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<pb facs="00057714_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(ftamltman<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.57<lb/>
Wednesday, May 15, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 12,000<lb/>
Woman Seeks $180,000 From<lb/>
ECU Accounting Professor<lb/>
Graduation '85<lb/>
More than 2.500 graduate and undergraduate students received their diplomas at ECU's 76th commence-<lb/>
ment ceremonies held the Saturday following spring semester exams.<lb/>
Dole A ddresses Graduates<lb/>
ECt News Bureau &amp; Slaff Reports<lb/>
Speaking at ECU's 76th com-<lb/>
mencement ceremonies and to<lb/>
more than 2.500 graduates, U.S.<lb/>
Transportation Secretary<lb/>
Elizabeth Dole told anxious<lb/>
graduates to continue to be flexi-<lb/>
ble, adaptable and creative after<lb/>
leaving ECU.<lb/>
"Graduates today have been<lb/>
prepared for a new and different<lb/>
world she said. "As you leave<lb/>
this campus, don't forget why<lb/>
you came. So long as the books<lb/>
arc open, minds can never be<lb/>
closed<lb/>
A native of Salisbury, N.C.<lb/>
and the wife of Sen. Robert Dole<lb/>
(R-Kansas), Dole has been a<lb/>
member of the Reagan Cabinet<lb/>
Elizabeth Dole<lb/>
since 1983. She is a graduate of<lb/>
Duke University and Oxford<lb/>
University and holds a law degree<lb/>
from Harvard University. She<lb/>
was awarded with an honorary<lb/>
degree, the cotor of letters, from<lb/>
ECU. This makes the third<lb/>
honorary doctorate degree ECU<lb/>
has given.<lb/>
Following the graduation, a<lb/>
reception was held for Dole and<lb/>
other guests at Chancellor John<lb/>
Howell's home. "At the first<lb/>
commencement in 1909, 13 were<lb/>
graduated from the two-year pro-<lb/>
gram. Today, we awarded over<lb/>
2,500 graduate and<lb/>
undergraduate degrees and the<lb/>
university's third honorary doc-<lb/>
torate. That is indeed an im-<lb/>
pressive advance Howell said.<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Cs-Ncwi Kdilor<lb/>
A Washington woman has fil-<lb/>
ed suit in Beaufort County<lb/>
Superior Court claiming that<lb/>
ECU accounting professor Gor-<lb/>
man W. Ledbetter obtained<lb/>
ownership in a dry-cleaning<lb/>
business by misrepresentation.<lb/>
Grace Corbett Leggett said in a<lb/>
complaint filed through Green-<lb/>
ville lawyer Sara Krome that<lb/>
Ledbetter, 56, purposely misled<lb/>
her into selling what was former-<lb/>
ly known as Leggett Cleaners ? a<lb/>
family business operated by her<lb/>
late husband Ashley Grey Leg-<lb/>
gett.<lb/>
Ledbetter purchased the<lb/>
business located at 130 W. 2nd<lb/>
St. in Washington on Aug. 2,<lb/>
1983. As part of the arrange-<lb/>
ment, Mrs. Leggett received<lb/>
$5,215 in cash, release from a<lb/>
$9,784 debt and bonds worth<lb/>
$60,000.<lb/>
During the course of the<lb/>
negotiations, Ledbetter said he<lb/>
would continue to operate the<lb/>
business on behalf of a corpera-<lb/>
tion titled Leggett ? Merchant of<lb/>
Cleanliness, Inc. A name intend-<lb/>
ed to honor Leggett's deceased<lb/>
husband and to allow Ledbetter<lb/>
to reap the benefits of the<lb/>
business.<lb/>
Ledbetter claimed the bonds he<lb/>
used to purchase the majority of<lb/>
the business would be backed by<lb/>
all assets of his new corperation<lb/>
(Leggett ? Merchant of<lb/>
Cleanliness). However, according<lb/>
to the lawsuit, Ledbetter made<lb/>
"no attempt to open a dry-<lb/>
cleaning establishment, therefore<lb/>
he had no intention or ability to<lb/>
assure repayment of the bonds<lb/>
According to Ledbetter, the<lb/>
charges are unfounded.<lb/>
"Anytime you enter into a<lb/>
business venture you try to make<lb/>
a profit. The negative aspect is<lb/>
suffering a loss some people<lb/>
will do anything to cut down on<lb/>
losses<lb/>
Following the sale of the pro-<lb/>
perty, the suit claims that Ledbet-<lb/>
ter reneged on an oral agreement<lb/>
to retain Leggett's son to perform<lb/>
necessary cleaning work on<lb/>
leather items.<lb/>
Also, Ledbetter failed to make<lb/>
the last two required nine percent<lb/>
interest paymetns (on the bonds)<lb/>
within time, and he has yet to<lb/>
make the payment due May 2.<lb/>
According to Krome, Leggett<lb/>
had been suspicious of Ledbetter<lb/>
for some time. However, no legal<lb/>
action was taken until a notice of<lb/>
forclosure on Ledbetter's<lb/>
business appeared in the<lb/>
Washington Daily Sews April 12.<lb/>
Later in the month the building<lb/>
was put up for auction and a bid<lb/>
of $44,369.70 was made, thus en-<lb/>
suring the assets of Leggett ?<lb/>
Merchant of Cleanliness could<lb/>
not back $60,000 worth of bonds.<lb/>
Krome said she contacted<lb/>
Ledbetter by mail inquiring how<lb/>
the bonds would be backed, but<lb/>
none of her letters were<lb/>
answered. Krome also added that<lb/>
Ledbetter refused to speak with<lb/>
her when contacted by phone.<lb/>
Ledbetter is seeking $180,000<lb/>
in damages as well as a share of<lb/>
the property. The suit was filed<lb/>
April 26, and Ledbetter has 30<lb/>
days to respond to the allega-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
Med School Graduates Class<lb/>
Faculty Senate Head Selected<lb/>
F.CL News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Kenneth R. Wilson, a<lb/>
sociologist who combines both<lb/>
teaching and research to provide<lb/>
a new frame of reference for<lb/>
students, will chair the ECU<lb/>
faculty during the 1985-86<lb/>
academic year.<lb/>
Wilson, 38, was elected<lb/>
Wednesday at an organizational<lb/>
meeting of the Faculty Senate.<lb/>
He will succeed Dr. James LeRoy<lb/>
Smith, professor of philosophy,<lb/>
as faculty chair in August.<lb/>
A native of East Liverpool,<lb/>
Ohio, Wilson completed both his<lb/>
undergraduate and graduate<lb/>
degrees at Purdue University. He<lb/>
joined the ECU faculty in 1974<lb/>
upon completion of his PhD at<lb/>
Purdue.<lb/>
"My primary interest in<lb/>
teaching is to provide students<lb/>
with a new frame of reference<lb/>
from which they may view, and<lb/>
better understand, the world in<lb/>
which they live Wilson said.<lb/>
He has "experimented" with<lb/>
lab sessions, games and simula-<lb/>
tions, team teaching and<lb/>
cognitive mapping discussion<lb/>
techniques. "Introductory<lb/>
sociology is one of the most ex-<lb/>
citing and interesting courses to<lb/>
teach Wilson said. He also<lb/>
uses interactive computer pro-<lb/>
grams to introduce students to<lb/>
survey research.<lb/>
"My early university service<lb/>
focused on improving campus<lb/>
computer resources he said.<lb/>
Wilson served on the university's<lb/>
computer committee, the com-<lb/>
puter users advisory committee<lb/>
and the chancellor's computer<lb/>
task force.<lb/>
Of the faculty, Wison said,<lb/>
"Our job is to create the intellec-<lb/>
tual future of the university<lb/>
Wilson holds the academic<lb/>
rank of associate professor in the<lb/>
Department of Sociology, An-<lb/>
thropology and Economics.<lb/>
Madge Smith McGrath, assis-<lb/>
tant professor in medical<lb/>
technology in the School of<lb/>
Allied Health and Social Work,<lb/>
was elected vice chair. Dr. Nancy<lb/>
K. Mayberry, professor of<lb/>
Foreign Languages and<lb/>
Literatures, was re-elected<lb/>
secretary for a second one year<lb/>
term.<lb/>
McGrath has been a member<lb/>
of the faculty since 1978, while<lb/>
Mayberry came to ECU in 1967.<lb/>
ECU News Bureau &amp; Staff Reports<lb/>
Forty-two men and 10 women<lb/>
were recently graduated from<lb/>
ECU's School of Medicine,<lb/>
marking the end of long hours of<lb/>
study and the beginning of their<lb/>
journey into the world of<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
The commencement ceremony,<lb/>
the laiiieii ever, was held at the<lb/>
Brody Medical Sciences Building<lb/>
on May 3. Dr. William R.<lb/>
Laupus, dean of the School of<lb/>
Medicine, told the crowd that he<lb/>
was "proud of the students' ac-<lb/>
complishments and proud that 34<lb/>
percent of the class will be going<lb/>
into the primary care field of<lb/>
family medicine<lb/>
World-renowed heart surgeon<lb/>
Dr. Micheal E. DeBakey, from<lb/>
the Baylor College of Medicine in<lb/>
Houston, Texas also spoke in<lb/>
honor of the Class of 1985.<lb/>
Listing numerous advances in<lb/>
medicine during the 20th century,<lb/>
DeBakey said that while some of<lb/>
those innovations have been spec-<lb/>
tacular, some economic, social,<lb/>
moral and ethical problems have<lb/>
come about. "Can we afford<lb/>
them?" he asked, while citing<lb/>
dilemmas such as rising health<lb/>
care costs, more demands on the<lb/>
medical profession and the con-<lb/>
troversy of whether a doctor is<lb/>
prolonging death or prolonging<lb/>
life. He told the graduates that it<lb/>
will be their responsibility to deal<lb/>
with these problems.<lb/>
"As physicians, you will face<lb/>
daily the conflict between the in-<lb/>
terests of an individual patients<lb/>
and those of society, a conflict<lb/>
that remains unresolved except<lb/>
on an individual basis he said.<lb/>
"Despite the strongly held opi-<lb/>
nions for and against costly high<lb/>
technology health care of the<lb/>
newborn, the gravely ill, the han-<lb/>
dicapped and the aged, neither<lb/>
ethicists nor economists and<lb/>
neither physicians nor politicians<lb/>
have devised satisfactory<lb/>
guidelines for providing every<lb/>
citizen with optimal, but<lb/>
economical health care<lb/>
DeBakey told the graduates.<lb/>
DeBakey is one of the world's<lb/>
best known surgeons who<lb/>
demostrated a genius for medical<lb/>
innovation early in his career. As<lb/>
a medical student, he divised a<lb/>
pump which years later became<lb/>
an essential component of the<lb/>
heart-lung machine that made<lb/>
open heart surgery possible.<lb/>
Since then, he has developed<lb/>
more than 50 surgical in-<lb/>
struments.<lb/>
Chairmen of the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees, C. Ralph Kinsey,<lb/>
also spoke to the graduates as<lb/>
well as former ECU chancellor<lb/>
Dr. Leo Jenkins who was<lb/>
recognized with a standing ova-<lb/>
tion. Jenkins was a leader in the<lb/>
development of the school of<lb/>
medicine.<lb/>
Fourteen of the graduates<lb/>
received awards at the ceremony,<lb/>
recognizing students' academic<lb/>
achievement, community service,<lb/>
research skills and personal<lb/>
stature.<lb/>
This year's class brings the<lb/>
total number of medical school<lb/>
graduates to 1.<lb/>
Career Centers Blamed For Inaccurate Survey<lb/>
(CPS) ? Half of this spring's<lb/>
college grads won't have jobs<lb/>
when they graduate, according to<lb/>
a new survey by a Chicago-based<lb/>
employment agency.<lb/>
But college placement experts<lb/>
caution that the survey ? which<lb/>
has been released to media<lb/>
around the country ? "sensa-<lb/>
tionalizes" what is a typical oc-<lb/>
curence in the job market as<lb/>
many students intentionally leave<lb/>
campus without employment.<lb/>
The study takes into account<lb/>
over one million students at near-<lb/>
ly 100 colleges across the country,<lb/>
says James Challenger, president<lb/>
of the Challenger, Gray, and<lb/>
Christmas placement service in<lb/>
Chicago.<lb/>
Based on an analysis of the<lb/>
172,000 graduating seniors at the<lb/>
schools surveyed, Challenger<lb/>
says, "it is likely that over half of<lb/>
ECU Trustee Members<lb/>
Consider A dmissions Rule<lb/>
Staff &amp;. Wire Reports<lb/>
SGA president David Brown<lb/>
recently took the oath as an ex of-<lb/>
Ficio member of the ECU Board<lb/>
of Trustees at their May meeting.<lb/>
Brown, a senior majoring in en-<lb/>
vironmental health, was sworn in<lb/>
by Greenville Mayor Janice<lb/>
Buck.<lb/>
The Board of Trustees honored<lb/>
outgoing SGA president John<lb/>
Rainey, commending his<lb/>
"outstanding contributions" as<lb/>
SGA president and trustee<lb/>
member.<lb/>
The trustees also approved the<lb/>
expenditure of more than<lb/>
$232,000 to renovate the medical<lb/>
school's family practice clinic in<lb/>
Bethel and $528,000 to air condi-<lb/>
tion portions of Scott Residence<lb/>
Hall.<lb/>
A resolution endorsing "the<lb/>
priniciples and objectives" con-<lb/>
tained in a statement on inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics made by the<lb/>
National Collegiate Athletic<lb/>
Association's Division 1-A<lb/>
university chief executives, was<lb/>
made by the trustees.<lb/>
The statement on inter-<lb/>
collegiate athletics itself em-<lb/>
phasized that "the integrity of<lb/>
academic institutions rests fun-<lb/>
damentally upon the missions of<lb/>
teaching and research and<lb/>
among other things, recommeded<lb/>
that "freshmen be ineligible to<lb/>
participate in those varsity sports<lb/>
which create substantail threats<lb/>
to successful academic adjust-<lb/>
ment, such as football and<lb/>
basketball<lb/>
Chancellor John Howell cited<lb/>
the success of the University<lb/>
Scholars Awards program fund<lb/>
drive. He also noted that CD.<lb/>
Langston of Winterville, has<lb/>
established four university<lb/>
scholarship award endownments,<lb/>
which enables ECU to surpass a<lb/>
goal of 20.<lb/>
The endowments of $40,000 <lb/>
each will provide $3,000 a year to For those who don't plan on joggling away their lives upon graduating,<lb/>
the scholars award recipient. visit one of the many career centers.<lb/>
all students who will graduate<lb/>
this spring will not have jobs<lb/>
when they leave school, and are<lb/>
entering the job market with non-<lb/>
business skills<lb/>
The problem, he feels, is that<lb/>
college placement offices aren't<lb/>
adequately addressing students'<lb/>
job hunting needs.<lb/>
"Only a little over one-third of<lb/>
the college graduates were<lb/>
assisted by their school placement<lb/>
services in finding a post-<lb/>
graduation job Challenger<lb/>
says.<lb/>
"Of the remainder, 38 percent<lb/>
did not have the benefit of job<lb/>
placement services while another<lb/>
26 percent were involved in place-<lb/>
ment services but were still<lb/>
unable to find work he says.<lb/>
And while the survey shows<lb/>
that, overall, 62 percent of the<lb/>
students surveyed use college<lb/>
placement services, less than two-<lb/>
thirds of them get jobs.<lb/>
"It's not necessarily because<lb/>
campus placement is poorly<lb/>
run Challenger says, "but<lb/>
(they are) simply unable to ad-<lb/>
dress the needs of many of their<lb/>
students<lb/>
"I think (Challenger's) just<lb/>
blowing smoke counters Victor<lb/>
Lindquist, placement director of<lb/>
Northwestern University and<lb/>
author of an annual nationwide<lb/>
job placement survey.<lb/>
At Northwestern, for instance,<lb/>
"55 percent of our four-year<lb/>
graduates go on to graduate<lb/>
school he points out.<lb/>
"I would be very skeptical of<lb/>
the way (Challenger) is presenting<lb/>
his survey results says Judith<lb/>
Kayser with the College Place-<lb/>
ment Council. "It doesn't mean<lb/>
that half of all graduates can't<lb/>
find jobs, just that half of them<lb/>
don't have jobs yet. There's a big<lb/>
