<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057681_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(ftarnltntatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.24<lb/>
Thursday November 15, 1984<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Prop Malfunction<lb/>
Causes Theater Fire <lb/>
Bs HAROLD JOYNKR<lb/>
A prop malfunction caused a<lb/>
101 fire Tuesday night at<lb/>
Auditorium, interrup-<lb/>
he show Ozma of Oz: A<lb/>
? Of Time for approximately<lb/>
minutes.<lb/>
defective prop, a fog-<lb/>
du  g machine, ignited and<lb/>
e oi burlap scenery on<lb/>
iccording to Scotl Parker,<lb/>
al manager of the<lb/>
"As soon as the<lb/>
? n caught fire Parker<lb/>
age curtain im-<lb/>
. el came down and the<lb/>
row extinguished the<lb/>
n 30 seconds<lb/>
500 people<lb/>
i lated from the theatre.<lb/>
'here was no im-<lb/>
"I. was stan-<lb/>
I re Parker said.<lb/>
have an extensive fire<lb/>
e and I must sav<lb/>
? smooth 1 com-<lb/>
ge crew for putting<lb/>
I so quickly Exhaust<lb/>
turned on and the<lb/>
riich was covered with<lb/>
er material, was<lb/>
rvf, Paiker<lb/>
ired, the au-<lb/>
litted into the<lb/>
er explained<lb/>
He assured<lb/>
thing would<lb/>
? would<lb/>
who were<lb/>
onstage when the fire was being<lb/>
extinguished, received injuries<lb/>
from the chemicals in the fire ex-<lb/>
tinguisher. Ginger Oxendine,<lb/>
head of props, suffered eye irrita-<lb/>
tions from the chemical fog. Julie<lb/>
Ziesler, a member of the running<lb/>
crew, inhaled a small amount of<lb/>
the chemical agent and complain-<lb/>
ed of congestion and coughing.<lb/>
Both were treated in Pitt County<lb/>
Memorial Hospital Emergency<lb/>
Room and released, Oxendine<lb/>
said. "There was so much of the<lb/>
chemical in the air she said,<lb/>
"and Julie had an allergic reac-<lb/>
tion to it<lb/>
House Manager Tracy Delius<lb/>
said she was not sure at first if the<lb/>
fire was a part of the play. "I<lb/>
knew something was wrong,<lb/>
though. So, 1 called backstage<lb/>
and they instructed me to call the<lb/>
Greenville Fire Department she<lb/>
said. Ushers Chris Bridges and<lb/>
Betty Liverman also thought the<lb/>
fire was in the play, but when the<lb/>
alarms went off, they helped<lb/>
escort the audience outside in an<lb/>
orderly fashion. "Everything<lb/>
went really smooth Bridges<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The company which manufac-<lb/>
tures this particular prop would<lb/>
be contacted Parker said. "This<lb/>
is something we're not taking<lb/>
lightly at all. We have pulled all<lb/>
special effects from the for-<lb/>
thcoming plays, so there will not<lb/>
be any more problems<lb/>
This was the first incident of<lb/>
this sort at McGinnis since its re-<lb/>
cent renovation, Parker noted.<lb/>
eport Warns Of<lb/>
"iu cation Pitfalls<lb/>
t promi-<lb/>
bnnging the<lb/>
from shortfalls in<lb/>
ind high schools,<lb/>
! a report warning<lb/>
education has serious<lb/>
ging from high<lb/>
seriously<lb/>
lildings and<lb/>
ts abandon-<lb/>
learning, curricular<lb/>
quality of<lb/>
,iorale and<lb/>
no longer<lb/>
to our expectations<lb/>
mel's repo said.<lb/>
prepared for<lb/>
ation Secretary T.H. Bell,<lb/>
resigned, and the<lb/>
nstitute oi Education,<lb/>
panel called for drastic<lb/>
higher education, in-<lb/>
D full vears of liberal<lb/>
for all bachelor's<lb/>
: ecipients, even if it means<lb/>
ng undergraduate pro-<lb/>
eyond the usual four<lb/>
tnel also recommended<lb/>
 faculty and resources<lb/>
en and sophomores,<lb/>
g advisement for<lb/>
and creating ways to<lb/>
ients' learning.<lb/>
ng signals" of the<lb/>
. ng conditions of higher<lb/>
include declining stu-<lb/>
? rmance from 1964 to<lb/>
I in il of 15 major subject<lb/>
. of the Graduate Records<lb/>
minations, especially in areas<lb/>
liring high verbal skills such<lb/>
history, political science,<lb/>
ion and English literature.<lb/>
e cannot blame these<lb/>
ds entirely on the decline in<lb/>
preparation of entering col-<lb/>
ge students the report said.<lb/>
Part of the problem is what<lb/>
ippens to students after they<lb/>
itriculate in college<lb/>
The report, "Involvement in<lb/>
I. earning: Realizing the Potential<lb/>
of American Higher Education<lb/>
prepared by the Study Group<lb/>
the Conditions of Excellence<lb/>
American Higher Education,<lb/>
chairman, Kenneth P. Mor-<lb/>
er, is professor of higher<lb/>
education and public administra-<lb/>
tion at Pennsylvania State<lb/>
University.<lb/>
The panel recommended two<lb/>
full years of liberal education to<lb/>
strengthen undergraduate degree<lb/>
programs. "Students are not like-<lb/>
ly to accumulate in four years<lb/>
both the generalized and special<lb/>
knowledge necessary for first-<lb/>
rate performance as profes-<lb/>
sionals the report said.<lb/>
Another "warning signal" the<lb/>
panel found was that only half of<lb/>
the students who start college<lb/>
ever receive bachelor's degrees.<lb/>
The panel also said that "one out<lb/>
of eight highly able high school<lb/>
seniors does not choose to attend<lb/>
college<lb/>
The panel sees the increasing<lb/>
number of undergraduates ma-<lb/>
joring in narrow specialities and<lb/>
the decreasing number of<lb/>
bachelor's degrees awarded in<lb/>
arts and sciences as problems.<lb/>
The percentage of students ma-<lb/>
joring in the arts and sciences fell<lb/>
from 49 percent in 1971 to 36 per-<lb/>
cent in 1982. The report said<lb/>
nearly half of the 1,100 majors<lb/>
offered by American colleges and<lb/>
universities are in occupational<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
The panel recommended that<lb/>
liberal education be the central<lb/>
core in undergraduate education,<lb/>
a shift from the specialization<lb/>
now prominent. "College cur-<lb/>
riculum has become excessively<lb/>
vocational in its orientation, and<lb/>
the bachelor's degree has lost its<lb/>
potential to foster the shared<lb/>
values and knowledge that bind<lb/>
us together as a society<lb/>
The percentage of freshmen in-<lb/>
tending to become professors<lb/>
plummeted from 1.8 percent of<lb/>
entering students in 1966 to 0.2<lb/>
percent in 1982. "This 89 percent<lb/>
decline bodes ill for the future of<lb/>
higher education the report<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The report criticized schools<lb/>
for favoring assertive students<lb/>
when they should give more at-<lb/>
tention to passive students. That<lb/>
passivity, the report said, is a<lb/>
warning sign of a lack of involve-<lb/>
ment. The panel recommended<lb/>
that student involvement be in-<lb/>
creased.<lb/>
The goals and objectives<lb/>
students should achieve in college<lb/>
should be outlined clearly, the<lb/>
report said. "If we want students<lb/>
See STUDENTS, Page 3<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Registration Proof<lb/>
Requirements Relax<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
He'll Get You Every time<lb/>
(old weather certainlv does not keep thisampus Policeman from<lb/>
finding secret illegal parking places on campus, such as this one<lb/>
behind the Theatre Arts Building.<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Newi Ullof<lb/>
When the Solomon Amend-<lb/>
ment, which requires men to pro-<lb/>
duce proof of draft registration<lb/>
before receiving financial aid.<lb/>
became law, it caused a great deal<lb/>
of controversy, as well as<lb/>
headaches for college financial<lb/>
aid administrators.<lb/>
Initially, colleges and univer-<lb/>
sities were required to verify that<lb/>
students had registered for the<lb/>
draft before distributing financial<lb/>
aid.<lb/>
Students are currently required<lb/>
to sign a form stating they have<lb/>
registered or are exempt from<lb/>
registering, as is the case with<lb/>
females or those who are not in<lb/>
the specified age category.<lb/>
The Department of Education<lb/>
had initially planned on enforc-<lb/>
ing stricter policies during the<lb/>
1985-86 school year, requiring<lb/>
financial aid offices to prose that<lb/>
only those men registered for the<lb/>
draft had received financial aid.<lb/>
However, because a recent<lb/>
AmongJW.C. Farmers<lb/>
survey by the Department of<lb/>
Education shows that most stu-<lb/>
dents signing the forms provide<lb/>
correct information, it was decid-<lb/>
ed that stricter enforcement of<lb/>
the rule was unnecessary.<lb/>
"We have to do it this sear,<lb/>
but we won't have to do it for the<lb/>
next two years, after that the<lb/>
government will be making<lb/>
periodic checks said Robert<lb/>
Boudreaux, director of Student<lb/>
Financial Aid at ECU.<lb/>
Boudreaux said that, although<lb/>
the process of certifying draft<lb/>
registration has been time-<lb/>
consuming, there have not been<lb/>
any real problems at ECU.<lb/>
"We've never had a student<lb/>
refuse to sign he said,<lb/>
"although we have had two com-<lb/>
plaints, one of which was from a<lb/>
female<lb/>
Boudreaux added that,<lb/>
although the problem of certify-<lb/>
ing registration will no longer rest<lb/>
on the university, male student<lb/>
will still have to prove registra-<lb/>
tion to the government before<lb/>
receiving financial aid.<lb/>
Chairmanship Plans Cause Concern<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) ? North<lb/>
Carolina tobacco and peanut<lb/>
farmers say they are worried Sen.<lb/>
Jesse Helms, R-N.C, will break<lb/>
his campaign promise to stay on<lb/>
as chairman of the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Committee.<lb/>
Helms has refused comment<lb/>
since his reelection on speculation<lb/>
that he will leave the agriculture<lb/>
post to take the Foreign Relations<lb/>
Committee chairmanship. His<lb/>
aides say he has not mentioned<lb/>
any change in his plan to stay on<lb/>
the Agriculture Committee.<lb/>
Farmers worried about losing<lb/>
Helms' clout on the committee<lb/>
have deluged at least two state<lb/>
farming organizations with<lb/>
telephone calls, officials said<lb/>
Wednesday.<lb/>
"Helms made a promise that<lb/>
he would stav in the Senate<lb/>
Agriculture Committee and that<lb/>
was a factor in my voting deci-<lb/>
sion said T. Carlton Blalock,<lb/>
executive vice president of the<lb/>
North Carolina Tobacco<lb/>
Grower's Association.<lb/>
W.B. Jenkins, assistant to the<lb/>
president of the state Farm<lb/>
bureau Federation, said he trusts.<lb/>
Helms will remember North<lb/>
Carolina farmers in making a<lb/>
decision.<lb/>
"We do feel if he or the ad-<lb/>
ministration feel that it was in the<lb/>
best interest of the country that a<lb/>
move did come about, he would<lb/>
resist it until he was sure the<lb/>
Senate Agriculture Committee<lb/>
still had someone there who sup-<lb/>
ports our philosophy, including<lb/>
himself Jenkins said.<lb/>
"If Sen. Helms continued to<lb/>
stay on the committee and still<lb/>
have an active role, then the con-<lb/>
cern would not be as great if these<lb/>
programs were turned over to a<lb/>
chairman" who doesn't support<lb/>
tobacco and peanut programs, he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Some political observers have<lb/>
speculated that Helms might take<lb/>
over the Foreign Relations Com-<lb/>
mittee and create a tobacco sub-<lb/>
committee he would head.<lb/>
"That's one alternative that's<lb/>
more acceptable than simply-<lb/>
leaving the Senate Agriculture<lb/>
Committee completely. It would<lb/>
be a new precedent Blalock<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Since Senators can serve as<lb/>
chairman of onl) one committee,<lb/>
Helms has come under mounting<lb/>
pressure from New Right groups<lb/>
to take the powerful foreign rela-<lb/>
tions post.<lb/>
Helms has reportedly said he<lb/>
would lake the foreign relations<lb/>
job rather tnan see it go to a<lb/>
moderate such as Sen. Charles<lb/>
Mathias, R-Mc<lb/>
Helms is vacationing until the<lb/>
Nov. 28 Senate Republican<lb/>
Caucus, when the committee<lb/>
leadership issuewill be decided .an<lb/>
aide said.<lb/>
Significant Pell Grant Errors Revealed<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Vt?l Htlor<lb/>
According to a recent report in<lb/>
The Chronicle of Higher Educa-<lb/>
tion, the Department of Educa-<lb/>
tion is planning to release a<lb/>
survey revealing that approx-<lb/>
imately $600 million in errors<lb/>
have been made in awarding S2.4<lb/>
billion in Pell Grants.<lb/>
The survey concentrates on<lb/>
students during the 1982-83<lb/>
school year and says more<lb/>
students were overpaid than<lb/>
underpaid. Some of the errors<lb/>
were due to incorrect financial<lb/>
status information on the grant<lb/>
application, the report stated.<lb/>
The study is especially signifi-<lb/>
cant because the law authorizing<lb/>
the program will expire in 1985,<lb/>
and is therefore undergoing<lb/>
rev iew.<lb/>
A 1982 study stated that almost<lb/>
30 percent of the grants<lb/>
disuibuted in 1980-81 wefe incor-<lb/>
rectly awarded, and almost 70<lb/>
percent of all recipients received<lb/>
incorrect awards.<lb/>
"The concern for quality con-<lb/>
trol in the Pell Grant program<lb/>
has increased with its extraor-<lb/>
dinary growth in both dollar<lb/>
volume and student participation<lb/>
levels the report said.<lb/>
"A lot of students are putting<lb/>
false information on the forms<lb/>
said ECU Director of Student<lb/>
Financial Aid Robert Boudreaux,<lb/>
who said he belies es the figure of<lb/>
70 percent is correct.<lb/>
Boudreaux added that valida-<lb/>
tion of selected applications has<lb/>
been required during the last<lb/>
several vears, and this "s<lb/>
things down terrifically" in the<lb/>
financial aid office.<lb/>
The government routinely<lb/>
audits applications, requiring<lb/>
students to provide signed copies<lb/>
of their parents" tax returns. a<lb/>
well as their own.<lb/>
In addition, Bondreaux said,<lb/>
"we question it if something<lb/>
doesn't look right. It slows the<lb/>
process down, but I don't know<lb/>
of any better way to do it<lb/>
Can 7 Let Go<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT ? ECU Photo Lao<lb/>
A new trend of fall tanning has begun on campus even though summer<lb/>
has left Greenville. But this student doesn't care and the tunes of<lb/>
beach music continue to play in her head.<lb/>
<lb/>
w- ? ?<lb/>
mmt<lb/>
mmmim ??? '<lb/>
amm?a0m?&amp;9mmm mL ? ? ? ??<lb/>
Ti<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0002"/><lb/>
I Ml EAST CAROLINIAN SOW MM R 15. IW4<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
BKA<lb/>
Will Hold a mandatory meeting tor all<lb/>
members Thurs Nov 15 at 3pm n Raw I 101<lb/>
it you are unable to attend contact Lynn at<lb/>
757 O'Av or Michael at '57 1613<lb/>
International Student ASSOC<lb/>
Aftenon members There will be a very<lb/>
?mpor'anf mee'ng on Sat Nov 17th at 6<lb/>
p m room  Mendenhaii Student center<lb/>
Be 'hee'<lb/>
Rho Lambda Meeting<lb/>
AM members ot Rho Lambda GreeK Honor<lb/>
Soc ety have a meeting Thurs Nov 15 at<lb/>
4 30 .aura Sweets oftice in Cotton dorm<lb/>
Plans tor the house mother s fea a ill be<lb/>
