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<pb facs="00057680_0001"/>
(Ulit ?aat (Earnltttian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.23<lb/>
Tuesday November 13, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,(MM)<lb/>
Where The Action Isn't<lb/>
JON jobdan - ecu Photo L?t<lb/>
Guess what, folks? Its Monday night in downtown Greenville and that even manv of the beer-drinking diehards stav in to stud lust wail<lb/>
doesn i mean a whole lot of action. As finals draw inevitably nearer, until Friday.<lb/>
'85 Rebel Announces Contest Winners<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
vOl?m Nfw Editor<lb/>
The winners of the 1985 Rebel<lb/>
Literary Art annual contest<lb/>
were announcfd Fritay af a<lb/>
reception held at the Art and<lb/>
Camera Galler.<lb/>
In the -rose competition,<lb/>
Horace Mc( ormick Jr. won first<lb/>
place for his short story, H inters<lb/>
on the Reservoir. Gary Bryant<lb/>
won second place for his work,<lb/>
Tremors.<lb/>
"The judges had a hard time<lb/>
 ng the winners said Ellen<lb/>
re, Rebel editor, "but 1 feel<lb/>
judges made the right<lb/>
.oices Chrystal Fray's The<lb/>
Mother's On The Bus Go Hush<lb/>
Hush won third place.<lb/>
Poetry winners for 1985 in-<lb/>
clude: First place, Peppermint<lb/>
Rust, Laurilyn McDonald; se-<lb/>
cond place, Fireflies, Deanya<lb/>
Lattimore-Cobb; third place. The<lb/>
Conception Company, J.T.<lb/>
Pietrzak.<lb/>
"The money for the art and<lb/>
writing contests will be provided<lb/>
by the Attic and Budweiser dur-<lb/>
ing a January fundraiser. We're<lb/>
expecting to raise approximately<lb/>
$775 to reimburse the Rebel ac-<lb/>
counts Moore said.<lb/>
George McKim received the<lb/>
Best in Show art award for his<lb/>
abstract painting, Tone Poem for<lb/>
Arnold Palmer.<lb/>
In other art competition,<lb/>
Moore said over 157 entries were<lb/>
received from 82 people. The<lb/>
winners include: Drawing,<lb/>
William Leidenthal, Geologic<lb/>
Time dumber 26, Mixed Media.<lb/>
Kara,Hammond, For Barb; Pain-<lb/>
ting, William Leidenthal. Sum-<lb/>
mer Rain At Twilight, Design,<lb/>
Phillip Dismuke, Seek Piece,<lb/>
Photography, Joe Champagne,<lb/>
un titled.<lb/>
Ceramics, V. Jane Tucker, Tea<lb/>
Pot Crazy, Sculpture, Carolyn<lb/>
Capps.JMjri oj Bird 1,11, Print-<lb/>
making, Joe Champagne, untitl-<lb/>
ed and Illustration, Todd<lb/>
Coats Imagination.<lb/>
Judges for the Prose and<lb/>
Poetry contests, Moore said,<lb/>
were Jean Morgan and Judith<lb/>
Suther, both faculty members<lb/>
from UNC?Charlotte. The art<lb/>
judges were Randy Osman.<lb/>
curator for Gray Gallery,<lb/>
Margaret Georgiann, visiting art<lb/>
instructor, Joan Moment,<lb/>
visiting artist and Chuck<lb/>
Chamberlain, chairman of design<lb/>
department in the School of Fine<lb/>
Arts.<lb/>
"Winners in all contests will<lb/>
have their work published in the<lb/>
1985 Rebels Moore said. "Also,<lb/>
finalists who did not win the con-<lb/>
tests win be published. We <lb/>
still accepting literature through<lb/>
the end of November<lb/>
The art work is on view for the<lb/>
general public through Friday,<lb/>
Nov. 16 at the Art and Camnera<lb/>
Gallery located on Cotanche<lb/>
street. Moore said, "1 encourage<lb/>
everyone to stop by and look at<lb/>
the work submitted by the<lb/>
students<lb/>
The Rebel will be ready next<lb/>
semester after spring break. "We<lb/>
will have 4,500 copies of the<lb/>
Rebel, which is a little more than<lb/>
we have had in the past. We plan<lb/>
to keep the same format <lb/>
Moore said.<lb/>
SGA Opens Coffers, Approves Printer<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOl T<lb/>
Managing hdtlor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature ap-<lb/>
propriated the bucks Monday<lb/>
night to buy students a printer<lb/>
will cough out letter-quality<lb/>
resumes. The printer will be at-<lb/>
tached to a computer in the<lb/>
;ness lab in Rawl Building,<lb/>
ss from the Student Supply<lb/>
Store.<lb/>
By consent, the Legislature<lb/>
gave the Graduate Business<lb/>
Association $1,920.28 to buy the<lb/>
printer for the school. The group<lb/>
plans on having a sign-up sheet<lb/>
where all students can indicate an<lb/>
hour in which they wish to use the<lb/>
computer. The printer can also be<lb/>
used for cover letters but not<lb/>
term papers.<lb/>
Students, the group argued,<lb/>
spend more than $7,000 each year<lb/>
at a local copying agency for<lb/>
resumes. The school and the<lb/>
GBA will maintain the equipment<lb/>
and help students use the com-<lb/>
puter.<lb/>
The Legislature also gave the<lb/>
International Language<lb/>
Organization $240 to help pay the<lb/>
bills tallied up during its annual<lb/>
Oktoberfest. The money will be<lb/>
used to pay part of a $418 Ser-<lb/>
vomation charge for catering the<lb/>
affair.<lb/>
Bachelor's Degree<lb/>
Waits For Approval<lb/>
The bill came out of the Ap-<lb/>
propriations Committee without<lb/>
a recommendation to the<lb/>
legislators because of a rule ad-<lb/>
vising the Legislature not to give<lb/>
money for food purchases. An<lb/>
amendment to the bill cut the<lb/>
$4'8 to $240, which would have<lb/>
covered band and hall rental<lb/>
costs had the ILO come to the<lb/>
Legislature before the<lb/>
Oktoberfest.<lb/>
TOMkV;<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
iat(aal Newt Editor<lb/>
A recommendation to establish<lb/>
a new baccalaureate degree at<lb/>
ECU was submitted by the<lb/>
Education Planning and Policy<lb/>
Committee of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors at their meeting last Thurs-<lb/>
day. The issue is on the Board of<lb/>
Governors' agenda for their<lb/>
January meeting.<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, vice chancellor<lb/>
for Academic Affairs said,<lb/>
"ECU officials are very op-<lb/>
timistic that the program will be<lb/>
forthcoming soon Student in-<lb/>
terest in careers in the field of<lb/>
communication at ECU has been<lb/>
very high, Volpe said. "In a re-<lb/>
cent student survey at ECU, 80<lb/>
percent of 186 students showed<lb/>
an interest in a communications<lb/>
major, especially elec-<lb/>
tronicbroadcasting<lb/>
journalism he said.<lb/>
"The recommendation submit-<lb/>
ted by the Planning Committee<lb/>
will not receive final approval un-<lb/>
til January, when the Board of<lb/>
Governors meets Volpe said.<lb/>
"This has been in the workings<lb/>
for several years (at ECU) and I<lb/>
feel once it has been approved,<lb/>
the program will be implemented<lb/>
in the Fall of 1985<lb/>
Resources from the Depart-<lb/>
ments of English and Theatre<lb/>
Arts will be combined, making it<lb/>
possible for ECU to offer a<lb/>
Bachelor of Science in Com-<lb/>
munications, Volpe said. "Right<lb/>
now, all ECU has to offer in the<lb/>
field of journalism is a Bachelor<lb/>
of Arts minor he said. "If this<lb/>
program is implemented, we will<lb/>
be able to offer a major in the<lb/>
print and broadcast media<lb/>
Currently, similiar programs<lb/>
are offered at Appalachian State<lb/>
University, UNC?Chapel Hill,<lb/>
UNC?Asheville and<lb/>
Winston?Salem State Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
The Pirate Blues<lb/>
f JOKOAM -<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Brains Top Brawn<lb/>
In Mating Game<lb/>
By MIKE HAMER<lb/>
Slaff wm?<lb/>
Students at ECU choose their<lb/>
mates according to their in-<lb/>
telligence, a recent survey shows.<lb/>
Surveys taken at universities in<lb/>
the '60s and '70s did not find<lb/>
these same results ? education<lb/>
and intelligence were found to be<lb/>
relatively important in previous<lb/>
studies.<lb/>
The survey was conducted by<lb/>
Hal Daniel, Robert McCabe and<lb/>
Sissy Quinter from the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Speech, Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology, and Kevin<lb/>
O'Brien from the department of<lb/>
Biostatistics and Epidemiology.<lb/>
The survey was initially conced-<lb/>
ed of as a way of seeing if men<lb/>
and women perceived the impor-<lb/>
tance of the human voice in mate<lb/>
selection<lb/>
"We expected the results of the<lb/>
survey to show that males and<lb/>
females placed an importance on<lb/>
the voice when they were selec-<lb/>
ting a mate, but the voice was<lb/>
rated last and next to last. The<lb/>
males ranked the importance of<lb/>
the voice higher than females did.<lb/>
That was entirely different from<lb/>
what was expected McCabe<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the future, the group will be<lb/>
doing specific research looking at<lb/>
the effects of different vocal<lb/>
characteristics in mate selection.<lb/>
McCabe said, "In future research<lb/>
we will be looking at varying<lb/>
female vocal characteristics such<lb/>
as pitch, intensity and quality in<lb/>
the terrp r which ' :ir:3!e is<lb/>
more important relative to the<lb/>
males' mate selection process<lb/>
The study will be published in<lb/>
the Spring issues of the College<lb/>
Student Journal.<lb/>
Commenting on the results of<lb/>
the survey, Daniel said, "We owe<lb/>
a lot to the students who rated in-<lb/>
telligence highK i is a credit to<lb/>
the students at ECU that this was<lb/>
discovered<lb/>
Besides intelligence, ECU<lb/>
students rated physical attrac-<lb/>
tiveness and sense of humor<lb/>
higher than did previous reports<lb/>
on mate selection that were done<lb/>
in the '60s and '70s. The<lb/>
researchers also found that sen-<lb/>
sitivity remains an important trait<lb/>
when considering a relationship<lb/>
Ambition was also found to be<lb/>
relatively important.<lb/>
The group found male and<lb/>
female respondents differed in<lb/>
their rankings of physical attrac-<lb/>
tiveness, voice, sense of humor<lb/>
and employment. Males ranked<lb/>
physical attractiveness and voice<lb/>
as being more important, while<lb/>
ECU women ranked a - e of<lb/>
humor and employment as more<lb/>
important qualities.<lb/>
"It is possible I<lb/>
"that today's college students<lb/>
desire partners who are more<lb/>
likely to succeed in a visual,<lb/>
seemingly narcissistic ety. An<lb/>
intelligent, sensitive, physically-<lb/>
attractive mate with a good sense<lb/>
of humor and a moderate<lb/>
amount of ambition appears to<lb/>
be a good candidate for success in<lb/>
finding a mate<lb/>
Quinter commented on the fac<lb/>
that ECU women ranked a sense<lb/>
of humor third in their criteria<lb/>
for choosing a mate "Women<lb/>
are in a transition place in socie-<lb/>
ty she said.<lb/>
"I was really surprised that<lb/>
males rated intelligence of<lb/>
women over physical attrac-<lb/>
tiveness; that wa a pleasant sur-<lb/>
prise Quinter added.<lb/>
Republicans Prepared<lb/>
To Avoid Fighting<lb/>
(UPI) ? In the aftermath of<lb/>
their victories last week.<lb/>
Republicans say they are better<lb/>
prepared than they were in 192<lb/>
to avoid political infighting and<lb/>
hold on'o the gains they made in<lb/>
North Carolina politics.<lb/>
Tom Ellis, chairman of the<lb/>
conservative National Congres-<lb/>
sional Club, and other<lb/>
Republicans said they are intent<lb/>
on avoiding the intra-party<lb/>
squabbling that followed Presi-<lb/>
dent Nixon's 1972 landslide over<lb/>
George McGovern. The victory-<lb/>
helped elect North Carolina's<lb/>
first Republican governor and<lb/>
senator this century ? moderate<lb/>
Jim Holshouser and conservative<lb/>
Jesse Helms.<lb/>
But skirmishes flared in the<lb/>
mid-1970s over control of the<lb/>
state Republican Party between<lb/>
the party's moderate and conser-<lb/>
vative wings.<lb/>
Ellis said his Congressional<lb/>
Club, aligned with right-wing<lb/>
organizations, would "do<lb/>
everything we can to be helpful"<lb/>
to Govelect James Martin. The<lb/>
six-term conservative con-<lb/>
gressman had distanced his<lb/>
political campaign from the PAC<lb/>
to become the state's second<lb/>
GOP governor this century.<lb/>
"What's the old saying? Those<lb/>
who don't learn from history are<lb/>
forced to repeat it said Robert<lb/>
Hunter, a Greensboro lawyer and<lb/>
GOP moderate.<lb/>
David Flaherty, chairman of<lb/>
the state Republican Party, said<lb/>
the discord following the 1972<lb/>
election hurt the party<lb/>
"disastrously<lb/>
"Instead of working on unity,<lb/>
we just had cat fights he said.<lb/>
"People aren't going to reregister<lb/>
from Democrat to Republican<lb/>
when there's a cat fight goinc<lb/>
on<lb/>
Republican Democrats and<lb/>
political anaiy have said North<lb/>
Carolina is moving toward a<lb/>
competi'ive two-party system<lb/>
that GOP leaders hope will cut<lb/>
into the Democrats' nearly 3-to-l<lb/>
advantage in registration in<lb/>
North Carolina.<lb/>
"I think that white people in<lb/>
North Carolina are clearly sens-<lb/>
ing that the national Democratic<lb/>
Party is leaving them said Ellis,<lb/>
a longtime political adviser to<lb/>
Helms.<lb/>
"It does not represent the<lb/>
values and the sentiments of the<lb/>
people of North Carolina he<lb/>
said. "This is a nationwide trend.<lb/>
It isn't just true for North<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
Other political observers<lb/>
agreed with Ellis' survey of voter<lb/>
distaste for Northern Liberal<lb/>
presidential candidates as<lb/>
another reason for the sweeping<lb/>
Republican triumph in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
