<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
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<pb facs="00057679_0001"/>
v<lb/>
?he<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the Last Carolina campus community since V25<lb/>
(?I.S?) No.22<lb/>
rhursdaj Novembers, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
12 Panes<lb/>
( irculation 12.IMK<lb/>
ECU Professors Discuss Election Results<lb/>
B JENNIFER JEN DRASI K<lb/>
As is the norm. Election Da caused n<lb/>
changes throughout the . North<lb/>
Carolina, a Republican governoi was elected to a<lb/>
position that has been a Democratic si nghold,<lb/>
while one oi the most expensive Senate races in<lb/>
history came to an end E( I faculty members had<lb/>
varying reactions concerning the winners and the<lb/>
ramifications of their victories<lb/>
Most faculty members contacted agreed Presi-<lb/>
dent Ronald Reagan's reelection ,iv no surprise<lb/>
and is indicative ol the conserval ve attitude oi<lb/>
many voters. "The majorit ol the electorate feels<lb/>
Reagan accomplished important thing: during his<lb/>
first term and should be given a chance to build on<lb/>
them said Maurice Simon, cl I ! Oi the<lb/>
Department oi Political Science.<lb/>
"It was not a question ol whethei Reagan<lb/>
would win, but bv how mu<lb/>
said ngel<lb/>
Volpe. v ice chancellor for academic affairs V<lb/>
said Reagan's reelection is "a sign of tl<lb/>
that the genera! population wan! see the<lb/>
government taking<lb/>
Volpe aKo said he is hop peo-<lb/>
ple have suggested, Reagan will coi . ??<lb/>
history" during his se : term ai<lb/>
the federal defi( do?<lb/>
meni in the foreign affairs climate<lb/>
On the state level, the outcome of the long,<lb/>
highly-publicized Senate race between Sen. Jesse<lb/>
Helms, R-N.C, and Gov. James Hunt was less<lb/>
predictable.<lb/>
Simon attributed Helms' win in part to<lb/>
Reagan's victory in North Carolina. ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell concurred, saying, "The<lb/>
sie of Reagan's support was the margin of victory-<lb/>
tor Helms. If Reagan's margin in the state had<lb/>
been 51 percent to 49 percent for Walter Mondale,<lb/>
Hunt probably would have won<lb/>
Howell said he didn't think the victories of<lb/>
Helms or Republican James Martin, who defeated<lb/>
Democrat Rufus Edmisten in the N.C. guber-<lb/>
natorial race, were unexpected. "A lot of people<lb/>
in North Carolina, when they realized Reagan's<lb/>
support was beginning to grow as the election<lb/>
grew near, began to realize Helms and Martin<lb/>
would probably win he said.<lb/>
Simon said he would predict a "moderate<lb/>
owth" in Republicanism in North Carolina<lb/>
following Martin's victory, but the extent oi the<lb/>
iwth "depends on what happens with the<lb/>
economy<lb/>
fad thai Martin is a former college pro-<lb/>
: was stressed b Volpe when discussing the<lb/>
ts ol the election outcome on higher educa-<lb/>
Newly-Elected Republicans<lb/>
Consolidate Future Plans<lb/>
(L PI) Presideni Reagan<lb/>
riding the cres I a record land-<lb/>
slide reelection victory, says<lb/>
"America's best days lie ahead<lb/>
and you ain't seen noi g yet<lb/>
The jubilant preside resorted<lb/>
to his favorite campaign slogan<lb/>
when he appeared a; a rictorj<lb/>
celebration Iuesda nighi <lb/>
his crushing defeat oi Democ ?<lb/>
opponent Waiter fndae.<lb/>
W'?i ?? percent of vYc vote<lb/>
counted nationwide, R<lb/>
5180.290 or 59 percent to Mon-<lb/>
day's 35,903,848 or 41 per<lb/>
Reagan won 525 electoral votes<lb/>
from 49 states. Mondale captured<lb/>
13 electoral votes by winning his<lb/>
home state of Minnesota and the<lb/>
District of Columbia.<lb/>
The 73-year-old president ap-<lb/>
peared anxious to emphasize that<lb/>
he Mews his overwhelming man-<lb/>
date as a signal to continue his<lb/>
-ervative policies and the<lb/>
"revolution of the right<lb/>
"Tonight is the end of nothing.<lb/>
It's the beginning of everything<lb/>
he said Tuesday.<lb/>
Reagan also indicated he was<lb/>
ready to meet with Soviet Presi-<lb/>
dent Konstantin Chernenko at<lb/>
the summit, saying, "It's time for<lb/>
us to get together and talk about<lb/>
a great many things and try to<lb/>
clear the air and suspicions bet-<lb/>
ween us so we can get down to the<lb/>
business of reducing, particulary<lb/>
nuclear weapons<lb/>
Exultant Vice President<lb/>
George Bush said President<lb/>
Reagan's "magnificent victory"<lb/>
gives the Republicans a mandate<lb/>
to represent all Americans.<lb/>
Bush appealed for bipartisan<lb/>
unity, saying, "now, in the<lb/>
American tradition after every<lb/>
election, let's come together as<lb/>
people united and individuals to<lb/>
share a common purpose to<lb/>
realize the dream held by all<lb/>
Americans regardless of partv,<lb/>
the universal goal of peace and<lb/>
;perin and opportunity for<lb/>
all<lb/>
Mondale appeared<lb/>
? K pe ple in the St.<lb/>
Pan! Civic Center to make his<lb/>
concession speech after the West<lb/>
Coa 'I uesda)<lb/>
e with the<lb/>
I gave it<lb/>
-aid Tm confident history will<lb/>
ronorably. Tonight let<lb/>
us be determined to tight on.<lb/>
"Let us continue to seek an<lb/>
merica that is just and fair he<lb/>
: speaking of the poor, the<lb/>
unemployed and the helpless.<lb/>
"My Candida.v has said the<lb/>
days oi discrimination are<lb/>
numbered Geraldine Ferraro<lb/>
said Tuesday night. "American<lb/>
women will never again be second<lb/>
class citizens<lb/>
"We are bursting with pride at<lb/>
the magnificent performance of a<lb/>
woman from Queens, a great<lb/>
Democrat and a great<lb/>
An. in said her patron New<lb/>
York Gov. Mario Cuomo.<lb/>
Ferraro said Reagan and Bush<lb/>
"ran a skillful, spirited campaign<lb/>
and today they have achieved an<lb/>
impressive victory. The race is<lb/>
over. This is not a moment for<lb/>
partisan statements. It is a mo-<lb/>
ment to celebrate our<lb/>
democracy<lb/>
Republicans retained control<lb/>
of the Senate, but their 55-45<lb/>
majoritv was reduced by two to<lb/>
53-47.<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms. R-N.C,<lb/>
who defeated Gov. James Hunt<lb/>
in the N.C . Senate race, vowed to<lb/>
lead a crusade for "the Christian<lb/>
people<lb/>
Helms, champion of the con-<lb/>
servative New Right, beat back<lb/>
Hunt's challenge with a little<lb/>
more than 51 percent of the vote<lb/>
Tuesday and pledged "love and<lb/>
faithfulness to the principles that<lb/>
deserve to survive.<lb/>
"Especially to the Christian<lb/>
people, I say an unashamed and<lb/>
unblemished, God bless you a<lb/>
beaming Helms told 600 cheering<lb/>
supporters in his victory speech.<lb/>
Hunt's campaign said the<lb/>
governor offered the "last best<lb/>
hope" of ousting Helms, 63, who<lb/>
hns te-i ooriNorsnf is c- causcf favor-<lb/>
ing school prayer and opposing<lb/>
abortion during his two terms in<lb/>
the Senate.<lb/>
Hunt, 47, refused to concede<lb/>
defeat until after midnight<lb/>
despite Helms' strong showing.<lb/>
The governor finally told his sup-<lb/>
porters, "I may be beaten but I<lb/>
am unbowed. The people of<lb/>
North Carolina have made their<lb/>
choice. While we may disagree,<lb/>
we must respect it<lb/>
Helms had trailed Hunt by as<lb/>
much as 20 percentage points in<lb/>
statewide popularity polls but<lb/>
gained ground late in the cam-<lb/>
paign, outspending the governor<lb/>
nearly 2-to-l by drawing on a<lb/>
vast network of supporters across<lb/>
the nation.<lb/>
In the governor's races,<lb/>
Republicans appeared to make a<lb/>
net gain of two, even though<lb/>
GOP incumbents were defeated<lb/>
in Washington and North<lb/>
Dakota. Overall, Republicans<lb/>
won eight of the 13 governor's<lb/>
races.<lb/>
Rep. James Martin, who<lb/>
defeated Democrat Rufus Ed-<lb/>
misten in a come-from-behind<lb/>
victory, pledged to "settle down<lb/>
and work for all the people" as<lb/>
the state's second Republican<lb/>
governor this century.<lb/>
Martin met with Edmisten<lb/>
after he was declared the winner,<lb/>
but said he had not spoken with<lb/>
state Sen. Robert Jordan,<lb/>
See MARTIN, Page 6<lb/>
"The success of education doesn't depend that<lb/>
much on who is governor Howell said. He add-<lb/>
ed that Martin's power would be enhanced it he-<lb/>
were working with a Republican, rather than a<lb/>
Democratic, state General Assembly. "I don't<lb/>
think there will be a great deal oi difference as tar<lb/>
as education is concerned Howell said.<lb/>
The N.C. governor has the power to select four<lb/>
members of the ECU Board of Trustees. The<lb/>
Board o' Governors for the University of North<lb/>
Carolina system is selected by the state legislature,<lb/>
however.<lb/>
"The university has always worked well with all<lb/>
the governors, and I'm sure we will continue to do<lb/>
this said William I aupus, dean of the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life Elmer Meyer<lb/>
said it will be "interesting to watch the next two or<lb/>
three years to see what happens to higher educa-<lb/>
tion Meyer added that there is enough of a<lb/>
"check-and-balance" system to ensure that educa-<lb/>
tional funding will not suiter greatlv.<lb/>
This year's races, especially the Hum-Helms<lb/>
race, showed the effect of money on the election<lb/>
process, Simon said. "Those races which were<lb/>
close show the power oi monev in American<lb/>
politics he said. "It seems disconcerting that<lb/>
you can bin a two or three percent margin if you<lb/>
have enough money and are nasty enough<lb/>
I.aupus said the Hum-Helms rac ? ? ttei<lb/>
and unpleasant campaign whuh most ol u<lb/>
of. It makes you wonder what all thi<lb/>
amounted to Laupus pointed out that tl<lb/>
results "were just about the same a<lb/>
taken in August" despite "the length and tl<lb/>
tensity of the campaign<lb/>
Concerning the possibility ol Helms in<lb/>
the position of chairman of the Senate !<lb/>
Relations Committee, an event made mi<lb/>
by the defeat of its current chairman Sen (<lb/>
Percy, R-IU Simon said there is a "i ftv I<lb/>
chance of this happening<lb/>
Helms has "national aspirations"<lb/>
terested in foreign policy Simon said H<lb/>
that, if Helms were to assume the p -<lb/>
would be more "difficulty in<lb/>
foreign policy. It would also be har lei I<lb/>
to move towards the center<lb/>
Howell said he is unsure ol 1 u<lb/>
but said "any chair of the Foreign Relal<lb/>
mittee can have considerable infl<lb/>
he's in a position to block the pres .<lb/>
things<lb/>
"Overall, it was a convincing ,<lb/>
wide and in the state for Repub<lb/>
said.<lb/>
?'ON JORDAN<lb/>
ECU PKr.<lb/>
By Student Residence Association<lb/>
Dorm Solicitation Banned<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
Mslant Nr. tditor<lb/>
The Student R e s i d e nc e<lb/>
Association passed an amend-<lb/>
ment Monday afternoon pro-<lb/>
hibiting anv campus organiza-<lb/>
tions from soliciting door to<lb/>
door.<lb/>
"The old rule said SR <lb/>
president Debbie Gembicki,<lb/>
"allowed door to door campaign-<lb/>
ing from the Student Govern-<lb/>
ment and SRA candidates.<lb/>
However, other organizations<lb/>
may contest that rule, and the<lb/>
university would be obligated to<lb/>
let them do it<lb/>
Carolyn Fulghum, director and<lb/>
associate dean for residence life,<lb/>
said N.C. State University recent-<lb/>
ly had the same problem oi door<lb/>
to door soliciting in the residence<lb/>
halls. "A campus organization<lb/>
that was not associated with the<lb/>
student government or residence<lb/>
council wanted to solicit religious<lb/>
messages. They were not allowed<lb/>
to do this, so the organization<lb/>
took the issue to court and the<lb/>
UNC General Admistration at-<lb/>
torney decided that if one group<lb/>
was allowed to solicit door to<lb/>
door, everyone else could, too<lb/>
Current residence hall rules<lb/>
prohibit anv one visiting residence<lb/>
halls without being associated<lb/>
with the university. The amended<lb/>
rule, which was passed by a ma-<lb/>
joritv vine, will be in addition to<lb/>
the current one.<lb/>
Students will still get their<lb/>
share oi campaigning and other<lb/>
solicitation, only now it will be in<lb/>
the lobby oi dorms. Gembicki<lb/>
said. "When a campus organiza-<lb/>
tion gets permission to solicit at<lb/>
the dorms, there will be an<lb/>
assigned area in the lobby for<lb/>
them to set up a display or<lb/>
table Gembicki said.<lb/>
The SRA will also submit a<lb/>
proposal to Dr. Elmer Meyer,<lb/>
vice chancellor for student life,<lb/>
putting the quiet dorm proposal<lb/>
on hold for one year. According<lb/>
to last year's proposal, two floors<lb/>
would be set aside in Slay dorm<lb/>
for exclusive quiet hours.<lb/>
Pam Bunch, vice-president of<lb/>
Slay said the idea of "warning"<lb/>
incoming freshmen oi the pro-<lb/>
posal would be a good idea. "It<lb/>
wouldn't be right for them to<lb/>
choose to live in Slav and not<lb/>
know it might be a quiet dorm<lb/>
she said. "I've talked to several<lb/>
of this year's freshmen in Slay<lb/>
and all of them are very happy<lb/>
with the set quiet hours now<lb/>
"The mam reason the SK <lb/>
decided to propose warring a yeai<lb/>
before making a decisioni(<lb/>
bicki said, "was so we wi<lb/>
have enough time to see<lb/>
fects oi new apa<lb/>
plexes and condominiums b<lb/>
built in Greenv<lb/>
nother proposal bv the SR <lb/>
would let tudei<lb/>
their own rooms In<lb/>
residence hails, furniture pei<lb/>
manentlv affixed to the a i<lb/>
floor.<lb/>
Gembicki sard sc w tici<lb/>
to see the current rules .<lb/>
and let the residents "create I<lb/>
own room. Of course she i<lb/>
"there would be a limit<lb/>
far we could let them do their<lb/>
own decorating 1 think it would<lb/>
help in keeping the student<lb/>
residence halls. But right n a<lb/>
we're just tossing ideas around.<lb/>
An informal surve was done<lb/>
b Marcie Green ol Belk dorm.<lb/>
"Eighty percent of the residents<lb/>
wanted to fix their own rooms b<lb/>
moving beds and desks she<lb/>
said. Another resident wl<lb/>
in Aycock dorm said everyone on<lb/>
his floor would lrke :o move<lb/>
furniture.<lb/>
Alumni Drive Exceeds Goal<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
suff wm?<lb/>
The ECU Alumni National<lb/>
Telefund raised $82,398 this<lb/>
semester, surpassing its goal of<lb/>
$80,000. This year's total sur-<lb/>
passed the amount raised in 1983<lb/>
by $18,000, according to Cindy<lb/>
Kittrell, alumni Field director.<lb/>
"This was the best telefund<lb/>
we've ever had Kittrell said. "I<lb/>
was impressed with the callers ?<lb/>
they had professionalism, en-<lb/>
thusiasm and comradeship<lb/>
Volunteer callers began contac-<lb/>
ting alumni every evening at 7 in<lb/>
order to raise the funds. Money<lb/>
from the telefund is used to help<lb/>
better ECU in many ways.<lb/>
The week of Oct. 22-24 was<lb/>
designated all-star week. Callers<lb/>
who had raised the most money<lb/>
in previous weeks were invited<lb/>
back for a final contest, calling<lb/>
for a grand prize which included<lb/>
dinner at the house of ECU<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell and<lb/>
tickets located in the chancellor's<lb/>
box at Saturday's football game.<lb/>
This year's winner was Elizabeth<lb/>
Frazzele from Jones dorai.<lb/>
Specific items provided<lb/>
through the monev raised are<lb/>
merit scholarships and research<lb/>
assistance for ECU faculty.<lb/>
The number of new donors this<lb/>
year totaled 568, an increase oi<lb/>
235 from 1983. Kittrell attributed<lb/>
the increase to the "caliber of the<lb/>
callers. They urged people who<lb/>
had never given to give and in-<lb/>
creased interest in ECU<lb/>
"The student leaders projected<lb/>
the feeling that East Carolina is<lb/>
important and the monev was im-<lb/>
portant for the growth of ECU<lb/>
she said.<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? m m ? 0m0miB m I.<lb/>
 ???????? mmmmmmmmmmw$mjmmmmwkm<lb/>
??<lb/>
i '<lb/>
1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0002"/><lb/>
TR? EAST CAROL INIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 8, 1984<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
l<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
Omeaa Pj, Phl Frat )nc i$ recoflnlllnB aM<lb/>
black sludnts who have accumlated a gpa<lb/>
0,30 ?r a&amp;ove You win be given a cer<lb/>
flficate of achievement during our ach eve<lb/>
ment aay awards ceremonoy on Nov IB at<lb/>
3 00 It you have the qualifications write<lb/>
Omeua Psi Phi p o Box 30U. Greenville<lb/>
N C 27834<lb/>
Allied Health Professions<lb/>
The Aii.ed Health Professions Admission<lb/>
Test will be offered at East Car ,una Univer<lb/>
sity on Saturday Jan 12. I9S5 Application<lb/>
blanks are to be completed and mailed to the<lb/>
Psychological Corp 7500 Old oak Blvd .<lb/>
Cleveland Ohio 44130 to arrive by Dec ,1$,<lb/>
i984 Applications may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECO Testing Center room 105 Speight<lb/>
Building<lb/>
Graduate Management<lb/>
The Graduate Management Admission Test<lb/>
GMATJ will be offered at East Carolina<lb/>
university -at Jan 26. 1985 Application<lb/>
blanks ar. tc je completed and mailed to<lb/>
GMAT Eaucafional Testing Service Box<lb/>
?66 R Princeton. N J 08540 Applications<lb/>
-nust te postmarned no later than Dec 24.<lb/>
i?84 Applications may be obtained from the<lb/>
ECU Testing Center. Room 105. Speight<lb/>
Building Greenville N C 27834<lb/>
Student Union Special Concerts<lb/>
Jdent un.on Special Concerts Com<lb/>
He meet on Thursday Nov 8. 1984, at<lb/>
4 00 pm in room ;38 of Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center All members and interested<lb/>
students a e u. gea to attend<lb/>
PhiTaus<lb/>
his weekend will be the ultimate jam Fri<lb/>
starts outs with lappv hour at the Attic<lb/>
Decision will be there to rock! Sat<lb/>
?ftet ioon attei the P,rates k.ck ass. we will<lb/>
? ae that maior munch with a pig pic'n and<lb/>
aiithefmns Sun wu. crank up at noon with<lb/>
the UltlmateTrim Party Party beverage<lb/>
