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<pb facs="00057688_0001"/>
She<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.3l<lb/>
Tuesday January 15, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
New Communications Major<lb/>
Approved At Friday Meeting<lb/>
Snower Blower Thrower<lb/>
JON JORDAN - ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
ECU students want it to snow so bad. they've hired this magnificiant piece of machinery to to the job.<lb/>
All you have to do is cross your fingers and blow north, okay?<lb/>
? . <lb/>
SGA Passes New Legislation<lb/>
Aimed At Athletic Director<lb/>
B GREG RIDEOl'T<lb/>
MaugJag Kdllor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature passed by<lb/>
acclamation Monday night a bill<lb/>
to advise Ken Karr. director of<lb/>
athletics, to consider student opi-<lb/>
nion when he makes decisions af-<lb/>
fecting them. The advice comes<lb/>
after the abrupt dismissal of<lb/>
Head Coach Ed Emory and the<lb/>
dela in renaming the Pirate<lb/>
mascot.<lb/>
Legislator and sponsor of the<lb/>
bill Dennis Kilcoyne put the bill<lb/>
on the floor after getting a<lb/>
suspension of the rules. Kilcoyne<lb/>
said the bill wai a reaction to re-<lb/>
cent decisions by Karr.<lb/>
The bill states that since Ken<lb/>
Karr took office in 1980, "he has<lb/>
taken several important actions<lb/>
offensive to the student body<lb/>
Among them are cancelling a<lb/>
highly successful wrestling pro-<lb/>
gram, giving the name "Pee<lb/>
Dee" to the mascot and par-<lb/>
ticipating in the firing of Ed<lb/>
Emory.<lb/>
"Such a pattern of behavior<lb/>
the bill says, "is undesirable in<lb/>
such a high-profile administrative<lb/>
position The bill suggests that<lb/>
Karr give "more thought to the<lb/>
opinions of students when he<lb/>
takes such major actions<lb/>
The bill, titled "Ken Karr,<lb/>
Wake Up and Smell the Coffee<lb/>
is only the second to pass by ac-<lb/>
ByHAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
AataUal Newt Mho,<lb/>
The authorization to establish<lb/>
a bachelor of science program in<lb/>
communications at ECU was ap-<lb/>
proved Friday by the UNC Board<lb/>
of Governors' Committee of<lb/>
Educational Planning, Policies<lb/>
and Programs.<lb/>
Eugene Ryan, dean of the Col-<lb/>
lege of Arts and Sciences, said the<lb/>
program will be in its final stages<lb/>
and should be available to<lb/>
students by the Fall of 1985.<lb/>
"The BS program will be official-<lb/>
ly offered once it is listed in the<lb/>
catalog he said.<lb/>
The new degree will involve<lb/>
two tracks: one in print jour-<lb/>
nalism and the other in broad-<lb/>
casting. "The departments of<lb/>
English and Theatre Arts already<lb/>
have the faculty members and<lb/>
facilities in place to begin the pro-<lb/>
gram Ryan said, "and the ad-<lb/>
dition of courses will be reviewed<lb/>
in the upcoming weeks.<lb/>
"We are really anticipating<lb/>
getting the program started and<lb/>
everything is looking very<lb/>
positive at this point. The faculty<lb/>
members have worked very hard<lb/>
in getting this proposal passed<lb/>
and I'm sure they'll be working<lb/>
even harder to get it im-<lb/>
plemented<lb/>
A center will be organized on<lb/>
the first floor of Whichard An-<lb/>
nex in the next few weeks, Ryan<lb/>
said. A director for the program<lb/>
will be named soon, he said, and<lb/>
information for interested<lb/>
students will also be available.<lb/>
"This center will be a focal point<lb/>
for the new major Ryan said,<lb/>
"so students who are interested<lb/>
in the program may inquire about<lb/>
it there<lb/>
William Bloodworth, chair-<lb/>
UNC President's Replacement Sought<lb/>
man of the Department of<lb/>
English, said he believes this new<lb/>
degree will invoke a new interest<lb/>
in communications. "This is an<lb/>
exciting program in which<lb/>
students will be able to obtain<lb/>
skills training in various areas of<lb/>
communications he said. "We<lb/>
hope the program will prepare<lb/>
them for careers in this area.<lb/>
"The communications degree<lb/>
will be very broad Bloodworth<lb/>
said, "in the sense that it will pro-<lb/>
vide students with a sound educa-<lb/>
tion background. The program<lb/>
will encounter many aspects of<lb/>
the media including new<lb/>
technologies, public relations and<lb/>
advertising<lb/>
Edgar Loessin, chairman of<lb/>
the Theatre Arts department,<lb/>
said there would not be "any<lb/>
radical changes in the present<lb/>
concentration in broadcasting<lb/>
Chairman Given Key Role<lb/>
Kilcoyne<lb/>
clamation this school year. The<lb/>
only other time was on Nov. 19<lb/>
uhen tne SGA Legislature urged<lb/>
Karr and the athletic department<lb/>
to seriously consider changing the<lb/>
name of the pirate mascot.<lb/>
Repeated attempts to contact<lb/>
Karr for comment were unsuc-<lb/>
cessful.<lb/>
By HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
Mla'aal New, Mttor<lb/>
Chairman of the University of<lb/>
North Carolina Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors Philip Carson was given a<lb/>
key role in the naming of a suc-<lb/>
cessor to retiring President<lb/>
William C. Friday at last week's<lb/>
meeting of the Board of Gover-<lb/>
nors. Carson will head the search<lb/>
committee and the selection of<lb/>
committee members.<lb/>
Of the 32 members of the<lb/>
Board of Governors, nine will be<lb/>
chosen by Carson to serve on the<lb/>
committee. He will also set times<lb/>
and places for the public hearings<lb/>
to be held bv the committee and<lb/>
serve as the board and commit-<lb/>
tee's spokesman.<lb/>
An advisory panel consisting<lb/>
of 16 people will also be Carson's<lb/>
responsibility. Members<lb/>
associated with the 16-campus<lb/>
university system will make up<lb/>
the panel, which will include<lb/>
various chancellors and faculty<lb/>
members of the university<lb/>
system.<lb/>
"We do not intend on delaying<lb/>
the procedures he told The<lb/>
yews and Observer Saturday.<lb/>
"We wanted to try to get a pro-<lb/>
cedure to find the best person to<lb/>
replace President Friday. I think<lb/>
it's a good plan<lb/>
Friday, 64, set a July 1986<lb/>
retirement date in September. He<lb/>
has been the only president of the<lb/>
UNC-system since its creation in<lb/>
1956.<lb/>
"I think the entire board is in-<lb/>
terested in serving Carson said.<lb/>
"All of the board members will<lb/>
be involved in one way or the<lb/>
other, whether or not they're on<lb/>
the search committee<lb/>
According to the procedures of<lb/>
selecting a new president, public<lb/>
hearings will be held in order to<lb/>
gather input from citizens on the<lb/>
future of the university system<lb/>
along with the establishment of a<lb/>
timetable for selecting a replace-<lb/>
 i? w ?nu u? me wiiiniiiiK ana rnaay, t4, set a July 1986 ment<lb/>
Computer Sound System Assists Blind Chemistry Students<lb/>
FCl Ntwi Bureau<lb/>
An article describing the<lb/>
development at ECU of<lb/>
microcomputer-based sound<lb/>
systems to assist blind chemistry-<lb/>
students has been published in<lb/>
the January issue of Chemical<lb/>
and Engineering Sews, a<lb/>
magazine published by the<lb/>
American Chemical Society.<lb/>
The article reports on the<lb/>
development of two such systems<lb/>
to help blind students or working<lb/>
professionals in the laboratory.<lb/>
One is a talking portable<lb/>
microcomputer that can control<lb/>
Totally Revised<lb/>
instruments, acquire as well as<lb/>
process data and communicate<lb/>
with mainframes.<lb/>
The second system is a method<lb/>
to render infrared spectra into<lb/>
characteristic tunes and chords<lb/>
for pattern recognition to match<lb/>
colors and wavelengths of the<lb/>
spectra.<lb/>
According to the article,<lb/>
"Robert C. Morrison, professor<lb/>
of theoretical chemistry, describ-<lb/>
ed his work with physical<lb/>
analytical chemistry professor<lb/>
David Lunney, research associate<lb/>
David C. Sowell, and electronics<lb/>
technician Raymond T. Mills" at<lb/>
the 1984 International Chemical<lb/>
Congress of Pacific Basin<lb/>
Societies, nicknamed PAC<lb/>
CHEM '84, in Honolulu last'<lb/>
month.<lb/>
More than 3,700 scientists<lb/>
from 38 countries attended PAC<lb/>
CHEM '84 and more than 2,500<lb/>
technical papers were presented.<lb/>
According to the article, Mor-<lb/>
rision said he and Lunney became<lb/>
interested in problems of visually<lb/>
impaired persons in science<lb/>
several years ago when one such<lb/>
student wanted to take the in-<lb/>
troductory chemistry lab course.<lb/>
"The two solved the problem<lb/>
then by engaging a sighted assis-<lb/>
tant for the student. But the ex-<lb/>
perience made them realize how<lb/>
inadequate that would be for a<lb/>
professional scientist the article<lb/>
said.<lb/>
For the talking microcomputer<lb/>
system, Morrison estimated that<lb/>
the cost would be about $5,000<lb/>
for a minimum system with two<lb/>
disc drives, 64 kilobytes of<lb/>
memory, minimal data acquisi-<lb/>
tion power, and a low-quality<lb/>
synthesizer, he said. The cost<lb/>
could rise to $8,000 with the addi-<lb/>
tion of more circuit boards and a<lb/>
high-quality synthesizer, he said.<lb/>
The two ECU chemists com-<lb/>
missioned the first two pro-<lb/>
totypes of the talking microcom-<lb/>
puter with a Michigan firm. Mor-<lb/>
rison said he expects the machine<lb/>
to be ready for production in the<lb/>
summer of 1985.<lb/>
For the system of converting<lb/>
infrared spectra into<lb/>
characteristic tunes and chords,<lb/>
the ECU scientists divided the <lb/>
notes of eight octaves into a<lb/>
range from 4,000 to 600<lb/>
reciprocal centimeters, redrew<lb/>
spectral curves as "stick spectra"<lb/>
with straight lines at peak posi-<lb/>
tions and lengths corresponding<lb/>
to peak intensities, then assigned<lb/>
notes to each peak.<lb/>
The author of the article said<lb/>
renditions of the spectra<lb/>
measurements in sounds "seemed<lb/>
eerie<lb/>
A sound synthesizer plays the<lb/>
notes as two tunes and a chord.<lb/>
The chord, Morrision said, "is<lb/>
almost always highly dissonant<lb/>
Although designed for the<lb/>
visually impaired, Morrison said<lb/>
the spectra-as-music program<lb/>
might be useful to sighted people<lb/>
as well.<lb/>
Yearbook Meets Schedule<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Ntwi Kdtlnr<lb/>
The final pages of the 1984<lb/>
Buccaneer went to press on Fri-<lb/>
day, according to Buccaneer<lb/>
editor Gary Patterson, who said<lb/>
the yearbook should return from<lb/>
the printer by the first week of<lb/>
March.<lb/>
The concept of the yearbook<lb/>
was "totally revamped Patter-<lb/>
son said, with just the "bare<lb/>
bones of copy Only major<lb/>
stories were covered in print and<lb/>
the majority of the 294-page<lb/>
book consists of pictures. "Most<lb/>
students have indicated that they<lb/>
want more pictures and less<lb/>
copy Patterson said.<lb/>
Patterson said by sending the<lb/>
Buccaneer to press now, the<lb/>
high school crunch" was avoid-<lb/>
ed. A large number of high<lb/>
school yearbooks are printed at<lb/>
this time of year.<lb/>
The first deadline has been met<lb/>
for the 1985 Buccaneer and<lb/>
delivery is scheduled for Aug. 18<lb/>
for that yearbook. Patterson said<lb/>
the delivery was scheduled so the<lb/>
book can be distributed during<lb/>
drop-add, a time he terms the<lb/>
"most successful" for yearbook<lb/>
distribution.<lb/>
Portraits for the 1985 Buc-<lb/>
caneer will be taken during<lb/>
February and March. Senior por-<lb/>
traits will be taken from Feb.<lb/>
4?15. Underclassmen portraits<lb/>
are scheduled for March 18-27.<lb/>
Faculty portraits, which are being<lb/>
taken for the first time in 11<lb/>
years, are scheduled for both<lb/>
months.<lb/>
Patterson<lb/>
Patterson added that, for the<lb/>
first time, the 1985 Buccaneer<lb/>
will be available for sale to<lb/>
parents and faculty. The cost will<lb/>
be $30 for parents and $15 for<lb/>
faculty members. Further infor-<lb/>
mation can be obtained at the<lb/>
Buccaneer office.<lb/>
2<lb/>
Senior Accounting Student Dies<lb/>
What Time Is It?<lb/>
Those 8:00 classes are a hard habit to break. We hope someone wakes<lb/>
Education class.<lb/>
JON JORDAN - 1CU Photo Lab<lb/>
her before her arrival to Driver's<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
NmUiw<lb/>
A self-inflicted stab wound to<lb/>
the chest was determined by the<lb/>
Winterville police to be the cause<lb/>
of death of an ECU student who<lb/>
died last week.<lb/>
David Hayes Wall, 22, died<lb/>
Thursday in Winterville. Wall, an<lb/>
accounting major, was found<lb/>
after another resident of the<lb/>
house where he lived reported to<lb/>
the police that he would not<lb/>
answer his door.<lb/>
"It came as a real shock said<lb/>
Dan Hines, chairman of the<lb/>
Department of Accounting. "He<lb/>
seemed to have everything going<lb/>
for him<lb/>
Elmer Meyer, vice chancellor<lb/>
for Student Life, said.a suicide is<lb/>
an "unusual" incident at ECU.<lb/>
The last reported suicide, he said,<lb/>
was "a couple of years ago<lb/>
Meyer added that in the five years<lb/>
he has been at ECU there have<lb/>
"not been more than three"<lb/>
suicides.<lb/>
Wall would have graduated in<lb/>
May.<lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2 the production, resulting in<lb/>
Editorials4 transition for the well-known<lb/>
Style6 play. See Style, page 6.<lb/>
Classifieds7<lb/>
Sportsg<lb/>
?New Head Football Coach<lb/>
?Joe Layton, producer of The Art Baker is in the process of<lb/>
Lost Colony, will be leaving naming his new staff. See<lb/>
Sports, page 8.<lb/>
?A variety of events will take<lb/>
place at Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center this semester. For a<lb/>
list, see Style, page 6.<lb/>
mmmmm<lb/>
mm<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
ttaMMMi<lb/>
 ??<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROL INI AN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1S85<lb/>
Summer Study In ltal<lb/>
Navigators<lb/>
Check It out The Navigators Investigative<lb/>
Bible Study and Fellowship Brewster D<lb/>
wing, room 102. every Tues, 7 30 p m begin<lb/>
nlng Jan 8th<lb/>
Ambassadors<lb/>
Happy new year and welcome bach! We will<lb/>
have our first general meeting ot the spring<lb/>
semester on Wed Jan 16 at 5 p m In the<lb/>
Mendenhall Multipurpose room We will<lb/>
discuss activities and plans tor this<lb/>
semester Inductions have been rescheduled<lb/>
and the date will be announced at this<lb/>
meeting See you there<lb/>
Div. of Cont. Education<lb/>
Continuing education non credit courses<lb/>
Ballroom Dancing Fri , Feb I Apr 12 18<lb/>
p m 10 sessions Middle Eastern Dancing<lb/>
Sat . Feb 9 Apr 27. 12 30 1 30 p m 9 ses<lb/>
slons Beginning Piano, Mon , Febl 11 Apr<lb/>
?.? 337 30pm 10 sessions Call 757 6143 or<lb/>
come to Erwln Hall<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
iHS Sport Club Council There will be an in<lb/>
tramural sport council meeting Jan 23 at <lb/>
p m In Brewster B 103 ATTEND!<lb/>
Basketball<lb/>
Reg'Stration for 5 player intramural basnet<lb/>
ball will be held Jan U and 15 Play begins<lb/>
Jan 21 Get your team together and enter I<lb/>
Participate rather then spectate through in<lb/>
tramurals<lb/>
?raahdancersr<lb/>
The Student AIMeftc Board is looking for<lb/>
breakdanctfif aroup to perform during half<lb/>
time of pirate basketball games If in<lb/>
tereered, contact Pem Holt at 757 6417 come<lb/>
on and Break for me Purple and Gold I! I<lb/>
Interviewing Workshops<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
in the B'oxton house fi offering these one<lb/>
hour sessions to aid you in developing berte'<lb/>
interviewing skills for use In your iob search<lb/>
A film and discussion of how to interview on<lb/>
ana off campus will be 4r.?refl these se<lb/>
sions will be held in the Career Planning<lb/>
room at 3 p m on Jan 23 and 29 and<lb/>
Feb 7,11 and 19 On Jan 28 an evening ses<lb/>
slon will be held at 7 p m Seniors are<lb/>
especially encouraged to attend one of these<lb/>
sessions!<lb/>
Resume Workshops<lb/>
The Career Planning and Placement Service<lb/>
in the Bloxton House is ottering one hour ses<lb/>
sions to help you prepare your own resume<lb/>
Few graduates get tobs without some<lb/>
preparation Many employers request a<lb/>
resume showing your education and ex<lb/>
penence Sessions to help will be held in the<lb/>
Career Planning room at 3 p m on Jan 21<lb/>
ana 31 An evening session will be held at 7<lb/>
p m on Jan 30<lb/>
Free Faculty &amp; Staff Aerobics<lb/>
Classes are held every Mon Wed Fri at 12<lb/>
