichols will retire as one<lb/>
? 'he most celebrated receivers<lb/>
in ECL' history, and will always<lb/>
be remembered by Pirate fans as<lb/>
the "big play" man.<lb/>
ll<lb/>
1<lb/>
Pirates<lb/>
On The Road Again: Saturdav <lb/>
2:00 p.m. (CDT) kickoff with the<lb/>
Ragin' Cajuns of Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana will be ECU's seventh<lb/>
and final road game of the 1984<lb/>
season. The Pirates, an im-<lb/>
pressive 7-3 on the road over their<lb/>
last 10 road contests entering the<lb/>
1984 season, have yet to win in an<lb/>
opponents stadium this year<lb/>
ECU is 0-6 on the road for<lb/>
1984, and a loss at Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana will mean the Pirate<lb/>
will go winless on the road for the<lb/>
first time since prior to the 196<lb/>
season. East Carolina's w<lb/>
road record since 1960 before<lb/>
season was the 2-5 mark posted<lb/>
by Coach Mike McGee's team<lb/>
back in 1970 (ECU finished the<lb/>
year 3-8)<lb/>
Pat Dye's 1979 team pi<lb/>
2-3-1 road record, while<lb/>
season ranks as head coach<lb/>
Emory's worst season or<lb/>
road. Emory's four prior ??<lb/>
saw his teams post 2-4, 2-4<lb/>
and 4-3 records.<lb/>
This is the third straight<lb/>
Emory has faced the task ol <lb/>
ing seven games awav from<lb/>
friendly confine of<lb/>
Stadium, where the P<lb/>
enjoyed considerable<lb/>
The 1984 season w<lb/>
Pirates, however, pla<lb/>
games for the first time<lb/>
Track Me<lb/>
Sport Clu<lb/>
Bv JKANNETTEROIH<lb/>
si?ff Vkmt<lb/>
Though the inclerr.<lb/>
canceled several events<lb/>
tramural track meet -<lb/>
success for several cam:<lb/>
Suffering under drizz: - ?<lb/>
and slippery track - I<lb/>
L'mstead Dorm ran awav wil<lb/>
overall victory<lb/>
tracksters from N<lb/>
dependent third place finishers<lb/>
Thunder and L<lb/>
Taking individual h<lb/>
both the discus<lb/>
events was Jeff Martlet!<lb/>
long jump award w<lb/>
speedster Arthur Barnes,<lb/>
also finished first in the 50-yard<lb/>
dash and 100-yard dash. .$<lb/>
Phi Epsdon captured first place<lb/>
in the softball throw.<lb/>
The 440-yard victory went to<lb/>
the independent Thunder and<lb/>
Lightening who not only finished<lb/>
third overall, but captured top<lb/>
honors in the 880-yard run. The<lb/>
"lightening" crowd chased<lb/>
L'mstead Dorm, but came up<lb/>
short taking second place in the<lb/>
880 relav.<lb/>
The two mile race saw the frat<lb/>
men from Phi Kappa Tau cross<lb/>
the tape first with Scott Dorm<lb/>
finishing second, fourth and fifth<lb/>
in the same race. I r.sead once<lb/>
again made the top three, receiv-<lb/>
ing three points to aud to their<lb/>
total. As the skies darkened, the<lb/>
men from Phi Kappa Tau raced<lb/>
to earn seven points in the mile<lb/>
run. while Scott and L instead<lb/>
followed.<lb/>
On the women's side, il was all<lb/>
Tri Sig and Chilling Sauce who<lb/>
bounced back and forth from vic-<lb/>
tory to victory. Chilling Sauce<lb/>
earned first place honors in the<lb/>
softball throw, long innp B8<lb/>
relay and 440 run. wh<lb/>
ladies from Sigma 5. -<lb/>
won the 440-vard run. 5<lb/>
dash and received - and sc<lb/>
cond place honors n the 880<lb/>
run. Other ever "ad to<lb/>
canceled as the track became<lb/>
JON JO DAN - CCU ffMto La?<lb/>
Ricky Nichols needs 106 yards to become ECU's second all-time receiver for yardage gained. He abo needs<lb/>
just two catches to move to the No. 4 spot for career receptions.<lb/>