? ne prov.oeo wh.ie we all knock out some<lb/>
'??e sisters are expected to be there<lb/>
Brothers This is your chance to knock it<lb/>
Hem fax are we going<lb/>
Motorcycle Club<lb/>
t Hariey Davidson and Frog Level<lb/>
Motorcycle Club are sopnsormg the 2nd an<lb/>
nual toy run Sat nov 17 Rendeivous9 30<lb/>
am a' J ano E Hariey Davidson 1008 Dickin<lb/>
son Ave Free Eats and drinks Departure<lb/>
. 00 pm on a 5 mile parade route Con<lb/>
buttons go to the Salvation Army and<lb/>
10 a' donations to the Ronald McDonald<lb/>
House AH Bikers mv.ted. bring a toy<lb/>
The Holiday Project<lb/>
e hoi.da, Proiect Is a non profit public<lb/>
orporation Ihal IS working toward raising<lb/>
financial ass stance with the funds raised<lb/>
volunteers the Holiday Project will pro<lb/>
ae g,t?s at Christmas for people m area<lb/>
 id normally be without If<lb/>
'Ou are interested In contributing either<lb/>
?oluntani- or financially please contact Dee<lb/>
Pre -Season Basketball<lb/>
tgister now tor one of 'he most successful<lb/>
ntramura events of the fall Registration<lb/>
the tournament sponsored by Miller High<lb/>
fe s on No 26 27 Play begins the 30th<lb/>
?tme to let it dn out before exams<lb/>
Register In room 204 menonal gym or call<lb/>
'57 6387<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
,i Be- pi ?ee- usda Nov 15<lb/>
' ? the B gy Build -g 103<lb/>
ECU Mens Invitational Flag<lb/>
?ee s SIS 00 and the event will be<lb/>
 '8 of Nov Register this<lb/>
"amural office room<lb/>
Men a g The tournament is spon<lb/>
sorea By All Campus champs<lb/>
Bombsquad and will use 'he money to<lb/>
cover expenses or, tne.r v.p to the National<lb/>
Collegiate Flag Football Tournament<lb/>
N.C.I.O.<lb/>
The North Caroi'na Internship Office pro-<lb/>
ses ca c<lb/>
13 73 per<lb/>
June<lb/>
summer mtern positions tor<lb/>
ri S"a'e Government Positions<lb/>
- " a .are'y of agencies located<lb/>
he s'aV S'udents will Be paid<lb/>
. aurmg the period of<lb/>
August 1<lb/>
Christmas Vacation<lb/>
Zao Natonal Underwater<lb/>
? ? 'aBL ous Ke, Largo Tne Flor.aa<lb/>
.evs are the only natural coral reef in the<lb/>
' ental u S This five day trip. Dec<lb/>
uoes lodging and two dive boat<lb/>
'?" T;jiks Backpack ano weight<lb/>
elts a-e provided Cost is SI75 00 per per<lb/>
son two to a room occupancy and 210 00 per<lb/>
- 4 to a room occupancy For further<lb/>
nformat on Ra, Schart, Director of Ac<lb/>
jua'ics 757 6441<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
ne Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau.<lb/>
?ne National Honor Society of Nursing, w.li<lb/>
noid Its fall educational meet.ng on Thurs<lb/>
day. Nov 15. I984at6pm at the Ramada Inn<lb/>
m Greenville The program presented By<lb/>
Dr Ann Belcher rn, PhD Is entitled,<lb/>
'The ten ear p,an implications for On'<lb/>
coiog, Nursmg Or Belcher is director of<lb/>
Nurs.r.g Staff Deveiopement at the Umversi<lb/>
ty of ALatama Hospital in Birmingham<lb/>
AiaBama Colleagues s'udents, spouses and<lb/>
Friends are cordially mv.ted For further In<lb/>
?ormation. contac lou Everett at the School<lb/>
 Nursing 757 401<lb/>
Free Throw Contest<lb/>
There will be a free throw contest he'd for all<lb/>
.ou expert hoopsters Nov 13 This in<lb/>
'ramurai sponsored event will be held in<lb/>
Memorial Gym To register come by room<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym or call 757 6387 Par<lb/>
'icipate rather than specfafe<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
'erested in international Policy and<lb/>
Regulations affecting high technology expor<lb/>
?mg? if so. this position may be for you.<lb/>
NASA will be interviewing on compus in<lb/>
nov tor Sprmg, 1985 Contact the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building as soon as possible<lb/>
Surfing Club<lb/>
There will no' be a meeting this week but a<lb/>
?earn surf off is sheduied tor this Sunday at<lb/>
Emerald Isle Everyone interested should<lb/>
meet at theisiander Motel parking lot at<lb/>
9 00am Sunda The contest may be moved<lb/>
somewhere else if conditions are better<lb/>
HEY BKA!<lb/>
Didn't we nave fun Thanks to everyone who<lb/>
was able to make II to Wilson, for those who<lb/>
didn't boy did you miss out Our next<lb/>
meeting is going to be Thursday, Nov 15<lb/>
See ya there<lb/>
American Marketing Association<lb/>
The American Marketing Association will be<lb/>
sponsoring a marketing profile of Anheuser<lb/>
BuschonNov 15th at 4 00 at Mendenhall 244<lb/>
All AMA members and anyone interested<lb/>
are invited to attend<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
The brothers of the Kappa Alpha Psi frater<lb/>
nify, inc would like to announce that they<lb/>
are having a happy hour this Thurs night<lb/>
Nov 8 from 10 until at the Wii Bus<lb/>
transportation will begin at Mendenhall at<lb/>
10 30 and then to the hill at 10 45 Cost is SI 50<lb/>
student and $2 00 non student There will be<lb/>
free beer , so come on out and party with the<lb/>
nupes!<lb/>
LOVE<lb/>
Is something missing in your life right now<lb/>
but you iust can't put your finger on If<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 N C and enjoy a relax<lb/>
ing weekend with people who really care<lb/>
about you I For more info contact Fr. Terry<lb/>
at 752 4216 or Colleen Pirone at 752 4975 it<lb/>
promises to be a fantastic experience!<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
ECU Peace Committee<lb/>
Amnesty international finds new dedication<lb/>
to human rights In Greenville with the bud<lb/>
ding of a local chapter The first public<lb/>
meeting will be held Tues . Nov 20, 1984 in<lb/>
the Belk Building, room 101 at I 00pm , and<lb/>
will feature a film entitled Prisoner of Cons<lb/>
clence Susan Carpenter, the Regional Pro<lb/>
gram Coordinator for Amnesty Interna<lb/>
tlonal, will discuss the goals of Ai and ideas<lb/>
on organizing to work effectively to gain<lb/>
release of "prisoners of conscience" all over<lb/>
the world<lb/>
Ai does not support or oppose any goverm<lb/>
nent but works for the international protec<lb/>
tion of human rights It advocates the<lb/>
release of people everywhere detained for<lb/>
their beliefs, color, sex, ethnic background,<lb/>
language, or religion, so long as they do not<lb/>
participate in or condone violence It seeks<lb/>
fair and prompt trials for all political<lb/>
prisoners and aids those people detained<lb/>
without being charged or tried. It opposes<lb/>
cruel, inhuman or degrading treatment, tor<lb/>
ture and the death penalty tor all prisoners<lb/>
without exception All are welcome to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
The Student Planning Association<lb/>
NetworkiSPAN) is sponsoring a series of<lb/>
alumni panels during 1984 85 to celebrate the<lb/>
completion of twenty years of<lb/>
undergraduate planning education at ECU<lb/>
The first of these panels will be held on Nov<lb/>
14th m Brewster Building room D 208, from<lb/>
12 00 to 1 30pm The panel will discuss plan<lb/>
ning education in terms of public sector<lb/>
employment opportunities within the plann<lb/>
mg profession<lb/>
The panelists are Lee Downie, Director<lb/>
of Community Development, Roanoke<lb/>
Rapids N C Wat Brown, Director of Town<lb/>
Planning, Tarboro. N C Beth Shields. Plan<lb/>
ning director Nash county. N C Gene<lb/>
Thomas Annexation Coordinator and Plan<lb/>
ner II, Goldsboro. N C Bill Richardson,<lb/>
county Manager Currituck county, N C<lb/>
All interested persons are invited to at<lb/>
tend For additional information contact<lb/>
Mike Walker SPAN President or Pro<lb/>
fessors Hankms or VvuOneh a' 757 6465<lb/>
The Usuals<lb/>
Fri , Nov 9, The Usuals will play in Multi<lb/>
purpose room from 8 30 10 30pm Free piz<lb/>
2a compliments of Pizza Transit Authority<lb/>
Sponsored By the Student union Coffeehouse<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
ECU Acquatics Center<lb/>
On Tuesday evening, Nov 13, 1984 at 7 30pm<lb/>
ECU Acquatics and the Rum Runner Ocean<lb/>
Atlantic Dive Club will sponsor a dry suit<lb/>
demonstration at the Minges Coliseum<lb/>
Aquatic Center diving Pool The demonstra<lb/>
tion will be presented by Mr Larry Richard<lb/>
son of the Off Shore diving Equipment Com<lb/>
pany<lb/>
Dry suits are not only utilized by divers for<lb/>
cold water diving but can also be utilized By<lb/>
police fire and rescue units as well as by<lb/>
sailors, boaters, fisherman or anone who<lb/>
works in. on or near the water<lb/>
The Off Shore Nautilus dry suit is an<lb/>
ultralight ory suit and weighs only 3' lbs<lb/>
Not only does II keep you dry and warm, but<lb/>
is very tough to rip and is aBrasion resistant<lb/>
In this type of enviornmen it is important<lb/>
Ihal you Be comtortaBle with the aBility to<lb/>
move without restriction This can be ac<lb/>
complished with the Off Shore dry suit as it<lb/>
is very flexible and does not restrict move<lb/>
ment It takes less than one minute to put on<lb/>
and take off<lb/>
There Is no admission charge for this<lb/>
demonstration If you have a need for or are<lb/>
interested in this type of protective equip<lb/>
ment. you are invited to attend this<lb/>
demonstration<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
There will be a meeting for all Psi Chi<lb/>
members on Thurs Nov 8, at 5 00pm Mee'<lb/>
m the library on 2nd floor Speight All<lb/>
members urged to attend.<lb/>
Conservation Film<lb/>
Thefilm Garden of Eden will be shown by<lb/>
'he Pamlico Tar R.ver Foundation a' 7pm<lb/>
Mon. Nov 19 m the auditorium of the Wilhs<lb/>
Building ECU Regional Development in<lb/>
stitute) The f.lm. produced by the Nature<lb/>
Conservancy, makes a case for preservation<lb/>
of natural environments and the earth's gene<lb/>
pool The showing is free and open to the<lb/>
PUBliC<lb/>
MSO<lb/>
MSO will hold it's weekly meeting Thurs at<lb/>
4 30, m room 248 Mendenhall All minority<lb/>
students please come out and ge' .nvoived<lb/>
this afternoon1!<lb/>
Alapha Phi Big Brothers<lb/>
The next meeting will be Sun, Nov 18th at<lb/>
9 00pm at the house All money (t shirtsand<lb/>
dues) will be expected on that date Con<lb/>
gratulations to the h g brother volleyball<lb/>
team who won last week agams' the Sig Eps<lb/>
and will play tonight at 10 45<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Come on out and really party with the<lb/>
brothers of Kappa Alapha Psi this Sat night<lb/>
Nov 10 from 10 until After the last home<lb/>
football game at the Cultural Center adm is<lb/>
$ 75 for students and $1 00 non students The<lb/>
others had their chance but now it is really<lb/>
time to Jam!<lb/>
PPHA<lb/>
Pre Professional Health Alliance will hold a<lb/>
special meeting Thursday Nov 8. 1984 at 5 30<lb/>
pm in room 244 in the Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center The guest speaker will be Dr<lb/>
Marion Phillips, Associate Dean of Minority<lb/>
Affairs at UNC CH School of Medicine This<lb/>
meeting will be very mfromative so all<lb/>
members and interested guests are strongly<lb/>
encouraged to attend<lb/>
The Sport Club<lb/>
The Sport Club council meeting for Nov 21,<lb/>
1984 has been changed to Nov 13, 1984 at 4 00<lb/>
in Brewster B 103 Attendance at the<lb/>
meeting is mandatory We look forward see<lb/>
ing you there<lb/>
All Campus Party! ?<lb/>
ECU Students The date has been set! Chill<lb/>
Thrill 1984 will be held friday, Nov 16th from<lb/>
3 7pm at the Phi Tau house Come rock to<lb/>
the sounds of Domino as they warm up for<lb/>
their appearance at the Attic Golden<lb/>
Beverage will Be plentiful and serious party<lb/>
ing is a requ.rement Another West Campus<lb/>
Throwdown!<lb/>
Americas in Transition<lb/>
An academy award winning PBS film will be<lb/>
shown Nov 8 m Joyner Library downstairs<lb/>
m the Media room at 7pm Please join us<lb/>
Campus Service<lb/>
The Fountain of Life Christian Fellowship<lb/>
will be sponsoring a morning church service<lb/>
this Sun ,11 at II 00am in Jenkins<lb/>
Auditorium it you haven't been to a campus<lb/>
service before, make this Sun your first of<lb/>
the many more church services to attend<lb/>
Everyone is invited to be a part of this event<lb/>
As you come, purpose in your heart to make<lb/>
Nov II, 1984 your day It's yours for the ask<lb/>
ing!<lb/>
Gong show starting at 8 00 Then "B" team<lb/>
volleyball plays at 10 45 Thur , our little<lb/>
sisters will be having a happy hour at Grum<lb/>
py's Everyone come out and support our lit<lb/>
tie sisters<lb/>
Fashion Show<lb/>
A benefit fashion show for the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Choir will be given by Carel's Unlimited inc<lb/>
Nov the 11th at 5 00pm in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
tickets for ECU students will be $2 and the<lb/>
general public $3 The purchase of tickets<lb/>
will be in Mendenhall Student Center on the<lb/>
following days Mon thru Fri<lb/>
Fashion Show<lb/>
A benefit fashion show for the E C U Gospel<lb/>
Choir will be given by Carel's Unlimited Inc<lb/>
Nov the 11th at 5 00pm in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
tickets for EC U students will be $2 and the<lb/>
general public S3 The purchase of tickets<lb/>
will be in Mendenhall Student Center on the<lb/>
following days Mon thru Fri<lb/>
Gong show starting at 8 00 Then "B" team<lb/>
volleyball plays at 10 45 Thur . our little<lb/>
sisters will be having a happy hour at Grum<lb/>
py's Everyone come out and support our lit<lb/>
tie sisters<lb/>
Fashion Show<lb/>
A benefit fashion show for the ECU Gospel<lb/>
Choir will be given by Carel's Unlimited Inc<lb/>
Nov the 11th at 5 00pm in Hendrix Theatre,<lb/>
tickets for E C U students will be S2 and the<lb/>
general public S3 The purchase of tickets<lb/>
will be in Mendenhall Student Center on the<lb/>
following days Mon thru Fn<lb/>
Psi Chi<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all Psi Chi<lb/>
members on Thur , Nov 8th at 5 00pm in the<lb/>
Psi Chi library, Speight 202 T shirts and<lb/>
new member certificates will be discussed<lb/>
and presented All members are urged to at<lb/>
tend<lb/>
Ept<lb/>
A scholarship will be awarded to an outstan<lb/>
omg member of Epsilon Pi Tau during the<lb/>
Spring semester of 1985 Interested memoers<lb/>
should contact Dr Leith in Flanagan 209<lb/>
The deadline for applicants is Dec 1 Also<lb/>
the initiation Banquet for new members will<lb/>
be held at 5 00pm on Nov 29 at the Western<lb/>
Steer on 'Oth st<lb/>
Marauder members<lb/>
There will be an important meeting for all<lb/>
Marauder members on Wed Nov 14 at 7 30<lb/>
m the coffee house located In the basement of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Upcoming<lb/>
events will be discussed<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society<lb/>
Those persons interested in iom.ng the Gam<lb/>
ma Be'a Phi Honor Society who have a GPA<lb/>
of 3 0 or better are urged to come to an or.en<lb/>
tation meeting at 6 00pm Thurs Nov 8 in<lb/>
room 221 Mendenhall<lb/>
Fencing Club<lb/>
The Fencing Club would like to invite anyone<lb/>
interested to a'tend our meetings every Wed<lb/>
at Memorial Gym, room 102 at 7 30<lb/>
Art Contest<lb/>
Design a I shirt depicting your interpreta<lb/>
tion of aerobics and win free semester of<lb/>
aerodic classes Enter your design in room<lb/>
204 Memorial Gm By Fn Nov 30<lb/>
Count Basie<lb/>
Mon Nov 12th. a' 7 00. A7.MB. 91 3 FM will<lb/>
feature a tull hour on the music and lite of<lb/>
Count Basie Tune m for an entertaining<lb/>
eventing with the sounds of Jazz ano Count<lb/>
Bas.e<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
The College Republicans will continue<lb/>
their triumphal season ton.ght at 7 00 m<lb/>
the Mendtrnnaii Coffeehouse We will give<lb/>
directions to a victory party for all those<lb/>
CR s who contriButed to our smashing sue<lb/>
cess<lb/>
BLOCK PARTY<lb/>
KA's. Kappa Sigs, TKE's and AZD' present<lb/>
'he second annual all campus post game<lb/>
block party featuring the sounds of S T A<lb/>
Express The party starts Nov 10 at 5 30 at<lb/>
the KA house Bring your coolers and flasks<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Come on out and really party with the<lb/>
brothers of Kappa Alpha Psi this Sat night<lb/>
Nov loth from 10 until after the last home<lb/>
football game at the Cultural Center Adm<lb/>
is75 for students and SI 00 non students<lb/>
The others had their chance but now it Is<lb/>
really time to iam!<lb/>
Sport Club<lb/>
The Sport Club Council meeting for Nov 21.<lb/>
1984 has been changed to Nov 13. 1984 at 4 00<lb/>
m Brewster B 103 Attendance at the<lb/>
meeting is mandatory We iv forward see<lb/>
mg you there<lb/>
Non-violence Training<lb/>
"Sensitizing and Depolarizing Peace Work<lb/>
a workshop in non violent assertion Is<lb/>
scheduled for Sat 8 12 and I 3 In Mendenhall<lb/>
Coffeeshop on the ECU campus<lb/>
The three areas the workshop will cover<lb/>
are peace In our own lives, non violence In<lb/>
interaction with other individuals, and non<lb/>
violence in the larger policfical world<lb/>
The trainer is Herbert Walters of Burn<lb/>
sville. N C He is the founding editor of<lb/>
RSVP (Rural Southern Voice for Peace) and<lb/>
a member of the national speakers bureau of<lb/>
the Fellowship of Reconciliation He is an<lb/>
experienced trainer<lb/>
The workshop is sponsored by the ECU<lb/>
Peace Committee For more information,<lb/>
call Carroll or Edith Webber at 758 4806<lb/>
Alpha Phi Alpha<lb/>
The brothers of Alpha Phi Alpha are spon<lb/>
soring a victory party after the football<lb/>
game sat at The Unlimited Touch Happy<lb/>
hour prices until 11 00pm<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
are now being accepted for students wishing<lb/>
to serve on University Committees for<lb/>
1984 1985 school year Twenty one(21) stu<lb/>
dent positions are open Committees with<lb/>
vacancies are Alcohol and Drug Education<lb/>
Committee! 1), Committee on Canvassing<lb/>
and Soliciting on Campusd), Committee on<lb/>
Residence Life(l) Committee on Status of<lb/>
Minorities (4), Committee on Status of<lb/>
