<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057692_0001"/>
SHre lEaat (Earnltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.35<lb/>
Tuesday January 29, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
12 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12.000<lb/>
Reagan Proposes<lb/>
Tighter Aid Rules<lb/>
A Study In Bicycles: Aerial Perspective<lb/>
JON JORDAN - ECU Photo Lb<lb/>
For those of you who have always wondered what a bkyck rack looks and snow have limited their appearance on campus. However. the,<lb/>
like from above, here you are. Although biocles are usuallv a popular along with flowers and summer clothing, will soon reappear,<lb/>
mode of transportation year-round at ECU, the recent cold weather<lb/>
SGA Allocates Funds To Arts Forum<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
aalsUat New, tdiinr<lb/>
The SGA passed a bill Monday<lb/>
night allocating $4,100 to the<lb/>
Visual Arts Forunxi annual<lb/>
budget while the Student<lb/>
Residence Association's attempt<lb/>
to get SGA funding was cut short<lb/>
when quorum was called and not<lb/>
enough legislators were present.<lb/>
The Visual Arts Forum re-<lb/>
quested $12,900.50, but that<lb/>
amount was cut by the Ap-<lb/>
propriations Committee, which<lb/>
decided the approved figure was<lb/>
"an adequate amount and was<lb/>
not out of proportion to the other<lb/>
arts" such as the ECU Playhouse<lb/>
and ECU School of Music, accor-<lb/>
ding to Teresa Briley. spokesman<lb/>
for the committee.<lb/>
Three hundred dollars will go<lb/>
to increase the School of Art<lb/>
library holdings. That library is<lb/>
independent of Joyner Library,<lb/>
and Briley said the committee felt<lb/>
this money would be in the best<lb/>
interests of art students. Re-<lb/>
quested money was cut from sec-<lb/>
tions involving extensive travel by<lb/>
the Forum and fees for proposed<lb/>
invited guests.<lb/>
SRA Vice President Juan<lb/>
ie<lb/>
-<lb/>
' HiinAi .<lb/>
NEIL JOHNSON<lb/>
ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
When 9-year-old Junior Walston presented his Michael Jackson<lb/>
imitation Saturday and Monday nights at the Pirate basketball<lb/>
games, he brought the crowds to their feet. Kids do the darndest<lb/>
things. <lb/>
On The Inside<lb/>
Announcements2 For those crossword puzzle<lb/>
Editorials4 afficianados in our audience,<lb/>
Style7 we've got another one for you.<lb/>
Classifieds9 See page 3.<lb/>
Sports1U<lb/>
?The Pirates lost another one ?Sean Penn's latest movie,<lb/>
Monday, losing to James The Falcon and The Snowman<lb/>
Madison in Minges Coliseum, is reviewed today. See Style,<lb/>
See Sports, page 10. P?8? ??<lb/>
Velasquez appealed to the<lb/>
Legislature for $430 to help<lb/>
defray the cost of sending 50<lb/>
delegates to a Leadership Con-<lb/>
ference in Hickory, N.C. He said<lb/>
the SRA opted for chartering a<lb/>
bus because it would keep all<lb/>
delegates together and also<lb/>
reduce the risk of having several<lb/>
members in different<lb/>
automobiles. SGA Transit buses<lb/>
were not available, he said,<lb/>
because of the distance involved.<lb/>
SGA Legislators, following a<lb/>
lengthy debate, offered to draw<lb/>
up a bill paying $215, half of the<lb/>
requested amount. However, the<lb/>
number of SGA members left at<lb/>
the meeting was challenged and<lb/>
the body did not have quorum.<lb/>
The meeting was immediately ad-<lb/>
journed. The SRA ha.s the option<lb/>
of coming before the SGA next<lb/>
week and proposing a bill asking<lb/>
the SGA to reimburse them for<lb/>
the $430.<lb/>
The 50 delegates attending the<lb/>
conference are being funded<lb/>
through SRA or being sponsored<lb/>
by their residence halls, Velas-<lb/>
quez said.<lb/>
r-rom Staff and<lb/>
Wire Report<lb/>
President Reagan will ask Con-<lb/>
gress to deny federally-<lb/>
guaranteed loans to all college<lb/>
students with family incomes<lb/>
above $32,500, a move which<lb/>
would lock out hundreds of<lb/>
thousands of students from the<lb/>
loan program, an administration<lb/>
source said Saturday.<lb/>
Reagan's fiscal 1986 budget<lb/>
will also seek to clamp an overall<lb/>
$4,000 ceiling on the total federal<lb/>
aid ? including loans and grants<lb/>
? for any student per year,<lb/>
regardless of how poor his or her<lb/>
family is. The ceiling would also<lb/>
hit graduate students, who now<lb/>
can borrow up to $5,000 a year,<lb/>
twice as much as undergraduates,<lb/>
in guaranteed loans.<lb/>
And it would restrict eligibility<lb/>
for Pell Grants ? outright<lb/>
federal stipends of up to1,900 a<lb/>
year ? to students from families<lb/>
with incomes of $25,000 or less,<lb/>
according to the source, who<lb/>
spoke only on condition of<lb/>
anonymity.<lb/>
According to Karen Barbee,<lb/>
acting director of the ECU Office<lb/>
of Financial Aid, the ceiling on<lb/>
aid will affect out-of-state<lb/>
students at ECU more than<lb/>
anyone else. Although this is<lb/>
"not a significant number of<lb/>
students" she said, those who are<lb/>
not from North Carolina have ex-<lb/>
penses of approximately $6,000.<lb/>
Students barred from the<lb/>
Guaranteed Student Loan pro-<lb/>
gram ? under which loans are<lb/>
free while the borrower remains a<lb/>
student and the interest is only 9<lb/>
percent afterwards ? could turn<lb/>
to an auxiliary loan program for<lb/>
parents that extends loans under<lb/>
much less favorable terms.<lb/>
Under that program, bor-<lb/>
rowers are charged interest while<lb/>
they are still in school at rates 3.5<lb/>
points above the interest rate on<lb/>
Treasury bills ? a total of about<lb/>
12 percent currently ? and<lb/>
repayments must start im-<lb/>
mediately.<lb/>
Reagan will include the student<lb/>
aid cutbacks in the budget he is<lb/>
scheduled to send to Congress on<lb/>
Feb 4. Most of the cuts would<lb/>
affect loans and grants for the<lb/>
academic year starting in<lb/>
September 1986, although<lb/>
Reagan, in his attempts to cut<lb/>
domestic spending may also seek<lb/>
rescissions that could affect the<lb/>
aid budget for this fall.<lb/>
Higher education lobbyists<lb/>
have been girding for an attack<lb/>
on student aid, the largest c! unk<lb/>
of the Education Departn mt's<lb/>
$17.9 billion fiscal 19?5 budget.<lb/>
More than 5 million ollege<lb/>
students get some ical help<lb/>
each year, including 3.3 million<lb/>
who borrower more tnan S<lb/>
billion in guaranteed loans last<lb/>
year. Banks and other private<lb/>
lending agencies make the loans,<lb/>
but the government insures their<lb/>
repayment and pays all the in-<lb/>
terest while the borrower pursue<lb/>
their education.<lb/>
Congress has resisted past<lb/>
Reagan administration efforts to<lb/>
scale back the loan subsidies,<lb/>
although in 1981 it did require<lb/>
students from families with in-<lb/>
comes above $30,000 to<lb/>
demonstrate thay they needed the<lb/>
loans.<lb/>
With average college costs ap-<lb/>
proaching $10,000 at many<lb/>
private institutions and $5,000 at<lb/>
public universities, that has not<lb/>
been difficult for many students<lb/>
from middle- and upper-class<lb/>
families to prove. It is not un-<lb/>
common for families with in-<lb/>
comes of $50,000 or more to<lb/>
qualify, particularly if they have<lb/>
two children in college, experts<lb/>
say.<lb/>
The Office of Management<lb/>
and Budget originally sought to<lb/>
draw the eligibility line at<lb/>
$30,000. Patricia A. Smith, direc-<lb/>
See STUDENTS, Page 6<lb/>
Student Union Elects President<lb/>
By ELAINE PERRY<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
"Increasing student awareness<lb/>
of the Student Union" is the<lb/>
main goal of Student Union<lb/>
President-elect Michael Smith,<lb/>
who was elected Jan. 24.<lb/>
"We had set some goals: more<lb/>
awareness of the Student Union<lb/>
and leadership development<lb/>
said Regina Hardee, the current<lb/>
Student Union president.<lb/>
"Michael is an excellent person<lb/>
for the job. He wants to continue<lb/>
the goals we've already establish-<lb/>
ed Hardee said.<lb/>
Smith said he feels students<lb/>
need to be more aware of what<lb/>
the Student Union has to offer.<lb/>
"Hopefully, the unity of this<lb/>
organization can be improved<lb/>
through group interaction he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The purpose of the Student<lb/>
Union, Hardee said, "is to be<lb/>
responsible for providing a<lb/>
balanced program of social,<lb/>
recreational and cultural pro-<lb/>
grams for the entire university.<lb/>
This organization gives students a<lb/>
chance to work with other<lb/>
students on issues involving<lb/>
things they want Hardee said.<lb/>
"A lot of students don't take ad-<lb/>
vantage of the opportunities of-<lb/>
fered. I wouldn't take anything<lb/>
for the experiences I've had, the<lb/>
people I've met and the oppor-<lb/>
tunities gained by being involved<lb/>
in the Student Union<lb/>
The Public Relations and<lb/>
Publicity Committee was recently<lb/>
allocated money from the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union budget and "the<lb/>
committee will be a major force<lb/>
in increasing student awareness<lb/>
of this organization said John<lb/>
Greer, chairman.<lb/>
A logo contest is being planned<lb/>
by the Public Relations and<lb/>
Publicity Committee, Greer said.<lb/>
The contest will be open to all<lb/>
ECU students and $200 will be<lb/>
awarded to the person who<lb/>
designs a winning logo.<lb/>
Current information about the<lb/>
Student Union and its various<lb/>
programs and committees will be<lb/>
available to students Feb. 5<lb/>
Smith<lb/>
through Feb. 7 in front of the<lb/>
Student Supply Store. A<lb/>
Committees offered by the Stu-<lb/>
dent Union are: Art Exhibition,<lb/>
Films, Coffeehouse, Minority<lb/>
.Arts, Special Concerts, Special<lb/>
Events, Travel, Forum, Public<lb/>
Relations and Publicity and Pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
Roads Act Changes Drinking Habits<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
NewiEattlor<lb/>
When the stricter DWI laws ?<lb/>
coupled with a raised drinking<lb/>
age ? were passed Oct. 1, 1983,<lb/>
most of the ECU population as<lb/>
well as most of the state popula-<lb/>
tion was affected. This is the first<lb/>
article in a series examining the<lb/>
effects of the DWI laws as well as<lb/>
the changes in the laws<lb/>
themselves. Part I will deal with<lb/>
drinking habits, Part II with<lb/>
roadblocks and other methods of<lb/>
detecting the intoxicated driver<lb/>
and Part III with the process of<lb/>
arrest and conviction.<lb/>
Although it is difficult to<lb/>
estimate the effect of the tougher<lb/>
laws on alcohol consumption,<lb/>
they have changed liquor sales<lb/>
and nightclub business.<lb/>
According to William Hester,<lb/>
administrator of the Alcoholic<lb/>
Beverage Control Commission,<lb/>
liquor sales in the state dropped<lb/>
1,668,154 bottles in 1984, follow-<lb/>
ing enaction of the law. Hester<lb/>
said that in dollar figures this<lb/>
amounted to a loss of $4,133,811.<lb/>
However, Hester added, those<lb/>
cities and counties which have li-<lb/>
quor by the drink showed a<lb/>
$3,945,443 increase in alcohol<lb/>
revenues. Hester attributed this<lb/>
increase to increased taxes on li-<lb/>
quor, not to increased consump-<lb/>
tion. "The true mark is bottles<lb/>
he said. The decrease comprised<lb/>
approximately 139,000 cases of<lb/>
liquor, or 319,729 gallons.<lb/>
"People are clearly drinking<lb/>
less than before he said, "both<lb/>
because of increased DWI<lb/>
awareness and the higher cost of<lb/>
liquor<lb/>
According to Jay Hare, ad-<lb/>
ministrative officer of the<lb/>
Department of Revenue, the<lb/>
amount of taxes collected on beer<lb/>
and wine sales has not diminish-<lb/>
ed. He said apparently people are<lb/>
not drinking less beer and wine<lb/>
since the law went into effect.<lb/>
The number of bottles of li-<lb/>
quor sold in Pitt County actually<lb/>
increased in fiscal 1984, accor-<lb/>
ding to Joan Respass, assistant<lb/>
supervisor of the Pitt County<lb/>
ABC Board. She said this can be<lb/>
attributed to more mini-bottles<lb/>
being sold instead of the half-<lb/>
gallon bottles.<lb/>
Tom Rice, Greenville super-<lb/>
visor for the CO. Tankard Com-<lb/>
pany, a local beer and wine<lb/>
distributor, said there has been<lb/>
no drop in total sales, but the<lb/>
sales distribution has changed.<lb/>
"The sales in nightclubs have<lb/>
dropped, but the sales in conve-<lb/>
nience stores are up he said,<lb/>
adding that he feels many more<lb/>
people are drinking at home.<lb/>
The nightclub business has suf-<lb/>
fered a definite blow, said Tom<lb/>
Haines, owner of the Attic and<lb/>
Grog's and president of Green-<lb/>
ville's Downtown Nightclub<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
Haines said people are not go-<lb/>
ing out as many nights, are more<lb/>
selective as to why they go out<lb/>
and are drinking less. As a result,<lb/>
he said, more special events are<lb/>
being planned by local clubs.<lb/>
Another product of the<lb/>
tougher laws is the designated<lb/>
driver program, which designates<lb/>
one person who does not drink<lb/>
and will drive the others in his<lb/>
group home. "It is the hope and<lb/>
desire of all nightclub owners<lb/>
that the designated driver<lb/>
becomes a national<lb/>
phenomenon Haines said.<lb/>
Haines is opposed to the raised<lb/>
drinking age, which he says<lb/>
"made criminals out of 18-year-<lb/>
olds. It took drinking out of a<lb/>
controlled atmosphere and into<lb/>
an uncontrolled atmosphere he<lb/>
said. Underage students are<lb/>
allowed into the Attic, but are<lb/>
not allowed to drink, a situation<lb/>
Haines said has resulted in<lb/>
several arrests. "We will continue<lb/>
to do that Haines said, adding<lb/>
that the club's license is at stake if<lb/>
they violate the rules.<lb/>
The decline in drinking and<lb/>
nightclub attendance is "an<lb/>
industry-wide situation and is not<lb/>
different anywhere else Haines<lb/>
said.<lb/>
?<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057692_0002"/><lb/>
 THE EAST CARPI I MAN<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 1985<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Omtga Psi Phi<lb/>
Will t? partying at tne unlimited Touch<lb/>
Thurv Jan 31 Tttara will b? a 11 nappy<lb/>
hour and all procaads will go to our National<lb/>
Talant Hunt Schoiarahlp Program There<lb/>
will be also be a tight leans contest! I 1st ?2S.<lb/>
Jno tlS<lb/>
Ecconimics Association<lb/>
The new economics association will meet<lb/>
Wed , Jan 30 at I p m in room 712<lb/>
Mendenhall All economics malors and<lb/>
minors are Invited to attend this meeting and<lb/>
learn the practical side o economics We<lb/>
want to help you I<lb/>
international Student Assoc.<lb/>
We have a very Important meeting on Feb<lb/>
2nd at 6 p m In Mendenhall 271 We are go<lb/>
Ing to vote and we need your opinion Also<lb/>
the tickets tor me international dinner will<lb/>
be available to all members Don ? torget<lb/>
It<lb/>
UGSC<lb/>
United Greed and Social Council will have a<lb/>
meeting Wed Jan 30 at I p m In room 1CM<lb/>
west wing in Joyner Library<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
We are having a membership drive Toes<lb/>
and Wed trom Jam to 2 p m Jan 2 30 in<lb/>
the Student Supply Store Lobby So stop by<lb/>
and discover the roles ot NAACP in your<lb/>
past presen' and future Then you'll know<lb/>
why you should become member o? NAACP<lb/>
today 11<lb/>
Presbyterian Fellowship<lb/>
Tues Jan 79 at 7 30 p m will be the tirst<lb/>
gather'ng o the Westminister Fellowship<lb/>
we will meet at the Methodist Student<lb/>
Center 501 East fifth st (across from Gar<lb/>
rer? dormi Please join us tor singing, mun<lb/>
ehies. and making plans<lb/>
Wed. Night Fellowship<lb/>
Suppers<lb/>
Are held at the Methodist Student Center at<lb/>
i 30 p m Cost of the meal is 12 Come ioln us<lb/>
for food, fellowship end a short program<lb/>
Please call 7S 2030 for a reservation<lb/>
Sigma Nu Little Sisters<lb/>
AH glr!? are invited to join the knights of<lb/>
Sigma Nu and their little sisters tor their an<lb/>
nual oalame party Tues at 9 p.m Party<lb/>
will be at the Sigma Nu house oH Cotanche<lb/>
St on 3th st<lb/>
ECU Catholic Newman<lb/>
Community<lb/>
invites you to loin us this Wed We 11 be hav<lb/>
ing worship service, followed by our group<lb/>
meeting and dinner come by and meet your<lb/>
nelghoor! whoWho knows.we may have<lb/>
something you'd Hke to be involved with It<lb/>
all starts Wed at 5 p m . at the ECU<lb/>
Newman Center on east 10th st (lust past the<lb/>
music building)<lb/>
Inter-Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship<lb/>
Looking for something new? Looking tor<lb/>
something different in vour lite? Maybe we<lb/>
can help we offer fun faith, friendship, and<lb/>
even a few surprises' Why not find out for<lb/>
yourseff? Join us Inter Varsity Christian<lb/>
Fellowship this Wed at 7 p m in the Jenkins<lb/>
Art Building audltoriulm and you iust might<lb/>
see things in a new light!<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society will have It's first<lb/>
meeting of the spring semester on Tues<lb/>
Jan TV, at 7 p m in the multi purpose room<lb/>
of Mendenhall Plans for the<lb/>
Washington.D C trip will be discussed All<lb/>
members should definitely be there For<lb/>
more Information, call Mike Gardner<lb/>
mum<lb/>
Womens Soccer Club<lb/>
Indoor Soccer tournament to be held March<lb/>
1517 tor all organize independent teams<lb/>
Contact Ginger vann at 757 9722 or Vanessa<lb/>
Hlgdon at 757 6064 If you are interested 15<lb/>
entry fee<lb/>
All woman Interested In participating in<lb/>
th club, must attend an organizational<lb/>