"The last national Democrat<lb/>
the whites voted for in North<lb/>
Carolina was in 1960 said<lb/>
Merle Black, a political science<lb/>
professor at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina at Chapel Hill.<lb/>
That year, John Kennedy<lb/>
defeated Nixon by a statewide<lb/>
margin of 52 percent to 48 per-<lb/>
cent.<lb/>
"A Democrat perceived to be a<lb/>
liberal is a losing proposition in<lb/>
this state Black said. "Even if<lb/>
Mondale had run a great cam-<lb/>
paign, it wouldn't have made any<lb/>
difference<lb/>
Saturday's football game has most of the ECU campus singing the<lb/>
blues.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2<lb/>
Editorials4<lb/>
Features6<lb/>
Classifieds7<lb/>
Sports8<lb/>
?The Pirates closed their foot-<lb/>
ball season Saturday with a<lb/>
loss to the Eagles of Southern<lb/>
Mississippi. Sports Editor<lb/>
Randy Mews takes a look at<lb/>
the season, as well as a look<lb/>
ahead to next year. See Sports,<lb/>
page 8.<lb/>
<lb/>
y. ?. ii i, m ?i ,mm- ii 4k m<lb/>
?MMMHM??MkMHfel<lb/>
0MMMMMsai<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057680_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13. 1984<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Why Do Communist<lb/>
"Church H<lb/>
m <lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
Omega Pi Pht Frat, Inc Is recognizing ail<lb/>
black students who have accumulated a gpa<lb/>
of 3 0 or above You will be given a cer<lb/>
tiflcate of achievement during our achieve<lb/>
ment day awards ceremonoy on Nov It at<lb/>
3 00 if you have the qualifications write<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi, P O Box 3014. Greenville,<lb/>
N C 27S34<lb/>
Allied Health Professions<lb/>
Admission Test<lb/>
The Aihed Health Professions Admission<lb/>
Test wilt be offered Saturday, Jan 12, 1985<lb/>
Application blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to the Psychological Corp 7500 Old<lb/>
oak Blvd Cleveland Ohio 44130 to arrive by<lb/>
Dec 15 1984 Applications may be obtained<lb/>
from the ECU Testing Center, room 105,<lb/>
Speight Building<lb/>
Graduate Management<lb/>
Admission Test<lb/>
The Gradua'e Management Admission Test<lb/>
,GMAT' will be offered Sat , Jan 26. 1985<lb/>
Application blanks are to be completed and<lb/>
mailed to GMAT Educational Testing Ser<lb/>
vice Box 96 R Princeton N J 08540 Ap<lb/>
plications must be postmarked no later than<lb/>
Dec 24 1984 Applications n ?y be obtained<lb/>
from the ECU Testing Center. Room 105,<lb/>
Spegnt Building<lb/>
Episcopal Worship<lb/>
A stuoen' Episcopal service of Holy Commu<lb/>
nion will be celebrated on Tuesday evening,<lb/>
Nov. 13 in the chapel of St Paul's Episcopal<lb/>
Church 406 4th st (one block from Garrett<lb/>
Dorm) The service will be at 5 30pm with<lb/>
the Episcopal Chaplain, the Rev Bill Had<lb/>
den. celebrating Supper will follow<lb/>
Surf Club<lb/>
The team surf off was not held last Sun due<lb/>
to bad weather Another surf off is scheduled<lb/>
for this Sun Meet at the Islander Motel at 9<lb/>
am in Emerald isle it you want to par<lb/>
ticipate There is a meeting this Thurs at<lb/>
8 "3 p m in the Mendenhail Coffeehouse<lb/>
Slides of the fall break trip to Hatteras will<lb/>
be shown Final plans will be made for the<lb/>
Thannsgiving trip to Florida also<lb/>
Fall Semester Graduates<lb/>
Caps and Gowns should be picked up in the<lb/>
Student Supply Store. Wright Building, Nov<lb/>
14 16<lb/>
These keepsake gowns are yours to keep<lb/>
providing the graduation fee has been paid<lb/>
LOVE<lb/>
is something missing in your life right now<lb/>
but you just can't put your finger on it<lb/>
Everyone needs love and understanding<lb/>
You can fill this empty space by making an<lb/>
Encounter with Christ Weekend Nov 15 18<lb/>
Meet students within N C and enjoy a relax<lb/>
ng weekend with pecole who really care<lb/>
about you! For more into, contact Fr Terry<lb/>
at 752 4216 or Colleen Pirone at 752 4975 it<lb/>
promises to be a fantastic experience'<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha<lb/>
Tie Beta Kappa Alpha Chapter of Financial<lb/>
Management Association will hold a General<lb/>
Business meeting on Thurs , Nov 15 at<lb/>
3 00pm in Rawi 101 Dues will be collected<lb/>
so have your checkbook handy<lb/>
Student Union Public Relations<lb/>
The c,udent union Public Relations and Pro<lb/>
n ? Committee will meet on Tues , Nov<lb/>
13. 1984 a 5 OOp m in room 238 Of<lb/>
Menoenhail Student Center AH members<lb/>
are urged 0 attend<lb/>
Student union Recreation<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
The S'udent union Recreation Committee s<lb/>
sponsoring a Bingo ice Cream Party at 7<lb/>
cm m the Menoenhail Student Center<lb/>
Mu't' Purppose room All ECU students<lb/>
? acuity staf the r dependents ana guests<lb/>
are welcome Admission is only 25 cents<lb/>
Play 8 different oingo games and win pruts<lb/>
Bring a friend or Tues . Nov 13 and enjoy<lb/>
rhe funJ<lb/>
Pre-Season Basketball<lb/>
Register now for one of the most successful<lb/>
mtramurai events of the fall Registration<lb/>
for the tournament sponsored by Mille' High<lb/>
Lite is on Nov 26 27 Play begins the 30th<lb/>
us1 m time to let it an out before exams<lb/>
Register in room 204 menorial gym or call<lb/>
757 6387<lb/>
ECU Mens Invitational Flag<lb/>
Football<lb/>
Tne entry tee is $15 and the event will Lie held<lb/>
on the 16,17,18 of Nov Register this week and<lb/>
next in the intramural office room 204<lb/>
Memorial gym The tournament is spon<lb/>
sored by All Campus champs<lb/>
Bombsquad The money will be used to<lb/>
cover expenses on their trip to the National<lb/>
Collegiate Flag Football Tournament<lb/>
N.C.I.O.<lb/>
The North Carolina Internship Office pro<lb/>
vides paid summer intern positions for<lb/>
studenrs with State Government Positions<lb/>
are available in a variety of agencies located<lb/>
throughout the state Students will be paid<lb/>
S3 73 per hour working during the period of<lb/>
June 1 until August 1<lb/>
Comedy<lb/>
Anyone who thinks they have a good sense of<lb/>
humour and would like to do stand up com<lb/>
edy. Please contact Ed at 752 2524.<lb/>
Health and Human Services<lb/>
Opening for spring semester in Washington,<lb/>
DC, Health and Human Services, Office of<lb/>
'he Secretary, Policy and New initiatives<lb/>
Division, for student with good typing skills.<lb/>
Word processing desired but not required<lb/>
Student will be trained to use word process<lb/>
mg equipment if needed Tuition and books<lb/>
paid the semester following each Coop<lb/>
assignment Salary approximately 11,000<lb/>
month Contact the Co op office in Rawi 313<lb/>
immediately<lb/>
North Carolina Internship<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Opportunities are available for summer<lb/>
employment with North Carolina State agen<lb/>
cies A wide variety of positions for many<lb/>
majors are available statewide Applies<lb/>
tions should be completed by early<lb/>
December Contact the Cooperative Educa<lb/>
tion Office in Rawi 313 for information<lb/>
reguarding this program<lb/>
Gamma Beta Phi<lb/>
Gamma Bet Phi will meet Thursday Nov 15<lb/>
at 7 p m in the Biology Building 103<lb/>
Christmas Vacation<lb/>
Dive Penny Camp National Underwater<lb/>
Park in fabulous Key Largo The Florida<lb/>
Keys are the only natural coral reef in the<lb/>
Continental US This five day trip, Dec<lb/>
16 2lst includes lodging and two dive boat<lb/>
trips dail.y Tanks backpack and weight<lb/>
belts are provided Cost is $175 per person,<lb/>
two to a room occupancy and $210 per per<lb/>
son, 4 to a room occupancy For further in<lb/>
formation: Ray Scharf, Director of Ac<lb/>
quatics 757 6441<lb/>
Sigma Theta Tau<lb/>
The Beta Nu Chapter of Sigma Theta Tau,<lb/>
the National Honor Society of Nursing, will<lb/>
hold its fall educational meeting on Thurs<lb/>
day, Nov. 15, 1984 at 6 p.m at the Ramada<lb/>
inn in Greenville The program, presented<lb/>
by Dr. Ann Belcher, rn. PhD, is entitled,<lb/>
"The ten year plan implications for On<lb/>
cology Nursing " Dr Belcher is director of<lb/>
Nursing Staff Development at the Unlversi<lb/>
ty of Alabama Hospital in Birmingham, Ala.<lb/>
Colleagues, students, spouses and friends<lb/>
are cordially invited For further inform<lb/>
tlon, contact Lou Everett at the School of<lb/>
Nursing (757 60411<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 Gre?llle Blvd.<lb/>
TS8-JKJ - U HXS<lb/>
24 hour Towing Service<lb/>
L-HmI Reatab<lb/>
Free Throw Contest<lb/>
There will be a free throw contest held for all<lb/>
you expert hoopsters Nov 13 This in<lb/>
tramural sponsored event will be held in<lb/>
Memorial Gym To register come by room<lb/>
204 Memorial Gym or call 757 6387 Par<lb/>
ticipate rather than spectate<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
Interested In international Policy and<lb/>
Regulations affecting high technology expor<lb/>
ting If so, this position may be for you<lb/>
NASA will be Interviewing on compus in<lb/>
Nov for Spring, 1985 Contact the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office, 313 Rawi<lb/>
Building as soon as possible<lb/>
Turkey Shoot in Bowling<lb/>
The Student Union Recreation Committee is<lb/>
sponsoring a turkey shoot in bowling on<lb/>
Thurs Nov 15 1984 from 7 p m until 10 p m<lb/>
in Mendenhail Student Center $2 entry fee,<lb/>
ECU I D s required Come win a turkey<lb/>
BSU<lb/>
The Baptist Student Union invites you to<lb/>
witness for Peace with Mike Hamer, ECU<lb/>
faculty at 8 30 Wed Nov 14 at the BSU The<lb/>
program will also include vocal and guitar<lb/>
music<lb/>
Tree Trimming Party<lb/>
The Student Union Productions Committee<lb/>
is having a free trimming party on Mon .<lb/>
Nov 26 m Mendenhail student Center at 4<lb/>
p m All are invited1 At 1 p m the ECU choir<lb/>
will perform Refreshments will be served<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
The brothers of Pi Kappa Phi fraternity<lb/>
would like to mvite everyone out to the Elbo<lb/>
room tonight during Pi Kapp happy hour<lb/>
starting at 9 p m Let's all get together and<lb/>
jam before those tests start up<lb/>
Alpha Phi big brothers<lb/>
The next big brother meeting will be Sun<lb/>
night at the house starting at 9 00 All money<lb/>
dues and t shirts) is due that night T shirts<lb/>
nave been ordered and will be in by the<lb/>
meeting Also big brother volleyball plays<lb/>
WED night at 10 p m Lets get out and sup<lb/>
port the big brothers of Alpha Phi Sorority<lb/>
Oxfam America Fast<lb/>
The annual Oxfam America Fast for World<lb/>
Harvest will take place on Thurs . Nov 15<lb/>
Students, faculty, and staff are asked to fast<lb/>
for one or two meals and donate the money<lb/>
that would have been spent for tnose meals<lb/>
Money win be collected at a table outside the<lb/>
Student Supply Store on Thurs Oxfam<lb/>
America channels it's money to promote<lb/>
self help projects in several disadvantaged<lb/>
areas of tne world<lb/>
Lama Visits<lb/>
The Venerabei Khenpo Kartrtar Rmpoche<lb/>
will give tnree public 'alks m Greenville next<lb/>
week On Sun, Nov 18. In room 244 of<lb/>
Mendenhail Student Center, at 7 30 p m , he<lb/>
will present Part I of "The Four Noble<lb/>
Truths ' Part 2 of the talk will be the follow<lb/>
ing night at the same time and place On<lb/>
Tues , Nov 20. at 7 30 p m at the Wilson<lb/>
Acres Club House he will have meditation in<lb/>
structlon- "introduction to the Heart of Bud<lb/>
dhist Practice " Refuge and Empowerment<lb/>
services win also be announced Born m<lb/>
eastern Tibet, Khenpc Rmpoche has official<lb/>
I y recei ved the title<lb/>
Choeie Lama "(superior Dharma masteri<lb/>
He is presently abbot of the Karma Triyana<lb/>
Dharmachakra Monastery in Woodstock,<lb/>
NY<lb/>
Early Childhood Education Club<lb/>
ECU is having a meeting today at 4 30 in<lb/>
speight building room 129 We are honored to<lb/>
have as a guest speaker, the principal from<lb/>
Sadie Saulter Elementary School Members<lb/>
please bring a company's address to share<lb/>
for professional files and dues are $3<lb/>
Everyone is welcome!<lb/>
Rho Lambda Meeting<lb/>
All members of Rho Lambda Greek Honor<lb/>
Society have a meeting Thurs , Nov 15 at<lb/>
4 30. Laura Sweet's office in Cotton dorm<lb/>
Plans for the house mothers tea will be<lb/>
discussed See you there1<lb/>
International Student Association<lb/>
Attention members There will be a very im<lb/>
portant meeting on Sat Nov 17th at 6 p m<lb/>
room 221, Mendenhail student Center Be<lb/>
there'<lb/>
Racquetball Club<lb/>
ECU'S Racquetball Club will hold an<lb/>
organizational meeting on Wed Nov. U,at 5<lb/>
pm in Memoral Gym, Rm 105. All<lb/>
members and anyone intrested are<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
AMA<lb/>
The American Marketing Association will be<lb/>
sponsoring a marketing profile of Anheuser<lb/>
Bush on Nov 15th at 4 p m at Mendenhail<lb/>
244 All AMA members and anyone in<lb/>
terested are invited to attend<lb/>
Applications<lb/>
are now being accepted for students wishing<lb/>
to serve on University Committees tor the<lb/>
1984 1985 school year Twenty one(21) stu<lb/>
dent positions are open Committees with<lb/>
vacancies are Alcohol and Drug Education<lb/>
Commlttee(l). 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 Commlttee(l), Career Education<lb/>