Women (2). Committee on Student Health<lb/>
Services (1), Housing appeals (off campus<lb/>
student) (1). Parking and Traffic Committee<lb/>
(1). Scholars Weekend Committee (1), Ad<lb/>
missions Committeei 1). Career Education<lb/>
Committee (1). Course Drop Appeals Com<lb/>
mittee (1), Faculty Computer Committee<lb/>
(1), Teaching Effectiveness Committee (2)<lb/>
Applications are availavle at the following<lb/>
locations Office of the Vice Chancellor for<lb/>
Student Life. 204 Whichard Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Information Desk, SGA Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall student center Office of<lb/>
intramural Recreational Services,<lb/>
Memorial Gym and Residence Hall Direc<lb/>
tors Offices<lb/>
The University greatly appreciates the ef<lb/>
forts of those students who have served in<lb/>
the past and hope that students will continue<lb/>
their interest and participation Questions<lb/>
about university Committees and member<lb/>
ships may be director to the Office of the<lb/>
Vice Chancelor for Student Life (757 6541)<lb/>
Submit your applications now'<lb/>
Christmas Vacation<lb/>
Dive Penny Camp National Underwater<lb/>
Park m fabulous Key Largo The Florida<lb/>
Keys are the only natural coral reef in the<lb/>
Continental U S This five day trip. Dec<lb/>
16 21st includes lodging and two dive boat<lb/>
trips dail.y Tanks backpack and weight<lb/>
belts are provided Cost is $175 00 per per<lb/>
son. two to a room occupancy and 210 00 per<lb/>
P?r?on. 4 to a room occupancy. For furthor<lb/>
information Ray Scharf, Director of Ac<lb/>
quatics 757 6441<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
The Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau.<lb/>
'he National Honor Society of Nursing, will<lb/>
hold its fall educational meeting on Thurs<lb/>
day. Nov 15, 1984 at 6pm at the Ramada Inn<lb/>
in Greenville The program, presented by<lb/>
Dr Ann Belcher. RN, Ph D . is entitled,<lb/>
"The ten year plan and dues) will be ex<lb/>
pected on that date Congratulations to the<lb/>
big brother volleyball team who won last<lb/>
week against the Sig Eps and will play<lb/>
tomght at 10 45<lb/>
Fencing Club<lb/>
The Fencing Club would like to invite anyone<lb/>
interested to attend our meetings every Wed<lb/>
at Memorial Gym, room 102 at 7 X<lb/>
WE PAY<lb/>
CASH f<lb/>
FOR<lb/>
Class Rings Diamond Rings<lb/>
Gold &amp; Silver Jeweriy<lb/>
Silver Coins<lb/>
WEtUY&amp;SEU<lb/>
r.V's, stereo's, cameras, video, microwave ovens,<lb/>
Ncycles, watches, binoculars, walkmans portable<lb/>
M-FM, cassette, heaters, good furniture, china 4<lb/>
crystal, typewriters, etc.<lb/>
CQM?JC?4?<lb/>
400 EVANS, "on cue corner<lb/>
Downtown Greenville<lb/>
752-3966<lb/>
WISHING VOU L1VEV AT THE TOWERS? VOU STILL CAN WE HAVE A<lb/>
rlnlSnmUAELE f?R ?CCUmCV WINNING SEC0NVSe7sTER<lb/>
CALL FOR DETAILS 0k RENTAL OR PURCHASE. 7S6-UWOR 355-5I5i<lb/>
RINGGOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At The Campus<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
RinCffoId Development Co lac<lb/>
10) Commerce Street<lb/>
P O Drawer 568<lb/>
Greenville. NC 27854<lb/>
(919) 355-2698<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Tonight at Grumpys our little sisters will be<lb/>
having a happy hour, the fun begins at 9 00<lb/>
ALSO "A" team volleyball plays at 10 00<lb/>
Next Mon , "B" team volleyball will play at<lb/>
10 45 All right guy's little sister apprecia<lb/>
tion week Is coming up Mon the 12th and<lb/>
Tues the 13th are the days lers do<lb/>
something nice, They deserve It<lb/>
A scholarship will be awarded to an outstan<lb/>
ding member of Epsilon PI Tau during the<lb/>
Spring semester of 1985 Interested<lb/>
members should contact Or Leith in<lb/>
Flanagan 209 The deadline for applicants is<lb/>
Dec 1 Also the initiation banquet for new<lb/>
members will be held at 5 00pm on Nov 29<lb/>
at the Western Steer on 10th st<lb/>
Marauder members<lb/>
There will be an important meeting for all<lb/>
Marauder members on Wed , Nov 14 at 7 30<lb/>
in the cotfee house located in the basement of<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Upcoming<lb/>
events will be discussed<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi Honor Society<lb/>
Those persons interested in loinmg the Gam<lb/>
ma Beta Phi Honor Society who have a GPA<lb/>
ot 3.0 or better are urged to come to an orien<lb/>
tation meeting at 6 00pm Thurs Nov 8 In<lb/>
room 22! Mendenball<lb/>
Art Contest<lb/>
Design a t shirt depicting your interpreta<lb/>
tion a aerobics and win free semester of<lb/>
aerobic classes Enter your design in room<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym by Fn Nov 30<lb/>
Count Basie<lb/>
Mon . Nov 12th, a: 7 00 WMB 91 3 FM wu<lb/>
feature a full hour on the music and nt? of<lb/>
Count Basie Tune m tor an entertaining<lb/>
eventing with the sounds ot Jail and Coun'<lb/>
Basie<lb/>
College Republicans<lb/>
The College Republicans win continue tne r<lb/>
triumphal season tonight at 7 00 m the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse We will give direr<lb/>
tions to a victory party for an those CR s wnc<lb/>
contributed to our smashing success<lb/>
BLOCK PARTY<lb/>
KA's. kappa Sigs THE s and A2D preset-<lb/>
the second annual all campus pos game<lb/>
block party featuring the sounds of S T A<lb/>
Express The par? starts Nov 10 a'5 30 a'<lb/>
the K A house Bring your coolers and tias?s<lb/>
East Carolinian advertising<lb/>
call 757-6366<lb/>
inmiiiiniiiiiiitiiiiiiNiiiiiiiiiiHiiiiiiHiMiiiniHiiiiimiHiiMMiriiiiiiiiiiiiiiiiniiiiHiiiiiiiiniiniiiiiiiitiiiiiii<lb/>
'ows, <lb/>
CoUHTRV CobfCIW<lb/>
All You Can Eat<lb/>
Barbeque Ribs 6.95 -f- tax<lb/>
Good thru December<lb/>
Sunday Specials<lb/>
 Daily Specials - $2.25 pins tax <lb/>
 512 E. 14th St. Near Dorms i<lb/>
I Call for Take Outs - 752-0476 1<lb/>
 OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK ll:00am-ft:00pm<lb/>
iHWHiiimiimrffimmimiiiimnimm<lb/>
Nobody else makes<lb/>
Fine photography<lb/>
this simple.<lb/>
? Proqrarnmed automation?<lb/>
just focus ana shoot1<lb/>
? Shutter-priority automation<lb/>
plus manuai mode<lb/>
? Fully automatic flash with<lb/>
optional Speediite 188A<lb/>
? Optional Power Winders A2 A<lb/>
and Motor Drive MA avaiiaoie<lb/>
for rapid sequence shooting<lb/>
? includes Canon USA Inc<lb/>
one-year Itmtied warranty<lb/>
registration card<lb/>
Spred le ?M ,? ?<lb/>
$219.95<lb/>
oft' camera hop<lb/>
58 SOUTH COTANCHC STS6E f<lb/>
aeEMvn.Le. ne 27u<lb/>
Look into the one<lb/>
market research<lb/>
graduate program<lb/>
that all<lb/>
these companies<lb/>
are involved in:<lb/>
AC. Nielsen Company<lb/>
Advertising Research Foundation<lb/>
Audits Si Surveys, In<lb/>
Burke Marketing Services<lb/>
Campbell Soup Co.<lb/>
Coca-Cola USA<lb/>
Custom Research Inc.<lb/>
Fnio- Lay<lb/>
General Ftxxis<lb/>
General Mills, Inc.<lb/>
Grey Advertising<lb/>
Kenneth Hollander Associates<lb/>
McDonald &amp; Little Advertising<lb/>
Market fjts. Inc<lb/>
Marketing ft Research<lb/>
Counselors. Iru<lb/>
MR( A Information Services<lb/>
Needham. Harper Steers Advertising<lb/>
NFOResearch, Inc<lb/>
Procter &amp; Gamble<lb/>
Ralston Purina Co<lb/>
Sears. Roebuck<lb/>
SSC&amp;B Linus Worldwide<lb/>
I he Pillsburv Compam<lb/>
Yankelovwh, SkelK &amp; V?"hite<lb/>
Young &amp; RubKam<lb/>
The Ln.vers.ty of Georgia's Master of Marketing Research Program is<lb/>
truh -unique It 1S governed by a Board of Ad v.sors drawn from the leaders<lb/>
of industry. The.r personal .nvolvement results ,n an outstandmg program<lb/>
that prepares you for the real world<lb/>
. .Ifs a ffteM month program that comb.nes classroom and on-<lb/>
theob research experience. It was the first and b st.ll the finest mtegrated<lb/>
degree1 8 StUd' 'Cadmg a Mma Market.ng Research<lb/>
As you would expect, adm.ss.on is select.ve and competinon is stiff<lb/>
Scholarships are available for qualifying applicants<lb/>
Professor Fred D. Reynolds ' "<lb/>
122 Brooks Hall<lb/>
University of Georgia<lb/>
Athens, Georgia 30602<lb/>
Dear Sir:<lb/>
Please send me complete information on vour MMR pr.ram<lb/>
Name <lb/>
Street.<lb/>
City<lb/>
State,<lb/>
Apt<lb/>
. Zip <lb/>
133<lb/>
ECU Ar<lb/>
ECL Nw Bureau<lb/>
A unique theory that places the<lb/>
site of Sir Waiter Raleigh's 16th<lb/>
century settlement underwater<lb/>
rather than on land will undergo<lb/>
some tests next spring by an<lb/>
underwater archaeologist at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Gordon Watts, a history pro-<lb/>
fessor and the co-director of<lb/>
ECU's program in maritime<lb/>
history and underwater research,<lb/>
plans to take himself, students,<lb/>
scuba diving gear and an array of<lb/>
sophisticated, underwater sensing<lb/>
devices into the waters that sur-<lb/>
round Roanoke Island. He hopes<lb/>
to find evidence that the site of<lb/>
the nation's first English settle-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Soun<lb/>
itselt<lb/>
searcl<lb/>
main;<lb/>
men<lb/>
r xd<lb/>
small<lb/>
exped<lb/>
1585.<lb/>
settler<lb/>
site w!<lb/>
is as<lb/>
famoi<lb/>
 I<lb/>
donee I<lb/>
only<lb/>
I<lb/>
then<lb/>
Hypertension<lb/>
Among ECU<lb/>
Health<lb/>
Column<lb/>
crease<lb/>
smok<lb/>
.<lb/>
I<lb/>
751 ? -??<lb/>
Hypertension, or high blood<lb/>
pressure, is a maj. h ?'<lb/>
blem in eastern North v<lb/>
and is now becoming a common<lb/>
problem for the ECU stud<lb/>
Dopulation. Some cases ma.<lb/>
due to underlying problerm<lb/>
as heart, kidney or blood vc<lb/>
defects. Others may not be<lb/>
tributed to any particular ca<lb/>
heredity may be a factor in these<lb/>
cases. Many elcauons in blood<lb/>
pressure can be reversed<lb/>
changing habits and lifestyle.<lb/>
Smoking leads to rises in BP<lb/>
since nicotine causes restriction<lb/>
of blood vessels. The core:<lb/>
arteries are affected tahicl<lb/>
lead to heart attacks. A rise in BP<lb/>
can be detected after just one j<lb/>
cigarette. Pulse and respirators<lb/>
rates also increase, which pro-<lb/>
bably accounts for the ?'high<lb/>
Resulting bronchitis and em-<lb/>
physema place more demands on<lb/>
the heart, lungs and blood<lb/>
vessels.<lb/>
Caffeine acts as a rfmufam<lb/>
and causes rises in BP. It is found<lb/>
in coffee, tea, chocolate, soft<lb/>
drinks and oer-the-counter<lb/>
medications. Other stimulants<lb/>
are decongestants in cold and<lb/>
allergy medications and ingre-<lb/>
dients in diet pills. Examples are<lb/>
pseudoephedrine (Sudafed, Con-<lb/>
tac), phenylpropanolamine<lb/>
(Comtrex, Dexatrim. Sinutab).<lb/>
and phenylephrine (Dimetane.<lb/>
Dnstan).<lb/>
Obesity, as well as being<lb/>
moderately overweight, also con-<lb/>
tributes to hypertension. The<lb/>
heart works harder to pump<lb/>
blood through a greater body<lb/>
mass. Restricting refined car-<lb/>
bohydrates, particularly<lb/>
cholesterol and saturated fats,<lb/>
helps prevent plaque formation<lb/>
in blood vessels. Using polyun-<lb/>
saturated fats and complex car-<lb/>
bohydrates (fruits, vegetables.<lb/>
nuts, grains) helps prevent pla-<lb/>
que. Regular exercise, particular-<lb/>
ly aerobic types, lowers pulse and<lb/>
respiratory rates as well as BP<lb/>
Oral contraceptives also cause 0<lb/>
elevations in BP. even those ? <lb/>
the lowest doses of the hormones.<lb/>
There is a high correlation bet- ?<lb/>
ween the pill and cardiovascular 9<lb/>
disorders (heart attacks, stroke 0<lb/>
Fund Drive ?<lb/>
Surpasses I<lb/>
ECU Goal !<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDR ASl Ak<lb/>
SmMlH<lb/>
Both the ECU main campus<lb/>
and the School of Medicine sur-<lb/>
passed their fundraising goals in<lb/>
the 1984-85 United Way cam-<lb/>
paign, Main Campus Chairman<lb/>
Mimi Quick announced Wednes-<lb/>
day.<lb/>
On the main campus. $24,411<lb/>
was raised, exceeding the goal of<lb/>
$23,000. The School of Medicine<lb/>
had a goal of $12,000 and sur-<lb/>
passed that amount by $7,367.<lb/>
The campaign began Sept. 13<lb/>
with a kick-off breakfast. ECU<lb/>
helped to attain the Pitt County<lb/>
goal of $681,325. Funds raised in<lb/>
this drive are used to provide<lb/>
various services throughout the<lb/>
county.<lb/>
'f<lb/>
?'? f-oflE?' m m "<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
836<lb/>
,1<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0003"/><lb/>
IHf 1 AM ' KOi INIAN<lb/>
rising<lb/>
366<lb/>
IIHIItllHIHii<lb/>
oKm<lb/>
us tax?<lb/>
rms<lb/>
?<lb/>
bun x00pm5<lb/>
??iif?mmnir<lb/>
hop<lb/>
 v<lb/>
4.1 1 1<lb/>
J<lb/>
ECU Archaeologists Look For Lost Colony<lb/>
 Sr"M ' mem is submerged in Roanoke evidence to substantiate .?? - c?    <lb/>
A unique theor that pla.es the<lb/>
Site of Sit Walter Raleigh's 16th<lb/>
century settlement underwatei<lb/>
rathet than on land will undergo<lb/>
some tests next spring b an<lb/>
under water archaeologist at<lb/>
Gordon Waits, a history pro<lb/>
fessoi and the co directoi oi<lb/>
ECU's program in maritime<lb/>
history and underwatei reseai<lb/>
plans to lake himself, students,<lb/>
scuba diving geai and an array ol<lb/>
sophisticated, underwater sensing<lb/>
devices into the waters that sui<lb/>
round Roanoke Island He hopes<lb/>
to find evidence thai the site ol<lb/>
the nation's first English settle<lb/>
mem is submerged in Roanoke<lb/>
Sound rather than on the island<lb/>
itselt where archaeologists have<lb/>
searched without ;uccess foi re-<lb/>
mains ot the 400 yeai old settle-<lb/>
ment site'<lb/>
I xcepi tor the discovery oi a<lb/>
small earthworks fort built In an<lb/>
expedition led by Ralph I ane in<lb/>
1585, all traces ol the domestic<lb/>
settlement have vanished I he<lb/>
site where the first colonists lived<lb/>
is as much as mystery as the<lb/>
famous "I ostolony " oi 1 587<lb/>
whose people mysteriously ab<lb/>
doned then settlement leaving<lb/>
only the word "CROATOAN"<lb/>
carved into a tree .is a clue to<lb/>
theii abouts.<lb/>
It we can find some phy<lb/>
Hypertension Common<lb/>
Among ECU Students<lb/>
Health<lb/>
Column<lb/>
ke an<lb/>
i . .<lb/>
Hyperw<lb/>
pres<lb/>
rn Nor11 <lb/>
i<lb/>
lii.<lb/>
as 1<lb/>
Ma<lb/>
be reversed K<lb/>
! i i d ?<lb/>
s king lead? n HI'<lb/>
luses re<lb/>
: ?<lb/>
 BP<lb/>
-<lb/>
mes the BP<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
a<lb/>
evidence to substantiate our<lb/>
theory that the site is underwat<lb/>
this could tuin into om ol the<lb/>
most sophisticated underv,<lb/>
excavations to take place in this<lb/>
hemisphere says Watts, whose<lb/>
work is being funded tin. uj<lb/>
research contract with the<lb/>
American Quadricentennial I<lb/>
poration. The agenc; supports<lb/>
research and other activities<lb/>
relating to the 400th annivei<lb/>
ol the first English settlement<lb/>
Wail theory take- int(<lb/>
couni some new interpretations<lb/>
ol early colonial settleme<lb/>
terns m North America as w<lb/>
evidence oi environmej<lb/>
changes :aV ing place on R<lb/>
Island.<lb/>
 i he Engli . .<lb/>
iditionally built<lb/>
tlenients n i<lb/>
ild hav<lb/>
their only escape routt<lb/>
hostile fndi ? d it is unlik<lb/>
they would have built theii<lb/>
men . here ex<lb/>
the shoreline<lb/>
-<lb/>
ke Isla<lb/>
?<lb/>
R 11 ' . ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
show that soil erosion<lb/>
? ' i rise in sea level<lb/>
iway .i much as<lb/>
1.50 lint on the<lb/>
tnd here the<lb/>
dly built their<lb/>
I<lb/>
ntury colony<lb/>
tld have ex<lb/>
' tte a the<lb/>
?' odstock<lb/>
hore oi the<lb/>
 a part<lb/>
Waterway,<lb/>
town<lb/>
' lunda-<lb/>
? struc-<lb/>
ttom.<lb/>
induct<lb/>
May<lb/>
h i g I ibi 1 i t y<lb/>
Roanoke<lb/>
ientified<lb/>
.<lb/>
ental<lb/>
will utilize<lb/>
: ? ? :?<lb/>
l<lb/>
the artifacts should be in relative-<lb/>
ly good condition because he says<lb/>
'?preservation is frequently be<lb/>
underwater than on land "<lb/>
" I here are a number oi th .<lb/>
that could have survived the I<lb/>
sitional process from a terrestrial<lb/>
environment to a water environ-<lb/>
ment he saw<lb/>
"We know thev were in the<lb/>
process ot making hrik and thev<lb/>
brought with them from Eng<lb/>
such things as glass, ceran<lb/>
iron says Watts, notii .<lb/>
historical sources relating ? I<lb/>
White's return to the colony<lb/>
1590 indicate that mai . I the<lb/>
structures and a lot ol equipn<lb/>
remained at the site despite<lb/>
disappearance ot the coloi<lb/>
In his three years at the he n I<lb/>
the 1(1 underwater resea<lb/>
program and previously a- the<lb/>
underwater archaeologist for I<lb/>
state oi North Carolina, W u<lb/>
conducted researcl i<lb/>
number ot historically impo:<lb/>
shipwrecks ranging from vol.<lb/>
fen ? f war. H<lb/>
water include the d<lb/>
? . <lb/>
?? ? I SS 1nnitn, <lb/>
IV"1 some 16 mile<lb/>
Cai ? : ear Cape I<lb/>
I<lb/>
min<lb/>
? - ??<lb/>
Monitor But<lb/>
Ra .<lb/>
ire ui ?<lb/>
? <lb/>
Be-<lb/>
 - <lb/>
'<lb/>
11<lb/>
o<lb/>
o<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
?<lb/>
Res<lb/>
. ?<lb/>
.<lb/>
i essels<lb/>
i .????- i ? . , tirmilam<lb/>
BP. It i<lb/>
?<lb/>
ilani<lb/>
I gestant old<lb/>
medical ngn<lb/>
I<lb/>
pse . Irine (Sudafed<lb/>
I, ph(<lb/>
mtrex Dexatrin s<lb/>
and pi<lb/>
Drisi<lb/>
?? . ' C<lb/>
eht, al :on<lb/>
I<lb/>
rl<lb/>
 through a greatei I I<lb/>
Rest rict i n j<lb/>
irai<lb/>
?<lb/>
? i<lb/>
?<lb/>
"57 f,s ?<lb/>
<lb/>
 fac<lb/>
OAKWOOD HOMES<lb/>
PROUDLY SUPPORTS<lb/>
THE PIRATES AND<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
<lb/>
NOW OPENING<lb/>
Gourmet International's<lb/>
GOURMET COFFEE SHOP<lb/>
O<lb/>
"GO PIRATES"<lb/>
t ? ?<lb/>
O<lb/>
HOMES<lb/>
(?r??it pldco to meet your friends rH,i uith a up<lb/>
of Gourmet C offce and a wiru-tv. of muffins that arv<lb/>
b,iktti frosh daik<lb/>
752-341 1<lb/>
117 1<lb/>
f-ifth St<lb/>
ouiirmc<lb/>
i<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
8:3 r:30<lb/>
Sal<lb/>
1 JO-5 10<lb/>
n<lb/>
626 VV Gi<lb/>
IO<lb/>
J<lb/>
Spice of Life Mini Mill<lb/>
This Way Up<lb/>
In Downtown Greenvilli<lb/>
Free Concert<lb/>
Priority<lb/>
? Saturday Nov. 10<lb/>
Doors Open At 8:00 As<lb/>
Concert At 8:55<lb/>
-<lb/>
md d fats,<lb/>
ps prevent ;<lb/>
id vessel . , n<lb/>