meeting Thurj , Jan 31 at 7 in 105 B<lb/>
?I Gym<lb/>
Hostage Club<lb/>
Will meet this Thurs, Jan 30,at 5 it will be<lb/>
held at PI Wilson Acres Ned Jeffries will be<lb/>
the guest speaker<lb/>
Kappa Alpha Psi<lb/>
Will be having It's formal smoker Tues , Jan<lb/>
??. In that coffeehouse MSC 8 ? 10 All In<lb/>
terested men are Invited<lb/>
KYF<lb/>
There will be a meeting of the King Youth<lb/>
Fellowship on Jan 29 at 7 p m In 238<lb/>
Mendenhall Anyone Interested contact Jack<lb/>
at 757 108!<lb/>
Pre-Med<lb/>
Attention members, officers and pledges<lb/>
There is an important meeting Tues , Jan 29<lb/>
at 7 30 In Flanagan 307 The speaker will be<lb/>
Mr Canton P Smith, a Curator at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine at 7 There will be an ex<lb/>
ecutlve meeting in conference room also at 7<lb/>
in tlanagan 307 there will be a pledge<lb/>
meeting All are invited Refreshments will<lb/>
be served<lb/>
UGSC<lb/>
Will be having it's meeting Wed .Jan 30 In<lb/>
room 104 West Wing of Joyner Library at 6<lb/>
p m<lb/>
Pirate Walk<lb/>
Pirate Walk ECUS Student Escort service<lb/>
is accepting applicants tor the positions of<lb/>
Assistant Director, and Secretary and<lb/>
treasurer for spring semester Applications<lb/>
are available in the SGA office and should be<lb/>
returned by Wed , Jan 30 by 5 p m<lb/>
Pirate Walk will have an organizational<lb/>
meeting on Thurs Jan 31st at 4 p m In 212<lb/>
Mendenhall All persons interested in the<lb/>
positions of Pirate Excorts or Night<lb/>
Operators are urged to attend this meeting<lb/>
or come by the Pirate Walk office by Frl .<lb/>
Feb 1st. between the hours of 12 1 30 p m<lb/>
Fall semester escorts unable to work this<lb/>
semester should bring their iackets by the<lb/>
SGA office before fri . Feb 1st<lb/>
Sign Language Class<lb/>
A non credit sign language class Is being of<lb/>
tered every Wed night from 6 to 9 p m<lb/>
There is no tee for the class and anyone can<lb/>
attend iust show up tomorrow night at 6 in<lb/>
B 10 (the media room in Joyner Library)<lb/>
The only prerequisite is interest and the time<lb/>
tor class<lb/>
Early Childhood Education<lb/>
Club<lb/>
is meeting today at 5 p m in room 129<lb/>
Speight A film will be shown Please come!<lb/>
Summer Jobs<lb/>
Thomas Nelson inc has positions available<lb/>
for the up coming summer Students in<lb/>
terested in having a summer job that will<lb/>
give valuable ioto experience and good<lb/>
money should attend one of the following<lb/>
meetings Thurs Jan 31 in Brewsfer D wing<lb/>
at 1 3 30 7 in room 102 A grade point<lb/>
average of 2 5 is required<lb/>
SNEHA<lb/>
Attention environmentalists, the Student Na<lb/>
tional Environmental Health Organization is<lb/>
meeting Wed Jan 30th at 3 in the 2nd floor<lb/>
EHLT lab Club members and other in<lb/>
terested persons are urged to attend<lb/>
Society for Advancement<lb/>
Encourages everyone to ioin us on a tour of<lb/>
the Greenville Athletic Club See manage<lb/>
ment at its best Join us Wed at 4 A free<lb/>
guest pass to all who participate For more<lb/>
info call Wayne 752 0385 or Rick 752 8787<lb/>
Army ROTC<lb/>
The latest in Army Technology will be<lb/>
featured in a color video exhibit entitled<lb/>
Todays Weapons' at Joyner Library from 9<lb/>
am 3pm on Tues . Jan 2v The exhibit is<lb/>
presented by the US Army Material Com<lb/>
mand. lAMC) headquartered in Alexandria<lb/>
Va and is sponsored by the Army ROTC<lb/>
AMC is responsible for supplying the field<lb/>
soldier the best and most reliable weapons<lb/>
and equipment Military and civilian AMC<lb/>
personnel wni be on hand to answer ques<lb/>
tons about The exhibit weapons systems and<lb/>
possible career opportunities<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/>
tivlfies This festival of events is one of the<lb/>
largest programs happening at the Universi<lb/>
ty each year Among the responsibilities of<lb/>
the committee are the following securing<lb/>
bands for the parade, conducting the parade,<lb/>
arranging half time activities at the football<lb/>
game, securing iudges for the floats and<lb/>
house and residence hall decorations, and<lb/>
presenting entertainment<lb/>
The Student Homecoming Committee<lb/>
chairperson is the individual who has overall<lb/>
responsibility for Homecoming Students in<lb/>
terested in being considered for the position<lb/>
of Student Homecoming Committee<lb/>
Chairperson may pick up application forms<lb/>
at either MSL I iformationDesk or the<lb/>
Taylor Slaughter Alumni Center The<lb/>
Deadline tor applying for this position is Jan<lb/>
28<lb/>
ECU Student Union<lb/>
Needs You<lb/>
Help us plan concerts, trips, movies, dances,<lb/>
art exhibitions, minority programs, recrea<lb/>
tlon activities, and other special events! Ap<lb/>
plications tor committee chairpersons are<lb/>
available at Mendenhall Student Center's In<lb/>
formation desk Applications are being ac<lb/>
cepted from Jan 21 Feb 1 For more infor<lb/>
metion contact the Student union office at<lb/>
757 6611, ext 210<lb/>
The Student Union Visual Arts committee<lb/>
win meet on Thurs . Jan 24 at 4 p m In room<lb/>
241 of Mendenhall Student Center All<lb/>
members and Interested students are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
The Student Union Coffeehouse Committee<lb/>
will meet on Tues , Jan 29, at 5 p m in room<lb/>
241 of Mendenhall Student Center All<lb/>
members and Interested students are urged<lb/>
to attend<lb/>
Spoleto Festivel<lb/>
Remember the deadline' for application Is<lb/>
Feb 17 If you are Interested, please contact<lb/>
the Co op office as soon as possible<lb/>
Business. Music. Theatre Arts. English and<lb/>
Writing, Art and Home Economics malors<lb/>
are encouraged to applly Salary Is $125 per<lb/>
week, free housing, S50 paid toward<lb/>
transportation cost<lb/>
Banking Positions<lb/>
Interested In Banking as a careeer? Local<lb/>
financial Institution seeks career minded<lb/>
students maorlng in Business. Finance, Ac<lb/>
counting for Spring and Summer<lb/>
IvfJS Students should be graduating seniors<lb/>
Contact the cooperative Education Office In<lb/>
313 Rawl Building for more information<lb/>
Air Products<lb/>
Nationwide producer of Industrial chemicals<lb/>
and gases offers sumer program with head<lb/>
quarters and regional offices Rising Seniors<lb/>
with good GPA and maiorlng In chemistry,<lb/>
business, accounting, or computer science<lb/>
invited to apply For more information con<lb/>
tact the Coopertive Education Office In 313<lb/>
Rawl Building<lb/>
Summer Jobs<lb/>
With major food service corporation having<lb/>
facilities throughout the Southeast Food and<lb/>
Nutrition malors Interested in career related<lb/>
experience paying V4 50 J5 per hour Contact<lb/>
Cooperative Education office in 313 Rawl<lb/>
Building<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 Frl and at 2 on Mon Inten<lb/>
slve work on writing and speech are also<lb/>
avallavle for more info -come by the center<lb/>
Army ROTC<lb/>
There will be a Marauder meeting on Wed<lb/>
Jan 30 at 8 in room 221 at Mendenhall Stu<lb/>
dent Center Up coming events wil' be<lb/>
discussed<lb/>
Law Society<lb/>
The ECU Law Society would like to extend<lb/>
an invitation to all members and the general<lb/>
public to attend Irs first meeting this<lb/>
semester We will be meeting on Tues , Jan<lb/>
29 at 7 p m in the multipurpose room at<lb/>
mendenhall Plans will be discussed tor our<lb/>
spring trip to Washington D C For more in<lb/>
formation, call Mike Gardner 7S8 1640<lb/>
Scuba Diving Adventures<lb/>
Spring Break Dive in the fabulous Flonaa<lb/>
Keys with Ray Scharf and Captain Slate<lb/>
ECU graduate class of 1971, from the Atlantis<lb/>
Dive Center on the only coral reef in the con<lb/>
tinentai united States<lb/>
Dive program includes five days of diving,<lb/>
dally boat trips, lodging and fun breakfost<lb/>
For registration and information call Ray<lb/>
Scharf, Director of Aquatics at 757 6441 or<lb/>
756 9339 Total cost s ?35 and includes a 1100<lb/>
non refundable deposit Non diver cost is<lb/>
$182<lb/>
Blood and Organ Drive<lb/>
There will be a Red Cross Bloodmobiie and<lb/>
Lions Club Organ donor drive held on the<lb/>
campus of ECU on Tues . Jan 29 and Wed<lb/>
Jan 30 from 12 noon to 6 p m in Mendenhall<lb/>
244 There will be a representative from the<lb/>
Lions Club on hano to answer ar.y questions<lb/>
you may have on the subiect of organ dona<lb/>
tions and be accepting eyewili and other<lb/>
organ donor committments on these days<lb/>
The Bloodmobiie and Organ Drive are spon<lb/>
cored by the ECU Biology Club Please<lb/>
students and faculty, give the gift of life and<lb/>
support this worthwile cause<lb/>
All Teacher Education Students<lb/>
Applying for Upper Division<lb/>
The department of Speech Language and<lb/>
Auditory Pathology (SLAP) will be pro<lb/>
vidlng the speech and hearing screening for<lb/>
all students eligible for admission to the up<lb/>
per division of teacher education on Mon ,<lb/>
Jan 28 Jan X<lb/>
The department will be testing from 5 7 on<lb/>
the days listed above No appointment is<lb/>
needed Do Not call their office for an ap<lb/>
pointment The LOAP department is located<lb/>
In a trailer adjacent to Belk building on<lb/>
Charles St<lb/>
Again.no appointment is needed<lb/>
Assertiveness Training<lb/>
Workshop<lb/>
A three part workshop offered to students at<lb/>
no cost by the University Counseling Center<lb/>
Thurs , Jan 31. Feb 74,14 All three sessions<lb/>
will be conducted from 3-4 p.m. in 306 Wright<lb/>
Annex (757 6661)<lb/>
The workshop will focus on helping<lb/>
members distinguish between their asser<lb/>
tivc, aggress've. and nonassertive<lb/>
behaviors Participants can learn how to ex<lb/>
press themselves directly and openly, and<lb/>
respond to Interpersonal situations In a man<lb/>
ner which neither compromises individual<lb/>
beliefs nor offends others Please call<lb/>
Counseling Center tor registration<lb/>
8z iEaat Ear0liniatt<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
We are now taking applications for typesetters.<lb/>
Persons possessing skills in typing or computer<lb/>
typesetting should turn an application to The East<lb/>
Carolinian office between 9 a.m. and 5 p.m. The job<lb/>
involves working Sunday night, and on Monday and<lb/>
Wednesday afternoon between 12 p.m. and 7p.m.<lb/>
?<lb/>
Honor Board<lb/>
There will be an Important mandatory<lb/>
meeting tonight after the honor board cases<lb/>
All alternates are required to attend The<lb/>
meeting Is at 6 p m sharp<lb/>
Div. of Continuing<lb/>
Education<lb/>
Continuing Education Non Credit Courses<lb/>
Speed Readlng-Thurs , Feb 14 Apr II; 7 9<lb/>
p m 8 sessions<lb/>
Beginning Italian Tues , and Thurs , Feb<lb/>
14 Mar 26, 7 8 30 p m 10 sessions<lb/>
Camera I Tues . Feb 19 Mar 26 7 9 p m 5<lb/>
sessions<lb/>
Register at Erwln Hall or call 757 6143<lb/>
Math and Computer<lb/>
Science Jobs<lb/>
Deadlines for many of the math and CSCI<lb/>
lobs In Co op for summer and fall are soon<lb/>
One of best lobs for someone who has com<lb/>
pleted COBOL has Jan 25 deadline! If you<lb/>
have not registered with Co op. come now to<lb/>
Rawl 313 to register if you have registered,<lb/>
make appointment to see your coordinator<lb/>
as soon as possible!<lb/>
Calenders<lb/>
The ECU Biology Club In association with<lb/>
the Department of Biology are offering for<lb/>
sale Scanning Electron Microscoput for the<lb/>
department These calenders are not only<lb/>
functional pieces of Biological Art the pro<lb/>
ceeds will also raise mor.ey for Research<lb/>
Presentations and for the publication of a<lb/>
Pre Professional Handbook authored by<lb/>
members ot the Biology Club The calenders<lb/>
are available through the Biology Depart<lb/>
mental Office or at the Student Supply Store<lb/>
and UBE Thank you for your continuing<lb/>
support<lb/>
NAACP<lb/>
The NAACP Text meeting will be held on<lb/>
Mon , Jan 28th in mendenhall student center<lb/>
in the coffeehousse at 5 30 p m Everyone is<lb/>
urged to attend<lb/>
Swim Meet<lb/>
The annual IRS swim meet will be held In<lb/>
early ,(, Register Feb 2 7 Get your squad<lb/>
together nnc poo, rniir ruor, Sign up in 204<lb/>
memorial gym<lb/>
Weight Training Clinic<lb/>
im rec services will offer a free weight train<lb/>
ing clinic on Jan 294,30 from 89 pm To<lb/>
become a part, register in room 204<lb/>
memorial gym The limit is 15<lb/>
Amabassadors<lb/>
We will have a general meeting Wed Jan 30<lb/>
at 5 p m in the mendenhall multipurpose<lb/>
room This is a very important meeting<lb/>
Mope To see everyone there<lb/>
EAST CAROLINA UNIVERSITY<lb/>
A ; I lei '? : <lb/>
??:?? : <lb/>
UNIVERSITY OF NORTH CAROLINA<lb/>
Greensboro<lb/>
f Hi' I I .? '  ? '?  ;?<lb/>
Friday ? ? . . '<lb/>
 ? ? ? .<lb/>
Imtr ,m ? ??:? . iffy ? "<lb/>
'?? ? i mli rerv ?   bent latNortl<lb/>
the Arts in The Work) i ? n ? I I 61<lb/>
"(? ? M .  Carowinds<lb/>
Mush . tav. fetxuary<lb/>
Singers ? Dancers ? Instrumentalists<lb/>
Technicians ? Variety Performers ?<lb/>
$190 $270 week<lb/>
?<lb/>
KINGS ISLAND ? KINGS DOMINION <lb/>
CAROWINDS ? CANADA S WONDERLAND . ?? <lb/>
GREAT AMERICA ? HANNA BAPBERA LAND<lb/>
Nightclub<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
THE ALL NEW<lb/>
LADIES'<lb/>
With the<lb/>
Kappa Sigma<lb/>
  -1I<lb/>
51<lb/>
.?.<lb/>
Dadd<lb/>
: i ,i.i, - ? ?<lb/>
? U ith I i. .<lb/>
I'llin : .i. . in i<lb/>
? .i .a<lb/>
Beau's is avaitabij  - i  ,<lb/>
 i. 90 y.?ur . uuniitil i.i'i Tghr  s-<lb/>
'?' ? - ? ' ?l M<lb/>
Legislator:<lb/>
B GKEG RIDEOIT<lb/>
The S(jA Legislature v.as ad-<lb/>
vised Vlonda night b) Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
Elmer Meyer of proposed student<lb/>
fee increases for the 1985-86<lb/>
school year If the fee increases<lb/>
ere passed, combined student<lb/>
fees would be $35-? per sear up<lb/>
SI8 from S336<lb/>
The major increase would be<lb/>
S16 in the athletic fee, bringing<lb/>
the total to $101. The onlv other<lb/>
increase Ls S2 for Mendenhall<lb/>
Studentei<lb/>
w,<lb/>
atl<lb/>
S1<lb/>
UJ<lb/>
u<lb/>
N<lb/>
W ll<lb/>
W<lb/>
rei<lb/>
Right Win,<lb/>
B GREGRIDECM I<lb/>
???r?t Jailor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monda<lb/>
rejected the constitution of the<lb/>
ECL Wolverines, a group<lb/>
sluden' .ording to the<lb/>
constitu  tied to the '<lb/>
Legislature. ' provide<lb/>
opportur ?. for righi<lb/>
student 0use their<lb/>
and eel.<lb/>
corr mil ' about the prorr.<lb/>
conser. Ids Approval<lb/>
a constitution makes a .<lb/>
eligible foi - <lb/>
un r.eeung roc<lb/>
Disapproval of the<lb/>
tion, by a voter-<lb/>
School Leadel<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL<lb/>
boul 80 percent of the I<lb/>
ty of North Carolina ?<lb/>
campu- . stude:<lb/>
four of the sch<lb/>
mitonc<lb/>
demanding change<lb/>
Paul Parker, itudei<lb/>
president, said <lb/>
government leader a; a r<lb/>
conference last spring "were<lb/>
amazed" t:<lb/>
. ritural schism at the<lb/>
"The) could sec -nee<lb/>
immediately. The; were<lb/>
shocked Parka a I<lb/>
"We can have white -<lb/>
on this campus who never ha1<lb/>
interact with black<lb/>
they don't want to r.J<lb/>
not fair he said. "B act<lb/>
to associate w<lb/>
There is an incredible dichotomy<lb/>
on thi campus<lb/>
The university has agreej I a<lb/>
project this fall to house 50 :<lb/>
cent white and 50 percent n<lb/>
ty students in a North Can-<lb/>
dormitory, if at least 100 student!<lb/>
volunteer. Parker said 88 pe<lb/>
l<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Mr Premmger<lb/>
5 Vipers<lb/>
9 Lock opener<lb/>
12 Metai<lb/>
13 Der,<lb/>
14 Mineral<lb/>
15 Note of scale<lb/>
16 Send forth<lb/>
18 Ventilate<lb/>
20 Negative vc:e<lb/>
22 Girt s name<lb/>
24 Arm meal<lb/>
27 Former Russian<lb/>
ruler<lb/>
29 Weakens<lb/>
31 Unit of Siamese<lb/>
Currer<lb/>
32 Ascends<lb/>
34 Game played on<lb/>
hor setae<lb/>
36 Sun god<lb/>
37 Be present<lb/>
39 Unit of currency<lb/>
41 Execute<lb/>
42 Nobleman<lb/>
44 Peci<lb/>
dir<lb/>
45 B "r<lb/>
47 Poel<lb/>
e dk<lb/>
50 f<lb/>
of<lb/>
54 Symt<lb/>
55 Perm<lb/>
easj<lb/>
61<lb/>
-SSiSt<lb/>
65 C<lb/>
67 Fre<lb/>
art<lb/>
68 Defeatj<lb/>
,69 Time g<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Lutx i<lb/>
: Fieei n<lb/>
12345 U<lb/>
121 13<lb/>
1516 I 17<lb/>
12'4.<lb/>
27281 ?<lb/>
32331<lb/>
3738T<lb/>
41? ? 4:<lb/>
45461 4<lb/>
50?B52<lb/>
56<lb/>
6162FeT"64<lb/>
6768<lb/>
?<lb/>
t<lb/>
V<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 1985<lb/>
GS PRODUCTIONS<lb/>
KHlNAUNIvtRSlTV<lb/>
NORTH CARi,<lb/>
'tormers ?<lb/>
8<lb/>
Mi <lb/>
F<lb/>
i w<lb/>
i (H K I P<lb/>
i il Sisters<lb/>
'W<lb/>
  ed<lb/>
? - .<lb/>
- - iHEtn<lb/>
? - - i ? : s<lb/>
? RI P AIKS<lb/>
?  ! I HA TINCI<lb/>
'<lb/>
ES ALIVE<lb/>
Legislators Advised of Fee Increases<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOUT<lb/>
Maaatfag Editor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature was ad-<lb/>
vised Monday night by Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
Elmer Meyer of proposed student<lb/>
fee increases for the 1985-86<lb/>
school year. If the fee increases<lb/>
were passed, combined student<lb/>
fees would be $354 per year, up<lb/>
$18 from $336.<lb/>
The major increase would be<lb/>
$16 in the athletic fee, bringing<lb/>
the total to $101. The only other<lb/>
increase is $2 for Mendenhall<lb/>
Student Center.<lb/>
Director of Athletics Ken Karr<lb/>
told the Legislature the increase<lb/>
was needed to keep tli. athletic<lb/>
department on schedule in a five-<lb/>
year plan that would increase the<lb/>
athletic budget from its current<lb/>
$3.3 million to between $4 ?<lb/>
$4.4 million in 1987-88.<lb/>
Karr said the money is needed<lb/>
to keep the athletic program in<lb/>
NCAA Division I-A. Athletics<lb/>