discussed See you there'<lb/>
Lama Visits<lb/>
The Venerable K henpo ?.?"?' Rinpoche<lb/>
 . vef,reepubic,aiksnGeenv ue nexT<lb/>
week On Sun Nov 18. in room 2a ol<lb/>
sAendenhal S'u.iem ,pn!pi a' 1 30 p m Me<lb/>
a o'esent parf of The Four Noce<lb/>
rruttw Pa ? tne talk bethefc ?<lb/>
g n phi a' 'he same I me and p a I<lb/>
es Nov 20 a' 7 30 p m a the A son<lb/>
Aces Ciub House he a give, rteditation n<lb/>
stn ' m rttroduction ?o'he Mear of Bud<lb/>
Wllsl Pra lice Retuge aid Empowerment<lb/>
se es a a so be announced B.<lb/>
easv 1 oe' k nenpo Rinpocnehas OH a<lb/>
. eceiveo fne title Cnocje Lama ? superior<lb/>
0"aa Tiastei Me s p-ece-1 . abot ol<lb/>
the Karma r r v a -a Dh ar m ac h ak r e<lb/>
sAonas'e n Woodstock N<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
A members shoepresent<lb/>
-? -me on ou ? Bea. stonjhtl - <lb/>
gea' ? me De 'a Ze'a w r-??se hfl<lb/>
?? ? - the p g p . ? n on Sa' atBea s<lb/>
. el s ge' all he Grees -geer l' a a <lb/>
d? "s ? me!<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
The hi athers jl Anna S gma Pn are having<lb/>
a happy h0u' a' Grumpy s 'on.gnt The par<lb/>
tv nfl commences a' ' p m So come t0<lb/>
Gf jmpy s '0' al' n gn- rapo, hour pr ces on<lb/>
c tellers anc scper mugs<lb/>
NC Internship Program<lb/>
 - ' es are a.a ar  hM s<lb/>
?ymen1 a ?- Norm Car- -a State<lb/>
Agencies A a ce ar e o cos is foi<lb/>
a ma ors are aa atye s'a'e 3e ?<lb/>
plications shou a be impieted by ear , De<lb/>
Contact the Cooperal ?? ? itioi ?? <lb/>
Raw' 313 tor nto'ma'ion 'egarc inj tti s pi<lb/>
gram<lb/>
Poetry Forum<lb/>
The p?e'r- F rum ? ? eel Tht rs<lb/>
j'io ' - -? :8 Ve-aea ? ? I<lb/>
bi "g :oc es -? 'he r poems<lb/>
Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
- Brothers a'e eminoea ,f,a' r-e?-<lb/>
?  a be Mon a' Me-n.ena a'<lb/>
5c m " here will be ne " e s s'er anc pieoge<lb/>
? ee1 -g in s Son but a brothers anc ttle<lb/>
s se's anc pieoges are rem - jec ol 'ne r<lb/>
brethe- dinner -nis Tues n.gn- "p m a' tne<lb/>
Kingston Place Clubhouse, all ? 'tie SiSters<lb/>
ana pledges are asked to bring something<lb/>
The ne?' ftle s s'er p.eoge meet "g will be<lb/>
Sun Nov 25th at ?p.m a"c the nexl fit- <lb/>
sister meetinfl a ce Su- Dec : a' t t ?<lb/>
CADP<lb/>
There w be a CADP mee' nfl T-ls Nov<lb/>
15 at 4 p m - E'w " rrr 211 A n-eres'ec<lb/>
piease a"enc<lb/>
ECU Men's Flag football<lb/>
' e Fee s 115 and ne een a pe he : -<lb/>
the 16 '6 ot Nov Regis'er th s week a"c ne?'<lb/>
- 'he htramura OH ce room 204 Ver a<lb/>
3ym The lournamenl s sponsored by a<lb/>
campus :famps<lb/>
Beta Kappa Alpha Chapter<lb/>
The Be'a Kappa A,pna Chapter ot P na -i<lb/>
Va-ager-en' Assoc a'ion will hold a Geneva<lb/>
B-s ness meeting on TnurSday Nov 15 at 3<lb/>
p m in Raw '01 Dues will be collected sc<lb/>
have four neckoook nanoy<lb/>
Turkey Shoot<lb/>
AH ECu S'udents lacu'tr staH. and their<lb/>
dependents are welcome to enter the Turkey<lb/>
Shoot In bowing sponsored 0 the Studen"<lb/>
Union Recrea'ion Commttee on Thurs Nov<lb/>
15 from 7 10 p m n Vendenhan Studen<lb/>
Cen'er doa -g anes Entree tee 'S $2 per<lb/>
person Only 1 tyrkey per person me be<lb/>
won Get details trom the recreation centers<lb/>
m Mendenhall or call 757 611 ex's 239 or<lb/>
267<lb/>
Alpha Phi Big Brothers<lb/>
AM big brothers are reminded of our next<lb/>
meeting this Sun night at the house star'mg<lb/>
at 9 All money s due on th,s date T shirts<lb/>
are in and will be sold at this meeting<lb/>
Everone det n tev needs to try to attend<lb/>
this one so we can plan our party with the<lb/>
girls also little Sisters will be announced<lb/>
UGSC<lb/>
The united Greek and Social Counc.i would<lb/>
like to announce that they are having a nap<lb/>
py hour this Thurs night Nov 15, from<lb/>
9 until at the z Bus transportation will<lb/>
begm ?? v 30 a' Menoenhaii. and on the hin<lb/>
at 9 45 Cost i) tl 50 for students with i D. S2<lb/>
nonstudents there will oe F REE oeer trom 9<lb/>
mtil 12 Come and support the UGSC<lb/>
Phi Beta Lambda<lb/>
Phi Beta LambcM will hold its regular<lb/>
meeting on Wed Nov 14 at 4 p m m raw!<lb/>
341 Please plan to attend. Tom Wat mer<lb/>
chandise will be distributed<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
The Delta Sigma Phi fraternity will be<lb/>
holding happy hour at Grumpy's on Nov 16<lb/>
from 9pm to 1 a m All happy hour prices<lb/>
Come party with the best<lb/>
Sign Language Club<lb/>
We w'H be having a silent dinner this Thurs<lb/>
Nov 15 at the New Deli at 7 p m So come on<lb/>
out an enjoy a really great s.lent meal with<lb/>
us1 Hope to see you there<lb/>
Conservation film<lb/>
The film Garden of Eden, ' will be shown by<lb/>
thePamlico Tar River Foundation at 7 p m ,<lb/>
Mon, Nov 19 in the auditorium of the Willis<lb/>
Building (ECU Regional Development In<lb/>
stltute) The film, produced by the Nature<lb/>
Conservancy, makes a case for preservation<lb/>
of natural environments and the earth's gene<lb/>
pool The showing is free and open to the<lb/>
public<lb/>
NCIO<lb/>
The North Carolina Internship Office pro<lb/>
vdes paid summer intern positions for<lb/>
students with State Government Positions<lb/>
are available m a varet, of agent ies ick ated<lb/>
throughout the state Students will be paid<lb/>
13 73 per hour working during the period ot<lb/>
June 1 until Aug 1 These positions require<lb/>
early application and interested students<lb/>
should vontact the Co op office ear iy m Nov<lb/>
NASA<lb/>
interested in international Policy and<lb/>
Regulations AHectmg High Technology Ex<lb/>
porting' if so this position may be tor you<lb/>
NASA will be nterviewing on campus in<lb/>
Nov for Sprmg 1985 Contact the<lb/>
Cooperative Education Office 313 Rawi<lb/>
Building as soon as Possible<lb/>
Health and Human Services<lb/>
Opening tor spring semester n Atv<lb/>
DC Health anc Human Services Ott , ?<lb/>
'he Secretary Polii . and New n I II yes<lb/>
D v son for studen' with g id typing sk s<lb/>
a ' P"? ess ng desired bul I<lb/>
S'uden' will be ra neo to use woro pi n iss<lb/>
ng equipment if needed Tuition ar ?<lb/>
paid the semester following ea- I<lb/>
issigmenl Salary approx matei, V,<lb/>
000<lb/>
ASPA<lb/>
The Amernan Society for Personnel Ad<lb/>
ministra'ion will hold a meeting Thurs<lb/>
Nov 15 at 3 30 in Raw! 102 Guest speaker<lb/>
will be Joe High Human Resoure Manager<lb/>
from TRW E ver yone welcome1<lb/>
Delta Sigme Phi<lb/>
Just a reminder to all brothers, sisters, and<lb/>
pledges about our Thanksgiving dinner Sun<lb/>
Nm 18 at 6 30 p m at the house Come with<lb/>
a good appetite'<lb/>
Dance Contest<lb/>
Fri Nov 16 (984 Pi S gma Pi National<lb/>
Honor Fraternity and Papa Kat present the<lb/>
3rd annual dance contest All proceeds from<lb/>
Ihe 'a ? i mtesl will go to United Cerebal<lb/>
Pa s. There will b e a spe ,ai happy hour<lb/>
from 8 30 10 OO Please i ome on out ion us<lb/>
? or the fun<lb/>
Phi Kappa Tau<lb/>
All campus party w be Fi N . 16 ti<lb/>
pm Golden Beveragi a be I a an<lb/>
Domino wiibeiamrrnn SI donal be<lb/>
bougn II  jny brother ? s ? ? v 'he<lb/>
door Come by and party at the Pn Tau<lb/>
S?ta Kappa Alpha Chapter<lb/>
The tVrta Kappa Alpha Chapter of Financial<lb/>
Management Association win hold a General<lb/>
Butine meeting on Thursday Nov 15 at 3<lb/>
p m in Rawl 101 Dues will be collected so<lb/>
have your checkbook handy<lb/>
Fall 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/>
For those receiving the Masters Degree the<lb/>
fee pays for your cap and gown, but there is<lb/>
an extra fee of Sn 95 tor your hood<lb/>
ECU Surf Team<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<lb/>
9a m m Emerald Isle if you want to par<lb/>
ticipate There is a meeting this Thurs at<lb/>
8 30 m the Mendenhaii Coffeehouse Slides of<lb/>
the Fall Break trip to Hatteras will be<lb/>
shown Final plans will be made for the<lb/>
Thanksgiving trip to Florida also<lb/>
S4.00<lb/>
S4.00<lb/>
PIG PICKW<lb/>
at<lb/>
BEAU'S<lb/>
W the Delta Zeta's<lb/>
SAT. NOV. 17th<lb/>
1:00-7:00<lb/>
Partial Proceeds to Help lhe v.allaiulel School t-r the Deal<lb/>
Omega Psi Phi<lb/>
upsiion 2ta Chapter of Omega Ps PI<lb/>
fraternity at ECU will present t's tin .<lb/>
nua achievement da, program Sen a'<lb/>
Menoenhaii Student Center<lb/>
Chapter P'eS'rtent Ca- Puree ? s.i I<lb/>
the program s ntencft II<lb/>
s'udents and s ?  ichieve<lb/>
menl anc spec as ?<lb/>
The Nov 18 3 : g ? ? , anc<lb/>
open v the pub ? ' ? ?? sa : Mi<lb/>
the Ups ; ,<lb/>
fund racing pro e<lb/>
anc se'v ce " ga- 1 n s, I<lb/>
Phi Sigma Tau<lb/>
will be a Pi<lb/>
Club meeting this M No 19, at<lb/>
tbe ? rr.e .t t ? ns- Marsca 100 f Third<lb/>
he tor, I discussioi ?<lb/>
  ers k ar a'az<lb/>
? A 'K. ' S<lb/>
BYOI<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
am those nteresteo ? i a<lb/>
the Judicial branch of ? ?<lb/>
 led ? ? ? . ? ? a<lb/>
meeting C eaki<lb/>
.ucge J n" Ma' I<lb/>
re- ? a ? a . . ? ? ?. Ige's<lb/>
roie in the Jud - ten a. a<lb/>
 . i at 7<lb/>
feehouse located n Mendenhaii For more<lb/>
n can Mike Gardner 7S8 1640<lb/>
anon<lb/>
PROGRAM<lb/>
NObOdY CISC lliakGS ? Proqrammed automation<lb/>
Fine photography . ?2SZ?2L?r<lb/>
thlS SimpIC? plus mdnua m?de<lb/>
s- -n ? fully automatic flash with<lb/>
optional Speedlite 188A<lb/>
? Optional Power Winders A?<lb/>
and Motor Drive MA availably<lb/>
' f rapid sequence shoe1 ,<lb/>
? ? ides Canon USA In<lb/>
e ,t r mited warranty<lb/>
?? ; itral " : :<lb/>
IMPORTED<lb/>
CAR PARTS<lb/>
105 Greenville Blvd<lb/>
Across from Union Carbide,<lb/>
Greenville, NC,<lb/>
WE CARRY A COMPLETE LINE<lb/>
OF OEM PARTS<lb/>
&amp; ACCESS.<lb/>
-v<lb/>
V<lb/>
Students 10 Percent Off<lb/>
With Th,s AS<lb/>
Quality Parts at a Reasonable Price<lb/>
$219.9<lb/>
artcofeicro hop<lb/>
,18 SO?ITH COTAMCMe STRtt <lb/>
GR?ENVIHE. H C 1T93<lb/>
r2 0688<lb/>
This Way Up<lb/>
In Downtown Greenville<lb/>
Free Concert<lb/>
Cross<lb/>
Saturday Nov. 17<lb/>
Doors Open At 8:00 '<lb/>
Concert At 9:00<lb/>
Custom crafting<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Jewlery Repairs<lb/>
fair prices<lb/>
guaranteed work<lb/>
Brm. This Ad for<lb/>
1 2 Off<lb/>
14K C ham Repairs<lb/>
by Lcrs Jewlaty<lb/>
120 E. 5 th Street<lb/>
758-2127 10-5 TuesSat.<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
610 urecnnlk Blvd<lb/>
m-MD U HR<lb/>
24 hour Towing Scmce<lb/>
I -Haul Rentals<lb/>
AaUiMc<lb/>
ECl"<lb/>
Panhellenic Counc<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Ugliest Bartender Contest<lb/>
teatunny your favorite fron<lb/>
Sponsors:<lb/>
D any Is<lb/>
Grumpy s<lb/>
Pantama s<lb/>
Chicos<lb/>
Tree House<lb/>
hi bo Room<lb/>
Attic<lb/>
Beau s<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
Opnj House<lb/>
Grog s<lb/>
C.urrian s<lb/>
Vote At:<lb/>
Your favorite Bar<lb/>
Contest will run<lb/>
from Nov. 19th<lb/>
thru Dec. 3rd<lb/>
r<lb/>
If Killian's Irish Red<lb/>
is a ten,<lb/>
German beer is a nein.<lb/>
Now don't get us<lb/>
wrong The Crcrmans<lb/>
make some pretty fine<lb/>
beers But none of<lb/>
them slow roast their<lb/>
malt like we do<lb/>
So no German beer<lb/>
can boast the color,<lb/>
the character, the rich,<lb/>
incredibly smooth taste<lb/>
of'Killian's Red Ale<lb/>
So the next time<lb/>
you're about to order<lb/>
your favorite German<lb/>
beer, try a Killian's<lb/>
Red, instead<lb/>
And go from a nein<lb/>
to a ten<lb/>
"fljK<lb/>
Thill lAYVll<lb/>
k , j .?<lb/>
Something That You Will<lb/>
Always Treasure!<lb/>
Low Prices Available<lb/>
.9<lb/>
I<lb/>
a1<lb/>
rJfV<lb/>
&amp;H!<lb/>
sr<lb/>
L<lb/>
rvlnnraroD<lb/>
Cl?t XnltKawl omrmm Cr???? ?l40i h.?. F?? li fcn S?n W71<lb/>
5S<lb/>
Your Official ECU Class Ring<lb/>
Date Nov. is Time: 9:B? - 4.oo<lb/>
Place<lb/>
Yale Student:<lb/>
White Collar<lb/>
NEW HAVEN, Conn (I PI)<lb/>
A group of students begar<lb/>
a boycott of classes Vednesda<lb/>
in ar attempt to force a<lb/>
settlement between striking<lb/>
htc-eollar workers and Yale<lb/>
University administrators.<lb/>
"We're sick of this student<lb/>
Daniel Froomkin said of the<lb/>
seven-week strike "We're suffer-<lb/>
ing The quality of our education<lb/>
has been lowered. Garbage is pil-<lb/>
ing up. There is tension on the<lb/>
campus<lb/>
"This is not the Yale we came<lb/>
here for Froomkin said.<lb/>
While both sides met today in<lb/>
their third negotiating session of<lb/>
the week at an off-campus hotel,<lb/>
a dozen students said they ex-<lb/>
pected 1,000 colleagues to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the moratorium<lb/>
Vale j<lb/>
Giamatt!<lb/>
ting themv? <lb/>
Some<lb/>
students s<lb/>
with the uni<lb/>
tion of L<lb/>
but m( a<lb/>
away be I<lb/>
with the<lb/>
stnke-boun<lb/>
Life a<lb/>
since<lb/>
cieri. a<lb/>
won 9m<lb/>
dispute o<lb/>
The ?<lb/>
on the ba!<lb/>
der.<lb/>
men<lb/>
Integrity Board<lb/>
If a faculty member feels a<lb/>
dent has cheated on a test or<lb/>
presented false material, ne may<lb/>
choose two ways of handling<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
Helps Plan<lb/>
Law Careers<lb/>
Three long, arduous years of<lb/>
intense, stimulating study<lb/>
develop skills in logic, anai<lb/>
organization, oral and writi<lb/>
communications and probiem-<lb/>
solving ? that is a glimpse of aw<lb/>
school.<lb/>
In order to help students<lb/>
prepare for law school, ECU<lb/>
established the ECL" Law Socie-<lb/>
ty, David Stevens, uniersit at-<lb/>
torney, is the faculty advisor for<lb/>
the society. Student officers in-<lb/>
clude: Michael Gardner, presi<lb/>
dent; Douglas Cohn, vice presi-<lb/>
dent and Georgia Mooring<lb/>
secretary treasurer.<lb/>
The Law Societ equ p<lb/>
students with catalogue, re:<lb/>
sonal letters and descriptive<lb/>
pamphleiv from various sctaools<lb/>
around the nation Tn addition.<lb/>
road trips to differer sck<lb/>
and to the L.S. Supreme C<lb/>
are planned.<lb/>
In addition, the society spon-<lb/>
sors guest speakers each month.<lb/>
They may include local lawyers,<lb/>
judicial clerks, law educa-<lb/>
faculty members and distrid<lb/>
judges.<lb/>
Judge Jim Martin will be<lb/>
speaking at the next mee: .<lb/>
Monday, No . 19 at " p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhaii Coffeehouse. Martin<lb/>
will speak on "The Judge's Role<lb/>
in the Judicial System<lb/>
Law Society meetings are open<lb/>
to the general public.<lb/>
fa<lb/>
 i<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Abandon<lb/>
Liberal Arts Jff<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
to become more responsible<lb/>
-learning, then colleges must be<lb/>
more articulate in preserv .<lb/>
their exit standards " Rescarc"<lb/>
suggests that clearly com-<lb/>
municated, detailed statements<lb/>
help students achieve more, il<lb/>
said.<lb/>
To increase credibility of<lb/>
degrees offered, the panel rev<lb/>
mended proficiency assessments<lb/>
in liberal education and the stu-<lb/>
dent's major before degrees are<lb/>
given, "to provide a warrantv fot<lb/>
postsecondary credentials and<lb/>
hence increase their value for<lb/>
students These would also help<lb/>
institutions evaluate their pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