difference<lb/>
"Many students she notes,<lb/>
"don't even get job offers until<lb/>
very late in their graduating year,<lb/>
or well after they graduate. And a<lb/>
lot of students take the summer<lb/>
off, intentionally, figuring they'll<lb/>
enjoy a little time off and avoid<lb/>
competing with a million other<lb/>
new graduates who will be look-<lb/>
ing for spring job offers<lb/>
Still, Challenger argues those<lb/>
50 percent who didn't have jobs<lb/>
when they graduated ? by choice<lb/>
or by default ? sooner or later<lb/>
will need some employment<lb/>
assistance.<lb/>
Not coincidentally, Challenger<lb/>
thinks he has the answe- in a new<lb/>
program his private placement<lb/>
agency is offering.<lb/>
Under the auspices of his new<lb/>
"Graduplacement Program<lb/>
Challenger is seeking corpora-<lb/>
tions to underwrite job placement<lb/>
programs for new high school<lb/>
and college graduates.<lb/>
And despite what some say is<lb/>
an exaggerated view of the col-<lb/>
lege grad placement problem,<lb/>
there are some schools with<lb/>
"abhorrent" placement services<lb/>
where programs such as<lb/>
Challenger's could do some<lb/>
good, Northwestern's Lindquist<lb/>
admits.<lb/>
"But if a student ends up in a<lb/>
private program like<lb/>
(Challenger's), it's criminal,<lb/>
because it means the school<lb/>
didn't do its job to begin with<lb/>
Lindquist adds.<lb/>
?-<lb/>
6 r m4m ? - w i . cm<lb/>
rtsifritmiHhiip<lb/>
  t - ??<lb/>
 ? ? ?"?? ? ??<lb/>
V I ? ? ? ri<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 15. 1985<lb/>
i<lb/>
Protests Continue From Concerned Students<lb/>
(CPS) ? After a relatively<lb/>
small turnout for the nationwide<lb/>
campus "Day of Action" earlier<lb/>
this year, the student anti-<lb/>
apartheid movement has<lb/>
mushroomed abruptly in recent<lb/>
weeks, attracting media attention<lb/>
and, in some cases, even provok-<lb/>
ing college administrators to con-<lb/>
sider selling university holdings in<lb/>
companies that do business in<lb/>
South Africa.<lb/>
Perhaps more significantly, the<lb/>
upheavals have been spontaneous<lb/>
and organized on the grassroots<lb/>
level.<lb/>
A protest network seems to be<lb/>
growing among the<lb/>
demonstrators themselves, and<lb/>
exists separately from the off-<lb/>
campus organizers who con-<lb/>
cocted the April 4 event.<lb/>
"We're pleasantly surprised<lb/>
says Katherine Graetzer of the<lb/>
American Committee on Africa,<lb/>
which sponsored the April Day of<lb/>
Action. "But the possibility for<lb/>
action was always there<lb/>
It's been hard to provoke,<lb/>
however, as ACA activists have<lb/>
tried to attract wider campus sup-<lb/>
port in recent years by co-<lb/>
sponsoring events in conjunction<lb/>
with protests of nuclear power<lb/>
and American policy in Central<lb/>
America.<lb/>
While their efforts produced a<lb/>
steady, low-keyed pressure at a<lb/>
handful of campuses, the protests<lb/>
this spring are much more vehe-<lb/>
ment and prolonged, observers<lb/>
say.<lb/>
And the action shows no sign<lb/>
of abating as students at Colum-<lb/>
bia, Cornell, Rutgers, UCLA,<lb/>
Princeton, Louisville, Oberlin,<lb/>
Santa Cruz and San Francisco<lb/>
State, among others, occupy<lb/>
campus buildings and commons,<lb/>
and hold candle light vigils to<lb/>
demonstrate solidarity with<lb/>
South African blacks resisting<lb/>
their segregationist government.<lb/>
Five Syracuse students are on a<lb/>
hunger strike, hoping to convince<lb/>
their university to rid its invest-<lb/>
ment portfolio of shares in com-<lb/>
panies that do business in South<lb/>
Africa and thus, by implication,<lb/>
help support the South African<lb/>
government's rigid segregationist<lb/>
laws.<lb/>
"Currently, there're 200 to 300<lb/>
people camped out in front of<lb/>
Sproul Hall nightly says<lb/>
George Olson, a student reporter<lb/>
at Berkeley where demonstra-<lb/>
tions have continued for more<lb/>
than two weeks and nearly 200<lb/>
students have been arrested.<lb/>
At a forum last week, "5000<lb/>
people and 13 regents showed<lb/>
up" to discuss full divestiture and<lb/>
its options, he reports. "It (was)<lb/>
so crowded they had to bring in<lb/>
folding chairs. The place (was)<lb/>
packed to the gills<lb/>
And about half the students<lb/>
enrolled at the nine-campus<lb/>
University of California system<lb/>
honored a one-day class boycott<lb/>
last week, Olson adds. The week<lb/>
before, 10,000 of Berkeley's<lb/>
30,000 students joined a class<lb/>
boycott.<lb/>
Organizers say the movement<lb/>
will continue until UC regents<lb/>
divest some $2.3 billion in South<lb/>
Africa-related stock, Olson says.<lb/>
"The protestors have said, 'If<lb/>
you divest at your May meeting,<lb/>
we'll quit protesting. If you<lb/>
don't Olson reports.<lb/>
"These people are extremely<lb/>
well-organized concurs pro-<lb/>
testor Fred Balfour. "They've<lb/>
got competent people<lb/>
Indeed, the demonstrators cen-<lb/>
tralize responses to the media and<lb/>
have different people handling<lb/>
newspaper, radio and tv<lb/>
reporters.<lb/>
Now other apartheid op-<lb/>
ponents from campuses nation-<lb/>
wide are aping the sophisticated<lb/>
protests at Berkeley and Colum-<lb/>
bia, where students last week<lb/>
ended a three week occupation of<lb/>
a campus administration<lb/>
building.<lb/>
"We've been in contact with<lb/>
Columbia Balfour reports.<lb/>
"The only thing we don't have<lb/>
going with them is a computer<lb/>
link-up. We've also been in touch<lb/>
with Cornell<lb/>
"We're in touch with Colum-<lb/>
bia students says Michael Mar-<lb/>
tin of the Princeton divestment<lb/>
coalition. "But no outside<lb/>
organization is helping<lb/>
Martin says his group has stag-<lb/>
ed protests all year, demanding<lb/>
the university sell the $500<lb/>
million it's invested in South<lb/>
Africa-related companies<lb/>
"You could say we started<lb/>
because of Berkeley, but we're<lb/>
not formally supported by<lb/>
anyone says Sarah Boone, a<lb/>
Syracuse University hunger<lb/>
striker. "Students need to take a<lb/>
stand for solidarity<lb/>
The informal campus network<lb/>
provides "direct communication<lb/>
from student to student and to<lb/>
spread ideas and issues<lb/>
observes Keith Jennings of the<lb/>
U.S. Student Association, a<lb/>
Washington-based student lobby-<lb/>
ing group.<lb/>
"It won't sustain he says,<lb/>
"so we're planning meetings this<lb/>
summer to continue the move-<lb/>
ment. We intend to escalate ef-<lb/>
forts<lb/>
But "we're not going to eat un<lb/>
til the university begins to<lb/>
bargain in good faith SUs<lb/>
Boone claims. "We want (SIto<lb/>
totally divest itself<lb/>
"We're organized to th ?<lb/>
that we've got a laver tor<lb/>
coalition in case people ,<lb/>
jail she adds<lb/>
South Park<lb/>
Amoco<lb/>
AMOCO<lb/>
Complete Automotive Service<lb/>
756-3023 24 hrs.<lb/>
310 Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Advertising<lb/>
Scholarship<lb/>
The Eastern Advertising Federation<lb/>
Scholarship Fund has been established at the<lb/>
School or Art Design Department, by the<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Advertismg Federation to<lb/>
support and promote the study of advertising<lb/>
by deserving luniors and seniors The appli<lb/>
ca-t must have at least a 3 0 gpa. and must<lb/>
ntend to pursue a career in advertising or<lb/>
reiated fields in Eastern North Carolina The<lb/>
applicant must complete the ECAF form,<lb/>
and submit a 500 word typewritten essay ex<lb/>
piam.ng how he or she became interested m<lb/>
advertising and why he or she should receive<lb/>
me scholarship Slides of ten works must ac<lb/>
company the application form An award of<lb/>
at least 1500 and not exceeding J1000 will be<lb/>
made Application forms may be obtained<lb/>
from me School of Art Office The deadline<lb/>
for all completed application material is<lb/>
September 16, 1985<lb/>
Job Opening<lb/>
The Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services needs an outdoor<lb/>
'ecreation employee The person will be<lb/>
primarily responsible for the rental of out<lb/>
door recreation equipment with some<lb/>
responsibility in the organization of recrea<lb/>
fion trips interested persons should apply m<lb/>
room 204 Memorial Gym<lb/>
Benefit<lb/>
On Friday. May 17th we w.ll hold a benafif<lb/>
o ra.se money to provide medical a,d to<lb/>
Nicaragua The benaf,t w,n be held at the<lb/>
New Del, from 9 00 p m to 2 00 a m<lb/>
Featured will be The Tommy G Experience<lb/>
ano ,ghtmng Wells Admission will be a<lb/>
3 00 donation<lb/>
National Teacher Examination<lb/>
A special National Teacher Examination<lb/>
will be administered Saturday, June 22 Fees<lb/>
will be the regularly scheduled amounts<lb/>
payable on the day of the test by check or<lb/>
money order Cash cannot be accepted Can<lb/>
didates report prior to 8 30 a m for Core I &amp;<lb/>
Specialty Area tests and before 12 30 p m<lb/>
for Core ii and Core Ml Candidates must<lb/>
contact the testing center prior to June 5,<lb/>
1985, to register for the test To save travel<lb/>
time, you should be aware that tests are also<lb/>
bemg given at Atlantic Christian College<lb/>
Wilson N C Weslyan, Rocky Mount, Fayet<lb/>
tev.lle State and New Bern High School<lb/>
Ice Cream Party<lb/>
The Student un,on Recreation Committee<lb/>
is sponsoring a BingoIce Cream Party on<lb/>
Tuesday May 28th at 7 00 p m ,n the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center Multi Purpose<lb/>
Room ECU students, faculty, staff their<lb/>
dependents, and their guests are welcome<lb/>
Enjoy dehcous ice cream and play Bingo for<lb/>
prizes all for only 25?. the cost of admission<lb/>
Aerobics<lb/>
Aerobic exercise registration will be on<lb/>
Ma, 13 4 ana )5 Come by Memona Gym<lb/>
room 204 The cost ,s M forjUyatt and $10<lb/>
tor faculty ano staff "<lb/>
Expressions<lb/>
There will be a meeting of 'all ' staff<lb/>
Wed Ma 15.(Today) at 4 00 p m in the of<lb/>
t'ce 'See you there<lb/>
Intramural<lb/>
Registration<lb/>
Reg.straion tor slow pi?ch softball, co-rec<lb/>
volleyball, tennis singles and the raquetball<lb/>
tourney will be on May 13, 14 and 15 in<lb/>
Memorial Gym, room 204 Play begins May<lb/>
20<lb/>
Backpacking Trip<lb/>
The department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services is sponsoring a<lb/>
backpacking trip on June 7, 8 and 9 The tr.p<lb/>
location will be the Uwaharrie National<lb/>
Forest which .s approximately 4 hours from<lb/>
Greenville The cost for the trip will be J.28<lb/>
which will include travel, all equipment ren<lb/>
tal and meals Friday night through Sunday<lb/>
morning For more information or<lb/>
registraion stop by 204 Memorial Gym<lb/>
PLAY<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Bivd Greenville<lb/>
OP TO<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
is now accepting applications for<lb/>
D.Js and Newscasters. Pick up<lb/>
application forms at WZMB<lb/>
office, 2nd Floor, Old Joyner<lb/>
Library. Monday-Friday, 2 p.m4<lb/>
p.m.<lb/>
Odds vary depending on the number of Game Tickets you oblarn<lb/>
The more Tickets you collect, the better your chancee of winning<lb/>
ODDS CHART EFFECTIVE APRIL 27.IMS<lb/>
NUMBER T ODDS FOB ODDS FOR ODDS FOR PRIZE OF ONE GAME 4 GAME 8 GAME 1 VALUE PRIZES TICKET TICKETS TICKETS<lb/>
tzooo 1 In - ? ?1 m : im.?<lb/>
 1JM0631 m1 In . ?? 1 In ? -<lb/>
t 200? A 1 In .1 In ?? 1 In<lb/>
: too1 In ?t In ? 4 1 In<lb/>
S 2039 In 6S8C1 In ? -? 1 ki -<lb/>
1 101 In ?1 In t In - ?<lb/>
? 5He1 In 41 In ? 1 In 66<lb/>
S 1v .i m1 m ?? 1 In<lb/>
TOTAl.? tet In w1 In <lb/>
$2,000!<lb/>
$100<lb/>
FREE GROCERIES<lb/>
PREMIUM AND LIGHT<lb/>
Coors<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
ECU'S MINORITY PUBLICATION<lb/>
Has Openings in the following<lb/>
positions:<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
and<lb/>
Sales Representatives<lb/>
Applications are available at EXPRESSIONS office<lb/>
in the Publications Building or contact General<lb/>
Manager Jeff Canady 757-6927.<lb/>
12 Oz<lb/>
Cans<lb/>
I<lb/>
BURGUNDY RHINE.<lb/>
CHABLIS BLANC OR VIN ROSE<lb/>
Gallo<lb/>
Premium Wine<lb/>
Pitt-Greenville Airport is accepting<lb/>
applications for part-time employment<lb/>
starting May 15, 1985 and ending May 30,<lb/>
1985. Duties will consist of aircraft refueling<lb/>
and airport maintenance. Some type of<lb/>
previous aviation experience is required ?<lb/>
civilian or military. For further information<lb/>
call 758-4707 between the hours of 10:00<lb/>
A.M. - 1:00 P.M Monday through Friday.<lb/>
Ltr<lb/>
Btl<lb/>
499<lb/>
Medium<lb/>
Headless Shrimp<lb/>
$<lb/>
Lb<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
Light N Lively<lb/>
Yogurt<lb/>
6 Oz<lb/>
Cup<lb/>
ADVERTISE0 ITEM POUCV<lb/>
Eacn of tnese advertised item<lb/>
is reauireo to oe readiiv<lb/>
avaiianie tor sate m eacn Kroger<lb/>
Saw on except as specifically<lb/>
noted m this ad M we do run<lb/>
out of an item we wm offer you<lb/>
your cnoice of a comparaoie<lb/>
item wnen avaiiaoie reflecting<lb/>
tr?e same sawmgs or a raincnec<lb/>
wnicn win entitle you to pur<lb/>
cnase tne advertised item at<lb/>
tne advertised once witrim so<lb/>
days Only one vendor couoon<lb/>
wni oe accepted per item J<lb/>
IN THE DELI<lb/>
8 INDIVIDUAL<lb/>
Pan. Pizza<lb/>
Pepperoni<lb/>
Combo .<lb/>
Deluxe. .<lb/>
<lb/>
H ?<lb/>
OLD SOL<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
<lb/>
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$1.69<lb/>
$1.89<lb/>
$1.99<lb/>
HAVE YOU CHECKED<lb/>
YOUR PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
PRICES LATELY?<lb/>
Compare what you<lb/>
presently pay with<lb/>
the ppce at the<lb/>
KROGER PHARMACY!<lb/>
.   <lb/>
Dane<lb/>
B JAN M<lb/>
Or ' ?<lb/>
St udeI<lb/>
Den<lb/>
benefit<lb/>
money 1<lb/>
f teli, <lb/>
mat.<lb/>
??<lb/>
sion is r<lb/>
will nclud<lb/>
i '<lb/>
unc-<lb/>
Truste<lb/>
M I s.<lb/>
I<lb/>
Get ready<lb/>
HOT sumi<lb/>
COOL col<lb/>
Specializing<lb/>
Clothim<lb/>
116 E. 5th Si.<lb/>
Next Door to Bol<lb/>
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pi<lb/>
d<lb/>
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tol<lb/>
Q(<lb/>
NO1<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0003"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 15, 1985<lb/>
dents<lb/>
to the extent<lb/>
for the<lb/>
vple go to<lb/>
bA'LRS<lb/>
ersitv<lb/>
-<lb/>
OO!<lb/>
OCERIES<lb/>
tnge<lb/>
ice<lb/>
i<lb/>
? ?. HP!<lb/>
Dole<lb/>
Bananas<lb/>
29<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
MFG'S<lb/>
OUPONS<lb/>
- .VE WILL DOUBLE 5<lb/>
P TO 50; FACE VALUE)<lb/>
R 1 SIC PURCHASE'<lb/>
1 as ?? t?t?lt in ttora j<lb/>
Dance Benefits Hospital Construction<lb/>
B JAY STONE<lb/>
?hrfririim<lb/>
On Friday May 17, the Pro-<lb/>
gressive Student Network and<lb/>
Students for Economic<lb/>
Democracy will co-sponsor a<lb/>
benefit concert to help raise<lb/>
mone to build a health clinic in<lb/>
Esteli, Nicaragua. The perfor-<lb/>
mance will begin at 9 p.m. at the<lb/>
Neu Deli Restaurant and admis-<lb/>
sion is $3. Bands slated to play<lb/>
will include Lightnin' Wells and<lb/>