noonin Memorial Gym 108 No experience is<lb/>
necessary Now's the time to start on that<lb/>
new year's resolution to get in shape and<lb/>
have a good time See you there<lb/>
Also ball room dance classes are offeree at<lb/>
12 noon on Tues ana Thurs in Memorial<lb/>
Gym 106 Get a partner ana come on down<lb/>
for some tun No experience Is necessary<lb/>
ana it's tree<lb/>
Spring Break at Snowshoe<lb/>
its snowing right now in West Virginia The<lb/>
slopes win be in great shape tor our annual<lb/>
spring trip to snowshoe W V Sign up with<lb/>
Mrs Jo Saunders to reserve your space<lb/>
Price varies according to your ski package<lb/>
Transportation available on first come first<lb/>
serve basis Phone 757 6000 or go by Mrs<lb/>
Saundrs office at 3 p m any day for more in<lb/>
formation<lb/>
Application for Student<lb/>
Homecoming<lb/>
Committee Chairperson<lb/>
The Student Homecoming committee is<lb/>
responsible for planning, promoting, and<lb/>
presenting the annual homecoming ac<lb/>
tivltles This festival of events is one of the<lb/>
largest programs happening at the Universi<lb/>
ty each year Among the responsibilities<lb/>
parade, arranging half time activities at the<lb/>
football game, securing judges for the floats<lb/>
and house and residence hall decorations,<lb/>
and presenting entertainment<lb/>
The Student Homecoming Committee<lb/>
chairperson is the individual who has overall<lb/>
responsibility for homecoming Students in<lb/>
teresfed in being considered for the position<lb/>
of Student Homecoming Committee<lb/>
Chairperson may pick up application forms<lb/>
at either MSC information desk or the<lb/>
Taylor Slaughter Alumni Center The<lb/>
deadline for applying for this position is Jan<lb/>
28<lb/>
Motel Management<lb/>
interested In learning motel management<lb/>
with a maior chain? Position available in<lb/>
Greensboro for Spring, I9J5 Contact<lb/>
Cooperative Education 313 Rawl bldg for<lb/>
more Information<lb/>
Spoleto Festival<lb/>
Charleston SC<lb/>
Remember the 'deadline' lor application is<lb/>
Feb 1.1985 If you are interested, please con<lb/>
tact the Co op office as soon as possible<lb/>
Business, music, theatre arts, engi-sh and<lb/>
writing, art and home economics majors art<lb/>
encouraged to apply Salary is SI25 per week,<lb/>
free housing, 150 paid toward transportation<lb/>
cost<lb/>
Camp Day<lb/>
Do you like to work with children? Enoy the<lb/>
outdoors? Then this opportunity may be for<lb/>
you! Representatives from camps<lb/>
throughout the east will be on campus Jan<lb/>
n. ?85 to Interview students tor summer<lb/>
positions Counselors. Instructors, life<lb/>
guards, and more positions available See<lb/>
me Co-op office. 313 Rawl Bldg. to sign up for<lb/>
an interview and tor more Information<lb/>
PLAZA<lb/>
SHELL<lb/>
COMPLETE<lb/>
AUTOMOTIVE<lb/>
SERVICE<lb/>
?10 GranvMr ?td<lb/>
24 hour Tow.na, Service<lb/>
I HmI Rentals<lb/>
rlTibat<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
N.C. Student Legislature<lb/>
The N C Student Legislature Is beginning a<lb/>
membership drive for students Interested In<lb/>
N C issues We have students In a wide<lb/>
variety of maors Over 45 percent of our<lb/>
legislation Is passed in some form by the<lb/>
N C general assembly, which has granted<lb/>
us a $10 000 grant this year We meet Mon at<lb/>
7 In the mendenhall coffeehouse or call<lb/>
James at 752 5662<lb/>
LSS Society<lb/>
The LSS Society will hold It's first meeting of<lb/>
the semester on Wed Jan 16. In the LSS<lb/>
building at 7 p m All LSS members are en<lb/>
c our aged to attend<lb/>
ZBT<lb/>
An Important workshop will be held on Fri,<lb/>
Jan 18th All brothers and HI sisters should<lb/>
plan to attend This workshop will start at 3<lb/>
pm In Mendenhall 221 Guest speakers will<lb/>
be in attendence Your attendence and<lb/>
cooperation will make the difference<lb/>
Alpha Phi<lb/>
The tirst meeting of the semester will be this<lb/>
Thurs afternoon at 4 30 at the house All big<lb/>
brothers are urged to attend this meeting so<lb/>
we can start planning for this semester<lb/>
International Student<lb/>
Association<lb/>
We will havt our first meeting Sat the 19th<lb/>
Jan at 6 p m m Mendenhall 221 See you<lb/>
there!<lb/>
Air Products<lb/>
Nationwide producer of industrial chemicals<lb/>
and gases offers summer program with<lb/>
headquarters and regional offices Rising<lb/>
seniors with gooa GPA and majoring in<lb/>
chemistry business, accounting, or com<lb/>
puter science invited to apply For more in<lb/>
formation contact the Cooperative Educa<lb/>
tion Office in 313 Raw! building<lb/>
Banking Positions<lb/>
interested in banking as a rareer? Local<lb/>
tinancial restitution seeks careet mindea<lb/>
students maloring in business finance, ac<lb/>
i-ounting for spring, summer 1985 Studnets<lb/>
should be graduating seniors Contact the<lb/>
Cooperative Education office in 313 Rawl<lb/>
building for more information<lb/>
Summer Jobs<lb/>
With maior food service corporation having<lb/>
facilities throughout the Southeast Food ana<lb/>
Nutrition majors interested In career related<lb/>
experience paying 14 50 S5 per hour Contact<lb/>
Cooperative Education office in 313 Rawl<lb/>
building<lb/>
Honor Board<lb/>
The university honor ooard will meet Thurs<lb/>
Jan 17th at mendenhall student center room<lb/>
241 We will continue our regular schedule<lb/>
tor the rest of the spring semester<lb/>
Student Union Recreation<lb/>
Committee<lb/>
The department of university unions studnet<lb/>
union recreation committee Is sponsoring a<lb/>
bingo and ice cream party on Tues , J?n.<lb/>
15th at 7 30 p m In the college hill cafeteria<lb/>
(Jones) Admission Is only 25 and all ECU<lb/>
students, faculty, staff, their guests and<lb/>
dependents are welcome Play eight dlf<lb/>
ferent bingo games for priies and eat<lb/>
delicious Ice cream Bring a friend!<lb/>
Tutoring<lb/>
If you need help writing a paper from a one<lb/>
page summary to a one hundred page dlsser<lb/>
tatlon lust come by the engllsh department<lb/>
office A 124 and sign up to see a tutor in the<lb/>
writing center It's free!<lb/>
Rugby<lb/>
Interested In playing this intense sport? It's<lb/>
a college experience you don't want to pass<lb/>
up North Carolina has one of the best rugby<lb/>
unions In the USA, and ECU has been a very<lb/>
respected member since 1975 We've toured<lb/>
up and down the east coast and Bahamas,<lb/>
always representing ECU well on the field<lb/>
and at the traditional aftergame rugby par<lb/>
ties No experience Is needed Practice<lb/>
begins Wed , Jan 23 at 4 behind the Allied<lb/>
Health building We'll be having a team<lb/>
meeting Tues . Jan 22 at 5 downstairs in<lb/>
memorial gym If you're interested, come on<lb/>
out For more info . contact Bill Zimmer<lb/>
mann. 758 4459<lb/>
Foreign Students<lb/>
Individual and group tutoring in english as a<lb/>
second language will be offered in the<lb/>
english writing center, A 309 at noon on<lb/>
Mon , Wed, and Fri and at 2 on Mon Infen<lb/>
sive work on writing and speech are also<lb/>
available For more info, come by the<lb/>
center<lb/>
Zeta Party<lb/>
Zeta Phi Beta sorority, Inc will be sponser<lb/>
ing a party on Fri , Jan 18th form 10 until 2<lb/>
at the Ledonia Wright Cultural Center Ad<lb/>
mission price Is 75 for students, non<lb/>
siudents It<lb/>
ECU Lacrosse<lb/>
There win be an -rnpoitait meeting Thurs<lb/>
the 17 at 7 30 p m In memorial gym in room<lb/>
105 All persons interested in playing lax this<lb/>
semestershouid be there Also there will be<lb/>
elections for a new president and vice presi<lb/>
dent tor this up coming year of 1985 So for<lb/>
everybody who is interested be there!<lb/>
Gospel Choir<lb/>
To all interesting students who would like to<lb/>
lOin the ECU gospel choir, you are invited to<lb/>
come out Jan , 15 Wed at 5 p m In the<lb/>
Ledoms Wright Culture Center If you enioy<lb/>
singing good gospel music here is your op<lb/>
portunij See you there<lb/>
Christian Fellowship<lb/>
There will be campus service Sun ian 20th<lb/>
at II a m In Jenkins auditorium in the art<lb/>
building This will be the first campus of the<lb/>
semester and the new year Why not come<lb/>
out and plan to glorify the lord with us<lb/>
Public Relations<lb/>
The student union public relations and<lb/>
publicity committee will meet on Wed Jan<lb/>
16, I9t5, at 5 p.m. In room 23 of Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center All members and Interested<lb/>
students are urged to attend<lb/>
AMA Meeting<lb/>
There will be an AMA meeting on Tues .Jan<lb/>
IS at 3 p.m. In Rawl 130 Everyone Is welcom<lb/>
edt<lb/>
AMA Wine and Cheese<lb/>
Recaption<lb/>
Any AMA members not receiving an Invlta<lb/>
tlon to the marketing faculty and AMA<lb/>
member social on Jan 24th please stop by<lb/>
Dr Lemleys office R 227 and pick one up<lb/>
Thank you!<lb/>
Delta Sigma Theta<lb/>
Spring Rush<lb/>
DST will be having their ms spring rush on<lb/>
Thurs , Jan 17 at 7 p.m. IntheMultl Purpose<lb/>
room in Mendenhall. All Interested ladies<lb/>
are encouraged to attend It takes a lady<lb/>
All Nursing Students Graduating<lb/>
Spring Semester<lb/>
in order to receive your nursing pin by April<lb/>
22. 1985, orders must be placed In the student<lb/>
supply store. Wright building, no later then<lb/>
Feb 4 Orders should be placed at the<lb/>
jewelry counter Orders must be paid in full<lb/>
when the order is placed<lb/>
N.A.A.C.P.<lb/>
The NAACP will be having a party .<lb/>
Ledonia Wright Culture Center Sat , Jan 19<lb/>
Come out and enjoy<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
We're alive In '85 and lti time to find out<lb/>
what we're all about! We are me inter<lb/>
Vanity Christian Fellowship and we offer<lb/>
fun, friendship, faith, and much morel But<lb/>
come loin us and saw for yourself this Wed at<lb/>
7 p.m. In room 110. Rawl Building, and bring<lb/>
a friend. OK 7<lb/>
Ice Hockey<lb/>
There will be a practice and scrimmage with<lb/>
UNC in Fayettevllle on sun , Jan 20 at 11<lb/>
am You will be back tor the superbowl (it<lb/>
football's your thing) I Please call George at<lb/>
'52 8525 tor more Info Also, we need lots of<lb/>
new players! Call the above number for<lb/>
more Info<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
There will be a king youth fellowship<lb/>
meeting on Tues . Jan 15th at 7 p m in 242<lb/>
mendenhall Vlstors and new members<lb/>
welcome<lb/>
ECU Catholic Newman<lb/>
Community<lb/>
invites you to be Involved with us in 8S Fine<lb/>
out whaTs going on ioin us this wed tor<lb/>
worship service, then our group meeting ana<lb/>
m?yte a surprise or two! It all starts Wed ?'<lb/>
5pm at the ECU Newman Center on East<lb/>
10th st (lust past the music building) Se,<lb/>
you there1<lb/>
Early Childhood<lb/>
Ed. Club<lb/>
Early childhood education duo is meetng<lb/>
Jan IS. Ml at 4 30 in room 129 Speight Hope<lb/>
to see you there!<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma<lb/>
Phi Eta Sigma win be having a m?ef,ng or<lb/>
tues.Jan 15, at 5 15 This will be trie firs'<lb/>
meeting of the new semester Sweatshirts<lb/>
are in so please try to attend Checx at the<lb/>
Oesk at Mendenhall tor the room number<lb/>
TARLANDING SEAFOOD<lb/>
Ar;f Combination Special:<lb/>
yf&amp;7Y . Shrimp, Trout &amp; Deviled Crab<lb/>
FF or Baked Potato,<lb/>
Cole Slaw &amp; Hush Puppies - $3.99<lb/>
105 Airport Rood 7 58-0327<lb/>
Jtf the body shopL<lb/>
Join us now during our New Year's Spec a<lb/>
1 month<lb/>
membershipreg 24.00<lb/>
$19.95<lb/>
3 month<lb/>
membershipreg 60.00<lb/>
$49.95<lb/>
Corner of i AtK. Bring in this ad and get an extra week on your membership.<lb/>
and Greenville Blvd. Call Or Come By For A Free Visit 758-7564<lb/>
SKI WIHTERGREEH<lb/>
a ?<lb/>
Overtoil's<lb/>
"A Mm At?w? tu kVawattr'<lb/>
I I I R.4 ?? H.4<lb/>
3SS 7600<lb/>
m<lb/>
Hours 9-7 Mon-Fri<lb/>
8-6 Saturday<lb/>
Day Trip<lb/>
Every Tuesday<lb/>
Charter But, Leave 4:00 am, return 10:30 pm<lb/>
Continental Breakfast, Light<lb/>
Dinner and lift tickets included.<lb/>
For Reservations<lb/>
Call Jimmy 355-7600<lb/>
The'Best'Rental Prices in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
2905 E.lOth St.<lb/>
A MONTH<lb/>
'9<lb/>
Coic<lb/>
PortaDtt<lb/>
ERENT also rents<lb/>
VCR's<lb/>
Home Stereos<lb/>
Color Consoles<lb/>
Hours M-F 10-6<lb/>
Closed Wednesdays<lb/>
Sat. 9-5<lb/>
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Y.V.YYu<lb/>
I<lb/>
A ?U?" 6U E9<lb/>
?5<lb/>
v<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
<lb/>
"Specializing In Chinese Gourmet Cuisine'<lb/>
Luncheon Specials of the Day $2.75<lb/>
Sunday Buffet m qc<lb/>
(all you can eat) ?-y;y<lb/>
DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
Shrimp and scallops<lb/>
with Chinese vegtables<lb/>
$6.95<lb/>
Beef with Cauliflower<lb/>
and broccoli<lb/>
$5.95<lb/>
( Specials come with: hot and sour soup, chicken corn soup, or<lb/>
house special soup, steamed or fried rice, hot tea and fried "<lb/>
banana.)<lb/>
i<lb/>
100 E.lOth St.<lb/>
757-1818<lb/>
MonThurs. 11:30-9:30<lb/>
FRI. 11:30-10:30<lb/>
SAT. 5:00-10:30<lb/>
SUN. 12:00-9:30<lb/>
? SSfS,<lb/>
TAKE OUTI<lb/>
ORDERS<lb/>
CoUHTRV CoOKNG<lb/>
Sammy's Specialties<lb/>
Fried Chicken<lb/>
Country Style Steak<lb/>
Meat Loaf<lb/>
Fried Flounder<lb/>
Chicken &amp; Pastry<lb/>
Beef Tips<lb/>
B.B.Q. Chicken<lb/>
Ribs<lb/>
Pork Chops<lb/>
Pork Tenderloin<lb/>
Turkey &amp; Dressing<lb/>
Home Cooked<lb/>
Vegetables &amp; Bread<lb/>
Collards<lb/>
ALL YOU CAN EAT 10 Fltte MeSlS<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
SEMESTER PLAN<lb/>
AT SAMMY'S!<lb/>
Plus Tax<lb/>
6.95<lb/>
512 East 14th St. Near Dorma<lb/>
Call (or Tato-Outs: 7?a-047?<lb/>
Open 7 Days a Waafc. 11 am til 8 pm<lb/>
f1.00 Off Any 5.00<lb/>
Or More Purchase!<lb/>
TMt coupon can bo usad for This coupon good on All-you-<lb/>
1 or monj customer can- Eat Specials over $5.00<lb/>
New P<lb/>
B BRETT MORRls<lb/>
Maff ?m?<lb/>
ECU will again be offering a<lb/>
program of summer stud) in Ita-<lb/>
ly. The program will be the<lb/>
equivalent of a summer session at<lb/>
ECU and will last from May 12<lb/>
? June 18. The session has been<lb/>
arranged through the University<lb/>
degli Studi de Ferrara and the<lb/>
College of Arts and Sciences<lb/>
Geraldine Laudati ol the ECU<lb/>
music faculty and Simon Baker,<lb/>
chairman of the Department of<lb/>
Geography and Planning, will be<lb/>
attending the tnp a instructors.<lb/>
There will also be program dr<lb/>
tors<lb/>
LniM<lb/>
Lmv<lb/>
Tw<lb/>
rJurinl<lb/>
ly. C<lb/>
art<lb/>
will<lb/>
classe<lb/>
EaJ<lb/>
credit<lb/>
fulfill<lb/>
quirej<lb/>
cour<lb/>
studel<lb/>
ding<lb/>
I<lb/>
Studies Re<lb/>
(CPS) - Students this year have<lb/>
more financial aid dollars to use<lb/>
for college than any time since<lb/>
the 1981-82 school year, but,<lb/>
after weighing inflation's effects,<lb/>
the total actually works out to a<lb/>
15 percent drop in financial aid<lb/>
since the Reagan administration<lb/>
took office, two new stuc<lb/>
report.<lb/>
Students and their families also<lb/>
are shouldering more of the<lb/>
financial burden for their educa-<lb/>
tions because much of the aid<lb/>
money available must be paid<lb/>
back eventually, the studies<lb/>
found.<lb/>
In all, students will get near<lb/>
SI8 billion in federal, state and<lb/>
institutional aid this year, about<lb/>
the same amount as in 1981-82<lb/>
and up Si.6 billion from<lb/>
1982-83 low, according to a new<lb/>
student aid trend report by the<lb/>
College Board's Washington of-<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
With those funds, most<lb/>
American college students have<lb/>
no trouble financing their edu<lb/>
tions, another survey of over<lb/>
1,700 colleges by Peterson's<lb/>
Guides concludes.<lb/>
More than 9' percent I b<lb/>
year's freshmen are getting some<lb/>
kind of aid money, and they're<lb/>
using it to cover an average of 85<lb/>
percent of their financial needs,<lb/>
the Peterson's survey shows.<lb/>
About 65 percent of all<lb/>
undergraduates get some form of<lb/>
financial aid, a significant in-<lb/>
crease over last year in light of<lb/>
soaring college costs and tuition<lb/>
levels, notes Peter Hegener.<lb/>
Peterson's president.<lb/>
While most of the S18 billion in<lb/>
aid this year will go to students<lb/>
with demonstrated financial<lb/>
needs, over Si 13 million will go<lb/>
toward so-called merit aid pro-<lb/>
grams based on students'<lb/>
academic standing and perfor-<lb/>
mance, the survey also pc<lb/>
out.<lb/>
The average merit aware r.<lb/>
creased less than 8 percent over<lb/>
the past year - to Si, 112 - while<lb/>
the average "need-based" award<lb/>