Faculty problems include a 20<lb/>
percent loss of purchasing power<lb/>
in the last decade The panel<lb/>
recommended that faculty wages<lb/>
be increased at a rate higher than<lb/>
inflation.<lb/>
The percentage of part-time<lb/>
faculty has increased from 2?<lb/>
percent in 1966 to 41 percent in<lb/>
1980, the report said. More part-<lb/>
time faculty cause difficulty in<lb/>
maintaining high contact with<lb/>
students and continuity and<lb/>
coherence in instruction, the<lb/>
panel said, and recommended<lb/>
reducing the number of pan-time<lb/>
professors.<lb/>
AL1<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
r<lb/>
I<lb/>
,1<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0003"/><lb/>
S4 OO<lb/>
G P1CKIW<lb/>
eta's<lb/>
NO 1 Mh<lb/>
toi i ht- Deaf<lb/>
bide.<lb/>
 i<lb/>
-ETE LINE<lb/>
I PARTS<lb/>
ESS<lb/>
f<lb/>
? v<lb/>
y<lb/>
Percent Off<lb/>
il le Price<lb/>
c<lb/>
nder Contest<lb/>
1<lb/>
I:<lb/>
At:<lb/>
our favorite Bar<lb/>
Contest will run<lb/>
from Nov. 19th<lb/>
hru Dec. 3rd<lb/>
hat You Will<lb/>
Treasure!<lb/>
rices Available<lb/>
li's<lb/>
s Ring<lb/>
00<lb/>
<lb/>
Yale Students Boycott Classes;<lb/>
White Collar Workers Bargin<lb/>
IHEEAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 13. ?9M 3<lb/>
NEW HAVEN, Conn. (UPI)<lb/>
 A group of students began<lb/>
a boycott of classes Wednesday<lb/>
in an attempt to force a<lb/>
settlement between striking<lb/>
white-collar workers and Yale<lb/>
University administrators.<lb/>
"We're sick of this student<lb/>
Daniel Froomkin said of the<lb/>
seven-week strike. "We're suffer-<lb/>
ing. The quality of our education<lb/>
has been lowered. Garbage is pil-<lb/>
ing up. There is tension on the<lb/>
campus<lb/>
"This is not the Yale we came<lb/>
here for Froomkin said.<lb/>
While both sides met today in<lb/>
their third negotiating session of<lb/>
the week at an off-campus hotel,<lb/>
a dozen students said they ex-<lb/>
pected 1,000 colleagues to par-<lb/>
ticipate in the moratorium.<lb/>
Yale President A. Bartlett<lb/>
Giamatti said they're only hur-<lb/>
ting themselves.<lb/>
Some of the boycotting<lb/>
students said they sympathized<lb/>
with the union, Local 34, Federa-<lb/>
tion of University Employees,<lb/>
but most said they are staying<lb/>
away because they are frustrated<lb/>
with the inconvenience on the<lb/>
strike-bound campus.<lb/>
Life at Yale has been disrupted<lb/>
since Sept. 26, when 1,600<lb/>
clerical workers, most of them<lb/>
women, walked off their jobs in a<lb/>
dispute over a first contract.<lb/>
They charged Yale discriminates<lb/>
on the basis of sex, a claim Yale<lb/>
denied.<lb/>
Their protest was exacerbated<lb/>
by the refusal of about 1,000<lb/>
members of an affiliate union to<lb/>
cross the picket lines at many of<lb/>
Yale's 200 buildings. Dining halls<lb/>
have been closed, library hours<lb/>
curtailed, trash has piled up, and<lb/>
dormitories, some with faulty<lb/>
toilets and smelly bathrooms,<lb/>
were described as "filthy" by law<lb/>
and management graduate<lb/>
students.<lb/>
Giamatti said the moratorium<lb/>
was part of an effort to disrupt<lb/>
the campus and said the only way<lb/>
the strike was going to end was<lb/>
through negotiations between the<lb/>
administration and the union.<lb/>
"The people who deny their<lb/>
own opportunity to go to class<lb/>
aren't putting pressure on the<lb/>
union Giamatti said. "All<lb/>
they're doing is denying<lb/>
themselves an opportunity for an<lb/>
education<lb/>
Integrity Board Handles Violations<lb/>
If a faculty member feels a stu-<lb/>
dent has cheated on a test or<lb/>
presented false material, he may<lb/>
choose two ways of handling the<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
Helps Plan<lb/>
Law Careers<lb/>
Three long, arduous years of<lb/>
intense, stimulating study to<lb/>
develop skills in logic, analysis,<lb/>
organization, oral and written<lb/>
communications and problem-<lb/>
solving ? that is a glimpse of law<lb/>
school.<lb/>
In order to help students<lb/>
prepare for law school, ECU has<lb/>
established the ECU Law Socie-<lb/>
ty. David Stevens, university at-<lb/>
torney, is the faculty advisor for<lb/>
the society. Student officers in-<lb/>
clude: Michael Gardner, presi-<lb/>
dent; Douglas Conn, vice presi-<lb/>
dent and Georgia Mooring,<lb/>
secretary treasurer.<lb/>
The Law Societv equips<lb/>
students with catalogues, per-<lb/>
sonal letters and descriptive<lb/>
pamphlet? from various schools<lb/>
around the nation. In addition,<lb/>
road trips to different schools<lb/>
and to the U.S. Supreme Court<lb/>
are planned.<lb/>
In addition, the society spon-<lb/>
sors guest speakers each month.<lb/>
They may include local lawyers,<lb/>
judicial clerks, law education<lb/>
faculty members and district<lb/>
judges.<lb/>
Judge Jim Martin will be<lb/>
speaking at the next meeting,<lb/>
Monday. Nov. 19 at 7 p.m. in the<lb/>
Mendenhall Coffeehouse. Martin<lb/>
will speak on "The Judge's Role<lb/>
in the Judicial System<lb/>
Law Society meetings are open<lb/>
to the general public.<lb/>
Students<lb/>
Abandon<lb/>
Liberal Arts<lb/>
Continued From Page 1<lb/>
to become more responsible for<lb/>
-learning, then colleges must be<lb/>
more articulate in presenting<lb/>
their exit standards Research<lb/>
suggests that clearly com-<lb/>
municated, detailed statements<lb/>
help students achieve more, it<lb/>
said.<lb/>
To increase credibility of<lb/>
degrees offered, the panel recom-<lb/>
mended proficiency assessments<lb/>
in liberal education and the stu-<lb/>
dent's major before degrees are<lb/>
given, "to provide a warranty for<lb/>
postsecondary credentials and<lb/>
hence increase their value for<lb/>
students These would also help<lb/>
institutions evaluate their pro-<lb/>
grams.<lb/>
Faculty problems include a 20<lb/>
percent loss of purchasing power<lb/>
in the last decade. The panel<lb/>
recommended that faculty wages<lb/>
be increased at a rate higher than<lb/>
inflation.<lb/>
The percentage of part-time<lb/>
faculty has increased from 23<lb/>
percent in 1966 to 41 percent in<lb/>
1980, the report said. More part-<lb/>
time faculty cause difficulty in<lb/>
maintaining high contact with<lb/>
students and continuity and<lb/>
coherence in instruction, the<lb/>
panel said, and recommended<lb/>
reducing the number of part-time<lb/>
professors.<lb/>
1'<lb/>
situation, according to Scott<lb/>
Sutker, ECU attorney general.<lb/>
Violations that may warrant a<lb/>
faculty member to hold a con-<lb/>
ference with the student include:<lb/>
cheating, plagiarism, falsification<lb/>
or attempts to commit an<lb/>
Jemic violation.<lb/>
The first option is for the<lb/>
faculty member to hold a<lb/>
preliminary conference with the<lb/>
student. The instructor has the<lb/>
right to give the student a failing<lb/>
grade or he may waive that right<lb/>
and bring the case to the<lb/>
Academic Integrity Board, after<lb/>
a preliminary conference is held<lb/>
with the student involved.<lb/>
The Academic Integrity Board<lb/>
consists of four faculty members<lb/>
and three students. One of the<lb/>
faculty members is chairman and<lb/>
votes only in a tie. The students<lb/>
are nominated by the SGA ex-<lb/>
ecutive council and elected by the<lb/>
legislature. The student has the<lb/>
right to appeal the Board's deci-<lb/>
sion at any time, Sutker said, and<lb/>
he may also appeal to the vice<lb/>
chancellor for Academic Affairs.<lb/>
"However, the faculty member<lb/>
must contact the student and<lb/>
hold a preliminary conference<lb/>
within three days of the<lb/>
incident Sutker said. "After<lb/>
that, the student cannot be accus-<lb/>
ed of the incident and cannot be<lb/>
brought to the Board he said.<lb/>
O:<lb/>
OAKWOOD HOMES<lb/>
PROUDLY SUPPORTS<lb/>
THE PIRATES AND<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Visr like tCU Oakwood Homes has been<lb/>
o port of the growth of Greenville and eastern<lb/>
North Carolina for years Qualify and service<lb/>
wte hollmark of two great institutions I Both<lb/>
helping friends to a beffer life<lb/>
"GO PIRATES"<lb/>
@<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
HOMES<lb/>
o o<lb/>
jl 626 W Greenville Blvd 756-5434<lb/>
IO<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; )h kinson Ave.<lb/>
We Buy Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
Buy - Sell - Trade<lb/>
752 - 0322<lb/>
Hour?: 9:0O?m.6:UOrm Mon-S<lb/>
eau<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
presents<lb/>
Friday Night<lb/>
Greek Night<lb/>
with<lb/>
Lambda Chi's<lb/>
and<lb/>
Alpha Delta Pi<lb/>
ALL ECU STUDENTS WELCOME<lb/>
2 For I Highballs<lb/>
7 5 (Tallboys tilll 1:00<lb/>
$2.00 Pitchers<lb/>
featuring Bob "Daddy Cool" Hayworth<lb/>
Playing the best Party and Dance Music in Town.<lb/>
7S6-6401<lb/>
zz<lb/>
laCarollu Eaat<lb/>
?  ??<lb/>
  ? ? <lb/>
WISHING V0U L1VEV AT THE TOWERS' V0U 9T7 riu ??r utnr<lb/>
Cttl FOR DETAILS ON RENTAL OR PURCHASE. 756-J4I0 OR 3SS69t<lb/>
RINGCOLD TOWERS<lb/>
At The Campus<lb/>
East Carolina University<lb/>
Co Uc<lb/>
lttt C?? itnm<lb/>
f O Dnw, X?<lb/>
Grenmik, NC 27th<lb/>
(919) 35V26M<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
Cliill<lb/>
Thrill<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
DOMINO<lb/>
? Free Bus Service: Begins at 2:30;<lb/>
Pick up and return from College<lb/>
Hillfthe last bus will go to the<lb/>
apartment complexes). DO NOT<lb/>
DRIVE<lb/>
?Free Draft Beer:<lb/>
?Raffle: Choice of Peugeot Crusier<lb/>
or a Motobecane Nomade 10 Speed<lb/>
?Ticket Available: At the Phi Tau<lb/>
House or see any Brother or Little<lb/>
Sister. $1.00 donation for raffle ticket<lb/>
also gets you in for band<lb/>
OKT HOUSE<lb/>
409 Elizabeth St.<lb/>
DATE - NOV. 16th<lb/>
TIME - 3 - UNTIL<lb/>
f<lb/>
?q<lb/>
t<lb/>
v. I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0004"/><lb/>
tttye East (ttarnlmfcm<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
C. Hunter Fisher. am<lb/>
Greg Hideout, ihnijiijai<lb/>
Jt NNIFER JENDRASIAK, ????, J.T. PlETRZAK. ?? ?M?t,<lb/>
Randi Mew s, ?, w??, Anthony Martin, bus, mm<lb/>
TIN A M ROSCHAK. Rmm e?n. TOM NORTON, rr? ?????<lb/>
Bli l Al ST1N, Imtao. UMT BILL DAWSON. Product? Manager<lb/>
Doris Rankins. s?. mike Mayo. ??, r?,<lb/>
Novembci 15. 14<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Everyone<lb/>
Evaluations Important<lb/>
So, it's teacher evaluation time<lb/>
again. Now is the chance for all<lb/>
students to evaluate their pro-<lb/>
fessors and let the administrators<lb/>
know how you think the people<lb/>
educating you are doing. And<lb/>
although it only happens once a<lb/>
vear instead of each semester like it<lb/>
should, the rating of profs is<lb/>
something that should be taken<lb/>
ery seriously. Everyone involved<lb/>
the students, teachers and ad-<lb/>
ministrators ? must realize that<lb/>
what we, the students, think is im-<lb/>
portant.<lb/>
Students, be objective. Just<lb/>
because you are failing a course,<lb/>
don't feel that it's necessary to<lb/>
:ake revenge on the teacher. Miss-<lb/>
ing class and failing to do<lb/>
assignments are your fault, not the<lb/>
professor's. Did he present lecture<lb/>
material coherently? Was he<lb/>
organized? Did he care whether or<lb/>
not you were learning the subject?<lb/>
These are questions which must be<lb/>
answered by you ? no matter<lb/>
what grade you have at present.<lb/>
What you say matters. Don't<lb/>
haphazardly throw down answers<lb/>
just to hurry up and get out of<lb/>
.iass five minutes early. What you<lb/>
think about a prof's performance<lb/>
will be studied by department<lb/>
chairmen and used when<lb/>
evaluating teachers on a broader<lb/>
scale. Think about each question.<lb/>
Taking proper care to do a good<lb/>
job on the evaluations may help<lb/>
the professor see the error of his<lb/>
ways, and the next student who<lb/>
lakes his class may get a better<lb/>
break.<lb/>
Professors, lecturers and grad<lb/>
students, please understand that<lb/>
teaching is the main reason you are<lb/>
here. We know that research and<lb/>
service to your academic discipline<lb/>
is important, and we aren't<lb/>
underestimating the value of both<lb/>
of these. Yet, your students should<lb/>
come first. Don't look at this pro-<lb/>
cess as a necessary evil, a chore<lb/>
that must be done every year. Take<lb/>
the time to study the results. If<lb/>
you're doing a good job, believe<lb/>
us, it will be reflected in the survey.<lb/>
Most students do appreciate a<lb/>
teacher who does his or her best to<lb/>
educate them.<lb/>
We know some students will in-<lb/>
evitably try to get even for a bad<lb/>
grade. But most will do their best<lb/>
to show you the error or good of<lb/>
your ways. When giving out the<lb/>
op-scan sheets, take the time to ex-<lb/>
plain what the evaluations are used<lb/>
for. Impart on each class member<lb/>
the seriousness of doing the job<lb/>
right. And when looking over the<lb/>
results, take the them to heart.<lb/>
Remember why you're here.<lb/>
Administrators and department<lb/>
chairmen, please don't let bad<lb/>
evaluations slide by. Talk to the<lb/>
person who got a bad one and<lb/>
make him or her use the results to<lb/>
improve on the technique used in<lb/>
the classroom. Professors who<lb/>
continually receive bad marks<lb/>
should suffer the consequences,<lb/>
just as their students must. On the<lb/>
other hand, those professors with<lb/>
high grades should be rewarded.<lb/>
They are the ones who are suc-<lb/>
cessfully passing on the tradition<lb/>
of higher education ? knowledge<lb/>
through compassion and<lb/>
understanding.<lb/>
Yes, this is important. Everyone<lb/>
involved must think about the<lb/>
meaning of these evaluations. The<lb/>
high standing of a university<lb/>
depends on it.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Go Pirates, Catch A Wave<lb/>
After four years of attending ECU<lb/>
sports activities, I can remember no<lb/>
finer show of sportsmanship and stu-<lb/>
dent participation than in the ECU-<lb/>
Southern Mississippi football game.<lb/>
It is such displays that makes one<lb/>
"proud to be a Pirate The only thing<lb/>
that can improve such a performance is<lb/>
to have it carry over to the basketball<lb/>
season, which could be a great boost to<lb/>
the basketball program. Even though<lb/>
winning is important, there comes a<lb/>
time when winning becomes secondary<lb/>
because fans are, in my opinion, just as<lb/>
much a part of a game as the players.<lb/>
I know that it is a lot to ask of the<lb/>
student body, but why not try to ac-<lb/>
complish "the wave" (or at least a<lb/>
splash) in Minges? Really, however,<lb/>
let's support ECU basketball this<lb/>
season ? enthusiasm never hurt<lb/>
anyone.<lb/>
Randy Mizelle<lb/>
Senior, PsycBus<lb/>
Frat Talk<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
It seems everytime I open a<lb/>
newspaper or magazine lately, there<lb/>
seems to be some article about fraterni-<lb/>
ty hazing and incidents of sexual<lb/>
harassment by fraternity members.<lb/>