Tommy G. and Company.<lb/>
Concert organizer Lisa Hieber<lb/>
said Esteli is a town that has been<lb/>
under attack by the contras for<lb/>
the last three years and has one<lb/>
health clinic that serves approx-<lb/>
imately 50,000 people. The<lb/>
building of the new clinic is being<lb/>
undertaken as a joint project by<lb/>
the municipal government of<lb/>
Esteli and Nuevo Institute de<lb/>
Centro America, an organization<lb/>
based in Cambridge, Mass.<lb/>
Hieber is less than sanguine<lb/>
about the effects of the contra<lb/>
war in Nicaragua. She alleges<lb/>
that the victims of contra attacks<lb/>
haven't been soldiers in the San-<lb/>
danista army.<lb/>
"The contras have specifically<lb/>
targeted health care workers,<lb/>
teachers and food co-op<lb/>
workers Hieber said. "The<lb/>
have tried to avoid fighting with<lb/>
the Sandinista army<lb/>
The money from the concert,<lb/>
Hieber said, will go to the NICA,<lb/>
which is supervising the building<lb/>
of the health clinic and the pur-<lb/>
chase of medical supplies. A U.S.<lb/>
delegation, along with NICA,<lb/>
will begin building the health<lb/>
clinic in June.<lb/>
Members of the group will be<lb/>
paying their own travel expenses<lb/>
and supporting themselves while<lb/>
they are in Esteli.<lb/>
Close supervision of the pro-<lb/>
curement of supplies and the con-<lb/>
struction of the health clinic by<lb/>
American and a reputable<lb/>
American based organization,<lb/>
Hieber said people attending the<lb/>
benefit can be certain that their<lb/>
money will actually be spent on<lb/>
medical facilities and supplies.<lb/>
Hieber also added that since<lb/>
she has maintained close contact<lb/>
with former ECU graduate stu-<lb/>
dent Mike Hamer, who has been<lb/>
living in Nicaragua for four mon-<lb/>
ths, the issue has been brought<lb/>
closer to home for her.<lb/>
"I've been involved with Cen-<lb/>
tral American issues for three<lb/>
years, but having a friend in<lb/>
Nicaragua has brought the<lb/>
realities of the contra war home<lb/>
to me Hieber said.<lb/>
Trustees Select New Home Economics Dean<lb/>
EXT News Bureau<lb/>
Dr. Judith C. Rollins, a<lb/>
department head and associate<lb/>
professor at Kansas State Univer-<lb/>
sity, will become professor and<lb/>
dean of the School of Home<lb/>
Economics at ECU effective<lb/>
Aug. 12.<lb/>
The appointment, approved by<lb/>
the ECL' trustees and the UNC<lb/>
Board of Governors, was an-<lb/>
nounced bv Dr. Angelo A.<lb/>
Volpe, ECU vice-chancellor for<lb/>
academic affairs.<lb/>
"1 am delighted that a person<lb/>
of the high caliber and excellent<lb/>
experience of Dr. Rollins is join-<lb/>
ing East Carolina University<lb/>
Volpe said. "1 am looking for-<lb/>
ward to working with her as she<lb/>
assumes her duties as dean of the<lb/>
School of Home Economics<lb/>
Rollins has been at Kansas<lb/>
State University since 1979, hav-<lb/>
ing served as assistant dean of the<lb/>
College of Home Economics un-<lb/>
til August 1981, when she became<lb/>
acting head of the department of<lb/>
family and child development. In<lb/>
1982, she was named department<lb/>
head.<lb/>
Rollins is active in research and<lb/>
publication with two significant<lb/>
research projects in progress,<lb/>
Volpe said.<lb/>
She succeeds Dr. Eugenia M.<lb/>
Zallen as dean of the School of<lb/>
Home Economics. Dr. Edward<lb/>
(Mel) Markowski has served as<lb/>
acting dean since Zallen's<lb/>
resignation at the end of the sum-<lb/>
mer sessions in 1984.<lb/>
Get ready for the long<lb/>
HOT summer with<lb/>
COOL cotton clothes.<lb/>
Specializing in Natural Fiber<lb/>
Clothing for Women<lb/>
116 E. 5th St. Mon-Sat 10:00-5:30<lb/>
Next Door to Book Barn 757-3944<lb/>
TREAT YOURSELF TODAY<lb/>
DELIVERS<lb/>
(In our delivery area)<lb/>
Lunch M-F 11-2<lb/>
7.50 Minimum Order<lb/>
1.00 Delivery Charge<lb/>
758-6372<lb/>
Check Our Daily Specials<lb/>
Philadelphia Style Cheese Steaks (Our Specialty)<lb/>
Pizza Cheesesteak<lb/>
Pepper Cheesesteak<lb/>
Mushroom Cheesesteak<lb/>
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Victim being treated in Nicaraguan health clinic<lb/>
siflmnfli<lb/>
tAMoariCM (mo?<lb/>
Enjoy Music Under The<lb/>
Sun With Your Favorite<lb/>
Beverages ? On Our<lb/>
Patio<lb/>
215 East 4th Street<lb/>
Happy Hour 3-7<lb/>
Monday through Sunday<lb/>
11 AM til 11 PM<lb/>
Thurs Fri Sat &amp; Sunday<lb/>
11 AM to 2 AM<lb/>
Free Delivery<lb/>
Call 752-2183<lb/>
?<lb/>
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44<lb/>
iTim<lb/>
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WELCOME BACK STUDENTS! TW's has planned<lb/>
Prime Times JUST FOR YOU Every Thursday.<lb/>
Want a high-energy, fun-filled night away from<lb/>
the books? We've got what it takes!<lb/>
FREE DRAFT BEER<lb/>
All you can drink 'til 11:30 free! HAPPY<lb/>
HOUR 11:30'til closing<lb/>
LIVE ENTERTAINMENT<lb/>
POWER PLAY keeps you movin' with Top 40 &amp;<lb/>
Funk dance tunes<lb/>
LARGE DANCE FLOOR<lb/>
Plenty of elbow room for everybody. Rather<lb/>
dance to records? Rock 93's Greg Allinton will<lb/>
spin all your requests!<lb/>
FREE TRANSPORTATION<lb/>
Don't DRIVE! Call the Liberty Ride at 758-5570<lb/>
for a free ride to TW's and back home<lb/>
againwhenever you're ready!<lb/>
NOW YOU KNOW WHERE THE PARTY IS!<lb/>
Private Club - All ABC Permits<lb/>
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GYM<lb/>
Memberships<lb/>
Yearly<lb/>
$115.00<lb/>
Monthly<lb/>
$25.00<lb/>
Summer Prices<lb/>
$20.00 Per Session<lb/>
1 st Session May 13-June 18<lb/>
2nd Session June 19-July 25<lb/>
$35 for Both Sessions<lb/>
WHOLE SUMMER ONLY<lb/>
$40.00<lb/>
May 13-August 31<lb/>
"Tired of Standing in a<lb/>
Booth??? Then Come<lb/>
Lay In A Bed (A Tanning<lb/>
Bed) Jobbie's now has a<lb/>
Suntana Tanning Bed.<lb/>
Prices:<lb/>
M6iwbrs<lb/>
$3.00 - Single Visit<lb/>
$25.00 - 10 Visits<lb/>
New Nautilus Equipment<lb/>
Has Arrived. 10,000 Lbs. of<lb/>
Olympic Weight and 5,000<lb/>
Sq. Ft. of Work-Out Space.<lb/>
(Air Conditioned All The<lb/>
Time).<lb/>
Noil MWMHpOn<lb/>
$3.50 - Single Visit<lb/>
$35.00 - 10 Visits<lb/>
ALL NEW<lb/>
Locker Rooms &amp; Showers<lb/>
GYM HOURS<lb/>
Mon-Fri ? 10:00 A.M8:00 P.M.<lb/>
Sal-Sun ? 2:00 P.M6:00 P.M.<lb/>
FOR MORE INFO CALL<lb/>
75M359<lb/>
<lb/>
will ruin f i m wiii nnm<lb/>
-II ???!?<lb/>
'? ??  ???? " ? <lb/>
<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0004"/><lb/>
3U? East (Earoltnian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton, om mo<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. uni<lb/>
Harold Joyner.  vwa? Tom Llyender. ftWW, <lb/>
Randy Mews. o-nm ?? Anthony Martin. ?u,Wi ?,??<lb/>
Rick Mccormac, sf, John Peterson, cm vf<lb/>
Bill Mitchell, nmrnm w Bill Dawson. w?? .????<lb/>
Daniel Malrer. ??i?&amp; DeChanile Johnson, wndtaw<lb/>
Ma 15, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Happy Hour<lb/>
More Ineffective Legislation<lb/>
Prohibition is a classic example of<lb/>
a law that just didn't work. For-<lb/>
tunately, lawmakers saw the light<lb/>
and repealed the amendment. Un-<lb/>
fortunately, as far as college<lb/>
students are concerned, the days of<lb/>
prohibition seem to be returning.<lb/>
First, it was the drinking age in-<lb/>
crease, a piece of legislation which<lb/>
will probably affect 75 percent of<lb/>
the college population. Sure, it may<lb/>
deter a few people from drinking<lb/>
because they are afraid they will get<lb/>
caught, but for the rest of them, the<lb/>
danger of getting caught makes it all<lb/>
the more entertaining.<lb/>
Now, to add insult to injury, hap-<lb/>
py hour has been banned in North<lb/>
Carolina, effective August 1.<lb/>
Amazingly enough, despite the<lb/>
fact that this new legislation has the<lb/>
potential to affect everyone who<lb/>
consumes alcohol, there has been<lb/>
very little protest.<lb/>
Under the new regulations, bars<lb/>
and restaurants will not be permit-<lb/>
ted to offer traditional happy hour<lb/>
specials such as two-for-one drinks.<lb/>
According to N.C. Rep. Coy C.<lb/>
Privette, R-Cabarrus, happy hours<lb/>
encourage drinking and driving and<lb/>
"glamorize" liquor.<lb/>
Happy hours don't encourage<lb/>
drinking and driving any more than<lb/>
the mere presence of bars does.<lb/>
What legislators seem to be assum-<lb/>
ing is that just because something is<lb/>
less expensive, people will<lb/>
automatically consume more of it.<lb/>
In effect, they are saying that the<lb/>
average adult lacks the judgement<lb/>
to determine how much he should<lb/>
drink and will overindulge because<lb/>
of a special.<lb/>
Granted, there are some people<lb/>
who will take every opportunity to<lb/>
consume large quantities of alcohol.<lb/>
But these people aren't going to be<lb/>
affected by the new laws. People<lb/>
who really want to drink will drink,<lb/>
no matter what the price.<lb/>
The N.C. Restaurant Association<lb/>
proved their awareness of this fact<lb/>
by supporting this legislation. You<lb/>
can be sure that if they thought cut-<lb/>
ting out lower prices would decrease<lb/>
their sales, they would be the first to<lb/>
protest. They know people will con<lb/>
tinue to drink, and their revenues<lb/>
will go up.<lb/>
Pitt County District Attornex<lb/>
Thomas Haigwood says the biggest<lb/>
DWI problems are with chronic of-<lb/>
fenders. The people who drive<lb/>
drunk repeatedly won't be deterred<lb/>
by stricter laws or higher prices. It's<lb/>
the people who like to relax with<lb/>
one or two drinks on Friday after-<lb/>
noon who will be hurt.<lb/>
Most people do have good judge-<lb/>
ment and while it may sound good<lb/>
theoretically, making things more<lb/>
difficult for everybody is not the<lb/>
answer to the problem of drunken<lb/>
driving.<lb/>
WORLPS SHORTEST LIFE<lb/>
EXPECTANCIES<lb/>
MA9 FW<lb/>
(3 HOURS)<lb/>
VANKEff<lb/>
MANAGER<lb/>
fmwrs IS<lb/>
 MNUTg<lb/>
-v.<lb/>
i<lb/>
A Psychological Ailment<lb/>
Appeasement Policies "Fatal"<lb/>
It was forty years ago. To us<lb/>
youngsters it is merelv a chapter in a<lb/>
history book or stones repeated bv our<lb/>
fathers or grandfathers<lb/>
In World War II American<lb/>
patriotism and unity peaked. Everyone<lb/>
was committed to the cause of wiping<lb/>
out the fascist scourge ? hardK a single<lb/>
family was untouched by this call to du-<lb/>
ty. For instance. m grandfather built<lb/>
the bombers my Dad flew in over<lb/>
Europe.<lb/>
How many millions died in the war?<lb/>
Forty million? Fifty million:1 Who<lb/>
knows? In spite oi the cost, we can pro-<lb/>
udly say that international fascism is<lb/>
The Right Word<lb/>
Dennis Kilcoyne<lb/>
however, this one was avoidable. It was<lb/>
brought on not onl) bv the dictates oi a<lb/>
bizarre fascist ideology but also by the<lb/>
dangerous instincts oi the still-practiced<lb/>
liberal foreign policy.<lb/>
Neville Chamberlain (described b<lb/>
Winston Churchill as "looking at<lb/>
foreign affairs through the wrong end<lb/>
of a municipal drainpipe") was the<lb/>
prime minister of Great Britain cluing<lb/>
the latter stages of the emergence of Na-<lb/>
tional Socialist (Nazi) Germany. Hitler<lb/>
found him a useful dupe, for<lb/>
Chamberlain merely wrung his hands in<lb/>
bewilderment as the National Socialists<lb/>
violated key provisions oi the Versailles<lb/>
Treatv Indeed. Chamberlain stood b)<lb/>
as the German dictator marched into<lb/>
Austria. And when the Fuhrer demand-<lb/>
ed that Czechoslovakia cede to Ger-<lb/>
many its German-speaking area (known<lb/>
as the Sudetenland), Chamberlain<lb/>
decided that appeasement would bring<lb/>
lasting peace. At the Munich con-<lb/>
ference in 1938, he agreed to hand ovei<lb/>
the Sudetenland to German) (as if it<lb/>
were his to give) and Hitler agreed to<lb/>
lake no further territories<lb/>
It was one oi history's greatest<lb/>
betrayals, and the Czechs were enraged<lb/>
Of course. Hitler's appetite was not Ap<lb/>
peased; it was whetted, and WAS il was<lb/>
the result. s Churchill said oi<lb/>
Chamberlain, "in the depths oi that<lb/>
dust) soul there is nothing but abject<lb/>
surrender<lb/>
One oi the unfortunate consequences<lb/>
oi the war was that b annihilating one<lb/>
form oi totalitarianism, we strengthen<lb/>
ed another. Before the war. the Soviet<lb/>
Union was a lone, socialist island. Now<lb/>
its repressive ideologv rules halt the<lb/>
world. We can't rcalh knock the<lb/>
Soviets for what thev are doing I ike<lb/>
Hitler, they are merely following the<lb/>
dictates of a philosophv which the) are<lb/>
committed to As Chamberlain did with<lb/>
the National Socialists, howecr. we are<lb/>
doing with the communists ? making it<lb/>
a hell oi a lot easier for them to fulfil!<lb/>
their ideological dreams. I ike<lb/>
Chamberlain, we are often gripped bv<lb/>
an unexplainablc sense of guilt about<lb/>
the actions of tyrants. We feel compell-<lb/>
ed to please them a:<lb/>
psychological ailment among <lb/>
leaders, which even lingei<lb/>
Reagan, makes th<lb/>
contemptuous ol oui a<lb/>
more determined to d I<lb/>
peasement is a fatal wa<lb/>
aggressors. Only a 1<lb/>
sisten and thi<lb/>
diplomatic<lb/>
militar) pressure can ?;i<lb/>
( me area where -<lb/>
applied is in <lb/>
gressors there are in <lb/>
three-tiered po<lb/>
least to some -?<lb/>
Diplomaticall) I R<lb/>
lion's approach has<lb/>
fairl) consistent 1<lb/>
pressure on the N<lb/>
has been steadih gi i<lb/>
economic pressu<lb/>
until now<lb/>
Bet ore 1' Reaga<lb/>
total trade emb United S<lb/>
was Nicaragua's<lb/>
currenc) Out<lb/>
finance th rorist, anti-democratu<lb/>
wavs The <lb/>
alwa) s bee<lb/>
Daniel Ortega otite d " na ,?Vw oo<lb/>
pose Marxism I eninism .ire as iss m<lb/>
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Central mencan empire is <lb/>
cost.<lb/>
Republicans Perform Apartheid Volte-Face<lb/>
By ANTONY J. BL1NKEN<lb/>
The New Republic<lb/>
When 35 young Republican represen-<lb/>
tatives wrote to the South African am-<lb/>
bassador in Washington last December,<lb/>
their message argued as persuasively for<lb/>
a new kind of conservatism as it did<lb/>
against apartheid.<lb/>
By ending conservative silence about<lb/>
South Africa's official racism, they<lb/>
hoped to convince skeptical liberals and<lb/>
moderates that their vision of an "op-<lb/>
portunity society" was more than just a<lb/>
repackaging of the usual right-wing<lb/>
themes.<lb/>
The letter was signed by leading young<lb/>
Republicans such as Newt Gingrich of<lb/>
Georgia, Vin Weber of Minnesota and<lb/>
Robert Walker of Pennsylvania. "We<lb/>
were disturbed to see conservatives all<lb/>
lumped into one group, who are sup-<lb/>
posedly at least acquiescing, if not pro-<lb/>
apartheid says Walker, who led the ef-<lb/>
fort. "We decided to define that there is<lb/>
at least one group of us who are<lb/>
vehemently anti-apartheid, too<lb/>
But the realigners failed to foresee op-<lb/>
position from within conservative ranks,<lb/>
perhaps because they failed to see the<lb/>
contradictions in their new position. In<lb/>
the months since the letter was released,<lb/>
often vicious criticism from traditional<lb/>