hazardous to c -<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
In sport club action, the ECl<lb/>
Surfing Qub sponsored na-<lb/>
ment ihis pas: weekend<lb/>
Emerald Isle, N C Seven<lb/>
people represeing t?<lb/>
across the eastern seaboarc: com-<lb/>
peted. At the end of regulal<lb/>
time, a tie developed between the<lb/>
teams from UNC- and ECl X<lb/>
tie breaker in which the top<lb/>
surfers from each s<lb/>
waves for 15 minutes. end<lb/>
victory for UNC-W, who<lb/>
edged the talent of ECl<lb/>
For those of you who fancy the<lb/>
martial arts. Rose High recer<lb/>
held the 1984 Goju Sti<lb/>
Southeastern Class- v.<lb/>
gratulations are in order<lb/>
several ECU Martial hits Sport<lb/>
Club participants who came awav<lb/>
with individual honors Chuck<lb/>
Johnson placed first in the<lb/>
heavyweight black belt bout, and<lb/>
took third in the Kata r<lb/>
arranged series of fighting<lb/>
moves) belt event. David M<lb/>
fought for third place in the greet-<lb/>
It division. In women's action.<lb/>
:CU instructor Anne Vanlith<lb/>
)laced second in the brown belt<lb/>
j<lb/>
<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
mmm<lb/>
n<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0011"/><lb/>
I HI I -v  VRO! INI AN<lb/>
I MB! k<lb/>
II<lb/>
;<lb/>
irates<lb/>
ocks<lb/>
st<lb/>
jon jo?on tcu ?.?- lt<lb/>
r arda?e gained He also needs<lb/>
Pirates Look For First Road Win Saturday<lb/>
On The Road Again: Saturdays<lb/>
2:00 p.m. (CDT) kickoff with the<lb/>
Ragin' Cajuns of Southwestern<lb/>
1 ouisiana will be ECU's seventh<lb/>
and final road game of the 1984<lb/>
season The Pirates, an mi<lb/>
pressive 7-3 on the road over their<lb/>
last 10 road contests entering the<lb/>
1984 season, have yet to win in an<lb/>
opponents stadium this year.<lb/>
ECU is 0-6 on the road for<lb/>
1984, and a loss at Southwestern<lb/>
1 ouisiana will mean the Pirates<lb/>
will go winless on the road for the<lb/>
first time since prior to the I960<lb/>
season. Fast Carolina's worst<lb/>
oad record since I960 before this<lb/>
season was the 2-5 mark posted<lb/>
h Coach Mike McGee's team<lb/>
hack in 1970 (ECU finished the<lb/>
yeai 3-8).<lb/>
Pat Dye's 1979 team posted a<lb/>
2 3 1 road record, while this<lb/>
season ranks as head coach Ed<lb/>
Emory's worst season on the<lb/>
oad Emory's four prior seasons<lb/>
saw his teams post 2-4, 2-4. 3-4<lb/>
and 4-3 records<lb/>
This is the third straight season<lb/>
1 mor has faced the task of plaj<lb/>
ng seven games away from the<lb/>
endl confines o Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, where the Pirates have<lb/>
enjoyed considerable success<lb/>
The 19S4 season will see the<lb/>
Pirates, however, play five home<lb/>
games for the first time since<lb/>
1981 let' will lu.st Miami<lb/>
Florida, South Carolina, Fulsa,<lb/>
Temple and a team to he an-<lb/>
nounced<lb/>
Bombs Awa: Senioi flankei<lb/>
Rick) Nichols caught his second<lb/>
touchdown pass of the 1984<lb/>
season in excess ol 50 yards in<lb/>
last week's 42-20 loss to No. 5<lb/>
South Carolina The 5-10,<lb/>
170-pound Chesapeake, ,<lb/>
native hauled in a 64-yard ID<lb/>
strike from quarterback Darrell<lb/>
Speed m the first quarter, the se-<lb/>
cond time the two have hooked<lb/>
up for a 50 plus yard pass pLo<lb/>
Speed connected with Nichols foi<lb/>
a 59-yard scoring strike in the<lb/>
Pirates' 34-27 ictory over<lb/>
Georgia Southern on Sept 22.<lb/>