The articles I read create the illusion<lb/>
that fraternity members are nothing<lb/>
more than insensitive, drunk, sex<lb/>
fiends who care about nothing except<lb/>
getting drunk, getting wild and getting<lb/>
laid. These articles threw dirt in the<lb/>
faces of fraternities across the country,<lb/>
and I'm sure they scare quite a few<lb/>
parents to death, especially when their<lb/>
freshman son comes home during fall<lb/>
break with the news that he's joined a<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
O0n V<lb/>
M SHOULD<lb/>
; IGNORE h 3<lb/>
GRADES.<lb/>
? s<lb/>
QBfik HONEY. TRUST MB<lb/>
ON THIS ONE ZONKBR<lb/>
has wwam&amp;me<lb/>
QUAL TIES:<lb/>
BESIDES, WHENI FOUNDED TUB<lb/>
BABY DOC COLLEGE OF PHYSICIANS,<lb/>
i made a amnrnirwoFfmne<lb/>
FINEST IN OFF SHORE<lb/>
EDUCATION ID ANYONE<lb/>
WITH 12,000'<lb/>
I CANT RENEGE ON THAT COMMIT-<lb/>
MENT, DEAN HONEY. THIS COLLEGES'<lb/>
OPEN ADMISSIONS POLICY HAS A<lb/>
PROUD TRADITION THAT <lb/>
GOES ALL THB UJAY<lb/>
BACKTO.TV-<lb/>
LAST<lb/>
THURSDAY<lb/>
RJ6HT. BY THE<lb/>
UJAY HAS THAT<lb/>
SHIPMENT OF IVY<lb/>
SHOWN UP YET?<lb/>
I've been<lb/>
LOOKING ALL<lb/>
OVER FOR<lb/>
YOU<lb/>
youPcKr<lb/>
m to .<lb/>
sckam, Hi<lb/>
HOt&amp;l<lb/>
SORRY SIR. BUT ITS OH. RI6HT<lb/>
INAUGURATION MY I GIVE MB A<lb/>
DONT THINK YOwANT MINUTE TO<lb/>
TO MISS YOUR OWN Cm THROUGH<lb/>
SHEARING THEC0BUB65.<lb/>
IN OKAY?<lb/>
W6REXXJUNDER<lb/>
ETHERTHEUHOLE<lb/>
NIGHT, SIR?<lb/>
<lb/>
YEAH , I<lb/>
COULDN'T<lb/>
SLEEP. TOO<lb/>
NERVOUS<lb/>
A30UTMY<lb/>
'SPEECH<lb/>
Wgbizah.<lb/>
46BETTER HURfir,2R HE CAN MIT.<lb/>
THE MAYOR OF PORT- I PAY HIM<lb/>
AMPRINCE IS ALREADY ENOUGH HAS<lb/>
j HERE TO SWEAR YOU THEINAUGURA<lb/>
'IN' WN SPEAKER<lb/>
SHOWS? YET?<lb/>
<lb/>
YES.SIR LATE<lb/>
LAST NIGHT A<lb/>
CIGARETTE<lb/>
30ATPROPPED<lb/>
HIM OFF AT<lb/>
, THE MARINA<lb/>
THAT <lb/>
SOUNDS<lb/>
LIKE BOBBY,<lb/>
ALL RIGHT<lb/>
EVER SINCE UJE<lb/>
ROOMED TOGETHER<lb/>
IN COLLEGE, BOBBY'S<lb/>
ALWAYS HATED BEING<lb/>
THECENTEROF ATTENTION<lb/>
X41<lb/>
SIR, WHO<lb/>
EXACTLYIS<lb/>
ROBERT VESCO?<lb/>
KIND OF A<lb/>
CARIBBEAN<lb/>
JQHNPELOREAN<lb/>
THE KIDS WILL<lb/>
EATHIMUP'<lb/>
fraternity.<lb/>
A fraternity is nothing of the sort,<lb/>
and the national organizations of many<lb/>
of these fraternities take a very firm<lb/>
stand on the conduct of its members.<lb/>
For example, on Oct. 26, 1984, the Na-<lb/>
tional Council of Pi Kappa Phi passed<lb/>
a resolution that was prompted by the<lb/>
increased incidences of sexual harass-<lb/>
ment and sexually-related disturbances<lb/>
on campuses across the country. The<lb/>
fraternity began to formulate a policy<lb/>
to express its opposition to the ill-<lb/>
treatment of individuals in general and<lb/>
women in particular. The resolution is,<lb/>
in effect, an educational program for<lb/>
each chapter of Pi Kappa Phi to follow<lb/>
to maintain a climate of healthy rela-<lb/>
tionships between men and women and<lb/>
brings to the forefront the growing<lb/>
issue of sexual abuse, which can range<lb/>
from abusive, offensive language to<lb/>
criminal offenses such as rape. The<lb/>
resolution also instills the "pride in be-<lb/>
ing a gentleman" into its members.<lb/>
Not just Pi Kappa Phi, but many other<lb/>
fraternities take a serious stand on the<lb/>
conduct of its members and will not<lb/>
hesitate to bring immediate<lb/>
disciplinary action against the officers<lb/>
andor members of a chapter which<lb/>
engage in any form of sexual harass-<lb/>
ment or hazing.<lb/>
I am very proud to be a fraternity<lb/>
member and get disgusted everytime I<lb/>
see an article written about how evil<lb/>
fraternities and their members are. The<lb/>
fraternity experience is one of dignity<lb/>
and pride, and I feel that more young<lb/>
men should meet the challenge of join-<lb/>
ing one. I, of course, am not making<lb/>
fraternities out to be bible study groups<lb/>
? hell, fraternities have some of the<lb/>
wildest parties a campus can ever ex-<lb/>
perience but, there is a time for parties<lb/>
and a time for commitment, and most<lb/>
fraternities know the difference.<lb/>
It is not the parties, the house,<lb/>
badge, emblem or songs that make up<lb/>
a fraternity. It is the unseen things ?<lb/>
friendship, brotherhood, character,<lb/>
good citizenship, honor, trust, ideals<lb/>
? these make the fraternity and the<lb/>
man.<lb/>
Bob Schultz<lb/>
Senior, Ind. Tech.<lb/>
We Had A Rev<lb/>
Drum rolls and bugle calls ? it ap-<lb/>
pears that the American people are be-<lb/>
ing prepared for some sort of in-<lb/>
evitable invasion of Nicaragua for the<lb/>
purpose of maintaining the atmosphere<lb/>
of democracy in Central America. This<lb/>
could be the most serious mistake that<lb/>
we ever allow our government to com-<lb/>
mit.<lb/>
There are those among our govern-<lb/>
ment and our electorate who feel that it<lb/>
is essential that the Marxist element be<lb/>
eliminated from our continent. These<lb/>
individuals fear that if the Nicaraguan<lb/>
experiment is allowed to continue, then<lb/>
there exists the possibility of a<lb/>
repressive state such as exists in Russia.<lb/>
This is a legitimate concern.<lb/>
However, I feel that these in-<lb/>
dividuals are losing sight of the reality<lb/>
of the situation in Nicaragua. First of<lb/>
all, neither the Nicaraguan people nor<lb/>
the Sandinista government is interested<lb/>
in becoming closely tied to Russia, as<lb/>
Russia is not trusted by Nicaraguans.<lb/>
Many in the Sandinista government<lb/>
were educated in the United States;<lb/>
American goods and American culture<lb/>
are popular there, and Nicaragua alone<lb/>
among the Central American countries<lb/>
shares the United States' passion for<lb/>
baseball. Secondly, we must realize<lb/>
that Nicaragua shares a religious<lb/>
heritage with this country; many of the<lb/>
priests, nuns, ministers and lay<lb/>
religious people in Nicaragua are U.S.<lb/>
citizens. Third, we must not lose sight<lb/>
of the fact that our own country was<lb/>
born from a revolution. Why then can<lb/>
we not sympathize with a revolution<lb/>
that is trying to reverse the poverty let-<lb/>
by 50 years of dictatorship under the<lb/>
Somoza family? If we allow<lb/>
government to invade Nicaragua, e<lb/>
shall face a guilt and a war that will<lb/>
carry much more sadness than we ever<lb/>
accumulated in Vietnam. Le us learn<lb/>
from our mistakes.<lb/>
Mike Hamer<lb/>
Grad, English<lb/>
Jesus! Stop!<lb/>
Enough is enough. I really mu' -<lb/>
ject to your continuous slanderr .<lb/>
Jesus Christ in the cartoon "Walk<lb/>
the Plank What type of sick mind<lb/>
would draw a cartoon which wou!j be<lb/>
sure to raise such controvert"1 .?<lb/>
theme for the past three weeks de<lb/>
with religion is, in my view, m <lb/>
poor taste and has no place in any<lb/>
newspaper. If you find such a car<lb/>
funny that is fine, but too man p.<lb/>
are offended by such "humor I<lb/>
many other people, wish that this type<lb/>
of caijoon is never seen anywtvr in<lb/>
your newspaper again.<lb/>
Jamie Brewster<lb/>
Freshman, Music<lb/>
Band Boogying<lb/>
The ECU marching band b far is<lb/>
one of the most talented and exciting<lb/>
bands on the East Coast and probab<lb/>
the nation. However, the recent trip to<lb/>
South Carolina and seeing as well a-<lb/>
hearing the USC marching band made<lb/>
me realize that marching bands can<lb/>
play modern or popular music. We<lb/>
were sitting in the stands when USC's<lb/>
band came on the field, and I said,<lb/>
"Hey, I recognize that song ECU's<lb/>
band did out perform South Carolina<lb/>
even though they were out numbered<lb/>
probably 2 to 1, but it was so nice to<lb/>
finally here something other than<lb/>
"music-major" music at the football<lb/>
games.<lb/>
It is my belief that if ECU went with<lb/>
popular music, they would get much<lb/>
better crowd response as well as more<lb/>
enthusiasm within the band and<lb/>
perhaps a larger membership. I am in<lb/>
no way putting down the ECU Mir-<lb/>
ching Pirates, just merely suggesting a<lb/>
possible way to improve the relation-<lb/>
ship between the band and the non-<lb/>
music majors in the stands.<lb/>
Something else I really liked about<lb/>
USC's band is that their half-time<lb/>
show and pre-game show was plaved to<lb/>
both sides (press box side and student<lb/>
side), whereas here, pre-game is done<lb/>
to the pressbox side and half-time is<lb/>
done to the student side. From the peo-<lb/>
ple I have spoken with, no one has<lb/>
disagreed with any of my points. As I<lb/>
stated earlier, this band is one of the<lb/>
best marching bands in the country and<lb/>
my suggestions are designed for the<lb/>
sole purpose of improving this great<lb/>
organization.<lb/>
Hats off to the Marching Pirates; we<lb/>
know that the members put in<lb/>
countless hours of practice, and this<lb/>
year's edition, from what I've seen and<lb/>
heard from others, is the best group<lb/>
ECU has ever had. Congrats on<lb/>
copywriting your version of "The Star<lb/>
Spangled Banner It still gives me<lb/>
chill bumps every time I hear it.<lb/>
DR. Edwards III<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing alt points of view.<lb/>
More Crimes In October<lb/>
Campus Larc<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
Report<lb/>
Four motor vehicle thefts and a<lb/>
drastic increase in the number of<lb/>
stolen bicycles nearly doubled the<lb/>
value of property reported stolen<lb/>
on campus during the month of<lb/>
October over the amount<lb/>
reported during September, ac-<lb/>
cording to statistics released by<lb/>
'he ECU Department of Public<lb/>
Safety this week. In September,<lb/>
S7.387 in property was reported<lb/>
stolen. The value of property<lb/>
stolen during the month of Oc-<lb/>
tober totaled $13,437.<lb/>
Bicycle larcenies increased<lb/>
from eight in September to 20 in<lb/>
October. Larcenies not involving<lb/>
bicycles, burglaries and motor<lb/>
vehicle thefts were down.<lb/>
Arrests made by Campus<lb/>
Public Safety officers were up<lb/>
from 28 in September to 42 in Oc-<lb/>
tober. Driving while impaired ar-<lb/>
rests were down from 12 to seven<lb/>
"We are 85 case numbers<lb/>
ar.ead of where we were at this<lb/>
same time last year said Lt.<lb/>
Gene McAbee, crime prevention<lb/>
officer for the Department of<lb/>
Public Safety. "This indicates an<lb/>
increase in our activity level over<lb/>
the previous year where making<lb/>
arrests and taking crime reports<lb/>
are concerned. October was an<lb/>
extremely hectic month for us<lb/>
and it appears that the trend<lb/>
toward increased crime is conti-<lb/>
nuing into November<lb/>
Crimes reported for the week<lb/>
of Nov. 6 through Nov. 13 were:<lb/>
Sow 6, 8:40p.m. ? A battery<lb/>
was reported stolen from a vehi-<lb/>
cle parked in the Third and Reade<lb/>
freshman lot. 9 p.m. ? A break-<lb/>
in and larceny was reported at a<lb/>
room on the eighth floor of<lb/>
Greene dorm.<lb/>
Pop Singer's<lb/>
Influence Bad<lb/>
These are rough<lb/>
'n' rollback in the<lb/>
(USPS) ?<lb/>
times for rock<lb/>
USSR.<lb/>
First an official state-run<lb/>
Soviet newspaper accused<lb/>
.American pop megastar Michael<lb/>
Jackson of contaminating South<lb/>
.America. And now the official<lb/>
journal of the Young Communist<lb/>
League has warned Soviet<lb/>
citizens to be on their guard<lb/>
against the subversive influence<lb/>
of American music.<lb/>
"The Jacksonmania virus<lb/>
launched from North America in-<lb/>
to South America has one aim ?<lb/>
to squeeze as much gold juice as<lb/>
possible out of the country said<lb/>
the newspaper Leninskae<lb/>
Znamye, or "Lenin's Banner<lb/>
"Michael Jackson is more<lb/>
widely popularized in Argentina<lb/>
than local singers and groups<lb/>
the newspaper went on. The<lb/>
paper also complained that South<lb/>
American youngsters waste their<lb/>
time trying to imitate Jackson's<lb/>
style of dress and mannerisms.<lb/>
The article was only the latest<lb/>
in a series of attacks on Michael<lb/>
Jackson by the heavily censored<lb/>
and rigidly controlled state<lb/>
media. Other articles have charg-<lb/>
ed that Jackson sold his black<lb/>
soul for white profit, that his<lb/>
music is nothing but plastic, and<lb/>
that his mesmerizing music keeps<lb/>
millions of Americans from<lb/>
thinking about serious topics like<lb/>
racial violence in Miami.<lb/>
Another article in the official<lb/>
Komsomolskaya Pravda said that<lb/>
the West is using subversive<lb/>
music to "cook up a so-called<lb/>
rock culture, imbuing it with pro-<lb/>
paganda of a certain indepen-<lb/>
dent, aggressive lifestyle inherent<lb/>
in only one group of people, the<lb/>
young<lb/>
"A culture which preaches<lb/>
primitive pleasure, amusement,<lb/>
political passivity and which gives<lb/>
illusions instead of reality is<lb/>
unacceptable to the Soviet peo-<lb/>
ple according to the article<lb/>
Soviet citizens should watch out<lb/>
for these "musical intrigues of<lb/>
Western propaganda<lb/>
The article made specific men-<lb/>
tion of several songs recorded by<lb/>
an underground group in Len-<lb/>
ingrad and broadcast into the<lb/>
Soviet Union by the BBC World<lb/>
Service. These songs "preach<lb/>
alcoholic themes ovei<lb/>
loutishness, hooliganism, and<lb/>
enraptured descriptions of 'the<lb/>
sweet life' and then end with<lb/>
overt religious propaganda the<lb/>
paper said.<lb/>
Nov. 7, 10:3<lb/>
was reported<lb/>
side of Garret!<lb/>
? A bicycle wj<lb/>
from the soutl<lb/>
dorm 2 p.m.<lb/>
reported stoU<lb/>
tramural off I<lb/>
Gymnasiun.<lb/>
Nov. 9, 2<lb/>
Repeta of Joi<lb/>
rested for larc<lb/>
12:15 p.m.<lb/>
reported stolen<lb/>
Camaro parked<lb/>
Berkley freshnj<lb/>
? A vehicie<lb/>
dalized w<lb/>
Greene d<lb/>
louvre was<lb/>
second vehicle<lb/>
and Berkl<lb/>
' ? 10, I I<lb/>
Wordsworth<lb/>
was arreste<lb/>
? A brea<lb/>
reported on t<lb/>
Scott d<lb/>
Bauman c ?<lb/>
arrested for<lb/>
and reckle- !<lb/>
control of his<lb/>
? Presr<lb/>
? a I<lb/>
? Pho<lb/>
? Gen<lb/>
10<lb/>
Ce1<lb/>
 Loc<lb/>
? Han<lb/>
 Gret<lb/>
Located u<lb/>
0<lb/>
"Rl<lb/>
'<lb/>
m<lb/>
??<lb/>
A i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0005"/><lb/>
More Crin, ? Qctobr<lb/>
5J<lb/>
Wave<lb/>
a revolution<lb/>
vert left<lb/>
J inder the<lb/>
allow our<lb/>
N aragua, we<lb/>
'hat will<lb/>
?s than we eer<lb/>
US learn<lb/>
Jesus! Stop!<lb/>
ally must ob-<lb/>
andenng of<lb/>
n "Walkin'<lb/>
' sick mind<lb/>
" ould he<lb/>
?rsy? Your<lb/>
Its dealing<lb/>
, in very<lb/>
ice in any<lb/>
l cartoon<lb/>
ti) people<lb/>
' " I. and<lb/>
his type<lb/>
?n any?. here in<lb/>
Band Boogying<lb/>
b) far is<lb/>
and exciting<lb/>
robably<lb/>
. recent trip to<lb/>
g av vell as<lb/>
g hand made<lb/>
rig bands can<lb/>
i music. We<lb/>
! a hen L'SC's<lb/>
d, and I said,<lb/>
ai song ECU'S<lb/>
Carolina<lb/>
? numbered<lb/>
' as so nice to<lb/>
i other than<lb/>
e football<lb/>
' ECU went with<lb/>
- d get much<lb/>
 ell as more<lb/>
the band and<lb/>
hip. 1 am in<lb/>
the ECU Mir-<lb/>
- jggesting a<lb/>
e the relation-<lb/>
ind and the non-<lb/>
uids.<lb/>