trated fats and complex<lb/>
bohydrates (fruits, vegetables,<lb/>
nuts, grains) helps previ<lb/>
Reg ilai exei :ise, panic .<lb/>
bic t pes, towers pulse a<lb/>
piratory rates as well as BP.<lb/>
Oral contraceptives also cause<lb/>
ations in BP. even those with<lb/>
? Ic es oi the hormones.<lb/>
ere is a high correlation he!<lb/>
?see the pill and cardiovascular<lb/>
rders (heart attacks, stroke<lb/>
Fund Drive<lb/>
Surpasses<lb/>
ECU Goal<lb/>
Bv JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Sf?i l-dltor<lb/>
Both the ECU main campu-<lb/>
and the School of Medicine sur-<lb/>
ed their fundraising goals in<lb/>
the 1984-85 United Way cam-<lb/>
gn, Main Campus Chairman<lb/>
Mimi Quick announced Wednes-<lb/>
d a<lb/>
( n the main campus, $24,411<lb/>
was raised, exceeding the goal oi<lb/>
$23,000. The School of Medicine<lb/>
had a goal of $12,000 and sur-<lb/>
passed that amount by $7,367.<lb/>
The campaign began Sept. 13<lb/>
with a kick-off breakfast. E I<lb/>
helped to attain the Pitt Count"<lb/>
goal of $681,325. Funds raised in<lb/>
this drive are used to provide<lb/>
various services throughout the<lb/>
count v<lb/>
<lb/>
eat <lb/>
Cightclub<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Thursday Night<lb/>
Sigma Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Happy Hour 9:00<lb/>
for $1 Off Admission<lb/>
' : : . SOCDraft<lb/>
piichers<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
E( I Cheerleaders present<lb/>
Pre Game Victory Party<lb/>
also<lb/>
Greek Night with the<lb/>
Lambda Chi's<lb/>
. raIIbo ? : ?"<lb/>
? l ills<lb/>
Phone 756 6401<lb/>
ror<lb/>
1 jted in Carolina I asiemu-<lb/>
?H??MIMl All MU Pmriu H.Mtnnl?  ,h.<lb/>
 .ut-sts Are Welcome<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0004"/><lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
M?e Eaat (Earolinton<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. HUNTFR FlSHFR. OmI Manager<lb/>
GRFC RlDEOUT, wtmm?rmm<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, ?. euw J.T. Piftrzak. ???? !????<lb/>
Randy Mews, sr? &amp;?? Anthony Martin, ???Mm<lb/>
Tina Maroschak, fiMMaanw Tom Norton, rn-rf.r wnngn<lb/>
Bn i Austin, cimdttfouiuttt MiKt Mayo, -wmm mruh<lb/>
November 8, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Reagan Wins<lb/>
77?e Supreme Court Next?<lb/>
With a sweeping landslide,<lb/>
Ronald Reagan has been<lb/>
catapulted back to Washington for<lb/>
another four years. And as he<lb/>
glides over North Carolina, he'll<lb/>
stop to let Sen. Jesse Helms hitch a<lb/>
ride on his coattails. But that is<lb/>
behind us; our immediate worry is<lb/>
not what those men will do, but in-<lb/>
stead we worry about a group of<lb/>
nine old men who sit atop the na-<lb/>
tion's judicial system.<lb/>
The Supreme Court. The men<lb/>
who breath life into the browned<lb/>
pages of the Constitution. They<lb/>
are the keepers of the law who pro-<lb/>
tect those of low station and high<lb/>
from having their rights callously<lb/>
trampled on. But the wind that<lb/>
swept Reagan back into office in<lb/>
the biggest electoral win ever<lb/>
(besides George Washington's),<lb/>
may be blowing the Court<lb/>
rightward, as five of the justices<lb/>
approach the time to leave and five<lb/>
new ones get ready to come in.<lb/>
lr?. Reagan now has the chance<lb/>
to influence the policies of this<lb/>
country for more than 20 years<lb/>
after he is dead and gone. For<lb/>
those who value equal protection<lb/>
under the law and the recent inter-<lb/>
pretations of the Constitution, the<lb/>
horror has as yet not unfolded.<lb/>
The drift of the Court rightward<lb/>
could begin to anchor itself firmly<lb/>
in a conservative port.<lb/>
Pretty soon we will see the ero-<lb/>
sion of the barrier between church<lb/>
and state. Those who would force<lb/>
everyone's children to pray in<lb/>
school will be sitting in the highest<lb/>
judicial chairs in the land and<lb/>
won't blink an eye as the ban on<lb/>
school prayer is lifted and God is<lb/>
thrust into the classroom.<lb/>
Roe v. Wade has a good chance<lb/>
of being overturned. The legaliza-<lb/>
tion of abortion has been<lb/>
anathema to Reagan and the new-<lb/>
righters from the very minute the<lb/>
1974 decision was announced. He<lb/>
and the people he will appoint do<lb/>
not believe women should have a<lb/>
choice. Abortion is murder, they<lb/>
say, and tons of illegal, unsafe<lb/>
clinics will open once again.<lb/>
Many procedural safeguards for<lb/>
the accused will fall prey to the<lb/>
law-and-order mentality of those<lb/>
who inhabit the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration. Some have already<lb/>
been weakened by the present<lb/>
Court. Will due process and right<lb/>
to a fair trial be thrown out the<lb/>
window in an effort to crack down<lb/>
on the seedier side of our society?<lb/>
If these vanguards of our Constitu-<lb/>
tion are destroyed, our country<lb/>
itself may be next.<lb/>
The Supreme Court was last a<lb/>
major issue during the Nixon cam-<lb/>
paign of 1968. He was for a law-<lb/>
and-order court that would spare<lb/>
no mercy on the due process tradi-<lb/>
tion of our society. Ironic that he<lb/>
turned out to be someone who<lb/>
needed a little due process himself.<lb/>
It is also a twist of fate that his ap-<lb/>
pointees turned against him in the<lb/>
Pentagon Papers case.<lb/>
Don't give up hope. People have<lb/>
been appointed to the Court<lb/>
because presidents thought they<lb/>
would vote one way and they end-<lb/>
ed up voting another. Ask<lb/>
Eisenhower about Earl Warren.<lb/>
But, to be sure, let's just hope<lb/>
some of the present, more liberal<lb/>
judges live to be healthy oc-<lb/>
togenarians.<lb/>
"Campus Forum<lb/>
Plank Cartoon Blasphemous<lb/>
I, along with several of my friends,<lb/>
feel that what was printed under the ti-<lb/>
tle of "Walkin' the Plank" in the<lb/>
Tuesday edition of The East Caroli-<lb/>
nian was outright blasphemy!<lb/>
This comic strip depicts Jesus as a<lb/>
silly, pointless imbecile (with a poor<lb/>
sense of humor), and even goes as far<lb/>
as having him use profanity<lb/>
("helluva i.e. "hell of a uses the<lb/>
word "hell" as a vain expression and<lb/>
fits most people's definition of pro-<lb/>
fanity). You have made the greatest<lb/>
and one of the most important men in<lb/>
the history of the world look like a<lb/>
moron in your eight-frame strip, offen-<lb/>
ding several people in the process.<lb/>
Christ is not some myth or literary<lb/>
figure, but the Son of God, who died<lb/>
for the sins of the world.<lb/>
Not that Christ is above going into<lb/>
Krispy Kreme or talking with a guy like<lb/>
Nick (but I think he is above that old<lb/>
joke) ? or even a bit of humor. In<lb/>
fact, Christ was often known for his<lb/>
sharp wit in dealing with the Pharisees,<lb/>
but in an honest matter, not with cheap<lb/>
one-liners like those used in your strip.<lb/>
I also think Christ was (is) above going<lb/>
to a party celebrating Halloween, a<lb/>
holiday created by a pagan religion.<lb/>
I do not know if Alan Guy shares my<lb/>
beliefs in Christianity, but regardless, I<lb/>
think he should show respect for my<lb/>
beliefs and the beliefs of Christians<lb/>
everywhere.<lb/>
Richard Glosser<lb/>
Sophomore, Fine Arts<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
JEEP&amp;tS, THIS IS UPSeTTING 11<lb/>
cant believe i slept through<lb/>
the election1 twas registerep<lb/>
this time 11 hap a stakb'<lb/>
V<lb/>
EVER SINCE I HEARD THE PRESIDENT<lb/>
TALK ABOUT SAVING HIGHUiAYl AND<lb/>
MAU8U FOR KIPS '00 YEARS FROMNOU,<lb/>
TVE BEEN PSYCHED IUAS GOING TO<lb/>
r GO FOR IT, FINALLY<lb/>
) f U? ACTUKEARE5P0N-<lb/>
SJBLEAPULT'<lb/>
UNTHINKABLE<lb/>
THINKABLE<lb/>
Congress Screws Around<lb/>
By JACOB M. SCHLESINGES<lb/>
Tto New Rrpabttr<lb/>
The Senate floor on the afternoon of<lb/>
Friday, Oct. 5, 1984, was awash in big<lb/>
names. Ted Kennedy traded com-<lb/>
pliments with Strom Thurmond. Barry<lb/>
Goldwater argued with Jennings Ran-<lb/>
dolph. Howard Baker chatted strategy<lb/>
with Bob Dole.<lb/>
Then, at about 5 p.m. in the back of<lb/>
the chamber, Daniel Patrick Moynihan<lb/>
stepped to the portable lectern and<lb/>
began lecturing ? as if to<lb/>
undergraduates. As his glasses migrated<lb/>
from his face to his hands to his breast<lb/>
pocket and back to his face, the senior<lb/>
senator from New York berated his col-<lb/>
leagues for their faults.<lb/>
"What has happened to Congress?"<lb/>
he asked. "Why can it not do its work?"<lb/>
It was an all-too-pertinent query, cap-<lb/>
ping as it did an incredibly embarrassing<lb/>
week for the nation's lawmakers. Con-<lb/>
gress had originally planned to adjourn<lb/>
by Thursday, Oct. 4, to give its members<lb/>
a month to campaign for re-election.<lb/>
Trying to meet the deadline, the Senate<lb/>
pulled two near all-nighters and rammed<lb/>
through several important measures.<lb/>
But a civil rights bill with overwhelm-<lb/>
ing support in both Houses got lost in<lb/>
the shuffle because there wasn't enough<lb/>
time. Ditto the genocide treaty and an<lb/>
environmental cleanup bill. Even so.<lb/>
Congress failed to adjourn on time<lb/>
because it had failed to fulfill its most<lb/>
basic responsibility ? approving a<lb/>
government budget.<lb/>
Moynihan's question was difficult to<lb/>
answer. No one controls the sprawling<lb/>
legislative process, yet everyone assesses<lb/>
blame. President Reagan, explaining his<lb/>
decision to shut down the federal<lb/>
bureaucracy without a budget, said,<lb/>
"You can lay this right on the majority<lb/>
party of the House of Representatives<lb/>
That one was too ludicrous to let pass<lb/>
? the Democratic House had, in fact,<lb/>
approved a temporary funding exten-<lb/>
sion, and the Republican Senate had<lb/>
not. House Majority Leader Jim Wright<lb/>
stormed to the press gallery to issue a<lb/>
refutation.<lb/>
"It's inaccurate; it's untrue, and he<lb/>
repeatedly does this Wright said. "He<lb/>
lives in a fantasy world, as if he states it<lb/>
and then it's so I'm sick and tired of<lb/>
my colleagues being whipping boys for<lb/>
his policy failures<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
thatSit-hit<lb/>
HWWN ONE STEP<lb/>
C I AT A TIMS<lb/>
YOU Vf GOT THE SENSITIVITY OF A<lb/>
LUG WRENCH, KNOWTHAT, JJ?I'VE<lb/>
JUST MSSEP MY FIRST-EVER CHANCE<lb/>
,T0VOreANDALlY0UCANQ0ISRE<lb/>
MNPMB I<lb/>
?j iX STILL PONT<lb/>
Cc 3k HAVE A JOB'<lb/>
rSSF<lb/>
WEIL, I PONT HAVE TO<lb/>
TAKE THIS ABUSE' I'M GOOD<lb/>
GOING INTO TOWN 70 PLAN.Z<lb/>
SEE A MOVIE' HAVE A<lb/>
?I NICE TIME<lb/>
THANK YOU, MIKE BY<lb/>
THE WAY, CAN I HAVE<lb/>
MY ALLOWANCE BEFORE<lb/>
 I GO7<lb/>
r<lb/>
SHE SURE IS BEING<lb/>
A RHYMES-WITH<lb/>
WITCH TODAY<lb/>
ITt JUST<lb/>
AFEiAJ<lb/>
BUCKS, J.J<lb/>
???????' ?igMWMiiMi<lb/>
? ????<lb/>
The House, for its part, blamed the<lb/>
Senate. Rep. Silvio Conte, D-Mass<lb/>
delivered the most stinging attack in his<lb/>
"Ode to a Hundred Neros<lb/>
"Last night I had the strangest dream<lb/>
as I lay in bed. I saw a lovely chamber<lb/>
decked in gold, blue, white and red.<lb/>
Ninety-nine men and women sat and<lb/>
played their violins. But instead of a<lb/>
conductor stood a man in stripes and<lb/>
pins, 'ft's only a billion bucks he cried,<lb/>
and pleaded for their votes. The or-<lb/>
chestra found harmony and put it in<lb/>
their notes. Each player took a turn with<lb/>
an amendment as baton. Each move-<lb/>
ment ever louder as the piece dragged on<lb/>
and on. Then suddenly the drapes<lb/>
caught fire and flames shot up the wall.<lb/>
And soon the room was full of smoke<lb/>
and busts began to fall. The pillars<lb/>
cracked ? the orchestra responded right<lb/>
on key. Ignoring all around them, not<lb/>
resisting any spree. What happended<lb/>
next, I do not know. Gad saved me. I<lb/>
awoke. But one-half of the Capitol was<lb/>
left in dust and smoke. The symphony<lb/>
composed last night would put Mozart<lb/>
to shame. But the orchestra's a<lb/>
laughingstock, and gluttony's to<lb/>
blame. "<lb/>
At 6 p.m. Thursday, the House-<lb/>
Senate conference committee crammed<lb/>
into Room S-207 to try and come up<lb/>
with a budget for fiscal 1985. In the cor-<lb/>
ridors outside the room one could see at<lb/>
least part of the reason for the fiscal<lb/>
paralysis.<lb/>
As Reagan prepared to shut down the<lb/>
government Thursday morning, the hot<lb/>
topic on the House floor was a proposal<lb/>
to underwrite $33 million in interest<lb/>
payments owed b the Kennedy. (<lb/>
for the Performing Arts. Eight mei<lb/>
rose to denounce the debtor R<lb/>
Gerald Solomon of New York wo<lb/>
rhetorical battle with his conden<lb/>
of the "moonlight raid on the fe I<lb/>
treasury by bandits wearing black<lb/>
and ball gowns" in "the most expci<lb/>
and silliest night at the opera since tl<lb/>
Marx brothers<lb/>
Rep. Toby Roth of Wisconsin<lb/>
rupted the indignation to declare.<lb/>
the blue, that "in the next session I i<lb/>
tend to press forward with my I<lb/>
point (farm) export proposal " Indiai<lb/>
Republican Rep. Dan Burton rose l<lb/>
claim the Congressional golf tr p<lb/>
had won from Illinois Democrat M<lb/>
Russo. And as the budget conferees I <lb/>
gled into the night, the House debate<lb/>
resolution from Bill Goodhng oi 1<lb/>
sylvania to make William Penn a I 5<lb/>
citizen.<lb/>
After a moving tribute to the<lb/>
of his home state. Goodling vieldec I<lb/>
questions from the floor. In a sad<lb/>
unintentional parody of Congress lacl<lb/>
of fiscal discipline throughout the weel<lb/>
Romano L. Mazzoh of Kentucky r<lb/>
ask if any costs would be incurl<lb/>
through benefits to Penn's descend i<lb/>
or other provisions He was ass<lb/>
there would be none, and the moi<lb/>
passed unanimously.<lb/>
The government remained shut, an<lb/>
Congress kept talking. Bui Wi<lb/>
Penn is, at last, an American.<lb/>
(Jacob Schlesinger is a reporter '<lb/>
The Sew Republic.j<lb/>
ict. I'M I mlrd teaturr ?vndittr lot<lb/>
Things I Thought Of<lb/>
ByGREGRIDEOl 1<lb/>
You know it's been a helluva long time since the last tune 1 brought<lb/>
zany zingers and ludicrous laughs. I believe the election supplied those in m<lb/>
absence. But now that it's over and the people have made their mistakes, once<lb/>
again the time has come for "Things I Thought Of<lb/>
Why does the toilet paper dispenser in a public rest room not roll1 Do they<lb/>
expect you to get up and sort of glide against it? I guess it's so you won use<lb/>
so many sheets at once, but if you're like the rest of us, you unravel the d<lb/>
thing, do your business and never go back to that darn stall again.<lb/>
.4 poem (to the tune of Red Ridinghood or some such slum: Over tht<lb/>
river and through the woods to Jesse's house we go, hut ir you 're "laik<lb/>
you better stay back or you'll be shining shoes. And it vou 're preunant<lb/>
or gay, Jesse regulates your day. But'if you've not toxic wtjstc. dor<lb/>
make haste, he '11 see you anytime.<lb/>
I know where socks go when they escape the washer or drver (You know<lb/>
what I mean, where the two have a domestic quarrel and one leaves the othei<lb/>
to go it alone in the big, bad boot world.) Well, argyles go to Minnesota, but<lb/>
all others, including smelly sweatsocks, go to Arnie's Meatpa,kers on the cor-<lb/>
ner of 57th and Broadway in lower Manhattan. There, they're sorted, shred<lb/>
ed and made into McDonalds' uniforms.<lb/>
I saw a dinasaur on the third floor of Brewster the other dav. I think he was<lb/>
looking for his advisor, something about having trouble with a stats class Oh<lb/>
well.<lb/>
Rumor: Ronald Reagan had to be awakened Wednesday morning and told<lb/>
he had won the election. He immediately said he had not been sleeping with<lb/>
Nancy so he couldn't possibly have an election. Then, without even pausing.<lb/>
he dozed back off.<lb/>
News Flash: Walter Mondale arrived in New York City Thursdav morning<lb/>
after being blown off the map by Ronald Reagan on Tuesday. The former vice<lb/>
president was rushed quickly to Mercy Hospital in Queens where he underwent<lb/>
emergency surgery to remove a dullness growth at the base of his brain.<lb/>
A toy-making facility in Upper Volta has been raided by the CIA and more<lb/>
than 3,500 cabbage patch whores have been confiscated. The dolls were<lb/>
reportedly being shipped to cities in the United States, where thev were auc-<lb/>
tioned off in red-light districts.<lb/>
Did you notice that most gay whales who spout Christian beliefs voted for<lb/>
Jesse Helms, hoping to get nuked after WWII1 starts because the Senate<lb/>
Foreign Relations Committee decided Idi Amin is a cool dude. Reallv Look at<lb/>
the exit polls.<lb/>
Jim Hunt may have lost, but not a hair was out of place. A credit to his<lb/>
long-time friend and hairdresser, Marky. He looked marvelous, but 1 didn't<lb/>
quite understand why he came out against busing now. Was that why he had<lb/>
the windshield wiper?<lb/>
Now that it's finally cold, maybe we don't have to look at those darn boxer<lb/>
shorts sticking out of frat boys' shorts. The only thing more disgusting is the<lb/>
guy in front of me in Econ who smells like warm fish.<lb/>
Who decided where the letters should go on a typewriter. I'm tired of the<lb/>
way they are, so fjkwoi skkds jfueie iiwsaqm irmqww.<lb/>
And remember, vote. <lb/>
tmmmmm<lb/>
Fatal Injuries A t Universith<lb/>
Hazing Beco<lb/>
(USPS) ? These are good<lb/>
times for college fraternities.<lb/>
After two decades of decline,<lb/>
membership in fraternities has<lb/>
gone way up. But as more and<lb/>
more students have joined, the<lb/>
hazing of new pledges has<lb/>
become a serious problem.<lb/>
Hazing may seem like harmless<lb/>
fun, but it can often cause<lb/>
physical harm, mental distress,<lb/>
discomfort and embarassment.<lb/>
And it can sometimes lead to<lb/>
death.<lb/>
Common causes of hazing<lb/>
deaths include alcohol poisoning,<lb/>
heart attack, suffocation and<lb/>
drowning. New state laws pro-<lb/>
hibit hazing, but dangerous in-<lb/>