grew by almost 11 percent - to<lb/>
SI,377 - the survey found.<lb/>
"These statistics suggest that<lb/>
merit awards are not being given<lb/>
at the expense of needy students,<lb/>
as many have feared Hegener<lb/>
says.<lb/>
But the statistics do suggest all<lb/>
students, regardless of need, have<lb/>
suffered from the repeated<lb/>
federal student aid cuts in recent<lb/>
yeai<lb/>
A I<lb/>
cial<lb/>
15<lb/>
I<lb/>
growf<lb/>
than<lb/>
fi<lb/>
failefl<lb/>
In<lb/>
em<lb/>
I<lb/>
propl<lb/>
i<lb/>
I <lb/>
Boan<lb/>
froi<lb/>
3r<lb/>
EXHIBI<lb/>
Art P<lb/>
and Coi<lb/>
<lb/>
DATE<lb/>
PLACE: M<lb/>
Tl<lb/>
:<lb/>
Special Fea<lb/>
M<lb/>
Matting Availa<lb/>
m?mnpftpimiffti(U-iiJ ????'?'??'?: ?A<lb/>
mmmmmm<lb/>
w<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
I i 13<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0003"/><lb/>
 e Tan<lb/>
?<lb/>
ATE<lb/>
79<lb/>
 ?<lb/>
s<lb/>
5 E.IOth St<lb/>
758-9102<lb/>
;ies<lb/>
4 Br<lb/>
ee Meals<lb/>
STER PLAN<lb/>
SAMMY'S!<lb/>
.00<lb/>
f<lb/>
"Od on All-you-<lb/>
iai over $5.00<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
Summer Study In Italy<lb/>
HE EASTC AROUNIAN IANLARV 1<lb/>
K BRb H MORRls<lb/>
Program Offers Study, Travel<lb/>
l<lb/>
Staff Hnifi<lb/>
fc I will again be offering a<lb/>
n ol summei studs m ta<lb/>
program will be the<lb/>
aleni oi a summei session ai<lb/>
and will lasl from 1a 12<lb/>
ls rhe session has been<lb/>
ged through the Universita<lb/>
- Studi d? Ferrara and the<lb/>
 ol ts and Sciences.<lb/>
l reraldine I audatj ol the ECU<lb/>
fa? Lit and Simon Bakei<lb/>
' the Department of<lb/>
i ?Ph and Planning, will be<lb/>
'?ng the trip as instructors<lb/>
be program direc<lb/>
tors and professors from the<lb/>
I niversitj of Ferrara and the<lb/>
I niversit of Bologna<lb/>
Ivvo courses will be ottered<lb/>
during the six-week session in lta<lb/>
1. One vnll concentrate on fine<lb/>
arts and social sciences Students<lb/>
will also be required to take daily<lb/>
classes in conversational Italian.<lb/>
Each course will carry three<lb/>
credit hours and ma be used to<lb/>
fulfill general education re<lb/>
quirements. In some cases, these<lb/>
courses maj be applied toward a<lb/>
student's major or minor, depen<lb/>
ding on their field of stud<lb/>
I he cost of the program, which<lb/>
includes lodging, dail main<lb/>
meal, language classes, field trip<lb/>
expenses and travel within Italy is<lb/>
$500. I he tuition will be<lb/>
equivalent to the cost ol alien<lb/>
ding a summer session at E( I<lb/>
Airfare to and from Italy,<lb/>
passports, light meals and pel<lb/>
sonal expenses will be the respon-<lb/>
sibility of the student.<lb/>
Along with the courses<lb/>
scheduled, there will be overnighl<lb/>
field trips to Milan, Venice,<lb/>
Florence, Ravenna, Bologna and<lb/>
Rome. Each trip will consist ol<lb/>
Msits to various points ol interest<lb/>
such as churches, art galleries and<lb/>
museums I he sessions will end<lb/>
with a four-da) visit to Rome.<lb/>
Applications ma be obtained<lb/>
at the office ol theollege of<lb/>
Aits and Sciences ,r from<lb/>
1 audati in the Music 1 ihrar<lb/>
1 he application deadline is ch<lb/>
1 A deposit is due at the same<lb/>
tune as the application Due to<lb/>
limited enrollment, all applicants<lb/>
will be interviewed and notified<lb/>
of selection b f eb 20 I ul!<lb/>
refunds will be available for those<lb/>
not selected<lb/>
Additional information son<lb/>
cerning the program can be ob-<lb/>
tained b contacting 1 audati 01<lb/>
I nnis hestang ol the Depart<lb/>
meni ol Geography and Plann<lb/>
inc<lb/>
4 '<lb/>
SHORT<lb/>
 ,gh,club I 1<lb/>
 Wednesday<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA<lb/>
SHORTS CONTEST<lb/>
Daddy Cool<lb/>
ALSO<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
Studies Report More Financial Aid<lb/>
 ls Students this vear have<lb/>
nancial aid dollars to use<lb/>
ege than anv time since<lb/>
he 1981 82 school vear, but,<lb/>
i weighing inflation's effects.<lb/>
total actually works out to a<lb/>
15 percent drop in financial aid<lb/>
?'?' the Reagan administration<lb/>
fl ce, two new stu<lb/>
s idents and their families also<lb/>
?uldering more of the<lb/>
??? burden to: their educa<lb/>
cause much of the aid<lb/>
? available ? ist he paid<lb/>
 eventually, the studies<lb/>
idem - . nearly<lb/>
illion in tederai. state and<lb/>
ial aid this vear, about<lb/>
the same amount as in 1981-82<lb/>
llion from<lb/>
1982 83 low according to a new<lb/>
l 1 trend report bv the<lb/>
eg? B a ? v as! .<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
ts have<lb/>
hie I . , ica-<lb/>
vear s<lb/>
Allowing for inflation, finan-<lb/>
cial aid funding this year is down<lb/>
15 percent from its peak 1980-81<lb/>
level, while college costs have<lb/>
urown more in the last three years<lb/>
than in the 17 vears between 1963<lb/>
and 1980, the College Board<lb/>
studv shows<lb/>
Federal aid. in particular, has<lb/>
failed to keep pace with inflation.<lb/>
In constant dollars, federal stu-<lb/>
dent aid has fallen nearlv 20 per-<lb/>
cent in the last four vears, the<lb/>
studv shows, and dropped as a<lb/>
proportion o all aid from 83 to<lb/>
"s percent.<lb/>
Even more alarming to College<lb/>
Board officials - as well as manv<lb/>
other aid experts - is the shift<lb/>
from grants and other non-<lb/>
repayable forms of aid to loans<lb/>
and work-study awards.<lb/>
Grants now make up only 4<lb/>
percent of all financial aid<lb/>
awards, the study reports, com-<lb/>
pared to over 80 percent in<lb/>
1975-76.<lb/>
The greater emphasis on loan<lb/>
not only means students incui<lb/>
siable debts, but "way down the<lb/>
road loans could also end up<lb/>
costing (the government) more<lb/>
than grants claims Lawrence<lb/>
dladieu.x, executive director of<lb/>
College Board's Washington of-<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Flower Shop<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
Corner Evans &amp; 11 Th St.<lb/>
fice.<lb/>
If interest rates rise significant<lb/>
ly, the fedei . . .eminent could<lb/>
a "significant" amount of<lb/>
ney financii . 5t, low-<lb/>
' loans, he warns, conse<lb/>
quentlv spending more than if the<lb/>
money had been awarded as<lb/>
ts and scholarships.<lb/>
LOCK-UP<lb/>
?v ? hrr Draft md Wine Plus 2 1<lb/>
'?u v ? In at Id ()(i<lb/>
ls!  '? '?: I ' ttsU br Awarded<lb/>
Phone ' 56 640 1<lb/>
I b I<lb/>
Wanted Immediately<lb/>
urve ner<lb/>
Peterson's<lb/>
('Uide des<lb/>
M an 97 pg,<lb/>
ire getting some<lb/>
?? ? '? monex. and thev 're<lb/>
cove: an a' erage<lb/>
heir final aJ needs,<lb/>
Peterson '5 survey shows<lb/>
b ? 5 rcr. en; ol all<lb/>
' in-<lb/>
:rease over last vear in light<lb/>
1  tuition<lb/>
Pete: Hegener,<lb/>
Peterson 's president<lb/>
of the SIS billion in<lb/>
his year will go to students<lb/>
nstrated financial<lb/>
 SI 13 million will go<lb/>
tiled merit aid pro-<lb/>
n students'<lb/>
iden ; standing and perfor-<lb/>
? also points<lb/>
?rage merit award in-<lb/>
. S percent over<lb/>
? $1,112 - while<lb/>
? ig "need-based" award<lb/>
: percent<lb/>
the survev found.<lb/>
"These :s sUgges; that<lb/>
1 ai : are being given<lb/>
' e expei eedv students,<lb/>
many have feared Hegener<lb/>
But the statistics do suggest all<lb/>
students, regardless ol need, have<lb/>
suffered from the repeated<lb/>
federal student aid cuts )n recent<lb/>
The East Carolinian is now taking applica-<lb/>
j tions tor the positions o Director of Advertis-<lb/>
ing and Advertising Representative. Applica-<lb/>
 tions can be picked up at The East Carolinian<lb/>
l<lb/>
j oft ice across from Joyner Library. Applications<lb/>
I should be submitted no later than 3 p.m. on Fri- j<lb/>
1 day, January 17. <lb/>
W<lb/>
fo<lb/>
OAKWOOD HOMES<lb/>
PROUDLY SUPPORTS<lb/>
THE PIRATES AND<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA<lb/>
UNIVERSITY<lb/>
Just like ECU Oakwood H mes I<lb/>
? " e 3  th ol Greei . ???<lb/>
North Carolina for year Quality and ser<lb/>
the hallmark of fwo greof institutions<lb/>
helpmg hiends to a bef't" ? ?<lb/>
11<lb/>
ol<lb/>
I<lb/>
Botl<lb/>
ft<lb/>
GO PIRATES"<lb/>
ra<lb/>
CD<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
HOMES<lb/>
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LADIES LOCKOUT<lb/>
WED, JANUARY 16TH<lb/>
Featuring<lb/>
Virginia's Hottest Male Revue<lb/>
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3rd ANNUAL<lb/>
EXHIBIT AND SALE<lb/>
Art Prints, Laser Prints,<lb/>
and Contemporary Photo Art<lb/>
DATE: January 14-18, 1985<lb/>
PLACE: Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
TIME: 9 a.m 5 p.m.<lb/>
Special Features: Rock Star Photos<lb/>
Movie Star Photos<lb/>
Wildlife Prints<lb/>
Buttons<lb/>
Matting Available, Silver and Wood Frames<lb/>
iwx,wxvwyy,rrx.y<lb/>
? ??wwfsssmrmrss?mswt<lb/>
Fabulous Tails For Females<lb/>
DOORS OPEN AT 7:30<lb/>
FREE WINE AND DRAFT TILL 10:30<lb/>
' Men admitted at 10:00 for live<lb/>
rock an roll with THE BLAZERS<lb/>
CALL 758-5570 For FREE TRANSPORTATION<lb/>
to the club and home again.<lb/>
PRIVATE CLUB FOR MEMBERS AND GUESTS<lb/>
ALL ABC PE<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0004"/><lb/>
2Ue 3Eaat (Earolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton, c,??????<lb/>
GRE(i RlDEOUT, Hanagmg Eduor<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mm em. Anthony Martin, ?,?, ???.<lb/>
Randy Mews, v.? &amp;? John Peterson, cm .?<lb/>
I 1NA MAROSCHAK, RHM fitter Bit I DAWSON, Producon Manage<lb/>
Bu l Mitchell, omum v.? John Rusk, .tdW,u?, r?tM<lb/>
Doris Rankins. s?r,(,rv<lb/>
January 15, 1983<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Geneva<lb/>
TaArs TVeec Foresight<lb/>
The media blitzes by high of-<lb/>
ficials on both sides of the Geneva<lb/>
table Sunday reflected one major<lb/>
point of the negotiations: The<lb/>
Soviets want one thing and one<lb/>
thing only from the talks between<lb/>
themselves and the United States<lb/>
? the death of the Star Wars<lb/>
defense. Soviet Foreign Minister<lb/>
Andrei Gromyko made an unusual<lb/>
television appearance in a blatant<lb/>
attempt to sway U.S. opinion.<lb/>
The snag in the dealings in<lb/>
Geneva is a thorn in the president's<lb/>
side, who desperately wants to<lb/>
achieve an arms agreement with<lb/>
the Soviets for historical reasons.<lb/>
If he fails to reach an accord with<lb/>
the Soviets, he'll be the only presi-<lb/>
dent in that category since before<lb/>
John F. Kennedy. Secretary of<lb/>
State George Shultz, under direc-<lb/>
tions from the president, wishes<lb/>
the negotiations to go further<lb/>
under three separate categories:<lb/>
medium range missiles, strategic<lb/>
missiles and space weapons. The<lb/>
Soviets don't plan on listening<lb/>
unless the first two are linked to<lb/>
what they want to stop ?<lb/>
Reagan's Strategic Defense In-<lb/>
itiative.<lb/>
'Without reaching an accord,<lb/>
simultaneous and interrelated in all<lb/>
three directions, there can be no<lb/>
advancement in the realization of<lb/>
what was agreed upon in Geneva<lb/>
Gromyko said. "One would like<lb/>
that fewer frivolous statements of<lb/>
this kind come from the United<lb/>
States of America He also at-<lb/>
tacked the research as "devious,<lb/>
and, generally speaking, perfidious<lb/>
stratagem<lb/>
This posturing is to be expected<lb/>
anytime the two countries get<lb/>
together for high-level talks. But<lb/>
this time the stumbling block for<lb/>
both sides appears formidable.<lb/>
The methods the Soviets took to<lb/>
present their argument to the<lb/>
American people underscores the<lb/>
intransigent nature of their<lb/>
bargaining position. President<lb/>
Reagan, of course, is just as ada-<lb/>
mant about not giving up the Star<lb/>
Wars system. Most of the plan, ad-<lb/>
mittedly, is just being researched.<lb/>
But the project is a darling of<lb/>
Reagan and Defense Secretary<lb/>
Caspar Weinberger. Both honestly<lb/>
believe that the production and in-<lb/>
stallation of such a system will pro-<lb/>
tect the United States. Others say<lb/>
the project will only serve to<lb/>
escalate the arms race.<lb/>
There are many reasons for the<lb/>
United States not to build the<lb/>
system, but appeasing Gromyko is<lb/>
definitely not one of them. The<lb/>
cost itself is prohibitive (and is pro-<lb/>
bably one of the reasons the<lb/>
Soviets want it stopped). The idea<lb/>
is very farfetched, with the<lb/>
technology for completion way in<lb/>
the future. But, we cannot refuse<lb/>
to bargain just because we don't<lb/>
want to lose international face. It<lb/>
takes an honorable nation to<lb/>
realize that the dangers of a<lb/>
nuclear holocaust take precedence<lb/>
over pride. To advocate an agree-<lb/>
ment that might be seen as giving<lb/>
in is better than leaving the world<lb/>
without an agreement and a little<lb/>
less safe in the long run.<lb/>
We do want to emphasize that<lb/>
we understand the way the Soviets<lb/>
operate. We are not naive. They do<lb/>
not keep agreements and usually<lb/>
use them to their advantage. But,<lb/>
hope should not be lost that both<lb/>
sides really don't want a nuclear<lb/>
war. That maybe, in a matter as<lb/>
important as this, the Soviets will<lb/>
forego trying to build warring<lb/>
machines in space if we do the<lb/>
same. If we only get each other to<lb/>
stop for a little while, maybe in the<lb/>
interim we will realize how foolish<lb/>
and insane the whole arms race is.<lb/>
So, now that we've decided on<lb/>
what to talk about, let's not<lb/>
jeopardize that because of the<lb/>
Soviet Union's methods. While<lb/>
negotiating we should not do<lb/>
anything to harm our security, but<lb/>
we should not let the Soviets force<lb/>
us into escalating an arms race that<lb/>
could destroy the world.<lb/>
We only wish that reason<lb/>
prevailed in world politics. It does<lb/>
not; power does. But maybe this<lb/>
time, with the globe sitting in a<lb/>
nuclear oven, the power will<lb/>
overheat and the reason will win<lb/>
the battle.<lb/>
If your schedule indicated that<lb/>
you had CSCI 1584 ? 005 on<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday in Austin<lb/>
325 at 0800 ? 0915, when would<lb/>
you go to class? In the morning, of<lb/>
course. Well, think again. What<lb/>
you signed up for was a night class.<lb/>
We just thought we'd let you know<lb/>
about this scheduling brilliance.<lb/>
Maybe next time the powers-that-<lb/>
be will think about putting an<lb/>
asterisk or something.<lb/>
Campus Foru<lb/>
Economic Quagmire<lb/>
Right Economics Wrong<lb/>
Hysterical weeping and the gnashing<lb/>
of teeth can be heard in the outer<lb/>
darkness. Within the corridors of the<lb/>
bastions of "New Deal Liberalism"<lb/>
pundits from Americans for<lb/>
Democratic Action can be seen fran-<lb/>
tically plucking at their lips and pun-<lb/>
ching meaningless equations into dime<lb/>
store pocket calculators. Intermittantly,<lb/>
they drool on themselves and giggle<lb/>
distractedly. Throughout the country<lb/>
many speak of a realignment in favor of<lb/>
the Republican Party and the return of<lb/>
ideological conservatives such as Pat<lb/>
Buchanan and William F. Buckley Jr.<lb/>
Four more years of Ronald Reagan and<lb/>
another round of assaults on the<lb/>
welfare state, aggressive flatulence in<lb/>
the Third World, hyper inflated<lb/>
defense budgets, glad-handing of cor-<lb/>
porate front men and the force feeding<lb/>
of swill via presidential proclamations,<lb/>
courtesy of CBS (Jesse's station), loom<lb/>
on the horizon.<lb/>
From The Left<lb/>
Jay Stone<lb/>
What does it all mean? Has God for-<lb/>
saken our once fair and intellectually<lb/>
fertile land? Take heart fellow pro-<lb/>
gressives. We are only in the grip of the<lb/>
ideology of regression and retrogression<lb/>
for a short while. Think of how the ad-<lb/>
ministrations of Hoover and Coolidge<lb/>
followed the Progressive Era and en-<lb/>
shrined notions of nostalgia and laissez-<lb/>
faire until the stock market crash of<lb/>
1929 re-established the country's for-<lb/>
ward momentum in the long run by ex-<lb/>
posing the bankruptcy of laissez-faire<lb/>
dogma and heralding the New Deal.<lb/>
Now, as then, certain structural<lb/>
changes are taking place within both the<lb/>
national and the global<lb/>
economicpolitical system that are ex-<lb/>
posing the flawed nature of current<lb/>
social and institutional arrangements.<lb/>
Change in our institutions is, therefore,<lb/>
imminent. The only question which re-<lb/>
mains to be answered is: "What direc-<lb/>
tion will that change take?" Let us hope<lb/>
that we can avoid repeating the disaster<lb/>
of 1929. The problems which confront<lb/>