Committee (1). Course Drop Appeals Com<lb/>
mitte (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, Mendenhail Stu<lb/>
dent Center Information Desk. SGA Office,<lb/>
Mendenhail 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/>
torts 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/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
Everyone come on out to Beaus Thurs night<lb/>
for a great Happy hour Delta Zeta will be<lb/>
selling Tickets for the pig picking at Beaus<lb/>
this Sat See you Thurs at Beaus!<lb/>
Pre-iMed<lb/>
Aft Officers, Members and Pledges There<lb/>
will be a meeting Tues Nov 13 In Flanagan<lb/>
307 at 7 30 The speaker will be Dr Baughan.<lb/>
Family practice His topic will be the Sym<lb/>
poslum All are invited at 7 p m there will be<lb/>
an executive meeting in Conf room Also at 7<lb/>
p m there will be a mandatory pledge<lb/>
meeilng in 307<lb/>
Delta Zeta<lb/>
Parents week end was a great success<lb/>
Thanks Lori and Tina for all your hard work!<lb/>
Reminder too sisters and pledges of all our<lb/>
events this week Tues Is the Coke Castle at<lb/>
King and Queen North, Wed night is our<lb/>
happy hour at Elbo and Thurs party at<lb/>
Beaus Also, don't forget Renee needs your<lb/>
money for the pig picking no later than Tues<lb/>
It's going to be a fantastic week of<lb/>
togetherness!<lb/>
Marauder members<lb/>
There will be an important meeting for all<lb/>
Marauder members on Wed , Nov 14 at 7 30<lb/>
p m in the coffee house located in the base<lb/>
ment of Mendenhail Student Center Upcom<lb/>
ing events will be discussed<lb/>
Conservation Film<lb/>
The film "Garden of Eden will be shown by<lb/>
the Pamlico Tar River Foundation at 7 p.m ,<lb/>
Mon, Nov 19 in the auditorium of the Willis<lb/>
Bulldlng(ECU Regional Development In<lb/>
stitute) The film, produced by the Nature<lb/>
Conservancy, makes a case tor preservation<lb/>
of natural environments and the earth's gene<lb/>
pool The showing is free and open to the<lb/>
public<lb/>
SPAN<lb/>
The Student Planning Association Network<lb/>
(SPAN) Is sponsoring a series of alumni<lb/>
panels during 1984 85 to celebrate the com<lb/>
pletion of 20 years of undergraduate plann<lb/>
Ing education at ECU The first of these<lb/>
panels will be held on Nov 14 In Brewster<lb/>
Building, room D 208, from 12 00 to 1 30pm<lb/>
The panel will discuss planning education m<lb/>
terms of public sector employment oppor<lb/>
tunltles within the planning profession<lb/>
The panelists are Lee Downie, Director of<lb/>
Community Development, Roanoke Rapids,<lb/>
N.C Wat Brown, Director of Town Plann<lb/>
ing, Tarboro, N C . Beth Shields. Planning<lb/>
director, Nash county, N C , Gene Thomas<lb/>
Annexation Coordinator and Panner II.<lb/>
Goldsboro, N C , Bill Richardson, county<lb/>
Manager, Currltuck 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 Hank ins or Wubneh at 757 6465<lb/>
Delta Sigma Phi<lb/>
Just a reminder to all brothers, sisters, and<lb/>
pledges about our Thanksgiving Dinner sun ,<lb/>
Nov IB at 6 30 pm at the house Come with<lb/>
a good appetite!<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
Ail those interested m Knowing more about<lb/>
the Judicai branch of our government are<lb/>
invited to attend the next ECU law society<lb/>
meeting Our guest speaker ,s district court<lb/>
iudge Jim Martin (of the 3rd jud.cai<lb/>
District) who will talk about the Judges<lb/>
Role m the judicial System' we win oe<lb/>
meeting on Nov 19(Mondar I at 7 p m m th?<lb/>
Coffee House located m Menoenhail For<lb/>
more information, call Mike Gardner<lb/>
758 1640<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
The American society tor Personnel Ao<lb/>
ministration will hold a meeting Thuri<lb/>
Nov 15 at 3 30 in Rawi 102 Gues' spr???<lb/>
will be Joe High, Human Resource Manager<lb/>
from TRW Everyone welcome'<lb/>
Dance Contest<lb/>
Fri. Nov 16,1984, Pi Sigma P. Nat.ca<lb/>
Honor fraternity ana Papa Ka?z prev ?-?<lb/>
3rd annual Dance contest An proceeds from<lb/>
the dance contest win go to United Cfrcj<lb/>
Palsy There will be a specai fapc. I<lb/>
from 8 10 p m Please come on ou' ar ?<lb/>
us for tne fun<lb/>
Your No, 1 Choice<lb/>
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$1295 to $2995<lb/>
Our new family eyewear selection consists of<lb/>
over 200 fashion frames for the entire family<lb/>
from just $12.95 to $29 95 Choose from functional<lb/>
to fantastic and save!<lb/>
Bring your family m for a complete eye exam-<lb/>
ination by our Doctor of Optometry You'll save<lb/>
money and know your family's eyes are well<lb/>
cared for at the Eye Care Center.<lb/>
V&amp; care for your eyes.<lb/>
OfHOMCTMC<lb/>
?YECAR?C?KT?R<lb/>
Drs. Hollis and Scibal<lb/>
PA<lb/>
The Tipton Annex228 Greenville Blvd - 756-940J<lb/>
Attention<lb/>
Students !<lb/>
Wea,<lb/>
THE TREEHOUSE RESTAURANT Is Out<lb/>
To Improve Your Funtime Hours.<lb/>
Throughout the month of November, We will offer<lb/>
PITCHERS OF BEER FOR ONLY $2.00 w food<lb/>
purchase<lb/>
So Come On Out And Join Us For<lb/>
Good Food - Good Fun - Great Prices<lb/>
Onlv at The Treehouse 752-7483.<lb/>
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With this coupon get<lb/>
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?DOUBLE PRINTS or<lb/>
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Limit one coupon<lb/>
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135mm negatives<lb/>
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?FREE BUS SERVICE begins 2:30 - Pick Up &amp;<lb/>
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?RAFFLE - Choice of Peugeot Crusier or<lb/>
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B JENNIFER JI SDRAM K<lb/>
Church-state relations in t<lb/>
Poland were the su-<lb/>
ture given at ECU last Thurs :<lb/>
b Dr Dieter Bii g<lb/>
Federal Institute for I<lb/>
pean and International Studies<lb/>
Cologi Germa<lb/>
The lecture w a<lb/>
"Re. i<lb/>
Pa f le i ??? v. ? Relij<lb/>
rated in One of the I<lb/>
mun;  (<lb/>
'jsored b the Depart mv I<lb/>
g cn said<lb/>
oikhurch I<lb/>
ke role in the ev<lb/>
Poland H(<lb/>
in the<lb/>
"renew<lb/>
patriotism and .<lb/>
Since the I970's, B .<lb/>
-jpable of<lb/>
in Poland<lb/>
at i :<lb/>
"huma<lb/>
valuer<lb/>
which "the<lb/>
Thc<lb/>
more influei<lb/>
Solid '<lb/>
Dual Career M<lb/>
Discussed At<lb/>
Dua<lb/>
par<lb/>
phenoir<lb/>
the<lb/>
typi<lb/>
disv<lb/>
Fan<lb/>
The<lb/>
tior.<lb/>
5 p i<lb/>
Greei boro:<lb/>
-<lb/>
Famih R<lb/>
author f 1 ?<lb/>
numerous articles . and Dr c ,<lb/>
MacKinnon. :i?am professor<lb/>
f cl I U<lb/>
?<lb/>
tens<lb/>
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Dual -<lb/>
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? ?? ' d'??r,ct court<lb/>
"? 3ra Judicial<lb/>
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N I ?' ' P m in tht<lb/>
? ? Wenoenhaii pg<lb/>
a M,ke Gardner,<lb/>
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Personnel Ad<lb/>
I netting Triorj<lb/>
Guett speaker<lb/>
? -? s ?- ? .e Vanager<lb/>
Contest<lb/>
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NOW MBi RB.I ? <lb/>
Why Do Communists Have Religion?<lb/>
Church Relations Intensify<lb/>
ccmt risiuts fHf ? 6A m fi ? ?<lb/>
B JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nf?? fdllor<lb/>
Church-state relations in<lb/>
Poland were the subject of a lec-<lb/>
ture given at ECU last Thursday<lb/>
by Dr. Dieter Bingen of the<lb/>
Federal Institute for last Euro-<lb/>
pean and International Studies in<lb/>
Cologne, West Germany.<lb/>
The lecture was titled<lb/>
"Religion is the Opiate of the<lb/>
People; Yet Why is Religion<lb/>
Tolerated in One of the Com-<lb/>
munist Countries1" and was<lb/>
sponsored h the Departments of<lb/>
Political Science and Philosophy.<lb/>
Bingen said the Roman<lb/>
Catholic Church has "played a<lb/>
key role in the evolution of<lb/>
Poland He said the current<lb/>
situation in the country has<lb/>
"renewed the symbiosis t<lb/>
patriotism and Catholicism<lb/>
Since the 1970's, Bingen said,<lb/>
the church has become the "sole<lb/>
independent large organization<lb/>
capable of opposing Comm mism<lb/>
in Poland<lb/>
This has been due to<lb/>
that the church has been exeri<lb/>
"humanist, moralist a<lb/>
patriotic" values contrary I<lb/>
values of the government<lb/>
which "the people do '1<lb/>
The church has as<lb/>
more influence sii<lb/>
Solidarity in tht<lb/>
said. "In 1980-81, the church<lb/>
acted repeatedly as a fire brigade<lb/>
to stop threatening confronta-<lb/>
tions between Solidarity and<lb/>
political leaders.<lb/>
"The partv had lost all means<lb/>
ol directly influencing the<lb/>
masses he said.<lb/>
He added that while the church<lb/>
was in great demand as an ad-<lb/>
 isor to both the Communist Par-<lb/>
ty and the trade unions, the im-<lb/>
position of martial law in<lb/>
December, 1981, was "a sign of<lb/>
the failure of the Catholic<lb/>
Church in moderating conflicts in<lb/>
Poland<lb/>
Despite this. Bingen said, the<lb/>
church had shown its power,<lb/>
"not as the opiate of the people,<lb/>
hut as a real political force<lb/>
Bingen said that, following the<lb/>
position of martial law, a<lb/>
"common formula for com-<lb/>
promise was sought, one in which<lb/>
cither the church or the Com-<lb/>
munist Party would lose face<lb/>
He said the visit of Pope John<lb/>
Paul II in 1983, "strengthened<lb/>
the conviction of the conpatnots<lb/>
their convictions had been<lb/>
hwhile.<lb/>
'He gave the society<lb/>
psychological relaxation but no<lb/>
concrete hope for change<lb/>
Dingen said.<lb/>
ears of real<lb/>
. m  Poland, the Catholic<lb/>
Church is not perceived as an<lb/>
opiate of the people by the<lb/>
government or society he said.<lb/>
"It has not defeated the Marxist<lb/>
? Leninist political party on the<lb/>
labor field because as a<lb/>
-anscendentalist political entity<lb/>
it doesn't enter into that field<lb/>
directly ? it has an influence on<lb/>
the awareness of the individual<lb/>
Dingen added that the church<lb/>
is "the most important source of<lb/>
Polish self-identity" and is grow-<lb/>
ing in "moral strength and in-<lb/>
direct political influence.<lb/>
"It is not an opiate but a real<lb/>
political and societal force which<lb/>
has to be recognized by the<lb/>
government and Communist Par-<lb/>
ty as a political factor which<lb/>
plays a dynamic role and brings<lb/>
new discussions on the behalf of<lb/>
democratization and liberaliza-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
HI 'rs' M <lb/>
<lb/>
a.<lb/>
A ' irH A CRIME.<lb/>
?4 w ?<lb/>
I ? ?<lb/>
? 7 . ?:  ?? ?. -TT<lb/>
ROM " ? ' foO<lb/>
??'?' Bi m ?<lb/>
<lb/>
- ?<lb/>
? 4 ?:?: titLK zos. J<lb/>
S0NM e? nd<lb/>
? <lb/>
Advertise<lb/>
Dual Career Marriages<lb/>
Discussed At Seminar<lb/>
Dua  gig<lb/>
par md other<lb/>
phenomena which have affected<lb/>
the structure and dynan .<lb/>
typical  i family i<lb/>
discussed at ECl 's 25th annual<lb/>
Family ife Conference Nov. 13.<lb/>
The event will feature prese<lb/>
tions by two noted family<lb/>
specialists from L NC-<lb/>
Greensboi i Dt 3 anzoni,<lb/>
1 he L Nc -G<lb/>
! amily Re ?.?. h Center and<lb/>
author of 10 books and<lb/>
numerous articles, .imi )r Carol<lb/>
MacKinnon, assistant professor<lb/>
'  ; ' family<lb/>
relati I ; ex-<lb/>
tensi family 1 ole<lb/>
ps.<lb/>
p ' the :e arc<lb/>
)u iltreei Man iages: ?, hange<lb/>
iccess "S nglehood: A<lb/>
Positive Choice "Single Pan<lb/>
Families "Preparing for Mar-<lb/>
riage "IV ;itie R ; a<lb/>
tionships" and 'Negotiating<lb/>
I with Your Partner<lb/>
Sessions will be held in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center and<lb/>
in the Jenkins Fine Arts Center<lb/>
auditorium and are open to all in-<lb/>
;sted persons in the campus<lb/>
.md local communities.<lb/>
ECU'S annual Family Life<lb/>
(. onference is a project of an in-<lb/>
terdepartmental committee of<lb/>
faculty members and students.<lb/>
Dr. Dawd Knox, ECL' sociologist<lb/>
: family Lie specialist, is chair<lb/>
ol the committee.<lb/>
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Free Draft &amp; Wine<lb/>
Men Allowed In At 10:00<lb/>
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Randy Mews. ?, e, Anthony Martin. ????, Wanu<lb/>
Tina Maroschak. am ??.? ToN1 Norton, c, m???<lb/>
Bn i Austin, cmmmm, mm, bu i Daw son, ??? ???-<lb/>
Jon Jordan. p MlKE: MAm 4i <lb/>
November 13, 1984<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Vietnam<lb/>
Let's Honor Soldiers, Okay?<lb/>
A day honoring men and women<lb/>
who have fought in wars has been<lb/>
a mainstay for countries<lb/>
throughout time. Roman<lb/>
gladiators, medieval crusaders and<lb/>
WWI trench warriors all have been<lb/>
remembered for their heroic ef-<lb/>
forts. Monday, we honored our<lb/>
War heroes. We not only paused to<lb/>
say thanks to those veterans who<lb/>
are still living, we also bowed to<lb/>
thank the dead. By doing so, we<lb/>
showed our appreciation to those<lb/>
who gave their lives for our coun-<lb/>
try during wartime dating back to<lb/>
the Revolutionary War.<lb/>
But Monday was a little bit more<lb/>
significant for one group. Vietnam<lb/>
veterans. For on the day before,<lb/>
Sunday, President Reagan ac-<lb/>
cepted the Vietnam Veterans<lb/>
Memorial on behalf of the nation,<lb/>
telling those who waited more than<lb/>