itiation rites are still widespread<lb/>
"In the next few years, you're<lb/>
going to see a larger number of<lb/>
deaths from hazing Jack<lb/>
levin, sociology professor at<lb/>
N .neastern University, said.<lb/>
Eileen Stevens is fighting to<lb/>
keep this prediction from coming<lb/>
true. After her son Chuck died in<lb/>
a hazing incident five years d.<lb/>
she founded the Committee to<lb/>
Halt Useless College Killings,<lb/>
cal'ed CHUCK in memory of her<lb/>
son and others who met senseless<lb/>
deaths in fraternity mitiati<lb/>
Stevens' von died pledging the<lb/>
Klan Alpine fraternity at Alfred<lb/>
University. During February in<lb/>
upstate New York, he was locked<lb/>
in a car trunk and told he could<lb/>
not come out until he had con-<lb/>
sumed huge amounts of whiskev .<lb/>
wine and beer. He died &amp;e<lb/>
hours later of acute<lb/>
poisoning and exp reez-<lb/>
mg temperatures<lb/>
Stevens was upset wher<lb/>
university informed her that her<lb/>
son had died from an "overdose<lb/>
of alcohol at a party but she<lb/>
was outraged when she<lb/>
discovered the truth about the<lb/>
hazing incident. Later Stevens<lb/>
learned "the college did not ever.<lb/>
discipline" the fraternity<lb/>
members involved. She has car<lb/>
paigned against hazing ever since<lb/>
When Stevens first started her<lb/>
organization, only five states<lb/>
outlawed hazing. Today, eigh-<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Active In<lb/>
Area Voting<lb/>
By HAROI DJOYNER<lb/>
4uviati! Sf? Mit'?f<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of the N<lb/>
tional Association tor the Ad-<lb/>
vancement<lb/>
continuing to reach goals set<lb/>
earlier this year, according to Jef-<lb/>
frey Canady. publicity chairman<lb/>
for" the ECl NAACP char<lb/>
"One our main<lb/>
secure a free ballot for ev.<lb/>
qualified American cil<lb/>
Canadv said. "We were able<lb/>
apply that goal in ty's<lb/>
election. The ECU chapter worl<lb/>
ed with voter reg<lb/>
absentee ballots and I real'tv d<lb/>
think it affected the large turr<lb/>
of Pitt County voters Canadv<lb/>
also noted several ECU NAACP<lb/>
members helped at the polling<lb/>
precincts. "We had several<lb/>
members hand out candidate in-<lb/>
formation leaflets, gave vo<lb/>
rides to the polls.<lb/>
registered voters to remind them<lb/>
of the election and<lb/>
assistance to voters who co<lb/>
not read their ballot<lb/>
Other plans for the NAACP<lb/>
include celebrating Martin<lb/>
Luther King Jr Dav in Januarv<lb/>
and acknowledging Black<lb/>
History Month in Fcbruar)  c<lb/>
hope to get the ECU chap:cr<lb/>
more involved with local and na-<lb/>
tional affairs he said "We<lb/>
want to keep the students inform-<lb/>
ed of what's going<lb/>
nationally <lb/>
The current officers of the<lb/>
ECl NAACP include W<lb/>
Case, president; Herward<lb/>
Manley. vice president. Connie<lb/>
Shelton, assistant secret<lb/>
Monieuh Womble, treasurer.<lb/>
and Jeffrev Canadv. publicity<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
"The ECL chapter has been<lb/>
here since 1981 We are continu-<lb/>
ing to make progress and this is a<lb/>
great chance for minoritj<lb/>
students to voice their opinions<lb/>
through the NAACP. We want to<lb/>
get everyone involved and make<lb/>
things happen Canadv said.<lb/>
teen states<lb/>
hazing, and<lb/>
eight other<lb/>
testimony a<lb/>
and her anti-<lb/>
forts, Steven<lb/>
ed, either dirl<lb/>
in having law<lb/>
"These ial<lb/>
hands of coll<lb/>
Stevens <lb/>
was treated<lb/>
slap on the wj<lb/>
again, the<lb/>
incidents qui(<lb/>
few repercusj<lb/>
will involv<lb/>
pena. ? i<lb/>
Since '<lb/>
tion. Steverij<lb/>
on<lb/>
puses. Stev<lb/>
mes <lb/>
anti-ha<lb/>
"7 ?<lb/>
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very .<lb/>
nities<lb/>
"1 ?<lb/>
going I<lb/>
tion o' <lb/>
the Nationa<lb/>
ference<lb/>
The N I<lb/>
? ?i0 frater<lb/>
ruses.<lb/>
:ethec <lb/>
ed in 1909<lb/>
AM<lb/>
have a:<lb/>
books m all 5<lb/>
haz<lb/>
I'm i<lb/>
anyrhir.j<lb/>
Steven<lb/>
make the<lb/>
There are<lb/>
I<lb/>
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"The  j<lb/>
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educate eacr<lb/>
such incident!<lb/>
Steven<lb/>
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round<lb/>
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nembers<lb/>
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ndemnation<lb/>
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The former vice<lb/>
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theh,his brain. eIA and more<lb/>
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Aherethey were auc-<lb/>
?uthristian beliefs oted for<lb/>
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a :ool dude. Really. Look at<lb/>
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Ifine to look at those darn boxer<lb/>
nly thing more disgusting is the<lb/>
irm fish.<lb/>
a typewriter. I'm tired of the<lb/>
Ti irmqwu<lb/>
Fatal Injuries A t Universities<lb/>
Hazing Becomes<lb/>
Problem<lb/>
(USPS) - These are good<lb/>
times for college fraternities.<lb/>
After two decades of decline,<lb/>
membership in fra'ernities has<lb/>
gone way up. But as more and<lb/>
more students have joined, the<lb/>
hazing of new pledges has<lb/>
become a serious problem.<lb/>
Hazing may seem like harmless<lb/>
fun, but it can often cause<lb/>
physical harm, mental distress,<lb/>
discomfort and embarassment.<lb/>
And it can sometimes lead to<lb/>
death.<lb/>
Common causes of hazing<lb/>
deaths include alcohol poisoning,<lb/>
heart attack, suffocation and<lb/>
drowning. New state laws pro-<lb/>
hibit hazing, but dangerous in-<lb/>
itiation rites are still widespread.<lb/>
"In the next few years, you're<lb/>
going to see a larger number of<lb/>
deaths from hazing Jack<lb/>
Levin, sociology professor at<lb/>
Northeastern University, said.<lb/>
Eileen Stevens is fighting to<lb/>
keep this prediction from coming<lb/>
true. After her son Chuck died in<lb/>
a hazing incident five years ago,<lb/>
she founded the Committee to<lb/>
Halt Useless College Killings,<lb/>
called CHUCK in memory of her<lb/>
son and others who met senseless<lb/>
deaths in fraternity initiations.<lb/>
Stevens' son died pledging the<lb/>
Klan Alpine fraternity at Alfred<lb/>
University. During February in<lb/>
upstate New York, he was locked<lb/>
in a car trunk and told he could<lb/>
not come out until he had con-<lb/>
sumed huge amounts of whiskey,<lb/>
wine and beer. He died several<lb/>
hours later of acute alcohol<lb/>
poisoning and exposure to freez-<lb/>
ing temperatures.<lb/>
Stevens was upset when the<lb/>
university informed her that her<lb/>
son had died from an "overdose<lb/>
of alcohol at a party but she<lb/>
was outraged when she<lb/>
discovered the truth about the<lb/>
hazing incident. Later Stevens<lb/>
learned "the college did not even<lb/>
discipline" the fraternity<lb/>
members involved. She has cam-<lb/>
paigned against hazing ever since.<lb/>
When Stevens first started her<lb/>
organization, only five states<lb/>
outlawed hazing. Today, eigh-<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
Active In<lb/>
Area Voting<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNEK<lb/>
Xwivtunt Ne? tdititr<lb/>
The ECU Chapter of the Na-<lb/>
tional Association for the Ad-<lb/>
vancement of Colored People is<lb/>
continuing to reach goals set<lb/>
earlier this year, according to Jef-<lb/>
fre Canady, publicity chairman<lb/>
for the ECU NAACP chapter.<lb/>
"One our main goals is to<lb/>
secure a free ballot for every<lb/>
qualified American citizen<lb/>
( anady said. "We were able to<lb/>
applv that goal in yesterday's<lb/>
election. The ECU chapter work-<lb/>
ed with voter registration and<lb/>
absentee ballots and I really do<lb/>
think it affected the large turnout<lb/>
oi Pitt County voters Canady<lb/>
also noted several ECU NAACP<lb/>
members helped at the polling<lb/>
precincts. "We had several<lb/>
members hand out candidate in-<lb/>
formation leaflets, gave voters<lb/>
rides to the polls, called<lb/>
registered voters to remind them<lb/>
of the election and offered<lb/>
assistance to voters who could<lb/>
not read their ballot<lb/>
Other plans for the NAACP<lb/>
include celebrating Martin<lb/>
I uther King Jr Day in January<lb/>
and acknowledging Black<lb/>
History Month in February. "We<lb/>
hope to get the ECU chapter<lb/>
more involved with local and na-<lb/>
tional affairs he said. "We also<lb/>
want to keep the students inform-<lb/>
ed of what's going on<lb/>
nationally<lb/>
The current officers of the<lb/>
ECU NAACP include Wilma<lb/>
Case, president; Herward<lb/>
Manley, vice president; Connie<lb/>
Shelton, assistant secretary;<lb/>
Monteith Womble, treasurer;<lb/>
and Jeffrey Canady, publicity<lb/>
chairman.<lb/>
"The ECU chapter has been<lb/>
here since 1981. We are continu-<lb/>
ing to make progress and this is a<lb/>
great chance for minority<lb/>
students to voice their opinions<lb/>
through the NAACP. We want to<lb/>
get everyone involved and make<lb/>
things happen Canady said.<lb/>
teen states have laws banning<lb/>
hazing, and bills are pending in<lb/>
eight other states. Through her<lb/>
testimony at legislative hearings<lb/>
and her anti-hazing lobbying ef-<lb/>
forts, Stevens "has been involv-<lb/>
ed, either directly or indirectly<lb/>
in having laws passed in 13 states.<lb/>
"These laws strengthen the<lb/>
hands of college administrators<lb/>
Stevens said. "Before, hazing<lb/>
was treated with probation or a<lb/>
slap on the wrist. Time and time<lb/>
again, the colleges tried to keep<lb/>
incidents quiet. There were very<lb/>
few repercussions. Now hazing<lb/>
will involve severe criminal<lb/>
penalties, as it should<lb/>
Since founding her organiza-<lb/>
tion, Stevens has lectured to<lb/>
students on over 240 college cam-<lb/>
puses. Stevens stresses her<lb/>
message is not anti-fraternity, but<lb/>
anti-hazing.<lb/>
"The fraternities have embrac-<lb/>
ed my work Stevens said. "It's<lb/>
very gratifying to me that frater-<lb/>
nities have recognized that hazing<lb/>
is a problem.<lb/>
"There's a great deal of change<lb/>
going on, and a lot of positive ac-<lb/>
tion on the part of students and<lb/>
the National Interfraternity Con-<lb/>
ference Stevens said.<lb/>
The N.I.C which represents<lb/>
5,000 fraternity chapters on 650<lb/>
campuses, has opposed hazing<lb/>
since the organization was found-<lb/>
ed in 1909.<lb/>
Although Stevens' goal is to<lb/>
have anti-hazing laws on the<lb/>
books in all 50 states, she says the<lb/>
laws will not succeed in ending<lb/>
hazing without student support.<lb/>
I'm not going to change<lb/>
anything, neither are the laws<lb/>
Stevens said. "The kids have to<lb/>
make the change themselves.<lb/>
There are vows of secrecy and<lb/>
oaths of silence. That's what has<lb/>
to change.<lb/>
"The greatest thing students<lb/>
can do to prevent hazing is to<lb/>
educate each other and bring<lb/>
such incidents out in the open<lb/>
Stevens said. "They need to have<lb/>
the courage to report such in-<lb/>
cidents, becausetoo often, haz-<lb/>
ing incidents are found out after<lb/>
the fact, and that's sad<lb/>
Since 1978, 29 students have<lb/>
died in hazing incidents. Experts<lb/>
expect hazing to increase because<lb/>
of the 67 percent increase in<lb/>
fraternity membership on<lb/>
American campuses since 1971.<lb/>
On August 30, 1984, hazing<lb/>
claimed its latest victim. Texas<lb/>
A&amp;M sophomore Bruce Dean<lb/>
Goodrich, 20, died of heat stroke<lb/>
after three upperclassmen roused<lb/>
him from his bed at 2:30 a.m<lb/>
forced him to run around cam-<lb/>
pus, and Finally do 87 sit-ups and<lb/>
push-ups. Goodrich collapsed<lb/>
shortly after and later died. The<lb/>
upperclassmen were members of<lb/>
A&amp;M's Corps of Cadets and<lb/>
Goodrich, a Webster, New York,<lb/>
transfer student, was a cadet<lb/>
recruit. The "motivational exer-<lb/>
cises" Goodrich endured are<lb/>
outlawed by the university.<lb/>
The three cadets, as well as<lb/>
their unit commander, were in-<lb/>
dicted on misdemeanor charges<lb/>
of criminally negligent homicide<lb/>
and hazing. They were released<lb/>
on a personal recognizance bond<lb/>
in early October. Two weeks ago,<lb/>
the three cadets were suspended<lb/>
7A<lb/>
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THJ EAS1 CAROl INIAN<lb/>
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Fall, Summer Graduation<lb/>
Planned For December<lb/>
Jl'<lb/>
By ERNEST ROBERTS<lb/>
V?? W rlln<lb/>
The ECU Program Committee<lb/>
recently announced plans for a<lb/>
program and reception for 1984<lb/>
summer and fall graduates.<lb/>
The program is scheduled for<lb/>
10a.m. Saturday, Dec. l.atHen-<lb/>
drix Theatre in Mendenhall Stu-<lb/>
dent Center. A reception is plan-<lb/>
ned in Mendenhall lounge follow-<lb/>
ing the program.<lb/>
"This program is not a com-<lb/>
mencement said Melinda<lb/>
Da is, senior class president.<lb/>
"And this program won't take<lb/>
the place of a commencement. It<lb/>
is a compromise for a formal<lb/>
December commencement<lb/>
According to Davis, the pro-<lb/>
gram is for the graduates and<lb/>
their friends and family. This<lb/>
program is funded through<lb/>
graduation fees.<lb/>
The idea came from UNC-CH,<lb/>
which has had successful pro-<lb/>
grams for about three years, ac-<lb/>
cording to Davis. The idea of a<lb/>
program at ECU was introduced<lb/>
by Lisa Roberts, last year's senior<lb/>
class president. The coordinator<lb/>
for the program is C.C. Rowe,<lb/>
who is also coordinator of Han-<lb/>
dicapped Student Services. These<lb/>
people have played an important<lb/>
part in initiating a program at<lb/>
ECU, Davis said.<lb/>
The program will be different<lb/>
from a formal commencement.<lb/>
There will be no caps and gowns<lb/>
and no formal school or depart-<lb/>
ment seating. "This program is<lb/>
designed to be more personal<lb/>
than regular commencement<lb/>
Davis said. "I think it's a good<lb/>
idea for summer and fall<lb/>
graduates<lb/>
Davis also commented that in-<lb/>
vitations should be mailed by the<lb/>
end of the week to summer and<lb/>
fall graduates.<lb/>
A<lb/>
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<lb/>
Martin Thanks Democrats<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
D-Montgomery, who defeated<lb/>
Republican businessman John<lb/>
Carnngton for lieutenant gover-<lb/>
nor Jordan said he and Martin<lb/>
disagree on issues but his<lb/>
"obligation is to work for the<lb/>
people<lb/>
Martin said early Wednesday,<lb/>
"1 intend to work with the leader-<lb/>
ship of the General Assembly<lb/>
?hich is Democraticallv controll-<lb/>
ed<lb/>
Martin also thanked<lb/>
Democrats ? who outnumber<lb/>
Republicans 3-1 in North<lb/>
Carolina ? for supporting the<lb/>
conservative veteran con-<lb/>
gressman and prominent<lb/>
Democratic leaders for cam-<lb/>
paigning for him.<lb/>
"We couldn't have done it<lb/>
without them Martin said.<lb/>
"They gave a lot of credibility to<lb/>
our campaign<lb/>
With 94 percent of the state's<lb/>
2,354 precincts reporting, Martin<lb/>
had 1.111,963 votes, or 54 per-<lb/>
cent, while Edmisten received<lb/>
936,868 votes, or 46 percent.<lb/>
A disheartened Edmisten also<lb/>
thanked his supporters and said<lb/>
he did not know what the future<lb/>
held for him.<lb/>
"May I thank the most<lb/>
wonderful people in the world<lb/>
and you know the most precious<lb/>
possessions you have are your<lb/>
friends Edmisten said.<lb/>
??<lb/>
Read It<lb/>
In The<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Caffeine Hinders More Than It Helps<lb/>
(l SPS) ? Most UllHfnfc Innu ihrw ,nnc nf ff  <lb/>
(I SPS) ? Most students know three cups of coffee.<lb/>
that a little caffeine taken before<lb/>
or during an exam may give them<lb/>
a feeling of much-needed energy.<lb/>
What they don't know, however,<lb/>
is that the combined effects of<lb/>
exam-time stress and caffeine can<lb/>
wreak havoc on their car-<lb/>
diovascular system.<lb/>
A new studv found that in-<lb/>
gesting caffeine immediately<lb/>
before an exam or a similar<lb/>
stressful situation raises blood<lb/>
pressure and intensified the ef-<lb/>
fects of stress on the heart. Duke<lb/>
University professor Dr. James<lb/>
Lane outlined his findings in his<lb/>
report, "Caffeine Magnifies Car-<lb/>
diovascular Responses to<lb/>
Stress<lb/>
Lane reached his conclusions<lb/>
by measuring the blood pressure<lb/>
of 33 male undergraduates as<lb/>
they took sample 12-minute math<lb/>
tests. The average blood pressure<lb/>
wen: up seven millimeters when<lb/>
students had ingested no caffeine<lb/>
before the test, but it went up ten<lb/>
Doints after students had two or<lb/>
r<lb/>
The average blood pressure of<lb/>
the students who had taken no<lb/>
caffeine was 120 over 65 before<lb/>
the test and 127 over 72 when the<lb/>
test was over. But after two cups<lb/>
of coffee, after-test blood<lb/>
pressure averaged 135 over 77.<lb/>
Blood pressure of more than 140<lb/>
over 90 is considered high.<lb/>
Lane also found some correla-<lb/>
tion between hypertension and<lb/>
unusually large blood pressure in-<lb/>
creases during stressful situa-<lb/>
tions. He suggested that further<lb/>
study of the detrimental effects<lb/>
of stress and caffeine on the car-<lb/>
diovascular system could aid in<lb/>
the "prevention and management<lb/>
of cardiovascular disease<lb/>
&amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
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Laurel Burch Earrings<lb/>
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Specializing in Satural Fiber<lb/>
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116 E. 5th St. Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30<lb/>
Next Door to Book Barn 757-3944<lb/>
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Nov. 8th<lb/>
7:00-10:00<lb/>
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ATTENTION ECU STUDENTS<lb/>
Get Your Spring Semester Application in NOW!<lb/>
? IT 3l?S LanQinQ ? offers a new concept in student housing<lb/>
