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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057715_0001"/>
Bht<lb/>
Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.58<lb/>
Wednesday, May 22,1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
10 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Media Heads' Tuition<lb/>
Scrutinized By Board<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Co-?wj Mllor<lb/>
The appointment of Jeff<lb/>
Canady as General Manager of<lb/>
Expressions provoked members<lb/>
of ECU's Media Board to con-<lb/>
sider a policy change Monday<lb/>
regarding the payment of media<lb/>
heads' tuition during summer<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Canady recently became the<lb/>
first media head who was not a<lb/>
resident of North Carolina and<lb/>
this has media board members<lb/>
concerned since there is a $639<lb/>
disparity in tuition between full-<lb/>
time (six credit hours) in-state<lb/>
and out-of-state students for each<lb/>
summer session.<lb/>
SGA President David Brown<lb/>
attended the meeting and said,<lb/>
"the possibility exists in the<lb/>
future that four or five media<lb/>
heads could be out-of-state<lb/>
students He told media board<lb/>
members that a decision would<lb/>
have to be made in the event all<lb/>
media heads who request tuition<lb/>
payment are from out-of-state.<lb/>
The tuition for media heads<lb/>
has been paid in full since the<lb/>
summer of 1983. However, a<lb/>
policy change to avert the added<lb/>
expense of those who reside out-<lb/>
side of North Carolina is ex-<lb/>
pected to be approved at the<lb/>
media board's next meeting.<lb/>
The new policy is expected to<lb/>
be similar to one of the proposals<lb/>
made Monday:<lb/>
? That out-of-state media heads<lb/>
be allowed to appoint someone<lb/>
(that is from in-state) to serve in<lb/>
their place during the summer<lb/>
months.<lb/>
? That out-of-state media heads<lb/>
must pay the difference between<lb/>
their tuiton and that of in-state<lb/>
students.<lb/>
? That out-of-state media heads<lb/>
don't have to be enrolled in sum-<lb/>
mer school (although it has<lb/>
always been policy that media<lb/>
board employees be enrolled in<lb/>
school while working.)<lb/>
According to Canady, any<lb/>
change in policy would be unfair<lb/>
to out-of-state media heads.<lb/>
"The board needs to consider<lb/>
that everyone does the same job<lb/>
regardless of where they live.<lb/>
"I could be making five times<lb/>
as much money as I do now if 1<lb/>
was working at home Canady<lb/>
continued, "but the experience<lb/>
I'm getting now could never be<lb/>
replaced by money<lb/>
The five summer media heads<lb/>
who currently have their tuition<lb/>
paid for include: Tom Norton,<lb/>
The East Carolinian ; Kate Ab-<lb/>
bott, WZMB-FM; Beth Davis,<lb/>
Buccaneer; Jeff Canady, Expres-<lb/>
sions; Jon Jordan, Photo Lab.<lb/>
Researchers Hoist Anchor<lb/>
By HAROLD JOY NER<lb/>
Oo-Nmh Editor<lb/>
ECU researchers recently ex-<lb/>
amined the 1,350-pound anchor<lb/>
of the Civil War ship USS<lb/>
Monitor which has been soaking<lb/>
in a special solution to remove<lb/>
buildup from the ocean.<lb/>
Those involved in the restora-<lb/>
tion of the anchor said the clean-<lb/>
ing process is on schedule and<lb/>
that it looks much like it did more<lb/>
than a century ago. "We hope to<lb/>
display the anchor at ECU in the<lb/>
fall said Dina Hill, coordinator<lb/>
of the Monitor projects. The an-<lb/>
chor has been soaking in a unique<lb/>
tank at ECU's power plant while<lb/>
an electrolysis process removes<lb/>
barnacles and Crustacea ac-<lb/>
cumulated on it.<lb/>
Curtiss Peterson, a preserva-<lb/>
tionist associated with the<lb/>
University of South Carolina,<lb/>
said some salt is still being releas-<lb/>
ed from the anchor, so a suitable<lb/>
design for the anchor's display<lb/>
case will not be built until the end<lb/>
of the summer.<lb/>
The researchers work has been<lb/>
supervised the National Oceanic<lb/>
and Atmospheric Administra-<lb/>
tion. "NOAA will set up a<lb/>
display schedule for the anchor<lb/>
Peterson said, "with it probably<lb/>
going to the U.S. Navy after be-<lb/>