iiked about<lb/>
ritl half-time<lb/>
? was played to<lb/>
 side and student<lb/>
pre-game is done<lb/>
ere.<lb/>
side and half-time is<lb/>
student side From the peo-<lb/>
Ken with, no one has<lb/>
ed with any of my points. As I<lb/>
earlier, this band is one of the<lb/>
? ands in the country and<lb/>
ggestions are designed for the<lb/>
purpose of improving this great<lb/>
n.<lb/>
e Marching Pirates; we<lb/>
'hat the members put in<lb/>
ours of practice, and this<lb/>
n. from what Ie seen and<lb/>
om others, is the best group<lb/>
has ever had Congrats on<lb/>
writing your version of "The Star<lb/>
ngled Banner It still gives me<lb/>
II bumps every time 1 hear it.<lb/>
r Edwards III<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
rhe East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
-essing all points of view.<lb/>
?<lb/>
A<lb/>
Campus Larcenies Increasing<lb/>
Crime<lb/>
Report<lb/>
Four motor vehicle thefts and a<lb/>
drastic increase in the number of<lb/>
stolen bicycles nearly doubled the<lb/>
value of property reported stolen<lb/>
on campus during the month of<lb/>
October over the amount<lb/>
reported during September, ac-<lb/>
cording to statistics released by<lb/>
the ECU Department of Public<lb/>
Safety this week. In September,<lb/>
$7,387 in property was reported<lb/>
stolen. The value of property<lb/>
stolen during the month of Oc-<lb/>
tober totaled $13,437.<lb/>
Bicycle larcenies increased<lb/>
from eight in September to 20 in<lb/>
October. Larcenies not involving<lb/>
bicycles, burglaries and motor<lb/>
vehicle thefts were down.<lb/>
Arrests made by Campus<lb/>
Public Safety officers were up<lb/>
from 28 in September to 42 in Oc-<lb/>
tober. Driving while impaired ar-<lb/>
rests were down from 12 to seven.<lb/>
"We are 85 case numbers<lb/>
ahead of where we were at this<lb/>
same time last year said Lt.<lb/>
Gene McAbee, crime prevention<lb/>
officer for the Department of<lb/>
Public Safety. "This indicates an<lb/>
increase in our activity level over<lb/>
the previous year where making<lb/>
arrests and taking crime reports<lb/>
are concerned. October was an<lb/>
extremely hectic month for us<lb/>
and it appears that the trend<lb/>
toward increased crime is conti-<lb/>
nuing into November<lb/>
Crimes reported for the week<lb/>
of Nov. 6 through Nov. 13 were:<lb/>
Nov. 6, 8:40p.m. ? A battery<lb/>
was reported stolen from a vehi-<lb/>
cle parked in the Third and Reade<lb/>
freshman lot. 9p.m. ? A break-<lb/>
in and larceny was reported at a<lb/>
room on the eighth floor of<lb/>
Greene dorm.<lb/>
Pop Singer's<lb/>
Influence Bad<lb/>
fUSPS) ? These are tough<lb/>
times for rock 'n' rollback in the<lb/>
USSR.<lb/>
First an official state-run<lb/>
Soviet newspaper accused<lb/>
American pop megastar Michael<lb/>
Jackson of contaminating South<lb/>
America. And now the official<lb/>
journal of the Young Communist<lb/>
League has warned Soviet<lb/>
citizens to be on their guard<lb/>
against the subversive influence<lb/>
of American music.<lb/>
'The Jacksonmania virus<lb/>
launched from North America in-<lb/>
to South America has one aim ?<lb/>
to squeeze as much gold juice as<lb/>
possible out of the country said<lb/>
the newspaper Leninskae<lb/>
Znamye, or "Lenin's Banner<lb/>
"Michael Jackson is more<lb/>
widely popularized in Argentina<lb/>
than local singers and groups<lb/>
the newspaper went on. The<lb/>
paper also complained that South<lb/>
American youngsters waste their<lb/>
time trying to imitate Jackson's<lb/>
style of dress and mannerisms.<lb/>
The article was only the latest<lb/>
in a series of attacks on Michael<lb/>
Jackson by the heavily censored<lb/>
and rigidly controlled state<lb/>
media. Other articles have charg-<lb/>
ed that Jackson sold his black<lb/>
soul for white profit, that his<lb/>
music is nothing but plastic, and<lb/>
that his mesmerizing music keeps<lb/>
millions of Americans from<lb/>
thinking about serious topics like<lb/>
racial violence in Miami.<lb/>
Another article in the official<lb/>
Komsomolskaya Pravda said that<lb/>
the West is using subversive<lb/>
music to "cook up a so-called<lb/>
rock culture, imbuing it with pro-<lb/>
paganda of a certain indepen-<lb/>
dent, aggressive lifestyle inherent<lb/>
in only one group of people, the<lb/>
young<lb/>
"A culture which preaches<lb/>
primitive pleasure, amusement,<lb/>
political passivity and which gives<lb/>
illusions instead of reality is<lb/>
unacceptable to the Soviet peo-<lb/>
ple according to the article.<lb/>
Soviet citizens should watch out<lb/>
for these "musical intrigues of<lb/>
Western propaganda<lb/>
The article made specific men-<lb/>
tion of several songs recorded by<lb/>
an underground group in Len-<lb/>
ingrad and broadcast into the<lb/>
Soviet Union by the BBC World<lb/>
Service. These songs "preach<lb/>
alcoholic themes over<lb/>
loutishness, hooliganism, and<lb/>
enraptured descriptions of 'the<lb/>
sweet life and then end with<lb/>
overt religious propaganda the<lb/>
paper said.<lb/>
- ' ii ii at UttB<lb/>
Nov. 7, 10:30a.m. ?Abicycle<lb/>
was reported stolen from the east<lb/>
side of Garrett dorm. 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
? A bicycle was reported stolen<lb/>
from the south side of Fleming<lb/>
dorm. 2 p.m. ? Money was<lb/>
reported stolen from the In-<lb/>
tramural office in Memorial<lb/>
Gymnasium.<lb/>
Nov. 9, 2:30 a.m. ? Michael<lb/>
Repeta of Jones dorm was ar-<lb/>
rested for larceny of a bicycle.<lb/>
12:15 p.m. ? A louvre was<lb/>
reported stolen from a Chevrolet<lb/>
Camaro parked in the 14th and<lb/>
Berkley freshman lot. 3:39 p.m.<lb/>
? A vehicle was reported van-<lb/>
dalized while parked south of<lb/>
Greene dorm. 3:05 p.m. ? A<lb/>
louvre was reported stolen from a<lb/>
second vehicle parked in the 14th<lb/>
and Berkley freshman lot.<lb/>
Nov. 10, 1:19 a.m. ? Michael<lb/>
Wordsworth of Rocky Mount<lb/>
was arrested for DWI. 1:55 a.m.<lb/>
? A break-in of a vehicle was<lb/>
reported on the northeast side of<lb/>
Scott dorm. 7:20 p.m. ? Henry<lb/>
Bauman of 303 Garrett dorm was<lb/>
arrested for DWI and careless<lb/>
and reckless driving after he lost<lb/>
control of his vehicle near Garrett<lb/>
and struck a tree.<lb/>
Nov. 11, 12:15 a.m. ? A<lb/>
burglary was reported on the first<lb/>
floor of Aycock dorm. 1:28p.m.<lb/>
? A larceny was reported from a<lb/>
room located on the ninth floor<lb/>
of Tyler dorm. 8p.m. ? A com-<lb/>
plaint of harassing phone calls<lb/>
was received from the eighth<lb/>
floor of Greene dorm.<lb/>
Nov. 12, 1:50 a.m. ? William<lb/>
Booger of Camp Lejeune was ar-<lb/>
rested and placed in protective<lb/>
custody for public inebriation.<lb/>
1:30p.m. ? Two larcenies were<lb/>
reported from rooms on the ninth<lb/>
floor of Tyler dorm. A necklace<lb/>
was stolen from one room and a<lb/>
cooler was stolen from the other.<lb/>
3:30 p.m. ? A state-owned truck<lb/>
was reported stolen. 3:30p.m. ?<lb/>
Money and jewelry were reported<lb/>
stolen from a purse at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum during cheerleading<lb/>
practice.<lb/>
Nov. 13, 1:30 p.m. ? A<lb/>
larceny was reported from the<lb/>
women's locker room at Minges<lb/>
Coliseum. 8:15 p.m. ? The<lb/>
Greenville Fire Department<lb/>
responded to a fire on the stage at<lb/>
McGinnis Auditorium.<lb/>
Hargett Drug Store<lb/>
Home Health Center<lb/>
"m Prescription pick up &amp; deliverys<lb/>
? Charge Accounts with authorization from parents<lb/>
T Photo Finishing Service<lb/>
 General Drugs &amp; Vitamins - As well as brand names<lb/>
1 0 Discount with Student ID<lb/>
Across from Carriage House Apts.<lb/>
on 43 South 756-3344<lb/>
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Located in Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
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? Purchase: Under $60,000 about Vi the price per<lb/>
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Please stop by our office at<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057681_0006"/><lb/>
THl tAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 15, 14<lb/>
In The York River<lb/>
Underwater Excavation Continues<lb/>
K I Nt? Bureau<lb/>
A flooded cofferdam, its nar-<lb/>
row outline formed like the hull<lb/>
of a ship, sits unobtrusively in the<lb/>
York Rivei connected to the<lb/>
mainland shore by a wooden pier<lb/>
of heavy pilings and planks.<lb/>
From the shore, the only clue to<lb/>
the activities inside the cor-<lb/>
rugated steel walls of the dam is a<lb/>
sign that reads "Yorktown Ship-<lb/>
wreck Project<lb/>
On this day, John Broadwater,<lb/>
director of underwater ar-<lb/>
chaeology for the state of<lb/>
Virginia is complaining about the<lb/>
visibility of the water inside the<lb/>
dam.<lb/>
"A week ago there was ten feet<lb/>
of visibility he says. "Today,<lb/>
it's not more than three feet" of<lb/>
visibility at the bottom of the<lb/>
mer where the remains of a<lb/>
Revolutionary War vessel,<lb/>
perhaps one of the best preserved<lb/>
shipwrecks of the period, are being<lb/>
excavated from its bed of sand<lb/>
and silt.<lb/>
Normally three feet is enough<lb/>
visibility for archaeologists to<lb/>
work at the site, but today, Gor-<lb/>
dari Watts, an underwater ar-<lb/>
chaeologist and professor at<lb/>
ECl, and Wes Hall, an ECU<lb/>
research assistant, are at the site<lb/>
to make video tape recordings of<lb/>
the wreck. Watts is anxious to use<lb/>
a new underwater camera unit<lb/>
recently acquired for ECU's pro-<lb/>
gram in Maritime History and<lb/>
Underwater Research and is un-<lb/>
Jaunted by Broadwater's descrip-<lb/>
tion of the storm of suspended<lb/>
particles restricting visibility<lb/>
around the shipwreck site.<lb/>
While assembling the camera<lb/>
md other gear needed for the<lb/>
live, the two archaeologists<lb/>
discuss the merits of "wet" ver-<lb/>
sus "dry" diving suits. The<lb/>
"wet" suit is constructed of<lb/>
neopreme rubber foam that traps<lb/>
water in its spongy skin which is<lb/>
then heated by the diver's bodv.<lb/>
The heated water acts as an in-<lb/>
sulator. "Dry" suits permit the<lb/>
diver to wear insulated<lb/>
undergarments under the suit's<lb/>
outer layer of rubber or rubberiz-<lb/>
ed fabric. "Wet" suits are dif-<lb/>
ficult to remove and don't keep a<lb/>
diver warm for very long in cold<lb/>
water. Dry" suits constrict<lb/>
around a diver's body and can<lb/>
develop leaks during a dive but<lb/>
modern technology has introduc-<lb/>
ed some changes in the design of<lb/>
the suit and Watts is interested in<lb/>
its performance.<lb/>
The temperature this da is<lb/>
inusually warm. Watts selects<lb/>
the "wet" suit while Broadwater<lb/>
.limbs into the "dry" model.<lb/>
The two divers enter the water<lb/>
and assistants hand down an<lb/>
underwater light and the<lb/>
videocamera unit. The camera is<lb/>
a self-contained system with<lb/>
camera and tape deck mounted in<lb/>
a sleek metal and glass housing.<lb/>
Watts gently lets the camera sink<lb/>
beneath the water praying to<lb/>
himself that the case around the<lb/>
camera and recorder is water-<lb/>
tight. He sits the camera on a<lb/>
submerged platform inside the<lb/>
cofferdam. There are no bubbles<lb/>
trickling from the lid of the<lb/>
camera housing. The seal is tight.<lb/>
Broadwater switches on the<lb/>
light and he and Watts, together<lb/>
with the camera, and breathing<lb/>
from long yellow hoses connected<lb/>
to a surface air compressor, sink<lb/>
out of sight, to the bottom, some<lb/>
twenty feet below.<lb/>
The vessel they are recording<lb/>
dates back to the Revolutionary<lb/>
War and is one of the many ships<lb/>
scuttled in the final hours of the<lb/>
war by General Cornwallis along<lb/>
'he shore of Yorktown. The<lb/>
British general had retreated with<lb/>
his troops to Yorktown in an at-<lb/>
tempt to link his forces with the<lb/>
British fleet that was waiting off-<lb/>
shore. But a blockade of French<lb/>
and American ships blocked the<lb/>
movement of the British fleet as<lb/>
well as Cornwallis' escape. In an<lb/>
effort to stall surrender, Corn-<lb/>
wallis ordered that his transport<lb/>
vessels be lined up and sunk in<lb/>
order to protect his flank from a<lb/>
rear attack by French troops.<lb/>
Following the surrender of<lb/>
Cornwallis, the scuttled ships<lb/>
were turned over to the French<lb/>
who refloated many of them. Of<lb/>
those left on the bottom, a total<lb/>
of nine ships have been located.<lb/>
The ship, being excavated in the<lb/>
cofferdam, sits upright, buried<lb/>
under tons of sand and silt.<lb/>
The unique cofferdam was<lb/>
constructed around the ship two<lb/>
years ago to protect it while ar-<lb/>
chaeologists conduct their slow<lb/>
excavation. A special Filtration<lb/>
system was installed at the dam to<lb/>
help clear the water for better<lb/>
visibility. The filters haven't<lb/>
worked as well as expected and in<lb/>
recent months Broadwater swit-<lb/>
ched to the use of chemicals that<lb/>
are poured into the water, clear-<lb/>
ing it, by taking particles of<lb/>
suspended materials to the bot-<lb/>
tom. The water was treated a<lb/>
week before Watts arrived.<lb/>
Plant and marine life trapped<lb/>
inside the steel walls of the dam<lb/>
are unaffected by their controlled<lb/>
environment. Fish, trapped in-<lb/>
side the dam when it was built re-<lb/>
main. An eel has grown from the<lb/>
thickness of a pencil to that of a<lb/>
broomstick. Crabs, with names<lb/>
grease-penciled on their outer<lb/>
shell, are familiar pets for the<lb/>
divers.<lb/>
The Yorktown Shipwreck Pro-<lb/>
ject is funded by the National En-<lb/>
dowment for the Humanities and<lb/>
is managed by the Virginia<lb/>
Historic Landmarks Commis-<lb/>
sion. Broadwater and his assis-<lb/>
tant Robert Adams are in charge<lb/>
of most of the work at the wreck<lb/>
site. They are often directing<lb/>
teams of volunteer divers who<lb/>
donate their time to assist with<lb/>
various aspects of the research.<lb/>
Watts, the co-chairman of the<lb/>
ECU underwater research pro-<lb/>
gram, is called in from time to<lb/>
time to assist in the work.<lb/>
Graduate students from ECU<lb/>
also work at the site as part of the<lb/>
training. There are currently four<lb/>
graduate students working with<lb/>
Broadwater and Adams in<lb/>
Yorktown.<lb/>
"They are doing such things as<lb/>
excavating and mapping and<lb/>
making drawings of the hull as<lb/>
the sand is removed from around<lb/>
it said Watts. "They are help-<lb/>
ing to document the excavation<lb/>
of the vessel<lb/>
To date, the identity of the ship<lb/>
and its class are unknown, but<lb/>
clues surface on a regular basis.<lb/>
With every foot of sand the<lb/>
divers vacuum away, more pieces<lb/>
of the puzzle fall into place.<lb/>
"We know that it had at least<lb/>
two masts said Watts. "From<lb/>
the dimensions of the hull, it was<lb/>
probably square-rigged<lb/>
"It is unlikely that the vessel<lb/>
carried armaments because Corn-<lb/>
wallis stripped most of the vessels<lb/>
of their cannons and hauled them<lb/>
up on the hill for the defense of<lb/>