The scoring pass was also the<lb/>
second straight week Nichols has<lb/>
caught a 11) pass In ECU's 24 6<lb/>
homecoming victor) ovei last<lb/>
lennessee State on Oct. 20<lb/>
Nichols hooked up with Speed<lb/>
for a 46 yard scoring strike.<lb/>
Nichols, with his four recep<lb/>
tions for 95 yards against the<lb/>
Gamecocks, has caught 21 passes<lb/>
for 395 yards in 1984 foi an<lb/>
18.8-yard per catch average He<lb/>
has also moved into a tie with<lb/>
Tim Dameron (1970 72) foi fifth<lb/>
place on E t 'scared receptions<lb/>
list with 58, and needs just two to<lb/>
overtake Stan Lute foi the No. 4<lb/>
spot.<lb/>
Nichols also now has 1,088<lb/>
yards in career yardage, which<lb/>
puts him No. 4 on that career list<lb/>
with two games still to play.<lb/>
Nichols needs nine yards to take<lb/>
over the No. 4 spot from Billy<lb/>
Ray Washington (1977-79, 1,096<lb/>
yards) and 106 yards to jump into<lb/>
the No. 2 spot (Tim Dameron,<lb/>
1,193 yards). This season Nichols<lb/>
has jumped from the No. 10 spot<lb/>
on the career yardage list to No<lb/>
4.<lb/>
The Long and Winding Road:<lb/>
Should the Pirates lose to<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana in their<lb/>
seventh and final road game of<lb/>
the season this week it will mark<lb/>
the first time since prior to 1960<lb/>
that the Pirates have failed to win<lb/>
in an opponents stadium.<lb/>
Records prior to 1960 are not ac-<lb/>
curate as to road and home<lb/>
games<lb/>
Home (poking: Saturday's game<lb/>
Track Meet A Hit,<lb/>
Sport Clubs Active<lb/>
with East Carolina will be the<lb/>
final home game of the season<lb/>
for the Ragin' Cajuns of<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana. The Ca-<lb/>
juns are an impressive 2-1 on the<lb/>
Cajun Field this season, having<lb/>
beaten Southern Mississippi, who<lb/>
the Pirates host in their final<lb/>
game of the 1984 season, and<lb/>
Wichita State. The Ragin' Cajuns<lb/>
only loss at home this season has<lb/>
been to Northeast Louisiana 7-6.<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana faces<lb/>
the same task this season as the<lb/>
Pirates have for the past three<lb/>
USL also plays seven road games<lb/>
this season as it strives to reach<lb/>
the status of major Division LA<lb/>
independent, which Fast<lb/>
Carolina accomplished a year ago<lb/>
with its 8-3 record.<lb/>
Homecoming of Sorts:<lb/>
Saturday's game with<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana will be a<lb/>
homecoming of sorts for ECU's<lb/>
offensive coordinator Don<lb/>
Murry. Murry, who joined the<lb/>
Pirate staff this season when Art<lb/>
Baker left for Florida State, ser<lb/>
ed in the same capacit) tor the<lb/>
Ragin' C ajuns during the 1983<lb/>
season before coming to T( U in<lb/>
the spring.<lb/>
Bunn Impressive Again: Tullhak<lb/>
Bubba Bunn was again the<lb/>
Pirates' leading rusher for the se<lb/>
cond straight week after his move<lb/>
from tailback.<lb/>
Bunn, who rushed foi 161<lb/>
yards and two touchdowns in<lb/>
E U's 24-6 victory over Last<lb/>
Tennessee State on October 20 in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium, ran for 68 yards<lb/>
in last week's 42-20 loss at the<lb/>
hands of No. 5 Southarolina.<lb/>
That gives Bunn. a junior from<lb/>
Cioldsboro, 229 vards in two<lb/>
games for an impressive 114 5<lb/>
yards per game average Foi the<lb/>
season, Bunn has rushed for 245<lb/>
.ards in five games and lead-<lb/>