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REMCO EAST INC ? P O Box 6026 ? Greenville. NC 27834 ? 919 758-6061<lb/>
PIEDMONT'S 50 OFF COLLEGE RARE.<lb/>
Face it,your learning years are not your prime earning<lb/>
years. Rut dont let that stop you from moving off campus<lb/>
Through February 28, l985,you can fly anywhere<lb/>
Piedmont flies for halt fare To LA and New Yrk And to all<lb/>
kinds of hot spots and hometowns in between<lb/>
Whats the catch?Well,you must be under26 and have<lb/>
a valid student ID. Read the tine print below for restrictions<lb/>
Piedmont's 50 Off College Fare More proof that our<lb/>
commitment to higher education is not just a lottv ideal.<lb/>
.<lb/>
n rLJwuhibLrmind-tTil)twkrtsrmiMfvfnn fuivcd ,if le?iM vmi jn ? n<lb/>
c, ? I ? ,1111 ,  vjmctna<lb/>
Sundayafta 1 pm HMaymmrestnetumsapply yarn n .<lb/>
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(.rwnville h? iUajs ,<lb/>
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Watchin<lb/>
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: ink<lb/>
"H<lb/>
Trivia For Th<lb/>
w<lb/>
I eas<lb/>
-<lb/>
Mosi <lb/>
M s<lb/>
Most c<lb/>
Mos<lb/>
: <lb/>
Be si<lb/>
Catch The Holiaa<lb/>
Bv 1 IN M KOM , K<lb/>
Holidav <lb/>
Christmas From .<lb/>
visiting<lb/>
seem;<lb/>
special w<lb/>
io arv.<lb/>
millions<lb/>
itions x-<lb/>
Volunu ??<lb/>
jeci.<lb/>
In 1971 t .<lb/>
dents si ??<lb/>
' h v delivei a -<lb/>
Christmas Oav<lb/>
hospitals ;<lb/>
program expanded<lb/>
volunteers Now the H<lb/>
Pro j e d has t hoi<lb/>
olunteer who visit mil<lb/>
People throughout the<lb/>
States and v<lb/>
ehristina- and (haniAd' W<lb/>
?s the Holidav Protect re<lb/>
about? "People being with p<lb/>
Pie "<lb/>
Hoi<lb/>
set<lb/>
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<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0007"/><lb/>
ANP KINCM<lb/>
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ov. 8th<lb/>
10:00<lb/>
iei<lb/>
??????mh<lb/>
NOVEMBER 8, 1984<lb/>
Pngtl<lb/>
(.reenvilles boys The Usuals, will be appearing at the Coffeehouse in the Mendenhal! Student Center<lb/>
this Fnda from 8 p.m. to 10 p.m.<lb/>
Vet Turns Comedian<lb/>
A Different Way To Get Laughs<lb/>
Watching A tari Fall<lb/>
(l PI) - There are creative peo-<lb/>
and there are business people.<lb/>
The problem is getting both of<lb/>
them in the same company, ac-<lb/>
ding to Scott Cohen, who<lb/>
chronicled the history of Atari.<lb/>
It there is a moral to the Atari<lb/>
story, it ma be that neither<lb/>
creativity nor business pro-<lb/>
- at ism is enough to keep a<lb/>
iwing company healthy,<lb/>
Cohen said.<lb/>
"You can onl be creative in<lb/>
developing a product, and<lb/>
straight-business in selling it he<lb/>
-aid. "You have to have that<lb/>
balance, ano Atari never had it<lb/>
When Cohen began his Atari<lb/>
story, it was intended to be a<lb/>
high-tech success story about the<lb/>
electronic games company that<lb/>
c ? ild. But Cohen missed his<lb/>
deadline on the book, and during<lb/>
the intervening weeks Atari<lb/>
dn its sudden descent into an<lb/>
ocean of red ink.<lb/>
"Being late turned out to be<lb/>
verv much to mv advantage<lb/>
c onen said<lb/>
Published bv McGraw-Hill,<lb/>
Zap ? The Rise and hall of<lb/>
Atari, is a saga of the Silicon<lb/>
Valley, an unlovely piece of<lb/>
California territory that became<lb/>
the nation's hotbed of high tech.<lb/>
Most of its pioneers, Cohen<lb/>
wrote, "put in 12-hour days,<lb/>
seven days a week, for months,<lb/>
and ended up depressed, divorced<lb/>
and drunk, just like the prospec-<lb/>
tors of California's first Gold<lb/>
Rush<lb/>
Atari was founded in 1972 by<lb/>
Nolan Bushnell, a young engineer<lb/>
with $500 and an interest in com-<lb/>
puter games. Its first major pro-<lb/>
duct, Pong, was a huge success.<lb/>
But the hotshot engineers and<lb/>
daring entrepreneurs who could<lb/>
dream up the games and bet the<lb/>
store on each new enterprise<lb/>
could not carry Atari through its<lb/>
transformation into a major<lb/>
American business.<lb/>
"Atari did as well as could be<lb/>
expected, being run by people<lb/>
who didn't know how to run a<lb/>
company Cohen said in a re-<lb/>
cent interview. "They had the<lb/>
right product, but they weren't<lb/>
well-managed. There was a<lb/>
market there, but there wasn't<lb/>
enough capital<lb/>
When Warner Communica-<lb/>
tions purchased Atari, Cohen<lb/>
said, "a big company with lots of<lb/>
money and no ideas bought a lit-<lb/>
tle company with lots of ideas<lb/>
and no money<lb/>
The Warner people who took<lb/>
over management of Atari "were<lb/>
selling something they essentially<lb/>
knew nothing about Cohen<lb/>
said. When the computer games<lb/>
sold like hotcakes, "they thought<lb/>
it was because they were smart,<lb/>
and they started to bring in more<lb/>
people of their type<lb/>
The influx of corporate<lb/>
salesmen made life uncomfor-<lb/>
table for the original engineers.<lb/>
"Guys who were undisciplined<lb/>
didn't like punching a time<lb/>
clock Cohen said. "Atari<lb/>
started losing its creative<lb/>
people<lb/>
The exodus began with<lb/>
Bushnell, who walked off with<lb/>
$15 million from the $28 milion<lb/>
sale to Warner.<lb/>
(UPI) ? God knows there was<lb/>
nothing funny about Vietnam.<lb/>
Maybe that's why only one stand-<lb/>
up comedian has emerged from a<lb/>
war that toppled American<lb/>
presidents and turned the country<lb/>
upside down.<lb/>
Both World Wars and even<lb/>
Korea produced their share of<lb/>
funnymen who made their starts<lb/>
with jokes about misadventures<lb/>
in the service.<lb/>
But they were "popular" wars<lb/>
in that most Americans sup-<lb/>
ported the country's involve-<lb/>
ment. There was little humor in-<lb/>
volving Vietnam at home, but the<lb/>
GIs, sailors, Marines and airmen<lb/>
who fought in Southeast Asia liv-<lb/>
ed with their own black humor.<lb/>
The sole stand-up comedian to<lb/>
surface in the wake of Vietnam is<lb/>
Blake Clark, a broad-shouldered<lb/>
southerner who looks a little like<lb/>
Robin Williams but whose humor<lb/>
has more bite.<lb/>
Like most Vietnam vets, Blake<lb/>
has a chip on his shoulder.<lb/>
Understandably.<lb/>
A lieutenant and platoon<lb/>
leader in the 5th Infantry Divi-<lb/>
sion ? nicknamed The Devils in<lb/>
Baggy Pants ? Blake is a tough,<lb/>
hard man whose sense of humor<lb/>
has a keen edge.<lb/>
He gets laughs with the bitter-<lb/>
funny observations that strike<lb/>
home with everyone, especially<lb/>
Nam vets themselves.<lb/>
Blake often starts his<lb/>
monologue with a shocker: "Boy<lb/>
I was really looking forward to a<lb/>
hero's welcome when 1 came<lb/>
home from Vietnam after all<lb/>
those months in combat. I<lb/>
remembered stories about the<lb/>
kind of welcome and the ticker<lb/>
tape parades they gave the<lb/>
"When they had sold off all<lb/>
the products developed by the<lb/>
original people, they had no great<lb/>
products to introduce because all<lb/>
the great people had left Cohen<lb/>
said. The new games ordered up<lb/>
by the new management, like<lb/>
"E.T and "Raiders of the Lost<lb/>
Ark were inspired marketing<lb/>
decisions, but turned out to be no<lb/>
fun to play.<lb/>
veterans of other wars. Even the<lb/>
Iranian hostages got a ticker tape<lb/>
parade and an invitation to the<lb/>
White House. But with us Nam<lb/>
vets it was different. People spit<lb/>
on us when we came back. I'll<lb/>
never forget my own experience<lb/>
when I got off the plane at the<lb/>
Atlanta airport. This guy came<lb/>
up to me and said, 'You're a war-<lb/>
monger and a murderer So I<lb/>
killed him<lb/>
After that opener there is a<lb/>
stunned beat of silence before the<lb/>
audience roars with laughter. The<lb/>
joke is outrageous, cynical and<lb/>
funny. It also makes a point.<lb/>
"I'm finding audiences are<lb/>
responding well because I'm not<lb/>
bitter Blake said. "I smile a lot<lb/>
while I'm telling Nam jokes. I've<lb/>
been on the Johnny Carson show<lb/>
four times and I get good reac-<lb/>
tions. What some people don't<lb/>
know is that some of my jokes<lb/>
are things that really happened<lb/>
Blake will join Bob Hope,<lb/>
Charlton Heston, Ed McMahon,<lb/>
George Peppard and Robert<lb/>
Stack Nov. 12 at the Vietnam<lb/>
Veterans Salute to the USO at<lb/>
Los Angeles' Century Plaza<lb/>
Hotel. The banquet for 600, at<lb/>
$250 a plate, will benefit the Viet-<lb/>
nam Veterans leadership Pro-<lb/>
gram<lb/>
"That program is important to<lb/>
me because it helps so many Nam<lb/>
vets who are still trying to get<lb/>
back into the American<lb/>
mainstream said Blake.<lb/>
"A lot of the veterans still have<lb/>
problems because of the stigma<lb/>
attached to that war and the men<lb/>
who fought it. There's still<lb/>
discrimination against them. The<lb/>
government and the people still<lb/>
have a guilt complex about<lb/>
Nam<lb/>
"People don't feel right that<lb/>
we went o.er there and the way<lb/>
we were treated when we got<lb/>
back. Hell, we don't want to be<lb/>
thanked. We just don't want to<lb/>
be blamed<lb/>
To lighten the load, to bring a<lb/>
little more understanding bet-<lb/>
ween the vets and bodv politic,<lb/>
Blake bases about a third of his<lb/>
act on the war and its aftermath.<lb/>
"One of mv stories involves<lb/>
bavonet practice at Fort Dix<lb/>
before mj outfit went to Nam<lb/>
Blake -aid. grinning. "The drill<lb/>
instructor had a routine. He'd<lb/>
yell, 'What are the onlv two kin-<lb/>
da people on a battlefield?' And<lb/>
he had to yell back. 'The quick<lb/>
and the dead?' One day he yelled<lb/>
that question at me and I hollered<lb/>
back, 'The minorities and the<lb/>
poor When he quit laughing he<lb/>
ordered me to do push-ups for<lb/>
the rest of the da "<lb/>
"There was a lot oi gallows<lb/>
humor in Nam We had to laugh.<lb/>
It's the onlv thing that kept us<lb/>
sane sometimes People were<lb/>
misled about us in pictures like<lb/>
Apocalypse Sow, showing all the<lb/>
troops stoned out oi their gourds<lb/>
all 'he time. It iust wasn't the<lb/>
truth<lb/>
"But 1 remember one dark<lb/>
night in th ingle when I got a<lb/>
call from an observation post. A<lb/>
voice on the other end of the line<lb/>
said, 'Hev, lieutenant, we got<lb/>
some movement in the bushes! I<lb/>
asked, 'What does it look like?'<lb/>
And the voice came back. 'A<lb/>
giant chocolate chip cookie<lb/>
"That's how it was sometimes<lb/>
in Nam<lb/>
Atari shipped $98 milion worth<lb/>
of cartridges the week before<lb/>
Thanksgiving in 1982. A week<lb/>
and a half later, it shipped none.<lb/>
Cancellations replaced orders<lb/>
and Warner closed its 19$? se-<lb/>
cond quarter losing $283.4<lb/>
million.<lb/>
Atari recently was purchased<lb/>
by Jack Tramiel, a hard-driving<lb/>
entrepreneur who founded Com-<lb/>
modore. Atari's chief rival, but<lb/>
resigned from the company in a<lb/>
dispute last January.<lb/>
"If Tramiel brings it back up<lb/>
so it's a great company once<lb/>
again, and thev go up against<lb/>
Commodore, it would be a great<lb/>
reason to write another book<lb/>
about it Cohen said.<lb/>
U<lb/>
tijjps<lb/>
EFARE.<lb/>
ir prime earning<lb/>
ing offcampus.<lb/>
i fly anywhere<lb/>
'vYrk And to all<lb/>
r een.<lb/>
jnder26 and have<lb/>
w for restrictions.<lb/>
rc proof that our<lb/>
JSt a loftv ideal.<lb/>
Trivia For The Day<lb/>
Best food: Bennington College<lb/>
Worst food: University of Hawaii<lb/>
Best party schools: West Virginia University, University of Miami,<lb/>
University of Wyoming<lb/>
Most promiscuous: Boston University<lb/>
I east promiscuous: Oral Roberts University<lb/>
test students: UC Santa Barbara, Arizona State University<lb/>
I gliest men: University of Pennsylvania, Indiana University<lb/>
I gliest women: University of Alaska<lb/>
Most sorority action: University of Mississippi<lb/>
Most fraternity action: University of Illinois<lb/>
Most computers (and nerds): Carnegie-Mellon University<lb/>
Most political: University of WisconsinMadison<lb/>
I east political: Rollins College<lb/>
Most bars per capita: Marquette University, Skidmore College<lb/>
Best campus bar: The Cafe, Bennington College<lb/>
Vv orst bars: Brigham Young University (No bars allowed in Provo)<lb/>
mciest cars: Southern Methodist University-<lb/>
's! school spirit: Texas A&amp;M, Princeton University<lb/>
1 cast school spirit: Emory, SUNY Albany<lb/>
souvenir: Yale's blue bikini underpants that read "Beat<lb/>
'?ard"<lb/>
Fro I ?a Birnh?. k  of I uls<lb/>
Catch The Holiday Spirit<lb/>
? 2S1 S72<lb/>
B TINAMAROSCHAK<lb/>
rrilim rdilor<lb/>
Holidays seem to bring out the<lb/>
best in people, especially around<lb/>
(hnstmas. From caroling to<lb/>
visiting nursing homes, the spirit<lb/>
of giving and sharing always<lb/>
?eems to be at its best. And for<lb/>
about 13 years groups of very<lb/>
?pecial volunteers have brought<lb/>
and meaning to the lives of<lb/>
millions of people confined to<lb/>
hospitals, homes and other in-<lb/>
stitutions. Who are these people?<lb/>
Volunteers for the Holiday Pro-<lb/>
ject.<lb/>
In 1971 eight San Francisco<lb/>
residents started the Holiday Pro-<lb/>
ject by delivering gifts on<lb/>
Christmas Day to peoPle m<lb/>
hospitals. Just two years later the<lb/>
Program expanded to 400<lb/>
volunteers. Now the Holiday<lb/>
Project has thousands of<lb/>
volunteers who visit millions of<lb/>
people throughout the United<lb/>
States and Canada each<lb/>
Christmas and Chanukah. What<lb/>
8 the Holiday Project really<lb/>
about? "People being with peo-<lb/>
ple<lb/>
Greenville residents and ECU<lb/>
students now have the opportuni-<lb/>
ty to be a part of this worthwhile<lb/>
organization. Headed by Dee<lb/>
Tropeano, the Greenville Holi-<lb/>
day Project is in desperate need<lb/>
of volunteers and money. Accor-<lb/>
ding to Fundraising Chairperson<lb/>
Jenny Eckert, there are currently<lb/>
onlv about 20 volunteers, most of<lb/>
who are ECU students.<lb/>
Eckert said that the group<lb/>
plans on visiting three facilities<lb/>
on Dec. 6 ? Earth (a home for<lb/>
emotionally disturbed children),<lb/>
ECVC (East Carolina Vocational<lb/>
Center) and the Alcohol<lb/>
Rehabilitation Center. "We need<lb/>
volunteers and donations of any<lb/>
kind Eckert said. She explained<lb/>
that the group raises money and<lb/>
sends it to National Headquarters<lb/>
in Washington, D.C. From there,<lb/>
National Headquarters sends<lb/>
back unwrapped presents and<lb/>
wrapping paper. This year the<lb/>
Holiday Project plans to visit<lb/>
around 150 people in Greenville.<lb/>
Volunteers are needed to raise<lb/>
money, coordinate entertainment<lb/>
See UNIQUE, Page 8.<lb/>
Ferguson To Jazz Up ECU<lb/>
The ECU Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee will present "An<lb/>
Evening with Maynard<lb/>
Ferguson" Wednesday, Nov. 14<lb/>
at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium.<lb/>
Maynard Ferguson is the one<lb/>
musician in the jazz world who<lb/>
can truly be labeled "a legend in<lb/>
his own time He has been refer-<lb/>
red to as provocative, ingenious,<lb/>
sophisticated, powerful and col-<lb/>
ossal.<lb/>
Ferguson formed his first band<lb/>
in 1957. Known as the Birdland<lb/>
Dream Band, this group went on<lb/>
to win numerous Downbeat and<lb/>
Playboy )daz polls. The list of<lb/>
names who came through<lb/>
Ferguson's band reads like a<lb/>
who's who of jazz greats ? Don<lb/>
Ellis, Slide Hampton, Bob<lb/>
James, Clark Terry and Willie<lb/>
Maiden, just to name a few.<lb/>
In 1967 Ferguson dissolved his<lb/>
band and moved to England<lb/>
where he embarked on a new<lb/>
phase of his career. His M.F.<lb/>
Horn album received critical ac-<lb/>
claim not only from jazz buffs<lb/>
but also from music fans. With<lb/>
the release of the theme from<lb/>
Rocky, Ferguson made the jazz-<lb/>
pop crossover. This resulted in<lb/>
his first gold album and the tune<lb/>
received a Grammy nomination<lb/>
for the "Best Pop Instrumental"<lb/>
award.<lb/>
Constant touring of U.S. col-<lb/>
leges and concert halls and<lb/>
several overseas tours confirm<lb/>
the popularity of Ferguson. This,<lb/>
coupled with the fact that he has<lb/>
sold more albums than any other<lb/>
bandleader since the 1940s,<lb/>
makes him a "must see attrac-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Tickets for the concert are on<lb/>
sale at the Central Ticket Office,<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
They are $1.50 for ECU students,<lb/>
$3 for ECU faculty and staff, and<lb/>
$5 for the public. All tickets at<lb/>
the door will be $5. Tickets may<lb/>
be purchased Monday through<lb/>
Friday from 11 a.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
For additional information call<lb/>
757-6611, ext. 266.<lb/>
Maynard Ferguson will entertain ECU on Wednesday, No. 14 at 8 p.m. in Wright Auditorium<lb/>
"pT<lb/>
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1<lb/>
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ACOC<lb/>
 HUflMHC HI<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOVEMBERS. 1984<lb/>
Page 9<lb/>
NEIL JOHNSON - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Darrtll speed has started the last seven games ai quarterback for the ECU football team, but in the Pirates'<lb/>
season finale against Southern Miss, he'll be replaced b redshirt freshman Ron Jones<lb/>
Heath Third Ail-Time Scorer<lb/>
B scon COOPKR<lb/>
suff nlrr<lb/>
Despite a rough and tumble<lb/>
formance last year, junior<lb/>
placekicker Jefi Heath is shining<lb/>
the Pirate- in "84.<lb/>
"Jeff's having a great year<lb/>
special teams coach John Patter-<lb/>
son -aid. "He's done a great job<lb/>
coming ofl such an aderse ear<lb/>
ast year) ? it ua simpl) a<lb/>
'sophomore jinx<lb/>
The Virginia Beach native has<lb/>
made 11 of 14 field goal attempts<lb/>
and is a perfect 20 20 in extra<lb/>
ni attempts. Heath has scored<lb/>
53 total points this year, putting<lb/>
him in third place among ECU's<lb/>
all-time scoring leaders. He needs<lb/>
just 22 points to move into se-<lb/>
cond place, while 40 points would<lb/>
make him tops in the Pirate<lb/>