right-wingers has forced the young turks<lb/>
to retreat.<lb/>
The young conservatives claim to have<lb/>
been surprised by the vehemence of the<lb/>
reaction to their letter. They should have<lb/>
known better. Criticism of a pro-<lb/>
Western, anti-communist regime ran<lb/>
against decades of conservative theory<lb/>
and practice. But the young turks had<lb/>
been unequivocal in their criticism.<lb/>
"If constructive engagement becomes<lb/>
in your view an excuse for maintaining<lb/>
the unacceptable status quo the letter<lb/>
warned the South Africans, "it will<lb/>
quickly become an approach that can<lb/>
engender no meaningful support among<lb/>
American policy-makers The young<lb/>
Republicans added a blunt threat. "We<lb/>
are looking for an immediate end to the<lb/>
violence in South Africa accompanied<lb/>
by a demonstrated sense of urgency<lb/>
about ending apartheid. If such actions<lb/>
are not forthcoming, we are prepared to<lb/>
recommendcurtailing new American<lb/>
investment in South Africaand<lb/>
organizing international diplomatic<lb/>
sanctions<lb/>
The backlash began almost im-<lb/>
mediately. The magazines of the old<lb/>
right reiterated the traditional conser-<lb/>
vative position that criticism of South<lb/>
Africa, no matter what the intention,<lb/>
abetted communism. Human Events ran<lb/>
a withering denunciation of the signers<lb/>
of the letter in an article on page 1: "In<lb/>
our view their moral authority was not<lb/>
enhanced by joining hands with the<lb/>
lynch mobs of the left National<lb/>
Review simply dismissed the letter as<lb/>
"uppity<lb/>
Old-fashioned bigotry played a role<lb/>
too. Aides to several of the co-signers<lb/>
said that their bosses have received an<lb/>
unusual amount of negative mail. "A lot<lb/>
of it was racist one aide told me, "but<lb/>
unfortunately these people are our con-<lb/>
stituents<lb/>
The young turks had not thought<lb/>
through their position, either<lb/>
theoretically or politically. If it was im-<lb/>
perative for conservatives to denounce<lb/>
the sorry human rights record of a pro-<lb/>
Western regime such as South Africa,<lb/>
why wouldn't it be imperative to criticize<lb/>
such regimes in Guatemala or the<lb/>
Philipines? That clearly would be more<lb/>
of a break with traditional conservatism<lb/>
than the young turks wanted. The<lb/>
realigners also neglected to calculate<lb/>
whether the liberal and moderate votes<lb/>
they might gain would outweigh the<lb/>
anti-black conservative votes they might<lb/>
lose.<lb/>
A racist may be more important to<lb/>
Republican politicians than many care<lb/>
to admit.<lb/>
By early January, the retreat started.<lb/>
In an interview with the Washington<lb/>
Times, Walker tried to dissociate the<lb/>
group of 35 from liberal opponents of<lb/>
apartheid: "I've been somewhat shock-<lb/>
ed since the whole thing came up to read<lb/>
conservative publications who are accus-<lb/>
ing us of sharing the agenda on South<lb/>
Africa. That's ridiculous<lb/>
Then in March, Walker, Gingrich and<lb/>
Weber declined to support legislation<lb/>
proposed by liberal Reps. Stephen<lb/>
Solarz, D-N.Y and William Gray,<lb/>
D-Penn that would have imposed sanc-<lb/>
tions on South Africa ? exactly the kind<lb/>
of bill they initially seemed to have in<lb/>
mind.<lb/>
As an alternative to Solarz-Grav.<lb/>
Gingrich, Weber and Walker introduced<lb/>
their own bill, which they grandilo-<lb/>
quently call the "International Human<lb/>
Dignity and Opportunity Act of 1985<lb/>
This bill is really aimed at communist<lb/>
countries, not at South Africa. Among<lb/>
other things, it would withhold IMF<lb/>
loans to nations that "cooperate" in in-<lb/>
ternational terrorism or illegal drug traf-<lb/>
ficking, and deny most-favored-nation<lb/>
trade status to countries that limit<lb/>
emigration or restrict the press.<lb/>
Walker explains his change of heart<lb/>
by arguing that this country needs an<lb/>
evenhanded approach to human rights<lb/>
problems. "It is inconceivable that the<lb/>
United States simply address human<lb/>
rights abuses which are currently gaining<lb/>
media attention without simultaneously<lb/>
addressing human rights situations<lb/>
everywhere in the world<lb/>
Yet consider the economic sanctions<lb/>
already imposed by the United States.<lb/>
Congress has placed restrictions on trade<lb/>
against 20 countries, most oi them com<lb/>
munist. Virtually no communist coun-<lb/>
tries receive U.S. foreign aid, and few<lb/>
may purchase high-technologv products<lb/>
made in the United States. Many oi the<lb/>
same nations have been the targets of<lb/>
periodic trade embargoes. South Africa<lb/>
has been singled out, but only in the<lb/>
sense that it is one of the onlv American<lb/>
allies not penalized by Congress for its<lb/>
human rights abuses.<lb/>
In his pitch to fellow Republicans for<lb/>
the "Human Dignity" bill. Walker com-<lb/>
pleted the surrender of the group of 35.<lb/>
He circulated a "Dear Republican Col-<lb/>
league" letter that warns that "once<lb/>
again House Republicans are in danger<lb/>
of being overwhlemed by an issue,<lb/>
caught as we too often are without any<lb/>
kind of constructive alternative with<lb/>
which to oppose, in this case, attempts<lb/>
to punish South Africa<lb/>
In December, ot course,<lb/>
preciseh what the J5 claimed<lb/>
readv to do.<lb/>
The ?'Dear Colleague" letl<lb/>
clear that Republicans now want<lb/>
a safe distance from liberals or 5<lb/>
Africa. As the vote on the Solai I<lb/>
bill approaches. Walker and Webei f?ae<lb/>
hinted that thev max take yet anol<lb/>
approach and support an administrat<lb/>
bill that would impose sanctions<lb/>
"significant progress' in dismantling<lb/>
apartheid has not been made b ls"<lb/>
The spirit of the December letter ha-<lb/>
long since evaporated<lb/>
By reverting to the traditional<lb/>
Republican line on South Africa,<lb/>
would-be-realigners have settled foi<lb/>
politics as usual. Putting Pretoria<lb/>
notice was an impressive-sounding<lb/>
gesture. Voting against the Solat Guo<lb/>
bill confirms that it was onlv a plo<lb/>
Scient<lb/>
H I N?? Hum ?i<lb/>
Scientists from at i<lb/>
tions will meet it E I<lb/>
month for an intefl<lb/>
geologic field workshop<lb/>
posium on phoxphi<lb/>
mineral resource<lb/>
tion of world hunger<lb/>
A principal ol<lb/>
ongoing project, tl<lb/>
tional Geological (<lb/>
Program<lb/>
156-Phosphonte<lb/>
research effort<lb/>
tists on maior depos<lb/>
mineral and their<lb/>
distribution<lb/>
Phosphorite; ?<lb/>
dient in chem<lb/>
neceassarv <lb/>
on a scale suffice?<lb/>
panding populations<lb/>
countries, esp<lb/>
parts ol Asia and i<lb/>
South Ameri<lb/>
Just last  ai<lb/>
ed to the IGCP Pre <lb/>
tified target areas oi p<lb/>
deposits in food<lb/>
India. Thailand<lb/>
Objects oi the project<lb/>
only locating dq<lb/>
geologic survevs 3r.<lb/>
tions. but also the I<lb/>
geologists in Thud Wc <lb/>
in methods ol m<lb/>
and making it ii<lb/>
During th J<lb/>
IGCP p- I<lb/>
tracked into some<lb/>
remote corners<lb/>
conduct their<lb/>
teams hae been ir i<lb/>
oi Australia.<lb/>
Vunan province in Cli<lb/>
edges ol the Gobi<lb/>
Mongolia, across<lb/>
Dail<lb/>
Lar<lb/>
and a<lb/>
"? ??"?! wiium<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0005"/><lb/>
Fatal<lb/>
ng Western<lb/>
n President<lb/>
ts evei more<lb/>
?'? of life and<lb/>
' AP-<lb/>
ng with<lb/>
nt, con-<lb/>
polic) of<lb/>
ecessary,<lb/>
Sgressors.<lb/>
? sdom is being<lb/>
a. The ag<lb/>
igua. The<lb/>
sed here at<lb/>
since 1981.<lb/>
tdministra-<lb/>
intense and<lb/>
M litarily, the<lb/>
?mmunists<lb/>
()nl<lb/>
lacking,<lb/>
enacted a<lb/>
Unii sd States<lb/>
source of trade<lb/>
e helping to<lb/>
mti-democratic<lb/>
. - -emmen: has<lb/>
is strongman<lb/>
?nce said, All who ojf<lb/>
eninism are assassins.<lb/>
to their pup-<lb/>
beg. But the<lb/>
economic<lb/>
? decide if a<lb/>
worth the<lb/>
Face<lb/>
? e, that is<lb/>
I the were<lb/>
etter makes it<lb/>
??? a ant to keep<lb/>
ral on South<lb/>
the SolarGray<lb/>
and Weber have<lb/>
may rake yet another<lb/>
rt an administration<lb/>
e sanctions if<lb/>
in dismantling<lb/>
ade h 1987.<lb/>
.? 1 ei letter has<lb/>
'he traditional<lb/>
x nth Africa, the<lb/>
?tied for<lb/>
Putting Pretoria on<lb/>
impressive-sounding<lb/>
I iray<lb/>
, ,i pjov.<lb/>
IAN,<lb/>
me,<lb/>
rt"<lb/>
'?H<lb/>
)<lb/>
IHL I-AS I C AROl lUS<lb/>
MAN 15, 19X5<lb/>
Scientists Seek Possibilities of Phosphorites To Solve Hunger<lb/>
I- 1 1 1 V U r- <lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
Scientists from at least 40 na-<lb/>
tions will meet at ECU early next<lb/>
month for an international<lb/>
geologic field workshop and sym-<lb/>
posium on phosphorites, a<lb/>
mineral resource vital to the solu-<lb/>
tion of world hunger.<lb/>
A principal objective of the<lb/>
ongoing project, the Interna-<lb/>
tional Geological Correlation<lb/>
Program Project<lb/>
156-Phosphontes, is to focus<lb/>
research efforts of world scien-<lb/>
tists on major deposits of the<lb/>
mineral and their strategic<lb/>
distribution.<lb/>
Phosphorites are a key ingre-<lb/>
dient in chemical fertilizers<lb/>
neceassary for crop production<lb/>
on a scale sufficent to feed the ex-<lb/>
panding populations of many<lb/>
countries, especially in Africa,<lb/>
parts of Asia and in Central and<lb/>
South America.<lb/>
Just last year, scientists attach-<lb/>
ed to the IGCP Project-156 iden-<lb/>
tified target areas of phosphorite<lb/>
deposits in food-scarce Ethiopia,<lb/>
India, Thailand and Colombia.<lb/>
Objects of the project include not<lb/>
only locating deposits through<lb/>
geologic surveys and explora-<lb/>
tions, but also the training of<lb/>
geologists in Third World nations<lb/>
in methods of mining phosphate<lb/>
and making it into fertilizers.<lb/>
During the past seven years,<lb/>
IGCP project scientists have<lb/>
tracked into some of the most<lb/>
remote corners of the globe to<lb/>
conduct their studies. Project<lb/>
teams have been in the outback<lb/>
of Australia, to the remote<lb/>
Yunan province in China, to the<lb/>
edges of the Gcbi Desert in<lb/>
Mongolia, across the mountains<lb/>
of the Soviet Republic of<lb/>
Kazakhstan in Central Asia, to<lb/>
the Himalyan kingdom of Nepal<lb/>
and to Ethiopia, Senegal and<lb/>
Morocco in Africa.<lb/>
Two volumes of research data<lb/>
and reports produced by project<lb/>
studies in Asia and Australia<lb/>
have been compiled for publica-<lb/>
tion by the Cambridge University<lb/>
Press. Other volumes are in<lb/>
various stages of preparation as<lb/>
the global research continues.<lb/>
In 1984, the IGCP<lb/>
156-Phosphorites project was<lb/>
renewed for an additional four<lb/>
years and Stanley Riggs of ECU<lb/>
and William Burnett of Florida<lb/>
State University were named co-<lb/>
directors. With the change of<lb/>
directors came a new emphasis<lb/>
shifting the prime geographic<lb/>
areas of research and education<lb/>
to the Caribbean Basin, Central<lb/>
and South America and Africa.<lb/>
Last year, A Caribbean Basin<lb/>
and Central American Phosphate<lb/>
Short Course at ECU set the<lb/>
stage for the larger, more<lb/>
elaborate program which began<lb/>
here May 5. A preliminary<lb/>
phosphate short course spon-<lb/>
sored by the IGCP project, the<lb/>
U.S. Geological Survey and ECU<lb/>
was conducted April 29-May 4.<lb/>
Riggs, an internationally-<lb/>
known geologist whose world-<lb/>
wide research and interest in<lb/>
phosphorite geology have won<lb/>
wide acclaim, has been involved<lb/>
in the IGCP 156-Phosphorites<lb/>
project since its inception.<lb/>
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"It's solid science says<lb/>
Riggs. "It is also science on<lb/>
which the future well-being of<lb/>
mankind, the whole human race,<lb/>
may depend<lb/>
Riggs is a recognized authority<lb/>
on coastal zone and seabed<lb/>
distribution of phosphorite rock<lb/>
formations and weathering. He<lb/>
discovered one of the world's<lb/>
largest phosphorite deposits in<lb/>
the Atlantic Ocean off the North<lb/>
Carolina coast several years ago.<lb/>
In 1984, Riggs received the<lb/>
University of North Carolina's<lb/>
O. Max Garner award for con-<lb/>
tributions to knowledge for the<lb/>
service and betterment of<lb/>
mankind.<lb/>
Riggs believes that through<lb/>
publication of certain other scien-<lb/>
P<lb/>
lific data which may come from<lb/>
the Ma symposium here, scien-<lb/>
tists may add immeasurably to<lb/>
the present knowledge of<lb/>
oceanography.<lb/>
"We could open a new book of<lb/>
25 to 35 million years of<lb/>
geological history he said.<lb/>
Another objective of the Ki( P<lb/>
Project 156-Phosphorites pro-<lb/>
gram is being achieved because<lb/>
the world's leading geologist<lb/>
have been cooperating and con-<lb/>
tributing to the project in the<lb/>
name of science, putting political<lb/>
and other differences of their<lb/>
governments aside.<lb/>
In effect, all of the nations ol<lb/>
the world arc participating and<lb/>
pooling their collective<lb/>
knowledge, Riggs said.<lb/>
For example, he cited the fact<lb/>
that UNESCO decided to support<lb/>
the Carribhean Basin and Central<lb/>
American project in North<lb/>
( aroihna and Florida this spring<lb/>
despite the fact that the United<lb/>
States government has announc-<lb/>
ed its intention to withdraw from<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057714_0006"/><lb/>
THE EASTCAROI 1NIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
MA 15, !9K<lb/>
Page 6<lb/>
Eastwood Discusses His Return To The West<lb/>
A name,?s stranger rides into the com.n, h  ???? - V I K, V V &amp; I<lb/>
A ruTn Tssssrand,exp,os,ve goid<lb/>
the praver of a young ?irl who s h ' , amv1 "? with<lb/>
sudden and random. violent ?n .1 Pg ?F a m'rade to end the<lb/>
Megan qu.et.v? 2X kK-STv!?<lb/>
pale horse: and his name h r  t ' l??ked and behdd a<lb/>
followed with him " " h'm Was Death- and Hell<lb/>
pr S&amp;tSJ? tHe l3teSl ?" fr?m<lb/>
the western genre Fas wT AMer a n,ne 'ear absen from<lb/>
shooter. 8 ' EMtwood rctur"s to the rawhide and the six-<lb/>
film S'cat'Idth"01 E"?0d Jl? ??<lb/>
career. ' " the rolc westerns have played in his<lb/>
MM: Since the "Rawhide" days, your image has been identified<lb/>
Zt'srLTi, WhQt lS V?Ur em?ti0nal b?d 3? 7n inre<lb/>
that s played such an important role in your career?<lb/>
vnJn.f1 VCrV u?Se? ,he WCStern That's where m roots are. I.<lb/>
SSWaafriarhblg, tar,0r m thC earl ?f m ?. both in<lb/>
television and the Italian-made westerns. In recent years they've<lb/>
been out quite a bit. I'd hate to see the genre complete! disappear<lb/>
though that's not really why 1 made Pale Rider.When I'm asked<lb/>
why! decided to do a western at this time I have to explain that<lb/>
mere really isn t any correlation to time or place. It's not like I'm<lb/>
trying to ride to the rescue of any genre. I just liked the story and<lb/>
wanted to tell ,t. Maybe there were other motivating factors ? me<lb/>
but at the onset, I hked the script and fell moved to do it I don't'<lb/>