American society today cannot proper-<lb/>
ly be understood by piecemeal analysis.<lb/>
Some of our most pressing problems<lb/>
are: l)sluggish economic growth; 2) the<lb/>
destruction of the environment and<lb/>
diminishing natural resources; 3)rising<lb/>
unemployment after each successive<lb/>
recession; 4)a decrease of productivity<lb/>
in the economy; 5)the international<lb/>
debt crisis (in which third world coun-<lb/>
tries are indebted to private banks in the<lb/>
West for hundreds of billions of<lb/>
dollars),and should these countries col-<lb/>
lectively default, they threaten the fiscal<lb/>
Other changes exhibit a similarh<lb/>
structural character. The demise of the<lb/>
Bretton Woods System in 19"1 is inex-<lb/>
tricably related to the current instability<lb/>
of the international economic system<lb/>
and the international debt crisis<lb/>
The finiteness of resources, the trend<lb/>
toward increasing population and en-<lb/>
'Four more years of Ronald Reagan and another round<lb/>
of assaults on the welfare state, aggressive flatulence in the<lb/>
Third World, hyper-inflated defense budgets, glad-<lb/>
handing of corporate front men<lb/>
solvency of much of the world's bank-<lb/>
ing system; 6)endlessly escalating<lb/>
defense costs and a dangerous arms<lb/>
race; 7)increasing restiveness among<lb/>
Third World countries, threatening<lb/>
vested economic interests and certain<lb/>
security interests and 8)decreasing op-<lb/>
portunities for all of us, but particularly<lb/>
for certain groups which, because of<lb/>
past discrimination, bear the brunt of<lb/>
the decline in opportunities.<lb/>
More than anything else these pro-<lb/>
blems point out the fundamental struc-<lb/>
tural changes taking place within our<lb/>
current institutions and within society<lb/>
at large. They poignantly illustrate the<lb/>
fact that current institutional ar-<lb/>
rangements are inadequate to deal with<lb/>
contemporary realities.<lb/>
For example, the transition from an<lb/>
industrial to a post-industrial economy<lb/>
is, in part, responsible for rising<lb/>
unemployment as technology replaces<lb/>
labor in certain sectors of the economy<lb/>
and labor-intensive sectors such as tex-<lb/>
tile and steel atrophy (due largely to<lb/>
foreign competition), while capital-<lb/>
intensive and labor-depreciating sectors<lb/>
such as micro-electronics and robotics<lb/>
grow. The transition from an industrial<lb/>
to a post-industrial economy also ex-<lb/>
acerbates the trend toward a loss of<lb/>
good jobs. (For example, research by<lb/>
labor department economists reveals<lb/>
that the 20 fastest-growing occupations<lb/>
pay annual wages averaging $5000 less<lb/>
than the 20 jobs in decline.) To be sure,<lb/>
other factors figure into the rise in<lb/>
unemployment, such as globalization of<lb/>
the economy, de-industrialization, cor-<lb/>
porate flight and not enough people<lb/>
able to consume the products that are<lb/>
being produced. These factors are<lb/>
themselves structural changes.<lb/>
vironmental pollution and the limited<lb/>
capacity of the natural environment I<lb/>
sustain disruption as illustrated b ?<lb/>
Club of Rome studies, "Limits I<lb/>
Growth "Mankind at the Turn ng<lb/>
Point" and "Reshaping the Interna-<lb/>
tional Order show that the wa we<lb/>
conceptualize and promote econonlie<lb/>
growth must change if the very integ-<lb/>
of civilization itself is to be preserved<lb/>
The feminization of poverty (the fact<lb/>
that the majority of families living<lb/>
below the poverty line are headed b<lb/>
single women) belies current<lb/>
conservative right-wing attacks on the<lb/>
welfare state and speaks of the need for<lb/>
new social institutions to deal with this<lb/>
problem.<lb/>
The growing prevalence of national<lb/>
liberation movements and economically<lb/>
motivated revolutions in the Third<lb/>
World underscores the necessity of con-<lb/>
structing a new foreign policy which<lb/>
responds to political change with flex-<lb/>
ibility and imagination.<lb/>
The increasingly technological and<lb/>
hence dangerous and costly nature of<lb/>
the arms race makes some kind of<lb/>
serious attempt at arms control im-<lb/>
perative. This effort should be related<lb/>
to the formulation of a new foreign<lb/>
policy.<lb/>
My intent has been to clarify the<lb/>
nature of the social changes that are<lb/>
taking place in America and around the<lb/>
globe. Admittedly, this has been done<lb/>
in a cursory fashion. In subsequent ar-<lb/>
ticles, I will analyze each particular<lb/>
change in greater detail and examine its<lb/>
political implications.<lb/>
(Jay Stone, a senior political science<lb/>
major, joins The East Carolinian staff<lb/>
as a columnist.)<lb/>
Helms' Reasons For Attacking CBS Unfounded, Absurd<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
If I'm your broker and I say, "Harry,<lb/>
it's a great deal. There are zillions of<lb/>
reasons to buy stock in CBS. One, only<lb/>
20 percent of the employees are conser-<lb/>
vatives. Two, the employees say 'okay'<lb/>
to homosexuals who want to teach in the<lb/>
schools. And, three, eight out of 10 peo-<lb/>
ple in the company voted for Jimmy<lb/>
Carter What would you do? My guess<lb/>
is you'd laugh in my face and go to Mer-<lb/>
rill Lynch.<lb/>
This is exactly what our senior<lb/>
senator, Jesse Helms, is doing. Of<lb/>
course, he doesn't want you to buy stock<lb/>
for economic reasons, he prefers you in-<lb/>
vest your money for political reasons.<lb/>
Helms wants to end "liberal media<lb/>
bias a catch-all term used by conser-<lb/>
vatives every time a reporter poses a<lb/>
tough question or wants to investigate<lb/>
one of the right's "sacred causes By<lb/>
being Dan Rather's boss, Helms says in<lb/>
a letter he plans to send to more than 1<lb/>
million people, you can give America a<lb/>
"fair" media.<lb/>
Helms targeted CBS because it is the<lb/>
"most anti-Reagan network Our il-<lb/>
lustrious senator cites a TV-guide story<lb/>
that found 52 percent of CBS's stories<lb/>
during the election season critical of the<lb/>
president or his policies. This is not bias.<lb/>
First of all, a sitting president is accoun-<lb/>
table for more. During the campaign,<lb/>
'Journalists respect words.<lb/>
They carefully care for and nur-<lb/>
ture them. Each one presents a<lb/>
point<lb/>
there were bombings in Beirut, a<lb/>
military invasion in Grenada, an at-<lb/>
torney general-designate under in-<lb/>
vestigation and a vice president in hot<lb/>
water with the IRS. All these were<lb/>
legitimate stories. Conservatives could<lb/>
label them "anti-president<lb/>
And, Helms, the Democrats did not<lb/>
escape unscathed. Vice Presidential can-<lb/>
didate Geraldine Ferraro ran the press<lb/>
gauntlet for her taxes, and her husband<lb/>
is still page-one material for his shady<lb/>
n??i -state dealings. But there are just<lb/>
more stories on a sitting president, and<lb/>
consequently, there will be more cast in<lb/>
a negative light. Helms and his offspring<lb/>
use the word 'bias' casually, stamping<lb/>
anyone or any story with it that doesn't<lb/>
ring out the virtues, as they see them, of<lb/>
God, state and motherhood.<lb/>
Journalists respect words. They pain-<lb/>
fully care for and nurture them. Each<lb/>
one presents a point. "Fairness" and<lb/>
"bias" are accorded high respect by<lb/>
reporters and editors. And the good<lb/>
ones, like Dan Rather or Bob Wood-<lb/>
ward, remember the rules while the<lb/>
game is going on. Helms doesn't. Rather<lb/>
won his libel case last year and Wood-<lb/>
ward, whose new book Wired has in-<lb/>
spired tounge lashings from John<lb/>
Belushi's friends, has yet to have a<lb/>
lawsuit come his way. The truth hurts.<lb/>
Helms would prefer we get our news via<lb/>
political commercials.<lb/>
What the senator wants you believing<lb/>
is that all media behave like vultures,<lb/>
circling and waiting to pounce on all<lb/>
conservatives, especially the president.<lb/>
This takeover bid is a ploy; media time is<lb/>
what Helms wants. He just wants to call<lb/>
attention to another unsubstantiated<lb/>
claim. Helms knows he can't buy CBS.<lb/>
But he can make us believe its reporting<lb/>
is biased. Yet, he gets precious air time<lb/>
because CBS is doing its job: reporting<lb/>
news, and famous people doing<lb/>
something absurd is defined as news.<lb/>
He's seeking to influence opinion with<lb/>
false accusations. Sure there is bias, but<lb/>
it is the exception, not the rule. Helms<lb/>
and his money bags can do it, too. After<lb/>
all, if he and his Congressional Club<lb/>
cohorts can make Robert Morgan a<lb/>
liberal and Jim Hunt gay, he can make<lb/>
us believe that Dan Rather and Bill<lb/>
Moyers are communists.<lb/>
So, what can be done? Well, the best<lb/>
thing is nothing. Let him try and fail,<lb/>
and point out along the way why he is<lb/>
wrong. Editorial pages should denounce<lb/>
it, and news pages should report it. But<lb/>
it should stand as a warning to the few<lb/>
bad apples who give journalism a bad<lb/>
name. Although Helms' attack is super-<lb/>
ficial and unfounded, it is a caveat to the<lb/>
profession to make sure ethics and<lb/>
fairness remain the most important<lb/>
bywords of journalism.<lb/>
We must police ourselves, or soon the<lb/>
courts will damage the Constitution and<lb/>
do it for you. Helms has every right to<lb/>
try to buy CBS. If he wants he could<lb/>
make it the New Right New Service. He<lb/>
probably would; in fact, if you've ever<lb/>
read any conservative papers that pur-<lb/>
port to "report" the news, you might<lb/>
understand what news is to the new<lb/>
guard. Journalists must strive to be fair,<lb/>
and let others decide if what is happen-<lb/>
ing is right, left or wrong.<lb/>
If the Helmses of the world are to be<lb/>
prevented from defining fairness and<lb/>
bias, and if they are to be fought as they<lb/>
try to legislate our lives and destroy our<lb/>
rights, journalists must treat him and<lb/>
everyone else according to the highest<lb/>
standards of the profession. The sad<lb/>
thing is is that Helms really believes that<lb/>
news that doesn't adhere to his defini-<lb/>
tion of news is biased. If journalists<lb/>
don't keep on their toes and let their<lb/>
guard down, if they try to put opinions<lb/>
on page one, then they'll get a right from<lb/>
Jesse Helms. Journalism and the Con-<lb/>
stitution might stay down for the count.<lb/>
Giggling, Dr<lb/>
Come en. Dennis, all libei<lb/>
jrc not just idiots searchinf<lb/>
!he ' id facts of reaiity<lb/>
1 here are those who cai<lb/>
more than giggle, stare, tume<lb/>
and drool when debating<lb/>
? gn poli<lb/>
 Is just as myopic and<lb/>
superficial to blame .ties<lb/>
on Marxist philosoph) and<lb/>
munist aggression as ii is to<lb/>
the<lb/>
? ol national traged<lb/>
listed 0j jan<lb/>
10<lb/>
There .an be no debate that<lb/>
many communist regime- have<lb/>
committed some of th- t<lb/>
human rights violati<lb/>
history The Khmer R .<lb/>
I ambodia .arned out a horrid<lb/>
massive genocide that matches<lb/>
Stalin's and Hitie:<lb/>
record of torture, impri<lb/>
ment and denial of civil t .<lb/>
is atrociou ou are right<lb/>
list goes on.<lb/>
But the I nited States<lb/>
ported rightist or anti-<lb/>
communist regimes that are<lb/>
sometin ad. and for<lb/>
that we car, . our<lb/>
government. Pinochet in Chile,<lb/>
whom we ht. tall a doen<lb/>
vears ago. has a long record of<lb/>
repression and cruelty that in-<lb/>
cludes murder, torture.<lb/>
klisting and imprisonment<lb/>
The inep of leaders wc<lb/>
backed in South Vietnam were<lb/>
as 1 id a the North<lb/>
Vietnamese at human rij<lb/>
violations, and the:<lb/>
were considerable at times<lb/>
Somoza n Nicaragua, whom<lb/>
e ?  for A<lb/>
likewise violated<lb/>
American ideal and<lb/>
human decency b keeping<lb/>
e in poverty, his polii<lb/>
enemies imprisoned, civil rij<lb/>
curtailed and his own bai ?<lb/>
count full. After w?<lb/>
the regime that in<lb/>
generate iffei <lb/>
aguan people, it<lb/>
wonder the Sandani<lb/>
not be boughi fl -<lb/>
package This st,<lb/>
on<lb/>
We undermine<lb/>
credibility and our<lb/>
tv when we I<lb/>
our nation itan i ?<lb/>
democratic goveri<lb/>
respeel tor human rights, fc<lb/>
Former SGA<lb/>
Presidents In<lb/>
Job Dispute<lb/>
B (,RK, RIDHH I<lb/>
Managing UMH<lb/>
Two former SGA pi<lb/>
and current ECU studer<lb/>
suspended from jobs in the N (<lb/>
Insurance Department<lb/>
a possible conflict bctw<lb/>
and a full-time job. The<lb/>
sions came during the<lb/>
transition between outg . In-<lb/>
surance Commissioner John In-<lb/>
gram and incoming C<lb/>
sioner Jim I ong<lb/>
Timothv K. Sullivan. :?<lb/>
Vincent Bret:? Melvin, 26. were<lb/>
pended without pav durin<lb/>
investigation that ended M<lb/>
Melvm. SGA lent dui<lb/>
the 1979-1980 school vear. was<lb/>
reinstated with ba ?<lb/>
"no conflict" was found.<lb/>
Sullivan, who held the top SCA<lb/>
po-t in 1976-1977, resigned after<lb/>
he was suspended, calling<lb/>
suspension political in a<lb/>
dreenshoro eu Record a<lb/>
cle.<lb/>
Insurance Department Pe-<lb/>
nel Director Ronnie Condrey -<lb/>
the suspensions were no: political<lb/>
and were a matter of "are thev<lb/>
able to do their job" while going<lb/>
to school Both Sullivan and<lb/>
MeKin inspected mobile homes<lb/>
from a Greenville base<lb/>
Sullivan had worked in the ill-<lb/>
fated gubernatorial campaign<lb/>
Ingram as a paid staffer. Melvin<lb/>
worked as a volunteer, lor.<lb/>
Felker, assistant professor ol<lb/>
political science, said Melvin was<lb/>
a part-time student in the depart-<lb/>
ment's Master of Public Ad-<lb/>
ministration program Felker<lb/>
said Melvin had completed the<lb/>
classroom instruction part of the<lb/>
program<lb/>
Melvm did a required intern-<lb/>
ship tor his degree in the In-<lb/>
surance Department He<lb/>
responded to consumers" com-<lb/>
plaints about mobile homes, and<lb/>
Sullivan inspected new mobile<lb/>
homes on dealers' lots. Sullivan<lb/>
earned $16,464 per year; Melvin<lb/>
still earns the same amount<lb/>
Melvin or Sullivan could not be<lb/>
reached for comment.<lb/>
V I<lb/>
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Uy, this has been done<lb/>
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each particular<lb/>
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mpiic i<lb/>
?r political science<lb/>
The East Carolinian staff<lb/>
Absurd<lb/>
fe must police ourselves, or soon the<lb/>
p a U damage the Constitution and<lb/>
for you Helms has everv right to<lb/>
 i CBS It he ants'he could<lb/>
le it the New Rlght News Service. He<lb/>
Jably would; in fact, if vou've ever<lb/>
any conservative papers that pur-<lb/>
to "report" the news, you might<lb/>
brstand hat news is to the new<lb/>
Id. Journalists must strive to be fair,<lb/>
llet others decide if what is happen-<lb/>
s right, left or wrong.<lb/>
the Helmses of the world are to be<lb/>
ented from defining fairness and<lb/>
and if they are to be fought as they<lb/>
lo legislate our lives and destroy our<lb/>
Is. journalists must treat him and<lb/>
yone else according to the highest<lb/>
lards of the profession. The sad<lb/>
is is that Helms really believes that<lb/>
that doesn't adhere to his defini-<lb/>
of news is biased. If journalists<lb/>
t keep on their toes and let their<lb/>
down, if they try to put opinions<lb/>
ige one, then they'll get a right from<lb/>
Helms. Journalism and the Con-<lb/>
kion might stay down for the count.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1985<lb/>
Giggling, Drooling Not In Liberal Repertoire<lb/>
Come on, Dennis, all liberals<lb/>
are not just idiots searching for<lb/>
'he hard, cold facts of reality<lb/>
'here are those who can do<lb/>
more than giggle, stare, fume<lb/>
and drool when debating<lb/>
toreign policy.<lb/>
11 is just as mvopic and<lb/>
superficial to blame all cruelties<lb/>
on Marxist philosophy and<lb/>
communist aggression as it is to<lb/>
"blame America first" for the<lb/>
htanv of national tragedies<lb/>
listed in your editorial of Jan<lb/>
10.<lb/>
There can be no debate that<lb/>
many communist regimes have<lb/>
committed some of the worst<lb/>
human rights violations in<lb/>
history. The Khmer Rouge in<lb/>
Cambodia carried out a horrid<lb/>
massive genocide that matches<lb/>
Stalin's and Hitler's. Castro's<lb/>
record of torture, imprison-<lb/>
ment and denial of civil rights<lb/>
is atrocious. You are right, the<lb/>
lisl goes on.<lb/>
But the United States has<lb/>
supported rightist or anti-<lb/>
communist regimes that are<lb/>
sometimes just as bad, and for<lb/>