history book.<lb/>
Heath had an outstanding<lb/>
freshman season for ECU. He set<lb/>
a school record tor most field<lb/>
g aN (16) in a single season. He<lb/>
broke the school's record for the<lb/>
longest field goal (58 yards),<lb/>
which is aKo the longest field<lb/>
goal by a North Carolina player.<lb/>
His 16 field goals in 23 attempts<lb/>
gave him a 69.6 percent accuracy<lb/>
rate. Also, he was perfect in extra<lb/>
points (27-27).<lb/>
Against Texas-Arlington, he<lb/>
set a school record with four field<lb/>
goals, while setting an NCAA<lb/>
record for average distance of the<lb/>
four kicks (49.5). Heath was the<lb/>
finest first year kicker in the<lb/>
history o ECU, and his exploits<lb/>
earned him second team all-south<lb/>
independent honors in 1982.<lb/>
Heath himself can't truly ex-<lb/>
plain his outstanding freshman<lb/>
year. "1 didn't really think that<lb/>
much about it he said. "I just<lb/>
went out there and did it<lb/>
Although leading the Pirates in<lb/>
scoring with 55 points in 1983,<lb/>
Heath didn't enjoy the success he<lb/>
had in his freshman year. He<lb/>
missed three extra point attempts<lb/>
and only connected on nine of his<lb/>
21 field goal tries. "1 didn't really<lb/>
work as hard as I should have<lb/>
Heath said. "I felt really bad for<lb/>
the team<lb/>
Heath really wanted to do well<lb/>
in his '84 campaign, so he did a<lb/>
lot of conditioning and lost 25<lb/>
pounds to ready himself. "It's a<lb/>
real key to his success Coach<lb/>
Patterson remarked. "He<lb/>
deserves a great deal of credit<lb/>
Heath's conditioning has<lb/>
helped his kicking game con-<lb/>
siderably. He also worked on his<lb/>
mechanical skills as well. "We<lb/>
went back to the basic fundamen-<lb/>
tals Coach Patterson said.<lb/>
"We practiced on drill steps and<lb/>
getting the ball up<lb/>
Though last year's perfor-<lb/>
mance was mediocre, Heath<lb/>
earned EC AC South first team<lb/>
honors and was a member of the<lb/>
greatest team in Pirate football<lb/>
history. "It was really fun to play<lb/>
LOU CLIMMONI ? ?CU MMto Laft<lb/>
Pirate kicking sensation Jeff Heath is rapidly closing in on Cariester<lb/>
 rum pier as ECU's all-time scoring leader.<lb/>
for a winning team (8-3 and na-<lb/>
tionally ranked) Heath com-<lb/>
mented.<lb/>
This year the Pirates are strug-<lb/>
gling with a 2-8 record and Heath<lb/>
says it gets tough for players to<lb/>
keep their motivation going dur-<lb/>
ing such a season. "It's<lb/>
frustrating for us when our work<lb/>
just dosen't pay off. I really feel<lb/>
bad for the coaches, but we've<lb/>
got one more game, and hopeful-<lb/>
ly we can finish with a win<lb/>
Although Heath has enjoyed<lb/>
considerable success while at<lb/>
ECU, he was also a star in high<lb/>
school. He lettered in soccer and<lb/>
football all three years at First<lb/>
Colon High School, while be-<lb/>
ing named all-beach, all-<lb/>
Tidewater and all-eastern<lb/>
regional. In his senior year, he<lb/>
was all-state and all-south<lb/>
honorable mention.<lb/>
Heath is an all-around athlete<lb/>
according to Coach Patterson.<lb/>
He's very coordinated and runs<lb/>
the forty in 4.65 seconds. "Jeff's<lb/>
a good athlete and a free spirited<lb/>
young man Patterson stated.<lb/>
"He's a very intense competitor<lb/>
who's always ready to play<lb/>
Jeff was not very highly<lb/>
recruited out of high school.<lb/>
However, he did receive letters<lb/>
from Richmond, UNC, N.C.<lb/>
State, Duke and Appalachain<lb/>
State. He said he chose ECU<lb/>
because of the enjoyable at-<lb/>
mosphere. Also, "the coaching<lb/>
staff was sincere and seemed to<lb/>
care about the players<lb/>
"I think the world of Coach<lb/>
Emory. Also, the players were<lb/>
great people and were easy to get<lb/>
along with<lb/>
Although this season still has<lb/>
one game remaining, Heath is<lb/>
looking forward to next year with<lb/>
great optimism. "I'm aware of<lb/>
the all-time scoring record, but I<lb/>
plan to go out and do my best<lb/>
Heath said. "We've seen the los-<lb/>
ing end of college football, but<lb/>
we're not losers here ? we're go-<lb/>
ing to go out and do our best<lb/>
"Jeff's a winner and he'll do<lb/>
whatever's necessary to help the<lb/>
team Patterson exclaimed.<lb/>
"He's done everything we've ask-<lb/>
ed and more (Heath also makes<lb/>
tackles on kick off returns)<lb/>
ECU fans can look for Jeff<lb/>
Heath in Pirate record books,<lb/>
because barring an injury, he'll<lb/>
become ECU's all-time leading<lb/>
scorer.<lb/>
ECU Awaits Southern Miss<lb/>
ByBOBUENNERELLI<lb/>
 I Sports laformalloa Director<lb/>
ECU Head Coach Ed Emory<lb/>
stressed the importance of this<lb/>
week's 11th and final game of the<lb/>
1984 season with the Golden<lb/>
Eagles of Southern Mississippi at<lb/>
his weekly press luncheon.<lb/>
"It is very important that we<lb/>
close this season on a positive<lb/>
note said Emory, whose team<lb/>
enters Saturday's 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
kickoff in ECU's Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium at 2-8. "It is important<lb/>
to the kids that we have<lb/>
something positive to build on<lb/>
for the 1985 season.<lb/>
"But that doesn't mean I am<lb/>
giving up on the older players<lb/>
Emory said. "They will all get the<lb/>
chance to go out one last time<lb/>
and make ECU a winner. The<lb/>
seniors have given a lot to this<lb/>
program, and I'm going to give<lb/>
them their chance to go out win-<lb/>
ners<lb/>
Southern Miss enters the game<lb/>
at 2-7 and has suffered a year<lb/>
very similar to ECU's. The<lb/>
Golden Eagles, always a power<lb/>
among Southern Independents,<lb/>
are experiencing their first losing<lb/>
season since 1976. The Pirates<lb/>
will be on the short side of the<lb/>
record for the first time since<lb/>
1981.<lb/>
"Southern Miss can play ? we<lb/>
know they can play, and we will<lb/>
be ready Emory said. "We've<lb/>
got problems, but hopefully we'll<lb/>
end this season 3-8. We had pro-<lb/>
blems last season when we were<lb/>
8-3, but the problems seem more<lb/>
evident when you're 2-8<lb/>
Emory did say he would start<lb/>
freshman Ron Jones at quarter-<lb/>
back instead of Darrell Speed,<lb/>
who has started the last seven<lb/>
games. Emory said the decision<lb/>
was based on Jones' play in last<lb/>
week's 42-24 loss to<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana, but also<lb/>
said that Speed would play a<lb/>
great deal. Both have alternated<lb/>
at quarterback the last four<lb/>
games.<lb/>
Emory also said sophomore<lb/>
defensive end Randy Watts was<lb/>
suspended for this week's game<lb/>
for missing a Tuesday morning<lb/>
meeting, while seniors Stefon<lb/>
Adams (free safety) and Damon<lb/>
Pope (tight end) have been<lb/>
suspended for disciplinary<lb/>
reasons.<lb/>
Emory also said senior<lb/>
flanker kick returner Henrv<lb/>
Williams would miss his last col-<lb/>
legiate game Saturday because of<lb/>
a separated shoulder and broken<lb/>
collarbone he suffered in last<lb/>
week's loss to Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siana.<lb/>
Inconsistency Plagues Eagles<lb/>
HATTIESBURG, Miss. (UPI) ?<lb/>
Southern Mississippi Coach Jim<lb/>
Carmody says the Golden Eagles<lb/>
have a lot in common with this<lb/>
week's opponent. East Carolina.<lb/>
"They are a team much like<lb/>
us Carmody told reporters at<lb/>
his weekly news conference.<lb/>
"They've gone from an 8-3<lb/>
record and a top 20 ranking a<lb/>
year ago, to 2-8 this year.<lb/>
"But also like us, they lost a lot<lb/>
of seniors off that team last<lb/>
year he added. "They've had<lb/>
some injury problems, but this<lb/>
also is their final game of the<lb/>
year, and we know they'll be<lb/>
ready to play<lb/>
The contest against the Pirates<lb/>
in Greenville, N.C, marks the<lb/>
last road game of 1984 for the<lb/>
Golden Eagles, 2-7. Carmody<lb/>
said injuries to key players con-<lb/>
tinue to affect his team heading<lb/>
into Saturday's game.<lb/>
USM starting quarterback<lb/>
Robert Ducksworth has missed<lb/>
the last two games with a deep<lb/>
thigh bruise, and he is listed as<lb/>
questionable for this week.<lb/>
Backup quarterback Timmy Byrd<lb/>
is out for the season after<lb/>
undergoing knee surgery last<lb/>
week, and starting defensive<lb/>
tackle Richard Byrd, nursing a<lb/>
knee injury suffered last week in<lb/>
practice, is listed as doubtful for<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
The injuries, combined with<lb/>
offensive inconsistency plaguing<lb/>
the Eagles much of the season,<lb/>
also figured last week, Carmody<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In their 22-0 homecoming loss<lb/>
to Northwestern Louisiana, USM<lb/>
mounted only 128 yards in total<lb/>
offense. "I thought the offensive<lb/>
situation would improve after a<lb/>
week's work with quarterbacks<lb/>
Tommy Compton and Andrew<lb/>
Anderson Carmody said.<lb/>
"But, we again didn't get the job<lb/>
done, and it's very disappointing<lb/>
tO Us<lb/>
Carmody also was disap-<lb/>
pointed in USM's defensive<lb/>
showing last week.<lb/>
"I thought we plaved a strong<lb/>
first quarter he said, "but after<lb/>
they scored that first touchdown.<lb/>
our efforts seemed to drop off<lb/>
for the remainder of the game<lb/>
Carmody said he and his staff<lb/>
selected tight end Robert Ray<lb/>
Stallings on offense; linebacker<lb/>
Greg Haeusler on defense; and<lb/>
noseguard Steve Hendncks on<lb/>
special teams as plavers of the<lb/>
week for Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
Manwaring A Proven Winner<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Surf Wrttrr<lb/>
Emily Manwaring, new Lady<lb/>
Pirate basketball coach, is a pro-<lb/>
ven winner in many sports at<lb/>
many levels of competition.<lb/>
Manwaring has coached teams<lb/>
in volleyball and softball as well<lb/>
as basketball, and led teams into<lb/>
national tournament competi-<lb/>
tion, while coaching eleven Ail-<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
She started her coaching career<lb/>
at Portland High in Michagan,<lb/>
where she was 45-7 with three<lb/>
league championships and a state<lb/>
semi-finalist team.<lb/>
After three seasons at Portland<lb/>
High, Manwaring took control of<lb/>
the Jackson Community College<lb/>
basketball team and led them to a<lb/>
55-9 record over three seasons for<lb/>
a .859 winning percentage.<lb/>
Manwaring's JCC teams won<lb/>
three conference titles and finish-<lb/>
ed second in the nation one of<lb/>
those years.<lb/>
She also coached the volleyball<lb/>
team to a 58-12 overall record,<lb/>
and led them to two sixth place<lb/>
finishes in the NJCAA tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
After coaching at JCC, Man-<lb/>
waring went to San Francisco<lb/>
State, a Division II school.<lb/>
In six years of coaching the<lb/>
Gators basketball team, she won<lb/>
four consecutive coach-of-the-<lb/>
year awards in the Northern<lb/>
California Athletic Conference,<lb/>
while receiving five consecutive<lb/>
post-season berths and three<lb/>
consecutive conference titles.<lb/>
Manwaring, who has a B.S.<lb/>
degree in physical education and<lb/>
a Master's in sports education<lb/>
from Michagan State, has coach-<lb/>
ed basketball for twelve years,<lb/>
winning ten conference cham-<lb/>
pionships.<lb/>
During that span, Manwaring<lb/>
has a 197-72 record. Her record<lb/>
just in the collegiate ranks is a<lb/>
sparkling 152-65, with six con-<lb/>
ference championships and six<lb/>
nationally ranked teams in only<lb/>
eight years.<lb/>
Manwaring, who was suc-<lb/>
cessful at the Division II level, is<lb/>
not worried about making the<lb/>
move up to the Division I level.<lb/>
"Basketball is basketball at any<lb/>
level. The biggest difference is the<lb/>
ability of the players Manwar-<lb/>
ing said. "My style and<lb/>
philosophy will remain the<lb/>
same<lb/>
Manwaring, who has had<lb/>
coaching success in many sports,<lb/>
also enjoys participating in them.<lb/>
"I've always liked all sports ?<lb/>
bowling, golf, field hockey,<lb/>
lacrosse and billiards<lb/>
"I've always played sports just<lb/>
as something to do. Once I was a<lb/>
lifeguard and didn't even know<lb/>
how to swim, so I know I can<lb/>
handle anything<lb/>
Manwaring moved all the way<lb/>
across the country to take the<lb/>
ECU coaching position. "There<lb/>
is no comparison geographically<lb/>
between Greenville and San Fran-<lb/>
cisco, but that doesn't mean I<lb/>
don't like it here Manwaring<lb/>
said.<lb/>
"I'm in a great situation here,<lb/>
and it was a great opportunity for<lb/>
me to move up the coaching lad-<lb/>
der Manwaring said. "The<lb/>
thing that really makes the pro-<lb/>
gram here is the fan support<lb/>
Manwaring brought assistant<lb/>
coach Joanne Bly with her from<lb/>
San Francisco State, while retain-<lb/>
ing Laurie Sikes as one of Cathy<lb/>
Andruzzi's assistants.<lb/>
Bly, in addition to on the floor<lb/>
coaching, also handles the<lb/>
scheduling of opponents, trying<lb/>
to build a Division I schedule.<lb/>
She played Division I basketball<lb/>
at Ohio State and Long Beach<lb/>
State. When Bly was at OSU, the<lb/>
Buckeyeres were two-time Big<lb/>
Ten champions and ranked 15th<lb/>
in the nation.<lb/>
While at Long Beach State, Bly<lb/>
played with Olympians Cindy<lb/>
Nobles and Latanya Pollard in<lb/>
route to a Western Collegiate<lb/>
championship and a fifth place<lb/>
national finish.<lb/>
Bly, who is 25 years old, and a<lb/>
native of Woosier, Ohio, who<lb/>
owns a B.S. degree in Physical<lb/>
Education and a Masters in<lb/>
Sports Psychology from the<lb/>
University of California.<lb/>
Berkley.<lb/>
Laurie Sikes, Manwaring's<lb/>
other assistant, played basketball<lb/>
at ECU for two years, transferr-<lb/>
ing to ECU from Peace College.<lb/>
Sikes, 25, spent a year on<lb/>
Cathy Andruzzi's staff after<lb/>
graduating from ECU. Sikes will<lb/>
serve as an on-the-floor coach,<lb/>
while also coordinating team<lb/>
travel.<lb/>
"She has really been a big<lb/>
help Manwaring said of Sikes.<lb/>
"She was here before and really<lb/>
knows a Division I system in<lb/>
terms of organization.<lb/>
"Not only does my staff have a<lb/>
thorough knowledge of the game<lb/>
of basketball Manwaring con-<lb/>
tinued, "they also have the ex-<lb/>
perience of playing at the Divi-<lb/>
sion I level<lb/>
"My playing experience in<lb/>
three different collegiate sports,<lb/>
and the fact that I had a military<lb/>
style coach at Ohio State for two<lb/>
years, helps me understand what<lb/>
the players were going through<lb/>
when we got here Bly said.<lb/>
"I love the support we have<lb/>
been getting from the athletic ad-<lb/>
See MANWARING, Page 10<lb/>
Christopher Newport<lb/>
Dumps Booters, 3-2<lb/>
By SCOTT POWERS<lb/>
The ECU soccer team played<lb/>
their fourth match in three days<lb/>
yesterday and fell to Christopher<lb/>
Newport in overtime by the score<lb/>
of 3-2 in the final game of the<lb/>
1984 season.<lb/>
The match was also the third<lb/>
overtime match of the four, and<lb/>
the fatigue began to show about<lb/>
midway through the second half<lb/>
as Christpher Newport, outman-<lb/>
ned and outplayed throughout<lb/>
most of the day, began to find<lb/>
cracks in the ECU defense.<lb/>
It was another very physical<lb/>
match for the booters, and as the<lb/>
game went on, the wear and tear<lb/>
began to show as the team was<lb/>
not able to mount many strong<lb/>
offensives.<lb/>
The match was tied 1-1 at the<lb/>
half, with ECU controlling the<lb/>
tempo of the game throughout<lb/>
the period.<lb/>
ECU broke out on top about<lb/>
midway through the second half<lb/>
when Brian Colgan, taking a pass<lb/>
from Mark Hardy, scored for the<lb/>
Pirates, making the score 2-1.<lb/>
It looked as if the game would<lb/>
end that way until Christopher<lb/>
Newport was awarded a penaltv<lb/>
try with less than a minute left<lb/>
and converted after Pirate goalie<lb/>
Jesse Daugherty had made and<lb/>
excellent save but lost control for<lb/>
an easy CN tap-in.<lb/>
The teams played to a standoff<lb/>
in the first overtime period as<lb/>
neither team could capitalize on<lb/>
the opportunities that arose.<lb/>
It looked as if the game would<lb/>
end up in a tie until with just<lb/>
under five minutes left in the se-<lb/>
cond overtime a Christopher<lb/>
Newport score gave them a 3-2<lb/>
lead. CN then held off a late<lb/>
ECU charge to seal the victory.<lb/>
The loss dropped the Pirates to<lb/>
3-16-2 as they end their season.<lb/>
?<lb/>
I<lb/>
j<lb/>
i " n<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 8, 1984<lb/>
Pirates Impressive A t Home<lb/>
The Long And Winding Road:<lb/>
With last week's 42-24 loss to<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana in<lb/>
Lafayette, La the East Carolina<lb/>
football team finished the 1984<lb/>
season with an 0-7 record on the<lb/>
road, the first time the Pirates<lb/>
have been winless on the road<lb/>
since the 1948 season (when ECL<lb/>
posted an overall record of 0-9).<lb/>
This season was the third that<lb/>
head coach Ed Emory had to play<lb/>
seven games away from Green-<lb/>
ville, N.C and this ranks as his<lb/>
worst effort on the road as a head<lb/>
coach in five seasons. Emory's<lb/>
four previous road records were<lb/>
2-4, 2-4, 3-4 and 4-3, with the<lb/>
1983 season seeing the Pirates<lb/>
beating Missouri, Southern Miss<lb/>
and North Carolina State on the<lb/>
road. The losses came against<lb/>
Florida State (47-46), Florida<lb/>
(24-17) and 1983 national cham-<lb/>
pion Miami-Florida (12-7).<lb/>
ECU'S worst road mark in re-<lb/>
cent years before this season was<lb/>
the 2-5 record the Pirates posted<lb/>
in 1970 under Mike McGee (ECU<lb/>
finished that season with an<lb/>
overall mark of 3-8).<lb/>
Home Sweet Home: East<lb/>
Carolina will be trying for its<lb/>
fourth straight winning season in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium Saturday when<lb/>
the Pirates host the Golden<lb/>
Eagles of Southern Mississippi.<lb/>
ECU is an impressive 10-1 over<lb/>