will be required to add two<lb/>
women's sports under NCAA<lb/>
regulations, and the addition of a<lb/>
fifth home game will require ad-<lb/>
ditional funds.<lb/>
The SGA makes recommenda-<lb/>
tions to the chancellor about the<lb/>
fee increases, which are non-<lb/>
binding. The chancellor then pro-<lb/>
poses increases to the Board of<lb/>
Trustees, which submits them to<lb/>
the UNC-Board of Governors for<lb/>
approval. The SGA did not act<lb/>
on the fee increase Monday<lb/>
night.<lb/>
Student fees provide about<lb/>
$1.1 million of the $3.3 million<lb/>
athletic budget. Other revenue<lb/>
comes from private sources, such<lb/>
as the Pirate Club, and gate<lb/>
receipts and guarantees.<lb/>
Concern over the amount of<lb/>
money the athletic department<lb/>
allocates to the Cheerleaders and<lb/>
Marching Pirates expressed in the<lb/>
meeting will result, according the<lb/>
Chairman of the Student Welfare<lb/>
Committeed, in a forum on the<lb/>
issue.<lb/>
Dorm rent will also be increas-<lb/>
ed $15 per semester under the<lb/>
proposal. The total bill for an in-<lb/>
state dorm student would now be<lb/>
increased to $851.<lb/>
Check Out<lb/>
The<lb/>
Library<lb/>
Right Wing Group Rejected By SGA<lb/>
By GREG RIDEOLT<lb/>
Muiflag Mitor<lb/>
The SGA Legislature Monday<lb/>
rejected the constitution of the<lb/>
ECU Wolverines, a group of<lb/>
students which, according to the<lb/>
constitution submitted to the<lb/>
Legislature, "shall provide an<lb/>
opportunity for right-wing<lb/>
students to espouse their values<lb/>
and educate others in the ECU<lb/>
community" about the promise<lb/>
conservatism holds. Approval of<lb/>
a constitution makes a group<lb/>
eligible for SGA funds and<lb/>
university meeting rooms.<lb/>
Disapproval of the constitu-<lb/>
tion, by a vote of 13-5, came after<lb/>
Legislator Rich Wynne pointed<lb/>
out a section which stated: "All<lb/>
members will be of sound conser-<lb/>
vative mind and will truly believe<lb/>
in the ways of Dr. Laffer and<lb/>
Newt Gingrich and Jack Kemp.<lb/>
They may be required to van-<lb/>
dalize pictures of Sandanistas,<lb/>
and to own at least one weapon is<lb/>
highly encouraged<lb/>
Wynne, who later added an<lb/>
amendment which would have<lb/>
made the group abide by all state,<lb/>
university and SGA rules and<lb/>
laws, eventually voted in favor of<lb/>
passing the constitution.<lb/>
Gordon Walker, 20, a junior<lb/>
economics major and president<lb/>
of the Wolverines, was upset over<lb/>
the action. "I'm kind of upset<lb/>
he said. "I think they<lb/>
misunderstood us Walker said<lb/>
the constitution was meant to be<lb/>
taken seriously, but the group<lb/>
will rewrite it and bring the con-<lb/>
stitution back before the<lb/>
Legislature.<lb/>
Legislator Dennis Kilcoyne, a<lb/>
member of the Wolverines, said<lb/>
the Legislature's action was<lb/>
"shameful" in light of the other<lb/>
groups that the SGA sanctions.<lb/>
The group, which got its name<lb/>
from the band of freedom<lb/>
fighters in the movie Red Dawn,<lb/>
was started to get students to<lb/>
"think Walker said. He said<lb/>
the group plans to petition the<lb/>
SGA to stockpile survival kits in<lb/>
case of a nuclear attack. Walker<lb/>
said this was a response to Brown<lb/>
University students who voted to<lb/>
ask their administration to stock<lb/>
cyanide tablets in case of a<lb/>
nuclear war. Walker called the<lb/>
Brown students' actions<lb/>
"wimpy<lb/>
The group's constitution calls<lb/>
for an advisor who will be "con-<lb/>
servative in nature (which<lb/>
eliminates 98 percent of the pro-<lb/>
fessors) and a member of the<lb/>
faculty, such as it is<lb/>
School Leaders Want Dorm Changes<lb/>
CHAPEL HILL (UPI)<lb/>
About 80 percent of the Universi-<lb/>
ty of North Carolina's on-<lb/>
campus black students live in<lb/>
four of the school's 29 dor-<lb/>
mitories and student leaders are<lb/>
demanding change.<lb/>
Paul Parker, student body<lb/>
president, said visiting student<lb/>
government leaders at a national<lb/>
conference last spring "were just<lb/>
amazed" at the racial and<lb/>
cultural schism at the university.<lb/>
"They could see the difference<lb/>
immediately. They were<lb/>
shocked Parker said.<lb/>
"We can have white students<lb/>
on this campus who never have to<lb/>
interact with black students if<lb/>
they don't want to. And that's<lb/>
not fair he said. "Blacks have<lb/>
to associate with white students.<lb/>
There is an incredible dichotomy<lb/>
on this campus<lb/>
The university has agreed to a<lb/>
project this fall to house 50 per-<lb/>
cent white and 50 percent minori-<lb/>
ty students in a North Campus<lb/>
dormitory, if at least 100 students<lb/>
volunteer. Parker said 88 people<lb/>
have already volunteered.<lb/>
But black leaders said they fear<lb/>
an evenly split black-white dor-<lb/>
mitory would lead to integrating<lb/>
the campus by computers ran-<lb/>
domly assigning rooms, when the<lb/>
emphasis should be on enrolling<lb/>
more black students.<lb/>
Of the 6,808 students who live<lb/>
on campus, 1,133 are blacks,<lb/>
most living on the South Cam-<lb/>
pus.<lb/>
"The root of the problem lies<lb/>
not so much in where black<lb/>
students live but how many black<lb/>
students are at school here. The<lb/>
way to integrate this on-campus<lb/>
situation is to have more minority<lb/>
students said Sherrod Banks,<lb/>
Black Student Movement presi-<lb/>
dent.<lb/>
"It's been my opinion that you<lb/>
will not achieve integration by<lb/>
dispersing an 8 percent popula-<lb/>
tion all over campus. What you'll<lb/>
have i5 a white campus peppered<lb/>
with black students.<lb/>
But Parker said the project is<lb/>
more of a "symbolic effort<lb/>
"We're not saying it'r in any<lb/>
way a solution to racial pro-<lb/>
blems Parker said. "We would<lb/>
hope that it would lead to people<lb/>
bringing an awareness to other<lb/>
backgrounds, that the white<lb/>
Anglo-Saxon background is not<lb/>
the only background on<lb/>
campus<lb/>
Evelma White said she did not<lb/>
want to feel black students are<lb/>
"diluted among the white majori-<lb/>
ty<lb/>
"As a black student, if you ask<lb/>
me am I willing to move to North<lb/>
Campus so 30 or 40 white people<lb/>
can come in contact with one<lb/>
black student ? is that fair to ask<lb/>
of any one minority student?"<lb/>
White said.<lb/>
Diane Miller said she knew of<lb/>
only one black student in her<lb/>
North Campus building and that<lb/>
"just doesn't give each race the<lb/>
exposure to the other that they<lb/>
need<lb/>
"As far as anything in my liv-<lb/>
ing environment, I don't see that<lb/>
many blacks Miller said. "It's<lb/>
not like we're all students here<lb/>
together<lb/>
ACROSS<lb/>
1 Mr Preminger<lb/>
5 Vipers<lb/>
9 Lock opener<lb/>
12 Metal<lb/>
13 Den<lb/>
14 Mineral<lb/>
15 Note of scale<lb/>
16 Send forth<lb/>
18 Ventilate<lb/>
20 Negative vote<lb/>
22 Girl's name<lb/>
24 Army meal<lb/>
27 Former Russian<lb/>
ruler<lb/>
29 Weakens<lb/>
31 Unit of Siamese<lb/>
currency<lb/>
32 Ascends<lb/>
34 Game played on<lb/>
horseback<lb/>
36 Sun god<lb/>
37 Be present<lb/>
39 Unit of currency<lb/>
41 Execute<lb/>
42 Nobleman<lb/>
44 Piece of<lb/>
dinnerware<lb/>
45 Bitter vetch<lb/>
47 Poet<lb/>
49 Wine cups<lb/>
50 Changed color<lb/>
of<lb/>
52 Bubble<lb/>
54 Symbol for<lb/>
silver<lb/>
55 Permit<lb/>
57 Region<lb/>
59 Printers<lb/>
measure<lb/>
61 Shoemaker's<lb/>
tool<lb/>
63 Assistant<lb/>
65 Crippled<lb/>
67 French plural<lb/>
article<lb/>
68 Defeat<lb/>
,69 Time gone by<lb/>
DOWN<lb/>
1 Lubricate<lb/>
2 Fleeting<lb/>
CROSS<lb/>
WORD<lb/>
PUZZLE<lb/>
FROM COLLEGE<lb/>
PRESS SERVICE<lb/>
3 As far as<lb/>
4 Unit<lb/>
5 Assumed name<lb/>
6 Petty ruler<lb/>
7 Greek letter<lb/>
12345678191011<lb/>
1213J11<lb/>
15Wkm 1617???<lb/>
? 2021 H22233526<lb/>
2728332930i<lb/>
3234 4336"<lb/>
37?39<lb/>
41i44<lb/>
45"4849<lb/>
501Hb53? 54<lb/>
?-?18<lb/>
wI<lb/>
67?69<lb/>
8 Spanish matron:<lb/>
abbr.<lb/>
9 Country of Asia<lb/>
10 Teutonic deity<lb/>
11 Old pronoun<lb/>
17 Manuscript:<lb/>
abbr.<lb/>
19 Negative prefix<lb/>
21 Kiln<lb/>
23 Footless<lb/>
25 Ruses<lb/>
26 Looks fixedly<lb/>
27 Bartered<lb/>
28 Walk unsteadily<lb/>
30 Soft mud<lb/>
33 Supercilious<lb/>
person<lb/>
35 Spanish pot<lb/>
38 Colorless<lb/>
40 Tibetan priest<lb/>
43 Fears<lb/>
46 Trades for<lb/>
money<lb/>
48 Challenges<lb/>
51 Prefix: down<lb/>
53 Wholly: prefix<lb/>
56 Hindu cymbals<lb/>
58 High mountain<lb/>
60 Seine<lb/>
61 Baseball league:<lb/>
abbr.<lb/>
62 Pronoun<lb/>
64 Maiden loved by<lb/>
Zeus<lb/>
66 Cooled lava<lb/>
? 1984 United Feature Syndicate<lb/>
<lb/>
? - m  ?? ? t m immmm<lb/>
 m m ?.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Advertising Director<lb/>
Advertising Salesperson<lb/>
Journalist<lb/>
APPLY TO:<lb/>
New Minority Publications<lb/>
office in Publications<lb/>
Building across from Joyner<lb/>
Library or see Kay Smith<lb/>
( Media Board Secretary )<lb/>
JOBBIES HAS EXPANDED ITS PRESENT<lb/>
FACILITY<lb/>
AVOID THE CROWD<lb/>
BRING THIS AD IN AND GET A<lb/>
SPECIAL $60.00 a semester<lb/>
RATE.<lb/>
Jobbies now has twice the room, and has added 2000 POUNDS of<lb/>
OLYMPIC weights and more equipment than ever before.<lb/>
7000 lbs of weight 5000" square ft. of work out space<lb/>
Gym Hours: Mon-Fri 10am-8pm<lb/>
Monthly memberships- Sat 2pm-6pm Sun 2p4-6pm<lb/>
$25 per month<lb/>
Yearly memberships FOR ADDITIONAL INFORMATION CALL<lb/>
only $115 758-4359<lb/>
PARTY<lb/>
with Campus Marketing<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057692_0004"/><lb/>
Wnt femt (Hatalinxan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
I v A" V TON, Ommtt Ujnuger<lb/>
GREt Rl OEOUT. Mew E<lb/>
TOM LUVENDER, DWitwo fehwrriSMg<lb/>
Anthony Martin. ?wa Mmp,<lb/>
John Peterson, o? u<lb/>
Bu i Mitchell. onim. ??? bu l Dawson, p.????<lb/>
Doris Raskins, h rICk Mccormac  v i<lb/>
?? vjl , (jrriifl?f Inuv pi cr  .<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. v,  (,<lb/>
Scott Cooper. c? ??? e? -<lb/>
Tina Maroschak, ???? .??<lb/>
9MrraneocMiteK?(jrrccpatuurau.<lb/>
Januarv 29. 1485<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Vigilante<lb/>
Response Can Breed Anarchy<lb/>
Bernhard Goetz is being called a<lb/>
hero. Letters to editors across the<lb/>
land have been heavily pro-Goetz.<lb/>
What has this man done? Has he<lb/>
saved burning babies from roaring<lb/>
tenement fires? Did he single-<lb/>
handedly capture an enemy bat-<lb/>
talion? Did he bravely go where no<lb/>
man has gone before? Well, in a<lb/>
word, no. What he did was shoot<lb/>
four black teen-agers in a New<lb/>
York City subway car last month.<lb/>
The 37-year-old electronics ex-<lb/>
pert has achieved celebrity status.<lb/>
"Thug Buster" T-shirts are ap-<lb/>
pearing on New York City street<lb/>
corners; a rock group wrote a song<lb/>
in his honor; The subway-<lb/>
patrolling Guardian Angels are<lb/>
collecting money for his defense.<lb/>
All this because he shot some sub-<lb/>
way thugs. All this because he<lb/>
flagrantly took the law into his<lb/>
own hands and replied to a request<lb/>
for five dollars from four rowdy<lb/>
youths with bullets from a ,38-cal<lb/>
handgun, shooting two of them in<lb/>
the back.<lb/>
Why is our country, the land of<lb/>
law and Tightness, bestowing ex-<lb/>
alted status on a frustrated man<lb/>
who was taking revenge for earlier<lb/>
incidents in his life? Why is this<lb/>
vigilante fascinating to our<lb/>
nation's citizens? Well, maybe it's<lb/>
because he did what we all want to<lb/>
do. Maybe his fighting back<lb/>
against the crime that runs so easi-<lb/>
ly through our city streets is a way<lb/>
to tell the law enforcement of the<lb/>
land that we're tired of being<lb/>
scared.<lb/>
The president, who in a press<lb/>
conference was asked what he<lb/>
thought of the incident, said he<lb/>
sympathized with the public's<lb/>
frustration, thus off-handedly con-<lb/>
doning Goetz's style of justice.<lb/>
Some say it's a way of society tell-<lb/>
ing authorities that they are failing<lb/>
to protect its citizens. Maybe it's<lb/>
easy for those of us who live so far<lb/>
away from the violence that in-<lb/>
habits our cities to abhor the<lb/>
methods this man took to combat<lb/>
the lawlessness he perceived. But<lb/>
we have to believe that even those<lb/>
who shout this man's praises<lb/>
secretly know what this man did is<lb/>
wrong.<lb/>
Goetz committed attempted<lb/>
murder, pure and simple. This is<lb/>
not a case of a man protecting<lb/>
himself in a hostile subway tram.<lb/>
No, Goetz not only tried to ward<lb/>
off the four teen-agers who tried to<lb/>
fleece him for five bucks, he turn-<lb/>
ed on them in a premeditated man-<lb/>
ner and ended up shooting two of<lb/>
the youthful thugs in the back. He<lb/>
broke the law and should be<lb/>
punished accordingly.<lb/>
But, he is not going to be, it<lb/>
seems. The charges against him<lb/>
have been downgraded to carrying<lb/>
an illegal weapon. This seems to be<lb/>
an attempt by New York city to<lb/>
placate its citizenry. But that is not<lb/>
the function of a municipal justice<lb/>
system. They are to be the bringers<lb/>
of the law. they are to lead the ci-<lb/>
ty's populus in the right manner.<lb/>
They are failing.<lb/>
Sure we understand the frustra-<lb/>
tion. But not to the extent that we<lb/>
condone acts of violence and<lb/>
lawlessness. Some have said the<lb/>
shootings have racial overtones;<lb/>
black citizens have even shown<lb/>
support for the action. It seems<lb/>
everyone is afraid and groping for<lb/>
a way to cope with inner city<lb/>
violence.<lb/>
What we ask is that everyone<lb/>
remember that when citizens take<lb/>
the law into their own hands, there<lb/>
is no more law. Those who do so<lb/>
should suffer the full penalties re-<lb/>
quired for their action. If everyone<lb/>
advocated this kind of justice, our<lb/>
system would fail and our nation<lb/>
would be plunged into anarchy.<lb/>
This man is no hero. He is no mar-<lb/>
tyr. He is no savior. He is a<lb/>
criminal. Just keep in mind that he<lb/>
shot two men in the back next time<lb/>
you walk away.<lb/>
mn,t?QMW?mMWm?OFlHE$e REA&amp;AN<lb/>
COTS ID WARTS CAN) W WB Z?<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
Abortion Editorial Disturbing<lb/>
The column, "Minority Without<lb/>
Support" by Greg Rideout was in-<lb/>
teresting but disturbing. Greg, 1 care<lb/>
not to comment on the political aspects<lb/>
of your article. That was interesting. I<lb/>
do care to comment on the biological<lb/>
aspects of your article That was<lb/>
disturbing. I mean, Greg, how do you<lb/>
know ?'at a fetus is not human? In<lb/>
your statement, "But it is not (human).<lb/>
A fetus is the unborn, the unliving 1<lb/>
did not know whether that knowledge<lb/>
was self-authoritative or somehow<lb/>
revealed.<lb/>
The fetus is either dead or alive, is it<lb/>
not? Are not all things either living or<lb/>
non-living9 So, because a fetus is in the<lb/>
womb and is not a completely<lb/>
developed human being, it is unliving"1<lb/>
1 myself, though out of the womb, do<lb/>
not consider myself a completely<lb/>
developed human being. I am pro-<lb/>
choice, but not at the expense of<lb/>
human life.<lb/>
But my purpose was not to discuss<lb/>
abortion. Man has not yet been able to<lb/>
decide for himself when life begins, but<lb/>
God knc ws. All that I ask of you is to<lb/>
please be sure that you are sure without<lb/>
a doubt before you make such<lb/>
authoritative statements about life, lest<lb/>
you lead someone astray.<lb/>
Let's thank God though that we live<lb/>
in a country where we can express our<lb/>
ideas without fear. And I thank God<lb/>
that we have a government which<lb/>
acknowledges that all men are created<lb/>
equal and endowed by their creator<lb/>
with certain inalienable rights; that<lb/>
among these are life, liberty, and the<lb/>
pursuit of happiness<lb/>
James Blake Eudailey<lb/>
Senior, Engl<lb/>
Wrong, Greg<lb/>
According to an editorial by Greg<lb/>
Rideout, human life begins when one<lb/>
can speak and maintain affectionate<lb/>
and close relationships. One must re-<lb/>
main cuddly in order to be termed<lb/>
"alive<lb/>
I refuse to make a statement dealing<lb/>
with Mr. Rideout'scuddliness, but I do<lb/>
wish to say that his writing, which<lb/>
seems to lack proper reasoning and<lb/>
good taste, should not be allowed to<lb/>
live.<lb/>
Let us consider two different<lb/>
scenarios. First, the anti-abortionists<lb/>
win and abortion is outlawed. Later we<lb/>
find that fetuses are actually lifeless,<lb/>
friendless lumps. What is the result"1 A<lb/>
lot of people will be living that other-<lb/>
wise would not be. But, what if the<lb/>
pro-abortionists win and abortion is<lb/>
still legal9 What if after ha: we find<lb/>
out that, indeed, fetuses are just small<lb/>
people beginning to develop? What we<lb/>
have is wide-spread mass murder like<lb/>
none other in the history of man. 1 pro-<lb/>
pose that we not risk the possibilil ?<lb/>
mass murder as long as there is the<lb/>
slightest chance that abortion is wrong.<lb/>
As far as I know, most medical<lb/>
research has proven that a fetus is quite<lb/>
living and quite responsive to pain and<lb/>
outside stimulus. When a couple con-<lb/>
ceives, whether by accident or plan, a<lb/>
new life is begun. That life must be<lb/>
cared for whether it is an accident or<lb/>
not. It is no longer just the woman's<lb/>
own body. It is a woman with another<lb/>
being in her womb. It is its parents<lb/>
responsibility to bring it into the world<lb/>
and raise it or give it to someone else to<lb/>
raise. Taking responsibility for one's<lb/>
actions has never killed anyone.<lb/>
Rather, it makes for a stronger person.<lb/>
Abortion, however, ignores respon-<lb/>