ing displayed at ECU<lb/>
"The anchor is the largest ar-<lb/>
tifact retrieved from the<lb/>
Monitor Hill said. "Other ar-<lb/>
tifacts are just too large to be<lb/>
displayed anywhere else She<lb/>
added that ECU is the only con-<lb/>
servation facility for artifacts<lb/>
such as the Monitor's anchor. "It<lb/>
is a problem because storage<lb/>
space is so short<lb/>
ECU history professor Gordon<lb/>
Watts, also a part of the Monitor<lb/>
research team, said the wrecked<lb/>
ironclad battleship lies in about<lb/>
200 feet of water 16 miles off the<lb/>
coast of Cape Hatteras. The an-<lb/>
chor was recovered during a 1983<lb/>
expedition to the wreck site by<lb/>
the ECU Department of<lb/>
Maritime History.<lb/>
Examination of the anchor has<lb/>
given researchers a clue of what<lb/>
kind of condition the Monitor<lb/>
may be in. "About 40 percent of<lb/>
the Monitor is buried in ocean<lb/>
sediment Watts said, "so it<lb/>
should be in an excellent state of<lb/>
preservation The section of the<lb/>
anchor that was buried in sand<lb/>
has remained in better condition<lb/>
than the part that was exposed to<lb/>
the sea, Watts said.<lb/>
Because the Civil War bat-<lb/>
tleship sat low and heavy in the<lb/>
water, some historians have said<lb/>
the anchor may have caused the<lb/>
Monitor to sink ? the anchor<lb/>
pulling the bow under stormy<lb/>
waves.<lb/>
According to Peterson, the<lb/>
cleaning process should continue<lb/>
for the next five months before<lb/>
being turned over to NOAA.<lb/>
JON JORDAN ? ECU Pnoto Lab<lb/>
Several ECU researchers recently examined the century-old anchor of the Monitor.<lb/>
Time-Out<lb/>
BRYAN HUMBERT ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Summer school is now in full force and this unidentified student takes advantage of some spare time bet-<lb/>
ween classes to study her notes.<lb/>
ECU Offers Solid Education<lb/>
By BRETT MORRIS<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Many of the students who have<lb/>
graduated from ECU are finding<lb/>
themselves in the same boat as<lb/>
thousands of other recent<lb/>
graduates across the nation ? the<lb/>
dilemma of what to do with their<lb/>
bachelor of arts degree.<lb/>
Many may decide to further<lb/>
their education in graduate<lb/>
school in hopes of successfully<lb/>
competing in the job market.<lb/>
Those who do find employ-<lb/>
ment, because they cannot afford<lb/>
more schooling, may find<lb/>
themseleves reminiscing about<lb/>
what they have learned and how<lb/>
their education will help them in<lb/>
the real world.<lb/>
The Association of American<lb/>
Colleges, which includes<lb/>
members from both public and<lb/>
private colleges and universities,<lb/>
said recently that university<lb/>
bachelor degrees are not concen-<lb/>
trating enough on the intellectual<lb/>
stimulation of the student.<lb/>
The AAC further states that<lb/>
students are too involved with the<lb/>
exterior motives surrounding col-<lb/>
lege life instead of producing<lb/>
thinking skills and a broad<lb/>
knowledge of basic education re-<lb/>
quirements, such as math and<lb/>
?English.<lb/>
Vice Chancellor of Academic<lb/>
Affairs Angelo Volpe said he<lb/>
disagrees with the AAC's report<lb/>
and said ECU students are expos-<lb/>
ed to all facets of an education<lb/>
through general education re-<lb/>
quirements in the fields of liberal<lb/>
arts, fine arts, social sciences,<lb/>
sciences and humanities. "We are<lb/>
in a very good situation as far as<lb/>
the National Education Associa-<lb/>
tion is concerned he said.<lb/>
ECU Philiosophy instructor<lb/>
Richard Miller said last semester<lb/>
at the ECU Phi Kappa Phi Sym-<lb/>
posium that there has been<lb/>
neglect of thinking and reading<lb/>
skills at educational institutions.<lb/>
Volpe said, "We encourage<lb/>
students to get involved in the op-<lb/>
portunities that are offered in<lb/>
curriculum and extracurricular<lb/>
activities through clubs, societies,<lb/>
programs and student employ-<lb/>
ment opportunities<lb/>
Pesticide Disturbs Immune System<lb/>
ECUNcwi<lb/>
A researcher at the ECU<lb/>
School of Medicine working with<lb/>
a team of Virginia scientists have<lb/>
discovered that a form of dioxin<lb/>