team in rushing with his 49 <lb/>
per game<lb/>
Bunn captured fAC r<lb/>
sive Plavcr of the Week I<lb/>
with his 161-vard dav aga<lb/>
last lennessee State<lb/>
Common Opponents.<lb/>
Pirates and ajuns share ' ?<lb/>
runon opponenets in i-y- .<lb/>
The Pirates lost to T .<lb/>
road i 20 and Southwest<lb/>
I ? lisiana will finish the l )l<lb/>
season at Fulsa's Skell) Sta .<lb/>
Ironically, I. SI defeated 1<lb/>
Carolina's season-ending<lb/>
nent last week when the Ca<lb/>
igged Southern Miss wit!<lb/>
13-7 Kiss in Lafayette, LA I ?<lb/>
Pirates close the 1984 sea<lb/>
the Golden Eagles No<lb/>
ficklen Stadium.<lb/>
B JFAWFTTFROIH<lb/>
M?ff W nlrr<lb/>
Though the inclement weather<lb/>
canceled several events, the in-<lb/>
tramural track meet was a huge<lb/>
success foi several campus teams.<lb/>
Suffering under drizzling skies<lb/>
: slipper) track conditions.<lb/>
" tea ?? : an awav with the<lb/>
overall victor) defeating the<lb/>
tracksters from Scott and the in-<lb/>
dependent third place finishers<lb/>
Thundei a n .  htening,<lb/>
raking individual honors in<lb/>
both the discus and shot put<lb/>
events was )z Martlet The<lb/>
long jump award went to<lb/>
speedster Arthur Barnes, who<lb/>
also finished first in the 50-yard<lb/>
dash and 100-yard dash Sigma<lb/>
Ph: Epsilon captured first place<lb/>
tl : uftball thr ?.<lb/>
The 440-vard victor) wen<lb/>
ndependeni Thunder at<lb/>
? ' nit t who not onlv finished<lb/>
third overall, but captured top<lb/>
honors in the 880-yard run. The<lb/>
"lightening" crowd chased<lb/>
Umstead Dorm, but came up<lb/>
rt taking second place in the<lb/>
88 I relav.<lb/>
The two mile race saw the !rat<lb/>
men from Phi Kappa Tau cross<lb/>
'he tape first with Scott Dorm<lb/>
finishing second, fourth and fifth<lb/>
m the same race. Instead once<lb/>
again made the top three, receiv-<lb/>
ing three points to add to their<lb/>
tal. As the skies darkened, the<lb/>
men from Phi Kappa Tau raced<lb/>
earn seven points in the mile<lb/>
run, while Scott and Umstead<lb/>
followed.<lb/>
On the women's side, it was all<lb/>
Tri Sig and Chilling Sauce who<lb/>
bounced back and forth from vic-<lb/>
tor) to victory. Chilling Sauce<lb/>
earned first place honors in the<lb/>
oftball throw, long jump, 880<lb/>
relay and 440 run, while the<lb/>
adies from Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
von the 440-yard run, 50-yard<lb/>
dash and received first and se-<lb/>
cond place honors in the 880 yard<lb/>
run. Other events had to be<lb/>
.anceled as the track became too<lb/>
hazardous to complete the con-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
In sport club action, the ECU<lb/>
Surfing Club sponsored a tourna-<lb/>
ment this past weekend at<lb/>
Tmerald Isle, N.C. Seventy-five<lb/>
people representing teams from<lb/>
across the eastern seaboard com-<lb/>
peted. At the end of regulation<lb/>
time, a tie developed between the<lb/>
reams from UNC-W and ECU. A<lb/>
tie breaker in which the top two<lb/>
surfers from each squad rode the<lb/>
waves for 15 minutes, ended in a<lb/>
victory for UNC-W, who just<lb/>
edged the talent of ECU.<lb/>
For those of you who fancy the<lb/>
martial arts. Rose High recently<lb/>
held the 1984 Goju-Shonn<lb/>
Southeastern Classic. Con-<lb/>
gratulations are in order to<lb/>
several ECU Martial Arts Sport<lb/>
( lub participants who came away<lb/>
with individual honors. Chuck<lb/>
lohnson placed first in the<lb/>