believe in market research or popular wisdom. I trust my instinct.<lb/>
MH: How was the project developed' understand you had been<lb/>
contemplating it for quite some time.<lb/>
CE: I started on it about four years ago. Michael Butler and Dennis<lb/>
Shryack had written The Gauntlet for me. The often talked<lb/>
their love tor westerns, so one das we just sat down and ossed<lb/>
around various ideas. They came back with the concept for Pale<lb/>
Rider. , ended up making it a little more supernatural hen t was<lb/>
written, getting into the parallels with the Bible.<lb/>
TwingpZJ hUk' m?re SPeCifiC QbOUt y?W ibution to<lb/>
CE: They came uP with the conflict between the independent<lb/>
miners and the big corporation as they had done someTeTeSch on<lb/>
n? h n hSh CrH "? fr?m ???. 'hev w rote a trLtm.n<lb/>
?en the) brought my character in, the preacher. 1 felt he needed a<lb/>
Relationship with an antagonist, the marshal. That wouWgive<lb/>
he Pale Rider an added dimension. It also tied in with the image of<lb/>
horseman from the Apocalypse. I'm not a Biblical scholar bu<lb/>
: ays been fascinated by the mythology of those Biblical<lb/>
stones and how they relate to the mythology of the western<lb/>
MH: Did you yourself do some research on that period?<lb/>
Clint Eastwood stars as a mysterious horseman who answers a<lb/>
$Bioom<lb/>
X. nSS?rJSdTK ThJd btv"affecIed hi 'he GM<lb/>
on m Sonera Th't d aS Whe" "e "lm? '?? ?" s,a<lb/>
rtre vl ' t up "orth ,0 X(?? locations in Idaho<lb/>
e ri,P???l? Him "Pale Rider scheduled (or sunder<lb/>
County kls<lb/>
the land.<lb/>
tna. s all that s reallv onginal anything in the world is origii<lb/>
See (I IN I paje 7<lb/>
Bv GREG RIDEOlIT<lb/>
pcl?l in ?( f Asrolinian<lb/>
My mother never asked me<lb/>
what I wanted to be when I<lb/>
grow up, but if she did, I'd quick-<lb/>
ly give her my answer. "Mom I<lb/>
would solemnly intone, "I want<lb/>
to be Steve Dallas, who lives the<lb/>
quintessential lawyerly life in<lb/>
Bloom County, USA. He is a<lb/>
man to be admired<lb/>
"Steve who?" you sav. Why,<lb/>
Dallas, Steve Dallas. My main<lb/>
man, totally unrelated to<lb/>
anything Ewing. The narcissistic<lb/>
attorney heads up a band of pun-<lb/>
dits and ponderers of life in<lb/>
Berke Breathed's Doonesberryes-<lb/>
que cartoon strip "Bloom Coun-<lb/>
ty Since its beginning in 1980,<lb/>
the strip has climbed into the na-<lb/>
tion's hearts and minds just as<lb/>
Doonesbury did before it, and<lb/>
after Trudeau's gang went on<lb/>
vacation, Opus, Dallas's penguin<lb/>
Mdekick, has led the gang into<lb/>
6700 newspapers.<lb/>
But, why am I telling vou this?<lb/>
Well, because Little, Brown and<lb/>
Company has produced a collec-<lb/>
tion of our dear strip, the third<lb/>
such endeavor for our home<lb/>
libraries. All wrapped up and<lb/>
packaged under the heading<lb/>
Penguin Dreams and Stranger<lb/>
Things, strips from the past year<lb/>
are presented to be re-religiously<lb/>
read by Bloom faithfuls or seen<lb/>
for the first time by those who<lb/>
knew no better. So, to put it<lb/>
bluntly, it's worth the seven<lb/>
bucks. Hell, it's worth $8.50.<lb/>
It tingles your jocular bone and<lb/>
stimulates your social satire sen-<lb/>
sors. The funnier strips are even<lb/>
more fun the second rime<lb/>
around.<lb/>
Breathed scores homers witn<lb/>
all the gang ? Opus, the pudgv<lb/>
penguin; Binkley, a neurotic<lb/>
philosopher; Milo, the average<lb/>
Bloomite, whose penchant for<lb/>
editing does the First Amend-<lb/>
ment wonderous good; Oliver<lb/>
Wendell Jones, a precocious<lb/>
computer wiz with a crush on<lb/>
Einstein and a knack for sublime<lb/>
N<lb/>
comedy; and, of course, poor<lb/>
dead Bill the Cat, whose quest for<lb/>
the presidency under the Meadow<lb/>
Party banner was as smashingly<lb/>
successful as Walter Vvnat's His<lb/>
Name.<lb/>
The placing of pen to paper to<lb/>
be funny more often than not<lb/>
gets you laughed at, not laughed<lb/>
with. Satire succeeds even less so.<lb/>
But with the gang zeroing in on<lb/>
the world's peculiarities, Breath-<lb/>
ed makes us 'augh not only with<lb/>
him, but at ourselves. There's<lb/>
Steve Dallas, my bar hopping<lb/>
barrister hero, who, along with<lb/>
the rest of us, found out in Time<lb/>
the Sexual Revolution was dead.<lb/>
But with characteristic self-<lb/>
serving motives, he plays along<lb/>
with his female prey at Bob's Bar<lb/>
and Flesh Market, finally bellow-<lb/>
ing to a girl who loned for a rela-<lb/>
tionship instead of a one-nighter,<lb/>
I care for you Hot Mama <lb/>
Well put, Steve.<lb/>
Then, there's Opus's dream in-<lb/>
to Michael Jackson land. Breath-<lb/>
ed makes us both care for and<lb/>
laugh at the fairy-tale prince.<lb/>
After a trade-off with Michael<lb/>
for one day, our gallant Opus<lb/>
waves goodbye, magically<lb/>
beckoning these wistful words of<lb/>
wisdom: "Farewell, dancing<lb/>
prince. May your jockey briefs<lb/>
forever sparkle! Give my best to<lb/>
Brooke! And Wilbur! Give my<lb/>
best to your accountant Wilbur'<lb/>
And your brothers! Randy<lb/>
Marlon. Jackie, Geranium and<lb/>
Fr.to Ah, Opus. A classic.<lb/>
And can you believe it, there's<lb/>
Ever<lb/>
sT<lb/>
VI<lb/>
d<lb/>
a<lb/>
actually tons of this stuff<lb/>
Breathed takes us from stars 0<lb/>
bars, from triads to TV ads (lt<lb/>
slices, it dices) and on to whale<lb/>
boats and music videos. He rolls<lb/>
out our culture and shocks us<lb/>
with it. It is no wonder so manv<lb/>
01 my comrades wish to be Opu-<lb/>
or Bill the Cat, for in all of us<lb/>
there is a little of each Bloom<lb/>
character.<lb/>
And me. es, I am mostlv Steve<lb/>
Dallas, with witt) one-liners and<lb/>
ax-wielding clients. So, run out 10<lb/>
your nearest book store, and buv<lb/>
a copy. Then, when your mother<lb/>
calls to inquire about your<lb/>
future, you'll have an answer.<lb/>
Summer Movie Schedule<lb/>
All shows begin at 7p m<lb/>
DATE TITLE TIME RATING<lb/>
HO teAUY, -MfflUQir<lb/>
15 5MWN&amp; HCM AT MY PlfiCl<lb/>
M 5.60MA 36 fi QNCH<lb/>
RGHT 'AX6 HMPtR ' m<lb/>
invar<lb/>
no mmiru 36<lb/>
A neUOF CAK?<lb/>
rt'S - VH- HOtP IT A 56C<lb/>
WL<lb/>
V<lb/>
WL A mST6f,<lb/>
OrVSIDXl<lb/>
mriR<lb/>
MJCHAu<lb/>
JACKSON<lb/>
fieAse<lb/>
7-<lb/>
FtoHT AW<lb/>
I'M KOJAH<lb/>
YVU CRAZY KIPS<lb/>
ALWAYS TFYIN'70 SftoNBfiU.<lb/>
YOWmYPAST-SONOf<lb/>
A WN HERB'S Y6K NAJAE '<lb/>
COm IN. CeNTRAL.<lb/>
THIS IS R6PLeAP?K<lb/>
wr$neoN6Heg?w<lb/>
Se6'PiKRPAH0He<lb/>
S6NP OVEX "600P FAIRY<lb/>
SIX' FOR<lb/>
ESCORT.<lb/>
<lb/>
WHO1<lb/>
I MPEYXm 1<lb/>
FeerMP 7<lb/>
FOUMME,<lb/>
PLEASE. ? r<lb/>
May .?Risky Business96 min.R<lb/>
May 15Bonnie &amp; ClydeIll min.R<lb/>
May 161letch (Sneak Preview)PG<lb/>
May 20VictorVictoria133 min.PG<lb/>
May 22Barbarella98 min.PG<lb/>
May 2710123 min.R<lb/>
May 29T'ddie and the Cruisers92 min.PG<lb/>
June 3Fating Raoul87 min.R<lb/>
June 5Shampoo112 min.R<lb/>
June 10The Jerk93 min.R<lb/>
June 12 June 18 June 19Dr. Strangelove orth by orthwest Brimstone &amp; Treacle93 min. 136 min. 85 min.PC, PG R<lb/>
June 25The Pope of Greenwich Village122 min.R<lb/>
June 26Alien124 min.R<lb/>
July 2Stripes105 min.R<lb/>
July 3 July 9Kelly's Heroes The Blues Brothers145 min. 133 min.PG R<lb/>
July 10Dirty Harry101 min.R<lb/>
July 15 July 17 July 22The Graduate The Cars That Ate Paris American Gigolo115 min. 90 min. 121 min.PG PG R<lb/>
July 24Casablanca102 min.G<lb/>
Clint<lb/>
'<lb/>
F01 ex a<lb/>
was take.<lb/>
irn bo I<lb/>
I '<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
Mil<lb/>
? ? ?<lb/>
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no:<lb/>
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of a<lb/>
like ?<lb/>
has -<lb/>
thout<lb/>
make<lb/>
hate :<lb/>
dience<lb/>
this all ?<lb/>
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audience<lb/>
film and 1<lb/>
wanted :<lb/>
picture. I c<lb/>
could have<lb/>
have ruined<lb/>
would pav ?<lb/>
ty. I guesv ?<lb/>
and poll pe<lb/>
proached PU R<lb/>
ing the star. .<lb/>
pseudo<lb/>
thousands<lb/>
the audience<lb/>
you start thi<lb/>
MH: Wet<lb/>
dealing u<lb/>
when it can<lb/>
ty'sfam<lb/>
isn 7 m<lb/>
the pop<lb/>
CE: .<lb/>
Pale Ridi<lb/>
thai<lb/>
and 1 a<lb/>
thro i<lb/>
luck. High Plain<lb/>
Halt- -<lb/>
on S<lb/>
L. -<lb/>
re<lb/>
the<lb/>
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audience 5<lb/>
of 1 eir 1<lb/>
cai<lb/>
the<lb/>
like<lb/>
MH:<lb/>
drt c ?<lb/>
CE: M<lb/>
prayer a<lb/>
mountains The<lb/>
To m<lb/>
super .<lb/>
plane, rn i<lb/>
who a<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
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7<lb/>
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foil AM?. ? -<lb/>
rf&amp;p V' ri ? - i<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057714_0007"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 15, 1985<lb/>
est<lb/>
R<lb/>
PC<lb/>
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PC<lb/>
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1 ? 'ore, and buv<lb/>
nen your mother<lb/>
lire about vourt k<lb/>
an answer.vere<lb/>
es it<lb/>
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in 2<lb/>
1 R I17.<lb/>
has<lb/>
PG <lb/>
nal<lb/>
PG 1the<lb/>
for<lb/>
PG Ion<lb/>
ing<lb/>
ray<lb/>
Clint Calls For New Western<lb/>
Continued From Page 6<lb/>
For example, there are parallels between Euro-<lb/>
pean and Oriental stories. Mv first Italian picture<lb/>
was taken from a Samurai story, Kurosawa's Yo-<lb/>
jimbo. Then, when I first saw that Japanese film<lb/>
1 thought I was watching a western! So there's<lb/>
realK nothing new on the planet.<lb/>
MH: When you were a youngster were vou<lb/>
fascinated by westerns? Do you feel that anv of<lb/>
them have been influential on vour own approach<lb/>
to the genre? For instance, Anthony Mann's<lb/>
westerns with James Stewart?<lb/>
CE: 1 don't know. I liked them a lot, but I wasn't<lb/>
totally obsessed by them. I don't reallv recall one<lb/>
particular director that stood out. In those days<lb/>
filmgoers weren't very conscious. You went to the<lb/>
vics because you wanted to see John Wayne or<lb/>
Gary Cooper. You didn't know who directed the<lb/>
picture. Maybe there were some film buffs, but 1<lb/>
didn't know too many people who were really<lb/>
educated as to the whole background of films.<lb/>
Maybe Hawks and Ford were the ones who got the<lb/>
most recognition as directors, the name above the<lb/>
title sort of thing.<lb/>
MH: Did you find it more difficult in 1984 to im-<lb/>
plement a project like Pale Rider than you did 10<lb/>
vears ago when vou undertook The Outlaw Josev<lb/>
Hales?<lb/>
CE: No, maybe because Josey Wales did really<lb/>
well. It wasn't like the last picture I'd done had<lb/>
been soft at the box office. I have to give the<lb/>
studio credit, they liked the idea, or maybe it just<lb/>
grew on them!<lb/>
MH: But then why didn't you make it when you<lb/>
were approached originally? Were you committed<lb/>
to other projects or did you feel that the moment<lb/>
was not quite right?<lb/>
CE: I'd like to say I picked the moment, but I'm<lb/>
not that smart! I did it on instinct. At that time I<lb/>
had other projects and I put Pale Rider aside. All<lb/>
of a sudden, a year or so ago, it just hit me that I'd<lb/>
like to see a western. Everything I've always done<lb/>
has been that way, something I'd like to see. I<lb/>
thought. 'Gee I'd like to see a western, time to<lb/>
make that script I've got in the drawer here I<lb/>
hate to play to a preconceived idea of the au-<lb/>
dience. I like to jus' make the project. I've done<lb/>
this all the way along. If you go with a preconceiv-<lb/>
ed idea you get into a bind of second-guessing the<lb/>
audience, which is dangerous. It would affect the<lb/>
film and the way you make it. I'm sure if I had<lb/>
wanted to make Bronco Billy a more commercial<lb/>
picture, I could have found all sorts of ways. I<lb/>
could have tossed in action scenes, but that would<lb/>
have ruined the film. Somewhere down the line I<lb/>
would pay for it since it wouldn't be as good quali-<lb/>
ty. I guess the studios feed stuff into computers<lb/>
and poll people, but that's nonsense. If I ap-<lb/>
proached Pale Rider that way, I would be sacrific-<lb/>
ing the story the a eel and the soul of it, for<lb/>
pseudo-commercial reasons. Bigger shoot-outs,<lb/>
thousands of extras There is a soul and heart in<lb/>
the audience and they are going to feel cheated if<lb/>
you start throwing things out to them like that.<lb/>
MH: Weren't you also going against the trend in<lb/>
dealing with the subtleties of mature relationships<lb/>
when it came to the preacher and Michael Moria, -<lb/>
ty's family? The rich emotional texture of the film<lb/>
isn 't necessarily geared to the younger segment of<lb/>
the population.<lb/>
CE: Yet, they were my second reason for doing<lb/>
Pale Rider. There is a whole youthful audience<lb/>
that hasn't seen me in a western for nine years,<lb/>
and whose only exposure to the genre has been<lb/>
through television re-runs. I've had very good<lb/>
luck; High Plains Drifter and The Outlaw Josey<lb/>
Wales keep getting good ratings every time they're<lb/>
on. So somebody out there wants to see westerns.<lb/>
Look at the so-called space movies. Aren't they<lb/>
really just spin-offs of the westerns? In Star Wars,<lb/>
they talk about the Force, but westerns all use<lb/>
those same elements. Now the question is, if that<lb/>
audience is a more mature one, will they step out<lb/>
of their homes and come visit us, or wait with their<lb/>
can of beer in hand for it to go on TV? I think if<lb/>
the picture is good on its own merit the audiences<lb/>
will come. If it's no good maybe they won't. I'd<lb/>
like to think that, whether it's true or not.<lb/>
MH: Going back to the supernatural elements you<lb/>
stressed in the narrative, was it your intention to<lb/>
suggest that the whole story might have been<lb/>
dreamed by the young girl?<lb/>
CE: Maybe it's a dream, maybe it isn't. She says a<lb/>
prayer and the preacher is sent down from the<lb/>
mountains. There's a lot of ways to interpret it.<lb/>
To me, it's just the spirit. Whether the hero is a<lb/>
supernatural being or an emissary from a higher<lb/>
plane, he brings spirit to these discouraged people,<lb/>
who are ready to leave the camp. But it turns out<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
that the preachei has another reason for being<lb/>
there as well. He had a whole other life with the<lb/>
antagonist that has to be settled. It's the basic jux-<lb/>
taposition of the forces of good and evil, as the<lb/>
conflict between the big corporation and the<lb/>
miners develops.<lb/>
MH: A common thread in the three westerns you<lb/>
directed is a feeling for people who have banded<lb/>
together in some sort of informal community. Be-<lb/>
ing disassociated from society and unorthodox in<lb/>
his methods, your character always shows a<lb/>
natural sympathy for the underdogs, outcasts, or<lb/>
marginal elements.<lb/>
CE: I feel that it adds to the drama if the hero is<lb/>
not just a loner, but you have these conflicts and<lb/>