Yorktown Watts said.<lb/>
Bob Adams, the assistant<lb/>
director of the archaeological<lb/>
work at the Yorktown site, thinks<lb/>
the vessel may have been<lb/>
designated as a fireship by the<lb/>
British. There were several of the<lb/>
ships that were loaded with wood<lb/>
at their bow to be set on fire and<lb/>
sailed into the French blockage as<lb/>
a diversion for the troops trying<lb/>
to escape from Yorktown.<lb/>
"We may be able to narrow the<lb/>
name of the ship down to four or<lb/>
five known vessels by the end of<lb/>
this year's research he said.<lb/>
But the name of the shipwreck<lb/>
and its function in the Revolution<lb/>
may be the least important infor-<lb/>
mation the archaeologists hope to<lb/>
uncover in their research.<lb/>
"It was one of the types of<lb/>
vessels that weren't very well, if<lb/>
at all, documented during the<lb/>
18th Century Watts said.<lb/>
"We've got artist's representa-<lb/>
tions of what they looked like but<lb/>
we don't have much concrete in-<lb/>
formation about how the ships<lb/>
were designed or constructed,<lb/>
especially merchant ships and<lb/>
transports he says.<lb/>
On their return to the surface,<lb/>
the two divers anxiously reviewed<lb/>
the tape made during their dive.<lb/>
One of the most intriguing<lb/>
aspects of the ship was clearly<lb/>
visible on the small TV screen. It<lb/>
was a window, its glass panes still<lb/>
intact, protruding from the sand.<lb/>
"We didn't know these ships<lb/>
had windows or how they are<lb/>
constructed Watts said.<lb/>
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NEED XMAS MONEY?<lb/>
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THERE ARE TWO SIDES TO<lb/>
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ARMY NURSE CORPS, BE All you CAN<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057681_0007"/><lb/>
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THE PARTY B!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057681_0008"/><lb/>
fHEEASI . AROUNIAN<lb/>
NOVEMBER 15, 1984<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
CABBAGE PATCH DOLL FOR<lb/>
SALE: Girl doll not an imitation<lb/>
SI25 Call 758 9516 or 758 9691<lb/>
FOR RENT; 2 bedroom apt 2 blocks<lb/>
from ECU 1310 per month and $310<lb/>
deposit Available Dec I 758 0329<lb/>
after 4pm<lb/>
FOR SALE: Custom built drawing<lb/>
'able $200 King size waterbed<lb/>
$200 Call 758 0868 after 5pm<lb/>
FOR SALE Electric bass guitar in<lb/>
sse red Fender precision special<lb/>
pre amp $350 Call 758 4807<lb/>
S p m<lb/>
LOST Three gold rings with dia<lb/>
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COMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE Word processing Spelling<lb/>
electronically checked Term<lb/>
papers and dissertations $1 75 a<lb/>
page, paper included Call Mark<lb/>
after 5 at 757 3440<lb/>
GREENVILLE STUDENT LAUN<lb/>
DRY SERVICE: Let Greenville Stu<lb/>
dent Laundry Service pick up, wash,<lb/>
dry, fold, hang, as well as deliver<lb/>
your laundry Dry cleaning too<lb/>
Call 758 3087<lb/>
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typing at home IBM typewriter<lb/>
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TYPING Of any kind done at home<lb/>
nightly Call 758 7838 after 5 and<lb/>
Wea afternoons<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
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? urmshed trailer Air Cond ,<lb/>
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? SL nt: Discount tickets<lb/>
S3 4013 or ?" 6398<lb/>
OMPUTERIZED TYPING SER<lb/>
CE ? ? Processing Spelling<lb/>
c a I , ft -nee! Term<lb/>
? ? ?? Hi 1 ssertai cs, $1 75 per<lb/>
paper included Call Mar<lb/>
? r 5 at 757 3440<lb/>
PING NEEDED' ifvouneedso<lb/>
1 ?oe papers of any kind for<lb/>
?? asonaoie rates please call<lb/>
34 after 5pm<lb/>
LP WANTED: $60 per HUN<lb/>
JAiD tor processing mail at<lb/>
information, send self<lb/>
sed, stamped envelope<lb/>
Ve Box 95. Roseile. New<lb/>
7203<lb/>
SESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
CE Expedience qua1 ty work.<lb/>
ectr c typewriter Lanie<lb/>
S8 5301<lb/>
90FESSI0NAL TYPING SER<lb/>
? ICE  ? p r?g needs 758 5488 or<lb/>
h WENDY'S' Memorial Dr<lb/>
ition will be accepting applica<lb/>
s 8. A-ed from 8 to 5 at the<lb/>
? if Room a Holiday inn on<lb/>
i D- ve Apply in person<lb/>
se<lb/>
i'PING Professional typist with 15<lb/>
-ars exp wants fulltime typing a'<lb/>
BMtpewr'ter Call 756 3660<lb/>
MICHAEL L Congratulations on<lb/>
your Stats grade1 Maybe you should<lb/>
start having your own S meeting<lb/>
before every test! You're a great big<lb/>
brother! Gladice<lb/>
STU BABY: Happy 20th Birthdav1<lb/>
For only you, let us "Make it" BIG!<lb/>
Your very own Lil Sisters We love<lb/>
you1 Phll. El and Cane<lb/>
LYNN: Life's just a cocktail party<lb/>
Are you ready to live? J.T.<lb/>
SWEET WILLIAM Start getting<lb/>
psyched to ski your mug off I'm<lb/>
speaking to The Go this weekend to<lb/>
tell him the forcast Snow blind at<lb/>
Snowshoe in '84 like never before<lb/>
Zak<lb/>
SIG TAUS: To the "BIGGEST" and<lb/>
"BEST" Brothers on campus!<lb/>
You're top on our list Sig Tau Happy<lb/>
Thanksgiving We love you all! Your<lb/>
Lil Sisters Phyllis and Candy<lb/>
RMH: We think you deserve the<lb/>
Freddy 'Cuz for a beer you're<lb/>
always ready To the Alpha Sigs you<lb/>
may not show it But we on the 9th<lb/>
floor know if Once again, it's<lb/>
THURSDAY NIGHT! Let's go to the<lb/>
Opry House and do it up right G.D.<lb/>
and S<lb/>
LYNDA Y You're the best! Sorry<lb/>
I've been chafin' you, but I'll make it<lb/>
up to you tomte So get ready to<lb/>
throw down with your big brother<lb/>
BAD: Well, the "hex" is broken but<lb/>
luckily King and Vice still "scare"<lb/>
me1 (Wonder if flamingos would<lb/>
make it in DC ?) Lights out Calgon<lb/>
HEY RDUI: What's the deal playing<lb/>
the the same songs over and over<lb/>
and OVER!? Come on ECU<lb/>
students, doesn't that insult your in<lb/>
telligence0 Listen to WZMB, ECU'S<lb/>
totally student run, commercial free<lb/>
top 40 free alternative FM WZMB<lb/>
ROCKS! !<lb/>
GREENVILLE STUDENT<lb/>
LAUNDRY SERVICE: Let<lb/>
ireenville Student Laundry Ser<lb/>
? D'Ck up, wash, dry, fold,<lb/>
'rz as wen as deliver our<lb/>
aundry! Dr, Cleaning too Call<lb/>
758 3087<lb/>
TEREO SYSTEM PROBLEM?<lb/>
itely no charge" for repair<lb/>
ites at the Tech Shop Cai.<lb/>
teen eighty " we thought<lb/>
j Ke to know<lb/>
EOPLE One or Two people needed<lb/>
ire housing with male, smoker,<lb/>
- in studen Start;ng Jamjar<lb/>
rer session. Repl Neil Rent<lb/>
- ler 207 Wellington Place. Aber<lb/>
N J , 07747<lb/>
-EMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted to<lb/>
1 Dd apartment close to cam<lb/>
"S $145 a month plus utilities Nov<lb/>
? ? a.read paid, start paying Dec<lb/>
St Call 756 5847<lb/>
CEMALE ROOMMATE Wanted to<lb/>
are furnished 2 bedroom<lb/>
townhouse, $162 50 8. ' utilities<lb/>
arable Jan l Call 756 7287<lb/>
ALE ROOMMATE Needed to<lb/>
? are apartment Prefer year round<lb/>
jdent Just 5 minutes from ECU<lb/>
oetween 8 am and 3pm<lb/>
- 6289<lb/>
MALE ONLY: Apartment for lease<lb/>
one bedroom $170 per month<lb/>
? aiable December 1st Call<lb/>
'h 5653 Walking distance to cam<lb/>
: 15 Carpeted, kitchen, laundry on<lb/>
chemises Please hurry Moving out<lb/>
of town<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Needed for<lb/>
r ng semester House Rent $110<lb/>
ser month plus one sixth the<lb/>
ties One and 4 blocks from cam<lb/>
pus Call Sharon at 757 0430<lb/>
APT FOR RENT: 2 rooms, kitchen,<lb/>
hath Near 10th and Evans $125 plus<lb/>
? ties Lease &amp; deposit 752 2615<lb/>
weekdays.<lb/>
TARLANDING SEAFOOD<lb/>
AjrV Combination Special:<lb/>
vi F . Shrimp, Trout &amp; Deviled Crab<lb/>
V. Wfi FF ?r Baked Potato,<lb/>
3LiMffT Co'e Slaw &amp; Hush Puppies - $3,991<lb/>
105 Airport Rood 758-0327<lb/>
u<lb/>
riartHjET<lb/>
JVC<lb/>
Wool Ponchos and Shawls<lb/>
Cotton Turtle Necks and Tights<lb/>
Wool Hats and Socks<lb/>
Specializing in Satural Fiber<lb/>
C lo thing for H omen<lb/>
116 E. 5th St. Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30<lb/>
Next Door to Book Barn 757-3944<lb/>
CHIP.B: Final score was 3 to 2,<lb/>
you'vjt got some eating of words to<lb/>
do Slu! Snooka and Ed<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI: Congratulates our<lb/>
new Executive Council for spring of<lb/>
'85 Archon Bob Canupp, Vice<lb/>
Archon Exec Kevin Manning, Vice<lb/>
Archon Revenue Jeff Newsome,<lb/>
Treasurer Clay Brewer, Secretary<lb/>
John Paul Lyens, Warden Steve<lb/>
Laroque, Historian Bill Simmons,<lb/>
Chaplin Bob Schultz<lb/>
GRACE: After watching y?u<lb/>
through your shadeless window I<lb/>
just had to let you know that your<lb/>
pink robe and orange knitted pom<lb/>
pon slippers drive me into a frenz<lb/>
J S<lb/>
ADELE G You're the best little<lb/>
sister m the whole world1 i hope you<lb/>
can hang with your big bro ths Fr;<lb/>
day! Foo<lb/>
PHI TAU LITTLE SISTERS (We're<lb/>
looking forward to see'nq every<lb/>
single one of you Friday afternoon at<lb/>
the iarnmmest party of lh<lb/>
semester CHILL THRILL"<lb/>
MR CHAPPED LIPS Roses are<lb/>
red Violets are blue Last Sunda<lb/>
night was fun, but believe it or no<lb/>
CHEATED TOO1 ! ! Glow ?<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTAS An girls<lb/>
read for one hell of a pai1.<lb/>
with the Pi Kapps? Get ready fot<lb/>
wild night' ? i<lb/>
ALPHA XI DELTA A ,  ? <lb/>
a bake sale today from 8 30 to I 30 n<lb/>
front of the student si<lb/>
ON THE ROAD WITH F P<lb/>
knows stickshift his Only ?? ?<lb/>
Next Repeal close a I<lb/>
F P " with Road the "On chin her<lb/>
wipes and smiles she groans<lb/>
again, ? wallow then once Swa<lb/>
soon be it'd knew she Dulsmg I<lb/>
Feeling atune bodies ar<lb/>
Accelerating miss' near a <lb/>
sign, stop the for out Watch!<lb/>
suck gentle slow - the ?<lb/>
mov ? larted<lb/>
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PLEDGES<lb/>
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K APHA SIGS and HE T AS t.<lb/>
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JIM: I'm sorry<lb/>
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need you I love<lb/>
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9I9YDICKINSON AVF<lb/>
GREENVILLE NC ZH'M<lb/>
EASTERN CAROLINA S<lb/>
COMIC BOOK STORE<lb/>
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JOHN<lb/>
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1nl977Voya<lb/>
was launched in<lb/>
inviting all life forms in the universe<lb/>
tovisitourplanet<lb/>
Get Ready.<lb/>
Company Coming.<lb/>
?<lb/>
COLUMBIA PICTURES PRESENTS<lb/>
A MICHAEL DOUGLAS - LARRY J. FRANCO PR0LX1O10N<lb/>
JEF BRIDGES KAREN ALLEN<lb/>
JOHN CARPENTER'S<lb/>
STARMAN<lb/>
CHARLES MARTIN SMTTH RICHARD JAECKEL<lb/>
JACKNniSCHE MICHAEL DOGGLAS<lb/>
? BRUCE A. EVANS &amp; RAYN0LD GIDEON BARRY BERNARD!<lb/>
LARRY J. FRANCO JOHN CARPENTER r<lb/>
PG.WBftH mm sataia<lb/>
- . ' ' WCMMMNCtwi<lb/>
OPEMS DECEMBER M AT ATHEATRE NJZAR VOoT<lb/>
fields Relates Ini<lb/>
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Friday 16th<lb/>
BEAT TH<lb/>
$1.00<lb/>
NO COVE<lb/>
5-7<lb/>
75c<lb/>
cans<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0009"/><lb/>
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OMA SKUNow i am chafed! I tried<lb/>
?ree weeks fiat you<lb/>
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?img but stories!<lb/>
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I ? dopted B B<lb/>
DGES 8c v 5 Pe ready tor<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOVEMBER 15, 1984<lb/>
Fields Relates Intense Idea In New Flick<lb/>
By DE1RDRE McENALLY<lb/>
Sufi Writer<lb/>
Robert Benton, screenwriter of<lb/>
Kramer vs. Kramer, came up<lb/>
with another film of parallel ex-<lb/>
cellence ? Places in the Heart.<lb/>
Places in the Heart does exactly<lb/>
what it is supposed to do ? make<lb/>
the audience feel proud to be<lb/>
American.<lb/>
The film takes place in Wax<lb/>
ahachie, Texas, a small town near<lb/>
Dallas. Benton, who was born<lb/>
ihere in 1935, interweaves the<lb/>
town's religious beliefs into a plot<lb/>
full of greed, disaster, cruelty,<lb/>
and murder. However, it is not a<lb/>
story of despair, but one of<lb/>
courage and triumph.<lb/>
Sally Fields' brilliant portrayal<lb/>
oi a young widow struggling to<lb/>
bring up two small children lends<lb/>
itself well to the overall produc-<lb/>
tion, depicting the trials and<lb/>
tribulations of the depression in<lb/>
the South.<lb/>
Mrs. Spalding (Sally Fields) is<lb/>
faced with an urgent problem.<lb/>
Her husband suddenly dies and<lb/>
the payment is due on the land<lb/>
she now owns. With the help of a<lb/>
vagrant negro (Danny Glover)<lb/>
she goes about planting her 40<lb/>
acres with cottenseed. After ac-<lb/>
complishing this feat, however<lb/>
she is faced with a few more<lb/>
obstacles.<lb/>
Mrs. Spalding's sister's hus-<lb/>
band is carrying on with another<lb/>
man s wife (Amy Madigan). Yet<lb/>
the audience still senses more<lb/>
irony in this situation. The two<lb/>
attend the same church, where<lb/>
they repent their sins together<lb/>
(along with the rest of the con-<lb/>
gregation Ku Klux Klan<lb/>
members) at the church of holy<lb/>
ideals.<lb/>
Through it all, a strong-willed<lb/>
negro named Moses (Danny<lb/>
Glover) is coping with the bigotry<lb/>
and prejudice of the South. There<lb/>
are some bright moments in his<lb/>
role, however. He becomes a part<lb/>
of the Spalding family ? a<lb/>
friend, teacher and companion to<lb/>
them all. He also learns through<lb/>
the Spaldings that all southern<lb/>
whites do not have the same<lb/>
ideals as the ones persecuting<lb/>
him.<lb/>
Truly every person in the au-<lb/>
dience can relate to the most im-<lb/>
portant idea behind the plot ?<lb/>
the hypocracy of the church-<lb/>
goers in Waxahachie, which is the<lb/>
hypocracy of us all, wherever we<lb/>
live.<lb/>
Places in the Heart is playing at<lb/>
the Buccaneer Movie Theatre.<lb/>
fAsr Jetr, AFfef seeing<lb/>
pouce Hpe Zvipemce<lb/>
AUV-0-SrcM left rue<lb/>
Cafe. The Qir.l. who<lb/>
Wmess ere? TkeP&amp;crH<lb/>
ASKEP OUR HERO For. a<lb/>
L IK - A4N-0-Sf.Ct<lb/>
(&amp;R X PQM'T,<lb/>
E CA6E OF VUt (TfcKP rVNAIvt<lb/>
?? HhovJ'S A0Ovrr GiVxVG ? fc<lb/>
Buddhist Leader, Khenpo Kathar Rinpoche, Visiting ECU<lb/>
By Pat McDermoit<lb/>
Coalrlballni Whirr<lb/>
For those interested in Buddhist<lb/>
philosophy, a firsthand oppor-<lb/>
tunity to learn more about it exists<lb/>
in the near future. Coming to<lb/>
1CU next week to relate his<lb/>
understanding of the true nature<lb/>
t existence is the venerable Khen-<lb/>
po Kathar Rinpoche, superior<lb/>
Dharma master. Rinpoche is<lb/>
known for his patience, compas-<lb/>
sion and gentle humor while ex-<lb/>
emplifying the clarity, dignity and<lb/>
precision of the Buddhist<lb/>
teachings.<lb/>
On Sunday, Nov. 18 and Mon-<lb/>
day, Nov. 19 at 7:30 p.m Rin-<lb/>
poche will give talks on "The<lb/>
Four Noble Truths' at<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center,<lb/>
Room 244.<lb/>