sibility and kills babies. Everyone<lb/>
loses.<lb/>
If Mr. Rideout's criterion for human<lb/>
life (friendliness, speech and cud-<lb/>
dliness) is correct, then what about<lb/>
newborn babies who have no friends,<lb/>
cannot speak and are too wet to be<lb/>
cuddly? Should they die, too?<lb/>
Bill Green<lb/>
Senior, Finance.<lb/>
Marx Wrong, Too<lb/>
Fay Stone . .<lb/>
? ?. escalating del i<lb/>
worsening environmem i<lb/>
structural change whi<lb/>
flawed nature of current -<lb/>
stitutional arrange-<lb/>
ly two possible irses I tion. We<lb/>
may stick with<lb/>
adds will lead to d He I<lb/>
make the a!?ere clear, b<lb/>
fen some clues and one suggt<lb/>
Like a straw man he sets ip<lb/>
"conservative" <lb/>
magic ot the markei - trial<lb/>
blems sirnp ,? disapj :ar V<lb/>
realize a sound econon c<lb/>
panacea. But, the markei d c<lb/>
vital information betwec pi<lb/>
and consumers. When<lb/>
to work, shortages and waste ai<lb/>
evitable.<lb/>
The next "conservative" h<lb/>
aim a; is the "freedom of :he<lb/>
proper: y to di :<lb/>
he sees fit Property rights a<lb/>
basic a freedom that the 1<lb/>
Constitution took them for gra<lb/>
When the state owns all<lb/>
gains enormous power<lb/>
Mr. Stone's -<lb/>
sion of democracy into the e<lb/>
sphere The individual .<lb/>
the free market decide wh<lb/>
ed by voting with :ne:r  He<lb/>
gests our politicians and<lb/>
could do a better j<lb/>
These are not new ideas; Marx and<lb/>
Lenin suggested them many decades<lb/>
ago. They have been tried, found lack-<lb/>
ing and rejected country by country.<lb/>
Don't you have some new ideas, Mr<lb/>
Stone.<lb/>
Alan Jones<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
H<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
Running Of Multinationals Contribute To Economic State<lb/>
By JAY STONE<lb/>
A phenomenon that has received a lot<lb/>
of attention lately is the globalization of<lb/>
the economy. The issue is usually couch-<lb/>
ed as follows:<lb/>
Before 1965, foreign trade did not<lb/>
figure significantly in the American<lb/>
economy. This situation has changed<lb/>
dramatically. By 1980, more than 70<lb/>
percent of all the goods produced in the<lb/>
United States were actively competing<lb/>
with foreign goods. More to the point,<lb/>
while in 1980, 19 percent of the goods<lb/>
Americans made were exported, more<lb/>
From The Left<lb/>
Jay Stone<lb/>
than 22 percent of the goods Americans<lb/>
used were imported. Thus, America has<lb/>
become very much a part of the world<lb/>
market, but American producers have<lb/>
not fared particularly well in this new<lb/>
context relative to foreign producers.<lb/>
The U.S. trade deficit is projected to<lb/>
reach SI SO billion next year. Without a<lb/>
coherent approach to our trade pro-<lb/>
blems, the foreign trade deficit could<lb/>
soon be as big ? and possibly<lb/>
troublesome ? as the budget deficit.<lb/>
This analysis, as far as it goes, is cor-<lb/>
rect. Yet it fails to shed much light on<lb/>
the causes of our current economic<lb/>
malaise. To be properly understood the<lb/>
trade deficit must be seen as the symp-<lb/>
tom of a structural crisis that has its<lb/>
roots in the collapse of the Bretton<lb/>
Woods system and the way the<lb/>
American corporation is run. This struc-<lb/>
tural crisis is also caused by other fac-<lb/>
tors, which will be examined later in this<lb/>
series.<lb/>
Barry Bluestone and Bennett Harrison<lb/>
offer a provocative analysis of tht<lb/>
development of the modern corporate<lb/>
economy in their book The Dein-<lb/>
dustrialization of America. According<lb/>
to them, after the United States emerged<lb/>
from WWII it possessed the most<lb/>
powerful army and more than half of all<lb/>
the usable productive capacity in the<lb/>
world. In addition, it became the banker<lb/>
and creditor to both former allies and<lb/>
former enemies.<lb/>
America's domination of the global<lb/>
economy was cemented by the establish-<lb/>
ment of the dollar as the capitalist<lb/>
world's principal reserve currency at the<lb/>
1944 Bretton Woods Conference.<lb/>
In this environment, American cor-<lb/>
porations were able to make massive in-<lb/>
vestments abroad in new plants and<lb/>
equipment, producing commodities for<lb/>
foreign markets and, later on, for re-<lb/>
importing back into the United States<lb/>
itself. These direct shifts of private<lb/>
American capital became truly enor-<lb/>
mous during the 1960s.<lb/>
The widespread plants, mines,<lb/>
distribution centers and offices of the<lb/>
multinational corporations made up en-<lb/>
tire production systems linked on a<lb/>
global scale. Their creation changed the<lb/>
very meaning of "competition By<lb/>
1970, close to three quarters of total<lb/>
U.S. exports and upwards of one-half of<lb/>
all imports were transactions between<lb/>
the domestic and foreign subsidiaries of<lb/>
the same multinational conglomerate<lb/>
corporation.<lb/>
As a result of this unprecedented<lb/>
global expansion, the proportion of<lb/>
total after-tax profits of U.S. corpora-<lb/>
tions earned abroad rose steadily from<lb/>
about 10 percent at the beginning of the<lb/>
1950s to more than 20 percent at the<lb/>
beginning of the 1970s.<lb/>
During the 1960s the productive<lb/>
capacity of the American economy near-<lb/>
ly tripled, even after accounting for in-<lb/>
flation. This meant uninterrupted, un-<lb/>
paralleled and unprecedented economic<lb/>
expansion from the end of the 1961<lb/>
recession to the 1969-70 recession.<lb/>
The "Golden Age" of the '50s and<lb/>
'60s, however, was not to last.<lb/>
Challengers to the global hegemony of<lb/>
American corporations began to emerge<lb/>
from behind every tree. In one industry<lb/>
after another ? steel, rubber, textiles,<lb/>
automobile, electronics and footwear ?<lb/>
Japanese and European competitors<lb/>
arose to challenge U.S. dominion. In<lb/>
support of their own multinational cor-<lb/>
porations ? many of them state-owned<lb/>
enterprises ? the other capitalist<lb/>
governments of the world refused to<lb/>
abide any longer by the Bretton Woods<lb/>
accords. Thus, Bretton Woods essential-<lb/>
ly collapsed in 1971 when Nixon took<lb/>
the United States off the gold standard<lb/>
(necessarily so).<lb/>
The fallout which resulted from these<lb/>
developments was ominous. In 1959 the<lb/>
United States was "home" for 111 of<lb/>
the world's 156 largest multinational<lb/>
corporations, a share of 71 percent. Bv<lb/>
1976 only 68 of the 156 largest (43 per-<lb/>
cent) were American-based.<lb/>
The story that is often told of this<lb/>
dramatic turn of affairs is how efficient-<lb/>
ly the Germans and the hard-working<lb/>
Japanese labored, albeit with aid from<lb/>
the American government, to build<lb/>
economies that were able to successfully<lb/>
compete with the United States. What<lb/>
that story leaves out is just how much<lb/>
these economic miracles owe to the<lb/>
direct involvement of American cor-<lb/>
porations in their affairs.<lb/>
The fact is that from the early 1950s<lb/>
American corporations fequently pur-<lb/>
sued their objective of gaining access to<lb/>
overseas markets by granting licenses to<lb/>
foreigners to enter the industry, using<lb/>
technologies developed by the American<lb/>
pioneer in return for a royalty. On other<lb/>
occassions, the American corporation<lb/>
moved abroad by implementing a joint<lb/>
production arrangement with a foreign<lb/>
firm, sometimes involving the construc-<lb/>
tion of a "turkey plant" that would<lb/>
subsequently be turned over to the host<lb/>
country. Direct investment in the stock<lb/>
of foreign firms by American companies<lb/>
constituted still another form of global<lb/>
interdependence between ostensibly in-<lb/>
dependent, competing firms. Indeed, in<lb/>
all three cases, it is no exaggeration to<lb/>
say that American corporate manage-<lb/>
ment policy during the 1950s and '60s<lb/>
actually helped to create its own future<lb/>
competitors.<lb/>
Ironically, even while the managers<lb/>
American corporations complained ol<lb/>
decreased profits due to foreign com-<lb/>
petition, they feverishly shifted the<lb/>
production facilities abroad to escape<lb/>
high labor costs and the cost of govern<lb/>
ment regulation. All told, betweeen 150<lb/>
and 1980, direct foreign investmen<lb/>
U.S. businesses increased 16 times, from<lb/>
about $12 billion to $192 billion. Over<lb/>
the same period, gross private domes: c<lb/>
investment grew less than half as ra<lb/>
ly, from 554 billion to about S400<lb/>
billion. In addition, corporal,<lb/>
dismvested in the nation's productive<lb/>
capacity by shifting capital away from<lb/>
productive activities (modernizing plants<lb/>
and equipment and training workers).<lb/>
which produce jobs and increase pro-<lb/>
ductivity and competitiveness, toward<lb/>
unproductive activities such as corporate<lb/>
mergers and speculative investment<lb/>
Decisions came to be made exclusively<lb/>
in the interest of enhancina or protecting<lb/>
the bottom line without regard to<lb/>
whether goods were produced, jobs were<lb/>
created or the public interest was<lb/>
enhanced The fact that each successive<lb/>
recession since 1970 has resulted in<lb/>
higher unemployment percentages than<lb/>
the recession before it is a grim<lb/>
testimony to the results of this policy.<lb/>
Hence, it is clear that economic elites<lb/>
pursuing private profit exclusivelv often<lb/>
fail to serve the interests of the public.<lb/>
Some means of protecting the public in-<lb/>
terest in economic matters must be<lb/>
devised.<lb/>
Other<lb/>
WASHINGTON (UPI) -<lb/>
Almost 31 years after the<lb/>
Supreme Court outlawed<lb/>
segregation in America's<lb/>
classrooms, racial, sexual and<lb/>
class discrimination persist, a<lb/>
private report concluded today<lb/>
The study found that<lb/>
discrimination has taken new and<lb/>
subtle forms, although equally<lb/>
potent, that can be seen in stu<lb/>
dent placement and school fun-<lb/>
ding policies that favor white<lb/>
over black, male over female and<lb/>
rich over poor<lb/>
"The doors of schools are<lb/>
more open than they were<lb/>
years ago" to minorities, said<lb/>
Harold Howe 11, who co-chaired<lb/>
the tw .?  ,?udv "But we<lb/>
found a lack of commitment<lb/>
making these students sue -<lb/>
"State and local financing of<lb/>
schools add up to a conspii i<lb/>
spend more money on rich <lb/>
and less money on poor kids to<lb/>
provide services that are sup-<lb/>
posedly fair to all students he<lb/>
sajd<lb/>
Howe, who headed the old<lb/>
Education Commission in the<lb/>
Johnson administration ai<lb/>
helped win congj a) ap-<lb/>
proval of landmark civil rig<lb/>
measures, authored the studv.<lb/>
"Barriers to Excellence Our<lb/>
Children at Risk with Mar<lb/>
Wright Edelman president of the<lb/>
Faculty Print<lb/>
Purchased By<lb/>
Library<lb/>
s.r? Bureau<lb/>
An intaglio print by an ECU<lb/>
School of Art faculty member<lb/>
Michael Voors has been purchas-<lb/>
ed by the Library of Congres<lb/>
Washington.<lb/>
Yoor's print, entitled "Vene-<lb/>
tian Nocturne will become par-<lb/>
of the library's permanent collec-<lb/>
tion. The Library of Congress<lb/>
print collection, one of the major<lb/>
collections of graphic art work-<lb/>
in the U.S was estabiisned in<lb/>
1812 to house the works of the<lb/>
old masters as well as contem-<lb/>
porary artists.<lb/>
Voors is a graduate of the<lb/>
Indiana-Purdue Department of<lb/>
Fine Arts and received his Master<lb/>
of Fine Arts degree from Eastern<lb/>
Michigan University in 1980.<lb/>
Since joining the ECU art<lb/>
faculty he has been an active ex-<lb/>
hibitor in art shows throughout<lb/>
North Carolina. He has also been<lb/>
represented in major exhibitions<lb/>
including the International Print<lb/>
Society competition show in<lb/>
California.<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057692_0005"/><lb/>
I HI I v I ' R( l INIAN<lb/>
IANI Vk<lb/>
N<lb/>
Other Discrimination Seen<lb/>
 VSHington (l <lb/>
H years afte. the<lb/>
Court outlawed<lb/>
' i ii mer i i .1 ?<lb/>
 s racial sexua and<lb/>
"mination persist, .1<lb/>
concluded today<lb/>
dy found<lb/>
iken new and<lb/>
although equally<lb/>
an he seen in stu<lb/>
nent and school fun<lb/>
avoi white<lb/>
'lack.mal. ale and<lb/>
ai e<lb/>
than the vsert<lb/>
??. said<lb/>
Howe Ii. u<lb/>
ud But we<lb/>
- -<lb/>
? 6 'se studei<lb/>
N ?'? tncing ol<lb/>
-<lb/>
It<lb/>
is he<lb/>
I ?<lb/>
Faculty Print<lb/>
Purchased By<lb/>
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I<lb/>
-<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
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Children's Defense fund, a<lb/>
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I he studs was initiated h the<lb/>
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foi Students, a s eai old net<lb/>
work ol child advocacy groups<lb/>
that visited 10 cities and inter<lb/>
viewed more than 280 people<lb/>
I he studs ottered more than<lb/>
100 recommendations, including<lb/>
tougher enforcement of<lb/>
desegregation and se discrimina<lb/>
tion laws, as well as increased<lb/>
funding ol programs tor the<lb/>
disadvantaged<lb/>
li also proposed thai localities<lb/>
nut ease taves on private<lb/>
businesses to help fund educa<lb/>
tion, noting that businesses get<lb/>
the schools' final product<lb/>
educated youngstei s<lb/>
I n Mas 17, 1954, the Supreme<lb/>
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ol "separate but equal" in the<lb/>
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But contrary to that ruling, the<lb/>
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?63 percent ol black students<lb/>
;id predominantly minority<lb/>
us! 8 5 percent<lb/>
ei are minorities<lb/>
,vs' idem placemen: policies<lb/>
c' e a t e p r e d o m mantis s h 11 e<lb/>
1 p pe r -1 e vel<lb/>
dommantly black lowet le<lb/>
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?Black students ha ree<lb/>
tunes the suspension rate and<lb/>
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i law Discrimination<lb/>
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ol children from poor families<lb/>
are enrolled in vocational rathet<lb/>
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Sex Discrimination<lb/>
?Males and females have equal<lb/>
achievement in must majoi sub<lb/>
jetts ai age 9, but bs 11 female<lb/>
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puts them behind males in math,<lb/>
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?W omen are less likely to<lb/>
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IANUAR1 29, 198S<lb/>
Businesses Encourage Input From Managers<lb/>
SAN FRANCISCO (UPI)<lb/>
Many chief executives should<lb/>
avoid issuing long-range,<lb/>
strategic business plans and turn<lb/>
a more attentive ear to middle<lb/>
managers to identity those pro-<lb/>
jects that can really pay off, a<lb/>
Stanford scholar said.<lb/>
"The CEO is ultimately<lb/>
responsible for the corporation<lb/>
and its divisions, but the size and<lb/>
complexty of the business make<lb/>
it impossible for him to know and<lb/>
understand all the strategic and<lb/>
operating situations facing these<lb/>
divisions said L. Jay<lb/>
Gourgeois, an assistant professor<lb/>
at the Stanford Graduate School<lb/>
of Business.<lb/>
Bourgeois and a former stu-<lb/>
dent, David R. Brodwin, discuss-<lb/>
ed the situation in a recent article<lb/>
they wrote for Strategic Manage-<lb/>
ment Journal.<lb/>
Instead of issuing business ob-<lb/>
jectives from a corporate suite of<lb/>
Students Can Expect<lb/>
Early Rebel Arrival<lb/>
By JtNMKFRJhNDRAMAK<lb/>
Nf? frdlluf<lb/>
A new. unproved Rebel, the<lb/>
literary and art magazine of<lb/>
FCC, went to press yesterday, ac-<lb/>
cording to Rebel Editor Ellen<lb/>
Moore.<lb/>
Moore said the 1985 magazine<lb/>
will follow the same format as<lb/>
previous magazines, but will have<lb/>
"better stones, poems and il-<lb/>
lustrations We had a good staff<lb/>
this year she said.<lb/>
The 88-page magazine should<lb/>
be back from the printers by the<lb/>
beginning of March. Five thou-<lb/>
sand copies will be printed, a<lb/>
number which is "more than last<lb/>
year Moore said.<lb/>
Moore said she is pleased with<lb/>
the cover illustration, an airbrush<lb/>
illustration done by Mike Tatsis.<lb/>
In addition, she said more ar-<lb/>
tists are represented in the<lb/>
magazine this year and there is "a<lb/>
centerfold piece Victor Van-<lb/>
quished by David Lewis.<lb/>
This is Moore's second year as<lb/>
editor of the Rebel and "the<lb/>
earliest the magazine has ever<lb/>
been sent to the printers she<lb/>
said.<lb/>
The magazine, which contains<lb/>
four stories and 25 poems, will be<lb/>
available at the Rebel office and<lb/>
in Mendenhall Student Center.<lb/>
Student Loans May Be Cut<lb/>
Continued From Pae 1<lb/>
tor of legislative analvsis for the<lb/>
American Council on Education,<lb/>
estimated that "probably 500,(X)0<lb/>
would lose eligibility" if the line<lb/>
were drawn at $30,000.<lb/>
A $32,500 ceiling "might<lb/>
reduce that 500,000 by 30,000 or<lb/>
4).000 at most she said.<lb/>
She also estimated that "about<lb/>
150,000 students from families<lb/>
with incomes over $25,000" now<lb/>
get Pell Grants, although they<lb/>
usually are at the iower range of<lb/>
awards, which start at $200.<lb/>
Uit<lb/>
offices, Bourgeois said the CEO<lb/>
should encourage input from<lb/>
middle managers and other<lb/>
employees along the chain of<lb/>
command who are closely involv-<lb/>
ed in the company's daily opera-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
"We're talking about a level of<lb/>
individual beyond the shop<lb/>
floor the business policy pro-<lb/>