10 years to hear such words,<lb/>
"thanks for your courage<lb/>
The memorial not only includes<lb/>
the 500-foot black granite wall in-<lb/>
scribed with the names of the<lb/>
58,022 Americans who gave their<lb/>
lives in Southeast Asia, but now a<lb/>
statue of three soldiers has been<lb/>
added to honor the more than 2.7<lb/>
million Americans who fought in<lb/>
the nation's longest and most un-<lb/>
popular war. Today, finally, all<lb/>
servicemen who were called to duty<lb/>
in Vietnam are welcomed home.<lb/>
We would like to say thanks to<lb/>
those (no longer) young men who<lb/>
fought and died. Their honor is<lb/>
not tarnished because of old politi-<lb/>
cians who handled the war ineptly<lb/>
and wrongly. You did not lose the<lb/>
war; we know of your heroics ?<lb/>
saving a downed buddy as lead<lb/>
whistled through the air, or help-<lb/>
ing a peasant family whose village<lb/>
was destroyed by bombs and<lb/>
tanks. The war was lost by men in<lb/>
blue suits who sat behind desks pil-<lb/>
ed with papers full of wrong deci-<lb/>
sions. The war was lost because the<lb/>
leadership did not lead, and then<lb/>
did not leave when the time had<lb/>
come to go home.<lb/>
Vietnam does have a lesson to<lb/>
teach us. Not the one that people j<lb/>
claim, though ? that of avoiding a <lb/>
similar war. Vietnam reinforces<lb/>
our tradition of tolerance and<lb/>
understanding. We must<lb/>
remember that all stories have<lb/>
more than one side. In this case, all<lb/>
had right on their side: protestor,<lb/>
draft-dodger and soldier. All did<lb/>
what they thought was right. One<lb/>
saw an unjust war, the other<lb/>
declined to participate in an unjust<lb/>
war and the third went to fight in<lb/>
that war because "it was the right<lb/>
thing to do<lb/>
Today, as 1984 comes to a close,<lb/>
we should come to grips with the<lb/>
splintering of our people that oc-<lb/>
curred in the '60s and '70s over<lb/>
Vietnam. We should be tolerant of<lb/>
those who fought, which we<lb/>
weren't before, and tolerant of<lb/>
those who didn't, which we suspect<lb/>
many today would look down<lb/>
upon. Each had a reason for doing<lb/>
what they did that was embedded<lb/>
just as deep as the other's in<lb/>
American philosophy. The right to<lb/>
question government and the duty<lb/>
to fight for democracy ? each can<lb/>
be seen when looking at the Viet-<lb/>
nam experience.<lb/>
You might question honoring<lb/>
those who never gazed upon the<lb/>
landscape of Vietnam. We say it is<lb/>
in the American character to honor<lb/>
all points of view whether we agree<lb/>
or not. So today, we honor not on-<lb/>
ly the soldier of Vietnam, but the<lb/>
society that was so tragically scar-<lb/>
red by it. The war is over, but the<lb/>
lessons are still being learned.<lb/>
Thanks to all of you for making<lb/>
America better.<lb/>
Instructor E<lb/>
OK, RONNIE, QAICg MORE, ,igUT7HlS VMS WITH miW.<lb/>
Press Becomes Passive<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
TRB<lb/>
Tht N? Republic<lb/>
Ten years after Watergate, the<lb/>
American press seems to be losing its ap-<lb/>
petite for scandal.<lb/>
The first-ever indictment of a sitting<lb/>
Cabinet member, Ray Donovan, has<lb/>
stirred little interest. Curiosity about Ed<lb/>
Meese's financial peccadilloes, a matter<lb/>
of obsessive concern just a few months<lb/>
ago, has been snuffed out by the deci-<lb/>
sion of an "independent counsel" not to<lb/>
seek an indictment. Most other papers<lb/>
have recoiled from following The en<lb/>
York Post and The Hall Street Journal<lb/>
into the recesses of Geraldine Ferraro's<lb/>
genealogy.<lb/>
Here in Washington, our Post has<lb/>
shown an amazing reticence about pur-<lb/>
suing charges of possible cocaine use by<lb/>
our mayor, Marion Barry. It's been a<lb/>
long time since an important grand jury<lb/>
has been allowed to go about its business<lb/>
so utterly unmolested by the Post, which<lb/>
in the good oJd days could keep allega-<lb/>
tions of a minor congressman's unpaid<lb/>
parking tickets on the front page for a<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The Barry story crept onto the bottom<lb/>
of page one for a single Saturday when<lb/>
the mayor (who is married) put out an<lb/>
official statement explaining that his<lb/>
regular visits to the home of a female<lb/>
former aide and convicted cocaine<lb/>
dealer were merely part of "a personal<lb/>
relationship and not to buy drugs.<lb/>
Then it disappeared. No "news<lb/>
analysis no leaks, no editorials, no<lb/>
follow-ups.<lb/>
The Ferraro case seems to be a<lb/>
turning point for the press. The Hall<lb/>
Street Journal argues that this simply<lb/>
proves a double standard: Journalists,<lb/>
with their left-wing bias, apply their in-<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
MICHAEL. W'VE GOT<lb/>
TO TALK TO HIM I<lb/>
WONT PUT UP WITH<lb/>
JJZONK<lb/>
JUSTNEEPS<lb/>
THS ANY LONGER'<lb/>
a little morl<lb/>
time 10 sort<lb/>
HIS UFt OUT<lb/>
SORT HIS LIFE OUT"<lb/>
All H5 DOES IS LIE JJ 1<lb/>
AROUND AND EAT'ITS PEALLY THINK<lb/>
LIKE LIVING WITHA rWRZOVER-<lb/>
TEENAGL REACTING<lb/>
 SON<lb/>
IAMNOT0VBRR5-<lb/>
ACTING1 ITSetGIN-<lb/>
NING TO AFFECT<lb/>
Ei'ER)' THING, MIKE -<lb/>
OUR WORK OUR<lb/>
MARJZIAGE, EVEN<lb/>
OUR SEX LIFE'<lb/>
PONT YOU<lb/>
OF COURSE,<lb/>
I CARS1<lb/>
HEY. COUU? YOU<lb/>
KEEP IT POUN IN<lb/>
HERE? I'M?TRYING<lb/>
TO WATCH TV<lb/>
I'LL TALK TO<lb/>
HIM IN THE<lb/>
MORNING<lb/>
NO IT CANT KEEP, ZONK<lb/>
I'VE PUT THIS OFF TOO<lb/>
LONG AS IT IS ITHASNT<lb/>
BEEN FAIR TO ANY OF US<lb/>
4r<lb/>
I'M NOT SURE HOW TO SAY HCT<lb/>
THIS, OLBUPPY. IDONTWAW<lb/>
YOU TO TAKE IT THE WRONG<lb/>
mtVrVtf<lb/>
sou orf<lb/>
we WERE<lb/>
WONDERING<lb/>
ABOUT YOUR i<lb/>
PLANS<lb/>
1<lb/>
GOAHEAP,<lb/>
ZONKERTELL<lb/>
JJ. WHATYOU<lb/>
JUSTT0LPMb<lb/>
JJ.YVLM WORRIES<lb/>
AREOVER.I'VEDE-<lb/>
CIDBPTDGOWMEP<lb/>
SCHOOL<lb/>
' OH-HUH<lb/>
AND I'M<lb/>
JOINING HE<lb/>
BOLSHOI.<lb/>
<lb/>
vestigative skills and their pun?anicai<lb/>
standards to conservatives, but let<lb/>
liberals off the hook.<lb/>
To correct that alleged imbalance, the<lb/>
Journal editorial page has been conduc-<lb/>
ting a parody of a Woodward-and-<lb/>
Bernstein-style investigation of Ms Fer-<lb/>
raro, fearlessu exposing shady business<lb/>
practices by deceased relatives of her<lb/>
husband, and suchlike matters, and<lb/>
meanwhile opining unctuously that if<lb/>
this sours people on the whole post-<lb/>
Watergate morality, that is fine with The<lb/>
H all Street Journal.<lb/>
Clearly a double standard of some<lb/>
sort is involved in the Post handling of<lb/>
Barry. If he weren't black, and if the<lb/>
Post hadn't promoted him from the ear-<lb/>
ly days of his career, his troubles would<lb/>
be getting more ink. But I sense that<lb/>
cases like Ms. Ferraro's, and Meese's<lb/>
too, have genuinely given journalists<lb/>
pause.<lb/>
They are unnerved by their own abili-<lb/>
ty to plunge someone overnight into a<lb/>
maelstrom of unwanted publicity and<lb/>
legal expense. The renewed vigor of libel<lb/>
plaintiffs, like Gen. William<lb/>
Westmoreland and Sen. Paul I.axalt.<lb/>
R-Nev has added worries of a more<lb/>
practical sort as well. Even winning a<lb/>
libel case can be an impoverishing "ex-<lb/>
perience.<lb/>
Aren't politicians entitled to some<lb/>
privacy? Aren't some matters ? sexual<lb/>
habits, in-laws' improprieties ? irrele-<lb/>
vant to their official duties0 Aren't<lb/>
others ? a misstatement on page six,<lb/>
line 17 of some form ? a bit overblown'1'<lb/>
Isn't there a danger of convktion-by-<lb/>
newspaper, of trivializing the political<lb/>
discourse, of driving interesting people<lb/>
from public life and leaving us to be rul-<lb/>
ed by antiseptic nerds?<lb/>
Oh, sure. But you can get carried<lb/>
away with restraint and discretion, too<lb/>
Take, for example, the notion that<lb/>
Meese has been "cleared" because an in-<lb/>
dependent counsel appointed bv the at-<lb/>
torney general decided not to indict him<lb/>
President Reagan said this, adding that<lb/>
the "baseless charges" against Meese<lb/>
were "revealed as having no foundation<lb/>
in fact The press seems to agree- the<lb/>
story has died.<lb/>
Jacob Stein, the independent counsel<lb/>
ordinarily makes his living as a criminal<lb/>
defense lawyer. The fact that a man who<lb/>
spends most of his davs dreaming up<lb/>
reasons why people aren't guiltv saw<lb/>
nothing in the Meese case worth an in-<lb/>
dictment doesn't mean the charges were<lb/>
"baseless<lb/>
As Stein emphasizes in his report, a<lb/>
decision to indict depends on other fac-<lb/>
tors besides whether a crime has been<lb/>
committed. Subjective judgements<lb/>
about the severity of the offense and the<lb/>
difficulty of a conviction also play a<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Steiri rep - tke . zt<lb/>
let that Meese did violate the I<lb/>
disclosure laws in a fair!)<lb/>
(not worth an<lb/>
cepl "in the most egreg<lb/>
 EU1 not -<lb/>
beyond able d a<lb/>
finaiu . <lb/>
seeking federa<lb/>
More important, even if M<lb/>
nothing criminal, ? . csn I n<lb/>
did nothing wrong. Stein i stenta<lb/>
refuses to pass judgemei vl<lb/>
ethics His J85-pagc i<lb/>
Meese as, at the verv least, a m u<lb/>
monumentally incurious ab i<lb/>
perfect strangers are ea<lb/>
favors. That is something ?<lb/>
sidering, surely, before all<lb/>
become attornev genera!<lb/>
Some might desci be ' I<lb/>
as "?he appearance<lb/>
But this hoary formula!<lb/>
struck me as an unfair vop-o<lb/>
accusation itself ? when picl<lb/>
the national media ? is re-<lb/>
appearance. If an official<lb/>
anvthing actually wrong, he<lb/>
be pilloried or punished. On<lb/>
hand, if he has ? and Mees<lb/>
shouldn't be able to bej Ff b<lb/>
ing an apology for crea ng<lb/>
appearance.<lb/>
The hang-up about il egalii<lb/>
even the most excited<lb/>
the press. Often the <lb/>
what's illegal, but whu<lb/>
largely, in a nostalgic<lb/>
high Watergate style<lb/>
persecuting the head<lb/>
Emergency Management ?<lb/>
caught him attend s<lb/>
fundraiser courtes) FEMA<lb/>
suiting firm, which la<lb/>
cv tor the cost. He a<lb/>
with him, first class,<lb/>
to conferences in Rom<lb/>
Tel Avi and Mexico (<lb/>
What I wonder is u<lb/>
firm can charge you and 52.00<lb/>
entertain a public scrvani<lb/>
seems to spend half his<lb/>
class to world glamoui<lb/>
parently that's perfectly OK.<lb/>
it's not a political fundraisc<lb/>
leaves his wife at home<lb/>
Don't lose heart, sleazemongers Nc<lb/>
one is forced to become a p<lb/>
no politician asserts his right<lb/>
when the local paper shows up<lb/>
photograph him leaving church ii<lb/>
family. Of course investigative ze<lb/>
go too far. But there's more dangei<lb/>
it won't go far enough, denying us<lb/>
information we need to hold our lei<lb/>
to account and ? not incidentally - de<lb/>
nying us the innocent pleasure of wal<lb/>
ching the mighty brought low<lb/>
?. I?4. I nurd hnimm s??lK?ie Ik<lb/>
I'M SERJOUS, JJ -tVE APPLIEP<lb/>
TO THE BABY POC COLLEGE OF<lb/>
PHYSICIANS, THE FINEST NEWMEP<lb/>
SCHOOL IN All OF HAITI'<lb/>
AND I PONT WANT TO SOUNP<lb/>
COCKY OR ANYTHING, BUT I HAVE<lb/>
EVERY REASON TO BELIEVE THAT<lb/>
tM A SHOO-IN I <lb/>
IP0N7<lb/>
KWU.SR<lb/>
I'VE NEVER<lb/>
SEEN6RA0ES<lb/>
UKE THESE<lb/>
IDONT CARE, DEAN<lb/>
HONEY UENEEP HIM<lb/>
TDSHORE UP THE<lb/>
VOLLEYBALL SQUmO'<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
What Year Is It?<lb/>
Well, the elections are over, the<lb/>
ballots have all been cast and the duly<lb/>
elected government is solidly entrench-<lb/>
ed with popular support. The country<lb/>
is glowing with a growing sense of<lb/>
patriotism and national pride.<lb/>
The government leaders see a man-<lb/>
date from the people to elevate the<lb/>
country's position in world politics.<lb/>
Plans are being formulated to regain<lb/>
political control of neighboring coun-<lb/>
tries which are in the hands of their<lb/>
enemies.<lb/>
There is a growing militarism stem-<lb/>
ming from the humiliating results of<lb/>
past adventures and a "we're tired of<lb/>
being pushed around" mentality. The<lb/>
youth of the nation who are too young<lb/>
to remember the horrors of war sup-<lb/>
port this idea in increasing numbers.<lb/>
The Christian clergy are taking a<lb/>
growing role in politics. Officials and<lb/>
private citizens alike are having their<lb/>
religious leanings scrutinized<lb/>
Even the normally enlightened en-<lb/>
vironment of universitv campuses is<lb/>
swept up m the fervor as students<lb/>
eagerly embrace the regime and its<lb/>
ideals.<lb/>
The year. 1933. The place: Germany,<lb/>
trunk about it.<lb/>
David Beard<lb/>
Graduate, Maritime History<lb/>
and Underwater Research<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building.<lb/>
?<lb/>
rm<lb/>
B ELAINE PERU!<lb/>
vff Vknwr<lb/>
It's time to whip out<lb/>
Number 2 pencil and critiJ<lb/>
your favorite professor. J<lb/>
structor evaluations for<lb/>
1984-85 school year are <lb/>
ducted this eek<lb/>
A-cording to Angel<lb/>
inceUor for Acaden <lb/>
fairs, the evaluations are<lb/>
valuable experience for both<lb/>
Resolutl<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIA1<lb/>
The Student C<lb/>
?<lb/>
irolina ii<lb/>
i<lb/>
sion ? Nicaraf<lb/>
The resolul<lb/>
Chape. H kU!<lb/>
ed and fl u<lb/>
mast it an inv<lb/>