On Tuesday, Nov. 20 at 7:30<lb/>
p.m. Rinpoche will give a formal<lb/>
meditation instruction, "In-<lb/>
troduction to the Heart of Bud-<lb/>
dhist Practice" at the Wilson<lb/>
Acres Clubhouse. All are invited<lb/>
to attend these events.<lb/>
Rinpoche was born in Eastern<lb/>
Tibet in 1925. His formal Buddhist<lb/>
training began at the age of 12. At<lb/>
20, he became a fully ordained<lb/>
monk of the Kagya Lineage.<lb/>
Subsequently, he devoted five<lb/>
years of his life to solitary medita-<lb/>
tion retreat followed by advanced<lb/>
studies of Buddhist philosophy,<lb/>
psychology, logic and<lb/>
metaphysics.<lb/>
Rinpoche was forced to flee<lb/>
Tibet in 1959 later to become ab-<lb/>
bot (superior residing monk) of<lb/>
Kanglung Monastery in Bhutan,<lb/>
India. In 1975, he officially receiv-<lb/>
ed the title of "Choeje-Lama"<lb/>
(superior Dharma master). Rin-<lb/>
poche was then asked by His<lb/>
Holiness, the Gyalwa Karmapa,<lb/>
to come to the U.S. to establish<lb/>
and guide His Holiness'<lb/>
monastery, Karma Triyana Dhar-<lb/>
machalcra, in Woodstock, N.Y<lb/>
Since that time, Rinpoche has<lb/>
traveled extensively throughout<lb/>
the United States giving lectures.<lb/>
This will be his third visit to<lb/>
Greenville. <lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
$190 bortion from 13 to 18 weeks at addi-<lb/>
Duuai cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For fur-<lb/>
ther information call 832-0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 1-800-532-5384) between 9A.M and<lb/>
5PM. weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917 Watt Morgan St.<lb/>
Raleigh, NC<lb/>
CONSOLIDATED<lb/>
THEATRES<lb/>
WbQM&amp;YgVL<lb/>
BUCCANEER MOVIES<lb/>
756-3307 ? Greenville Square Shopping Center<lb/>
1:00-3:05-5:10-7:15-9:20<lb/>
Places In The Heart -PG<lb/>
4th Fantastic Week<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5:00-7:00-9.00<lb/>
"Oh God! You Devil' -PG<lb/>
2nd NX pek<lb/>
1:00-3:00-5 on 7-00-9:00<lb/>
End. Tuesday JMq Small Aff R HT -R<lb/>
Starts Wed. Nov. 21st<lb/>
Super Girl -PG<lb/>
LATE SHOW FRI-SAT<lb/>
Open at 11:00pm X m.i <lb/>
Startsat 11:30pm ? Half the Action<lb/>
NO PASSES RAltUX<lb/>
'WANNA Sfc? t<lb/>
t&amp;?OApC, fcvtMN<lb/>
JpiUUfcp ALU OVCVC<lb/>
Injov?z. Mew wA 5eg, ?<lb/>
Get tht Fresh Alternate Enjoy<lb/>
a fhsh vg'g- or jnduich. made<lb/>
one-at-a-nme Ei m though the world<lb/>
is going plastic "? yt u don i hai? to eat it<lb/>
Stamp out tf njfood at Subu a<lb/>
Qrt iPk 3fr4 -l$m itiw<lb/>
i.0<lb/>
fc. 5tn SI<lb/>
75S-797V<lb/>
208<lb/>
E. 5th Si<lb/>
751-797?<lb/>
"WE BAKE OUR OWNBRI<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
BEER<lb/>
Papa Katz Re-Opening Celebration<lb/>
Thursday<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
November 1 5th<lb/>
From 8:30-1:00<lb/>
DRAFT ALL NIGHT LONG<lb/>
Membership available At The Door For Only1.00<lb/>
Friday 16th 3:00-7:00<lb/>
BEAT THE CLOCK<lb/>
$1.00 Highballs<lb/>
NO COVER CHARGE<lb/>
Saturday 17th<lb/>
John Moore Returns<lb/>
Papa Kdu k A Pnvate Club<lb/>
For Members &amp; Guests<lb/>
We Have All ABC Perrruts<lb/>
Papa Katz<lb/>
with<lb/>
The Best In Beach Music.<lb/>
Remember<lb/>
WEDNESDAY NJTE Greenville's First<lb/>
Ladies I ock-Out Is Back 8:30-10:00<lb/>
Free Draft &amp; Wirv<lb/>
- a- ? ii <lb/>
??? iiiw m ?i,?ii?i m m. m m<lb/>
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1VU bASI CAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
N )1 MBt R 1 IW<lb/>
1985 Schedule Toughest Yet<lb/>
Director of Athletics Dr. Ken Karr has finalized<lb/>
the Pirates' 1985 football schedule with the addi-<lb/>
tion o Southwest Texas State.<lb/>
The Bobcats are with the newly formed Gulf Star<lb/>
Conference and will fill the Sept. 14 void on ECU'S<lb/>
schedule, giving the Pirates five home games for<lb/>
the first time since the 1981 season. ECU has<lb/>
played seven of their 11 games on the road the last<lb/>
three seasons.<lb/>
The Bobcats are 7-2 in their first season as a<lb/>
Division 1-AA school. Prior to 1984, Southwest<lb/>
Texas State was a Division II school and captured<lb/>
consecutive national titles in 1981 and 1982 under<lb/>
Coach Jim Wacker, now at TCU.<lb/>
ECU's 1985 schedule is as follows:<lb/>
Sept. 7 at North Carolina State<lb/>
SEpt. 14 SOUTHWEST TEXAS STATE<lb/>
Sept. 21 at Penn State<lb/>
Sept. 28 TEMPLE<lb/>
Oct. 5 MIAMI<lb/>
Oct. 12 at Southwestern I ouisiana<lb/>
Oct. 26 South Carolina<lb/>
No. 2 at Southern Mississippi<lb/>
No. 9 at Auburn<lb/>
Nov. 16 rULSA<lb/>
Dec atLSU<lb/>
The Pirates' 1985 Homecoming game will be<lb/>
with 1983 national champion Miami on Oct. 5 in<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium. Second ranked South Carolina<lb/>
will also be in Greenville on Oct. 26<lb/>
five of ECU's 1985 opponents arc ranked<lb/>
among the nation's Top 20 teams this season, with<lb/>
all five likely to see post-season bowl action at the<lb/>
end o the vear. The home schedul<lb/>
b lar the<lb/>
ad football Fd Emory will have to rebuild<lb/>
lie football program against one of the<lb/>
I si hedules in the countrv in 1985.<lb/>
strongest and most attractive in the school's<lb/>
history, while ECU will face traditional powers<lb/>
Auburn. Penn State and I SU on the road.<lb/>
MASK BAB BE B<lb/>
ECU P??oto LD<lb/>
Ron Jones suffered through a reck Irishman ear at quarterback for the K I foothall team, but next ear<lb/>
could be just as bad as the Pirates face such teams Miami. Auburn. Penn Mate. I ?l and southarolina<lb/>
Women Face Tough Schedule<lb/>
dy Reflects On Season<lb/>
ii POWERS<lb/>
ins a banner<lb/>
 . but accor-<lb/>
: . id Steve Brody.<lb/>
get belter.<lb/>
 : the 19S4<lb/>
? 16-2 ecord, but<lb/>
beaten badly<lb/>
 g to Nav<lb/>
ECU's first-y ear<lb/>
" ree games.<lb/>
otalh disap-<lb/>
ason.<lb/>
. ab n 1 freshmen<lb/>
. this eai, arid a lot of<lb/>
ble r1 r.g time<lb/>
tied "I hat will<lb/>
.? in the next<lb/>
 fii : rom<lb/>
losing<lb/>
David Pere,<lb/>
. u d Mark Hardy.<lb/>
leading goal<lb/>
team, and<lb/>
ader as well<lb/>
? est all-around<lb/>
vas the closest<lb/>
n ihe-field<lb/>
ited "We will<lb/>
v tr.1<lb/>
I - hampered<lb/>
. . ies e en before<lb/>
Standout<lb/>
Pea sas lost<lb/>
game season<lb/>
 irgery.<lb/>
jffered another<lb/>
g alkeeper position<lb/>
first game.<lb/>
e Greg Brandle<lb/>
ith a broken hand<lb/>
h( season.<lb/>
e Pirates with only<lb/>
esse Daugherty,<lb/>
v .vhole season.<lb/>
Daugherty step-<lb/>
did a good job for a<lb/>
wasn't even on the<lb/>
ame in and improved<lb/>
. the season<lb/>
. . "For someone vvho<lb/>
ivei the way he did,<lb/>
well<lb/>
?<lb/>
major loss for the<lb/>
at mid-season when<lb/>
hman Jeff Kime was<lb/>
s "It hurt our<lb/>
lose Jeff when we<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
23, is one of the<lb/>
major college soccer<lb/>
el S , but feels his<lb/>
have benefited the<lb/>
- r hat it helped me<lb/>
:ould relate to the<lb/>
i ttei and could better<lb/>
? here they were com-<lb/>
is 'he first to admit,<lb/>
 that he still has a lot to<lb/>
it coaching on the col-<lb/>
ay you learn with every<lb/>
If that's the truth, I learned<lb/>
uva lot this year. But I think<lb/>
I will be a better coach<lb/>
f it he stated.<lb/>
n though the outdoor<lb/>
ason mav be over, the players<lb/>
are now preparing for the indoor<lb/>
season. Brody says that the team<lb/>
will start practicing sometime<lb/>
after 1 hanksgiv ing.<lb/>
"Soccer is an all-year sport<lb/>
he stated. "As soon as one season<lb/>
ends, we start another. The<lb/>
players will get back to vseight<lb/>
training soon, and we will start<lb/>
getting ready for next year<lb/>
Looking back on the season,<lb/>
one may believe that the soccer<lb/>
program at ECU may be fading<lb/>
into the sunset. If you ask Steve<lb/>
Brody. however, he'd probably<lb/>
tell you that while they're not<lb/>
where they want to be now,<lb/>
they're definitely on the way up.<lb/>
Despite a losing season in '84. seniors David Pere and Brian Colgan<lb/>
put forth a great deal of effort.<lb/>
Bv RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Stiff Whlw<lb/>
In addition to playing 12<lb/>
ECAC South league games, the<lb/>
ECU women's basketball team<lb/>
will also play three nationally<lb/>
ranked teams, and face two Ail-<lb/>
Americans.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates open their<lb/>
season against N.C. State, the<lb/>
twelvth ranked team in the<lb/>
Women's Court pre-season poll.<lb/>
The Wolfpack has high scoring<lb/>
All-America Linda Page, one of<lb/>
the best guards in the country.<lb/>
Later in the season, traditional<lb/>
women's power Old Dominion<lb/>
will come to Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
The Monarchs were ranked<lb/>
fourth in the Women's Court<lb/>
poll, and sport All-America for-<lb/>
ward Medina Di.xon.<lb/>
ECU will also face South<lb/>
Carolina twice this season. Both<lb/>
the Lady Gamecocks and Lady<lb/>
Pirates received honorable men-<lb/>
tion recognition in the Women's<lb/>
Court poll.<lb/>
With only eight days left to<lb/>
prepare for their season opener in<lb/>
the Dogwood Classic, the Lady<lb/>
Pirates are working hard on both<lb/>
the fundamentals and finer<lb/>
points of the game.<lb/>
"The girls have to pick up their<lb/>
intensity said ECU coach Emi-<lb/>
ly Manwaring. "We only have six<lb/>
practice days left, and in this<lb/>
tournament we are going to have<lb/>
to play as if it were for the cham-<lb/>
pionship of the world.<lb/>
"We've been practicing since<lb/>
Sept. 1 Manwaring said. "We<lb/>
will have had 45 practice days to<lb/>
prepare for this game, so we'll be<lb/>
ready<lb/>
Although many first-year<lb/>
coaches might be apprehensie<lb/>
about playing so many ranked<lb/>
teams early in the season, Man-<lb/>
waring feels that the difficult<lb/>
schedule will help the team.<lb/>
"The tough schedule will help<lb/>
prepare is I the conf rence<lb/>
garner later on Mai <lb/>
;aid<lb/>
The I ad P rai ?? : <lb/>
last raj the EC i<lb/>
South tournam . md will<lb/>
returning talent and newcomers<lb/>
they have this year, another tour-<lb/>
nament championship is well<lb/>
with . ? c'ap<lb/>
1984 Women's<lb/>
Basketball Schedule<lb/>
Nov23N.C State (Fays ?<lb/>
Nos 1N rtl Can ilina (Fayettev- .<lb/>
Nov28I l I 11A 1111 si AH<lb/>
Declat UNCCha3 ?<lb/>
Deci -?HOWARD I MVERSITY<lb/>
DecOI D DOMINION I NIVERSm7:30<lb/>
Dec.15at SoutlIB<lb/>
Dec.18ai Moorehead State I niversii ?s .<lb/>
Dec.19at Marshall I niversit- 3<lb/>
Jan-SOITH CAROI INA- ii<lb/>
JanIONACOI 1 EGE<lb/>
Jan.9( -MPBi 1 I I NIVERSm :<lb/>
Jan.12at w illiarr &amp; Marx;<lb/>
Jan.14ai RichmondTB-<lb/>
Jan.19GEORGE MAsoN I NIV1 RSIT7 -<lb/>
Jan.21AMERICAN UNIVERSITV7:30<lb/>
Jan.26at Radford I niversii ?rBA<lb/>
Jan.28a: James Madison UniversTB<lb/>
Jan.31UNC-WII MINGTON7:30<lb/>
Feb?SOUTH FI ORID<lb/>
FebsHAMPTON INST1TI U<lb/>
Eeb9at American I niversity" ?<lb/>
Feb11at George Mason Univers I ?5:15<lb/>
Eeb16WII 1 IAM&amp;MAR7:30<lb/>
Feb18JAMES MADISON UNIVERSITY" 30<lb/>
Eeb21at I 'NC-W ilmington7:00<lb/>
Feb24RICHMOND3:00<lb/>
Mar. 1-?I (. C -South TournameirBA<lb/>
Men's Basketball Around Corner<lb/>
B SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
staff ritrr<lb/>
The ECl men's basketball season is less than two<lb/>
weeks away, and the Pirates appear to be in good<lb/>
shape for the upcoming campaign.<lb/>
"We're a year older, we're bigger and stronger and<lb/>
hopeful)) better assistant coach Tom Barrise said.<lb/>
Barrise also said that the Pirate's strong point would<lb/>
be their tenacious defense.<lb/>
The Pirates' possess good quickness and must<lb/>
utilize their speed to be successful. "We have good<lb/>
overall team quickness Barrise said. "We also have<lb/>
to go out and play hard every night (to be<lb/>
successful)<lb/>
ECl must improve in two vital areas, according to<lb/>
Coach Barrise. Rebounding and free throw shooting<lb/>
have to improve from last year. Derrick Battle led the<lb/>
team with 4.6 rebounds per game, while the team's<lb/>
second leading rebounder was guard Curt<lb/>
Vanderhorst. He grabbed 3.6 rpg during the '8384<lb/>
season.<lb/>
The Pirates had a cold 61.7 percent team free<lb/>
throw shooting average and were last in the con-<lb/>
ference. However, throughout spring practice ECU<lb/>
has upped their average to a very respectable 83 per-<lb/>
cent .<lb/>
This year's roster has changed for the better, with<lb/>
some quality returnees and some bright new faces.<lb/>
The following is an evaluation of each position.<lb/>
The center spot was a bit thin last year, but not this<lb/>
year. Leon Bass, a 6-10, 210-pound sophomore from<lb/>
Florence, S.C. averaged 2.8 points per game as a<lb/>
freshman. Bass has put on some weight in the off-<lb/>
season and is looking more aggressive lately.<lb/>
A big question mark arises in the import of seven-<lb/>
foot, 235-pound sophomore Peter Dam. He's from<lb/>
Haaksbergen, The Netherlands, and will give EC.U<lb/>
considerable size on the inside.<lb/>
David Harris, 6-8, 220-pound junior from<lb/>
Brooklyn, N.Y. will provide inside strength and ex-<lb/>
perience to the club.<lb/>
The sole senior on the ECU roster is 6-10,<lb/>
230-pound David Reicheneker from Niceville, Fla.<lb/>
His leadership could help the younger players.<lb/>
The foward position looks to be bright for the<lb/>
Pirates. Derrick Battle, a 6-6, 190-pound sophomore<lb/>
from Whitakers, N.C. was a starter last year averag-<lb/>
ing 6.1 ppg and 4.6 rebounds. Battle possesses the<lb/>
talent to become a star in the ECAC South according<lb/>
to Coach Harrison.<lb/>
Swingman Keith Sledge (6-3 190 sophomore from<lb/>
Roanoke Rapids) averaged 4.7 ppg as a freshman<lb/>
and started some games during midseason last year.<lb/>
He should lend help along the front line as well as on<lb/>
the inside.<lb/>
1984 Men's Schedule<lb/>
Nov. 19IRISH NATIONAL TEAM (exhibition)<lb/>
Nov. 27CENTRAL CONNECTICUT STATE<lb/>
Dec. 1VIRGINIA COMMONWEALTH<lb/>
Dec. 4at Drexel<lb/>
Dec. 8 CHRISTOPHER NEWPORT COLLEGE<lb/>
Dec. 13at Campbell<lb/>
Dec. 19at Wake Forest<lb/>
Dec. 28-29First Tulsa Classic<lb/>
(ECU, Tulsa, North Texas State, TBA)<lb/>
Jan. 3BOSTON UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Jan. 7GEORGE MASON<lb/>
Jan. 9at Duke<lb/>
Jan.12WILLIAM &amp; MARY<lb/>
Jan.19at Richmond<lb/>
Jan. 21at Howard University<lb/>
Jan. 26NAVY<lb/>
Jan.28JAMES MADISON<lb/>
Feb. 2at George Mason<lb/>
Feb. 6at UNC-W'ilmington<lb/>
Feb. 9at William &amp; Mary<lb/>
Feb. 11AMERICAN UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Feb. 13WINTHROP COLLEGE<lb/>
Feb.16RICHMOND<lb/>
Feb. 18at Navy<lb/>
Feb.20at American University<lb/>
Feb. 23UNC-WILMINGTON<lb/>
Feb. 27CAMPBELL<lb/>
March 2at James Madison<lb/>
-h7-9ECAC South Tournament<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Sp<lb/>
ECU Netter<lb/>
Bv TOM BROWN<lb/>
Nt?f1 Wrutr<lb/>
The EC L men's tennis team<lb/>
 narrowly missed a winn:r.?<lb/>
for the fall portion of<lb/>
schedule, finishing 4-5-1. but the<lb/>
caliber of the opposition should<lb/>
help prepare the team for I<lb/>