that we can justly criticize our<lb/>
government. Pinochet in Chile,<lb/>
whom we helped install a dozen<lb/>
years ago, has a long record of<lb/>
repression and cruelty that in-<lb/>
cludes murder, torture,<lb/>
blacklisting and imprisonment.<lb/>
The inept series of leaders we<lb/>
backed in South Vietnam were<lb/>
as least as bad as the North<lb/>
Vietnamese at human rights<lb/>
violations, and their trespasses<lb/>
were considerable at times.<lb/>
Somoza in Nicaragua, whom<lb/>
we backed for 40 years,<lb/>
likewise violated every<lb/>
American ideal and standard of<lb/>
human decency by keeping his<lb/>
people in poverty, his political<lb/>
enemies imprisoned, civil rights<lb/>
curtailed and his own bank ac-<lb/>
count full. After we supported<lb/>
the regime that imposed<lb/>
generations of suffering on the<lb/>
Nicaraguan people, it is little<lb/>
wonder the Sandanistas would<lb/>
not be bought off with an aid<lb/>
package. This list, too, goes<lb/>
on.<lb/>
We undermine U.S.<lb/>
credibility and our own morali-<lb/>
tv when we forsake the ideals<lb/>
our nation stands for ?<lb/>
democratic government,<lb/>
respect for human rights, basic<lb/>
Former SGA<lb/>
Presidents In<lb/>
Job Dispute<lb/>
B (,RK(, HIDEOUT<lb/>
Managing Ml I or<lb/>
Two former SGA presidents<lb/>
and current ECU students were<lb/>
suspended from jobs in the N.C.<lb/>
Insurance Department because of<lb/>
a possible conflict between school<lb/>
and a full-time job. The suspen-<lb/>
sions came during the bumpv<lb/>
transition between outgoing In-<lb/>
surance Commissioner John In-<lb/>
gram and incoming Commis-<lb/>
sioner Jim Long.<lb/>
Timothy K. Sullivan, 28, and<lb/>
Vincent (Brett) Melvin, 26, were<lb/>
suspended without pay during an<lb/>
investigation that ended Monday.<lb/>
Melvin, SGA president during<lb/>
the 1979-1980 school year, was<lb/>
reinstated with back pay after<lb/>
"no conflict" was found.<lb/>
Sullivan, who held the top c 3A<lb/>
post in 1976-1977, resigned after<lb/>
he was suspended, calling the<lb/>
suspension political in a<lb/>
(treensboro Sews &amp; Record arti-<lb/>
cle.<lb/>
Insurance Department Person-<lb/>
nel Director Ronnie Condrey said<lb/>
the suspensions were not political<lb/>
and were a matter of "are they<lb/>
able to do their job" while going<lb/>
to school. Both Sullivan and<lb/>
Melvin inspected mobile homes<lb/>
from a Greenville base.<lb/>
Sullivan had worked in the ill-<lb/>
fated gubernatorial campaign of<lb/>
Ingram as a paid staffer. Melvin<lb/>
worked as a volunteer. Lon<lb/>
Felker, assistant professor of<lb/>
political science, said Melvin was<lb/>
a part-time student in the depart-<lb/>
ment's Master of Public Ad-<lb/>
ministration program. Felker<lb/>
said Melvin had completed the<lb/>
classroom instruction part of the<lb/>
program.<lb/>
Melvin did a required intern-<lb/>
ship for his degree in the In-<lb/>
surance Department. He<lb/>
responded to consumers' com-<lb/>
plaints about mobile homes, and<lb/>
Sullivan inspected new mobile<lb/>
homes on dealers' lots. Sullivan<lb/>
earned $16,464 per year; Melvin<lb/>
still earns the same amount.<lb/>
Melvin or Sullivan could not be<lb/>
reached for comment.<lb/>
civil freedoms and equality<lb/>
under the law - by supporting<lb/>
governments that violate every<lb/>
one. We are tempted to such<lb/>
policy by economic imperatives<lb/>
and strategic or military in-<lb/>
terests, but only by insisting on<lb/>
respect from our allies for the<lb/>
basic values we hold dear can<lb/>
we maintain our credible case<lb/>
against communist agression.<lb/>
To maintain the world's faith<lb/>
in the values our nation<lb/>
represents, we must live up to<lb/>
those values. When we have<lb/>
cleaned our own house, our<lb/>
case against Marxist policy is<lb/>
all the more credible.<lb/>
Let's have coffee sometime,<lb/>
Dennis. I haven't majored in<lb/>
political science like you, but I<lb/>
can do more than giggle and<lb/>
drool<lb/>
Darryl Brown<lb/>
ECU Alumnus<lb/>
Progress Sad<lb/>
Progress forges ahead at<lb/>
ECU. Although I can unders-<lb/>
tand the need for a new<lb/>
building on campus and the<lb/>
limited space available, it sad-<lb/>
dens me that the location of the<lb/>
new building will remove one<lb/>
of the few areas of beauty on<lb/>
campus. I have spent many a<lb/>
tranquil hour in that grove<lb/>
behind the Biology building.<lb/>
Someone in the past must<lb/>
have been aware that students<lb/>
need more than florescent<lb/>
lights and brick buildings<lb/>
because there is a gazebo and<lb/>
picnic table. It's the only picnic-<lb/>
table I've seen on campus.<lb/>
With their shouting numbers<lb/>
over the intercom at<lb/>
Mendenhall, I am always ex-<lb/>
pecting that any moment so-<lb/>
meone will stand up, shout<lb/>
bingo and walk away with a<lb/>
lamp. Not everyone cares for<lb/>
"cafeteria" atmosphere.<lb/>
Native Americans felt that<lb/>
sitting on the ground brought<lb/>
one closer to God. When sitting<lb/>
on those grassy slopes, the sun<lb/>
illuminates and warms my<lb/>
heart, the squirrels make it<lb/>
dance; the grass and insects<lb/>
make me sensitive to the<lb/>
dimensions of life not keenly<lb/>
visible to the eye. I am sure<lb/>
others will miss this place as<lb/>
well. This brings to mind<lb/>
another Indian saying: "Where<lb/>
the white man touches the<lb/>
earth, it is sore<lb/>
PJ. Klinger<lb/>
Soph Pre-OT.<lb/>
Transit Blues<lb/>
I am appalled at the universi-<lb/>
ty's inconsideration of the<lb/>
students who use the bus<lb/>
system at night. The only bus<lb/>
that goes to Pitt Plaza and<lb/>
Greenville Square is the Gold<lb/>
bus and that is only at night.<lb/>
Many students rely on the Gold<lb/>
bus to buy their groceries and<lb/>
need to put the perishable items<lb/>
away without them being spoil-<lb/>
ed. With the new bus schedule<lb/>
that combines both the Purple<lb/>
and the Gold route at night, the<lb/>
Gold bus arrives on the hill and<lb/>
at Mendenhall once an hour<lb/>
rather than every half hour. It<lb/>
has already encouraged<lb/>
students to skip meals rather<lb/>
than take the extra time to go<lb/>
food shopping. As many peo-<lb/>
ple know, many students do<lb/>
not eat properly as it is.<lb/>
Since the availability of the<lb/>
bus is now limited, it is a real<lb/>
shame that so many people<lb/>
(especially females) who usual-<lb/>
ly ride the bus and live on the<lb/>
hill now walk to and from the<lb/>
library at night alone. Since the<lb/>
last bus leaves Mendenhall by<lb/>
8:30 p.m. rather than 9:30<lb/>
p.m students also have less<lb/>
time to study at the library if<lb/>
students want to use the bus to<lb/>
return back to the dorms.<lb/>
I realize that the change in<lb/>
schedule is to save money, but<lb/>
the new schedule discourages<lb/>
many students from using the<lb/>
bus at night and encourages<lb/>
more students to have cars on<lb/>
?TZ-?,h' condon<lb/>
? uteVmaCtHeatn and<lb/>
Mitt Street 2ft590<lb/>
campus.<lb/>
Sheila Moore<lb/>
Jr Corrections<lb/>
ABORTIONS UP<lb/>
TO 12th WEEK<lb/>
OF PREGNANCY<lb/>
SI9(1 bortion from 13 to 18 weeks ai addi-<lb/>
uo.iaJ cost. Pregnancy Test, Birth Control,<lb/>
and Problem Pregnancy Counseling. For fur-<lb/>
ther information caJI 832-0535 (Toll Free<lb/>
Number 1-800-532-5384) between 9A.M and<lb/>
5P.M. weekdays.<lb/>
RALEIGH WOMEN'S<lb/>
HEALTH<lb/>
ORGANIZATIONS<lb/>
917WMtMor9onS?.<lb/>
RoMqIi.NC <lb/>
SOFT CONTACTS<lb/>
4??f jfa lVAn YUI-AR $40.00pair<lb/>
C<lb/>
<lb/>
KXTr.Nb! I)<lb/>
WEAR $60.00pair<lb/>
TINTED $70.00Pair<lb/>
(blue aqua,<lb/>
tfreen. brown)<lb/>
STUDENT ID REQUIRED<lb/>
I he abof prkes do ncN m, luj?- tees tor professional seri f,<lb/>
IVoUv.ion.xl fee depend on Ions tyi- r?d your previous soli<lb/>
lens expenerx t<lb/>
Call IWmore information ? 756-9404.<lb/>
onoMerwc<lb/>
?YECAR?C?MT?R<lb/>
Drs Holl.s W Scibal<lb/>
I ipion We 2jW (ireenviBe tthd<lb/>
soup<lb/>
scXad<lb/>
Si<lb/>
Now Offering: Stuffed Baked Potatoes<lb/>
or Quiche Lorraine<lb/>
"xSrWSS<lb/>
NOW TAKING<lb/>
APPLICATIONS<lb/>
General Manager<lb/>
Needed For<lb/>
Ebony Herald<lb/>
Interested persons<lb/>
may apply at the Media<lb/>
Board Office - Located<lb/>
in the Publications<lb/>
Bldg.<lb/>
Phone: 757 - 6009 Fiirjg Dates: iio-85 thru 1-18-85<lb/>
AID <lb/>
PAPA <lb/>
KATZ<lb/>
COt PON<lb/>
V<lb/>
30 OFF<lb/>
ALL FRAMES<lb/>
IN STOCK<lb/>
 Must present coupon with order for<lb/>
j discount Not good with other adver-<lb/>
tised s<lb/>
1984<lb/>
peciais ExpjreS Feb 8<lb/>
L<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
SOFT <lb/>
I<lb/>
Sf?'<lb/>
contacts; 20 OFF i<lb/>
DY.UU I All NonPrescription <lb/>
Sunglasses<lb/>
Expires Feb 8,1985<lb/>
Includes care<lb/>
kit at<lb/>
this price.<lb/>
viui. j.i<lb/>
J<lb/>
Phone<lb/>
756-4204<lb/>
OPTICAL<lb/>
PALACE<lb/>
YZ<lb/>
VL<lb/>
I 703 Greenville Blvd (Across From The Plaza. Next To ERA Realty)<lb/>
1 G?ry M Hams Licensed Opiician Open 9 30 am to 6 p m Mon Fr.<lb/>
L<lb/>
Iff<lb/>
PRESENT<lb/>
WEDNESDA Y<lb/>
NIGHT<lb/>
LADIES LOCKOUT<lb/>
THE ORIGINAL IS BACK HOME!<lb/>
Free Wine &amp; Beer<lb/>
FOR LADIES FROM 8:30-10:00<lb/>
MEN ADMITTED AT 10:00<lb/>
WITH HAPPY HOUR Prices TILL 1100<lb/>
MEMBERS $2.00 GUESTS $3.00<lb/>
MEMBERSHIPS AVALABLE<lb/>
AT THE DOOR FOR ONLY $1.00<lb/>
FRATERNITY WITH THE MOST GUYS<lb/>
AT 10:30<lb/>
GETS A SPECIAL GIFT<lb/>
GIRLS FROM AZD<lb/>
10th St. Ext. At<lb/>
Riverbluff Rd<lb/>
Papa Kati Is A Private Ouh<lb/>
For Members It Gv?<lb/>
W? Hove AM ABC Perm<lb/>
?<lb/>
? ? ?iMfc<lb/>
?MMMte<lb/>
?mM<lb/>
f<lb/>
N<lb/>
t<lb/>
i<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0006"/><lb/>
I HI I AM k( i INIAN<lb/>
style<lb/>
Layton Breaks A way From The 'Colony'<lb/>
hint's li<lb/>
Talks I:<lb/>
( ivil Pn<lb/>
Joe 1 ayton, foi 2 sears dues<lb/>
toi and choreographei ol The<lb/>
I"? olonx. said in a prepared<lb/>
st ate men t released b a<lb/>
spokesman from ew York, that<lb/>
his association with the Paul<lb/>
Green outdoor drama "has come<lb/>
I avto I in his state<lb/>
meni ed "an in<lb/>
sol ,1 ? flict" between<lb/>
nsell ? Mar k Sumnei, the<lb/>
produce pla who took<lb/>
over t<lb/>
M Fmma v M<lb/>
show 's opening la<lb/>
V M a ho<lb/>
R ? c<lb/>
?'4 show "a<lb/>
musical, Harrigan 7i' Hart I his<lb/>
summer will be the tust since<lb/>
I964 that he will nol travel to much . ? ,<lb/>
Manteo to re stage The I ost ol<lb/>
ony. a 10b he has long vailed his<lb/>
annual "labor ol love "<lb/>
In his prepared t.it t-m t-nt<lb/>
! aon said, "The ' olony' I ho.id ?<lb/>
debul n. 11h I he Sound ol M<lb/>
Mine to 111111 the <lb/>
tion ovei to anothei dii<lb/>
enti u I with gisinj<lb/>
'new look' in 2 '<lb/>
I a ton said thai thi<lb/>
marks his silsei annm<lb/>
?<lb/>
Exciting Drama. <lb/>
Intrigiurxg hisUny, uraottii mystery<lb/>
yc<lb/>
<lb/>
statement<lb/>
' tht ween him i<lb/>
r) is such as<lb/>
ake a ition<lb/>
? ? all)<lb/>
vi k : N e v<lb/>
been a big wn ol nw life foi 21<lb/>
ycai s I fell in love with ih ; i<lb/>
and with beautiful Roanoke<lb/>
Island righl from ilu ita I I've<lb/>
even made m home there Still,<lb/>
the onh thing thai is coi<lb/>
change<lb/>
I as-<lb/>
ms careei has<lb/>
l demanding<lb/>
ol nn travel<lb/>
ol whai 1h, I ostolon<lb/>
be seems t ha<lb/>
the stewardship ol its new<lb/>
ducei<lb/>
The directoi - tatei<lb/>
on, "I had h<lb/>
vMth Tht I ostolon<lb/>
more yea<lb/>
friends wl<lb/>
the show<lb/>
The I ???<lb/>
ol tl<lb/>
,hk am<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
mi<lb/>
? LAVTOW<lb/>
PRODI . riON<lb/>
or<lb/>
f'Al i<lb/>
l.REFN<lb/>
. ome uu i easing<lb/>
alls in tei m<lb/>
sion<lb/>
1<lb/>
 M  i<lb/>
44th Se<lb/>
Cl<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
America's FirM Outdoor Drama<lb/>
Presented on North Carolina'sHjtei Ba<lb/>
Salt And High Blood Pressure<lb/>
Ihmns ?,l! hr u little differenl this Su<lb/>
miner withotii<lb/>
A 'Shakey' Combination<lb/>
ience, medial scien<lb/>
i ? to 2<lb/>
body needs<lb/>
in elimir<lb/>
' ? I urn comes in<lb/>
-Hum chloride,<lb/>
:omn table salt This<lb/>
! -1- pe - and 60 per-<lb/>
ie teaspoon of<lb/>
00 mg (2 grams)<lb/>
A number<lb/>
' a s e<lb/>
iea<lb/>
Beha<lb/>
' ' dies<lb/>
liun nk<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
11 us that<lb/>
our ear's vegetarian ancestors ate<lb/>
?e nrnhah<lb/>
?? mg gram)<lb/>
i<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
" ng i ? .? rng a da<lb/>
Becasr , ?? ised httle<lb/>
' ?<lb/>
an high<lb/>
excessive<lb/>
inti diel<lb/>
' esulted<lb/>
averages rive i<lb/>
(2,000 mg pe<lb/>
per das in its diel<lb/>
bod) needs only a I<lb/>
amount <lb/>
persons in the I nited - i<lb/>
fering from hig<lb/>
In mans foi ds<lb/>
manu<lb/>
fla i Bakei<lb/>
control ea t ;<lb/>
ater absorpti n I nal<lb/>
:gh Sail :<lb/>
Sod um idded<lb/>
Wh<lb/>
t<lb/>
stance, fi I . ?<lb/>
onls 3 mg ol sodium perounce<lb/>
( r ei ? mes as i<lb/>
it ion and<lb/>
habil !?<lb/>
teni <lb/>
Is, liquersa I<lb/>
- V;r and ur Health<lb/>
??.i liable ? ? 55<lb/>
?. ERC-Sa<lb/>
<lb/>
?<lb/>
niri it ans hi<lb/>
rall It" H ?' sm hum h<lb/>
1985 Spring Semester Schedule<lb/>
Student Activities<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
DATK<lb/>
Tuesday, Jan ?<lb/>
Thursday. Jan. "<lb/>
Monday, Jan. 2H<lb/>
Thursday -Saturday<lb/>
Jan. H Teh. 2<lb/>
Tuesday, Teh. <lb/>
Mondas, Teh. II<lb/>
Thursday. I eh. 14<lb/>
Wednesday. Teh 27<lb/>
Sunday -Saturday,<lb/>
March 3-9<lb/>
Wednesday, March t<lb/>
Monday, March 25<lb/>
Tuesday, March 26<lb/>
Wednesday, April 10<lb/>
EVENT<lb/>
H I Is IS SI h'll s<lb/>
 iennahoir Hoys<lb/>
THT MKI Ris<lb/>
"Oh. Mr Faulkner, l) ou<lb/>
( HAMBER II sn i<lb/>
The I os Angeles Piano Quartet<lb/>
hi f r<lb/>
( alt forma Suite"<lb/>
TRAIT I API I II HI HI f<lb/>
Surprising Southern Africa<lb/>
ith Kenneth Richter<lb/>
( HA MM R II Sin AI<lb/>
1 he H estern H ind<lb/>
(Ideal Sextet)<lb/>
TRAVFA ADM Ml Ri i u t<lb/>
"Sri I anka Resplendentevlon<lb/>
with Ralph (.erstle<lb/>
ARTISTS SI Rlf S<lb/>
Rotterdam Philharmonic Orchestra<lb/>
TRAVFA OMMll II l<lb/>
Bahamasruise<lb/>
ARSS SI Rll s<lb/>
Marvis Martin, Soprano<lb/>
TRAM I ADURi III M<lb/>
"Around the Bay of Saptes"<lb/>
with Art Wilson and I red Keiffer<lb/>
THEATRE ARTS<lb/>
Ballet (,ran Folklorico de Mexico<lb/>
( HAMBER Tl Sin Al<lb/>
Theomposers String Quartet<lb/>
IM ACT<lb/>
rium<lb/>
IIMr<lb/>
?<lb/>
Nation Salutes King<lb/>
k :<lb/>
Vl (H: 15 I<lb/>
1 m<lb/>
.S(<lb/>
ft6: W p.m.<lb/>
cr. Room 224<lb/>
Hendri.x Theatre MSIS p.m.<lb/>
lit ndrt.x 1 ht itrt .Ss p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix 1 ? MS(m.<lb/>
H nht Auditorium8 p.m.<lb/>
Miami, f lorida<lb/>
iind the Bahamas<lb/>
m right luditoriumS p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix 1 heat re MSIS p.m.<lb/>
McCtinnis theatres IS p.m.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre f sr8 p.m.<lb/>
Hai<lb/>
C j r c<lb/>
<lb/>
-<lb/>
low<lb/>
nghi ead<lb/>
King's I<lb/>
.is a federal h<lb/>
tion an oppon<lb/>
celel b boi<lb/>
whites<lb/>
s orei ta Scott K .<lb/>
the eve ol King's<lb/>
V. kl, s 'Jt, -<lb/>
! Trivia, Trivia, Trivia 1<lb/>
l<lb/>
. Who sold Alaska to tht I S in IHt<lb/>
I iihi1 u'iir was rht 'r<lb/>
I honotilm. shown h it,  ? heatre 1<lb/>
I ty? '<lb/>
I<lb/>
. H her, is the mh place in tht h<lb/>
lush river hanks all in one location<lb/>
I 4. H hat professional sport did M tl<lb/>
in '? baskt I<lb/>
ball?<lb/>
I<lb/>
I V ? hen Has the first I . s, r<lb/>
 ? Whit h Milwaukee- Atlanta o, hit 75.5 . uni and,<lb/>
I the I tour times u<lb/>
I<lb/>
I . What is the average television viewing time per week for all nr<lb/>
I sons (according to 1982 estimatt p<lb/>
 v. What 1982 informal television special won an I  Kar'<lb/>
I<lb/>
I Id. Whuh I .S. President h.vn born in Raleigl '<lb/>
- ? ?? ? ? ? ? ?  i-    .<lb/>
A P<lb/>
?<lb/>
S<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0007"/><lb/>
;<lb/>
?a<lb/>
&amp;k<lb/>
a ton.<lb/>
ination<lb/>
 Sugar-<lb/>
?u that<lb/>
eef noo-<lb/>
: mg. of<lb/>
an cheese'<lb/>
per sermg.<lb/>
s 195<lb/>
t ass while<lb/>
470<lb/>
. : canned<lb/>
s95<lb/>
le wit I<lb/>
?ean;<lb/>
i Kentucky<lb/>
i whopp-<lb/>
lium?"<lb/>
"Most<lb/>
?? mg. of<lb/>
their<lb/>
studj suggests<lb/>
jown to<lb/>
rtnall) use in<lb/>
ice gradually<lb/>
jjj sal: before<lb/>
Rer high<lb/>
?alt con-<lb/>
h of<lb/>
ssiblc ?<lb/>
isc "ree times as<lb/>
- rig as the<lb/>
King<lb/>
k<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JANUARY 15, 1983<lb/>
i l a 11 o n<lb/>
if the<lb/>
I King Junior<lb/>
HI.<lb/>
King ic federal holi-<lb/>
e on the third<lb/>
irting next<lb/>
pportunity to<lb/>
is celebration<lb/>
11 across our na-<lb/>
. eral hundred peo-<lb/>
I he ceremony, in-<lb/>
.mber of school<lb/>
?he holiday<lb/>