fessor said in an interview. "Mid-<lb/>
dle managers have access to<lb/>
resources that allow them to do<lb/>
this<lb/>
The authors call this strategy<lb/>
"crescive" or "growing from<lb/>
within the firm<lb/>
"It's one thing to say you want<lb/>
ideas Bourgeois said. "It's<lb/>
another thing to choose when you<lb/>
start getting too many ideas,<lb/>
choosing among them so you<lb/>
don't discourage other people<lb/>
That is the key to this type of<lb/>
management, according to<lb/>
Bourgeois.<lb/>
"A lot of consultants talk<lb/>
about rewarding failure he<lb/>
said. "That's one suggestion<lb/>
that's hard to take, but sensible.<lb/>
"When you're going to initiate<lb/>
crescive management, you've got<lb/>
to be prepared to accept some<lb/>
ideas that aren't going to work<lb/>
he said. "You know, the best en-<lb/>
trepreneur to put your money on<lb/>
is the one that has failed two or<lb/>
three times<lb/>
The professor cited universities<lb/>
that concentrate on research as<lb/>
good examples of crescive<lb/>
management.<lb/>
"An organization that does it<lb/>
almost exclusively is a research<lb/>
university he said. "You have a<lb/>
lot of people doing things in-<lb/>
dependently and they somehow<lb/>
wind up doing things of<lb/>
greatness he said.<lb/>
For-profit firms of the same<lb/>
mold would include think tanks<lb/>
and companies like Hewlett-<lb/>
Packard, the Silicon Valley high-<lb/>
tech corporation.<lb/>
"H-P is a quintessential exam-<lb/>
ple Bourgeois said. "Their<lb/>
strategic approval process is very<lb/>
decentralized and only has to go<lb/>
through two or three leveh ind<lb/>
it's usually sold from within.<lb/>
Bourgeois drew an example<lb/>
from an episode he observed<lb/>
while working as a consultant for<lb/>
a large, foreign mining company.<lb/>
"They were diversifying<lb/>
through acquisition because com-<lb/>
modities metal prices had gone<lb/>
down the professor said.<lb/>
"The chief executive was com-<lb/>
plaining that since the downturn<lb/>
there had been little creativity<lb/>
and new ideas<lb/>
It turned out that the flow of<lb/>
new ideas dropped off<lb/>
dramatically at about the same<lb/>
time the CEO took command.<lb/>
Bourgeois said he learned the<lb/>
CEO was giving the impression at<lb/>
monthly meetings that he was<lb/>
more concerned about perfor<lb/>
mance compared to the budget<lb/>
than new, possible risky con<lb/>
cepts.<lb/>
Bourgeois suggested the CEO,<lb/>
at the next meeting, turn to<lb/>
whoever was sitting next to him<lb/>
and casually ask how many new<lb/>
ideas his division had in the last<lb/>
month.<lb/>
"You know what's going to<lb/>
happen out in the hallway after<lb/>
that meeting?" he asked. "These<lb/>
guys don't want to be embarrass-<lb/>
ed at the next meeting, so they're<lb/>
going to ask subordinates abou'<lb/>
new ideas.<lb/>
"By the fourth meeting, thev<lb/>
had to create a new agenda to<lb/>
control flow of new ideas coming<lb/>
through he said. "The whole<lb/>
place was buzzing ? just from<lb/>
asking that one simple question '<lb/>
Me And My Shadow<lb/>
Just once, our photographer wanted his image and not just his<lb/>
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the STUDENTUNION<lb/>
NOW is the time to apply for the positions of chairperosns<lb/>
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PUBLIC RELATIONS AND<lb/>
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Come by room 234 in Mendenhall Student Center to apply!<lb/>
INFORMATION: 757-6611, ext. 210.<lb/>
Deadline to Apply: Friday, February 1, 1985.<lb/>
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DATE: March 1-9<lb/>
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<lb/>
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?<lb/>
Timothy<lb/>
B 3W &amp; El I IO! KRW r 1<lb/>
?.l ???? ?"???? V<lb/>
Nhen he first read Rob-<lb/>
Lindsey's book. Th? Falcon and<lb/>
the Snowman, Academy a<lb/>
winning actor Timothv Hutton<lb/>
was fascinated with its central<lb/>
character, Christopher Bt<lb/>
"Chris Boyce thought of<lb/>
himself as a patriot Hutton<lb/>
said during a recent interview<lb/>
"He genuinely behevr<lb/>
CIA was pererting American<lb/>
principles, and that by sell ? I<lb/>
secrets to the Russians, he <lb/>
some strange a. -<lb/>
country<lb/>
That a bright, well-b' !<lb/>
man, the son of an ex-FB! .<lb/>
raised in an ultrm-consei i<lb/>
California commui<lb/>
subvert his idealism from n ?<lb/>
to treason was a shov<lb/>
"Boyce wa eager I<lb/>
Hutton recalled "W<lb/>
the phone almost evci<lb/>
ing through the script<lb/>
I'd ask what he was thinking<lb/>
feeling at a certaii<lb/>
time, and he'd open<lb/>
got into his head, r<lb/>
resist the tcmptal<lb/>
mannerismv There ha I<lb/>
point where I toc?<lb/>
tor<lb/>
That Boyce would<lb/>
forces with a<lb/>
smuggler, who'd been<lb/>
friend in high school,<lb/>
the most braze-<lb/>
since World War II, ?<lb/>
dramatic clincher as fai<lb/>
ton was concerned<lb/>
"I think it's rare for son<lb/>
that young to ha e su<lb/>
and take such steps<lb/>
said. "Clearly what I<lb/>
wrong, but the mind tl<lb/>
such a radica. -<lb/>
taken seriously<lb/>
Hutton was. eae-<lb/>
Boyce in the film er<lb/>
Falcon and the Snowman<lb/>
thusiasm shared b<lb/>
Award winner Jol<lb/>
who'd been signed<lb/>
project for Orion Picture<lb/>
"I wanted :<lb/>
ambiguit) of som<lb/>
thougl<lb/>
his country was tc beti<lb/>
Hutton said<lb/>
Hutton made h - c<lb/>
debut in television's "Fi<lb/>
Fire :n which he pla<lb/>
of Carol Burnett arj Ned B<lb/>
?<lb/>
H1<lb/>
I<lb/>
B<lb/>
Carlos saura" I armen ?iH<lb/>
'Carmen' To 5r<lb/>
b usa McDonald<lb/>
M?fT Vkri!r<lb/>
Carmen. Caro v<lb/>
tense film of dance and emotic<lb/>
is coming to Hendnx Theatre<lb/>
tomorrow. Jan. 30. at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The story centers on celebratec<lb/>
Choreographer Antonio Gades,<lb/>
who, playing himself, creates the<lb/>
dance version of Carmen and<lb/>
searchs for a young woman to<lb/>
play the leading role opposite his<lb/>
Don Jose.<lb/>
Complications begin after<lb/>
Gades Finds his young woman<lb/>
(Laura del Sol) and falls in love<lb/>
with her. His love for the woman<lb/>
(W<lb/>
C i<lb/>
i<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
H<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
ho<lb/>
m:<lb/>
SpJ<lb/>
inn<lb/>
I<lb/>
da<lb/>
'<lb/>
<lb/>
4<lb/>
OAM<lb/>
???<lb/>
f<lb/>
 '<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0007"/><lb/>
liev high<lb/>
I am<lb/>
" Their<lb/>
anagers<lb/>
CEO was giving the impression at<lb/>
monthly meetings that he was<lb/>
more concerned about perfor-<lb/>
mance compared to the budget<lb/>
than new. possible risky con-<lb/>
cepts<lb/>
'HI EASTCAROJ INIAN<lb/>
thin<lb/>
ample<lb/>
?sen ed<lb/>
I<lb/>
am<lb/>
rgeois suggested the CEO,<lb/>
i the next meeting, turn to<lb/>
whoever was sitting next to him<lb/>
casual!) ask how many new<lb/>
ide vision had in the last<lb/>
month<lb/>
v know what's going to<lb/>
?pen out in the hallway after<lb/>
that meeting1" he asked. 'These<lb/>
guys don't want to be embarrass-<lb/>
ed a: the next meeting, so they're<lb/>
going to ask subordinates about<lb/>
new ideas<lb/>
"Bv the fourth meeting, they<lb/>
create a new agenda to<lb/>
flow of new ideas coming<lb/>
he said "The whole<lb/>
vas b .ving ? just from<lb/>
simple question<lb/>
NION<lb/>
f chairperosns<lb/>
2 for you!<lb/>
TIONS<lb/>
tRTS<lb/>
CONCERTS<lb/>
ATIONS AND<lb/>
rtiter to apply!<lb/>
MANCE<lb/>
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ean at 752-5588<lb/>
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!<lb/>
<lb/>
J<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 1985<lb/>
Page<lb/>
TimothyHutton TurnsTraitor In Spy Thriller<lb/>
By JAYELLIOTKRAVETZ<lb/>
lumiaMU rtoio Nmh<lb/>
When he first read Robert<lb/>
1 indsey's book. The Falcon and<lb/>
the Snowman, Academy award-<lb/>
winning actor Timothy Hutton<lb/>
was fascinated with its central<lb/>
character, Christopher Boyce.<lb/>
"Chris Boyce thought of<lb/>
himself as a patriot Hutton<lb/>
said during a recent interview.<lb/>
"He genuinely believed that the<lb/>
CIA was perverting American<lb/>
principles, and that bv selling it's<lb/>
secrets to the Russians, he was, in<lb/>
some strange way, serving his<lb/>
country<lb/>
That a bright, well-bred voung<lb/>
man, the son of an ex-FBI agent,<lb/>
raised in an ultra-conservative<lb/>
California community, could<lb/>
subvert his idealism from religion<lb/>
to treason was a shocker.<lb/>
"Boyce was eager to help<lb/>
Hutton recalled. "We spoke on<lb/>
the phone almost everv day, go-<lb/>
ing through the script line by line.<lb/>
I'd ask what he was thinking and<lb/>
reeling at a certain moment in<lb/>
time, and he'd open up to me. I<lb/>
got into his head, but I had to<lb/>
resist the temptation to mimic his<lb/>
mannerisms. There had to be a<lb/>
point where I took over as an ac-<lb/>
tor<lb/>
That Boyce would then join<lb/>
forces with a strung-out drug<lb/>
smuggler, who'd been his best<lb/>
tnend in high school, to commit<lb/>
the most brazen act of espionage<lb/>
since World War II, was the<lb/>
dramatic clincher as far as Hut-<lb/>
ton was concerned.<lb/>
"I think it's rare for someone<lb/>
that young to have such thoughts<lb/>
and take such steps Hutton<lb/>
said. "Clearly what he did was<lb/>
wrong, but the mind that decided<lb/>
such a radical course had to be<lb/>
taken seriously<lb/>
Hutton was eager to plav<lb/>
Boyce in the film version of The<lb/>
falcon and the Snowman, an en-<lb/>
thusiasm shared by Academy<lb/>
Award winner John Schlesinger,<lb/>
who'd been signed to direct the<lb/>
project for Orion Pictures.<lb/>
"I wanted to show the moral<lb/>
ambiguity of someone who<lb/>
thought that the best way to serve<lb/>
his country was to betrav it<lb/>
Hutton said.<lb/>
Hutton made his co-starring<lb/>
debut in television's "Friendly<lb/>
Fire in which he played the son<lb/>
of Carol Burnett and Ned Beam.<lb/>
a bewildered, frightened teenager<lb/>
who watched his parents go to<lb/>
pieces after the death of his<lb/>
brother, to errant American<lb/>
firepower, in Vietnam.<lb/>
Hutton's memorable perfor-<lb/>
mance caught the eye of first-<lb/>
time director Robert Redford,<lb/>
who cast him in "Ordinary Peo-<lb/>
ple Hutton's lonely longing for<lb/>
relief from a guilt he could not<lb/>
fathom brought remarkable tex-<lb/>
ture to the film, which won<lb/>
Oscars for Best Picture of the<lb/>
Year, Best Director (Redford),<lb/>
Best Screenplay (Alvin Sargent)<lb/>
and Best Supporting Actor<lb/>
(Huton).<lb/>
In addition, he won the 1980<lb/>
Golden Globe Award, the Los<lb/>
Angeles Film Critics Award and<lb/>
rave reviews. In an approach to<lb/>
his craft which has characterized<lb/>
his entire career, Hutton resear-<lb/>
ched his role in "Ordinary Peo-<lb/>
ple" by visiting mental hospitals<lb/>
and consulting psychiatric<lb/>
specialists.<lb/>
He was equally conscientious<lb/>
in preparing his next assignment<lb/>
as the cadet major who led an in-<lb/>
surrection at a troubled military<lb/>
school in Taps.<lb/>
"My character in Taps was a<lb/>
golden boy, 1 suppose Hutton<lb/>
recalled. "He excelled in<lb/>
everything he did, always had,<lb/>
probably always will. He was<lb/>
academically in great shape and<lb/>
as the cadet leader, as the<lb/>
regimental commander, well,<lb/>
that's the best you can do at a<lb/>
military academy. Everything he<lb/>
did had always been top-notch.<lb/>
He was an overachiever<lb/>
During four weeks of<lb/>
preproduction at Pennsylvania's<lb/>
Valley Forge Military Academy,<lb/>
he explored his character's state<lb/>
Of mind by reading Pat Conroy's<lb/>
The lords of Discipline,<lb/>
Melville's Billy Budd and<lb/>
William Manchester's American<lb/>
Caesar, a long hard look at<lb/>
General Douglas MacArthur.<lb/>
"It was really kind of<lb/>
strenuous the first week Hut-<lb/>
ton recalled. "Everybody was<lb/>
complaining. You know: Oh,<lb/>
God! Why do we have to do<lb/>
this? Why can't we just<lb/>
rehearse?" But, by the second<lb/>
day, third day, everybody was<lb/>
beginning to see how much it was<lb/>
paying off, how beneficial it<lb/>
was<lb/>
After picking up a 1981 Golden<lb/>
Globe nomination for Taps, Hut-<lb/>
ton starred in television's The<lb/>
Long Hay Home, which brought<lb/>
Timothy Hutton stars as Christopher ? in Orion Pictures' ?? release 'The Falcon and The Sno<lb/>
him the Golden Nymph at the<lb/>
Cannes Film Festival and another<lb/>
Golden Globe nomination.<lb/>
"I'm just real happy that I<lb/>
made it and that I've had the op-<lb/>
portunity to work with the people<lb/>
I've worked with and the roles<lb/>
I've worked on Hutton said.<lb/>
Hutton added theatre to his<lb/>
growi-g list of credentials with<lb/>
The Oldest Living Graduate,<lb/>
which began as a live television<lb/>
drama and continued on stage on<lb/>
Los Angeles.<lb/>
"I've always been interested<lb/>
and curious about people Hut-<lb/>
ton explained. "I've always been<lb/>
a people watcher and to have the<lb/>
opportunity to explore different<lb/>
people through roles and to study<lb/>
attitude, behavior, ways of life<lb/>
and circumstance, it's what I<lb/>
really like to do<lb/>
Continuing to amass television<lb/>
credits, "And Baby Makes Six"<lb/>
and "The Best Place To Be<lb/>
Hutton kept pace with his soaring<lb/>
film career.<lb/>
"If I hadn't been so lucky so<lb/>
early he offers with a smile,<lb/>
"I'd probably be an English ma-<lb/>
jor at Berkeley today<lb/>
After starring for Sidney<lb/>
Lumet in the title role of Daniel.<lb/>
as the anguished, de'ermined son<lb/>
of the late Ethel and Julius<lb/>
Rosenberg, he flew to the Arctic<lb/>
Circle to star in Iceman as a<lb/>
scientist who befriends a survivor<lb/>
from our prehistoric past.<lb/>
"For the first time, I was into<lb/>
the research from my own point<lb/>
of view instead of solely through<lb/>
the character's he recalled his<lb/>
preparation, which included a<lb/>
heavy dose of anthropology texts<lb/>
and several session at Van-<lb/>
couver's well-know Museum of<lb/>
Anthropology.<lb/>
Researching this extraordinary<lb/>
subject along with his role, Hut-<lb/>
ton immersed himself in an-<lb/>
thropology and learned to speak<lb/>
Inuktituk, an Eskimo dialect.<lb/>
"I wouldn't want to be doing<lb/>
anything else he said en-<lb/>
thusiastically.<lb/>
Alter I he talc on and The<lb/>
Snowman, Hutton filmed Turk<lb/>
IH2! which will be released Feb.<lb/>
15. In the film, which also stars<lb/>
Robert Urich, Kim Cattrall.<lb/>
Robert Culp, Darren McGavin<lb/>
and Peter Boyle and is directed<lb/>
by Bob Clarke, Hutton plays an<lb/>
appealing and contemporary<lb/>
hero, Jimmy Lynch: a street-wise<lb/>
young man who discovers unex-<lb/>
pected resources in himself when<lb/>
wman<lb/>
he is compelled to right the wrong<lb/>
done to his brother<lb/>
Turk 182! is a contemporary<lb/>
drama which focuses on a vounc<lb/>
man's crusade to redeem his<lb/>
brother's reputation Hutton<lb/>
explained. "I play Jimmy Lynch,<lb/>
who wages an impassioned battle<lb/>
against an indifferent city<lb/>
bureaucracy that denied his older<lb/>
brother Terry, a disabled<lb/>
firefighter, his rightful pension.<lb/>
"Armed only with his wits,<lb/>
Jimmy sets out to topple a cor-<lb/>
rupt mayor and proves that vou<lb/>
can fight City Hall, as the entire<lb/>
city thrills to the dare devil ex-<lb/>
ploits and amazing ingenuitv i<lb/>
the mysterious crusader known<lb/>
only as'Turk 182 Hutton add-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Killing Fields Offers Honesty<lb/>
Carlos Saura's Carmen' will be showing in Hendrix Theatre on Wednesday at 8 p.m.<lb/>
'Carmen' To Steu; Up Screen In Hendrix<lb/>
By DANIEL MAI RER<lb/>
v.niin! rratarn f?lor<lb/>
The Killing Fields is an intense,<lb/>
brutally realistic, and humanly<lb/>
honest motion picture. Director<lb/>
Roland Joffe presents a personal<lb/>
story set in the chaos of Cam-<lb/>
bodia during the early 70s. In it<lb/>
he offers a first-hand look at a<lb/>
war-torn nation and its suffering<lb/>
people.<lb/>
In this frightening setting of<lb/>
political anarchy, Joffe<lb/>
Chronicles the true story of<lb/>
Sydney Schanberg (played by-<lb/>
Sam Waterston) and his Cambo-<lb/>
dian assistant, translates and<lb/>
friend Dith Pran (played by Dr.<lb/>
Haing S. Ngor). Schanberg is a<lb/>
Sew York Times war correspon-<lb/>
dent who travels to Cambodia in<lb/>
August of 1973 to cover<lb/>
American involvement in the<lb/>
growing Cambodian revolution.<lb/>
When the war escalates and<lb/>
American troops are forced to<lb/>
evacuate the U.S. Embassy,<lb/>
Schanberg, along with other<lb/>
journalists, choses to remain<lb/>
behind. Pran, given the chance to<lb/>
leave the country, stands bv his<lb/>
friend's side. What follows is the<lb/>
growth of an unbreakable bond<lb/>
between these two men as they<lb/>
look into the horrifying face of<lb/>
an insane war.<lb/>
Joffe's film pulls no punches,<lb/>
as he presents the Cambodian<lb/>
conflict with a journalistic impar-<lb/>
tiality. He does away with the<lb/>
usual cinematic license and sensa-<lb/>
tionalism to produce a gripping,<lb/>
sometimes frightening story bas-<lb/>
ed on harsh realities.<lb/>
What carries the audience<lb/>
above the bloody maelstom are<lb/>
the superb performances by both<lb/>
Waterston and Dr. Ngor. They<lb/>
develop an emotional thread that<lb/>
ties their characters and the au-<lb/>
dience together. They share an<lb/>
unspoken language characteristic<lb/>
of close comrades. They are un-<lb/>
doubtedly an academy award<lb/>
winning combination.<lb/>
Meanwhile, Director of<lb/>
Photography Chris Menges lends<lb/>
punctuation to Joffe's cinema<lb/>
prose with several stunning at-<lb/>
mosphere shots. Utilizing some<lb/>