the last three seasons in the<lb/>
friendly confines of Ficklen<lb/>
Stadium, including back-to-back<lb/>
4-0 campaigns under Emory in<lb/>
1982 and 1983. This season the<lb/>
Pirates are 2-1, losing to Temple<lb/>
17-0 on Sept. 1, beating Georgia<lb/>
Southern 34-27 on Sept. 22 and<lb/>
East Tennessee State 24-6 on Oct.<lb/>
20. In fact, the loss to Temple<lb/>
snapped an eight-game home<lb/>
winning streak for the Pirates<lb/>
that dated back to the 1982<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Pirates are an impressive<lb/>
15-6 (.714) in Ficklen Stadium<lb/>
since 1980, Emory's first season<lb/>
as head coach. The Pirates have<lb/>
not suffered through a losing<lb/>
season in Ficklen since 1980 (2-3),<lb/>
with that season being their only<lb/>
losing one at home in 14 years.<lb/>
Before 1980 you have to go back<lb/>
Manwaring<lb/>
Continued From Page 9<lb/>
ministration and the<lb/>
community Bly added. "I ap-<lb/>
preciate the team's hard-working<lb/>
character ? it makes it a joy to<lb/>
come to work<lb/>
Sikes said she enjoys coaching<lb/>
more than she did playing, and<lb/>
that it was time for a coaching<lb/>
change. "Change is good for<lb/>
anybody Sikes said. "At first<lb/>
the players had a hard time ad-<lb/>
justing to Coach Manwaring<lb/>
since her coaching philosophy is<lb/>
so much different than that of<lb/>
Andruzzi's, but now they've ad-<lb/>
justed<lb/>
If Coach Manwaring's past<lb/>
record is any indication, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates are going to win many<lb/>
games in the future, and thanks<lb/>
to her coaching philosophy, they<lb/>
should be a team to watch during<lb/>
the upcoming season.<lb/>
to 1970, under Mike McGee, to<lb/>
find the Pirates' last losing<lb/>
season in Ficklen (1-3).<lb/>
Nichols Hot: Senior flanker<lb/>
Ricky Nichols has found himself<lb/>
a popular target for quarterbacks<lb/>
the last three weeks.<lb/>
The 5-10, 170-pound<lb/>
Chesapeake, VA, native has now<lb/>
caught 24 passes for 464 yards<lb/>
and four touchdowns in 1984, his<lb/>
best season by far as a Pirate.<lb/>
Prior to 1984, Nichols' most pro-<lb/>
ductive year was as a sophomore<lb/>
when he grabbed 13 passes for<lb/>
265 yards and two touchdowns.<lb/>
Nichols' 464 yards puts him in<lb/>
the No. 9 spot on ECU's season<lb/>
reception yardage list while his<lb/>
three catches for 69 yards against<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana last<lb/>
week moved him into the No. 3<lb/>
spot on the school's all-time yar-<lb/>
dage list. He now has 1,157<lb/>
career yards, leaving him just 36<lb/>
yards shy of the No. 2 spot (Tim<lb/>
Dameron, 1,193 yards) with one<lb/>
game to play.<lb/>
Nichols also hooked up with<lb/>
quarterback Ron Jones for a<lb/>
53-yard pass play at USL, mark-<lb/>
ing the third time this season<lb/>
Nichols has been involved with a<lb/>
pass play of 50 yards or more.<lb/>
Prior to LSL, his two other grabs<lb/>
of 50 or more went for<lb/>
touchdowns (64 against South<lb/>
Carolina and 59 against Georgia<lb/>
Southern).<lb/>
Nichols also has 61 career<lb/>
receptions, putting him fourth on<lb/>
that all-time list. Nichols trails<lb/>
Dick Corrada (79), Dave<lb/>
Bumgarner (74) and Terry<lb/>
Gallaher (72) with one game to<lb/>
play. Nichols also needs just five<lb/>
catches for the best season by an<lb/>
ECU receiver since 1982.<lb/>
Heath And The Record Book:<lb/>
Jeff Heath's six points in last<lb/>
week's game with Southwestern<lb/>
Louisiana pushed the junior from<lb/>
Virginia Beach, VA, closer to the<lb/>
No. 2 spot on ECU's career scor-<lb/>
ing list.<lb/>
Heath, with 53 points this<lb/>
season, has 183 points tor his<lb/>
three-year career with the Pirates.<lb/>
He needs only 22 points to pass<lb/>
Dave Alexander (204 points) lor<lb/>
the No. 2 spot and 40 points to<lb/>
become the school's all-time scor-<lb/>
ing leader. Heath should easily<lb/>
surpass ECU's all-time leading<lb/>
scorer, Carlester Grumpier (222<lb/>
points) before finishing his<lb/>
eligibility following the 1985<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Heath also owns the school's<lb/>
career field goal mark as he now<lb/>
has 36 in his three seasons.<lb/>
Baker (racks Top 10: Junior<lb/>
tailback Tony Baker, with 452<lb/>
yards rushing this season, has<lb/>
broken into ECU's career top 10<lb/>
rushers.<lb/>
The High Point, NC, native<lb/>
now has 1,812 yards in three<lb/>
years with the Pirates, putting<lb/>
him in the No. 9 spot behind 1983<lb/>
graduate Earnest Byner (2,049<lb/>
yards).<lb/>
Common Opponents: The<lb/>
Pirates and Golden Eagles of<lb/>
Southern Mississippi (2-7) share<lb/>
only one common opponent dur-<lb/>
ing the 1984 season. Both have<lb/>
played the Ragin' Cajuns of<lb/>
Southwestern I ouisiana with the<lb/>
same result ? a loss. ECU drop-<lb/>
ped a 42-24 decision to USL last<lb/>
week in Lafayette, LA, while<lb/>
Southern Miss was on the short<lb/>
side oi a 13-7 score two weeks<lb/>
ago (Oct. 27), also in Lafayette,<lb/>
LA,<lb/>
Eagles Limping: Both ECU and<lb/>
Southern Miss are experiencing<lb/>
the same problems in 1984 as<lb/>
both are in the midst o' disap-<lb/>
pointing seasons.<lb/>
The Golden Eagles, always a<lb/>
power among Southern In-<lb/>
dependents, are suffering<lb/>
through their first losing season<lb/>
since 1976 when they posted a 3-8<lb/>
mark. That season saw the<lb/>
Golden Eagles 1-8 after nine<lb/>
games before winning their last<lb/>
two.<lb/>
Never in the school's history<lb/>
has USM won only two games in<lb/>
a season. Since 1937 the Golden<lb/>
Eagles' worst record would be<lb/>
that 3-8 campaign of 1976. In<lb/>
fact, the Eagles have experienced<lb/>
only five losing seasons in 47<lb/>
years of football, counting the<lb/>
1984 season.<lb/>
Since that 3-8 season of 1976,<lb/>
Southern Miss is an impressive<lb/>
56-41-2.<lb/>
Speed Moving Up: Since getting<lb/>
his first start back on Sept. 22,<lb/>
sophomore quarterback Darrell<lb/>
Speed has steadily moved up the<lb/>
statistical ladder.<lb/>
Speed, who has passed for 782<lb/>
yards this season, needs just 210<lb/>
yards against Southern Miss this<lb/>
week to move into 10th place on<lb/>
ECU's career yardage list. He<lb/>
needs only 24 yards passing to<lb/>
move into 10th place on ECU's<lb/>
season passing list, 67 to move in-<lb/>
to No. 9, 160 to move into No. 8,<lb/>
163 to move into No. 7 and 223 to<lb/>
move into No. 6.<lb/>
On the completion lists, Speed<lb/>
is already No. 10 on the season<lb/>
list and needs just three to move<lb/>
into No. 9, four to move into No.<lb/>
8, six to move into No. 7. 12 to<lb/>
move into No. 6 and 13 to move<lb/>
into No. 5. He is No. 9 on the<lb/>
career completion list with his 60<lb/>
and needs just 16 to become No.<lb/>
8.<lb/>
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M-W-F7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
M-F12Noon-l:30p.m.<lb/>
M-F3:30-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat.1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
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M-Th 10 a.m12 noon<lb/>
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Friday 3 p.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
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EQUIPMENT CHECK-OUT<lb/>
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M-Th 9 a.m9 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
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OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
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SOUTHERN Mis ? M l<lb/>
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VANDY at KENTI K<lb/>
ARMY at BOSTON COLL<lb/>
VA. TECH atI EMSON<lb/>
WAKE FOREST at 1)1 KK<lb/>
GEORGIA at FLORIDA<lb/>
FLA ST at SOUTH R<lb/>
GA. TECH at I NC<lb/>
HOUSTON at EEXAS<lb/>
MICH ST at IOSN <lb/>
MARYLAND at MIAMI<lb/>
MISSOURI at OKI si<lb/>
N.C. STATE at I A<lb/>
PlRDl E at Ws ONSIN<lb/>
WASHINGTON at I s(<lb/>
TENNESSEE at MEMPHIS<lb/>
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Amidst the<lb/>
highlight- oi ntra<lb/>
tivities, one fa<lb/>
and the indi<lb/>
often get i<lb/>
That progra<lb/>
man sports d il<lb/>
although a nc;<lb/>
the intramural dep<lb/>
clubs continue I - if<lb/>
campaign-<lb/>
Man student<lb/>
in sports clubs are nevei<lb/>
ed for the<lb/>
achievementv T:<lb/>
members of the ECU F -<lb/>
were chosen to pan<lb/>
1984-85 North Carol<lb/>
age 2?) -eie<lb/>
Blankenship. Ralph Cam:<lb/>
and BUI Zimmerman<lb/>
the team comprise<lb/>
players within the N -<lb/>
Rugby Football<lb/>
men, along v.<lb/>
nine universities, <lb/>
several matche- i<lb/>
coast. CongratuL<lb/>
three sport club par .<lb/>
bringing recognition<lb/>
ECLrand the IRS.<lb/>
The ECU Women's I<lb/>
Handball club travels to I<lb/>
Meade. Md . No . P-18 Tt<lb/>
attending the tournament in<lb/>
)Ve?t. Eaint.? Jje Ctf uei<lb/>
Washington Handball (<lb/>
Ohio State. Gardt<lb/>
eW<lb/>
HO<lb/>
FOR THE BES<lb/>
TOWN COME<lb/>
HOUSE!<lb/>
14th Street Location<lb/>
SHONEYS FIS1<lb/>
?<lb/>
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3 Favorite Stoney<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057679_0011"/><lb/>
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rUfcfcASI C AROl INIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 8, 1984<lb/>
11<lb/>
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p.m9 p.m.<lb/>
a.m4:00pm<lb/>
h Hit Cards<lb/>
eet<lb/>
The Experts Pick The Winners<lb/>
SOUTHERN MISS at ECU<lb/>
I SI at ALABAMA<lb/>
VANDY at KENTUCKY<lb/>
ARMY at BOSTON COLL<lb/>
VA. TECH at CLEMSON<lb/>
WAKE FOREST at DUKE<lb/>
GEORGIA at FLORIDA<lb/>
FLA ST at SOUTH CAR.<lb/>
GA. TECH at UNC<lb/>
HOUSTON at TEXAS<lb/>
MICH ST at IOWA<lb/>
MARYLAND at MIAMI<lb/>
MISSOURI at OKLA ST<lb/>
VC. STATE at I A<lb/>
PURDUE at WISCONSIN<lb/>
WASHINGTON at USC<lb/>
TENNESSEE at MEMPHIS ST<lb/>
TCI at TEXAS TECH<lb/>
POWERS<lb/>
So. Miss<lb/>
LSI!<lb/>
UK<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
IV A<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
UT<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
Sport Clubs Active<lb/>
B JEANETTE ROTH<lb/>
Staff Whirr<lb/>
?midst the scores and<lb/>
highlights o intramural ac-<lb/>
tivities, one facet of the program,<lb/>
and the individuals involved,<lb/>
often get lost in the shuttle.<lb/>
That program includes the<lb/>
main sports clubs at ECU, and<lb/>
although a separate member o<lb/>
the intramural department, these<lb/>
clubs continue to wage successful<lb/>
campaigns.<lb/>
Main students who participate<lb/>
in sports clubs are never recogniz-<lb/>
ed for their outstanding<lb/>
achievements. This season, three<lb/>
members of the ECU Rugby Club<lb/>
were chosen to participate on the<lb/>
1984-85 North Carolina (under<lb/>
age 2?) select side team. Alan<lb/>
Blankenship, Ralph Campano<lb/>
and Bill Zimmerman will play on<lb/>
the team comprised of the best<lb/>
players within the North Carolina<lb/>
Riikibv Football Union. These<lb/>
men, along with students from<lb/>
nine universities, will travel to<lb/>
several matches along the east<lb/>
coast. Congratulations to these<lb/>
three sport club participants for.<lb/>
bringing recognition to both<lb/>
ECU and the IRS.<lb/>
The ECU Women's Team<lb/>
Handball club travels to Fort<lb/>
Meade, Md Nov. 17-18. Teams<lb/>
attending the tournament include<lb/>
iV?t? fcoini tiie Gceaiei<lb/>
Washington Handball Club.<lb/>
Ohio State. Garden Citv and the<lb/>
Swim and Sport Club. If you<lb/>
want to witness a fast and ex-<lb/>
citing sport, come by Memorial<lb/>
Gym and watch the women play<lb/>
every Monday from 9-11 p.m.<lb/>
intramural activities continue<lb/>
with semi-finals in racquetball<lb/>
singles. In the open division, four<lb/>
participants remain and will bat-<lb/>
tle it out for the championship.<lb/>
Al Smith will slam against Chris<lb/>
Houk, while Raymond Song<lb/>
takes on Barry Scott for a chance<lb/>
at the finals. Intermediate divi-<lb/>
sion semi-finalists include Tom<lb/>
Stapelton, David Patten and<lb/>
Dean Wool ford.<lb/>
Although most IRS bowling<lb/>
teams have only rolled two to<lb/>
three games, several teams have<lb/>
unblemished records. In the<lb/>
women's divisions, residence hall<lb/>
Wild Ones and sorority Alpha<lb/>
Phi boast 2-0 records. Tootsie<lb/>
Bowlers, in the women's<lb/>
residence hall league, hold a 3-0<lb/>
lead over opponents.<lb/>
The men will try to beat the<lb/>
records of College Hill Crew and<lb/>
Aycock Pinbusters, framing the<lb/>
others with 2-0 records.<lb/>
Co-rec (lag football playoffs<lb/>
continue as the Love Brokers, Sig<lb/>
Ep &amp; Friends, Hillbillies and<lb/>
Chaos, won big beating op-<lb/>
ponents by a total of 150 to 39<lb/>
points. Third Regiment, favored<lb/>
to take the championship, has<lb/>
not yet played. The finals are<lb/>
tonight at 7 p.m.<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/>
5H0NEYS FISHERMAN'S<lb/>
BUFFET<lb/>
<lb/>
?-<lb/>
11 '<lb/>
fe<lb/>
ALL-YOU-CAN-EAT!<lb/>
Help Yourself To<lb/>
? FISH FILLETS Breaded n Seasoned From<lb/>
3 Favorite Shoney s Recipea<lb/>
? Baked FISH FILLETS<lb/>
? Hot Vegetables, including Fried Okra<lb/>
? Seafood Chowder<lb/>
it French Fries Qny<lb/>
? Hushpuppies ?y- qq<lb/>
EVERY FRIDAY <lb/>
C DM QPU 5?hSeladaFruBar<lb/>
SHONEYS<lb/>
MC 27834<lb/>
7M-21M<lb/>
SAD SAM<lb/>
So. Miss<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
UK<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
FSU<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Houston<lb/>
Mich. St.<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
UT<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
MAROSCHAK<lb/>
So. Miss<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Vandy<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
South Car.<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
UVA<lb/>
Wisconsin<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
UT<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
MEWSHIDEOUT<lb/>
So. MissSo. Miss.<lb/>
LSULSU<lb/>
UKVandv<lb/>
BCBC<lb/>
ClemsonVa. Tech<lb/>
WakeDuke<lb/>
FloridaFlorida<lb/>
South Car.South Car.<lb/>
Ga. TechGa. Tech<lb/>
TexasTexas<lb/>
IowaMich. St.<lb/>
MiamiMiami<lb/>
Okla. St.Okla. St.<lb/>
UVAUVA<lb/>
WisconsinWisconsin<lb/>
WashingtonUSC<lb/>
UTUT<lb/>
TCUTexas Tech<lb/>
JENDRAS1AK<lb/>
So. Miss<lb/>
LSU<lb/>
Vandy<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Clemson<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
South Car.<lb/>
Ga. Tech<lb/>
Texas<lb/>
Iowa<lb/>
Miami<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
UVA<lb/>
Purdue<lb/>
Washington<lb/>
UT<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
Scott Powers<lb/>
Sad Sam<lb/>
Tina Maroschak<lb/>
Randy Mews<lb/>
Greg Rideout<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak<lb/>
Last<lb/>
Week<lb/>
14-4<lb/>
13-5<lb/>
15-3<lb/>
13-5<lb/>
11-7<lb/>
11-7<lb/>
Nears 100<lb/>
Games<lb/>
OverallPet.Behind<lb/>
99-42.702<lb/>
94-47.6675<lb/>
93-48.6606<lb/>
91-50.6458<lb/>
85-56.60314<lb/>
84-57.59615<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
1<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
S190 bortion from 13 to 18 weeks at addi-<lb/>
tional cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 832-0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number t-800-532-5384) between 9AM and<lb/>
5P.M. weekdays<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 W?t Morgan St.<lb/>
RoUigh, NC<lb/>
Thurs. Nov. 8th<lb/>
MB I ?,?.  Niaht<lb/>
SKIP<lb/>
CASTRO<lb/>
 11<lb/>
: 1 I au<lb/>
4 JO til<lb/>
SPLIT<lb/>
DECISION<lb/>
SAT. NOV. 10th<lb/>
copyright 198a<lb/>
Kroger sav on<lb/>
Ouantity Rignts Reserves<lb/>
None Sold To Dealers<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
ADVERTISED ITEM POllC<lb/>
Earn of these advertised 'terns is re<lb/>
Quired to de readiiv a.aracie tor sale in<lb/>
each Kroger Sav on e?rept as specimen<lb/>
iy noted in this ad if we do run out of<lb/>
an item we win offer you your choice<lb/>
of a comparable item when avaiiaoie<lb/>
reflecting tne same savings or a rain<lb/>
check which win entitle you to pur<lb/>
chase tne advertised item at the adver<lb/>
tised price within 50 days Only one ven<lb/>
dor coupon win oe accepted per ite.n<lb/>
items na Prices<lb/>
Effective Ttiru Sat<lb/>
NOV 10 1C?84<lb/>
CALIFORNIA CELLARS<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT CHABLIS<lb/>
RHINE OR ROSE<lb/>
Taylor<lb/>
wines<lb/>
3 Ltr.<lb/>
Btl.<lb/>
LIQUID<lb/>
Clorox<lb/>
Bleach<lb/>
64 Oz.<lb/>
Jug<lb/>
LIMIT 2 PLEASE<lb/>
r<lb/>
CORNED BEEF, PASTRAMI,<lb/>
ROAST BEEF OR ITALIAN<lb/>
BEEF LEAN N TENDER<lb/>
Gourmet Shaved<lb/>
Deli Meats<lb/>
HCLLY FARMS CUT UP MIXED<lb/>
FRYER PARTS OR GRADE A<lb/>
whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
V<lb/>
LIMIT 3 PKGS PLEASE<lb/>
?<lb/>
SAUSAGE &amp; MUSHROOM<lb/>
PEPPERONI &amp; MUSHROOM,<lb/>
OR SAUSAGE &amp; PEPPERONI<lb/>
Thick Crust<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
J<lb/>
t;rrl<lb/>
VV.&amp;?<lb/>
GOLDEN<lb/>
Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
WASHINGTON STATE<lb/>
GOLDEN OR<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
I $128<lb/>
lag I<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
??!? ? ?g?a?X<lb/>
i<lb/>
v<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0012"/><lb/>
t<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBERS, 1984<lb/>
Show us your student LD. Card<lb/>
For an Extra 10 Discount<lb/>
GREENVILLE<lb/>
South Park Shopping Center<lb/>
115 E. Red Banks Rd.<lb/>
?(ONLY ECU STUDENT IDS<lb/>
QUALIFY FOR 10 DISCOUNT)<lb/>
756-9502<lb/>
UJfituuni latwor fttvwuo m<lb/>
DISCOUNT DOES NOT APPLY TO<lb/>
ALCOHOL, TOBACCO PRODUCTS FILM<lb/>
PRODUCTS, MAGAZINES OR SOFT DRINKS<lb/>
Items available while quantities last<lb/>
ggevco<lb/>
DISCOUNT DRUG<lb/>
Revco reserves the right to limit quantities<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
<lb/>
1<lb/>
f ! '<lb/>
<pb facs="00057679_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>