. ' a black holi-<lb/>
i holiday for all<lb/>
I<lb/>
want all Americans to fly<lb/>
jA.mencan Hag on Jan. 20,<lb/>
Martin Luther King was<lb/>
a patriot who marched<lb/>
the colors of his country<lb/>
commission members<lb/>
?et KIM, s. Page 7.<lb/>
3 Trivia<lb/>
and tor ho much money?<lb/>
d-on-film motion picture,<lb/>
it at Rnoli Theatre, V. Y. Ci-<lb/>
that has a forest, jungle and<lb/>
Xhamherlam play after basket-<lb/>
ed issued?<lb/>
r hit 755 home runs and led<lb/>
tng time per week for all per-<lb/>
ial won an Emmy Award?<lb/>
Raleigh, S.C.?<lb/>
for Answers, S?r Ptft 7,<lb/>
y<lb/>
c<lb/>
y<lb/>
3<lb/>
King's Wife<lb/>
Talks Against<lb/>
Civil Protests<lb/>
s .iitinued From Page 6.<lb/>
vsere sworn in at the King Center<lb/>
tor Non-Violent Social Change<lb/>
adjacent to Ebenezer Baptist<lb/>
church where King served as<lb/>
pastor and where his crypt is<lb/>
kvated. Members of the commis-<lb/>
sion include Sen. Ernest F. Holl-<lb/>
ings, D-S.C; Illionois Gov. Jim<lb/>
Thompson; Atlanta Mayor An-<lb/>
drew Young; Clarence M.<lb/>
Pendleton, chairman of the U.S.<lb/>
Civil Rights Commission, and<lb/>
singer Steie Wonder.<lb/>
I arlier, Mrs. King told an<lb/>
Atlanta gathering that civil<lb/>
disobedience and other forms of<lb/>
resistance may be needed to end<lb/>
the cycle of poverty, hunger and<lb/>
racism throughout the world.<lb/>
i et us revive the non-violent<lb/>
revolution she said. "It will re-<lb/>
quire that we question established<lb/>
values, that we question the<lb/>
Trivia, Trivia, Trivia<lb/>
4oi??n from Part 4.<lb/>
UOSJfJDf Mjjpuy -qi<lb/>
(SOd) W isoi ?m fo sjapwy ?ui fo XutyotX (,<lb/>
sajnuiw zi 'sunou z 'g<lb/>
JS9 st ooyjnj am jsaq m9jj uq 'l<lb/>
uojvy jujf 9<lb/>
u$i v m 's<lb/>
noq.?noA p<lb/>
punj.ausi(i ??<lb/>
?Z6I 'I<lb/>
uotjiftu z'l$ vissntf 7<lb/>
strange and frightening vision<lb/>
that says we must spend millions<lb/>
on Star Wars weapons<lb/>
"Ten million are likely to die in<lb/>
Africa of hunger in 1985 she<lb/>
said. "It's hard to comprehend<lb/>
the devastation ? more people<lb/>
have died of hunger in the last six<lb/>
years than died in all the wars,<lb/>
revolutions and murders of the<lb/>
last 50 years <lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Telecaster guitar, built<lb/>
s tti Dimarzio and Seymour Duncan<lb/>
Mumbuckers and a schecter brass<lb/>
br dge Asking $250 or best offer.<lb/>
Call 758 9628 ask for Dave<lb/>
FOR SALE: 1982 Silver BW Quan<lb/>
ft m Wagon. 34 miles per gallon.<lb/>
32 000 miles. Sfereo cassette Asking<lb/>
S6 890Call 756 7768.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Portable, Sears Ken<lb/>
more washer ideal for trailer or<lb/>
small apt Besf offer Lab Series<lb/>
Gibson) LS 100 Amplifier, 100 watt<lb/>
output, $350 firm 756 4136 after 5<lb/>
Ask for Herbert.<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING: Elec-<lb/>
tronic typewriter Reasonable rates.<lb/>
Call Janice at 756 4664, evenings or<lb/>
752 6106 days<lb/>
ENTERTAINMENT NEEDS:<lb/>
Ramada's house D.J. now available<lb/>
for private parties. Excellent stock<lb/>
of tunes and sound system to fulfill<lb/>
any party needs. Call THE<lb/>
TRASHMAN 752 3587<lb/>
GREENVILLE STUDENT LAUN-<lb/>
DRY SERVICE: Your own personal<lb/>
laundry service Professional, full<lb/>
service laundering including free<lb/>
pick up and delivery Give "Jack"<lb/>
the computer answering machine a<lb/>
call 758 3087. DON'T BE<lb/>
SCAREDleave Jack a message<lb/>
and save50 when you have your<lb/>
laundry cleaned.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Typewriter Olivetti<lb/>
Lexicon 82 electric portable. Like<lb/>
new condition Interchangeable typ<lb/>
ng elements including script. $200.<lb/>
Phone 758 8252 after 6 p.m.<lb/>
WAPIT: Lodge Ski Hostel. Inexpen<lb/>
sive hospitality for outdoor adven<lb/>
turers $15 per person includes<lb/>
breakfast, towels, linens and kitchen<lb/>
privileges 5 min. to Beech and<lb/>
Sugar 704-898 9899.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ENTHUSIASTIC AND<lb/>
MOTIVATED INDIVIDUAL: Need<lb/>
eo for part time exercise<lb/>
instructor's job. Call between 1:15<lb/>
and 2 p.m The Body Shoppe.<lb/>
758 7564<lb/>
RENT: 2 bedroom Apt. fully furnish<lb/>
ed, Ringgold Towers. Call 752 8945.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: Near Universi<lb/>
V 3 bedrooms, dining room. 1217<lb/>
Evans St $240. 758 5299<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: 2<lb/>
rent, ' 2 utilities. Call 355-6933 after 5<lb/>
p.m. M, W, F<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: For large<lb/>
Dedroom off house. Bath shared with<lb/>
other person. Washer-Dryer,<lb/>
microwave I block from campus.<lb/>
Call Dave at 752 3022<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE: Wanted<lb/>
mmediatly. Kingston Con-<lb/>
dominiums. $150 per month, $50<lb/>
deposit. M utilities. For more info,<lb/>
call Leigh at 752 1088.<lb/>
BABY SITTERS NEEDED: In ex<lb/>
change for membership at local<lb/>
health club. Must be available bet<lb/>
een 8 10 a.m. at least 2 days Mon.<lb/>
Sat Call 758 5065, between 9-11 p.m.<lb/>
only.<lb/>
TWO FEMALE ROOMMATES<lb/>
NEEDED: River Bluff Aprs Call<lb/>
758 7975 or 758 3280, ask for Kelly.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Western Sizzlin<lb/>
now accepting applications Friday<lb/>
between 2:30 5.30. No phone calls<lb/>
Please 2903 E 10th St.<lb/>
APARTMENT FOR RENT: Cap<lb/>
tains Quarters Apt. 21, $230 plus<lb/>
deposit Call Donna at 758 5901<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED: To<lb/>
split expenses I block from campus.<lb/>
Call 758 3720<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED:<lb/>
Rent $i 15 a month utilities included.<lb/>
Great location &amp; great roommates.<lb/>
Call 758-6224.<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
ALL CAMPUS: The Kappa Sigma<lb/>
Fraternity is sponsoring an all cam<lb/>
pus party after happy hour this Fri<lb/>
day, Jan. 18 from 9 until at their<lb/>
house on tenth street (next to Dar<lb/>
ryl's), BYOB<lb/>
KEG: Little sisters and little sister<lb/>
pledges. We are looking forward to<lb/>
partying with you Friday afternoon<lb/>
before happy hour. We've got a keg<lb/>
for you at the house. Come by and<lb/>
party with your brothers.<lb/>
TRIBUTE: To the best little sisters<lb/>
and pledges anybody could ever<lb/>
have Thank you for your love and<lb/>
support, you're the best.<lb/>
?The Kappa Sigs<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON: The<lb/>
Brothers and Golden Hearts of<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon would like to ex-<lb/>
tend a cordial invitation to anyone<lb/>
interested in attending our rush par<lb/>
ties on Jan. 21, 22, and 23. We are<lb/>
located at 505 E. 5th St. across from<lb/>
the Jenkins Art Building. Please feel<lb/>
free to drop by the house any time<lb/>
beforehand and meet us because we<lb/>
are looking forward to meeting all of<lb/>
you For more info, call 752-2941 or<lb/>
752-6502.<lb/>
HAPPY HOUR: The little sisters of<lb/>
Sigma Phi Epsilon and Alpha Sigma<lb/>
Phi invite everyone to the jam-<lb/>
minest, if not THE MOST jammin'<lb/>
Happy Hour Thurs.Jan. 17th at<lb/>
Beau's beginning at 9 p.m Come<lb/>
out and party with the best!<lb/>
STUDENTS: Do you ever get the<lb/>
munchies during class? Collect your<lb/>
change! Golden Hearts bake sale<lb/>
Jan. 16th &amp; 17th. We not only look<lb/>
good but we cook good too!<lb/>
SUPERBOWL HAPPY HOUR: The<lb/>
brothers of Pi Kappa P: Fraternity<lb/>
will be having their 4th annual<lb/>
Superbowl Happy Hour at The Attic<lb/>
this Sunday starting at 4:30. Come<lb/>
out and enjoy Happy Hour prices<lb/>
The biggest Superbowl party in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
KAPPA SIGMA: The Brothers,<lb/>
Pledges, and Little Sisters of the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma Fraternity wish<lb/>
Brothers Matt Rizzolo and Stuart<lb/>
Sloan a Happy Birthday!<lb/>
BOY WONDER, PLAYBOY,<lb/>
R TAILESS, THE VEGETABLE<lb/>
JUGGLER, AND THE BEAM: We<lb/>
HAVE NEVER seen a rockin' &amp;<lb/>
rollin' basketball player with the<lb/>
last name Hale, had to pay $200 in<lb/>
pledges just to see a party donkey<lb/>
shag, had so much fun playing suck<lb/>
blow while shotgunning, seen the sun<lb/>
come up at 6 p.mnot 6<lb/>
a.m. You're beautiful we love ya!<lb/>
PS. The room is still vibrating!<lb/>
Love, The "Party Ladies" of 906.<lb/>
LONELY: Emotionally, physically<lb/>
or intellectually, is there anybody<lb/>
out there- for you, just you. Coming<lb/>
soon answers to these and much<lb/>
more, interesting questions. For in-<lb/>
formation call 752-9667.<lb/>
CHRIS: I feel so good about<lb/>
useverything we're sharing<lb/>
becomes even more meaningful<lb/>
because it isn't for todayit's for<lb/>
tomorrow. Because I know that I'll<lb/>
always be in love with you. Bob<lb/>
YELLOW HOUSE HACKEY<lb/>
SHACK DWELLERS: Let's JAM<lb/>
this semester. Jersey forget Trig ,<lb/>
Financial Accounting Gumby,<lb/>
Third time lucky! D.C. Rabbit,<lb/>
forget it all! Let's Party! Grandpa.<lb/>
SUPERBOWL BETA RUSH PAR<lb/>
TY: At Olde Towne Inne Sunday<lb/>
Jan. 20. Happy Hour prices No<lb/>
Cover. 4-until. 757-3769.<lb/>
(?!): The Alliteration was euphoric,<lb/>
can't wait to have more of it.<lb/>
Wednesday's the Boss, partaking of<lb/>
the sauce. Research &amp; Recreation.<lb/>
Creating action and involuntary<lb/>
reaction. ()<lb/>
KLAH HEAD: Don't think I'm chaf<lb/>
ing you. We were both just as stub<lb/>
born as two cows on their way to the<lb/>
meat market. Moo, chafe, klah,<lb/>
shake, rattle and roll.<lb/>
Sig Tau lil sisters<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
TUE. JAN 15,1985 8:30-l:00am<lb/>
Adm. 1.50 18yrs. 1.00<lb/>
SfVjw.tf DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
YV DRAFT-<lb/>
XFf J HUMP NITE<lb/>
ff .10 DRAFT TILL 11:00<lb/>
V .80 CANS ALL NITE<lb/>
fWED. JAN 16,1985 8:30-l:00am<lb/>
Adm. 8:30-11:00 1.50 11:00-1:00 1.00<lb/>
18 yrs. 2.00 All Nite<lb/>
COUNSELOR POSITIONS<lb/>
AT CAMP STARLIGHT<lb/>
For cabin leaders with talents and skills in all Land<lb/>
Sports, Tennis, Swimming(W.S.I.), Sailing, Canoeing,<lb/>
Water Skiing, Gymnastics, Arts and Crafts(Ceramics),<lb/>
Music, Dramatics, and Photography at the leading<lb/>
private, modern, co-ed camp in the lake area of N.E.<lb/>
PA. 6-22 thru 8-22. Qualified mid and upper class men<lb/>
and women who are outgoing and enjoy leadership<lb/>
roles with youngsters. Contact Coop. Ed. Office, Rm<lb/>
313- Rawl, 757-6977 for application and on campus in-<lb/>
terview or CAMP STARLIGHT, 18 CLINTON ST<lb/>
MALVERNE, NY 11565, (516) 599-5239!<lb/>
Read The Classifieds<lb/>
ADVENTURE<lb/>
EXCITEMENT<lb/>
ROMANCE<lb/>
For the Spring Break to remember<lb/>
Travel Associates puts your right in the middle of the<lb/>
hottest action in Florida ? Daytona Beach.<lb/>
Your Sunbreak package includes:<lb/>
 Round-trip transportation via deluxe motorcoach<lb/>
Seven nights accommodations at one of Day-<lb/>
tona s finest beachfront motels<lb/>
Two poolside parties with complimentary bever-<lb/>
ages<lb/>
' A volleyball tournament with prizes<lb/>
Optional transportation services to Disneyworld<lb/>
and EPCOT<lb/>
' All hotel taxes<lb/>
Services of Travel Associates on-site Sunbreak<lb/>
vacation staff<lb/>
$190.00<lb/>
DATE: March 1-9<lb/>
CONTACT: Dean at 752-5588<lb/>
or<lb/>
Kevin at 752-9732<lb/>
The East Carolina University Unions<lb/>
Theatre Arts Committee presents<lb/>
John Maxwell in<lb/>
ulhiljBr,<lb/>
the critically acclaimed play about<lb/>
America's Pulitzer Prize-winning<lb/>
author<lb/>
Thursday, January 17, 1985 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre ECU Campus<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Tickets available Monday-Friday<lb/>
11:00am-6:00pm from the Central Ticket Office<lb/>
Telephone 757-6611, x266<lb/>
ECU Students and Guest: $5.00<lb/>
Youth (age 14 and Under): $7.00<lb/>
All Others and at the Door: $10.00<lb/>
This program is made possible in part from a grant<lb/>
and the National Endowment for the Arts through the<lb/>
Southern Arts Federation, of which the North Carolina<lb/>
Arts Council is a member.<lb/>
?<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
?MH??M??i<lb/>
MMMMMM?<lb/>
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i<lb/>
i 1<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057688_0008"/><lb/>
HI I SI i ki l INI <lb/>
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Sports<lb/>
?m k'i<lb/>
Lady Pirates Win Two<lb/>
Bv RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
I he ECU 1 ady Pirates con<lb/>
tinned ihen Fine play on the road<lb/>
last night with a 7-61 v ictoi)<lb/>
ovei conference foe Richmond<lb/>
1 he 1 ady Pirates started the<lb/>
g a m e b playing their<lb/>
"dynamite" full-couri pressure<lb/>
defense foi the titst 15 minutes,<lb/>
and then took a 46 35 advantage<lb/>
aftet the lust 20 minutes<lb/>
"We looked gooA in the first<lb/>
halt said ECU coach Emily<lb/>
Manwaring. "We hit 6i percent<lb/>
ol out shots (19 ol 30 from the<lb/>
field) and were really playing well<lb/>
on both ends ol the court<lb/>
I he 1 c I pressure defense<lb/>
forced the Lady Spiders into 12<lb/>
fust hall turnovers and led to<lb/>
many easy baskets for the I ady<lb/>
Pirates off their transition can e<lb/>
1 eading the way foi 1 :( I in<lb/>
the opening period was guard<lb/>
1 orainne Fostei who hit 1 ol 12<lb/>
shots from the floor and one of<lb/>
two from the line tor 21 first halt<lb/>
points.<lb/>
" 1 tie ke tor us w as our<lb/>
fastbreak Manwaring said<lb/>
"We ran 14 fastbreaks and<lb/>
scored on 10 of them while com-<lb/>
mitting no turnovers. About<lb/>
I orainne Foster's points came<lb/>
on the end ol out fastbreak<lb/>
1 ie minutes into 'lie second<lb/>
uirdaS) Sylvia Bragg defends against a university of Richmond hah the Lady Spiders were abU<lb/>
to pull within four points, but<lb/>
I i. 1 quickly stopped the Rich-<lb/>
u l a v a<lb/>
Baker Names Staff;<lb/>
One Position Open <lb/>
mond rally<lb/>
 20-fooi jumpei by Monique<lb/>
Pompili and two layups by Sylvia<lb/>
Bragg and 1 isa Squirewell quick-<lb/>
ly had the E I lead back to 10<lb/>
points<lb/>
Manwaring was especially<lb/>
pleased with het team's defensive<lb/>
performance in the second half.<lb/>
"In the second half we used our<lb/>
three two match-up one and<lb/>
really did a good job of trapping<lb/>
and helping out she said.<lb/>
Foster led the I ady Pirates in<lb/>
scoring finishing with 24 points<lb/>
,in a 14 ol 22 shooting perfor-<lb/>
mance from the field.<lb/>
Also in double figures tot E 1<lb/>
were Sylvia Bragg and Anita<lb/>
Anderson with 15 and 12 points.<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
1 isa Squirewell had her second<lb/>
good game m a row scoring eight<lb/>
points and pulling down nine re-<lb/>
bounds. Freshman Monique<lb/>
Pompili also turned in an<lb/>
outstanding effort on the boards<lb/>
hauling in nine rebounds.<lb/>
I he 1 ady Pirates in addition to<lb/>
winning then first two E <lb/>
South league games, also won<lb/>
their first two road games of the<lb/>
"We deserved both of these<lb/>
ies tins weekend, we played<lb/>
' good defense Manwaring<lb/>
said. "We won our first <lb/>
carries op, the road and are really<lb/>
in a good position now to do well<lb/>
in the conference<lb/>
B; I MRU I I<lb/>
I hose<lb/>
' ti<lb/>
-I ?<lb/>
malitv -<lb/>
'he :op<lb/>
?<lb/>
? - a isiness 1<lb/>
'<lb/>
? e have<lb/>
besi<lb/>
M i k? . to EC I<lb/>
Iing f i the<lb/>
it Murra i tte I)'( a<lb/>
tnt head<lb/>
  :<lb/>
tei om-<lb/>
the K offen<lb/>
r t e r b ac<lb/>
Murray<lb/>
i 28 16 record in ()'( ain's<lb/>
ling a 9-2 fit<lb/>
MV1 bad<lb/>
and punter forlemson I nivei<lb/>
t from 1972 '76, 0' a i 1 his<lb/>
a experience as a<lb/>
i tani with the I igei<lb/>
77 He 'hen served as 11<lb/>
I l  for Baker at I he<lb/>
' m 19"1 until his mine<lb/>
Murray State in 1981<lb/>
()'a l n is a native of<lb/>
? ; a burg N where he star-<lb/>
red for Wilkinson High Scho<lb/>
Men's results<lb/>
400 medlev relay: Kevin<lb/>
Hidalgo, lee Hicks, Bruce<lb/>
Brockschmidt. Keith Kaut, (EC)<lb/>
3 J5.28.<lb/>
1000 freestyle: Stevens (FS)<lb/>
9:48 79; Boozci (FS) 9:59 99;<lb/>
Andy Cook (EC9:59.17.<lb/>
200 freestvle: Brockschmidt<lb/>
' Fan1 Cl<lb/>
. ? .<lb/>
.?-? 84<lb/>
1 atsi ve<lb/>
??s peci 1 .<lb/>
? ? .sponsbilites have ? <lb/>
. the<lb/>
afl<lb/>
A -s a 1 e I v<lb/>
?: -<lb/>
serve as a<lb/>
Baket ' sta : v. ?<lb/>
Farrinj -<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
( I<lb/>
???<lb/>
ne to 1 a ross the<lb/>
mes to<lb/>
ECL aftei - i me yeai as<lb/>
? and defen-<lb/>