e. It pa<lb/>
?v " '<lb/>
Students As<lb/>
To Aid VVorl<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASM<lb/>
s.? ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
hu: gi<lb/>
during the annual I<lb/>
America Fa j<lb/>
I<lb/>
ccording Mil Ha<lb/>
coordina-<lb/>
ticipants fas t<lb/>
me<lb/>
they -<lb/>
Oxfam America.<lb/>
Hamei<lb/>
Amet<lb/>
vide self-he.p -J<lb/>
countries and aic in r-<lb/>
as digging wells, mal<lb/>
countries "indcpendei<lb/>
thar dcp?ndcm on forcer 2<lb/>
Money 1 fast w<lb/>
<lb/>
Post-Mortei<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
Election Dav<lb/>
Thi. m. at a "Pv<lb/>
I<lb/>
the Departme:<lb/>
Science and Historv The<lb/>
? ? m<lb/>
Charles P<lb/>
fessoi ? p<lb/>
I Nv re sboro, an <lb/>
Johns<lb/>
political science a vs<lb/>
Wilm b<lb/>
A look a -<lb/>
Election Da '<lb/>
Thursd.i<lb/>
Morten lie N ind N<lb/>
tional Elections"  ed b<lb/>
the Departments of P.<lb/>
Science and History The<lb/>
will be the as<lb/>
forums<lb/>
Charles P:<lb/>
lessor of pohtica<lb/>
I NC-Greenshoro. and v<lb/>
Johnston, ass. ssot<lb/>
political <lb/>
Wilmington, will ia:rne<lb/>
broad<lb/>
Republican<lb/>
and the<lb/>
OtTlFT CUTLET OUTLET OU<lb/>
1<lb/>
a Belvoir<lb/>
S Factory Outlel<lb/>
c<lb/>
5 &amp; Fi<lb/>
Get reach for<lb/>
PANA1<lb/>
Cordi<lb/>
ina<lb/>
5 HA VE YOU I TS<lb/>
I BETH<lb/>
O<lb/>
OUTLET OUTLET OITLET OITLFT<lb/>
fi ?-?<lb/>
V i<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057680_0005"/><lb/>
T<lb/>
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wimmim,<lb/>
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at agenc expense,<lb/>
Paris, BrueK<lb/>
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 oo to<lb/>
? and why he<lb/>
time Hitting first<lb/>
our spots0 But ap-<lb/>
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? mdraiser and he<lb/>
emongers. No<lb/>
? a politician and<lb/>
is right to priac<lb/>
ei shows up to<lb/>
g church with his<lb/>
stigative zeal can<lb/>
s more danger that<lb/>
igh, denying us the<lb/>
ed to hold our leaders<lb/>
identally ? de-<lb/>
? pleasure of wat-<lb/>
ight low.<lb/>
nra sndMair. la<lb/>
ar Is It?<lb/>
?'e in politics. Officials and<lb/>
alike are having their<lb/>
pous leanings scrutinized.<lb/>
the normally enlightened en-<lb/>
nment of un.versitv campuses is<lb/>
1f- up in the fervor as students<lb/>
eagerly embrace the regime and its<lb/>
The vear: 1933. The place: Germany.<lb/>
Think about it.<lb/>
David Beard<lb/>
Graduate, Maritime History<lb/>
and Underwater Research<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building.<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13, 1S?84<lb/>
Instructor Evaluations This Week<lb/>
Where Do You Stand, Prof?<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Staff V rtlCf<lb/>
It's time to whip out the<lb/>
Number 2 pencil and critique<lb/>
your favorite professor, as in-<lb/>
structor evaluations for the<lb/>
1984 85 school year are con-<lb/>
ducted this week.<lb/>
According to Angelo Volpe,<lb/>
vice chancellor for Academic Af-<lb/>
fairs, the evaluations are "a<lb/>
valuable experience for both the<lb/>
students and the teachers<lb/>
The students are given the<lb/>
chance to an opinion concerning<lb/>
classroom instruction while the<lb/>
instructor is given important<lb/>
feedback on lectures. "It is a way<lb/>
for the instructor to be made<lb/>
aware of things Volpe said.<lb/>
The evaluations are used as one<lb/>
piece of the total faculty evalua-<lb/>
tion process. Volpe said "after<lb/>
running the evaluation five or six<lb/>
times, you get a general<lb/>
baseline However, he also<lb/>
stressed that "other data" is im-<lb/>
portant when making personnel<lb/>
decisions.<lb/>
Only individual professors and<lb/>
department chairmen receive the<lb/>
results of the evaluation.<lb/>
The Teacher of the Year<lb/>
awards are given based solely on<lb/>
the evaluations. The two pro-<lb/>
fessors receiving the highest<lb/>
evaluation are given the award.<lb/>
Last year's recipients were Holly<lb/>
Matthews, Anthropology and<lb/>
Don Biehn, Theatre Arts.<lb/>
The Teaching Effectiveness<lb/>
Committee, headed by Belinda<lb/>
Lee, School of Nursing, is in the<lb/>
process of looking at the evalua-<lb/>
tion form and the possibility of<lb/>
modifying it.<lb/>
The evaluation forms are<lb/>
distributed every year, alter-<lb/>
nating spring and fall semesters.<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
SI90 Abortion from 13 to 18 ecks at addi-<lb/>
tional cost Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 832-0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 1-800-532-5384) between 9AM and<lb/>
5PM weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
f17WMtMof?o?Sr.<lb/>
Resolution Passed Concerning Invasion<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Nt?s f dllor<lb/>
The Student Government<lb/>
legislature at the University of<lb/>
North Carolina in Chapel Hill<lb/>
passed a resolution last week pro-<lb/>
posing that classes be called off in<lb/>
the event of a United States inva-<lb/>
sion of Nicaragua.<lb/>
The resolution also asked for<lb/>
Chapel Hill businesses to be clos-<lb/>
ed and flags to be flown at half-<lb/>
mast if an invasion were to take<lb/>
place. It passed by a vote of 11-0,<lb/>
with two members abstaining.<lb/>
The 25-member council re-<lb/>
quires a minimum of 13 students<lb/>
for quorom. Five members left<lb/>
the council meeting in an attempt<lb/>
to break the quorom, but the<lb/>
members remaining were suffi-<lb/>
cient for the resolution to pass.<lb/>
ECU SGA President John<lb/>
Rainey said the vote was discuss-<lb/>
ed at this weekend's meeting of<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
Association of Student Govern-<lb/>
ments in Chapel Hill. He said<lb/>
several members of the UN-<lb/>
CASG, which is composed of<lb/>
SGA presidents from the 16<lb/>
schools in the UNC system, felt<lb/>
they would have protests on their<lb/>
campuses in the event of an inva-<lb/>
sion, but nothing on a "big<lb/>
scale<lb/>
"My personal feeling is that<lb/>
when the chief executive of this<lb/>
country does something, we have<lb/>
to support him in most cases<lb/>
Rainey said.<lb/>
"I don't agree with that (the<lb/>
resolution). You need to look at<lb/>
the whole picture before you start<lb/>
making statements like thaj he<lb/>
added.<lb/>
Students Asked To Fast<lb/>
To Aid World Hunger<lb/>
Supply Store between 10 a.m.<lb/>
and 3 p.m. Thursday. In addi-<lb/>
tion, a table will be set up<lb/>
Wednesday to provide informa-<lb/>
tion about the fast and Oxfam<lb/>
America. Donations will also be<lb/>
taken at that time.<lb/>
Hamer added that a group of<lb/>
campus ministers will be holding<lb/>
a campus-wide fast at the same<lb/>
time to provide money for those<lb/>
suffering from the drought in<lb/>
Ethiopia.<lb/>
"The fast is scheduled so close<lb/>
to Thanksgiving for a reason<lb/>
Hamer said. "We need to be<lb/>
mindful of a lot of people who<lb/>
don't have enough to eat<lb/>
B JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Sc?! Ha .i<lb/>
ECU students are being asked<lb/>
to help provide food for the<lb/>
hungry through their own fasting<lb/>
during the annual Oxfam<lb/>
America Fast for World Hunger<lb/>
this Thursday.<lb/>
According to Mike Hamer,<lb/>
coordinator for the fast, par-<lb/>
ticipants fast for one or two<lb/>
meals and then donate the money<lb/>
the would have spent on food to<lb/>
Oxfam America.<lb/>
Hamer said the money Oxfam<lb/>
America receives is used to pro-<lb/>
vide self-help in many different<lb/>
countries and aid in projects such<lb/>
as digging wells, making the<lb/>
countries "independent rather<lb/>
than dependent on foreign aid<lb/>
Money for the fast will be col-<lb/>
lected in front of the Student<lb/>
Post-Mortem<lb/>
Forum<lb/>
Scheduled<lb/>
A look at what happened on<lb/>
Flection Day will be discussed<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at a "Post<lb/>
Mortem on the N.C. and Na-<lb/>
tional Elections" sponsored by<lb/>
the Departments of Political<lb/>
Science and History. The forum<lb/>
will be the last in a series of three<lb/>
forums.<lb/>
Charles Prsyby, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of political science at<lb/>
IN(-Greensboro, and W. Lee<lb/>
Johnston, associate professor of<lb/>
political science at UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington<lb/>
A look at what happened on<lb/>
Flection Day will be discussed<lb/>
Thursday at 7:30 p.m. at a "Post<lb/>
Mortem on the N.C. and Na-<lb/>
tional Elections" sponsored by<lb/>
the Departments of Political<lb/>
Science and History. The forum<lb/>
w ill be the last in a series of three<lb/>
forums.<lb/>
Charles Prsyby, associate pro-<lb/>
fessor of political science at<lb/>
UNC-Greensboro, and W. Lee<lb/>
Johnston, associate professor of<lb/>
political science at UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington, will examine the<lb/>
broad implications of the<lb/>
Republican landslide in the state<lb/>
and the nation.<lb/>
OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUT O<lb/>
H<lb/>
O<lb/>
?<lb/>
H<lb/>
O<lb/>
Miss M.S.O. Pageant<lb/>
There will be a meeting of all you ladies in-<lb/>
terested in becoming contestants for the Miss<lb/>
M.S.O. Pageant. The meeting will be held on<lb/>
Wednesday Nov. 14, 1984 in Mendenhall Room<lb/>
242. Crowning of Pageant Queen will take place<lb/>
at the 1st Annual Dr. Martin Luther King Jr. Ball,<lb/>
on January 12, 1985. The winner will repre-<lb/>
sent the M.S.O. for such events as Balls,<lb/>
Homecoming, etc. All serious minded young ladies<lb/>
please come out and support an organization thats<lb/>
working for you!<lb/>
SSQghtclub<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Wednesday Night<lb/>
Greenville's Newest Ladies<lb/>
Lock Out<lb/>
All Ladies Free<lb/>
Free Draft &amp; Wine<lb/>
75CHighballs<lb/>
9:00 to 10:30<lb/>
After 10:30 First 50 guys get in for $1.00<lb/>
Added Attraction:<lb/>
The Female Dorm With The Most Members Present<lb/>
At 12:00 Wins A Free Social With All The Trimm-<lb/>
ings.<lb/>
Beau's is a private dub for members A guests only<lb/>
All ABC Permits. Memberships available at the door.<lb/>
LAMES<lb/>
The ECU<lb/>
RUGBY TEAM<lb/>
will serui ou<lb/>
free DRAFT<lb/>
VMM<lb/>
until KPM<lb/>
AM)<lb/>
There is free<lb/>
VAN PICK UP<lb/>
75X<lb/>
Ever Wed.<lb/>
TWO,(cowl them) 2 KEGS<lb/>
will be given away to the<lb/>
Sororit with the biggest-<lb/>
turnout!<lb/>
557Q<lb/>
I6p4() Rock<lb/>
Funk&amp;<lb/>
Beach<lb/>
DRAWING COMING SOON!<lb/>
for SlOO gift certificate AND a $50 certificate<lb/>
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Dont Forget! Evm TWvkv tM.KC and the C.O.H. hnn? voo FREE BKF.R ALL NIGHT plus H<lb/>
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PMA'f CLUB FOfl Mt Mb H 4 GufcSIS<lb/>
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Thurs &amp; Fr. M<lb/>
loms sTbqo ?<lb/>
SPOUTS WCAN lr &amp; ?VA ?'WCAU<lb/>
Located BcMMMfl B?1h?l &amp; Tarhoro on Hny 64<lb/>
Hours 9 S Mon Sat We Accept Vrva &amp; Mastercard<lb/>
We Also Wholesale<lb/>
loooiK logs<lb/>
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Located ia 0M GrmttU Sckoni Homc<lb/>
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Get ready for cool days ahead<lb/>
PANAMA JACK ORGINAL'S<lb/>
Cordinates &amp; 1 st Quality, also good irregulars<lb/>
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Ladies name brand jog suits Reg. $29.99 NOW $10.99<lb/>
Misses jog wear Reg.14.99 NOW $7.99<lb/>
HA VE YOU VISITED OUR NEW STORE ON HWY. 64<lb/>
BETWEENBETHAL &amp; TARBORO?<lb/>
OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET OUTLET<lb/>
KINGSTON<lb/>
PLACE<lb/>
The most exclusive address in Greenville.<lb/>
Completely furnished and accessorized<lb/>
with the finest interior appointments and<lb/>
exceptional amenities for the serious stu-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
It's a very special condominium com-<lb/>
munity. Private, convenient, and available<lb/>
now for rent or purchase.<lb/>
? Rent: $150.00 per month per student<lb/>
(75Cmore per day than the dorm)<lb/>
? Purchase: Under $60,000 about Vi the price per<lb/>
square foot than the other student<lb/>
condominiums.<lb/>
Please stop by our office at<lb/>
2820 E. 10th St. anytime<lb/>
between 9am-6pm MonFri.<lb/>
10am-5pm Sat.<lb/>
Call for an evening or Sunday appointment.<lb/>
Call 757-1971 for more information<lb/>
ALL units are 2 bedrooms, 2 and 2 Vi baths.<lb/>
1088 square feet, 2 floor plans available.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057680_0006"/><lb/>
I HI EAS1 CAROI INKS<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
NOVEMBER 13.1?W '?t <lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Columbia Spends X-mas In India<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
James Fox and Jud Dais in a scene from A Passage to India, a deepl personal slorj of love and class struggle in 1928 India.<lb/>
Columbia Pictures heralds the<lb/>
1984 season with the long-awaited<lb/>
return of a master filmmaker to<lb/>
the screen, with the arrival of a<lb/>
kindly alien to our planet and with<lb/>
the reunion of a pair of talents<lb/>
who promise ten times the laughs<lb/>
this Christmas.<lb/>
Oscar-winner David Lean<lb/>
returns to filmmaking after a<lb/>