heavyweight black belt bout, and<lb/>
took third in the Kata (pre-<lb/>
arranged series of fighting<lb/>
moves) belt event. David Miller<lb/>
fought for third place in the green<lb/>
belt division. In women's action,<lb/>
ECU instructor Anne Vanlith<lb/>
placed second in tne brown belt<lb/>
Kata division<lb/>
I he Rugbv tea eted in a<lb/>
double- headei c ampbell<lb/>
University eune<lb/>
recent 1.<lb/>
ed l(i I<lb/>
.e again,<lb/>
all runners, st<lb/>
ruggc<lb/>
lil<lb/>
I while<lb/>
eune<lb/>
8 4,<lb/>
i<lb/>
. itei s and<lb/>
' ine ECU in<lb/>
? FINALLY.<lb/>
STUFFED ANIMALS<lb/>
THAT REALLY LOOK<lb/>
LIKE ANIMALS.<lb/>
tin<lb/>
atest sport club .<lb/>
tramural<lb/>
rat lit<lb/>
Iran<lb/>
m-<lb/>
P i<lb/>
in<lb/>
?,<lb/>
nrjMHiiKKYs<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
 <lb/>
DON'T MISS OUT!<lb/>
Sandwiches &amp; Salads<lb/>
3rd Anniversary Sale<lb/>
Buy Any Footlong Sub<lb/>
Get The Second One FREE<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 3,1984<lb/>
1 lam-5pm<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
!Delivery Coming Soon!<lb/>
THIS WAY UP<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
? presents ?<lb/>
THE GARY<lb/>
STALLINGS BAND<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 3rd<lb/>
 FREE ADMISSION <lb/>
Open 8:00pm, A<lb/>
Concert 8:55pm 'tfl<lb/>
?<lb/>
GYM<lb/>
STARTS AUGUST 15<lb/>
All New Exercise<lb/>
Facility in Downtown<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
All Olympic weights and<lb/>
machines, nutritional<lb/>
programs and<lb/>
supervised workout<lb/>
programs available.<lb/>
1 ' cm<lb/>
? ' ' ' .  52! . ?-<lb/>
? Brinj li ri d I ilrateNov I N 10(2 months) $30.00<lb/>
? TIM!<lb/>
Located in the Downtown Mall<lb/>
Next to The Aerobic Workshop<lb/>
FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL<lb/>
758-4359<lb/>
Warm-up &amp; Running<lb/>
Suits<lb/>
Be prepared for the cooler weather!<lb/>
Warm-ups (adult-men)<lb/>
First -50 polyester 50 amel triacetate<lb/>
-(S,M,L,XL)?Several colors available.<lb/>
A-15 -50 polyester 50 amel triacetate<lb/>
-(XS,S,M,L,XL)?several colors available.<lb/>
Paul -87 polyester 13 cotton double<lb/>
face knit-(S,M,L,XL)several colors<lb/>
available.<lb/>
Running suits (adult-men)<lb/>
Tim -Pullover Jacket-100 nylon taffeta<lb/>
-(S,M,L,XL)?Several colors available<lb/>
Terry -Warm-up Pant-100 nylon taffeta<lb/>
-(S.M.L.XL)?Several colors available<lb/>
Thomas-Zipper ed Jacket-100 Nylon taffeta<lb/>
-(S,M,L,XL)?Several colors available<lb/>
Coming Soon!?Warm-ups &amp; running suits<lb/>
for women? from NIKE!<lb/>
H.L. HODGES CO.<lb/>
210 E.FIFTM SI GREEN VILLE<lb/>
MtaMMta<lb/>
? l<lb/>
?? T . m m m ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057677_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
1 HI :AST( XKnl INIAN<lb/>
N ?V I MM! K I, WSJ<lb/>
HOWHv<lb/>
SM? (M<lb/>
HIliHH 1<lb/>
? I HIM<lb/>
l 4BAM4 .1 MIV. M<lb/>
11 SI U AR M<lb/>
MR HK I .i tRM<lb/>
M 81 RN ,1 HOMI1M<lb/>
B?M(?N l mi  ptvs si<lb/>
 sM al I I IMMIN<lb/>
l?l ht al .K in H<lb/>
WIV UNsin ? H <lb/>
??lMINN at I.SI<lb/>
MAKl M?.i i m<lb/>
"H HI(,U ,i pi n,u t<lb/>
MlVSOl Kl a. OKI HOM<lb/>
OIJi 0V? al NA<lb/>
XH IliHK ?, M4.lt<lb/>
fH'I al MRM I s<lb/>
? V A al ?fsl .iM4.<lb/>
?OMIV. .i HAWAII<lb/>
ECU Falls<lb/>
To Atlantic!<lb/>
B lOM BROWN<lb/>
staff V nlrf<lb/>
In the his! game ol the best-ol<lb/>
five match, the Pirates were hot<lb/>
Vftei eight consecutive side outs.<lb/>