 estern Ken-<lb/>
as a 16-yeai veteran<lb/>
the estern c arolina Univer-<lb/>
P wers, 40, began his<lb/>
hing career at W( I in<lb/>
68 is a defensive coach. He<lb/>
ars w orking<lb/>
tl e defensive ends and<lb/>
line- before being named<lb/>
ensive t . u in lv4.<lb/>
He -vas named assistant head<lb/>
n at v c i<lb/>
g the 1983 campaign,<lb/>
?'?' I made it to the champion-<lb/>
ship game ol the N( A A Division<lb/>
I A playoffs, finishing the yeai<lb/>
ranked fourth in the nation<lb/>
defensively. The Catamounts<lb/>
isted the nations second best<lb/>
sfense in 19"6 and again in<lb/>
1979<lb/>
Powers is a graduate ol Lin-<lb/>
High School in I in-<lb/>
. ftei a brilliant<lb/>
gh school career, he went on to<lb/>
earn four letters as a defensive<lb/>
end at VI<lb/>
Baker's announcement brings<lb/>
the current staff to eight with one<lb/>
defensive position still open. The<lb/>
remaining coaches on the Pirate<lb/>
staff include. Don Murrv, offen-<lb/>
sive coordinator; John Zernhelt,<lb/>
offensive line. Ken Matous, wide<lb/>
receivers; Tom Throckmorton,<lb/>
defensive coordinator; and<lb/>
Waverly Brooks, recruiting coor-<lb/>
dinator and defensive coach.<lb/>
Coach Baker did not vet in-<lb/>
dicate when the last position will<lb/>
be filled.<lb/>
(EC) 1 45.73; Waldrop (FS);<lb/>
Kaut (EC) 1:48.71<lb/>
50 freestvleI ris Pittelli (EC)<lb/>
22 29; Acre (1 Si 22.31; Halfacre<lb/>
(FS) 22 51<lb/>
200 individual medlev:<lb/>
Kowalsk, (FS) 2:00.29; LaPalme<lb/>
(FS) 2:01.63; Pat Brennan (EC)<lb/>
2:10.91.<lb/>
?Jf '? -<lb/>
Waverly Brooks (left) won't return to the Pirate football coaching<lb/>
staff, but lom rtirockmorton will be back for the '85 season.<lb/>
White Leads Tracksters<lb/>
To Fourth Place Finish<lb/>
By BILL MITCHELL<lb/>
NUff Urllrr<lb/>
t raig White led the ECU<lb/>
men's track team to a fourth<lb/>
place finish in the Joe Hilton In-<lb/>
door Track and Field Meet over<lb/>
the weekend.<lb/>
White placed first in both the<lb/>
50 and 60-yard high hurdles to<lb/>
earn the Most Valuble Sprinter<lb/>
award. Both of the wins were<lb/>
school records.<lb/>
in team competition, Pitt-<lb/>
sburgh took six first place<lb/>
finishes. North Carolina State<lb/>
four, UNC three and Duke and<lb/>
South Carolina each had one.<lb/>
"The team really showed good<lb/>
strength and what is in store for<lb/>
us down the road ECU Coach<lb/>
Bill Carson said. "It was also the<lb/>
finest meet I've seen Walter<lb/>
Southerland run (Southerland<lb/>
placed fifth in both the 50 and<lb/>
60-yard high hurdles)<lb/>
Carson said he was "re d pleas-<lb/>
ed with the entire squad and<lb/>
said the players are much<lb/>
stronger since putting time into a<lb/>
new weight program.<lb/>
Referring to ECU's trip to the<lb/>
Eastman Kodak Invitational in<lb/>
Johnson City, Tenn. this<lb/>
weekend, Carson said "the team<lb/>
is real keyed up to go next week<lb/>
and hopes to have a real good<lb/>
meet.<lb/>
ECU Results<lb/>
60 high hurdles: Craig White<lb/>
(first) 7.0, Walter Southerland<lb/>
(fifth) 8.0, David Parker (sixth)<lb/>
8.0.<lb/>
60-yard dash: Henry Williams<lb/>
(fourth). Lee MacNeil (fifth),<lb/>
Chris Brooks (eighth).<lb/>
600-yard run: Julian Anderson<lb/>
(second). Ken Daugherty<lb/>
(fourth).<lb/>
440: Eddie Bradley (third).<lb/>
Phil Estes (fifth), Willie Fuller<lb/>
(sixth).<lb/>
50 high hurdies; Craig White<lb/>
(first), David Parker (third),<lb/>
Walter Southerland (fifth).<lb/>
50 yard dash: Lee MacNeil<lb/>
(fourth).<lb/>
ECU-FIorida State Swimming Results<lb/>
1(1 by winning theii fourth<lb/>
consecutive game improves to 6<lb/>
overall and 2-0 in the I At<lb/>
South<lb/>
fan 12, 1985<lb/>
The I adv Pirates used their<lb/>
running game and "dynamite"<lb/>
lull-court pressure defense to<lb/>
defeat William &amp; Mary 86-5" in<lb/>
their EC AC South opener.<lb/>
ECU, who has now won three<lb/>
games in a row, shot 54 percen!<lb/>
from the field while limiting<lb/>
William &amp;. Mary to just 43 per-<lb/>
cent .<lb/>
The Lady Pirates pressure<lb/>
defense also forced the Indians<lb/>
into 22 turnovers and disrupted<lb/>
their offense throughout the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
ECU never trailed in the con<lb/>
test, and led at the half 46-29<lb/>
Lady Pirate coach Emily Man<lb/>
waring attributed much of her<lb/>
team's success to their ability to<lb/>
run their fastbreaking style ol<lb/>
fense.<lb/>
"We beat them down the court<lb/>
for some easy scores Manwar-<lb/>
ing said. "We had 2 fast brea<lb/>
and scored on 16 of them<lb/>
The Lady Pirates were led in<lb/>
scoring by Lisa Squirewell's 21<lb/>
points.<lb/>
Squirewell, who has not been<lb/>
as productive coming off the<lb/>
bench the past three games as she<lb/>
was earlier in the season, had he-<lb/>
best effort as a reserve hitting her<lb/>
first six attempts from  I<lb/>
and nine of 12 foi ? ime<lb/>
In addition to<lb/>
points, Squirewell connected<lb/>
three ol five ol her shooting<lb/>
tempts from the line and pulled<lb/>
down eight rebounds<lb/>
I orainc foster also, sh<lb/>
for the I ady Pirates hitting<lb/>
oi rntie shots from the field I<lb/>
both of her free '<lb/>
r 14<lb/>
nts<lb/>
Anita Ander- ed<lb/>
consistent play for II netting<lb/>
12 points This w<lb/>
eighth consecutive game i<lb/>
ble figures for E I an I tei tl I<lb/>
the sea<lb/>
Monique Pompili,<lb/>
her fine play pulling down I<lb/>
bounds while .<lb/>
points<lb/>
lvia Bragg<lb/>
floor game hitting I<lb/>
shots from the field, while<lb/>
. : ? ? .<lb/>
it four a<lb/>
v illiam &amp; Mary<lb/>
ring by Bridget Kea I<lb/>
tits, while Debbie !<lb/>
2 a<lb/>
With -ne loss, ? g V-<lb/>
drops to 1-10 '? ?<lb/>
the E M South<lb/>
The I ady P<lb/>
everyone or: the i bei I e ?<lb/>
' ? injured Jod Rodnque;<lb/>
?ed ? 5 and 1<lb/>
the con:<lb/>
Tribe Downs ECU<lb/>
In ECAC Contest<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
stiff u rim<lb/>
In an ECAC South t<lb/>
Keith Cieplicki red 21 nt<lb/>
in leading William &amp; Mary I a<lb/>
67-53 victory over ECl Satui<lb/>
night in Minges iliseum.<lb/>
Cieplicki, a two-time<lb/>
ECAC South selection and an<lb/>
Academic All-America scored 15<lb/>
second half points to finish vt<lb/>
25 for the game. Junior guard<lb/>
Scott Coval chipped in 14 points<lb/>
by hitting all six of his shots from<lb/>
the field and converting on two<lb/>
free throw attempts. Kevin<lb/>
i 2 5<lb/>
wit 11:3 e<lb/>
?<lb/>
&amp; Mar. text<lb/>
. : point<lb/>
 The Pira<lb/>
ng back bel ng ol<lb/>
cutting<lb/>
2 ? vith 4:5<lb/>
8<lb/>
V I I<lb/>
ini .i 2 !<lb/>
ter a<lb/>
Wil : fe Ma . ;2 22 - :<lb/>
lead<lb/>
" thought that we were prepared going into the<lb/>
game they kicked our butts on the inside. "<lb/>
?C harlie Harrison<lb/>
Richardson was the only other<lb/>
Indian in double figures with 14.<lb/>
Herb Harris scored eight points<lb/>
and grabbed a game-high eight<lb/>
rebounds.<lb/>
The William k Marv victory<lb/>
marked their seventh straight win<lb/>
over the Pirates. ECU'S last vic-<lb/>
tory over the Indians came during<lb/>
the '8182 season, 61-58.<lb/>
ECL Coach Charlie Harrison<lb/>
knew his team would have to be<lb/>
ready to play with William &amp;<lb/>
Mary. "I thought that we were<lb/>
prepared going into the game<lb/>
ECU coach Charlie Harrison<lb/>
said. "All ten of our guys played<lb/>
and all made gross mistakes. I<lb/>
messed up somewhere in getting<lb/>
them ready, and I take the blame<lb/>
for it<lb/>
The Pirates lacked scoring<lb/>
from their big men, and Harrison<lb/>
felt that was the primary reason<lb/>
for the loss. "They kicked our<lb/>
butts on ihe inside Harrison<lb/>
said. "Their inside game com-<lb/>
pletely shut ours down<lb/>
Harrison credited William &amp;<lb/>
Mary for their play. "They pro-<lb/>
tected the basket very well Har-<lb/>
rison explained. "They're good<lb/>
shooters and play intelligent<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
A large crowd of 4,358 were on<lb/>
hand to see ECU battle the In-<lb/>
dians. However, the Pirates<lb/>
started out slowly scoring just<lb/>
four points in the first eight<lb/>
minutes of play. Kevin Richard-<lb/>
son's layup gave William &amp; Mary<lb/>
a 10-4 lead with 12:41 remaining<lb/>
in the first half.<lb/>
1-meter diving: Sequin (FS)<lb/>
318.00; Lehman (FS) 309.00;<lb/>
Scott Eagle (EC) 304.00.<lb/>
200 butterfly: Barry (FS)<lb/>
1:57.43; Durst (FS) 1:57.59;<lb/>
Brockschmidt (EC).<lb/>
100 freestyle: Pittelli (EC)<lb/>
48.28; Summe (EC) (FS) 48.39;<lb/>
Kaut (EC) 48.63.<lb/>
200 backstroke: Kowalski (FS)<lb/>
1:59.65; Hidalgo (EC) 2:01.46;<lb/>
Acre (FS) 2:06.80.<lb/>
500 freestyle: Halfacre (FS)<lb/>
4:47.39; Cook (EC) 4:51.75;<lb/>
Stratton Smith (EC) 4:53.10.<lb/>
3-meter diving; Sequin (FS)<lb/>
313; Lehman (FS) 28; Eagle<lb/>
(EC) 266<lb/>
200 breaststroke: LaPalme<lb/>
(FS) 2:14.80; Hicks (EC) 2:17.67;<lb/>
Frierberger (FS) 2:18.16<lb/>
400 freestyle relay: FS<lb/>
(Kowalski, Halfacre, Somino,<lb/>
In the second half, EC I batt<lb/>
ed William &amp; Marv and cut<lb/>
margin to eight points on tl<lb/>
? ' occassions <lb/>
Gra the lead to 34-26 <lb/>
15:30 remaining on a  .ing<lb/>
layup. Vand I and Ciep ?<lb/>
then traded scores. The<lb/>
were able to cut the lead to e ?<lb/>
 '? e lasi ? me on a<lb/>
Grady lav up with ; 4s<lb/>
William &amp; Marv v.ore<lb/>
next nine points to break<lb/>
game open, 430 mid<lb/>
through the second half. The<lb/>
closest E I could gel was 4 4<lb/>
when Cradv banked in a ,<lb/>
jumper with 9:16 remaining<lb/>
From that point on, the Indians<lb/>
maintained the lead and a<lb/>
easilv 67-53.<lb/>
Coach Harrison was disap<lb/>
pointed with the Pirates" fast<lb/>
breaking opportunities. "We<lb/>
didn't get anything out of our<lb/>
fast break Harrison sa<lb/>
"When you hit on only one of 12<lb/>
fast breaks, vou're no: going to<lb/>
do too much "<lb/>
For ECL, Vanderhorsl match-<lb/>
ed Cieplicki with 25 points, w<lb/>
Grady added 18<lb/>
William &amp; Mary ups its record<lb/>
to 5-4 overall and 1-0 in EC-U<lb/>
South conference play ECU<lb/>
drops to 5-7 overall and 0-2 in<lb/>
conference plav<lb/>
The Pirates- next game will be<lb/>
on Saturdav Jan. 19at7:30p.m .<lb/>
when ECl travels to Richmond!<lb/>
Va. to battle last vear's ECAC<lb/>
South champions<lb/>
Acre) 3:13.71.<lb/>
Women's Result<lb/>
400 medley relav FS<lb/>
(Skerobiak, Bedard. Martneau<lb/>
C.alhvan) 4:06 9<lb/>
LOOO free McGregor (FS)<lb/>
10.24.64; Scotia Miller 10:52.13<lb/>
S? RESIT IS. Pagf 9<lb/>
Drug<lb/>
N-SH 11 I I<lb/>
Big time I<lb/>
to gain 'he<lb/>
sought ?<lb/>
79th am i i<lb/>
for dl .<lb/>
M r<lb/>
deeu<lb/>
along ? ' ?<lb/>
i ?<lb/>
the thrci<lb/>
ficia<lb/>
the<lb/>
r e p r e s <lb/>
-<lb/>
N( A<lb/>
-<lb/>
Intramura<lb/>
Bv IK ANSI<lb/>
anc: p<lb/>
Wit!<lb/>
five . ?<lb/>
. v .<lb/>
?<lb/>
ball w<lb/>
M m Thurs fi<lb/>
rule<lb/>
?<lb/>
? I eav e<lb/>
home<lb/>
? <lb/>
weathei<lb/>
?<lb/>
not you -<lb/>
tinue <lb/>
? V<lb/>
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? es '<lb/>
The<lb/>
va-<lb/>
ser<lb/>
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dolla - -<lb/>
?<lb/>
hour '<lb/>
?<lb/>
tion,<lb/>
eer a: " <lb/>
If you<lb/>
either IRS 1<lb/>
Employee ol I he M<lb/>
the<lb/>
per<lb/>
desc . <lb/>
in ' ?<lb/>
Tidbits<lb/>
Re '<lb/>
baske tiis <lb/>
game<lb/>
rollei<lb/>
next week -<lb/>
together "ow<lb/>
Cong-<lb/>
football sq<lb/>
participated<lb/>
Flag Football 1<lb/>
I ouistana Th<lb/>
ting E i an<lb/>
well<lb/>
? ? <lb/>
sUIMMIV, P(X)1 S<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F "an 8<lb/>
M-F 12 noon I -<lb/>
M F<lb/>
Sat I p.m<lb/>
Minge Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 8 p m<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m<lb/>
i ?. ii m n<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0009"/><lb/>
t Two<lb/>
e Floor<lb/>
i. ne<lb/>
m i ig 21<lb/>
Nre welCO. ted .Mi<lb/>
v at<lb/>
-illed<lb/>
<lb/>
:well<lb/>
t d and<lb/>
1 4<lb/>
 :i<lb/>
'a<lb/>
.<lb/>
<lb/>
.<lb/>
?.<lb/>
?.n<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
. w im &amp; M<lb/>
l ed<lb/>
<lb/>
om-<lb/>
?? '<lb/>
wns ECU<lb/>
 Contest<lb/>
.v Mai<lb/>
a 25<lb/>
? ??<lb/>
Hoeer,<lb/>
the next<lb/>
B-6 ad-<lb/>
i ar-<lb/>
the margin<lb/>
sn<lb/>
remain-<lb/>
ed and<lb/>
e teams trad-<lb/>
CovaJ sai ? j 25<lb/>
?? ? a 3<lb/>
ime<lb/>
prepared going into the<lb/>
butts on the inside. "<lb/>
-Charlie Harrison<lb/>
&amp; Via I cut the<lb/>
three<lb/>
liam<lb/>
14 2( Aith<lb/>
Iri vins<lb/>
: cki<lb/>
rhe Pirates<lb/>
eight<lb/>
ne on a<lb/>
1: 48 remain-<lb/>
red the<lb/>
eak the<lb/>
4" : midway<lb/>
nd half The<lb/>
- could get was 47-34<lb/>
? : in a short<lb/>
remaining.<lb/>
Indians<lb/>
id and on<lb/>
? i disap-<lb/>
Pira es' fast<lb/>
' ? es "We<lb/>
? ' of our<lb/>
H said.<lb/>
?ne of 12<lb/>
are not going to<lb/>
anderhorst match-<lb/>
' c points, while<lb/>
'? Mary ups its record<lb/>
and 1-0 in ECAC<lb/>
ference play. ECU<lb/>
all and 0-2 in<lb/>
u.e Pirates' next game will be<lb/>
irda Jan 19 at 7:30 p.m<lb/>
??els to Richmond,<lb/>
?attle last year's ECAC<lb/>
ampions<lb/>
re) 3 n 71.<lb/>
Women's Results<lb/>
400 medley relay: FS<lb/>
iSkerobiak, Bedard. Martneau<lb/>
Gallivan) 4:06.95.<lb/>
?00 free: McGregor (FS)<lb/>
-4 64; Scotia Miller 10:52.13.<lb/>
e RESULTS, Page 9<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn (UPI) -<lb/>
Big-time football schools figure<lb/>
10 gain the autonomy they've<lb/>
sought for years at the NCAA's<lb/>
"9th annual convention, where a<lb/>
controversial plan to test athletes<lb/>
for drug use also will be debated.<lb/>
More than 1,000 delegates will<lb/>
decide on Division I-A autonomy<lb/>
along with 144 other items during<lb/>
the three-day meeting which of-<lb/>
ficially opened Monday. Before<lb/>
the convention closes on Wednes-<lb/>
day, delegates also are expected<lb/>
to elect John R. Davis, faculty<lb/>
epresentatie from Oregon<lb/>
State, to the presidency of the<lb/>
huge association.<lb/>
Davis, a former secretary-<lb/>
treasurer of the NCAA, is the<lb/>
choice of the NCAA's<lb/>
nominating committee to succeed<lb/>
John Toner of Connecticut,<lb/>
whose two-year term expires this<lb/>
week<lb/>
The nominating committee<lb/>
i so has named Wilford S. Bailey<lb/>
ol Auburn as its choice for<lb/>
secretary-treasurer and Arliss L.<lb/>
Roaden, president of Tennessee<lb/>
Tech, as Division 1 vice-<lb/>
president.<lb/>
 busy agenda includes<lb/>
neetings of the College Football<lb/>
ssociation and the newly<lb/>
ited Presidential Commission,<lb/>
which already has called a special<lb/>
V -A convention next June in<lb/>
New Orleans.<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
Bv JFANNETTF ROTH<lb/>
Staff WiMm<lb/>
s the participants of in-<lb/>
tramural activities battle it out<lb/>
for the Chancellor's Trophy,<lb/>
many people choose to utilize the<lb/>
rmal recreation program to<lb/>
satsfy their recreational needs.<lb/>
Faculty, staff and students can<lb/>
swim, lift weights, heck out out-<lb/>
door and sporting equipment,<lb/>
and play basketball in Memorial<lb/>
m.<lb/>
With the onset of intramural<lb/>
five-on-five basketball, free play<lb/>
time in Memorial will be greatly<lb/>
reduced. Although the weekends<lb/>
will still be available. IRS basket-<lb/>
ball will occupy all the space<lb/>
MonThurs. from 3:45-10:30<lb/>
o ensure that all visitors<lb/>
eniov their play in the gym, a few<lb/>
rules and regulations should be<lb/>
adhered to: ? Be sure to bring<lb/>
your ECU student identification.<lb/>
? leave all your valuables at<lb/>
home<lb/>
? No f<lb/>
Debated<lb/>
THE EAST CAROMMAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15, 1985<lb/>
Uli c<lb/>
.curt play will be allow-<lb/>
to the demand in the cold<lb/>
weather.<lb/>
our conduct, language and<lb/>
actions will determine whether or<lb/>
: you will be allowed to con-<lb/>
tinue utilizing the facilities.<lb/>
? n area is clearly marked for<lb/>
:emale play. Follow all the rules<lb/>
posted so the ladies can enjoy the<lb/>
:civilities too.<lb/>
The outdoor receation pro-<lb/>
gram is providing an opportunity<lb/>
tor all students to go horseback<lb/>
riding each Thursday. A shuttle<lb/>
van, leaving at 3:45 p.m will be<lb/>
sent out to Jarman's stables bas-<lb/>
ed on demand. The charge is five<lb/>
dollars, two dollars off the nor-<lb/>
mal price, for an uninterrupted<lb/>
hour of riding. Individuals, small<lb/>
groups and as many as 14 people<lb/>
may register in advance and en-<lb/>
joy the day on horseback. The<lb/>
outdoor recreation center will<lb/>
also provide a camping-<lb/>
backpacking or canoe trip to fit<lb/>
your needs. For more informa-<lb/>
tion, call the outdoor recreation<lb/>