beautiful locations in Thailand<lb/>
and Canada, he is able to show<lb/>
the degree of devestation brought<lb/>
upon Cambodia's fertile coun-<lb/>
trvside.<lb/>
The Killing Fields is a film that<lb/>
excites the senses and touches the<lb/>
heart. It is a story of friendship<lb/>
hardship, and survival. Killing<lb/>
Fields is destined to secure a place<lb/>
for itself in motion picture<lb/>
history.<lb/>
By Lisa McDonald<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Carmen, Carlos Saura's in-<lb/>
tense film of dance and emotion,<lb/>
is coming to Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
tomorrow, Jan. 30, at 8 p.m.<lb/>
The story centers on celebrated<lb/>
Choreographer Antonio Gades,<lb/>
who, playing himself, creates the<lb/>
dance version of Carmen and<lb/>
searchs for a young woman to<lb/>
Play the leading role opposite his<lb/>
Don Jose.<lb/>
Compilations begin after<lb/>
Gades finds his young woman<lb/>
(Laura del Sol) and falls in love<lb/>
with her. His love for the woman<lb/>
(whose name, coincidentally, is<lb/>
Carmen) grows, and the<lb/>
characters begin to live the<lb/>
Carmen story while creating the<lb/>
dance version.<lb/>
Gades' assistant, Christina<lb/>
Hoyos, stirs up trouble during a<lb/>
rehearsal scene, resulting in a plot<lb/>
full of jelousy and conflict.<lb/>
Carmen is not just a love story,<lb/>
however; the greater part of the<lb/>
movie is devoted to dancing ?<lb/>
Spanish dancing ? encompass-<lb/>
ing all the usual fire and passion.<lb/>
Carmens uniqueness centers<lb/>
on the fact that the movie so<lb/>
closely imitates life. By having<lb/>
Gades and Hoyos play<lb/>
themselves in a ficticious manner,<lb/>
Saura, as director, shows us how<lb/>
close fiction and reality can<lb/>
come. Both are playing the parts<lb/>
they occupy in life ? that of<lb/>
choreographer and assistant.<lb/>
Carmen, sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee, is free to ECU students<lb/>
and a guest with current IDs.<lb/>
Faculty and staff must have a<lb/>
Spring Semester Film Pass,<lb/>
available for purchase at the Cen-<lb/>
tral Ticket Office.<lb/>
By JAMES REID<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
At last, a movie has been pro-<lb/>
duced that zeros in on the tyrany<lb/>
of war from the truest perspective<lb/>
? the people. Killing Fields is a<lb/>
sensitive film that drives to the<lb/>
heart and shakes the brain-fibers.<lb/>
Before the film's release, there<lb/>
was a lack of real-to-life offerings<lb/>
depicting what it is almost like<lb/>
when war grabs its victims by the<lb/>
throat.<lb/>
Media can never be a replace-<lb/>
ment for real experiences.<lb/>
Deerhunter and Apocolypse Now<lb/>
are two examples. Both films had<lb/>
outstanding cinematography and<lb/>
suspenseful scenes, but both lack-<lb/>
ed an honest display of the emo-<lb/>
tional and physical elements that<lb/>
would make the films real to me.<lb/>
Instead, each was pumped up<lb/>
with sensationalism to increase<lb/>
viewer interest.<lb/>
There was no need for sensa-<lb/>
tionalism in The Killing Fields.<lb/>
War is graphic enough. Every<lb/>
scene presented an honest ac-<lb/>
count of who would be most af-<lb/>
fected. It didn't cast blame on<lb/>
one side more than the other. It<lb/>
wasn't presented as ammunition<lb/>
for any political group to use on<lb/>
another. It wasn't produced to<lb/>
incite sexual, violent, or<lb/>
See KILLING Page 8.<lb/>
Trivia, Trivia, Trivia<lb/>
1. Who is the only wonm<lb/>
2. How many U.S. Presidci<lb/>
3. What is the nation's highc<lb/>
it?<lb/>
nn two Nobel Prizes?<lb/>
orn in Virginia?<lb/>
lian award and who established<lb/>
4. What is North Carolina's state bud. mammal, insect and reptile?<lb/>
fior??0008 l? ,983 eS"mak's- uhkh stale ranks first in popula-<lb/>
6. What is the world's busiest airport?<lb/>
7. Who won the Heisman Memorial Trophy in 1963?<lb/>
8. What are the ideal dimensions of a college basketball court?<lb/>
9. How much of the Earth's water is drinkable?<lb/>
10. What is the name of the first James Bond film?<lb/>
<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
 ? mm?0mmmmmm<lb/>
- - ? - ? ??? ?<lb/>
VWaMMMMati<lb/>
f<lb/>
V ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0008"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
I HI I AST CAROL 1N1AN<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 198?<lb/>
'The Killing Fields' Shows Tyrany, Hardships Of War<lb/>
Continued From Page 7.<lb/>
pleasureable responses. The film<lb/>
was offered in hopes of inciting<lb/>
thought of how attrocious and<lb/>
nauseating war is. It affects all<lb/>
people, but mostly, it affects<lb/>
those who hae the least amount<lb/>
of control over life's uncertain-<lb/>
ties the laymen.<lb/>
l)ith Pran was a commoner.<lb/>
He was an assistant for an<lb/>
American journalist, Sydney<lb/>
Schanberg Although the movie<lb/>
vvas, primarily, Schanberg's ac-<lb/>
count of the struggle of the Cam-<lb/>
bodian people during the collapse<lb/>
of their country's government<lb/>
and his direct involvement with<lb/>
some of those people, it was Pran<lb/>
who took the viewers on an emo-<lb/>
tional journey of those who were<lb/>
left to the mercy of the Khmer<lb/>
Rouge and later the North Viet-<lb/>
namese. There was little mercy.<lb/>
The viewers were subjected to the<lb/>
entire spectrum of emotions ex-<lb/>
cept those associated with hap-<lb/>
piness.<lb/>
There was very little happiness.<lb/>
Even during times when humor<lb/>
was injected by those who were<lb/>
trying to momentarily rise above<lb/>
their malady, Pran rarely was<lb/>
amused. He was horrified. He<lb/>
was afraid for Schanberg and<lb/>
himself, but mostly, he was<lb/>
frightened for his family. With<lb/>
Schanberg's help, he arranged<lb/>
for his wife and children to be<lb/>
evacuated to the United States.<lb/>
The audience had a chance to<lb/>
feel some of that horror. They<lb/>
witnessed Pran's struggle to flee<lb/>
the embattled country and join<lb/>
his family. They witnessed<lb/>
Phnom Pehn being ripped apart<lb/>
limb by limb. They also witnessed<lb/>
Pran's torment after finding out<lb/>
that he would not be able to<lb/>
escape with the French press<lb/>
corps.<lb/>
It was a movie where the plot<lb/>
was secondary. A movie where<lb/>
the outcome didn't matter too<lb/>
much. Sure, the outcome certain-<lb/>
ly instigated applause, but it was<lb/>
the intense realism that kept me<lb/>
emotionally involved. The evi-<lb/>
dent concern for family, friends,<lb/>
and self intensified the realism.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
Other elements which aided in<lb/>
creating the realistic effects were<lb/>
the superb cinematography and<lb/>
the excellent sound track. Often-<lb/>
times, a film can depict a scene's<lb/>
natural beauty. But rarely can a<lb/>
film place me within its essence.<lb/>
For years, I've wondered when<lb/>
a book or a motion picture would<lb/>
be produced that would illustrate<lb/>
the anguish the people of Indo-<lb/>
China suffered. A depiction<lb/>
which would show the concern or<lb/>
hatred one person or group can<lb/>
have towards another when both<lb/>
are placed within the raw com-<lb/>
ponents of war. In essence, I've<lb/>
been waiting for a true and fac<lb/>
tual account that would make us<lb/>
do one thing ? begin to think<lb/>
before we commit ourselves to<lb/>
war.<lb/>
Answers To Trivia<lb/>
BIUiOjlE <lb/>
3uru<lb/>
qX3UOH 'isjJinbv, bjo MeuiPjb ?<lb/>
3JJ 'UJOpSSiJ JO CpJl H?UU3piS3JJ t<lb/>
113 i<lb/>
3un ?) 3ijPl I<lb/>
o HI 01<lb/>
jpi p?j OS ?l I ??J w &amp;<lb/>
oSKmO PUo:iEUJ31U UH.O V<lb/>
SALE<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/>
758 3087 DON'T BE<lb/>
SCARED leave Jack a message<lb/>
ana save $50 when you have your<lb/>
laundry cleaned<lb/>
FOR SALE: Loveseat hideaway<lb/>
bea Complete with Slipcovers.<lb/>
Sleeps 2 $75 firm Call 757 3326.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Coffee table with 2 end<lb/>
tables $110 Bunk beds $125. Call<lb/>
at 752 3022<lb/>
FOR SALE: VW Bug Excellent run<lb/>
rung condition Call 756 82V4 after 6<lb/>
p m<lb/>
FOR SALE Sensory deprivation<lb/>
soiation tank including pump and<lb/>
heater Price negotiable Phone<lb/>
"56 8160 for more info<lb/>
GUITAR FOR SALE: Fender<lb/>
Mustang Two pick ups, tremolo,<lb/>
blue with mirrored pickguard, case<lb/>
and strap included Call 752 0998, ask<lb/>
for Robert<lb/>
FOR SALE. 13 nch Panasonic color<lb/>
TV great condition $60 752 1487<lb/>
TYPING Papers correspondence,<lb/>
reports and resumes Call 355 2165<lb/>
and ask for Yvette<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING SER<lb/>
VICE All typing needs. 758 5488 or<lb/>
758 8241<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING. Elec<lb/>
?-ooic typewriter Reasonable rates<lb/>
Call Janice at 756 4664 evenings or<lb/>
752 6106 days<lb/>
TYPING SERVICE: Word pro<lb/>
cessor 105 N Elm St Resumes, let<lb/>
?ers theses term papers, etc Ac<lb/>
curate depenaaDle service Call<lb/>
Betty iaws at 752 1454<lb/>
TAXES: Will do your taxes for<lb/>
reasonable price Reduced rates for<lb/>
students $5 for state $5 for federal<lb/>
Call Dons a? 757 6557 or 355 2510<lb/>
after 6<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
FEMALE ROOMMATE WANTED.<lb/>
Nonsmoker. Unfurnished<lb/>
townhouse Lexington Square next<lb/>
to Athletic club. $175 per month plus<lb/>
deposit, half utilities. Call Janice<lb/>
Gurganus at 7 57 6650 or 355 6974<lb/>
after 5.30 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Village<lb/>
Green Apts. $130 - ' 2 utlities. Con<lb/>
tact Brad 758 9235<lb/>
ROOMMATE: Male or female<lb/>
wanted for Eastbrook share ex<lb/>
penses 758 7180<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Graduate<lb/>
student desires roommate to share<lb/>
NICE, partially furnished duplex. Va<lb/>
rent ($150) and 'a utilities. Im<lb/>
mediate occupancy! Call 756-6633.<lb/>
RENT: 2 bedroom apt , fully fur<lb/>
mshed &amp; access. Ringgold Towers<lb/>
Excellent location to downtown &amp;<lb/>
classes. Call 752 8945<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED SOON:<lb/>
Male preferred. Vi deposit, ,j 1st<lb/>
month's rent $275, 'a utilities Cable<lb/>
included 756 9910.<lb/>
MALE: Dancer<lb/>
deliveries Serious<lb/>
Reply to Dancer,<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
for balloon<lb/>
inquiries only<lb/>
PO Box 1967,<lb/>
PART TIME PERSON: Tues Sat<lb/>
10-3:30 for balloon deliveries and to<lb/>
answer phone Car needed Singing a<lb/>
plus 355 2961<lb/>
NATION'S SECOND LARGEST<lb/>
CO Seeks mature, sharp in<lb/>
dividuals Work your own hours. Get<lb/>
full details cail G Jones after 6 p.m.<lb/>
at 758 4155<lb/>
COUNSELORS: For western North<lb/>
Carolina coed 8 week summer<lb/>
camp Room, meals, laundry,<lb/>
salary, travel allowance, and possi<lb/>
ble college credit. Experience not<lb/>
necessary, but must enjoy working<lb/>
with children. Only non smoking col<lb/>
lege students need apply. For<lb/>
application brochure write: Camp<lb/>
Pinewood, 19006 Bob O Link Drive,<lb/>
Miami, Florida 33015.<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 $115 a month utilities included.<lb/>
Great location &amp; great roommates.<lb/>
Call 758 6224<lb/>
PERSONAL<lb/>
PHI TAU KILLER B S Congratula<lb/>
tions for an awesome display of<lb/>
basketball skill. You really are "The<lb/>
Heat<lb/>
E.C Friday night was jammin'i<lb/>
Preesh for breakfast. Say HI to the<lb/>
"flasher<lb/>
SIGMA NU LITTLE SISTERS:<lb/>
Would like to congratulate Eric<lb/>
Weninger and the Brothers for a<lb/>
great rush, and to welcome the new<lb/>
pledges. We're looking forward to a<lb/>
great semester!<lb/>
YO CHICK: You, Pepe Lopez,<lb/>
Passout and Flesh are only half and<lb/>
couldn't be better when shared with<lb/>
the one who sits beside you in<lb/>
math .<lb/>
SIGMA PHI EPSILON PLEDGES:<lb/>
Get ready for the adventure of your<lb/>
life!<lb/>
THE BROTHERS OF ALPHA<lb/>
SIGMA PHI: Would like to welcome<lb/>
in the new pledges from Spring<lb/>
Rush. We look forward to a great<lb/>
semester See you at inductions<lb/>
tonight! Congratulations.<lb/>
NORWEGIAN PETTER: Dump the<lb/>
girl and come with me; satisfy our<lb/>
passion, set this love free. Come on<lb/>
let's get horizal, try it and see Men<lb/>
need a lot, so come on get next to me<lb/>
Economical Love.<lb/>
CINDY: For two who loved each<lb/>
other so much, it's a hard habit to<lb/>
break I would never hold on if you<lb/>
didn't want to be with me. I'll always<lb/>
love you T.T.<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI HAPPY HOUR: The<lb/>
brothers of Pi Kappa Phi Fraternity<lb/>
will be having a jammin' happy hour<lb/>
at The Elbo Room Wednesday night<lb/>
ifs Ifx draft night so come out and<lb/>
party with the Pi Kapps.<lb/>
COME JOIN: The Society for Ad<lb/>
vancement of Management on a tour<lb/>
of the Greenville Athletic Club<lb/>
Wednesday the 30th at 4:00. A free<lb/>
guest pass to all who participate!<lb/>
See management at its best. Info<lb/>
Wayne 752 0385<lb/>
HAVE A HEART: The Aerobic<lb/>
Workshop will be holding aerobic<lb/>
classes every Sunday in Feb. from 1<lb/>
to 2 p m. $2 drop in charge for<lb/>
everyone. Non members welcome<lb/>
Prizes 8 free memberships will be<lb/>
given away. All proceeds go to Heart<lb/>
Assoc. 417 Evans St. Downtown<lb/>
Greenville. 757 1608.<lb/>
YEARBOOK PORTRAIT<lb/>
SCHEDULE: Seniors and faculty<lb/>
Feb. 4 15. Underclassmen, faculty<lb/>
and senior makeups March 18 27.<lb/>
All dates 9 12 a.m. and 15 p.m. Por<lb/>
traits taken at the yearbook office<lb/>
and it's all FREE.<lb/>
GRADUATE STUDENT POR-<lb/>
TRAIT SCHEDULE: Feb 4 ISatthe<lb/>
yearbook office (2nd floor publica<lb/>
tions building). Come by and sign up<lb/>
now.<lb/>
GRAD STUDENTS: You haven't<lb/>
been forgotten Have your portrait<lb/>
made during the senior portrait ses<lb/>
sion Come by and sign up now. it's<lb/>
all FREE<lb/>
SENIORS: Portrait time is almost<lb/>
here! The dates are Feb. 4-15 at the<lb/>
yearbook office. Come by and make<lb/>
your reservation now. It's all<lb/>
FREE! Questions? Call 757 4501<lb/>
FACULTY PORTRAITS: Are back<lb/>
for the 1985 Buccaneer. Just come by<lb/>
from 9-12 a.m. or 1-5 p.m. during<lb/>
Feb. 4 15th No appointment<lb/>
necessart and no waiting.<lb/>
GET BACK JACK I. The one thing<lb/>
left on campus that's FREE. Having<lb/>
your smiling face in the 1985 Buc-<lb/>
caneer. Seniors? Faculty portralts-<lb/>
Feb. 4 15 at the yearbook office<lb/>
(across from the library).<lb/>
Beta Chi's: Look foreward to the<lb/>
best time of your life. Work hard and<lb/>
you will be rewarded. Chaka Preesh<lb/>
andS1?<lb/>
LOST AND<lb/>
FOUND<lb/>
LOST: Yellow gold 3 mm add a bead<lb/>
necklace lost in the library. Reward<lb/>
offered. Call Tiena at 753 3256<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Flower Shop<lb/>
758-2774<lb/>
Corner Evans &amp; UThJSt.<lb/>
GOODYEAR<lb/>
xn<lb/>
3 DAY<lb/>
COUPON SALE<lb/>
CHp &amp; Save Now On Goodyear Guaranteed Auto Servicw.<lb/>
THURSDAY. FRIDAY. AND SATURDAY ONLY1<lb/>
41<lb/>
pSTflTIDH<lb/>
$1.00 Off<lb/>
any 2 large subs<lb/>
Coupon valid on deliveries<lb/>
and at Sub Station.<lb/>
Expires Sunday, Feb. 3rd. Mon Sa(<lb/>
Corner of 4th &amp; Reade w m m ?- i 1 a.m. ?1 p.m.<lb/>
Downtown 752-2183 Sun- nmU Pm<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
X OIL,LUBE &amp; FILTER CHANGE<lb/>
$11.88<lb/>
expires 2-2-85<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
'W ENGINE TUNE -UP<lb/>
 i .? ?hi Electronic Ignition<lb/>
- kdir Four Cylinder S29.88<lb/>
Expires 2-2-85<lb/>
. w<lb/>
Coupon<lb/>
WINTERIZE NOW<lb/>
$15.95<lb/>
Flush and refill radiator with 2 quarts of anti-freeze.<lb/>
Check all hoses &amp; belt expire 2-2-H5<lb/>
QOODlYEAm<lb/>
r?'<lb/>
$$ CAREER ADVANCEMENT<lb/>
Research Tnongle Pork, NC Employee ore now competing with Silicon Volley<lb/>
and crther top employers around the country for good employees There are<lb/>
Hundreds of jobs ovailible for Executives, Administrators. Professionals and<lb/>
Trainees Companies in RTP represent some of the largest companies .n the<lb/>
work) rf you would like a listing of these companies ond a statement on their<lb/>
principle activities with phone numbers ond oddresses.mail $5 00 to<lb/>
CAREER ADVANCEMENTS O BOX 12656,<lb/>
RESEARCH TkIANGLE PARK.N C 27709<lb/>
Money bock guarantee<lb/>
37 COMPANIES EMPLOYING 23,000 EMPLOYEES<lb/>
rU T<lb/>
FRANK'S PIZZA<lb/>
LOCATED AT THE PLAZA<lb/>
take outs available 756-8798<lb/>
i r<lb/>
1.00 OFF j I .go OFF<lb/>
Any whole<lb/>
pizza purchase<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
I I<lb/>
Anv whole sub<lb/>
' Exp. March 1, 1985J Exp. March 1, 1985<lb/>
ETIRE<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
a<lb/>
?<lb/>
20 ECU Discount<lb/>
For Students and Faculty<lb/>
on all prescription<lb/>
eyeglasses<lb/>
315 Parkview Common<lb/>
Acrow From Doctor Park<lb/>
t<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
Open 9-5:30<lb/>
MonFri.<lb/>
752-1446<lb/>
( orbit I<lb/>
(Malcolm Danan<lb/>
age and dis<lb/>
release<lb/>
University Center<lb/>
Ik vv<lb/>
3Amerudn Optometric Association<lb/>
Comprehensive Visual Examinations<lb/>
Optical Shop<lb/>
Complete Line of Contact Lenses<lb/>
10 percent Student Discount<lb/>
on lenses and supplies<lb/>
Dr. Dennis O'Neal<lb/>
608 E. Tenth St.<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
7 5 8-6600<lb/>
By Appointment<lb/>
Evening Hours<lb/>
Available<lb/>
Professional Center<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 Cargill<lb/>
University Professional Center<lb/>
608 E. 10th St. Greenville, NC<lb/>
758-4927<lb/>
G.BJRUDf<lb/>
!<lb/>
V servmof hreakfast dcuhj<lb/>
choose fromz eggs any style<lb/>
ho.77t, sausage or bacon<lb/>
grits, hash browns<lb/>