Ann Guida set the ball perfectly<lb/>
SI . Hiinson, who pui the<lb/>
Pirates on top with a resounding<lb/>
smash<lb/>
V tied ii up, Kl<lb/>
took charge, scoring five straight<lb/>
with the excellent service oi Brin-<lb/>
son a jumr out to a 6 1 advan<lb/>
v cam ight bat k with a<lb/>
. - as the scored tour<lb/>
Rhoda Barkam's service<lb/>
to pull within one of the Pii i<lb/>
a great dig b<lb/>
I V I<lb/>
The pace slowed with tour<lb/>
side-outs, but finalh a dink by<lb/>
Martha McQuillan bi gl the<lb/>
service back to the Pirates (iuida<lb/>
was inserted ii up and<lb/>
promptly served an ace, then sei<lb/>
up a kill for ECl to make the<lb/>
-?core 12-5.<lb/>
The Pirates advanced to<lb/>
brink of victorj with two solo<lb/>
points during a series ol ex-<lb/>
changes before C gave them a<lb/>
ght scare with tour points,<lb/>
the rally fell short as ECl pui<lb/>
tame awa v'w a poM dui<lb/>
a's serve to ?in ! 5 <lb/>
The Pirates began the sei ?nd<lb/>
game in good shape as Guida set<lb/>
Smith smash,<lb/>
-<lb/>
AC v eained<lb/>
serv ice i<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
ace<lb/>
Pira<lb/>
er way ? 11<lb/>
?es hich led<lb/>
. I tals to 7-4<lb/>
( point, ECl 's<lb/>
ie over the net.<lb/>
Riggan sei her up again<lb/>
the Pirates a 9-5<lb/>
da -<lb/>
U (.<lb/>
ig Riggai<lb/>
save, ti ;<lb/>
??<lb/>
Katl<lb/>
d ECl<lb/>
CC j . Rhoda<lb/>
Bar-<lb/>
points s ? ?<lb/>
-r. ??:?- i<lb/>
gave the P<lb/>
coliap I<lb/>
ACC<lb/>
i I -12 win ai  i tie a<lb/>
one game each.<lb/>
Down two games to one,<lb/>
Pirates go: togethei to pull out an<lb/>
overtime win and force a I I<lb/>
game. It seemed hopeless as AC(<lb/>
rushed to a 6-0 lead, but Dawn<lb/>
Langley served two points to cut<lb/>
the lead. The teams traded points<lb/>
to make it 7-3, then EC I tallied<lb/>
again on a Bnnson hit.<lb/>
A block by Smith cut the AC C<lb/>
lead to a pair, but again the<lb/>
Pirates suffered a scoring<lb/>
drought while giving up ?<lb/>
points. Three of those so<lb/>
came during the serve ol Tammy<lb/>
Streater, a Winterville native.<lb/>
Elimination again appeared<lb/>
imminent for EC I as AC (<lb/>
?eetered on the edge ol victory<lb/>
after scoring two points, onlv<lb/>
needing one to take the game and<lb/>
match. But the mi irageous<lb/>
rally ol the season occurred as<lb/>
Brinsoi ill gave the Pirates the<lb/>
service, which subsequently<lb/>
? ught them back from the im-<lb/>
mediate "agony oi defeat<lb/>
Smith calmly put in four good<lb/>
rves, with a McQuillan hit tie<lb/>
ing the game at 14. Two more<lb/>
points gave ECU the required<lb/>
point margin for the game<lb/>
: in and a series tie<lb/>
The hard, hustling effort<lb/>
ssibly drained the Pirates The<lb/>
final game began well enough, as<lb/>
?he teams stayed close again dur-<lb/>
ing the first half. Continued ex-<lb/>
cellence hv Smith helped keep<lb/>
ECU in the game and Langleys<lb/>
contribution included a hard kill.<lb/>
The Pirates appeared to tire<lb/>
after the score advanced to 8-6 in<lb/>
?C C's favor. ACC had several<lb/>
good service series during the<lb/>
game as Wellington, Barkam.<lb/>
and Paige Murray served at least<lb/>
three points each. ACC eventual-<lb/>
ly went on to win the match three<lb/>
games to two.<lb/>
M 4. RUM 114.<lb/>
t SI<lb/>
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n si<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057677_0013"/>
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