center at 757-6911.<lb/>
If you have a nomination for<lb/>
either IRS Player of the Month or<lb/>
Employee of the Month, come by<lb/>
the intramural office. Give us the<lb/>
person's name and why they<lb/>
deserve the award. All nomina-<lb/>
tions will be reviewed by the IRS<lb/>
staff. Look for your non ination<lb/>
in the next issue of Tennis Shoe<lb/>
Tidbits.<lb/>
Remember to register for<lb/>
basketball this week. Video<lb/>
games tournament and co-rec<lb/>
roller hockey registration begins<lb/>
next week so get your teams<lb/>
together now.<lb/>
Congratulations to the flag<lb/>
football squad Bombsquad who<lb/>
participated in the sixth annual<lb/>
Flag Football Tournament in<lb/>
Louisiana. Thanks for represen-<lb/>
ting ECU and intramurals so<lb/>
well.<lb/>
 <lb/>
M-W-F<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
M-W-F<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
12 noon 1:30 p.m.<lb/>
3:30-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
MJnges Pool<lb/>
8 p.m9:30 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
In addition, the NCAA Coun-<lb/>
cil will hear Florida's appeal of<lb/>
its football probation. Florida,<lb/>
which finished the 1984 season<lb/>
with a 9-1-1 record and its first<lb/>
Southeastern Conference title,<lb/>
reportedly has been slapped with<lb/>
a two-year ban on television and<lb/>
bowl appearances and stripped of<lb/>
10 scholarships per year for two<lb/>
years.<lb/>
The item dealing with<lb/>
legislative autonomy for Division<lb/>
IA, the major football-playing<lb/>
schools, should be decided early.<lb/>
Its defeat at last year's conven-<lb/>
tion angered many I-A officials,<lb/>
who threatened to bolt the<lb/>
NCAA. Under terms of this<lb/>
year's proposal, the 105 I-A<lb/>
schools will vote independently<lb/>
of the 176 Division I-AA and<lb/>
I-AAA schools (who do not play<lb/>
varsity football but do play Divi-<lb/>
sion I in other sports in most mat-<lb/>
ters).<lb/>
Division I members whose<lb/>
primary sport is basketball, such<lb/>
as DePaul and Georgetown, have<lb/>
historically resisted attempts at<lb/>
I-A autonomy for fear the foot-<lb/>
ball schools would use their<lb/>
money and clout to upgrade their<lb/>
basketball programs and become<lb/>
dominant in both revenue-<lb/>
producing sports.<lb/>
"They wouldn't be able to<lb/>
create their own basketball or<lb/>
football championship said<lb/>
Davis, who helped write the<lb/>
legislation and has been lobbying<lb/>
the I-AA and I-AAA schools to<lb/>
support it. "In addition, they<lb/>
won't be able to change squad<lb/>
limits in basketball, or change the<lb/>
size of their basketball coaching<lb/>
staffs<lb/>
Another proposal, which failed<lb/>
last year but is expected to win<lb/>
approval in Nashville, would<lb/>
allow athletes to accept $1,900 in<lb/>
federal assistance under the Pell<lb/>
Grant program in addition to a<lb/>
full athletic scholarship.<lb/>
ECU Results<lb/>
Continued From Page Fight<lb/>
Hillencamp 10.56.<lb/>
200 freestyle: Acre (FS)<lb/>
1:57.58; Belew (FS) 1:58.75; Jen-<lb/>
ny Pierson (EC) 2:02.11.<lb/>
50 freestyle: Chris Holman<lb/>
(EC) 26.02; Nancy James (EC)<lb/>
26.10; Skrobiak (FS).<lb/>
200 individual medley: Mar-<lb/>
tineau (FS) 2:14.03; Prozzillo<lb/>
(FS) 2:21.60; Caycee Poust (EC)<lb/>
2:17.49.<lb/>
1-meter diving: Alexander (FS)<lb/>
257; Fuller (FS) 250; Lori Miller<lb/>
(EC) 177.<lb/>
100 butterfly: Russell (FS)<lb/>
1;01.83; Roller (FS) 1:02.02;<lb/>
Ellen McPherson (EC) 1:03.01.<lb/>
100 freestyle: Holman (EC)<lb/>
55.29; Martineau (FS) 56.11; Jen-<lb/>
ny Pierson (EC) 56.14.<lb/>
100 backstroke: Lori Liv-<lb/>
ingston (EC) 1:03.21; Sterrett<lb/>
(FS) 1:03.73; Poust (EC) 1:04.28.<lb/>
500 freestyle: McGregor (FS)<lb/>
5:17.25; Hayes (FS) 5:21.0; S.<lb/>
Miller (EC) 5:24.35.<lb/>
3-meter diving: Fuller (FS) 266;<lb/>
O'Hern (FS) 257; L.Miller.<lb/>
100 breaststroke: Bedard (FS)<lb/>
1:09.85; Jess Feinberg (EC)<lb/>
1:11.02; Joelle Ennis (EC)<lb/>
1:11.13.<lb/>
200 freestyle relay: EC (James,<lb/>
Pierson, S.Miller, Holman)<lb/>
1:41.78.<lb/>
PERSONAL DENTIST<lb/>
Do you need a caring,<lb/>
professional dentist?<lb/>
?Cleaning done by the doctor<lb/>
?Pain-free restorative dentistry<lb/>
Dr. Robert Carglll<lb/>
University Professional Center<lb/>
608 E. 10th St. Greenville, NC<lb/>
758-4927<lb/>
Si<lb/>
FRANK'S PIZZA<lb/>
LOCATED AT THE PLAZA<lb/>
756-8798<lb/>
l?ie0ute available<lb/>
? "? s? l roFT"<lb/>
, Any whole :<lb/>
? pizza purchase j Any whole sub<lb/>
, Exp. March 1, 1985 Exp. March 1, 1985<lb/>
FINE RESTAURANT, CATERING<lb/>
UNIQUE BAKED COOPS<lb/>
Mon-Sat 6:00am- 2:30pm<lb/>
Sun 8:00am- 2:30pm<lb/>
355-7055<lb/>
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Greenville,NC<lb/>
UQUIDATKNI SALE<lb/>
OF ALL DEE CEE Merchandise<lb/>
50 off<lb/>
Skirts Blouses<lb/>
Jeans Corduroys<lb/>
Prices Low As<lb/>
$5.00<lb/>
MaltTMtrl V t<lb/>
CXJEZEt<lb/>
Mor? Quality For Le??<lb/>
HuV J 1 Avden<lb/>
746-2402<lb/>
Tuev ? Sal<lb/>
9 30 6<lb/>
ADVEATISEO<lb/>
ITIMP01CY<lb/>
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 ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE No, AVAL ?BI F TO OTHER RETA.L DEALERS OR WHO, fsi, pDc<lb/>
PjM?at Specials; 1<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE<lb/>
COUNTRY PRIDE FRESH<lb/>
Sirloin Tip I Fryer Breast<lb/>
Cut<lb/>
Free!<lb/>
Boneless<lb/>
9-12 lb.<lb/>
avg.<lb/>
Vv<lb/>
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ANN PAGE<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Sliced Bacon<lb/>
159<lb/>
rWESTERN GRAIN FED BEEFSHORTR<lb/>
Beef Stew<lb/>
Bone-In<lb/>
SmLPv<lb/>
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CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Navel Oranges<lb/>
Fret w,th Qu.My WASHINGTON STATE<lb/>
RED OR GOLDEN<lb/>
Delicious Apples<lb/>
SILVERBROOK<lb/>
eat Groc,<lb/>
Saving:<lb/>
Homogenized Milk<lb/>
TWO<lb/>
each<lb/>
dozen<lb/>
48<lb/>
0<lb/>
SHEDD'S SPREAD<lb/>
Margarine Qtrs.<lb/>
11b.<lb/>
pkgs.<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
REGULAR BEAN<lb/>
"Eight O'clock Coffee<lb/>
m<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH COUPON AND 7.50 OR MORE ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN. 19 AT A&amp;R<lb/>
?600<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
SPRING BREAK CRUISF<lb/>
March 4-8$208.05 per person<lb/>
4-day sail aboard the CARNIVALE<lb/>
Visit the ports of Freeport and<lb/>
Nassau. Come aboard the "Fun Ship"<lb/>
and set sail for the best time of your<lb/>
life<lb/>
PLAIN ? SELF RISING ? BREAD<lb/>
Pillsbury Flour<lb/>
SKrarara mi? or more order<lb/>
I<lb/>
601<lb/>
A&amp;P COUPON<lb/>
Call for booking details and brochure<lb/>
QUIXOTE TRAVELS, INC.<lb/>
319 Contanche St.<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
Phone 757-0234<lb/>
A&amp;P CHILLED 100 PURE<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
K,UIT?iW,TH coupON AND 7.50 OR MORE ORDER<lb/>
GOOD THRU SAT JAN. 19 AT A4P<lb/>
64 OZ.<lb/>
!<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0010"/><lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 15. 1985<lb/>
j<lb/>
tOI<lb/>
Lo<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
sp<lb/>
hi<lb/>
Gi<lb/>
to<lb/>
mi<lb/>
so<lb/>
hi<lb/>
pr<lb/>
o<lb/>
o!<lb/>
b<lb/>
y<lb/>
bi<lb/>
Is<lb/>
m<lb/>
,1<lb/>
tr<lb/>
t(<lb/>
b<lb/>
P<lb/>
s<lb/>
<lb/>
t.<lb/>
Generals Seek Flutie<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? The<lb/>
New Jersey Generals, in their<lb/>
negotiations to sign Doug Flutie,<lb/>
reportedly offered the Boston<lb/>
College star quarterback a four-<lb/>
year, non-deferred deal worth<lb/>
more than $5 million according<lb/>
to the New York Times.<lb/>
The Times, quoting unnamed<lb/>
sources familiar with the talks,<lb/>
said the United States Football<lb/>
League team had gone beyond<lb/>
any previous non-deferred money<lb/>
offer ever made to a rookie foot-<lb/>
ball player and were ready to pay<lb/>
the Heisman Trophy winner<lb/>
about $1.3 million a year.<lb/>
Quarterback Steve Young of<lb/>
the USFL's Los Angeles Express<lb/>
has a contract worth an estimated<lb/>
$5.5 million for four years, but<lb/>
some of the money is deferred.<lb/>
The non-deferred part of the con-<lb/>
tract is worth about $4.2 million,<lb/>
and the Generals' offer is said to<lb/>
exceed that, the newspaper said.<lb/>
Herschel Walker, the Generals'<lb/>
star running back, is believed to<lb/>
have the richest contract in pro<lb/>
football on a yearly basis, averag-<lb/>
ing about $1.3 million annually.<lb/>
Walker, also a Heisman winner,<lb/>
signed that contract as a second-<lb/>
year pro, not as a rookie.<lb/>
Flutie and his family were in<lb/>
Japan where he played in Satur-<lb/>
day night's Japan Bowl college<lb/>
all-star game.<lb/>
Flutie said Friday from Tokyo<lb/>
that he had not spoken to his<lb/>
agent, Bob Woolf, in two days<lb/>
and did not know details of the<lb/>
Generals' offer. But he said that<lb/>
"if the contract is something I<lb/>
feel the NFL can't compete<lb/>
with then he would not wait for<lb/>
the April 30 National Football<lb/>
League draft.<lb/>
Woolf said he could not make<lb/>
a commitment to the Generals<lb/>
until he discussed the proposal<lb/>
with Flutie and that he wanted to<lb/>
wait to see what the NFL would<lb/>
do.<lb/>
Woolf said he held all-night<lb/>
negotiations ending Friday morn-<lb/>
ing with General's President Jay<lb/>
Seltzer in Fort Lauderdale, Fla.<lb/>
"They are impressive figures<lb/>
Woolf said of the contract offer.<lb/>
"However, I don't think the<lb/>
USFL is going to let it stay on the<lb/>
table forever. Donald Trump, the<lb/>
General's owner, has said he<lb/>
would not want the talks to go on<lb/>
any later than the first week of<lb/>
February<lb/>
The Buffalo Bills own the right<lb/>
to the No. 1 pick in the NFL draft<lb/>
and are permitted to negotiate<lb/>
with Flutie now. However, the<lb/>
Bills said Friday they still have<lb/>
not decided what they will do<lb/>
with the pick.<lb/>
"I'm trying to give the NFL an<lb/>
equal chance Woolf told the<lb/>
Times, "but it's tough to conduct<lb/>
business this way. I know Doug is<lb/>
going to ask where we stand in<lb/>
the NFL. Some clubs are trying<lb/>
to get the right to talk to us<lb/>
Woolf declined to say what<lb/>
teams were trying to trade up in a<lb/>
deal to get the top pick from the<lb/>
Bills.<lb/>
STUDENTS 9? IT<lb/>
MENS AND WOMENS OVERCOATS 9.95 up<lb/>
TRENCH COATS<lb/>
MEN'S SUIT VEST<lb/>
SWEAT TOP'S,BOTTOMS,<lb/>
AND JACK<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT OF SWEATERS<lb/>
Gators Lose NCAA Appeal,<lb/>
Face Three Year Probation<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
2.95<lb/>
1.95-3.95<lb/>
5.95<lb/>
FLANNEL SHIRTS<lb/>
BUY 4, GET 1 FREE<lb/>
3.95<lb/>
SPECIAL<lb/>
MEN'S JACKETS (cord,plaid,tweed,solids) 9.95<lb/>
FREE BUTTON DOWN SHIRT WITH EACH CO A T<lb/>
NASHVILLE, Tenn. (UPI) ?<lb/>
The Florida Gators have lost<lb/>
their appeal to the NCAA Coun-<lb/>
cil and will be placed on three<lb/>
years probation, including being<lb/>
barred from bowls and television<lb/>
for at least the next two years.<lb/>
NCAA President John L.<lb/>
Toner of the University of Con-<lb/>
necticut said Florida was being<lb/>
penalized for violations that oc-<lb/>
curred from 1979-1983 ? viola-<lb/>
FSU Defeats Pirates<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
taff Witter<lb/>
Florida State's powerful swim<lb/>
teams once again demonstrated<lb/>
their capabilities by sweeping<lb/>
past the Pirates in a dual meet<lb/>
Friday. The Seminoles took the<lb/>
men's competition 71-41 and the<lb/>
women's 68-44.<lb/>
Although at a great disadvan-<lb/>
tage against FSU due to the great<lb/>
difference in financial funding,<lb/>
ECU put up a great deal of<lb/>
resistance and actually led<lb/>
halfway through the men's com-<lb/>
petition, aided by a large and en-<lb/>
thusiastic crowd of Pirate fans.<lb/>
Chris Pittelli continued to excel<lb/>
for the Pirate men, winning the<lb/>
50 and 100 freestyles. Freshman<lb/>
Bruce Brockschmidt was the only<lb/>
other individual winner for ECU<lb/>
and also swam on the sole first<lb/>
place medley team.<lb/>
Chris Holman paced the Pirate<lb/>
women with wins in the 50 and<lb/>
100 freestyles and anchored the<lb/>
first place 200 freestyle relay<lb/>
team, while Lori Livingston was<lb/>
the only other individual winner<lb/>
for ECU, taking the 100<lb/>
backstroke.<lb/>
"We swam as fast as we<lb/>
could said ECU coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe. "Almost all our times were<lb/>
ahead of our previous best. We<lb/>
took four seconds off our best<lb/>
400 medley time for the men and<lb/>
beat Florida State.<lb/>
"If we swim like that the rest<lb/>
of the way, we should win most<lb/>
of our remaining meets Kobe<lb/>
added. "We're getting into com-<lb/>
petition that is more on the same<lb/>
scale as we are, so we're in good<lb/>
shape for the rest of the season<lb/>
The losses dropped the Pirate<lb/>
men's mark to 3-3, while the<lb/>
women fell to 2-3. Staunch<lb/>
regional foe UNC-Wilmington<lb/>
visits Minges Natatorium Satur-<lb/>
day at 2 p.m.<lb/>
ATHLETIC WORLD<lb/>
Tiger Winter Clearance<lb/>
All styles of TIGER Running Shoes<lb/>
Marked 20 OFF<lb/>
x<lb/>
A<lb/>
x<lb/>
EXTENDER<lb/>
Reg 42.99<lb/>
SALE 34.99<lb/>
STRIKER ST<lb/>
Reg 49.99<lb/>
SALE 39.99<lb/>
FALL WARM LP SUITS Reduced up to 25<lb/>
Athletic World<lb/>
Carolina East Mall, Greenville 756-7550<lb/>
East Carolina University's<lb/>
Student Union<lb/>
is taking applications for<lb/>
Student Union President<lb/>
&amp;<lb/>
Student Union Vice President<lb/>
for the 1985 - 1986 Term<lb/>
Any full time student can apply.<lb/>
Applications available at Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center's Information Desk.<lb/>
Deadline: January 18, 1985<lb/>
tions that led to the dismissal of<lb/>
head football coach Charley Pell<lb/>
after the third game of the 1984<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Toner said the third year of<lb/>
probation regarding post-season<lb/>
events and television appearances<lb/>
would be suspended if the univer-<lb/>
sity meets "prescribed monitor-<lb/>
ing conditions that will require<lb/>
written reports and periodic on-<lb/>
site reviews of the university's<lb/>
athletics program<lb/>
WAUCi?c SUPER SPECIAL<lb/>
WOMEN'S BLAZERS (some from 40's and 50's) 9.95<lb/>
.FREE BLOUSE WITH EACH BLAZER<lb/>
Of course, JEANS, SHIRTS, CAR COATS, WINDBREAKERS,<lb/>
LONGJOHNS, SKIRTS,SKI JACKETS,AND MICH MORE.<lb/>
COIN AND RING MAN<lb/>
Corner Evans and 4th St.<lb/>
Recycled Estate Clothing From NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, etc.<lb/>
CODvngnt 1985<lb/>
Kroger sav on<lb/>
Ouantitv Rights Reserved<lb/>
None soid to Dealers<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd - Greenville<lb/>
?? mm i?vtt'i? it.m, n -Mi.M re o? -?m?<lb/>
 i, ? ?:? u, - fjtr W u, o- litre li h?c??" ?<lb/>
-w- ?  ac'u- ou o' J- .rer   ? ,u<lb/>
?vwiw- r?T itt Mrt'TWODf?'tf IC aiv or<lb/>
items and Prices<lb/>
Effective Thru Sat<lb/>
Jan 19, 1985<lb/>
KROGER<lb/>
Old Fashioned<lb/>
Bread<lb/>
24 OZ.<lb/>
Loaf<lb/>
18 OZ.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
KROGER HOMOGENIZED,<lb/>
2. SKIM. CHOCOLATE, SWEET<lb/>
ACIDOPHILUS, BUTTERMILK OR<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Milk<lb/>
KROGER SMOOTH OR CRUNCHY<lb/>
Peanut<lb/>
Butter <lb/>
CREAMY<lb/>
Dukes<lb/>
Mayonnaise<lb/>
32<lb/>
Oz.<lb/>
Jar<lb/>
1<lb/>
12 Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
1<lb/>
CREAT CAMETIME SNACK<lb/>
OR HALFTIME MEAL<lb/>
VALUABLE COUPON<lb/>
THIN CRUST<lb/>
SINGLE TOPPING<lb/>
 Cfcecdc<lb/>
 si DelijFresh<lb/>
 imuaIi'uum Pizza<lb/>
WITH<lb/>
COUPON<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
2 LITER BTL.<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
WITH THE PURCHASE OF<lb/>
Wishbone Chicken<lb/>
(<lb/>
OR 50 PC BOX CHICKEN<lb/>
NUGGETS $8.99<lb/>
)<lb/>
LIMIT ONE PER FAMILY<lb/>
VALID THRU SAT JAN 26, 1985<lb/>
VARIETY DIPS 20 OFF<lb/>
 falapt Dip<lb/>
 BatmuOmm "Dip<lb/>
 FumcJi Onm Dtp<lb/>
v HaduDtp<lb/>
OmOmuL-Dip LD<lb/>
<lb/>
GOLDEN<lb/>
Ripe<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
19c<lb/>
10<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
us. NO. 1<lb/>
GENUINE<lb/>
Idaho<lb/>
Potatoes<lb/>
$98<lb/>
5 Lb Bag<lb/>
Select Bakers<lb/>
$1.38<lb/>
ld 48'<lb/>
CALIFORNIA ROYAL<lb/>
Mandarin<lb/>
Oranges<lb/>
4-?1<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
fwmmmt<lb/>
f<lb/>
v. I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057688_0011"/>
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