14-year absence with A Passage to<lb/>
India, an emotional and deeply<lb/>
personal story of love and class<lb/>
struggle in 1928 India. Based on<lb/>
the classic novel by E.M. Forster,<lb/>
Judy Davis stars as a young<lb/>
English woman caught between<lb/>
the allure of the exotic India<lb/>
lifestyle and her own strict upbr-<lb/>
inging. Written and directed by<lb/>
Lean and shot on location in India<lb/>
and England, the film also stars<lb/>
Dame Peggy Ashcroft, Sir Alec<lb/>
Guinnes, Victor Banerjee and<lb/>
James Fox. John Brabourne and<lb/>
Richard Goodwin produced. A<lb/>
Passage to India premiers in three<lb/>
cities on Dec. 14 and opens in ad-<lb/>
ditional markets throughout Jan.<lb/>
Also opening on Dec. 14 is<lb/>
John Carpenter's Starman, a<lb/>
romantic adventure with Jeff<lb/>
Bridges starring as an alien who<lb/>
comes to earth and clones the<lb/>
form of the recently deceased hus-<lb/>
band of an attractive young<lb/>
widow, played by Karen Allen.<lb/>
The tv.o embark on a cross<lb/>
country chase, pursued by oern-<lb/>
ment officials and end up, much<lb/>
to their surprise, falling deeply in<lb/>
love. Directed by John Carpenter,<lb/>
the film also stars Charles Martin<lb/>
Smith and Richard Jaeckel. Larry<lb/>
J Franco produced and Barry<lb/>
Bernardi co-produced from a<lb/>
screenplay by Bruce A Lans and<lb/>
R a y n o 1 d Gideon. Michael<lb/>
Douglas is execume producer.<lb/>
Then, on Dec. 21, Dudley<lb/>
Moore and director Blake Ed-<lb/>
wards reunite for the romantic<lb/>
comedy Micki &amp; Maude The<lb/>
team who last scored such a huge<lb/>
hit with 10 no join to tell the<lb/>
story of one man's frenied at-<lb/>
tempt to have the best of both<lb/>
worlds as his wife and his<lb/>
girlfriend become pregnant at the<lb/>
same time. Ann Reinking stars as<lb/>
Moore's wife, a successful lawyer<lb/>
who is too busy to give him the<lb/>
one thing he desperately wants<lb/>
a child. Amy Irving stars as the<lb/>
sweet and vulnerable cellist vuh<lb/>
whom Moore has an affair anj<lb/>
ends up marryingalso. Richard<lb/>
Mulligan also stars in the film,<lb/>
produced by Tony Adams from a<lb/>
screenplay by Jonathan Reynolds<lb/>
Jonathan D. Krane and Lou An-<lb/>
tonio are executive producers.<lb/>
Vacations: Coping With Eating Disorders<lb/>
B LEIGH COHN<lb/>
Mom students look forward to holiday vacations as a joyful time<lb/>
foi reunions and large family meals; but, for people with eating<lb/>
disorders, these instead may be times for confrontations, lies, and<lb/>
painful anxiety. Bulimia, which is characterized b binge purge<lb/>
behavior, and anorexia nervosa, a less common but related condi-<lb/>
tion of self-siarvation, are dangerous epidemics affecting between<lb/>
2 to 33 percent of college-aged women (also man) men). Lnder or-<lb/>
dinary circumstances, their lives are dominated by low self-esteem,<lb/>
g.nerahed fear, and obsessive thoughts about food. During the<lb/>
holidays, however, these feelings are intensified. With a wetl-<lb/>
ihought-oul plan and plenty of motivation, these individuals can<lb/>
use this time ot: to start a program tor recoverv.<lb/>
Although the underlving causes varv, eating disorders typically<lb/>
begin tor psychological reasons and become addictive. Most cases<lb/>
women with unrealistically high expectations of achievement,<lb/>
especially concerning their own appearance and weight. The initial<lb/>
bingo might be triggered by specific events, such as moving away<lb/>
from home, rejection by a lover, or family pressures. The behavior<lb/>
?arts as a way of dieting or in reaction to a failed diet. It<lb/>
becomes a numbing, drug-like coping mechanism that provides ins-<lb/>
tant relief for emotional pain or boredom. Bulimics often binge on<lb/>
eeral thousand calories after eating what they feel to be one bite<lb/>
too many at a meal. Since they have eaten more than they<lb/>
"should" anyway, they go ahead and binge, knowing that they will<lb/>
later force themselves to vomit or abuse laxatives. These purges<lb/>
confuse body signals causing extremely low blood sugar levels, elec-<lb/>
trolyte imbalances, and cravings for more sugary foods. This cycle<lb/>
perpetuates itself, dangerously upsets normal digestion, and fur-<lb/>
ther complicates the original psychological reasons for hinging.<lb/>
Lindsev Hall, who cured herself after nine years of bulimia, has<lb/>
co-written three booklets on this subject, which ate used in more<lb/>
than 500 colleges and universities She writes in her first booklet,<lb/>
Eat Without hear, "1 hinged up to foul and five times a dav after<lb/>
the third year. IThere were very few days ?? ru My vision<lb/>
often became blunv and 1 had intense he i . What used to be<lb/>
passing dizziness and weakness al ime walking<lb/>
into doorjams and exhaustion vl. ? r and I was<lb/>
often constipated. I arge blood I appeared in the back oi mv<lb/>
mouth. Mv teeth were a rness ' The rcseai I in which her<lb/>
third booklet. Heating Bulimia. i based, documents other bulimics<lb/>
who were hospitalized, had miscarriages, and ? ent more than 20<lb/>
years struggling ith t?vd. Between seven and nine die due to car<lb/>
diac arrest, kidney failure, r in paired metaboli<lb/>
Dr. lean Rubel. president ol Anorexia N. : Related<lb/>
Eating Disorders (ANRED), a non-profit oi ation which<lb/>
serves as a national clearing-house oi infoi d re! rrals,<lb/>
observes that college students comm til fal I fo<lb/>
pro-<lb/>
blems, "Students are vulnerable to a cycl of stress i nt in the<lb/>
structure of the school year rhere is a se ' m home and<lb/>
all that is familiar, anxiety resulting from having to make new<lb/>
friends and learn one's wav round campus, plus classwork and<lb/>
studies which pile pressure on top ol stress. I1 the while women<lb/>
are being vigilant about presenting to the world an immaculate,<lb/>
thin appearance. Many students resort to disordered eating in ef-<lb/>
forts to gam some peace and release.<lb/>
"That student returns home, perhaps still preoccupied with pro-<lb/>
blems at school, to find a different set of pressures and expecta-<lb/>
tions awaiting. To further complicate matters, holidays are tradi-<lb/>
tionally times of feasting. Foi someone who is already tcnitied of<lb/>
weight gain, who is craving rich food after a period of dieting, the<lb/>
prospect of spending time around large amounts of easily available<lb/>
food is frightening indeed<lb/>
Students with food obsessions can use the holiday break from<lb/>
school to begin to get better, though recovery is rarelv quick or<lb/>
easy. Dr. Rubel recommends that students be aware of the<lb/>
pressures awaiting them at home and make detailed plans for how<lb/>
to cope with them. They should set reasonable goals foi<lb/>
themselves, such as planning non-food related activities, perhaps<lb/>
by setting a limit for weight gain, or avoiding specific incidents that<lb/>
may trigger binges. She adds, "If you do slip back into a food<lb/>
behavior, remind yourself it does not mean vour plan is not effec-<lb/>
tive. It merely shows you a place to make some revisions so you can<lb/>
more easily achieve your goals<lb/>
Most who are cured find that the commicment to ecrtme hefrer is<lb/>
made easier with the important first step of confiding in someone<lb/>
who can help. Vacation lime may provide the perfect setting<lb/>
getting support from friends or family members, who are often<lb/>
understanding and compassionate, despite the sufferer's fears ol<lb/>
rejection. However, even with the help of loved ones, overcoming<lb/>
bulimia or anorexia nervosa may require professional therapy and<lb/>
medical treatment. Without proper attention, the behavior does<lb/>
not suddenly end and can continue for a lifetime.<lb/>
Lindsev Hall's bulimia developed into a daily habit during her<lb/>
college years, and now she regularly speaks to students who are<lb/>
struggling with food. She emphasizes her success at overcoming<lb/>
bulimia rather than dwelling on her suffering, "I am now able to<lb/>
enjoy growing, touching, tasting, smelling, and eating food<lb/>
without the temptation to binge Ms. Hall asserts, "the best<lb/>
Christmas present that people with eating disorders can give<lb/>
themselves is to make a devoted effort to end their food<lb/>
obsessions<lb/>
Lei$M C ihn hj pu?il nrrr bookieti jnd tt:urea titn .f . - - ? a<lb/>
Theatre Festival Opens<lb/>
On Friday and Saturday, Nov.<lb/>
16 and 17, the ECU Department<lb/>
if Theatre Arts will host Region I<lb/>
of the North Carolina Secondary<lb/>
School Theatre Festival in<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Twelve one-act plays will be<lb/>
presented throughout the two<lb/>
days. Immediately following each<lb/>
performance there will be a criti-<lb/>
que by two adjudicators. At the<lb/>
conclusion of the festival on<lb/>
Saturday a number of awards will<lb/>
be presented, including Best Ac-<lb/>
tor and Actress, Distinguished<lb/>
Achievement in Directing, and<lb/>
two plays will be selected to go on<lb/>
to the state-wide festival set for<lb/>
December in Greensboro.<lb/>
The production schedule for<lb/>
Friday, Nov. 16, is:<lb/>
2 p.m. Plymouth High School ?<lb/>
"Mike's Case"<lb/>
3 p.m. Garner Senior High<lb/>
School ? "The Passion of<lb/>
Amoroso"<lb/>
4 p.m. South I enoir High School<lb/>
? "Hospital"<lb/>
5 p.m. Plymouth High School ?<lb/>
"Crawling Arnold"<lb/>
The production schedule for<lb/>
Saturday, Nov. 17, is:<lb/>
9 a.m. Williamston High School<lb/>
? "Identity Crisis"<lb/>
10 a.m. Beddingfield High<lb/>
School ? "Cowboy's Capers"<lb/>
11 a.m. John T. Hoggard High<lb/>
School ? "Take Five"<lb/>
3 p.m. Beddingfield High School<lb/>
? "Roomers"<lb/>
4 p.m. John T. Hoggard High<lb/>
School ? "The Martydom of<lb/>
Peter Ohey"<lb/>
5 p.m. West Brunswick High<lb/>
School ? TBA<lb/>
The general public is invited to<lb/>
attend all activities throughout<lb/>
the festival and admission is free.<lb/>
For further information, call<lb/>
757-6390.<lb/>
Ugly Bartender Sought<lb/>
By TINA MAROSCHAK<lb/>
Featare Ullor<lb/>
Ever wonder who the ugliest<lb/>
bartender in Greenville is? Well,<lb/>
you will soon have your say in the<lb/>
matter because beginning Nov.<lb/>
19, the Panhellenic Council will<lb/>
be sponsoring ECU's first<lb/>
"Ugliest Bartender Contest<lb/>
Panhallenic President Cindy<lb/>
Fairbanks explained that various<lb/>
Greenville bars (about 13), will<lb/>
each sponsor one bartender.<lb/>
From Nov. 19-21, jars with the<lb/>
bartenders' pictures will be set up<lb/>
at the Student Supply Store. On<lb/>
Nov. 25 they will be moved to the<lb/>
various bars until Dec. 3. For a<lb/>
donation, you can cast your vote.<lb/>
Jars will be collected on Dec. 3<lb/>
and the winner will be announced<lb/>
after votes are tabulated.<lb/>
All proceeds are going to<lb/>
Muscular Dystrophy. When ask-<lb/>
ed whether the winner would be<lb/>
offended by the "honor Fair-<lb/>
banks replied that the contest is<lb/>
"just a fun thing. This is free<lb/>
publicity for the guys as well<lb/>
she added.<lb/>
The winner will be announced<lb/>
in the Dec. 4 issue of The East<lb/>
Carolinian.<lb/>
Fialkowska<lb/>
Pianist Visiting Campus<lb/>
Janina Fialkowska<lb/>
The ECU Artists Series Com-<lb/>
mittee continues its 1984-1985<lb/>
season with the appearance of<lb/>
one of the few female pianists of<lb/>
the new generation with an inter-<lb/>
national career. Janina<lb/>
Fialkowska will perform her con-<lb/>
cert in Wright Auditorium on<lb/>
Monday, Nov. 19 at 8 p.m.<lb/>
Fialkowska is fast becoming<lb/>
the standard by which other<lb/>
youthful pianists are measured.<lb/>
She was a top prize winner in the<lb/>
First International Arthur<lb/>
Rubenstein Master Piano Com-<lb/>
petition in September 1974 in<lb/>
Israel. Among the world-<lb/>
renowned pianists who judged<lb/>
the competition was Arthur<lb/>
Rubenstein himself. Maestro<lb/>
Rubenstein was so impressed<lb/>
with Miss Fialkowska's masterful<lb/>
playing that he became her men-<lb/>
tor, and subsequently advisor<lb/>
and friend.<lb/>
Since the Rubenstein competi-<lb/>
tion, the Canadian-born pianist<lb/>
has appeared with a great number<lb/>
of orchestras across Canada,<lb/>
Mexico and the United States.<lb/>
She also played extensively in<lb/>
Europe and Israel.<lb/>
Born to a Canadian mother<lb/>
and a Polish father in Montreal,<lb/>
Fialkowska started studying the<lb/>
piano with her mother at the age<lb/>
of five. Eventually she entered<lb/>
the Ecole Musique Vincent d'ln-<lb/>
dy, studying under the tutelage of<lb/>
Mile. Yvonne Hubert. The<lb/>
University of Montreal awarded<lb/>
her both Bachelor and Master of<lb/>
Music degrees by the time she was<lb/>
17.<lb/>
The next year, 1969, her career<lb/>
was jolted by two events: winning<lb/>
first prize in the Radio Canada<lb/>
National Talent Festival and her<lb/>
journey to Paris to study with<lb/>
Yvonne Lefebure.<lb/>
In 1970 she entered the<lb/>
Juilliard School of Music in New<lb/>
York, where she studied with<lb/>
Sascha Gorodnitzki and has since<lb/>
become his assistant.<lb/>
Aside from her successful<lb/>
recital and orchestral perfor-<lb/>
mances, Fialkowska has made<lb/>
two highly acclaimed recordings<lb/>
for RCA Records: an all-Lizst<lb/>
record and an all-Chopin record.<lb/>
The Lizst record prompted the<lb/>