relationships. I also think the bureaucratic work-<lb/>
ings of nations and corporations have encouraged<lb/>
people to form counter-societies. It seems like the<lb/>
growing complications of our life have made us<lb/>
wonder if there isn't some way to cut out all of<lb/>
that. Unlike High Plains Drifter, where the hero<lb/>
lets everyone fend for themselves, the people in<lb/>
Pale Rider are brought together by the preacher;<lb/>
they are willing to defend themselves and fight for<lb/>
their rights.<lb/>
MH: Being fairly similar in structure, with the<lb/>
hero as a catalyst in a micro-societv, High Plains<lb/>
Drifter and Pale Rider offer an interesting con-<lb/>
trast.<lb/>
CE: They both have elements of the classic<lb/>
western in them, mythological characters who<lb/>
drift in and have an effect on the people. In High<lb/>
Plains Drifter, he is the bereaved brother who<lb/>
comes back and persecutes the people for their<lb/>
apathy or corruption. In Pale Rider the stranger<lb/>
comes to the aid of hardworking people, who are<lb/>
trying to seek out a living and are being harassed<lb/>
by the major corporate concern. It's a classic pat-<lb/>
tern that's been played out hundreds of times,<lb/>
whether it's cattlemen against sheep men or land<lb/>
barons against settlers.<lb/>
MH: In High Plains Drifter as well as in Sergio<lb/>
Leone's westerns, moral values were totally con-<lb/>
fused. In Pale Rider, the line is drawn clearly, as it<lb/>
used to be in classic westerns, between right and<lb/>
wrong, between the little guys and big business,<lb/>
between the individuals and the establishment.<lb/>
CE: It was a different era. In that period of the<lb/>
60's cynicism was more prevalent. The westerns I<lb/>
made in Italy were strictly entertainment. But I<lb/>
hope people now are reaching out beyond<lb/>
cynicism and are interested in ecological and other<lb/>
modern day concerns.<lb/>
MH: Could Pale Rider be seen as a reconciliation<lb/>
between the baroque elements that marked Sergio<lb/>
Leone's westerns and the classical tradition from<lb/>
which the Italian westerns had departed.<lb/>
CE: The westerns I made with Sergio Leone were<lb/>
great fun to do at that particular time. After 1 did<lb/>
three of them I felt it was time to move on and do<lb/>
something different. I don't think it would be<lb/>
good for me or anybody to go back and do those<lb/>
kind of satiric forms unless it was something new<lb/>
and special. I like the more traditional western,<lb/>
but when we did the Leone films in the 60's, that<lb/>
genre was in a dormant state. So his highly stylized<lb/>
westerns came as a breath of fresh air. When I<lb/>
came back to the States, I was offered a part in<lb/>
MacKenna's Gold, a huge production. But I turn-<lb/>
ed it down and went for Hang'em High, which<lb/>
was a much smaller film but which analyzed the<lb/>
pros and cons of capital punishment, an issue that<lb/>
concerned people on a deeper level.<lb/>
MH: Like the best classic westerns, Pale Rider is<lb/>
affirmative and inspirational. You feel the power<lb/>
of human solidarity and you care for a community<lb/>
that is vibrant and alive.<lb/>
CE: To me, in a film, whether it's a western or<lb/>
not, you have to be wanting something to happen.<lb/>
Watching a film like The Good, the Bad, and the<lb/>
Ugh you just sit there like a voyeur and take in a<lb/>
lot of different ways of shooting people. It had<lb/>
great entertainment value, but in Pale Rider, you<lb/>
really want somebody to wipe out the villains, you<lb/>
build up steam. It gets you in the classic vein.<lb/>
MH: So does the dignity of the characters. There<lb/>
emotions are understated but are as poignant as<lb/>
they were in the cinema of John Ford or Anthony<lb/>
Mann.<lb/>
CE: Michael Moriarty's character evolves through<lb/>
his contact with the preacher, eventually becoming<lb/>
the leader of the community. They all learn<lb/>
something, including the mother and the<lb/>
daughter. I added these elements that were not in<lb/>
the script, because I felt that people in the com-<lb/>
munity had to grow.<lb/>
BY JARRELL &amp; JOHNSON<lb/>
fan. mm j&amp;rPa &amp;&amp;&amp;<lb/>
rn?" e:A-r as nu<lb/>
Summer School Special<lb/>
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CHUCK NORRIS<lb/>
AN ORION PICTURES RELEASE<lb/>
Storts<lb/>
Friday<lb/>
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? R ?<lb/>
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Get Your SummerFall Semester Application in NOW!<lb/>
$tTa'? Vflctfm S<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057714_0008"/><lb/>
liiEEASTCAROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 15, 1985<lb/>
Pirates Win in 13 Inninps<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
Aulilanl Sports hditor<lb/>
It went down to extra innings<lb/>
of the last conference game of the<lb/>
regular season for the Pirate<lb/>
baseballers, but they finally took<lb/>
the ECAC-South regular season<lb/>
title April 24 at Harrington Field.<lb/>
ECU didn't back in, either.<lb/>
They defeated season-long league<lb/>
leader UNC-Wilmington 8-4 in a<lb/>
game which saw Pirate<lb/>
right fielder Jay McGraw smash a<lb/>
grandslam homerun in the bot-<lb/>
tom of the 13th inning to secure<lb/>
the victory and conference cham-<lb/>
pionship.<lb/>
It took three ECU pitchers to<lb/>
hold the Seahawks to four runs,<lb/>
while UNC-W hurler Kenny King<lb/>
had the misfortune to go 12 inn-<lb/>
ings only to be relieved in the last<lb/>
frame by Scott Altman, who took<lb/>
the loss with the homer by<lb/>
McGraw.<lb/>
The Pirates scored once in the<lb/>
first on a walk, two outs and a<lb/>
wild pitch, but the Seahawks<lb/>
took the lead with three runs in<lb/>
the third, the main blow being<lb/>
McGraw<lb/>
Gary Hall's 19th homerun of the<lb/>
year.<lb/>
ECU loaded the bases in the<lb/>
bottom of the frame on two<lb/>
singles and a walk. One run<lb/>
scored on an out, then Winfred<lb/>
Johnson doubled in two runs to<lb/>
give the Pirates a 4-3 advantage.<lb/>
An error led to a UNC-W run<lb/>
in the fourth, which tied the score<lb/>
at four apiece until McGraw's<lb/>
game-winning homer in the 13th<lb/>
inning.<lb/>
Daniel Boone started the game<lb/>
for ECU, then gave way to Jim<lb/>
Peterson in the fourth after three<lb/>
runs had scored for the<lb/>
Seahawks. Peterson was tagged<lb/>
with one run in the five frames he<lb/>
threw. Mike Christopher pitched<lb/>
the final five innings and picked<lb/>
up his ECU record-tying 10th<lb/>
consecutive win, striking out six,<lb/>
walking none and only giving up<lb/>
two hits.<lb/>
The Pirates finished the<lb/>
ECAC-South regular season with<lb/>
a 12-4 record. UNC-W fell to<lb/>
10-5 in the conference with the<lb/>
loss.<lb/>
Campbell University had the<lb/>
Pirates number at the end of the<lb/>
regular season, beating ECU in<lb/>
the last two games 5-4 and 3-2.<lb/>
One of the biggest casualties<lb/>
was Pirate hurler Mike<lb/>
Christopher's attempt to take<lb/>
sole possession of the consecutive<lb/>
pitching victory record for ECU.<lb/>
Christopher ironically suffered<lb/>
his only two losses of the season<lb/>
in this pair of games.<lb/>
In the May 2 game at Buies<lb/>
Creek, Campbell used the long<lb/>
ball to good advantage. Roy Hill<lb/>
hit a solo shot and Rodney<lb/>
Stovall a two-run homer in the se-<lb/>
cond to pace the Camels to a 4-0<lb/>
lead.<lb/>
ECU picked up a run in the<lb/>
fourth and two in the fifth, but<lb/>
another Campbell run in the top<lb/>
of the fifth proved to be enough<lb/>
for the win. Winfred Johnson<lb/>
singled in a run for the Pirates in<lb/>
the eighth, setting a new single-<lb/>
season hitting mark of 65 for the<lb/>
Pirates, but that closed out the<lb/>
scoring for the game.<lb/>
The Camels again bested ECU<lb/>
May 11, this time at Harnn<lb/>
Field by a 3-2 margin. Pirate<lb/>
starter Mike Christopher gavs:<lb/>
only one run in six innings, then<lb/>
was tagged for four hits and two<lb/>
runs in the seventh before be .<lb/>
relieved by Jim Peterson.<lb/>
ECU opened the scoring in the<lb/>
fifth when Greg Hardison walked<lb/>
and came home on an error. The<lb/>
Camels then evened the score m<lb/>
the top of the sixth with a walk.<lb/>
hit and an error.<lb/>
Campbell took a 3-1 lead in the<lb/>
seventh on a walk and four<lb/>
singles, which proved to bt<lb/>
enough for the win. The<lb/>
Pirate run came on a long drive<lb/>
to left by Mark Cockrell.<lb/>
Campbell went to 30-15 with<lb/>
the wins, while ECU finished the<lb/>
regular season at 31-12. The<lb/>
Pirates now enter the ECAC<lb/>
tournament at Harrington F<lb/>
tomorrow as the first needed<lb/>
team. ECU plays George Ma<lb/>
at 7 p.m while the first garni<lb/>
2 features New York Tech ven<lb/>
Iona.<lb/>
I<lb/>
ECU assistant coach Bills Best (.3) waves Mark Cockrell (23) around<lb/>
third in a Pirate gaim earlier in the season at Harrington Field.<lb/>
Pirates Host EC A C Baseball Tourney;<lb/>
Winner Receives Automatic NCAA Bid<lb/>
ECAC Tournament Pairings<lb/>
1 hursday 2:00 New York lech vs Iona<lb/>
7:00 ECU vs George Mason<lb/>
Friday 2:00 Loser's Bracket<lb/>
7:00 Winner's Bracket<lb/>
Saturda 2:00 loser's Bracket<lb/>
7:00 Championship Game<lb/>
Sunda 2:00 Championship Game (if necessary)<lb/>
A book of tickets for the entire three day tournament<lb/>
veils for $10.00. Tickets for a single da of action are<lb/>
$4:00. Tickets may be purchased at the ticket office in<lb/>
Minges Coliseum or at the gate at Harrington Field.<lb/>
B TONY BROWN<lb/>
Dublin Sport t diior<lb/>
ECU's Harrington Field will be<lb/>
humming with excitement for the<lb/>
next few days as Coach Gary<lb/>
Overton and the baseball Pirates<lb/>
host the ECAC tournament<lb/>
beginning tomorrow.<lb/>
Tickets will cost $10.00 for the<lb/>
entire event or $4.00 for each two<lb/>
game session and Sunday's possi-<lb/>
ble single game. Since it's an<lb/>
ECAC sponsored event, these<lb/>
prices apply to ECU students and<lb/>
staff also.<lb/>
New York Tech and Iona open<lb/>
the tournament play at 2 p.m.<lb/>
Thursday in the double-<lb/>
eliminaUpn affair ECU and<lb/>
fellow ETACSotf member<lb/>
George Mason meet in the second<lb/>
game of the day at 7 p.m. The<lb/>
Lady Softballers End Season<lb/>
Pirates defeated the Patriots in<lb/>
two of three regular season con-<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
Friday's 2 p.m game will oust<lb/>
one of the first day losers, while<lb/>
the 7 p.m. game in the winner's<lb/>
bracket will either determine the<lb/>
champion or necessitate a final<lb/>
game Sunday at 2.<lb/>
The champion will receive an<lb/>
automatic bid to the NCAA<lb/>
regional playoffs. The Pirates are<lb/>
the defending champions and are<lb/>
the first team other than James<lb/>
Madison to host this ECAC<lb/>
event, which is in its seventh year.<lb/>
ECU, GMU and NYT sport<lb/>
the best overall records, each<lb/>
twinning, at leat 31 games, while<lb/>
ECAC-Metro champ Iona set a<lb/>
new school record of 23 wins for<lb/>
the season. It had been expected<lb/>
that UNC-Wilmington would<lb/>
make the tournament, but a poor<lb/>
second half of the season drop-<lb/>
ped them out of consideration.<lb/>
Pirate coach Overton believes<lb/>
the season records don't mean<lb/>
that much at this point though,<lb/>
because when tournament time<lb/>
comes, all the teams which make<lb/>
it that far are good. "Each of the<lb/>
four teams have an equal shot at<lb/>
winning the tournament he<lb/>
said. "You have to go out and do<lb/>
what it takes to win every time<lb/>
you play<lb/>
The pair of season-ending<lb/>
losses to Campbell University<lb/>
which closed out the Pirates'<lb/>
regular season will have no bear-<lb/>
ing on ECU's chances in the tour-<lb/>
nament either, according to<lb/>
Overton.<lb/>
"The team's in good spirit<lb/>
he stated. "Those losses won<lb/>
affect us. Everybody's readv to<lb/>
play their role. I don't think we<lb/>
have any particular advantage<lb/>
being the hosts, either. We're g<lb/>
ing to play as we have all sea-<lb/>
using the team concept that g<lb/>
us here.<lb/>
"Each team member has to do<lb/>
his own job and they all know<lb/>
what they're responsible for<lb/>
Overton added. The team is look-<lb/>
ing to improve on last year's<lb/>
post-season play, but since the<lb/>
Puaies narrowW mistd winmng<lb/>
the NCAA regional in Florida<lb/>
last year, it won't be an easy goal<lb/>
to attain.<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sport t-dilor<lb/>
The Lady Pirate softball team<lb/>
came within one game of tying<lb/>
last years 25-win season in only<lb/>
their second year of NCAA Divi<lb/>
sion I fast-pitch competition.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates had won five<lb/>
consecutive games until they<lb/>
dropped three in a row to the<lb/>
University of Virginia to end the<lb/>
season at 24-17-1.<lb/>
Although ECU didn't win as<lb/>
many games as they did in their<lb/>
initial season of fast pitch play<lb/>
ECU coach Sue Manahan felt the<lb/>
team did show improvement.<lb/>
"We had a more difficult<lb/>
schedule than last year, and<lb/>
finished with almost the same<lb/>
record Manahan said. "So I<lb/>
would say that we improved<lb/>
Among the highlights of the<lb/>
season was a 7-3 win over then<lb/>
No. 1 ranked in the region South<lb/>
Carolina. Also the Lady Pirates<lb/>
got a no-hitter from senior Pam<lb/>
Young against Methodist. Young<lb/>
fanned 10 Methodist batters as<lb/>
the Lady Pirates downed the<lb/>
Lady Monarchs 3-0.<lb/>
Young's no-hitter put the<lb/>
finishing touches on a double-<lb/>
header sweep over Methodist on<lb/>
April 18. ECU then swept a twin-<lb/>
bill over Liberty Baptist the next<lb/>
day by the scores of 2-1 and 3-2.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates got their final<lb/>
victory of the season by downing<lb/>
Virgina 7 2 in the opener of a<lb/>
double-header. The Lady<lb/>
Cavaliers battled back to take the<lb/>
nightcap by a score of 12-9.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates closed out<lb/>
their season on April 24 against<lb/>
Virginia. ECU lost both ends of<lb/>
the twinbill, dropping the first<lb/>
game 5-3 and the last game 3-2.<lb/>
Junior Lisa Zmuda overtook<lb/>
teammate Wendy Ozment in the<lb/>
final game to pace the Lady Bucs<lb/>
in hitting. Zmuda finished the<lb/>
season with a .321 batting<lb/>
average, while Ozment ended the<lb/>
year at .319.<lb/>
Robin Graves and Carla<lb/>
Alphin, who anchored the right<lb/>
side of the infield were named<lb/>
defensive MVPs by Manahan.<lb/>
Man. han is excited about next<lb/>
year as the Lady Pirates will<lb/>
return a number of players and<lb/>
will have another year of fast<lb/>
pitch experience behind them.<lb/>
ECU will, however, suffer<lb/>
losses up the middle as catcher<lb/>
Sandy Martin, pitcher Pam<lb/>
Young and centerfielder Tamara<lb/>
Franks will all have used up their<lb/>
eligibility.<lb/>
"We had some outstanding<lb/>
performances this season<lb/>
Manahan said. "I just wish we<lb/>
had been more consistently<lb/>