? fretook toast or pancakes<lb/>
Mendenhall Snack Bar<lb/>
mt. enrol VLL<lb/>
I<lb/>
HANGOVER SPECIALS<lb/>
Buy one and get one FREE!<lb/>
Chicken Biscuits<lb/>
With Coupon )<lb/>
expires 2-10-85<lb/>
cmtriy services<lb/>
I<lb/>
K<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS<lb/>
758-2098<lb/>
 the corner of Charles and 11 rh St<lb/>
vt the old creamery location<lb/>
T<lb/>
D00MESBUB<lb/>
-<lb/>
! Tl<lb/>
Di ss<lb/>
Prize <lb/>
long-av.<lb/>
True-<lb/>
Door -<lb/>
than 500<lb/>
Four previous bestsellini<lb/>
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The D<lb/>
The Pe .<lb/>
Doom -<lb/>
The D<lb/>
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 $2.95<lb/>
? - <lb/>
-?'???'<lb/>
? i<lb/>
I<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0009"/><lb/>
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R f i.xl MIO f,<lb/>
iS vq Iuoj paj t? 8<lb/>
wp 'qosqnvis J-jaoy <lb/>
1 .iiui 3jh.O f<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 29. 1985<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057692_0010"/><lb/>
I HI I ASI t AKOl INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JAM AKY 29, IS1' I'd.<lb/>
Dukes Defeat Pirates<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
Eric Esch scored 19 points to<lb/>
lead James Madison University<lb/>
to a 74-65 ECAC South Victory<lb/>
over ECU.<lb/>
James Madison had a balanced<lb/>
scoring attack with four players<lb/>
scoring in double figures. Along<lb/>
with Esch's 19, freshman guard<lb/>
Robert Griffin added 16 points.<lb/>
Forward John Newman chipped<lb/>
in 14 points and grabbed a team-<lb/>
high eight rebounds. Eric Brent<lb/>
was the fourth Duke in double<lb/>
figures with 10.<lb/>
Despite having the poorest<lb/>
field-goal shooting percentage in<lb/>
the ECAC South (47.3), James<lb/>
Madison shot 48.9 percent for the<lb/>
game. However, the cold weather<lb/>
rubbed off on the Pirates, as<lb/>
ECU managed to connect on just<lb/>
44.4 percent from the field.<lb/>
Although ECU hit five more<lb/>
field goals (28-23) than the<lb/>
Dukes, the Pirates were<lb/>
outscored 28-9 from the charity<lb/>
stripe. However, 25 of those free<lb/>
throws came in the second half,<lb/>
as the Pirates made a last-ditch<lb/>
comeback effort by sending JMU<lb/>
players to the line.<lb/>
JMU coach Lou Campanelli<lb/>
knew ECU would give it all thev<lb/>
had.<lb/>
"We knew Charlie's kids<lb/>
wouldn't quit Campanelli said.<lb/>
"It's a credit to Charlie and his<lb/>
program. We expected a tough<lb/>
game and we got it<lb/>
ECU coach Charlie Harrison<lb/>
showed the disappointment of<lb/>
the Pirate's seventh straight<lb/>
defeat.<lb/>
"I'm disappointed with the en-<lb/>
tire team Harrison said.<lb/>
"Their lack of concentration and<lb/>
aggressiveness 'with a purpose<lb/>
Our guys are looking for some<lb/>
kind of miracle ? but it's hard<lb/>
work that makes things happen<lb/>
Despite the snowfall, a vocal<lb/>
crowd was on hand in Minges<lb/>
Coliseum last night.<lb/>
Scott H a r d y and Curt<lb/>
Vanderhorst got the Pirates<lb/>
started by scoring the first four<lb/>
points. William Grady made a<lb/>
steal and used the glass to give<lb/>
ECU a 6-2 lead with 17.28 left in<lb/>
the first half. After Esch<lb/>
answered for JMU, Peter Dam<lb/>
hit a jump hook to make the<lb/>
Pirate lead four points (8-4)<lb/>
The Dukes then outscored<lb/>
ECU 10-2 behind the sharp<lb/>
shooting of Griffin and Brent<lb/>
The Pirates retaliated when Herb<lb/>
Dixon got an outlet pass and took<lb/>
it the length of the court to cut<lb/>
the JMU lead to 14-12. Jack<lb/>
Turnbill's three-point play with<lb/>
11:17 remaining gave E I the<lb/>
lead 15-14.<lb/>
When Brent hit a 10 footer<lb/>
with 3:00 left in the first half,<lb/>
JMU opened its biggest first-half<lb/>
lead, 25-19. A Turnbill seven<lb/>
foot jumper cut the lead to 25-21.<lb/>
Then, Dixon grabbed a missed<lb/>
JMU free throw ar.d dished a<lb/>
pass to Grady for a slam dunk.<lb/>
This cut tlie Dukes' lead to two,<lb/>
with 1:38 left in the first period<lb/>
The teams traded baskets as<lb/>
Hardy's 13 footer sent the team<lb/>
to the lockerroom with JMl<lb/>
leading 29-2<lb/>
Charlie Harrison felt ECl<lb/>
bench helped them stav in the<lb/>
contest.<lb/>
"In the first half, our bench<lb/>
helped keep us in the game<lb/>
Harrison remarked. "Thev<lb/>
helped prevent a blow out.<lb/>
"Herbie (Dixon) plaved with<lb/>
assertiveness Harrison con-<lb/>
tinued. "Jack and Peter (Turnbill<lb/>
and Dam) also played well ?<lb/>
they've been working really h<lb/>
in practice. I'm a firm believe: I<lb/>
'how well you practice is going lo<lb/>
determine how well vou nlav<lb/>
In the second half, Leon Be-<lb/>
lied the game at 29 29 with a tur<lb/>
naround jumper A Hardv steal<lb/>
led to a Dixon layup and a Pirate<lb/>
lead (31-29) with 19:20 remaining<lb/>
in the contest<lb/>
I he Pirates lost their steam as<lb/>
JMl outscored M 1 1f over<lb/>
the next five minutes. Newman<lb/>
and Griffin led the way for the<lb/>
Dukes, but it was Esch's inside<lb/>
score that gave JMl a 44 56<lb/>
vantage<lb/>
Vanderhorst made a steal and<lb/>
-erted it into a dunk with H 36<lb/>
remaining, giving ECU -<lb/>
something to veil about<lb/>
However, the cheering didn't<lb/>
long as the Pirates could only<lb/>
score two points in the next I<lb/>
and a half minutes Bv now,<lb/>
JML had taken command 5( -<lb/>
with 7:24 lei a<lb/>
The Dukes converted most<lb/>
their free throw- (17 of 23) down<lb/>
the stretch ECU matched JM'<lb/>
ring with their outs<lb/>
iting However, the Dukes<lb/>
were able to hold onto their li<lb/>
and win "4-65.<lb/>
Charlie Harrison was plea<lb/>
with the pla reshman gu<lb/>
Herb Dixon.<lb/>
"Herbie ke to win and hates<lb/>
ose Harrison commented<lb/>
"Ht  ne bull bv the hon<lb/>
He's not afraid to make<lb/>
mistakes He's goinj e on the<lb/>
r for ? ? .jrei. "<lb/>
Dixon felt that he plaved well<lb/>
e the teat:<lb/>
"I penetrated prett) well<lb/>
Dixon said. "I play with con-<lb/>
nce We Che team) need to<lb/>
put evervthing behind us and<lb/>
king to the future<lb/>
e Pirates nexi game is<lb/>
? nst EC AC South opponent<lb/>
George Mason<lb/>
Saturday ! eb 2 i I aii fax, ?<lb/>
Darnel Jackon ,22) of James Madison shoots ever ECU'S Kei.h Medge .24) in last niKh?Tpirau' k<lb/>
Swim Teams Split With ODU<lb/>
, I ; . s U I, i l v<lb/>
Lady Pirates Defeat Dukes<lb/>
For Eighth Straight Victory<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Hv IOW BROUN<lb/>
?Mff U ntrr<lb/>
ECL1 men's swim team<lb/>
defeated Old Dominion 69-44<lb/>
Saturday, while the ECU women<lb/>
. to the Monarch- 59-54.<lb/>
The ECU men were led bv<lb/>
Chris Pittelli with two freestyle<lb/>
- ' Eagle's t:rst place<lb/>
- in the two diving events.<lb/>
The men's event also saw a new<lb/>
shmen record in the<lb/>
20 .dividual medley for the<lb/>
Pirates. Bruce Brockschmidt top-<lb/>
ped the previous record ol<lb/>
1:56.88 bv clocking in at 1:56.S5.<lb/>
Scotia Miller performed im-<lb/>
pressively for the ECU women,<lb/>
taking three of the four in-<lb/>
dividual events that the Pirates<lb/>
won. ECU piled up second place<lb/>
points, but couldn't quite over-<lb/>
come the gap that the Monarch-<lb/>
opened.<lb/>
The absence of Chris Holman,<lb/>
the top Pirate woman, hurt E:CT<lb/>
severely. "Having Chris ill af-<lb/>
fected us said Coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe. "I'm really pleased with<lb/>
how women did without her.<lb/>
"The whole team swam well<lb/>
he added. "We continued the<lb/>
outstanding effort of our last few<lb/>
meets<lb/>
The meets brought the men's<lb/>
record to 5-3, while the Lady<lb/>
Pirates fell to 3-4. ECU travels to<lb/>
Chapel Hill to face the Tar Heels<lb/>
Wednesday at 6 p.m.<lb/>
Ml S SI ff AR)<lb/>
400-medley relay:(EC I Robinson.<lb/>
Hicks, Brockschmidt, Kaut<lb/>
3:331.<lb/>
1,000 freestyle: Brown (OD)<lb/>
9:36.89; Brennan (EC) 9:54.94;<lb/>
Hoffman (OD) 9:58.41.<lb/>
200 freestyle: Pittelli (E( I<lb/>
1:46 60; Cook (EC) 1:47.14;<lb/>
Cheney 1:48.59.<lb/>
50 freestyle: Kaut (EC) 22.08;<lb/>
Hidalgo (EC) 22.51; Purzycki<lb/>
(OD) 22.58.<lb/>
200 individual medley: Sargent<lb/>
(OD) 1:56.25; Brockschmidt<lb/>
(EC) 1:56.65; Brennan (EC)<lb/>
2:03.83.<lb/>
meter diving: Eagle (E ;<lb/>
Lydecker (OD); Durkin (EC).<lb/>
200 butterfly: Brown (OD)<lb/>
1:53.97; Brockschmidt (E <lb/>
1:57.09; U ray (EC) 1:59.52.<lb/>
100 freestyle: Pittelli (EC)<lb/>
48.02; Sargent (OD) 48.46; Kaut<lb/>
(1 C) 48.58.<lb/>
200 backstroke: Hidalgo (EC)<lb/>
2:01.11; Robinson (EC) 2:07.18;<lb/>
Horton (OD) 2:09.86.<lb/>
500 freestyle: Brown (OD)<lb/>
4:41.17; Cook (EC) 4:49.47;<lb/>
Hoffman (OD) 4:50.96.<lb/>
3-meter diving; Eagle (EC);<lb/>
I ydecker (OD); Seal (EC).<lb/>
200 breaststroke: Hicks (EC)<lb/>
2:14.8 5; Rock wood (OD)<lb/>
2:17.65; Smith 2:P.69.<lb/>
4O0-freestyle relay:(OD) Rogie,<lb/>
Hayduk, Casazza, Hoffman<lb/>
3:17.73.<lb/>
HOMES'SSl VfMARY<lb/>
400-medle relay: (OD) Parks,<lb/>
Horvatic, Simpirini, Winters<lb/>
4:07.85.<lb/>
1,000 freestyle S. Miller (EC)<lb/>
11:00.69; Dorn (OD) 11:16.19;<lb/>
Thomas (OD) 1 1:28.14.<lb/>
200 freestyle: S. Miller (EC)<lb/>
1:58.98; Pierson (EC) 2:01.02;<lb/>
Winters (OD) 2:04.03.<lb/>
50 freestyle: James (EC) 25.69;<lb/>
Park- (OD) 25.90; Banasik (OD)<lb/>
26.74.<lb/>
200-individual medlcv: Cholish<lb/>
(OD) 2:14.5; Poust (EC)<lb/>
2:15.9 Gorenflo (EC) 2:20.86.<lb/>
1-meter diving: Myers (OD); L.<lb/>
Miller (EC); Enderson (OD).<lb/>
200 butterfly: Simprini (OD)<lb/>
2:15.83; Burton 2:19.01; I udwig<lb/>
(EC) 2:23.20.<lb/>
100 freestyle: Cholish (OD)<lb/>
54.72; James (EC) 55.26; Pierson<lb/>
(EC) 55.49.<lb/>
200 backstroke: Winters (OD)<lb/>
2:15.16; Poust (EC) 2:15.36; Liv-<lb/>
ingston (EC) 2:17.74.<lb/>
500 freestyle: S. Miller (EC)<lb/>
5:20.49; Dorn (OD) 5:31.63;<lb/>
Thomas (OD).<lb/>
3-meter diving: Myers (OD); L.<lb/>
Miller (EC); Kerber (EC).<lb/>
200 breaststroke: Cholish (OD)<lb/>
2:29.36; Horvatic (OD) 2:32.26;<lb/>
Ennis (EC) 2:36.05.<lb/>
400- freest vie relay:(EC) Poust,<lb/>
(iorentlo, McPherson, James<lb/>
3:49.58<lb/>
Track Team Shines In Florida<lb/>
By BILL MTTCHELI<lb/>
SUff Wrllt<lb/>
The ECU men's track team<lb/>
took three first-place finishes in<lb/>
the I lorida Invitational Track<lb/>
Meet on Sunday.<lb/>
This has been the third con-<lb/>
secutive meet that the Pirates<lb/>
have done well in, in some of the<lb/>
most competetitive meets on the<lb/>
eastern seaboard. Through their<lb/>
success, ECU has proved<lb/>
themselves to have a good track<lb/>
program.<lb/>
In the 55-meter dash, Lee<lb/>
McNeil took first place with a<lb/>
time of 6.21 seconds, which<lb/>
qualified him for the nationals.<lb/>
Three of his last four races have<lb/>
been under the NCAA's qualify-<lb/>
ing time of 6.22.<lb/>
McNeil was pleased with his<lb/>
performance on Sunday.<lb/>
"I felt real good about the<lb/>
race McNeil said. "There was<lb/>
some real good competition<lb/>
there. It was great to win<lb/>
Teammate Erskine Evans also<lb/>
did verv well in the 55-meter<lb/>
dash. Evans finished second with<lb/>
a time of 6.29 seconds ? a per-<lb/>
sonal best.<lb/>
Continuing his winning ways<lb/>
from a week ago, Craig White<lb/>
took first place in the 55-meter<lb/>
high hurdles with a time of 7.29.<lb/>
In the 400-meter run, Julian<lb/>
Anderson came in first with a<lb/>
time of 48.53. Anderson showed<lb/>
great effort in this race. In the<lb/>
backstretch, an opponent stepped<lb/>
on Anderson's leg ? knocking<lb/>
his shoe oi'f and making Julian<lb/>
finish the last 110 meters with one<lb/>
shoe on. In the same race, team-<lb/>
mate Phil Estes came in third<lb/>
with a time 49.04.<lb/>
In the 4 X 400-meter relay,<lb/>
ECU finished in third place with<lb/>
a time of 3:19.40. In the race, the<lb/>
Pirates were without the presence<lb/>
of Chris Brooks.<lb/>
ECU track coach Bill Carson<lb/>
was happy that the Pirates were<lb/>
able to compete well, despite the<lb/>
long trip.<lb/>
"I would really like to com-<lb/>
mend the team for doing so<lb/>
well Carson remarked. "Our<lb/>
season is really shaping up<lb/>
 o-Sport tdltof<lb/>
The ECU women's basketball<lb/>
team defeated James Madison<lb/>
last night 70-67, to hand the<lb/>
Dukes their first loss in EC AC<lb/>
South play and give the Ladv<lb/>
Pirates sole possession of first<lb/>
place in the conference.<lb/>
ECU trailed by as manv as nine<lb/>
points before tying the score at 61<lb/>
at the end of regulation.<lb/>
In overtime, ECU tied the<lb/>
score at 63 with 4:50 remaining<lb/>
and was ahead 67 to 63 at the two<lb/>
minute mark.<lb/>
JMU trimmed the Pirate lead<lb/>
to two on a bucket by Alisa Har-<lb/>
ris. ECU responded with a Mom-<lb/>
que Pompili free throw for a<lb/>
68-65 Pirate advantage.<lb/>
With only 20 seconds remain-<lb/>
ing in the contest Sylvia Bragg hit<lb/>
Lorainne Foster on a long pass<lb/>
for a layup to put the Lady<lb/>
Pirates up by five (70-65). The<lb/>
Dukes scored at the buzzer to<lb/>
make the final margin of defeat<lb/>
three points.<lb/>
"We were taking the ball out<lb/>
under our basket and Anita<lb/>
Anderson screened Lorainne's<lb/>
(Foster) defender and Sylvia<lb/>
(Bragg) hit her for the layup<lb/>
ECU coach Emily Manwaring<lb/>
said in describing the key play of<lb/>
the contest. "That play really-<lb/>
broke their back<lb/>
Foster led the Lady Pirates in<lb/>
scoring with 24 points, with 14<lb/>
coming in the second period.<lb/>
Lisa Squirewell scored 12<lb/>
second-half points to help the<lb/>
Pirate comeback and finished<lb/>
with 19 points and 10 rebounds.<lb/>
Anderson scored 12 points and<lb/>
pulled down seven rebounds to<lb/>
increase her consecutive double<lb/>
figures streak to 13 games.<lb/>
For the game, ECU shot 30 of<lb/>
64 from the field for 47 percent,<lb/>
while the Pirate defense limited<lb/>
the Dukes to 37 percent on 27 of<lb/>
74 shooting.<lb/>
"We pressed them most of the<lb/>
game but were unable to get<lb/>
many turnovers Manwaring<lb/>
said. "They were burning us<lb/>
when we played our man-to-man<lb/>
defense. We switched to a zone<lb/>
defense in the second half and did<lb/>
a much better job<lb/>
With the win, ECU has now<lb/>
won eight games in a row and has<lb/>
outscored the opposition over<lb/>
that period 610 to 478.<lb/>
The win streak is the longest<lb/>
for a ladv Pirate basketball t<lb/>
since the 1981-82 season, and this<lb/>
year's team could match<lb/>
'81S2 total witl<lb/>
UNC-Wi 1 mington r hur s J a v<lb/>
night m Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
"We plaved a weak defensive<lb/>
first half Manwaring s<lb/>
"But, I was reailv proud of the<lb/>
way our team battled back ? v.e<lb/>
showed a lot o guts and came<lb/>
back to win<lb/>
James Madison effectiv civ<lb/>
defensed the ECl transition<lb/>
game in the opening halt, limiting<lb/>
the Ladv Pirates to just three<lb/>
fast break opportunities.<lb/>
In the second the JMl<lb/>
I ' :<lb/>
he ECl running<lb/>
? I i j -even fa<lb/>
opp ring on nine ol<lb/>
lo for the game.<lb/>
JML wa b) freshman<lb/>
center Harris, who had 15 point-<lb/>
. ds in the contest.<lb/>
VA " the loss JMU drop- to<lb/>
13-4 a and 4 in the league.<lb/>
1 ad Pirate who have<lb/>
now w ? consecutive league<lb/>
i back to the 1983-84<lb/>
seas ? ire 10-8 overall and 5-0 in<lb/>
EC Ac South action.<lb/>
Lady<lb/>
B RK K Mt OKMAC<lb/>
The Ladv Pirates got an<lb/>
outstanding effort from junior<lb/>
guard Sylvia Bragg fi<lb/>
23 points, in defeat .<lb/>
University 78-67 n a n<lb/>
conference game Saturday night<lb/>
"Svlvia Bragg nad one ol hci<lb/>
best game pi<lb/>
coach Emily M i<lb/>
"Her shot selecti ellent<lb/>
and she reall) play<lb/>
game<lb/>
Bragg, who entered the<lb/>
shooting only 37 percent,<lb/>
blistered the tie hitting run<lb/>
12 shot- from th<lb/>
of seven froi<lb/>
season high 23<lb/>
The I ady H .<lb/>
bv onh thn<lb/>
6:35 mark<lb/>
Ladv Pirati<lb/>
12-unan-w?<lb/>
coming<lb/>
Navy Dei<lb/>
In ECAC<lb/>
By M OT1(M)PrH<lb/>
David k ?<lb/>
second-ha<lb/>
Naval <lb/>
ference v<lb/>
dav rughi 1 V .<lb/>
Rot<lb/>
22 shots fron<lb/>
11 of 13 fron. ? ?<lb/>
with a career .<lb/>
also manage<lb/>
high 18 ret<lb/>
three shots<lb/>
Vernon B : ???<lb/>
point-<lb/>
M;dshipmen Fre<lb/>
Rees added 1<lb/>
fouling out<lb/>
ECl coach<lb/>
praised Nav ? ?<lb/>
formance<lb/>
"They've got a<lb/>
team Han s ?<lb/>
have verv few - <lb/>
keep<lb/>
lv"<lb/>
ECU shot <lb/>
field in the I<lb/>
the Pirates .oolec:<lb/>
siderabiy in<lb/>
shooting 32 3 pet<lb/>
The 4,22 far y<lb/>
fired up early as E(<lb/>
Roy Smith tip<lb/>
Scott Ha<lb/>
Vanderhorst Icngl<lb/>
Pirate lead to 8 - -<lb/>
in the opening ha<lb/>
Robinson. Butler<lb/>
-pearheaded the Navy<lb/>
ing the Mi<lb/>
15-13 with 12 54 rema 1 .<lb/>
first half Keith S<lb/>
Ba<lb/>
giving ECl<lb/>
(17-15)<lb/>
The two tean<lb/>
for the next nine n<lb/>
Dixon then gral<lb/>
and drove the leng<lb/>
court -  -? g<lb/>
Pirates withii<lb/>
36-35. Navy coach Pa<lb/>
9<lb/>
f<lb/>
f<lb/>
f<lb/>
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i<lb/>
1<lb/>
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?<lb/>
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f<lb/>
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9<lb/>
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? ? m n4 ? <lb/>
Stud.<lb/>
Production<lb/>
<lb/>
The Alpha-<lb/>
January 31<lb/>
through<lb/>
February 2, 1985<lb/>
ft<lb/>
6:30 p.m. M:<lb/>
Anita Anderson (42) -nd Lisa Squirewell (3D are two ver imnortan.<lb/>
reasons the Lady Pirates are undefeated in the ECAC South th<lb/>
season. ECU has now won eight consecutive game and hasn't lost to a<lb/>
conference foe in eight games, dating back to a loss last season t?<lb/>
George Mason. They will try to extend both streaks Thursday ni.hi ?<lb/>