critic from Grammophone<lb/>
Magazine to remark, "she is a<lb/>
pianist in several thousand<lb/>
Tickets for the Janina<lb/>
Fialkowska concert are available<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center;<lb/>
telephone 757-6611, ext. 266. The<lb/>
Ticket Office is open Monday-<lb/>
Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Ticket<lb/>
prices are $4 for ECU students<lb/>
and a guest, $4 for Youth (age 14<lb/>
and under), $8 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff and $8 for the public.<lb/>
All tickets will be $8 at the door.<lb/>
Group rates are also available.<lb/>
CABBAGE PATCH DOLL FOR<lb/>
SALE Girl doll not an in ra1<lb/>
SI25 Call 758 9516 or 758 9691<lb/>
FOR RENT: 2 bedroom apt <lb/>
from ECU $310 per month ana I<lb/>
deposit Aa laoie Dec I 758<lb/>
after 4 p ??<lb/>
FOR SALE: CuSton<lb/>
table $2 K - ig s ze -vaterped<lb/>
$200 Call 758 0668 after 5<lb/>
FOR SALE Elecl<lb/>
case rea Fender pi<lb/>
Pre &amp;'? $350 C<lb/>
after 5p "?<lb/>
ME<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE NEEDS ROOMMATE<lb/>
snare furn shed I<lb/>
washer drfer Pi<lb/>
bath, 5 min .<lb/>
mor"<lb/>
nights<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
Preferably gr-<lb/>
mature a JuH<lb/>
Two bedroom I <lb/>
and jl ? es Ca<lb/>
757 9965<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE vVANTED<lb/>
Rent $150 a<lb/>
utilities G&amp;<lb/>
Prefer someone for<lb/>
mer sessions Ca<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
to share I<lb/>
'ownhouse, SI62 5C r,<lb/>
Available Jan 1 Ca<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED<lb/>
room in ver co-<lb/>
located across Strer- -<lb/>
? " - split 5 ways C<lb/>
758 747C<lb/>
THANKSGIVING IN K E A Yi<lb/>
See A Chorus L re C<lb/>
Call 752 4013 0' 756 -<lb/>
"LOWEST PRICES II<lb/>
OneY<lb/>
Warra<lb/>
Against Factory De<lb/>
Parts Of The<lb/>
Spring Hinge<lb/>
Metal Spring Hinge FRAMES I<lb/>
With Single Vision Lenses<lb/>
irVith Line Bifocals<lb/>
CftjvKl<lb/>
I<lb/>
M<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
<lb/>
?ii"<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
? -<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
p-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057680_0007"/><lb/>
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ka v Mien<lb/>
ark ?" a cross<lb/>
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Barn<lb/>
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Bru? I ans and<lb/>
aie<lb/>
A Mit Hit<lb/>
ai<lb/>
Mh<lb/>
- is<lb/>
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wska<lb/>
ting Campus<lb/>
Hubert The<lb/>
? si mtreal awarded<lb/>
noth Bachelor and Master oi<lb/>
leg le time she was<lb/>
The ear, 1969, her career<lb/>
edl two events: winning<lb/>
firs' prize in the Radio Canada<lb/>
National Talenr Festival and her<lb/>
irne tc Paris to studv with<lb/>
nne Lefebure.<lb/>
?"0 she entered the<lb/>
Juilliard School of Music in New<lb/>
le York, where she studied with<lb/>
r Sascha Gorodnitzki and has since<lb/>
become his assistant.<lb/>
Aside from her successful<lb/>
recital and orchestral perfor-<lb/>
mances, Fialkowska has made<lb/>
two highly acclaimed recordings<lb/>
for RCA Records, an all-Lizsi<lb/>
record and an all-Chopin record.<lb/>
The Lust record prompted the<lb/>
critic from Grammophone<lb/>
Magazine to remark, "she is a<lb/>
pianist in several thousand "<lb/>
Tickets for the Janma<lb/>
Fialkowska concert are available<lb/>
at the Central Ticket Office in<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center;<lb/>
telephone 757-661 l.ext. 266. The<lb/>
Ticket Office is open Monday-<lb/>
Friday, 11 a.m. to 6 p.m. Ticket<lb/>
prices are $4 for ECU students<lb/>
and a guest, $4 for Youth (age 14<lb/>
and under), $8 for ECU faculty<lb/>
and staff and $8 for the public<lb/>
All tickets will be $8 at the door<lb/>
Group rates are also available<lb/>
?<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
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CABBAGE PATCH DOLL FOR<lb/>
SALE: Girl doll not an imitation<lb/>
v !5 Call 758 9516 or 758 9691<lb/>
FOR RENT 2 Dedroom apt 2 blocks<lb/>
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deposit Available Dec I 758 0329<lb/>
?"er 4pm<lb/>
FOR SALE: Custom built drawing<lb/>
?able $200 King size waterbed<lb/>
$200 Call 758 0868 after 5 p.m.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Electric bass guitar m<lb/>
ise red Fender precision special<lb/>
pre amp $350 Call 758 4807<lb/>
5pm<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
MALE NEEDS ROOMMATE: to<lb/>
ire furnished trailer. Air Cond ,<lb/>
vasher dryer Private room and<lb/>
ith 5 mmutes from campus $150<lb/>
u1 i ties included. 756 5I97<lb/>
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ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Preferably graduate student or<lb/>
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FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
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use, $162 50 8.  utilities<lb/>
Ava able Jan 1. Call 756 7287<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED. Pr vate<lb/>
n very comfortable house<lb/>
j'ed across street from campus.<lb/>
? ? es split 5 ways Caii after 7.<lb/>
470<lb/>
THANKSGIVING IN NEW YORK?<lb/>
sL ne! Discount tickets<lb/>
Can '56 6398<lb/>
COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE: Word Processing. Spelling<lb/>
electronically checked Term<lb/>
papers and dissertations $1 75 per<lb/>
page, paper included Call Mark<lb/>
after 5 at 757 3440<lb/>
TYPING NEEDED?: If you need so<lb/>
meone to type papers of any kind for<lb/>
you at reasonable rates, please call<lb/>
756 8934 after 5 p.m<lb/>
HELP WANTED: $60 per HUN<lb/>
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PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER-<lb/>
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location will be accepting applica<lb/>
tions Tues.&amp; Wed from 8 to 5 at the<lb/>
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Memorial Drive Apply in person<lb/>
please.<lb/>
STEREO SYSTEM PROBLEM?:<lb/>
Absolutely "no charge" for repair<lb/>
estimates at the Tech Shop Call<lb/>
757 ' nineteen eighty We thought<lb/>
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LOST Three gold rings with dia<lb/>
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Wri te. Reward. Call 752 8883<lb/>
"LOWEST PRICES IN TOWN"<lb/>
One Year<lb/>
Warranty<lb/>
Against Factory Defects On AI<lb/>
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Spring Hinge Frames<lb/>
Metal Spring Hinge FRAMES By L'AMY tr f .<lb/>
With Single Vision Lenses '<lb/>
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PERSONAL<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA: Happy hour at<lb/>
Blue Moon every Wednesday from 5<lb/>
to 10. Take a study break and come<lb/>
party<lb/>
SECRET POET: Your words did not<lb/>
go unnoticed! Reveal yourself to me,<lb/>
as I revealed myself to you. Noire<lb/>
Dentelle<lb/>
TO MY LOVE: Happy Anniversary!<lb/>
Thirteen is our lucky number<lb/>
because we are different! I love you!<lb/>
Diamonds are forever! J'taime!<lb/>
Pumpkin.<lb/>
PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS:<lb/>
Thanks to all of you that made it to<lb/>
the TRIM PARTY You're the JAM<lb/>
MINESTI<lb/>
THE PHI TAUS: Would like to thank<lb/>
David Brooks and Bill Dawson for<lb/>
an excellent pig cookin exhibition!<lb/>
That was good eatin! I think we im<lb/>
pressed a few of those Northern<lb/>
Boys too<lb/>
JEFF CLONINGER: Let'sgo ahead<lb/>
and make plans to go see the Red<lb/>
skins and the Dolphins in the Super<lb/>
bowl! Or maybe we can go to Dallas<lb/>
and watch it with the rest of the<lb/>
Cowboys! They CHAFE ME<lb/>
TRICIA: Drenched by "The Wave<lb/>
I deserved both the birds and the<lb/>
words. Sorry you had to call, you<lb/>
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Cole Slaw &amp; Hush Puppies $3 99<lb/>
105 Airport Rood 758-0327<lb/>
TYPING: Professional typistwith 15<lb/>
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1 BM typewriterCall 756 3660<lb/>
ENT 1<lb/>
1 GREENVILLE STUD<lb/>
1 LAUNDRYSERVICE:Let I<lb/>
m Greenville Student LaundrySer I<lb/>
1 vice pick up,wash, dry,fold, E<lb/>
1 hang, as we1 as deliveryour<lb/>
1 laundry! DryCleaning too!Call ?<lb/>
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DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Tues. Nov. 13.1984 ? jotil 1 00am<lb/>
Adm. $! 50 18 yrs. $1 00<lb/>
lOCDraft All Nite<lb/>
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DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Wed.Nov. 14. 1984 8:30til 1:00am<lb/>
Adm. SI.50 18 yrs. Si.00<lb/>
lOCDraft All Nite<lb/>
(let the Fresh Alternative. Enjoy<lb/>
a frsh sakh 'or jndinch, made<lb/>
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Stamp out styrofood at Subway.<lb/>
Get Ok ifjfi- -litew 2tuv<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057680_0008"/><lb/>
I HI EASTCAROI 1N1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
NOl MBER M. 14<lb/>
! . ?<lb/>
Southern Miss<lb/>
Stuns ECU, 31-2 7<lb/>
Bv RANDVMEWS<lb/>
Sports Mih.f<lb/>
Reserve quarterback Andrew Anderson<lb/>
ompleted seven of 14 passes and two<lb/>
i, hdowns to lead Southern Miss to a 31-27<lb/>
cton over ECU Saturday in licklen<lb/>
adium.<lb/>
nderson had only completed one pass<lb/>
re season prior to ECL's season<lb/>
tie, but aginst the Pirates he connected<lb/>
with I yneal Alston for scoring strikes,<lb/>
e ladder being the game winner with 4:28<lb/>
taining in the fourth quarter.<lb/>
1 he Pirates dominated everv statistical<lb/>
tegory, most noticeably accumulating 505<lb/>
ds worth of total offense compared to on-<lb/>
216 yards for USM.<lb/>
EC U, however, was plagued by a school<lb/>
cord 14 penalties for 106 yards and a costly<lb/>
turnovers. Return specialist Andrew<lb/>
ion also added spark to an unimpressive at-<lb/>
k as he picked up 96 return yards, 66 of<lb/>
Inch came on a third quarter touchdown<lb/>
ha! narrowed the margin to 27-17.<lb/>
Although Emory gave credit to Southern<lb/>
iss tot what he called a "great comeback<lb/>
vas obviously upset with the officiating.<lb/>
ight the officials did a terrible job<lb/>
ion said. "They were the most prejudic-<lb/>
ii disciplined group I've ever seen<lb/>
?' ' ' 's lack lit regard for the rules also<lb/>
?.disciplined at times, but the<lb/>
s still seemed to have the game under<lb/>
when ihev forged to a 24-3 lead with<lb/>
aining in the first half. Pirate<lb/>
tick Ron Jones, however, fumbled<lb/>
ball on his 2S-vard line giving ISM a<lb/>
?pportunity to add a quick score<lb/>
t the <lb/>
n obliged, as it took the budding<lb/>
? e plays to guide his team into the<lb/>
! ' mchdown came on Ander-<lb/>
touchdown pass to Alston, this<lb/>
 17 yards out.<lb/>
i (ones allowed the Eagles to gel<lb/>
into the game just before the second<lb/>
tei had expired, he played a respectable<lb/>
' ill as he was starting in his first game<lb/>
irterback since Sept. 8.<lb/>
got the Pirates moving on thier first<lb/>
Pirates Set<lb/>
possession as Jimmy Walden broke loose for<lb/>
43 yards to quickly move the ball into USM<lb/>
territory. ECU continued their march<lb/>
towards the goal line with relative ease until<lb/>
they were called for holding and confronted<lb/>
with a thrid and seven. But Walden got free<lb/>
again, this time ripping off a 21-yard gain<lb/>
that gave ECU first and goal inside the five<lb/>
and set up a Reggie Branch touchdown<lb/>
plunge.<lb/>
The Pirates got on the board less than a<lb/>
minute later when Eagle starting quarter-<lb/>
back Tommy Compton fumbled the ball on<lb/>
his team's third play from scrimmage. ECU<lb/>
was unable to pick up a first down, but settl-<lb/>
ed for a Jeff Heath field goal to make it<lb/>
10-0.<lb/>
Mott returned the ensuing kickoff 46<lb/>
yards, but the Eagles could only manage to<lb/>
pick up one first down, settling for a field<lb/>
goal of thier own to narrow the margin to<lb/>
10-3.<lb/>
The Pirates then looked invincible as im-<lb/>
pressive running by senior fullback Reggie<lb/>
Branch and Walden enabled the Pirates to<lb/>
drive the length of the field on two con-<lb/>
secutive possessions and build what looked<lb/>
like an insurmountable 24-3 lead.<lb/>
USM's touchdown in the final minutes of<lb/>
the first half seemed to add life to the<lb/>
Southern Miss attack as the Eagles scored<lb/>
two straight touchdowns on Mott's punt<lb/>
return and a four-play. 74-yard drive that<lb/>
was highlighted by a 54-yard reception by<lb/>
Alston on a halfback-option pass.<lb/>
The Pirates picked up another Heath field<lb/>
goal along the way, but thai wasn't enough<lb/>
as another fumble spelled doom for the<lb/>
Bucs. Bubba Bunn coughed up the ball near<lb/>
midfieid with about six minutes remaining in<lb/>
the contest, setting up the Anderson to<lb/>
Alston game-winning touchdown.<lb/>
Eagle Coach Jim Carmodv called his<lb/>
team's victory the greatest comeback in the<lb/>
history of Sou!hern Miss since he's been<lb/>
associated with the university, while ECU<lb/>
closes out an extremely disappointing season<lb/>
at 2-9 ? the worst record for a Pirate foot-<lb/>
ball team since 1957 when they posted a 1-8<lb/>
record.<lb/>
Mlfe<lb/>