outstanding. Still I am looking<lb/>
forward to next year with a great<lb/>
deal of enthusiasm and op-<lb/>
timism<lb/>
Lady Pirate Catcher Suzanne Martin makes a play on an opposing baserunner at home plate.<lb/>
Barrise, Pendergraft Resign Coaching Jobs<lb/>
Fullback Reggie Branch (32) signed a free agent contract with the Washington Redskins recently<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sports Editor<lb/>
Since the last edition of The<lb/>
East Carolinian on April 24,<lb/>
various events have taken place<lb/>
concerning Pirate athletics.<lb/>
Among the newsworthy items:<lb/>
Art Baker completed his first<lb/>
Pirate coaching staff with the ad-<lb/>
dition of two assistants; ECU<lb/>
basketball coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison is now looking for assistant<lb/>
coaches after two members of his<lb/>
staff accepted other positions; in<lb/>
addition Harrison had one player<lb/>
transfer but is bringing in five<lb/>
new faces for next season; the<lb/>
NFL also conducted its annual<lb/>
signing of football talent with<lb/>
two Pirates being drafted and<lb/>
two others signing free agent con-<lb/>
tracts.<lb/>
Below is a more detailed ac-<lb/>
count of these events:<lb/>
BASKETBALL ASSISTANTS<lb/>
LEAVE: Basketball assistant<lb/>
coaches Tom Barrise and David<lb/>
Pendergraft have both resigned<lb/>
to accept positions at other<lb/>
universities.<lb/>
Barrise, a native of Patterson,<lb/>
NJ, accepted a similar position at<lb/>
Fairfield University. Barrise<lb/>
coached at ECU for six seasons,<lb/>
and prior to that was an assistant<lb/>
at Jacksonville University for<lb/>
three seasons.<lb/>
Pendergraft, a native of Cary,<lb/>
resigned to accept a job at UNC-<lb/>
Charlotte under new head coach<lb/>
Jeff Mullins. Pendergraft began<lb/>
coaching at ECU in 1979 as a<lb/>
graduate assistant. From 1982<lb/>
until his resignation, he was the<lb/>
chief recruiting coach on the<lb/>
Pirate staff.<lb/>
ECU head coach Charlie Har-<lb/>
rison was disappointed to see the<lb/>
two assistants leave, but said they<lb/>
would not be forgotten. "Their<lb/>
loyalty to the program and the<lb/>
work the did for the program was<lb/>
tremendous Harrison said.<lb/>
"The results of their hard work<lb/>
may not have shown up right<lb/>
away, but it definitely will in the<lb/>
future<lb/>
Both coaches reportedly receiv-<lb/>
ed substantial pay raises in their<lb/>
new positions.<lb/>
W'ith the resignations of the<lb/>
two, Harrison's staff is currentlv<lb/>
comprised of part-time assistant<lb/>
Al Walker and student assistant<lb/>
Tony Robinson.<lb/>
BASKETBALL RECRUITS:<lb/>
ECU basketball coach Charlie<lb/>
Harrison has announced the sign-<lb/>
mgs of four incoming freshmen,<lb/>
who along with Marcel Henrv<lb/>
will give the Pirates five new<lb/>
faces for next season.<lb/>
Henry, a 6-6 player who<lb/>
becomes eligible this season after<lb/>
transferring to ECU from St. An-<lb/>
drews last year, is capable of<lb/>
ST" ?? guard position<lb/>
and either of the forward posi-<lb/>
tions. He was an all-conference<lb/>
selection both years at St. An-<lb/>
ZC1S S Was Div??on III Player<lb/>
of the Year as well.<lb/>
??Marcel has good basketball<lb/>
"wtmcts and is capable of playing<lb/>
cither inside or outside Har-<lb/>
rison said. "He is extremlv ver-<lb/>
? BAKEK, P. Nla<lb/>
Fac<lb/>
In a statement o<lb/>
concerns, the fa<lb/>
Carolina Unnersitv<lb/>
mended that freshmen!<lb/>
ble to participate<lb/>
such as football and<lb/>
, "wh.ch create substanJ<lb/>
to successful aca <lb/>
ment<lb/>
The proposal is conj<lb/>
list of suggestion<lb/>
Faculty Senate com j<lb/>
dorsed by the Senate,<lb/>
the 11 Division <lb/>
the NCAA Preside:<lb/>
sion to develop <lb/>
for consideratio:<lb/>
1-A convention.<lb/>
It proposed tr<lb/>
tion with new aui<lb/>
as soon as pos?-<lb/>
in conjunction v.<lb/>
scheduled special convl<lb/>
the NCAA in New <lb/>
Baker<lb/>
Adam<lb/>
Continued from Pai<lb/>
satile and ever.<lb/>
guard some la j<lb/>
team<lb/>
The rema <lb/>
were all high scfc<lb/>
past season and .<lb/>
winning progra-<lb/>
ed record for their<lb/>
?5 94-1 with all four j<lb/>
 on conference cl<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
Al Clark, a 6<lb/>
Flint Hill High Scho<lb/>
and Manual Jone a<lb/>
ingarn Hieh S<lb/>
Washington, D.C. are<lb/>
performers who .<lb/>
; next season. Both play<lb/>
ly 17 years old and ?<lb/>
until next December<lb/>
I could conceivably g<lb/>
more.<lb/>
ECU also sig<lb/>
John Williams is a 6-<lb/>
from Atlantic City H:g<lb/>
in Atlantic City, NJ. " AS<lb/>
a very fine shooter and!<lb/>
Harrison said. "He<lb/>
against al"? of the zoi<lb/>
been seeing because not<lb/>
i some opportunity <lb/>
! well<lb/>
Jeff Kelly, a 5-9 ; i<lb/>
rounds out the P <lb/>
- Kelly is also from New<lb/>
?T, is a hard-nosed player<lb/>
; to Harrison. "Jeff is<lb/>
- . kids you don't find ver<lb/>
: is a basketball junkie<lb/>
said. "He plays eem<lb/>
-? and hopefully his w rec k.<lb/>
don will be contagk<lb/>
Harrison feels that thel<lb/>
 faces will give next year's<lb/>
different look. "1 fee!<lb/>
very good recruiting clasl<lb/>
rison said. "We wa f<lb/>
front court player,<lb/>
not to take anyone who<lb/>
good person and plave:<lb/>
BAKER FILLS ST 1<lb/>
football coach Art B<lb/>
nounced the final two<lb/>
on his coaching stai<lb/>
Johnson. ?4, will<lb/>
recruiting coordinat- <lb/>
coaching the linebackc<lb/>
Hemn, 37, will coach th<lb/>
linebackers.<lb/>
Johnson comes to Ed<lb/>
serving as defensive cool<lb/>
at Appalachian State la<lb/>
The Apps moved from h<lb/>
in the Southern Confeij<lb/>
third place in only one vej<lb/>
Cheerlei<lb/>
The 1985-86 ECl dx<lb/>
' squad has been announq<lb/>
i below are the member<lb/>
'squad.<lb/>
Senior J.K. Elkins is<lb/>
fourth year on the scjuadl<lb/>
Mhe most experienced retuf<lb/>
 Junior's Chuck Ingl<lb/>
"Leigh Brown are both eJ<lb/>
?into their third year on the)<lb/>
Sara Kelly, Eric Sk<lb/>
?Judy Martin, Susanne Bar<lb/>
Morris and Susan Hartlev<lb/>
?n their second year<lb/>
Cheerleaders.<lb/>
There will be six meml.<lb/>
?he squad in their first seas<lb/>
cheerleader. Mark Moore<lb/>
tlerningway, Jennifer B<lb/>
Snd Myra Almond are<lb/>
JPear performers.<lb/>
j Mary Thaxton and<lb/>
?alrymplc will botl<lb/>
leerleader mascots in th<lb/>
?ial campaign as<lb/>
Iteerleaders.<lb/>
Ijhe ECU cheerleading.<lb/>
?niposed of 15 members<lb/>
i?m;imh0m<lb/>
- m?<lb/>
MVMK<lb/>
immummm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0009"/><lb/>
1<lb/>
T<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 15, 1985<lb/>
<lb/>
? -<lb/>
r?? j<lb/>
' JW<lb/>
'?.V" , . ,<lb/>
ler at home plate.<lb/>
Jobs<lb/>
'ions.<lb/>
th the resignations of the<lb/>
larrison's staff is currently<lb/>
'ised of part-time assistant<lb/>
lalker and student assistant<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
pKETBALL RECRUITS:<lb/>
basketball coach Charlie<lb/>
on has announced the sign-<lb/>
f four incoming freshmen,<lb/>
long with Marcel Henry,<lb/>
tlve fhe Pirates five new<lb/>
Jor next season.<lb/>
v- a 6-6 player who<lb/>
fes eligible this season after<lb/>
-mng to ECU from St. An-<lb/>
?ast year, is capable of<lb/>
the off guard position<lb/>
Ither of the forward posi-<lb/>
"He was an all-conference<lb/>
n both years at St. An-<lb/>
ind was Division III Player<lb/>
Year as well,<lb/>
ircel has good basketball<lb/>
ts and is capable of playing<lb/>
Iinside or outside Har-<lb/>
old. "He is extremly vcr-<lb/>
BAKER, Page Nine<lb/>
Bucs<lb/>
Camels again bested ECU <lb/>
1, (his time at Harrington<lb/>
b a ; - margin. Pirate<lb/>
c Mikehristophcr gae up<lb/>
e run in six innings, then<lb/>
ts and two<lb/>
seventh before being<lb/>
Peterson<lb/>
the scoring in the<lb/>
b Hardison walked<lb/>
? i on an error. The<lb/>
: the score in<lb/>
nth with a walk,<lb/>
k a 3-1 lead in the<lb/>
walk and four<lb/>
roved to be<lb/>
The last<lb/>
a iong drive<lb/>
I ell.<lb/>
- - 50-15 with<lb/>
e ECl finished the<lb/>
a )1-12 The<lb/>
the ECAC<lb/>
gton Field<lb/>
the first-seeded<lb/>
c rge Mason<lb/>
? firs! came at<lb/>
?s N rk fech versus<lb/>
ourney;<lb/>
A A Bid<lb/>
d spirits<lb/>
sses won't<lb/>
ready to<lb/>
on't think we<lb/>
advantage by<lb/>
ler. We're go-<lb/>
ive all season,<lb/>
icept that got<lb/>
ember has to do<lb/>
they all know<lb/>
risible for<lb/>
led. The team is look-<lb/>
nprove on last year's<lb/>
:a?on play, but since the<lb/>
I narrouiv mi.vtfd winning<lb/>
K AA regional in Florida<lb/>
pr, it won't be an easy goal<lb/>
u n<lb/>
Faculty Releases Concerns<lb/>
In a statement of academic<lb/>
concerns, the faculty of East<lb/>
Carolina University has recom-<lb/>
mended that freshmen be ineligi-<lb/>
ble to participate in varsity sports<lb/>
such as football and basketball<lb/>
"which create substantial threats<lb/>
to successful academic adjust-<lb/>
ment<lb/>
The proposal is contained in a<lb/>
list of suggestions drafted by a<lb/>
Faculty Senate committee and en-<lb/>
dorsed by the Senate, calling on<lb/>
the 11 Division 1-A members of<lb/>
the NCAA Presidents' Commis-<lb/>
sion to develop recommendations<lb/>
for consideration by the Division<lb/>
1-A convention.<lb/>
It proposed that such a conven-<lb/>
tion with new autonomy "be held<lb/>
as soon as possible preferably<lb/>
in conjunction with the already<lb/>
scheduled special convention of<lb/>
the NCAA in New Orleans June<lb/>
21-22.<lb/>
In addition to freshman in-<lb/>
eligibility for football and basket-<lb/>
ball, the ECU faculty suggested:<lb/>
?That there be no weakening<lb/>
of the requirements governing in-<lb/>
itial eligibility of student athletes<lb/>
in Division 1A. "While we sup-<lb/>
port the efforts of the NCAA<lb/>
working with other associations<lb/>
to recast their grade point<lb/>
average and test score re-<lb/>
quirements into a predictor of<lb/>
academic success, we believe<lb/>
minimum standards as to test<lb/>
scores and grade point average<lb/>
should be required the state-<lb/>
ment said.<lb/>
?That no playing seasons be<lb/>
lengthened further, and that con-<lb/>
sideration be given to shortening<lb/>
the length of playing seasons and<lb/>
reducing the number of ccatests<lb/>
to provide student athletes with a<lb/>
more appropriate balance bet-<lb/>
ween academic and athletic ac-<lb/>
tivities.<lb/>
?That the recruiting practices<lb/>
permitted by the NCAA be revis-<lb/>
ed with the purpose of relieving<lb/>
the pressure on prospective stu-<lb/>
dent athletes.<lb/>
?That the constitution, bylaws<lb/>
and rules of the NCAA be<lb/>
simplified to promote clarity and<lb/>
good sense and to provide for en-<lb/>
forcement procedures with the<lb/>
spirit of the rules.<lb/>
That consideration be given to<lb/>
establishing some form of<lb/>
periodic audit by which athletic<lb/>
programs are reviewed to achieve<lb/>
greater compliance with the ex-<lb/>
isting rules and to ensure that<lb/>
presidents, faculties and govern-<lb/>
ing boards are better informed of<lb/>
the problems within their own<lb/>
athletic programs and aware of<lb/>
the possibilities for improvement<lb/>
based on the accepted principles<lb/>
of good practice.<lb/>
Dr. Tom Johnson, professor<lb/>
of Health, Physical Education,<lb/>
Recreation and Safety and chair<lb/>
of the faculty's educational<lb/>
policies and planning committee,<lb/>
said the statement contained no<lb/>
timetable "but apparently<lb/>
something will be done in June in<lb/>
New Orleans<lb/>
He said the statement "is<lb/>
essentially a substitute" for a<lb/>
resolution proposed by the<lb/>
psychology department last<lb/>
month which would have barred<lb/>
students with SAT scores of less<lb/>
than 700 from participating in in-<lb/>
tercollegiate sports during their<lb/>
freshman year.<lb/>
Baker Completes First Coaching Staff;<lb/>
Adams, Nichols Selected In NFL Draft<lb/>
Continued from Pf e Eight<lb/>
satile and even played point<lb/>
guard some last year on the scout<lb/>
team<lb/>
The remaining four newcomers<lb/>
were all high school seniors this<lb/>
past season and all come from<lb/>
winning programs. The combin-<lb/>
ed record for their teams was<lb/>
94-17, with all four players being<lb/>
on conference championship<lb/>
teams.<lb/>
Al Clark, a 6-6 forward from<lb/>
Flint Hill High School in Virginia<lb/>
and Manual Jones also 6-6 of Sp-<lb/>
ingarn High School in<lb/>
Washington, D.C. are two inside<lb/>
performers who could contribute<lb/>
next season. Both players are on-<lb/>
ly 17 years old and will not be 18<lb/>
until next December, so they<lb/>
could conceivably grow some<lb/>
more.<lb/>
ECU also signed two guards.<lb/>
John Williams is a 6-3 off guard<lb/>
from Atlantic City High School<lb/>
in Atlantic City, NJ. "Williams is<lb/>
a very fine shooter and player<lb/>
Harrison said. "He will help<lb/>
against all of the zones we've<lb/>
been seeing because not only is he<lb/>
 sh?Qt?f but he akito. wiU.create<lb/>
some opportunites for us as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Jeff Kelly, a 5-9 point guard<lb/>
rounds out the Pirate signees.<lb/>
Kelly is also from New Jersey and<lb/>
is a hard-nosed player according<lb/>
to Harrison. "Jeff is one of those<lb/>
kids you don't find very often, he<lb/>
is a basketball junkie Harrison<lb/>
said. "He plays extremely hard<lb/>
and hopefully his wreckless aban-<lb/>
don will be contagious<lb/>
Harrison feels that the five new<lb/>
faces will give next year's squad a<lb/>
different look. "I feel this is a<lb/>
very good recruiting class Har-<lb/>
rison said. "We wanted another<lb/>
front court player, but decided<lb/>
not to take anyone who wasn't a<lb/>
good person and player<lb/>
BAKER FILLS STAFF: ECU<lb/>
football coach Art Baker an-<lb/>
nounced the final two positions<lb/>
on his coaching staff. Ellis<lb/>
Johnson, 34, will be the<lb/>
recruiting coordinator while also<lb/>
coaching the linebackers. Les<lb/>
Herrin, 37, will coach the outside<lb/>
linebackers.<lb/>
Johnson comes to ECU after<lb/>
serving as defensive coordinator<lb/>
at Appalachian State last season.<lb/>
The Apps moved from last place<lb/>
in he Southern Conference to<lb/>
third place in only one year's time<lb/>
during his stay there.<lb/>
"Ellis Johnson is an outstan-<lb/>
ding defensive football coach and<lb/>
recruiter Baker said. "We have<lb/>
worked together in the past and I<lb/>
know what he can do. We needed<lb/>
sDmeone with coordinating ex-<lb/>
perience, and in Ellis we have<lb/>
somebody with both coor-<lb/>
dinating and head coaching ex-<lb/>
perience on the collegiate level<lb/>
Iln 1983, Johnson was head<lb/>
coach at Gardner-Webb College,<lb/>
where his team won the District<lb/>
26 NAIA championship.<lb/>
Johnson served with Baker at<lb/>
The Citadel in 1982 and was in<lb/>
the high school ranks from<lb/>
1976-81 in South Carolina.<lb/>
Herrin, who comes to ECU<lb/>
from Clemson, coached<lb/>
linebackers during his four-year<lb/>
stay with Clemson and brings<lb/>
with him a reputation as one of<lb/>
the best recruiters in this region.<lb/>