ing competition accord <lb/>
Coach Pat Sherman.<lb/>
"We sched .<lb/>
help us prepare for<lb/>
South tournamei.<lb/>
"As a result, the<lb/>
much improved ar<lb/>
consolatio:<lb/>
ment "<lb/>
Dan LaMont (ial<lb/>
and David Cr<lb/>
consolatio:<lb/>
Treble had a winnii <lb/>
record, "h<lb/>
team to be e-<lb/>
Sherma:<lb/>
are workinj<lb/>
potent, a<lb/>
Althougl<lb/>
are de.<lb/>
seeded a<lb/>
seeded Da-<lb/>
led the<lb/>
ed in the<lb/>
while Grej<lb/>
Ke- - 1<lb/>
Treble A I<lb/>
number I u ? I<lb/>
per ha<lb/>
Turner<lb/>
and Dar 1<lb/>
marks<lb/>
top six<lb/>
"Their<lb/>
paid off I aM<lb/>
the rr <lb/>
Althoug<lb/>
stronger<lb/>
grounc.<lb/>
improved evei<lb/>
??Dav.u Cret<lb/>
touraamer ?<lb/>
of his life. H<lb/>
he could<lb/>
keep his mom imj<lb/>
really help the team<lb/>
Dogwood<lb/>
Tickets In<lb/>
r studei<lb/>
ding ihe Dogwoou (<lb/>
come "r the r-cke:<lb/>
linges Cc<lb/>
Monday N<lb/>
narr the sigi<lb/>
com r i<lb/>
be on reserve a<lb/>
at the c<lb/>
Memorial -v. .<lb/>
On Nc 23<lb/>
will play UN<lb/>
will face N.C. Sta<lb/>
Nov. 24. ECL ?<lb/>
p.m. ar N.C<lb/>
Favettev State a K<lb/>
$<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
v<lb/>
c<lb/>
ECU opens their season in less than a week and junior guard<lb/>
Vanderhorst should provide consistent scoring.<lb/>
Curt<lb/>
LADIES OFF F<lb/>
GREEHWUE Snunm Smmchb "<lb/>
T78 6969 HOURS HO SAT ??<lb/>
? i '?<lb/>
??<lb/>
MM?<lb/>
?HHI<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0011"/><lb/>
y<lb/>
?i: I<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
'MH.(f ECU PKO'C LiD<lb/>
I football leam, hut next vear<lb/>
I M .mil ouiharolina.<lb/>
Schedule<lb/>
 !a a ai<lb/>
- Olil<lb/>
v U<lb/>
tour-<lb/>
well<lb/>
Women's<lb/>
all Schedule<lb/>
s N ?<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
- JO<lb/>
I H A<lb/>
5 OX)<lb/>
 30<lb/>
- "?o<lb/>
- 1<lb/>
BA<lb/>
IB<lb/>
TH<lb/>
(<lb/>
- M)<lb/>
- jo<lb/>
7 N<lb/>
; oo<lb/>
orner<lb/>
2 3<lb/>
.&amp;&amp;<lb/>
s than a week and junior guard Curt<lb/>
onsistent storing.<lb/>
? ? ? ??  - -?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Cf Netters Finish Season<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
SUff W niti<lb/>
The ECU men's tennis team<lb/>
narrowly missed a winning record<lb/>
for the fall portion of the<lb/>
schedule, finishing 4-5-1, but the<lb/>
caliber of the opposition should<lb/>
help prepare the team for the spr-<lb/>
ing competition according to<lb/>
coach Pat Sherman.<lb/>
"We scheduled strong teams to<lb/>
help us prepare for the EC AC<lb/>
South tournament she said.<lb/>
"As a result, the team was very<lb/>
much improved and took several<lb/>
consolation titles in that tourna-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
Han LaMont, Galen Treble<lb/>
and David Creech each captured<lb/>
consolation titles, although only<lb/>
Treble had a winning dual season<lb/>
record. "By spring I expect the<lb/>
team to be even more improved<lb/>
Sherman added. "All the plavcts<lb/>
are working hard to reach their<lb/>
potential<lb/>
Although individual records<lb/>
ire deceptive because players are<lb/>
seeded according to ability, sixth<lb/>
seeded Davis Bagley's 8-2 mark<lb/>
led the team. Scott Avery finish-<lb/>
ed in the lower seeds at 5-1-1,<lb/>
while Greg Loyd was 4-1 and<lb/>
Kevin Plumb 4-2.<lb/>
Treble's 4-3 record as the<lb/>
nber four seed topped the up-<lb/>
pei half positions, while Dave<lb/>
rner broke even at 5-5 at the<lb/>
rd spot. Although Greg Willis<lb/>
and Dan LaMont had losing<lb/>
rks, their play as the top two<lb/>
seeds impressed Coach Sherman.<lb/>
Neither one was even in the<lb/>
p s; last year she said.<lb/>
"Their dedication and hard work<lb/>
: off. 1 aMont was probably<lb/>
most impro ed playet.<lb/>
Although he still needs to get a<lb/>
stronger volley and serve, his<lb/>
und strokes were excellent. He<lb/>
?proved ever) time he plaved.<lb/>
"David Creech came on at the<lb/>
tournament with the best tennis<lb/>
of his life. He began to piA like<lb/>
could have earlier. It he can<lb/>
keep his momentum going, it will<lb/>
ill) help the team this spring<lb/>
Dogwood<lb/>
Tickets In<lb/>
An siudenr interested  atten-<lb/>
ding the Dogwood Classic must<lb/>
come m !he ticket office in<lb/>
'finges Coioeum no later titan<lb/>
M mda) Nov. 19. Leave your<lb/>
e on the sign-up sheet for<lb/>
iplimentary tickets. They will<lb/>
be on reserve at the ticket office<lb/>
at the Cumberland County<lb/>
Memorial Arena.<lb/>
On Nov. 23, Fayetteville State<lb/>
pla) UNCat6p.m. and FC I<lb/>
will face N.C. State at 8 p.m. On<lb/>
Nov. 24. ECU will play UNC at 6<lb/>
p.m. and N.C. State will play<lb/>
Fayetteville State at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The Pirates' weak spot was in<lb/>
doubles play. Turner and Willis<lb/>
combined for a 6-4 record, but<lb/>
the team failed to break even at<lb/>
any of the other seeded positions.<lb/>
"We will continue to work dur-<lb/>
ing the break to improve our<lb/>
doubles Sherman said. "I<lb/>
believe we're capable of doing<lb/>
much better<lb/>
Assistant Coach Laura Red-<lb/>
ford has been a valuable teaching<lb/>
tool, Sherman feels. "We have<lb/>
twice as much coaching<lb/>
available she stated. "Her four<lb/>
years playing for ECU has given<lb/>
her valuable experience which she<lb/>
relays to the team.<lb/>
"I'm pleased with the perfor-<lb/>
mance of our freshmen also.<lb/>
Some have the potential to move<lb/>
up and really help the team, so<lb/>
I'm expecting us to be on a com-<lb/>
petitive level with just about<lb/>
anybody we play this spring<lb/>
Spring Sports Planned<lb/>
ByJEANNETTEROTH<lb/>
Staff Write<lb/>
If you missed out on the fall in-<lb/>
tramural events, don't fret, spr-<lb/>
ing semester is just around the<lb/>
corner with a new calender of in-<lb/>
tramural activities. Here's a<lb/>
month-by-month preview o' the<lb/>
activities available to all faculty,<lb/>
staff and students.<lb/>
in Jan enjoy aerobic exercise<lb/>
classes with your favorite instruc-<lb/>
tor. Five-on-five basketball<lb/>
begins along with co-rec roller<lb/>
hockey. The IM-SRA video<lb/>
games tournament will take place<lb/>
in the Aycock game room. Final<lb/>
activities of the month include<lb/>
arm wrestling and racquetball<lb/>
doubles.<lb/>
Feb. begins with co-rec bowl-<lb/>
ing and swim meet registration.<lb/>
Next, participate in the IM-<lb/>
lobbies weight lifting meet. In-<lb/>
tramurals and Domino's Pizza is<lb/>
sponsoring the annual wrestling<lb/>
tournament during the middle of<lb/>
the month. The end of February<lb/>
marks the beginning of aerobic<lb/>
exercise registration and its se<lb/>
cond session of classes.<lb/>
V hile spring is in the aii. so are<lb/>
March intramural activities.<lb/>
Register for tennis doubles and<lb/>
team handball. The infamous<lb/>
Miller pre-season softball tourna-<lb/>
ment adds excitement to the<lb/>
month. Softball officials should<lb/>
prepare for the upcoming regular<lb/>
season by attending clinics held in<lb/>
Memorial Gym. Co-rec activities<lb/>
bounce along with registration<lb/>
deadlines in volleyball and rac-<lb/>
quetball. Towards the end of the<lb/>
month, pull along with co-rec<lb/>
tug-of-war participants. End<lb/>
your month by marching into the<lb/>
outdoor recreation backpacking<lb/>
trip.<lb/>
April tees off with the IRS golf<lb/>
classic at Ayden Country Club.<lb/>
The outdoor recreation center is<lb/>
ottering a Whitewater rafting<lb/>
adventure trip on the tenth.<lb/>
Finish up the semester by enter-<lb/>
ing the homcrun derby. These are<lb/>
just the highlights of the semester<lb/>
to come. All the excitement will<lb/>
be provided by you.<lb/>
In recent IRS lane action,<lb/>
bowlers head for the top pin by<lb/>
rolling over opponents. Look for<lb/>
Power House, Thunder Balls,<lb/>
Tau Kappa Epsilon and Aycock<lb/>
Pinbusters to take top honors in<lb/>
the men's divisions. The top<lb/>
ladies teams at this point in the<lb/>
season are the Naturals, Alpha<lb/>
Phi and Bowlers Greene.<lb/>
Keep up with all the latest in-<lb/>
tramural action by listening to<lb/>
the Tennis Shoe Talkshow on<lb/>
WZMB every Tuesday and<lb/>
Thursday.<lb/>
ET<lb/>
p VILLAGE<lb/>
DONNA HWAKOS<lb/>
We Carry A Complete Line<lb/>
of Dog, Cat, and Fish Supplies<lb/>
Gold Fish 4$ 1.00<lb/>
(Reduced Prices on Volume Purchases)<lb/>
Large Selection of Salt Water Fish<lb/>
Master Card and Visa are accepted and financing<lb/>
is available.<lb/>
511 EVANS ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C 27834<lb/>
PMONT 756 9222<lb/>
1<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN NOW MBl-R 15. 1984 11<lb/>
s<lb/>
SAVE ? SAVE ? SAVE ? SAVE ? SAVE<lb/>
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oupon<lb/>
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GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
1111 ?? L.MMHMMtMMMMrtt?k<lb/>
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f<lb/>
J<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
NOVEMBER 15, 1984<lb/>
The Experts Pick This Week's Winners<lb/>
POWERS<lb/>
DUKE at N.C. STATENCSU<lb/>
UVA at UNCUVA<lb/>
FLORIDA at KENTUCKYFlorida<lb/>
GA. TECH at WAKE FORESTGa. Tech<lb/>
GEORGIA al Al BURNAuburn<lb/>
SYRACUSE at BOSTON COLLBC<lb/>
MARYLAND at CLEMSONClemson<lb/>
IOWA ST. at OKLA. ST.Okla. St.<lb/>
KANSAS at MISSOURIMizzou<lb/>
MICHIGAN at OHIO ST.OSU<lb/>
OKLAHOMA at NEBRASKAOklahoma<lb/>
PENN ST. at NOTRE DAMEPenn St.<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA at NAVYuse<lb/>
ISC at UCLAuse<lb/>
TEXAS at TCITCU<lb/>
VA. LECH at VANDKRBILTVandv<lb/>
SANTA CLARA al ST. MARY'SSanta Clara<lb/>
SAD SAM<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
UVA<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Okla St.<lb/>
Mizzou<lb/>
OSU<lb/>
Oklahoma<lb/>
Notre Dame<lb/>
use<lb/>
use<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
Va. Tech<lb/>
Santa Clara<lb/>
MEWS<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
UVA<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
Mizzou<lb/>
OSU<lb/>
Nebraska<lb/>
Penn St.<lb/>
use<lb/>
use<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
Va. Tech<lb/>
Santa Clara<lb/>
MAROSHAK<lb/>
NCSU<lb/>
UVA<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Wake<lb/>
Auburn<lb/>
BC<lb/>
Maryland<lb/>
Okla. St.<lb/>
Mizzou<lb/>
OSU<lb/>
Nabraska<lb/>
Penn St.<lb/>
use<lb/>
use<lb/>
TCU<lb/>
Va. Tech<lb/>
Santa Clara<lb/>
R1DEOUTJENDRASIAK<lb/>
NCSUNCSU<lb/>
UNCI VA<lb/>
FloridaFlorida<lb/>
WakeGa. lech<lb/>
AuburnAuburn<lb/>
BCBC<lb/>
MarylandMainland<lb/>
Okla. St.Okla. S?.<lb/>
KansasMizzou<lb/>
OSUOS I<lb/>
NebraskaNebraska<lb/>
Notre DameNotre Dame<lb/>
NavyISC<lb/>
useILA<lb/>
TexasTf I<lb/>
Va. TechVa. lech<lb/>
St. Mary'sSantaiara<lb/>
<lb/>
Powers KeepsLead<lb/>
LastGames<lb/>
WeekOverallPet.Behind<lb/>
Scott Powers11-7110-49.691?<lb/>
Sad Sam12-6106-53.6674<lb/>
Rand Mews13-5104-55.6546<lb/>
1 ina Maroschak11-7104-55.6546<lb/>
dreg Rideout11-796-63.60414<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak i 11-795-64.59715<lb/>
Swimmers Optn '84 Season<lb/>
The ECU swim feam will open<lb/>
 WS-i season Saturday at 1<lb/>
p.m. in the Minges Natitorium.<lb/>
The .nen host INC Charlotte,<lb/>
 hile the women take on .lames<lb/>
Madison.<lb/>
According to Pirate Coach<lb/>
k Kobe JMU boasts one of the<lb/>
litest proerams in the ECAC<lb/>
South and feels his women will<lb/>
ave to swim verv well in order to<lb/>
achieve victory.<lb/>
The men will face UNCC, and<lb/>
although much improved over<lb/>
last year, Kobe feels the 49ers<lb/>
don't have the talent to seriously<lb/>
challenge his men's squad.<lb/>
Both swim teams are coming<lb/>
of of their finest seasons in the<lb/>
history of the school, with a com-<lb/>
bined total of 17 wins.<lb/>
j? Marty, Mike &amp; James<lb/>
Fosh.on Cuts For Both Man &amp; Women (919) 752 18t6<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
EDK?N?<lb/>
SHIRLEY'S CUT &amp; STYLE<lb/>
301 E<lb/>
2nd Floor MM<lb/>
? riW?. N<lb/>
r.NC 27834<lb/>
Kim Shirley<lb/>
(919)752 7637 Fo?NonCu&amp;P?mw For Both M?no,W<lb/>
 Appointment<lb/>
?Mt<lb/>
THE ORIGINAL FAMILY STEAK HOUSE<lb/>
Lome To Western Sizzlin For<lb/>
Bigger, Juicy Beef Tips<lb/>
JUST ASK FOR THE NO. 3!<lb/>
r<lb/>
Lunch &amp; Dinner<lb/>
Special<lb/>
Ved.&amp;Thur.<lb/>
No. 3 Beef Tips<lb/>
S3.29<lb/>
FREE Potato Fixins Bar<lb/>
With Your Meal<lb/>
js<lb/>
4<lb/>
:T-<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
AN ALL'STAR BENEFIT<lb/>
The Greenville Parks and Recrea-<lb/>
tion Dept. is recruiting 10-14 part<lb/>
time youth basketball coaches for the<lb/>
Winter Program. Applicants must<lb/>
possess some knowledge of basketball<lb/>
skills and have patience to work with<lb/>
youth. Hours are from 3 p.m. to 7<lb/>
p.m. MonFri. and some nights and<lb/>
weekends. The program will extend<lb/>
from Nov. 26 to mid Feb. For infor-<lb/>
mation call the Greenville Parks and<lb/>
Recreation Department at 752-41 37<lb/>
Ext. 248, 220, or 259.<lb/>
Mylar Balloons ? Mugs ? Christmas Shoppe<lb/>
Stuffed Animals ? Stationery Bv The I<lb/>
Cards? Gag Gifts? Music Boxes And M<lb/>
Potpourri Chippendale Posters &amp; Calend<lb/>
Mylar Balloon<lb/>
Stuffed Anim<lb/>
Caids Gag<lb/>
Potpourri ?<lb/>
stmas Shop:<lb/>
v The Poi<lb/>
jxes And M<lb/>
&amp; Calenc!<lb/>
tmas Shopi<lb/>
Mvlar Ball(<lb/>
Stuffed Animals ? Stationery By The Poun<lb/>
Cards Gag Gifts ? Music Boxes ? And Mon<lb/>
Potpourri ? Chippendale Posters<lb/>
lPTTll'DipNS<lb/>
756-8310<lb/>
IMvMUMiJUl<lb/>
Kroqer Savon<lb/>
Ouantitv Rights Reserved<lb/>
None Soia To Dealers<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd. - Greenville<lb/>
- . ? e<lb/>
? truttc ??? ? ?<lb/>
 M . -  , <lb/>
,  . j- ?? ? ? ? n .? ? -<lb/>
,?, j r. ???;?-? ?a ?-?<lb/>
sji? UhnnQi -?? i ? - -? ?<lb/>
a- - t ' f ? B<lb/>
? ?? Q ' " "<lb/>
'?' ' . ' . ' - ?<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
NOV 17 1984<lb/>
RHINE, RED<lb/>
ROSE OR<lb/>
Gallo Chablis<lb/>
Blanc<lb/>
ASSORTED FLAVORS<lb/>
Big K<lb/>
Soft Drinks<lb/>
LIMIT 1 D0Z WITH S75C<lb/>
PURCHASEADDITIONAL DOZ.<lb/>
69<lb/>
Ltr.<lb/>
N.R.B.<lb/>
CHOCOLATE, LEMON,<lb/>
COCONUT, BANANA,<lb/>
AND KEY LIME<lb/>
Cream &amp;<lb/>
Meringue Pies<lb/>
$199<lb/>
1 50V<lb/>
1 ? 10-12 Lb- Turkey<lb/>
2 pints cornbread<lb/>
dressing<lb/>
112 Lbs green beans<lb/>
or yams<lb/>
Ijout<lb/>
SSB3?<lb/>
SUNDAY. NOVEMBER 18. 1984<lb/>
Sponsored by FRIENDS OF THE<lb/>
ATT1CJ<lb/>
READY - MADE, NO FUSS<lb/>
THANKSGIVING DINNERS<lb/>
from the De<lb/>
TURKEY DINNER HAM DINNER<lb/>
1 ? 5-6 Lb dinner<lb/>
nam<lb/>
2 pints cornbread<lb/>
dressing<lb/>
2 Lbs green beans or<lb/>
yams<lb/>
 doz dinner roils<lb/>
-4.<lb/>
9<lb/>
u<lb/>
- r<lb/>
re&amp;<lb/>
b<lb/>
SWEET<lb/>
Florida<lb/>
Tangelos<lb/>
U.S. NO. i<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
Idaho<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
Ea.<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
L<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057681_0013"/>
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