Pirate receiver Ricky Nichols goes up for a pass while being<lb/>
harrassed b a Southern Mississippi defender.<lb/>
The Pirates lost a heartbreaker<lb/>
at Ficklen stadium on Saturdav<lb/>
Defi<lb/>
to the Gulden Eagles 31-27<lb/>
to finish the season 2-9<lb/>
B RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
suff Wntrr<lb/>
?. year Lady Pirate basket-<lb/>
coach Emily Manwaring<lb/>
could enjoy considerable success<lb/>
in her season debut as two ECAC<lb/>
South all-conference players as<lb/>
well as five other letter winners<lb/>
return from last year.<lb/>
Sylvia Bragg returns for her<lb/>
junior season after leading the<lb/>
team with a 13.4 scoring average<lb/>
The Lady Pirate basketball team is set to defend its ECAC-South title when they swing into action this<lb/>
month. New head coach Emily Manwaring returns two all-conference players and five lettermen.<lb/>
and earning all-conference<lb/>
honors in just her second year.<lb/>
Bragg was second on the team<lb/>
in both assists with 54, and steals<lb/>
with 49. She led the Lady Pirates<lb/>
in scoring in 13 of 29 games, and<lb/>
is in 10th place on the career scor-<lb/>
ing list with 646 points in only<lb/>
two seasons.<lb/>
Junior forward Lisa Squirewell<lb/>
also made all-conference as a<lb/>
sophomore. She led the Lady<lb/>
Pirates in rebounding, pulling<lb/>
down 6.6 rebounds per game. She<lb/>
also had the highest field goal<lb/>
percentage on the team at 50.3<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
Also returning is senior An-<lb/>
nette Phillips, who started every<lb/>
game last year and set a school<lb/>
record for minutes played with<lb/>
1,091. Phillips was the team's se-<lb/>
cond leading rebounder and<lb/>
played every minute in 12 games.<lb/>
Letter winner Anita Anderson<lb/>
also returns for her senior season<lb/>
after leading the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
blocked shots last year. AndeF-<lb/>
son, hampered by injuries last<lb/>
year, showed what she can do<lb/>
against James Madison last<lb/>
season when she scored 21 points<lb/>
and pulled down 14 rebounds.<lb/>
Sophomore letter winner Jody<lb/>
Rodriquez was also bothered by-<lb/>
injuries during the first half of<lb/>
last season. But over the last ten<lb/>
games she averaged 9.3 points-<lb/>
per-game, and had her best<lb/>
outing in the championship game<lb/>
of the ECAC-South tourney<lb/>
when she poured in a career high<lb/>
17 points.<lb/>
Crystal Grier, a sophomore<lb/>
who started the last three games<lb/>
of last season, lettered last year<lb/>
and is an excellent defensive<lb/>
player. If she doesn't start, she'll<lb/>
surely be a factor coming off the<lb/>
bench.<lb/>
Lorraine Foster also returns<lb/>
after missing last season. Foster<lb/>
lettered two seasons ago and is<lb/>
one of the flashier players on the<lb/>
team.<lb/>
Alma Bethea is one of four<lb/>
freshmen on this years team.<lb/>
While at Goldsboro, the six-foot<lb/>
Bethea led her high school team<lb/>
to the final four all three years,<lb/>
winning the state championship<lb/>
her sophomore year. She earned<lb/>
all-conference honors and was an<lb/>
honorable mention All-America<lb/>
her senior year.<lb/>
Monique Pompih is a 5-10<lb/>
freshman from Fayettcviile.<lb/>
Pompih led Reid Ross to the state<lb/>
championship last year, while be-<lb/>
ing selected L PI and AP all-state,<lb/>
as well as honorable mention All-<lb/>
America.<lb/>
Freshman Shelly Ridgeway of<lb/>
Rio Grande, N.J is a 5 guard<lb/>
who led her Middle Township<lb/>
High School team to the South<lb/>
Jersey State Championship. She<lb/>
letterd all four years in high<lb/>
school and was a member of the<lb/>
all-south Jersey and Cape Atlan-<lb/>
Title<lb/>
League a<lb/>
Via iVatras<lb/>
guard from N<lb/>
Maine Watras ?a<lb/>
All-An<lb/>
n in 1984 She<lb/>
female a:hie:e oi the yeai<lb/>
Mount Desert Island H -<lb/>
and was the first p<lb/>
female to score 1,000<lb/>
points at her scl<lb/>
This year's adv. Pirate<lb/>
should have a very gen<lb/>
their are a numbei<lb/>
players, and man ol :r<lb/>
versatile enough to play<lb/>
than one posit<lb/>
ECU Lady Netters<lb/>
Finish Fall At 5-2<lb/>
Bv TONY BROWN<lb/>
sufr Writer<lb/>
Greatly improved play by the<lb/>
ECU women's tennis team during<lb/>
the just concluded fall portion of<lb/>
the season resulted in a 5-2 dual<lb/>
meet record, along with a cham-<lb/>
pionship in the six-team Eastern<lb/>
Collegiate Invitational Tourna-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have already<lb/>
gained two more victories than<lb/>
the entire season last year and<lb/>
more than doubled last year's fall<lb/>
season total wins. They are the<lb/>
only intercollegiate team at ECU<lb/>
with a winning mark so far this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
"Every player greatly improv-<lb/>
ed said Coach Pat Sherman.<lb/>
"Everyone played to their full<lb/>
potential. I'm very, very pleased<lb/>
with their play<lb/>
Every player came through the<lb/>
fall season with a winning singles<lb/>
record, led by Ann Manderfield<lb/>
at the number two seed with an<lb/>
8-2 mark and Janet Russell as the<lb/>
top seed with a 5-3 record. They<lb/>
both shared a 6-1 record in<lb/>
doubles. Kris Sammons was<lb/>
undefeated in four mat hes as the<lb/>
number three seed.<lb/>
Karla Hoyle helped the Pirate<lb/>
cause in the lower seeds at 7-3,<lb/>
while Sheila Feeley posted a 5-2<lb/>
and Ty Myers a 5-3 record as the<lb/>
third fourth seeded players. Susie<lb/>
Brown ended a; 4-3  id Susai<lb/>
Montjov 3-2.<lb/>
Feeley and Mver- c<lb/>
for a 6-2 number two d lib .<lb/>
mark, with Myers adding<lb/>
more with Karla Hoyle<lb/>
Janet Russell's 5-3 pel<lb/>
mance was outstanding i- view <lb/>
her number one seeded pos<lb/>
She amassed her wins against the<lb/>
best competition Ed faced. The<lb/>
value of her performance mav be<lb/>
keenly felt in the spring portion<lb/>
of the '8485 season. "Rusve<lb/>
may not be able to play in the spr-<lb/>
ing stated Coach Sherman<lb/>
"She is in the nursing program<lb/>
and may find it necessarv to con-<lb/>
centrate on her studies<lb/>
"This is one reason the depth<lb/>
we showed in the fall could really<lb/>
mean a lot to us in the spring If<lb/>
Russell is unable to play, each<lb/>
person will have to move up one<lb/>
seed<lb/>
Coach Sherman is looking for<lb/>
a good spring, but some dark<lb/>
clouds may have an effect on the<lb/>
team's play. In addition to<lb/>
Russell's possible absence, two<lb/>
players previously expected to re-<lb/>
join the team after academic dif-<lb/>
ficulties will not be elgibte in the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"We are expecting continued<lb/>
progress in '85 Sherman said<lb/>
"The tough schedule will help us<lb/>
improve for the spring.<lb/>
?eB?w?<lb/>
? ?ii<lb/>
r<lb/>
Third R<lb/>
B JF ANNETTE RO I H<lb/>
As fall semester nas headed in-<lb/>
to the the home stretch, so have<lb/>
intramural fall activities The<lb/>
most recent intramural cham-<lb/>
pionship was held on the football<lb/>
fields as four co-rec team ? ?<lb/>
around for all-campus h<lb/>
Playing m the fina<lb/>
game a- season favorite<lb/>
Regiment and the thrnnjtors.<lb/>
The Eliminators lived up t<lb/>
name as they knocked<lb/>
Spoilers in semit.<lb/>
Schoonover<lb/>
HAMPTON<lb/>
NASCAR Grand N<lb/>
Terry Schoono ?  .<lb/>
his second stax<lb/>
tracks, uas kille I<lb/>
wreck during the <lb/>
500 at v anta<lb/>
Raceway<lb/>
NASCAR -r ?<lb/>
W'ilhan laid Sen<lb/>
Royal Palm Beach. 1<lb/>
nounced dead<lb/>
Georgia BaptK H<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
-Tn this pi<lb/>
hospital listed<lb/>
massive head<lb/>
juries Willian<lb/>
Earnhardt woi<lb/>
The last drivei<lb/>
cuit was Rick) ?<lb/>
during a 125-mile qu<lb/>
TRAVEL WIT<lb/>
-<lb/>
March 4 1985 - .<lb/>
Sail fi<lb/>
Co :<lb/>
:<lb/>
i<lb/>
Lav<lb/>
CaJJ or coat b: QUIXOTE<lb/>
?JC3<lb/>
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JMttSi<lb/>
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uofo$ jioh jddf;<lb/>
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asd auoAidAa aij<lb/>
noA po aiuos di<lb/>
REEBOX<lb/>
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 LARGE QU AN <lb/>
ALL SIZES-X<lb/>
Also, New SuppI<lb/>
ladies trunks, along wi<lb/>
or aerobicwear <lb/>
' our Aerobics Hcaa<lb/>
t ft<lb/>
H.L. HO<lb/>
210 E.FIFTH ST.<lb/>
7<lb/>
V<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057680_0009"/><lb/>
i hn Ti "Hgi?i-i<lb/>
??T? ?'?W? I - lev PTlA? La<lb/>
the Golden Ragles 31-27<lb/>
tmih ihf season 2t.<lb/>
Title<lb/>
a 5-11<lb/>
1 irl<lb/>
. reer<lb/>
more<lb/>
dy Netters<lb/>
all At 5-2<lb/>
M-<lb/>
ined<lb/>
ma<lb/>
lull<lb/>
sed<lb/>
<lb/>
Ian<lb/>
I<lb/>
lev<lb/>
the<lb/>
?i .<lb/>
mding in . ? ?<lb/>
-<lb/>
1  the<lb/>
iced The<lb/>
erformance ma be<lb/>
Pring rtion<lb/>
? ? ?" on. "R .<lb/>
no? beabletopla.<lb/>
?<lb/>
in the nursing ;<lb/>
and ma find<lb/>
ne reason the depth<lb/>
e showed in the fall could reallv<lb/>
'  us in the spring It<lb/>
k ? ' unable to plav. each<lb/>
person will have to mi<lb/>
Sherman is looking for<lb/>
a good spring, but some dark<lb/>
clouds may have an effect on the<lb/>
team's play n addition to<lb/>
Russell's possible absence t.<lb/>
players previously expected to re-<lb/>
join the team after academic dif-<lb/>
ficulties will not be elgible in the<lb/>
spring.<lb/>
"We are expecting continued<lb/>
progress ,n '85 Sherman said<lb/>
The tough schedule will help us<lb/>
improve for the spring.<lb/>
T<lb/>
f<lb/>
Third Regiment Wins Crown<lb/>
THfc EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBI K )? 1984<lb/>
ByJEANNETTEROTH<lb/>
JMIWiMa<lb/>
As fall semester has headed in-<lb/>
to the the home stretch, so have<lb/>
intramural fall activities. The<lb/>
most recent intramural cham-<lb/>
pionship was held on the football<lb/>
fields as four co-rec teams kicked<lb/>
around for all-campus honors.<lb/>
Playing in the final co-rec<lb/>
game was season favorite Third<lb/>
Regiment and the Eliminators.<lb/>
The Eliminators lived up to their<lb/>
name as they knocked out the<lb/>
Spoilers in semifinal action. No.<lb/>
1 ranked Third Regiment<lb/>
defeated Chaos, winning their<lb/>
half of the single elimination<lb/>
bracket. The final game was<lb/>
plagued with rough play as<lb/>
members of both teams sustained<lb/>
injuries. Third Regiment stan-<lb/>
dout Ginger Rothermel fell vic-<lb/>
tim to a broken finger during a<lb/>
passing play as the competitive<lb/>
spirit ran high on the field.<lb/>
Despite these few dark moments,<lb/>
Third Regiment was still able to<lb/>
pull the plug on the Eliminators.<lb/>
The Regiment was able to once<lb/>
again clinch an IRS champion-<lb/>
ship in co-rec flag football.<lb/>
Racquetball closed out its<lb/>
season crowning open and in-<lb/>
termediate champions. In the in-<lb/>
termediate division, David Patten<lb/>
came out on top with Raymond<lb/>
Song taking open division top<lb/>
honors.<lb/>
In volleyball action, women's<lb/>
sorority division Sigma Sigma<lb/>
Sigma lead the league with two<lb/>
wins. Independent division<lb/>
Spikers, Destitutes, Figments and<lb/>
Enforcers, head up the ladies<lb/>
Schoonover Dies At Atlanta Track<lb/>
HAMPTON, Ga. (UPI) ?<lb/>
NASCAR Grand National driver<lb/>
Terry Schoonover, making only<lb/>
his second start on the major<lb/>
tracks, was killed Sunday in a<lb/>
wreck during the Atlanta Journal<lb/>
500 at Atlanta International<lb/>
Raceway.<lb/>
NASCAR spokesman Chip<lb/>
Williams said Schoonover, 32, of<lb/>
Royal Palm Beach, Fla was pro-<lb/>
nounced dead at Atlanta's<lb/>
Georgia Baptist Hospital at 4:27<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
"In this pronouncement, the<lb/>
hospital listed the cause as<lb/>
massive head and internal in-<lb/>
juries Williams said after Dale<lb/>
Earnhardt won the 328-lap race.<lb/>
The last driver to die on the cir-<lb/>
uit was Ricky Knotts in 1980<lb/>
during a 125-mile qualifying race<lb/>
at Daytona International Speed-<lb/>
way. The last driver to be killed<lb/>
in a wreck in what NASCAR calls<lb/>
an official event was Tinv Lund<lb/>
in 1975 at Talladega, Ala!<lb/>
Schoonover's death was the<lb/>
first driver fatality at the 1<lb/>
12-mile track since it opened in<lb/>
1960. The only other death at the<lb/>
speedway occurred March 19,<lb/>
1979 when Dennis Wade,<lb/>
jackman for Dave Watson, was<lb/>
hit on pit road.<lb/>
The wreck occurred on lap 129<lb/>
when Schoonover's car smacked<lb/>
the outside wall after coming off<lb/>
turn two, careened across the<lb/>
track, and slammed, driver's side<lb/>
first, into the inside dirt embank-<lb/>
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front end was demolished as<lb/>
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Gamecocks Defeat FSU;<lb/>
Cavaliers Destroy Wolfpack<lb/>
B Hill MIKHUI<lb/>
Milt Wrllrr<lb/>
Here's hov East Carolina's op-<lb/>
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Florida Stale: South Carolina,<lb/>
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South Carolina: See Florida State<lb/>
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Tulsa: The Golden Hurricanes<lb/>
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Fast Tennessee State: Western<lb/>
Carolina defeated the Buccaneers<lb/>
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