"This was the most extensive<lb/>
search of any of the positions I've<lb/>
filled Baker said. "I feel he was<lb/>
one of the finest assistant coaches<lb/>
in the ACC and is no doubt one<lb/>
of the best recruiters in this part<lb/>
of the country. I recruited against<lb/>
him and he rarely loses a kid.<lb/>
"He will add leadership and<lb/>
class to our program Baker<lb/>
continued. "I could not ask for<lb/>
someone better than Les<lb/>
Herrin<lb/>
Herrin and Johnson's hirings<lb/>
brings to six the number of<lb/>
assistants Baker has hired since<lb/>
being named head coach on Dec.<lb/>
10, 1984. The others are: Mike<lb/>
O'Cain, Assistant Head Coach <lb/>
Quarterbacks, Don Powers,<lb/>
Defensive Coordinator, Wally<lb/>
Chambers, Defensive Line, Jeff<lb/>
Farrington, Defensive Secon-<lb/>
dary.<lb/>
NFL SELECTS PIRATES:<lb/>
Stefon Adams and Ricky Nichols<lb/>
were both selected in the NFL<lb/>
draft May 1 while Reggie Branch<lb/>
and Damon Pope both signed<lb/>
free agent contracts.<lb/>
Adams was selected in the third<lb/>
round by the Los Angeles<lb/>
Raiders, while Nichols was<lb/>
chosen in the eighth round by the<lb/>
Indianapolis Colts. Pope signed a<lb/>
free agent contract with the<lb/>
Dallas Cowboys and Branch sign-<lb/>
ed a free agent contract with the<lb/>
Washington Redskins.<lb/>
Adams, a native of High<lb/>
Point, was a wide receiver until<lb/>
the middle of last season when he<lb/>
was switched to defensive back.<lb/>
Adams finished his Pirate career<lb/>
tied for tenth on the reception list<lb/>
with 47 catches for 676 yards.<lb/>
Nichols ended his career with<lb/>
the fourth highest number of<lb/>
career receptions and is now the<lb/>
third leading receiver in terms of<lb/>
yardage. He finished his career<lb/>
with 63 receptions and 1,203<lb/>
yards. <lb/>
SMITH TRANSFERS.Roy<lb/>
Smith, a 6-8 forward-center, has<lb/>
transferred to High Point Col-<lb/>
lege. Smith played sparingly in<lb/>
both his freshman and<lb/>
sophomore seasons and will be a<lb/>
junior eligibility-wise at High<lb/>
Point. All of the remaining Pirate<lb/>
basketball players are eligible and<lb/>
are expected to return next year.<lb/>
CM<lb/>
&amp; Pi Kappa Phi<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFT NITE<lb/>
Wed. May 15, 1985<lb/>
Adm. Guys $1.50<lb/>
Ladies $1.00<lb/>
9:00 -2:00 AM<lb/>
18 yrs. $1.00<lb/>
10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
Thur. May 16, 1985<lb/>
Adm. $1.00<lb/>
9:00-2:00 A.M.<lb/>
18 yrs. $2.00<lb/>
ALL CANS 60C TIL 12:00<lb/>
85 TIL CLOSE<lb/>
Cheerleaders Selected<lb/>
The 1985-86 ECU cheerleader<lb/>
squad has been announced, and<lb/>
below are the members of the<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
Senior J.K. Elkins is in his<lb/>
fourth year on the squad and is<lb/>
the most experienced returnee.<lb/>
Junior's Chuck Ingle and<lb/>
Leigh Brown are both entering<lb/>
into their third year on the squad.<lb/>
Sara Kelly, Eric Skinnner,<lb/>
Judy Martin, Susanne Barr, John<lb/>
Morris and Susan Hartley are all<lb/>
in their second year as ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders.<lb/>
There will be six members on<lb/>
the squad in their first season as a<lb/>
cheerleader. Mark Moore, Ricky<lb/>
Hemingway, Jennifer Brooker<lb/>
and Myra Almond are all first<lb/>
year performers.<lb/>
Mary Thaxton and John<lb/>
Dalrymple will both be<lb/>
cheerleader mascots in their in-<lb/>
itial campaign as ECU<lb/>
cheerleaders.<lb/>
The ECU cheerleading squad is<lb/>
composed of 15 members and can<lb/>
be seen next year as they perform<lb/>
at all Pirate home football<lb/>
games.<lb/>
MJWMWMWAWMWW<lb/>
&amp;ke Sfarf Jfoutato<lb/>
k Sandwiches A Salads<lb/>
"MADE FRESH BEFORE<lb/>
Y0UREYES"<lb/>
We're Open<lb/>
Every Nig.<lb/>
ate<lb/>
11 AM-2 AM<lb/>
208 E. I<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
Street<lb/>
Delivery Available<lb/>
thru<lb/>
"THE JOKE'S ON Vi<lb/>
757-1973<lb/>
!<lb/>
?SSSSSWSWSMSSSSSSS'sS'SSSSSSs.A ? ???,???<lb/>
The Aerobic<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
YARD SALE: Curtains, Shoes, Bed<lb/>
Frames, Cloths, Sm Tables,<lb/>
Matresses, nick nacks?YAR D<lb/>
SALE, May 19, 402 Rotary 12??<lb/>
FOR SALE: 2 Role Away day beds,<lb/>
2 pillows and table. All are in good<lb/>
condition. Call 758 3228<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMATE WANTED: To share ex<lb/>
penses in nice 3 bedroom apt at<lb/>
Eastbrook. Rent $110 and one third<lb/>
utilities. Call 758 0364. Please keep<lb/>
trying.<lb/>
vxxx-xxxwx.xx<lb/>
TENANT NEEDED: 6 bedroom<lb/>
house near university, 305 E 14th St.<lb/>
Summer or long term rental. To be<lb/>
renovated, $350, 758 5299<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED: Walk to<lb/>
class, pool, cable TV. $115 per<lb/>
month, plus utilities One bedroom<lb/>
I'm moving August first Call Gary<lb/>
at 752 0435 or 757 6501<lb/>
ROOMATE WANTED: To share 2<lb/>
bdrm townhouse mile from ECU<lb/>
with one person $145 per month plus<lb/>
utilities. On 5th St Call 830 1306<lb/>
ROOMATES NEEDED: 1 or 2<lb/>
female roomates needed to share<lb/>
2 bdrm apt. at Stratford Arms Apts<lb/>
Call Karen at 756 3766 or 758 2730<lb/>
:?:??:?:?:?:?:??: -x-x-x-x-x-i-x<lb/>
CUBBIES<lb/>
ANNOUNCES<lb/>
Daily Dinner Specials<lb/>
Old Fashioned Hamburgers, Cheeseburgers Hot<lb/>
Dogs, Philadelphia Style Cheese Steak, Shrimp<lb/>
Burgers, Shrimp Salad Sandwich<lb/>
2 Hot Dogs for $1.00<lb/>
Serving Until 2:30 a.m.<lb/>
Daily Happy Hours<lb/>
Late Night Happy Hours 12 a.m2 a.m.<lb/>
Longnecks, 32 oz. Cups Draft, Wine Coolers<lb/>
AW with Air Conditioning!<lb/>
Corner of 5 th &amp; Evans St.<lb/>
Hours: 10:30 a.m. to 2:30 a.m.<lb/>
7 Days a H eek<lb/>
Phone: 752-6497<lb/>
0J ? ??.? ??????? -?????.<lb/>
?x-xx-S<lb/>
) w?fl"GU C7<lb/>
??<lb/>
V<lb/>
PIRATE SPECIAL $1.99<lb/>
LUNCHEON SPECIAL $2.45<lb/>
SUNDAY BUFFET $3.95<lb/>
NEW MENU EVERY WEEK<lb/>
DINNER SPECIALS<lb/>
Seafood<lb/>
with Chinese<lb/>
Vegetables<lb/>
$6.95<lb/>
Sealeg and Beef<lb/>
with Chinese<lb/>
Vegetables $5.95<lb/>
(Specials come with: hot and sour soup, chicken corn soup, or<lb/>
house special soup, steamed or fried rice, hot tea and fried<lb/>
banana.)<lb/>
MonThurs. 11:30-9:30<lb/>
100 E. 10th St. FRI. 11:30-10:30<lb/>
SAT. 5:00-10:30<lb/>
SUN. 12:00-9:30<lb/>
757-1818<lb/>
TAKE OUT<lb/>
ORDERS<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Process &amp; Print<lb/>
wtt h tin<lb/>
From 110. laa. 35mm or ti.se co.or print film<lb/>
13 ?P per pr:r.t i r?g 27 a 1 I 4t- fc cbutfi $2 96<lb/>
j Example 24exp. re $9 4e NOW $4,731<lb/>
 Limit on? roll pur co D<lb/>
 Good At A; La itton<lb/>
? Not valid with other otters<lb/>
Expires 5-28-85<lb/>
c?dtoMGid<lb/>
FS l<lb/>
I<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
Reprints<lb/>
From 11C 126 35mm or disc cpior print<lb/>
JMMt 29e each reg 37c <lb/>
?<lb/>
I Good At AJ! Locations<lb/>
 Not vaiid with other offers<lb/>
Expires 5-28-85<lb/>
cPhbtiMr&amp;tld<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
FSI5 t<lb/>
? ?????????????????<lb/>
Worksho<lb/>
417 Evans St. - 757-1<lb/>
Walking Distance From Campus<lb/>
Special Summer School Rates<lb/>
For Students<lb/>
May 13th thru July 25th $45.00<lb/>
- Unlimited Classes -<lb/>
Must Present Valid Student I.D.<lb/>
mBBt<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Color Enlargements<lb/>
Good At Al! Ijocatioiis<lb/>
I Not valid irtth other offers<lb/>
'??v Uls s ?<lb/>
9m7 -v I 250!<lb/>
8x10 -?.? t OO<lb/>
llxl? raj til 50<lb/>
110 12 SxS ft?8 SiRtR 1 fcp.<lb/>
? 1 M<lb/>
tars<lb/>
r rr:r' rrr.<lb/>
Expires 5 28-15<lb/>
JKottMGtld<lb/>
FS-15<lb/>
irolino East Mall 756-6078<lb/>
(North entrance - Near Belks)<lb/>
Open Aon-Sat. 8 o.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Su days 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
1 Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
?mw "wipi<lb/>
-??m iifffniiM ?-?-?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0010"/><lb/>
!<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 15, 1985<lb/>
Knicks Win In Ewing Lottery<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) The<lb/>
New York Knicks, missing a<lb/>
dominant pivot man since Willis<lb/>
Reed retired 11 years ago, Sun-<lb/>
day won the NBA draft lottery<lb/>
and the rights to Georgetown<lb/>
center Patrick Ewing.<lb/>
In gaining the No. 1 selection<lb/>
for the June 18 draft, the Knicks<lb/>
captured the so-called "Patrick<lb/>
Ewing Sweepstakes which was<lb/>
telecast live at halftime of game<lb/>
one of the Boston-Philadelphia<lb/>
playoff series.<lb/>
Ewing, a 7-footer who took the<lb/>
Hoyas to the NCAA title game in<lb/>
three of his four seasons, will be<lb/>
most welcome by the Knicks.<lb/>
They lost their top two centers to<lb/>
injuries last season and finished<lb/>
with a 24-58 record, third worst<lb/>
in the league. New York was last<lb/>
in the NBA in rebounding.<lb/>
"We've had our share of bad<lb/>
breaks but hopefully this is the<lb/>
start of a new regime said<lb/>
Knicks executive vice president<lb/>
Dae DeBusschere who<lb/>
represented the club at the<lb/>
ceremony. "Ewing's a player<lb/>
that's got to help us. I hope all<lb/>
the bad breaks are behind us<lb/>
The lottery replaced the two-<lb/>
team coin flip for the No. 1 selec-<lb/>
tion that had been in effect since<lb/>
1966. New York and the six<lb/>
other clubs that failed to make<lb/>
the playoffs participated.<lb/>
Awarded the number two pick<lb/>
was Indiana, followed by the Los<lb/>
Angeles Clippers, Seattle, Atlan-<lb/>
ta, Saearamento and Golden<lb/>
State.<lb/>
NBA commissioner David<lb/>
Stern concluded the six-minute<lb/>
drawing at the Waldorf-Astoria<lb/>
by opening the last of seven<lb/>
envelopes and revealing a card<lb/>
displaying the Knicks' logo.<lb/>
DeBusschere held his head in<lb/>
his hands as the number two<lb/>
envelope was opened. When<lb/>
Stern announced the Pacers,<lb/>
DeBusschere raised his fist and<lb/>
wiped his brow as the crowd of<lb/>
about 150 screamed approval.<lb/>
"I'd rather be taking the last<lb/>
shot in a game then waiting for a<lb/>
card to be opened said<lb/>
DeBusschere, who starred for the<lb/>
Knicks' championship teams in<lb/>
1970 and 1973.<lb/>
"When you sit there and have<lb/>
no control over anything, it's<lb/>
murder. There's no strategy, no<lb/>
mental preparation, nothing.<lb/>
You just sit there and hope<lb/>
you're lucky. I sure hope I'm<lb/>
never in one again. It was no fun<lb/>
sitting up there<lb/>
Minutes after the announce-<lb/>
ment, DeBusschere unveiled a<lb/>
Knicks No. 33 jersey ? Ewing's<lb/>
number in college ? with the<lb/>
7-footer's name on the back.<lb/>
Ewing, often shielded from the<lb/>
media in college, said he is not in-<lb/>
timidated by the pressures of<lb/>
playing New York,<lb/>
"I think I'm capable of handl-<lb/>
ing any challenge he said from<lb/>
Washington, D.C. "Coach<lb/>
(John) Thompson has prepared<lb/>
me well for anything.<lb/>
"I wasn't particularly hoping<lb/>
for one particular team. I just<lb/>
wanted to get it over with<lb/>
Cards bearing the logos of the<lb/>
seven clubs were placed in sealed<lb/>
envelopes. Stern plucked the<lb/>
envelopes from a plexiglass con-<lb/>
tainer and placed them in slots<lb/>
numbered one through seven.<lb/>
The commissioner then opened<lb/>
the envelopes, beginning with<lb/>
number seven.<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 9a.m8 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M-F 3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
M-Th 10 a.m12 noon<lb/>
M-Th 2 p.m6 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th 3 p.m4:45 p.m.<lb/>
(4:45-10 based on availability)<lb/>
Friday 3 p.m5:30p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. lp.m5p.m<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
CHECK-Ol T CENTER<lb/>
(Memorial Gym 115)<lb/>
M-Th 9a.m9p.m<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:30 p.m<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
jr<lb/>
B'<lb/>
u<lb/>
VEGLASS FRAME SALE<lb/>
?OUto<lb/>
:<lb/>
0OFF<lb/>
All<lb/>
Frames<lb/>
In Stock<lb/>
;$H<lb/>
wMi i<lb/>
? '??<lb/>
<lb/>
I<lb/>
? <lb/>
n0 lt ALL NON-PRESCRIPTION<lb/>
OU OOff SUNGLASSES, b, L ?<lb/>
?' t985 <lb/>
Discounts Valid!<lb/>
ClFAR<lb/>
v'UE<lb/>
plicians<lb/>
? e? Z ooimons<lb/>
? ' C actors Park<lb/>
3hone . : ?.?<lb/>
CALL US FOR AN<lb/>
EE EXAMINATION<lb/>
WITH THE DOCTOR<lb/>
o rouw choice<lb/>
Open Mon -Fr, 9 AM til 5 30 PM<lb/>
Beecher K.rMey-D.spensmg Optic.an<lb/>
tner Locations in Kinston Goldsboro &amp; Wilsor<lb/>
Pantana Bob's<lb/>
?j Summer Session<lb/>
T Membership Drive<lb/>
NEW REGULAR MEMBERSHIP $5.00<lb/>
was $1()00<lb/>
LIFETIME MEMBERSHIP $15.00<lb/>
was $25.00<lb/>
RENEWAL MEMBERSHIP Now Only $3.00<lb/>
May 16, 17 &amp; 18<lb/>
(Thurs Fri &amp; Sat)<lb/>
THESE DATES ONLY!<lb/>
Have a<lb/>
Paixtaixa Summer<lb/>
A I'HIVATE CLUB K K MEMBERS AND I1IKIK INVTTEOGUESTS<lb/>
??<lb/>
BLUE<lb/>
MOON CAFE<lb/>
Quarters Tournament<lb/>
Every Mon. Night<lb/>
CASH PRIZES<lb/>
We now have<lb/>
fresh Bar-B-Q<lb/>
Open til 2:30 nightly<lb/>
752-1294<lb/>
Malpass Muffler and Parts<lb/>
Motorcraft Accessories<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
Thur<lb/>
Heart Throb<lb/>
 adies free til<lb/>
9:30<lb/>
Fri &amp; Sot<lb/>
Trezor Rex<lb/>
?n<lb/>
May Birthdavs Free<lb/>
10W40 Motor Oil<lb/>
Oil Filters<lb/>
Air Filters<lb/>
Spark Plugs<lb/>
Batteries<lb/>
2500 Off<lb/>
(Ends May 22)<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Ave<lb/>
We Buy Gold &amp; Silver<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
$ All Transactions Confidential cfS<lb/>
1 m -w?h ? ? <lb/>
752-0322 ?tf.c.Ne<lb/>
Houn:00M-fc0T?BiMo?-S? C<lb/>
Buy your<lb/>
summer school<lb/>
texts Downtown!<lb/>
Best selection of used<lb/>
summer school books in<lb/>
Greenville<lb/>
Don't forget<lb/>
Dad!<lb/>
Good selection<lb/>
of Father's<lb/>
Day Cards<lb/>
"LATE NIGHT"<lb/>
at<lb/>
9-B? hmi SeaM<lb/>
Tuesday and Thursday<lb/>
10 pm -12 am<lb/>
Shot-And-A-Draft1.75<lb/>
Draft Beer50<lb/>
Wine By The Glass85<lb/>
Pitchers2.95<lb/>
2-for-l Highballs<lb/>
and<lb/>
Complimentary Hors d'Ouevres<lb/>
Bring your friends and try a unique<lb/>
experience and a nice change of pace.<lb/>
A,<lb/>
U.B.E.<lb/>
516 S. COTANCHE<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C.<lb/>
Rivergate Shopping Plaza<lb/>
3101 E. 10th St.<lb/>
Phone 757-1757<lb/>
SEAFOOD<lb/>
LOVERS<lb/>
Now you don't have to wait till 5:00<lb/>
to enjoy the best seafood in town<lb/>
Is Now Open For Lunch<lb/>
1 1.00 -2:00 Mon - Fri<lb/>
Menu Items Include:<lb/>
? Shrimp or Tuna Salad stuffed into French<lb/>
Croissants or Pita Bread<lb/>
? Shrimp (steamed, fried or broiled)<lb/>
? Vegetable Pocket Sandwich<lb/>
? Fresh Seafood Specials Daily<lb/>
Dinner Hours<lb/>
Sun-Thur5-10 Fri-Sat5-ll<lb/>
<lb/>
Take-Out Service Now Available<lb/>
Full Service Bar<lb/>
Early Happy Hours 3-7<lb/>
N<lb/>
N<lb/>
???????????a<lb/>
g jrJT SS jr<lb/>
m inmwuir i am ??<lb/>
MhMl<lb/>
????mm- mmm-<lb/>
"Mi?"<lb/>
<pb facs="00057714_0011"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>