Minges against I NC-W. 5 ,Rni ,n<lb/>
 Tickets Available at<lb/>
t<lb/>
f<lb/>
r<lb/>
J All other'<lb/>
 No doc<lb/>
6?????????<lb/>
ECU Stud.<lb/>
One guest per<lb/>
<lb/>
A<lb/>
aaMtaaa<lb/>
1 ? j"?.<lb/>
f<lb/>
'1<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0011"/><lb/>
irates<lb/>
I eon Bass<lb/>
w ;th a tur-<lb/>
d steal<lb/>
i Pirate<lb/>
naming<lb/>
? earn as<lb/>
5 5 over<lb/>
Newman<lb/>
oi the<lb/>
inside<lb/>
i  J6 .id<lb/>
a and<lb/>
?aiu<lb/>
?ut.<lb/>
onl<lb/>
? five<lb/>
v.<lb/>
56 40<lb/>
'<lb/>
down<lb/>
Ml <lb/>
? de<lb/>
I) es<lb/>
?ad<lb/>
hates<lb/>
? ake<lb/>
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on<lb/>
lx, Va<lb/>
Dukes<lb/>
Victory<lb/>
AR<lb/>
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man<lb/>
?<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
? ? 84<lb/>
1 5<lb/>
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i<lb/>
ti<lb/>
'AS<lb/>
31<lb/>
? 8 Humhrrt<lb/>
12<lb/>
Ml?31)arei???er .mportam<lb/>
?ed in the K South fhjs<lb/>
?renames and hasn't losl to a<lb/>
hack to a loss ast season IO<lb/>
both streaks Thursday night<lb/>
in<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 1985<lb/>
11<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
 o-Spon? Mltuc<lb/>
The Lady Pirates got an<lb/>
outstanding effort from junior<lb/>
guard Sylvia Bragg, who scored<lb/>
23 points, in defeating Radford<lb/>
University 78-67 in a non-<lb/>
conference game Saturday night.<lb/>
"Sylvia Bragg had one of her<lb/>
best games of the season ECU<lb/>
coach Emily Manwaring said.<lb/>
"Her shot selection was excellent<lb/>
and she really played a fine floor<lb/>
game<lb/>
Bragg, who entered the contest<lb/>
shooting only 37 percent,<lb/>
Mistered the nets hitting nine of<lb/>
12 shots from the floor and five<lb/>
of seven from the foul line for a<lb/>
season-high 23 points.<lb/>
The I ady Highlanders trailed<lb/>
bv onl three points (25-22) at the<lb/>
6:35 mark in the first half. The<lb/>
1 ady Pirates then reeled off<lb/>
12-unanswered points, with eight<lb/>
coming from Lorainne Foster, to<lb/>
Down Radford For Ninth Win<lb/>
take a 37-22 lead with 4:13 re-<lb/>
maining in the opening period.<lb/>
"Lorainne Foster is really pla-<lb/>
ing well now Manwaring<lb/>
Emily Manwaring<lb/>
saidShe hit some long bombs<lb/>
before the end of the half, that<lb/>
put is out in front<lb/>
Radford was able to reduce the<lb/>
Navy Defeats Bucs<lb/>
In ECAC Contest<lb/>
By SCOTT COOPER<lb/>
 o-N?xrfi KdHof<lb/>
David Robinson scored 24<lb/>
econd-half points to lift the<lb/>
a al Academy to an 87-68 con-<lb/>
ference victory over ECU Satur-<lb/>
day night in Minges Coliseum.<lb/>
Robinson connected on 14 of<lb/>
22 shots from the field and went<lb/>
II of 13 from the line, finishing<lb/>
with a career-high 39 points. He<lb/>
also managed to grab a game-<lb/>
high 18 rebounds, while rejecting<lb/>
:hree shots.<lb/>
Vernon Butler contributed 20<lb/>
points and 11 rebounds for the<lb/>
Midshipmen. Freshman Cliff<lb/>
Rees added nine points before<lb/>
fouling out.<lb/>
ECU coach Charlie Harrison<lb/>
praised Navy for their fine per-<lb/>
formance.<lb/>
"They've got a very good<lb/>
team Harrison said. "They<lb/>
have very few weaknesses, they<lb/>
keep ou on your toes defensive-<lb/>
ly<lb/>
ECU shot 50 percent from the<lb/>
field in the first half. However,<lb/>
the Pirates cooled of con-<lb/>
siderably in the second half,<lb/>
shooting 32.3 percent.<lb/>
The 4,22 fans got the Pirates<lb/>
fired up early as ECU led 2-0 on a<lb/>
Rov Smith tip-in. Jumpers by<lb/>
tt Hardy and Curt<lb/>
vanderhorst lenghthened the<lb/>
Pirate lead to 8- with 16:16 left<lb/>
'he opening half.<lb/>
Robinson, Butler and Rees<lb/>
spearheaded the Navy attack giv-<lb/>
ing the Midshipmen the lead<lb/>
15-13 with 12:54 remaining in the<lb/>
first half. Keith Sledge and Leon<lb/>
Bass retaliated with jumpshots,<lb/>
giving ECU a two-point lead<lb/>
117-15).<lb/>
The two teams traded baskets<lb/>
for the next nine minutes. Herb<lb/>
Dixon then grabbed a rebound<lb/>
and drove the lenghth of the<lb/>
court to score and bring the<lb/>
Pirates to within one point,<lb/>
36 35. Navy coach Paul Evans<lb/>
was hit with a technical foul at<lb/>
the 2:28 mark. William Grady<lb/>
connected on one of the free<lb/>
throws to knot the game at 36-36.<lb/>
However, the Midshipmen<lb/>
managed to keep their composure<lb/>
to lead 43-40 at intermission.<lb/>
Navy coach Paul Evans was<lb/>
pleased with his team's play, but<lb/>
felt that their first-half play<lb/>
wasn't perfect.<lb/>
"We weren't patient enough in<lb/>
the first half Evans said. "We<lb/>
needed to make more passes and<lb/>
work the ball around ? we ac-<lb/>
complished that in the second<lb/>
period<lb/>
The Pirates stayed close<lb/>
throughout the second half,<lb/>
despite the red-hot shooting of<lb/>
6-11 center David Robinson.<lb/>
After being down by as many as<lb/>
nine points (51-42), ECU clipped<lb/>
the Navy lead to 57-55 on a<lb/>
Sledge 18-foot jumper with 12:48<lb/>
left in the game.<lb/>
That was the closest that the<lb/>
Pirates could get. As the Mid-<lb/>
shipmen took command, they<lb/>
outscored ECU 24-4 over the next<lb/>
nine minutes of play. During the<lb/>
Navy scoring rampage, Robinson<lb/>
accounted for 18 points.<lb/>
With the victory, Navy extends<lb/>
their winning streak to 10 games.<lb/>
ECU had a balanced scoring<lb/>
attack that was led once again by<lb/>
sophomore Grady with 15 points.<lb/>
Vanderhorst and Sledge added 12<lb/>
points each. Jack Turnbill added<lb/>
nine. Dixon was 4-4 from the<lb/>
field for eight points.<lb/>
Navy coach Evans thought that<lb/>
ECU is an improved team that<lb/>
has many capabilities.<lb/>
"They have got some very<lb/>
good athletes Evans remarked.<lb/>
"They've got good shooters and<lb/>
played well on their outside<lb/>
game, but it's hard to win with<lb/>
just that ? but I know Charlie<lb/>
will have his team ready come<lb/>
tournament time<lb/>
m<lb/>
9<lb/>
?<lb/>
o<lb/>
 "Student Unions <lb/>
! Production Committee mmmm,<lb/>
The Alpha-Omega Players<lb/>
In<lb/>
" M A fe Neil Simon's <lb/>
California<lb/>
Suite<lb/>
January 31<lb/>
through<lb/>
February 2, 1985<lb/>
m<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
m<lb/>
$<lb/>
?<lb/>
9<lb/>
' <lb/>
9<lb/>
. m<lb/>
?? 9<lb/>
6:30 p.m. MSC, rm 244 <lb/>
Tickets Available at Central Ticket Office I<lb/>
ECU Students $8.50<lb/>
One guest per student $8.50<lb/>
J All others $12.50<lb/>
l No door sales M<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
9<lb/>
1tmfm? ? ? i a mm mm<lb/>
margin by only two points and<lb/>
went to the lockcrroom trailing<lb/>
the Lady Pirates, 45-32.<lb/>
In the second half, ECU led by<lb/>
as many as 19 points, until Rad-<lb/>
ford rallied to trim the Pirate lead<lb/>
to 10 with 9:44 remaining in the<lb/>
game.<lb/>
However, The Lady<lb/>
Highlanders were unable to get<lb/>
any closer, as the Lady Pirates'<lb/>
held on to get their seventh-<lb/>
consecutive victory.<lb/>
Anita Anderson contributed 16<lb/>
points and eight rebounds to the<lb/>
Lady Pirate win, giving her<lb/>
!2-consecutive games in double-<lb/>
figure scoring.<lb/>
Foster was the only other<lb/>
player in double figures for ECU,<lb/>
finishing with 10 points.<lb/>
Bragg, in addition to leading<lb/>
both teams in scoring, pulled<lb/>
down seven rebounds and dished-<lb/>
out six assists.<lb/>
From the field, ECU was<lb/>
outscored by two points by the<lb/>
Lady Highlanders, but the Lady<lb/>
Pirates scored 13 more points<lb/>
from the foul line for the<lb/>
11-point victory.<lb/>
Manwaring attributed ECU's<lb/>
dominance from the foul line to<lb/>
her team's quickness. "We were<lb/>
quicker than they were and they<lb/>
were just unable to stay with us<lb/>
she said. "We were able to work<lb/>
the ball in for some good shots<lb/>
and they were fouling us<lb/>
ECU hit 24 out of 35 free<lb/>
throws while Radford connected<lb/>
on only 11 out of 17.<lb/>
For the game, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
shot 46 percent from the field<lb/>
(27-58) while limiting Radford to<lb/>
only 37-percent shooting (28-75).<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' used a varie-<lb/>
ty of defenses throughout the<lb/>
game to force the Highlanders in-<lb/>
to 28 turnovers.<lb/>
"In the first half, we used our<lb/>
full-court and half-court presses<lb/>
and we were able to bulid up a<lb/>
10-point lead Manwaring said.<lb/>
of 24 shots from the field<lb/>
The Lady Pirates' also blocked<lb/>
eight shots in the game, adding to<lb/>
7 think the girls are really playing<lb/>
well now. Our confidence has really<lb/>
improved over this winning streak, we<lb/>
think we can win every game. "<lb/>
?Emily Manwaring<lb/>
SOFT CONTACTS<lb/>
DAILY WEAR $40.00pair<lb/>
EXTEND! D<lb/>
WEAK $60.00pair<lb/>
IINTLD $70.00pair<lb/>
(blue aqua.<lb/>
( green brown)<lb/>
. 7 STUDENT ID REQUIRED<lb/>
I h?- .vlo?- prkes do ikm unhide fees for protvsMOfvd ? r ? ?<lb/>
I rotess&amp;mal fees depend on Wiw type And voui previous son<lb/>
lens rxpenem i<lb/>
Call for more information ? 756-9404.<lb/>
OnOMOWC<lb/>
?Y?CAR?C?HT?Rf:<lb/>
l)rs Hoihs W Svihai<lb/>
"In the second half, we decided<lb/>
to go to a man defense to put<lb/>
pressure on them. We did a good<lb/>
job of denying them the ball and<lb/>
made them shoot from the out-<lb/>
side. For the game, their starting<lb/>
guards were only able to hit eight<lb/>
the Radford offensive woes.<lb/>
"1 think the girls are really<lb/>
playing well now Manwaring<lb/>
said. "Our confidence has really<lb/>
improved over this winning<lb/>
streak, we think we can win every<lb/>
game we play<lb/>
Kappa Sig<lb/>
lil sisters<lb/>
present<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
TUE. Jan 29, 1985 8:30-1:00a. m<lb/>
Adm. SI.50 18vrs. $1.00<lb/>
.10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
PI KAPP<lb/>
present DRAFT NITE<lb/>
D. Jan 30, 1985 8:30-l:OOa.m.<lb/>
Adm. SI.50 18yrs. $1.00<lb/>
.10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
2 Gal<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
KROGER DELUXE<lb/>
Natural Flavor<lb/>
ice Cream<lb/>
v2 Gal.<lb/>
Ctn.<lb/>
2<lb/>
PREVIOUSLY FROZE<lb/>
20-30 CT. HEADLESS<lb/>
Jumbo<lb/>
Shrimp. . Lb.<lb/>
REGULAR OR UNSCENTED<lb/>
LAUNDRY<lb/>
Tide<lb/>
Detergent<lb/>
320 02. ? M<lb/>
Boxes mm<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
20 02.<lb/>
Boxes<lb/>
HOLLY FARMS CUT UP<lb/>
MIXED FRYER PARTS<lb/>
OR GRADE A<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
Fryers<lb/>
LIMIT<lb/>
3 PKGS<lb/>
PLEASE<lb/>
KROGER GRADE A<lb/>
Large<lb/>
Eggs<lb/>
D02<lb/>
1<lb/>
V<lb/>
J<lb/>
39<lb/>
SANDY MAC<lb/>
All Meat<lb/>
Bologna<lb/>
THIN CRUST PEPPERONI &amp; MUSHROOM OR<lb/>
SAUSAGE &amp; MUSHROOM<lb/>
Deli-Fresh y $g50<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
WE WILL DOUBLE<lb/>
5 MFGS. COUPONS (UP<lb/>
TO 50 FACE VALUE) FOR<lb/>
?, ? EVERY $10?? PURCHASE<lb/>
NOW THRU FEB. 2, 1985. PLEASE<lb/>
SEE DETAILS IN-STORE.<lb/>
EXAMPLE<lb/>
22 2J82XH 5 COUPONS<lb/>
20 PURCHASE  10 COUPONS<lb/>
l$100 PURCHASE . . 50 COUPONS<lb/>
EASTERN<lb/>
RED ROME OR<lb/>
Red Delicious<lb/>
Apples<lb/>
3<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
Bag<lb/>
1<lb/>
RIPE<lb/>
Golden<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
Lb.<lb/>
19?<lb/>
?! ?ll ? . ? l<lb/>
f<lb/>
I<lb/>
i<lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0012"/><lb/>
12<lb/>
THF EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JANUARY 29, 1985<lb/>
 IRS Wrestling Begins<lb/>
Bv JKANNETTF. ROTH<lb/>
M?ff Wrllrt<lb/>
Registration for the Budweiser-<lb/>
IRS arm wrestling tournament<lb/>
will be held until 5:00 p.m. this<lb/>
Wednesday<lb/>
All participants will receive a<lb/>
tree t-shirt so no one loses out on<lb/>
the action. The tournament will<lb/>
begin Feb. 4, so start pumping<lb/>
that iron nou<lb/>
Racquetball doubles competi-<lb/>
tion vsill also begin Feb. 4. Be<lb/>
Mire to register by Wednesday,<lb/>
Jan. 30. All matches will be<lb/>
played at the Minges Coliseum<lb/>
racquetball courts - get out there<lb/>
and practice before it's too late.<lb/>
Up and coming activities and<lb/>
registration dates include: swim<lb/>
meet, Feb. 4-7; co-rec bowling.<lb/>
Feb. 4-5; IRS .lobbies weight lif-<lb/>
ting meet, Feb. 11-13; IRS wrestl-<lb/>
ing tournament. Feb. 18-20. All<lb/>
these activities begin in February.<lb/>
Get your teams readv to par-<lb/>
ticipate and have fun.<lb/>
I ast week the annual IRS<lb/>
 ideo games tournament was held<lb/>
in the gameroom of Aycock dor-<lb/>
mitorv. A record number of<lb/>
students entered the one-day af-<lb/>
fair. Thirty seven students push-<lb/>
ed, pulled, pressed and joysticked<lb/>
their way into oblivion. The<lb/>
leader changed hands many times<lb/>
while previous machine high<lb/>
scores were set and reset.<lb/>
As the dust settled, Tim<lb/>
Everette won the men's division<lb/>
with a grand total of 471.600<lb/>
points - a new intramural record.<lb/>
Henrod Demby took second<lb/>
place with 336,410 points. An-<lb/>
toinette Bryant finessed her way<lb/>
into the female championship<lb/>
with a total of 206.800. Kern<lb/>
Bates finished second with<lb/>
186,800.<lb/>
New machine high scores were<lb/>
set by a number of contestants.<lb/>
Brett Schechter, Mike Sheard,<lb/>
Brian Hogan, Tony Sharpe,<lb/>
Tommy Skenteris. Alonzo Banks<lb/>
and John Tanner should all be<lb/>
congratulated for their efforts.<lb/>
Check out the outdoor recrea-<lb/>
tion program for Whitewater raf-<lb/>
ting, backpacking and adventure<lb/>
trips. These programs are<lb/>
available to all students, faculty<lb/>
and staff. Several trips are up-<lb/>
coming in March and February,<lb/>
so make your spring break plans<lb/>
now.<lb/>
'LIVE'<lb/>
For more information regar-<lb/>
ding any aspect of the IRS pro-<lb/>
gram, call 757-6387 or drop by<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym.<lb/>
Remember to listen to the Ten-<lb/>
nis Shoe Talkshow every Tuesday<lb/>
and Thursday at 2:30 and 5:30<lb/>
for highlights and interviews of<lb/>
intramural action on 91.3 fm ?<lb/>
WZMB.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
M-F 12 noon-1:30 p.m.<lb/>
M-F 3:30-6:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 8 p.m9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
Sat Sun.<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
9a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
9a.m5:30p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
M-Th 10a.m12 noon<lb/>
M-Th 2 p.m6 p.m.<lb/>
K &amp; W Productio is<lb/>
Inc.<lb/>
Present<lb/>
The 4 'Cuzzoo Crew 9s Razor 9s Edge<lb/>
D.J. Service<lb/>
Featuring the best in Dance Music,<lb/>
Rock-n-Roll, Top 40, Beach and Oldies<lb/>
Bose 200 wan "Music Master" amplifier with sound equalizer.<lb/>
Specializing in mixing and scratching.<lb/>
Dazling light show and special effects with mirror ball and strobe light,<lb/>
Five years combined experience as Elbo Room D.Js.<lb/>
H e Cater all Parties, Socials and Mixers<lb/>
Specializing in Fraternities, Sororities and High Schools<lb/>
For All Your Party Needs, Just Call 752-1463 - Ask 4 Watts<lb/>
Member of Dixie Dance kings' Record Pool<lb/>
? Relerenccs Available on Request ?<lb/>
STUDENTS y IT<lb/>
MENS AND WOMENS OVERCOATS 9.95 up<lb/>
TRENCH COATS 5.95<lb/>
MEN'S SUIT VEST 2.95<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT Just In !<lb/>
NEW SHIPMENT OF SWEATERS 5.95<lb/>
-P<lb/>
CORDUROY SHIRTS (REG.4.95)<lb/>
BUY 4, GET 1 FREE<lb/>
SV<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/>
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 MUCH MORE.<lb/>
COIN AND RING MAN<lb/>
Corner Evans and 4th St.<lb/>
?vt Recycled Estate Clothing From NYC, Boston, Philadelphia, etc.<lb/>
AO?(NTISiO<lb/>
IT POLICY<lb/>
Each of these advertised ims ? required to be read ? -? t U<lb/>
sa1? a' o beio? the advertised price n nc a&amp;p Store en rp' as<lb/>
spec ific a' v noted n ths ad<lb/>
PRICES EFFECTIVE THRU WED. JAN 30 AT A4P IN GREENVII 1 1<lb/>
I ITEMS OFFERED FOR SALE NOT AVAILABLE TO OTHER RETAIL DEALERS OR WHOLESALERS <lb/>
I VOUR LOCAL A&amp;P INgreenwlle) FOR DETAILS!<lb/>
mfT ' VM "eatseecssle Ta<lb/>
?<lb/>
WESTERN GRAIN FED BEEF<lb/>
WHOLE<lb/>
IJOf GROUND MEAT SALE<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
MORE THAN 73?o LEAN<lb/>
Top Sirloin ag Ground Beef<lb/>
Without<lb/>
Tenderloin<lb/>
Bone-In<lb/>
16-19 lb.<lb/>
avg<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
Cut Free Into<lb/>
Sirloin Steaks &amp;<lb/>
Trimmings<lb/>
MORE THAN 8' lI AN<lb/>
Ground -<lb/>
Beef<lb/>
MORE TmAN l Lf AN<lb/>
100o CHUCK<lb/>
Ground H<lb/>
Chuck . I<lb/>
MORE THAN I ? JAN<lb/>
'00. ROUNO<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
Round<lb/>
1<lb/>
98<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
3 lbs<lb/>
or<lb/>
more<lb/>
A&amp;P QUALITY<lb/>
U.S.DA INSPECTED<lb/>
Smoked Picnic I Fryer Drumsticks<lb/>
(SLICED ib 88c<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
507<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
JUICY<lb/>
California Oranges<lb/>
FIRST OF THE SEASON<lb/>
Juicy Nectarines<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
DECORATED OR<lb/>
aiuroc<lb/>
m Savings -<lb/>
ArtsN'FLowers<lb/>
Scottowels<lb/>
toiwefc<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH<lb/>
10.00 OR MORE ORDER<lb/>
big<lb/>
roll<lb/>
JANE PARKER ROUND TOP OR<lb/>
Sandwich<lb/>
Bread <lb/>
?!JJ.<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH 10 00 OR MORE ORDER<lb/>
24<lb/>
loaves<lb/>
HOMOGENIZED<lb/>
Silverbrook<lb/>
i<lb/>
70<lb/>
i? i- ?  i i ?p, mm<lb/>
r??asM-?-MMrM<lb/>
mmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057692_0013"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>