associated with a commonly used<lb/>
commercial pesticide interferes<lb/>
with normal immune function in<lb/>
laboratory mice.<lb/>
Dr. Donald W. Barnesv ECU<lb/>
associate professor of phar-<lb/>
macology, was involved in the<lb/>
research with three scientists<lb/>
from the Medical College of<lb/>
Virginia.<lb/>
The study focused on the<lb/>
pesticide pentachlorophenol, a<lb/>
compound frequently incor-<lb/>
porated in wood preservatives<lb/>
and stains to inhibit the growth<lb/>
of fungus. PCP is the second<lb/>
most heavily used pesticide in the<lb/>
United States, according tc the<lb/>
researchers.<lb/>
In its unpurified form, PCP is<lb/>
naturally contaminated with a<lb/>
form of the chemical dioxin<lb/>
known as HCDD. Although<lb/>
chemically related to its most<lb/>
publicized family member,<lb/>
TCDD, the most toxic man-made<lb/>
chemical known, the dioxin<lb/>
found in PCP has been shown to<lb/>
be less potent.<lb/>
Yet the researchers<lb/>
demonstrated that HCDD, like<lb/>
TCDD, also interferes with the<lb/>
immune system ? the body's ma-<lb/>
jor defense against foreign in-<lb/>
vaders and abnormal cells. The<lb/>
group found that when mice were<lb/>
exposed to HCDD for 14 days at<lb/>
levels similar to those found in<lb/>
the contaminated pesticide, the<lb/>
animals lost some of their ability<lb/>
to manufacture antibodies to<lb/>
foreign cells. When the resear-<lb/>
chers tested a form of the<lb/>
pesticide which had been purified<lb/>
to remove HCDD, they found it<lb/>
had no immunotoxic effects.<lb/>
Barnes said the dioxin, TCDD,<lb/>
a compound associated with the<lb/>
defoliant "agent orange" used in<lb/>
the Vietnam War, has undergone<lb/>
extensive scientific scrutiny in the<lb/>
past. HCDD and other members<lb/>
of the dioxin family, however,<lb/>
have been studied to a lesser ex-<lb/>
tent.<lb/>
Barnes' role in the research in-<lb/>
volved studies of certain<lb/>
biochemical changes induced by<lb/>
exposure to HCDD. In chemical<lb/>
assays of the livers of laboratory<lb/>
mice, Barnes found the HCDD<lb/>
induced the production of liver<lb/>
enzymes in patterns similar to<lb/>
those produced by exposure to<lb/>
TCDD.<lb/>
The investigators concluded<lb/>
that while the dioxin HCDD may<lb/>
not be wholly responsible for the<lb/>
unpurified pesticide's im-<lb/>
munotoxic effects, it is at least<lb/>
partly responsible. Further<lb/>
research is needed to find out if<lb/>
other components of the pesticide<lb/>
are also involved, they said.<lb/>
Professors Receive Higher Salaries; ECU Above Average<lb/>
Staff 4 Wire Reports<lb/>
After years of losing money to<lb/>
inflation, most college teachers<lb/>
are earning about 6.6 percent<lb/>
more than they did in 1984-85, a<lb/>
new study says.<lb/>
At ECU the percentage is even<lb/>
higher as all faculty members<lb/>
recently received a seven percent<lb/>
across the board raise as well as a<lb/>
three percent merit increase.<lb/>
On the national average, full<lb/>
professors now make $39,870 ?<lb/>
a 2.5 percent increase after infla-<lb/>
tion ? and experts hope the re-<lb/>
cent economic recovery and sute<lb/>
tax increases will prompt govern-<lb/>
ing boards and state legislatures<lb/>
to boost faculty salaries even<lb/>
more next year.<lb/>
But the salaries still don't let<lb/>
professors live as well as they did<lb/>
a decade ago, warns W. Lee Han-<lb/>
son, author of the American<lb/>
Association of University Pro-<lb/>
fessors' Annual Report on the<lb/>
Economic Status of the Profes-<lb/>
sion.<lb/>
"It's still only 85 percent of<lb/>
what professors were earning (in<lb/>
real dollars) in the early<lb/>
seventies he says.<lb/>
The reason is that, although<lb/>
most consumer prices were rising<lb/>
by some 10 percent a year during<lb/>
the late 70s and early gOs, col-<lb/>
leges could only afford to grant<lb/>
faculty members pay hikes of<lb/>
seven-to-eight percent during<lb/>
those years.<lb/>
But the relatively low inflation<lb/>
rate of the last two years has<lb/>
"helped ease the burden of col-<lb/>
leges and universities" this year,<lb/>
and given faculty their highest<lb/>
"real salary" increase since the<lb/>
1960s, Han sen explains.<lb/>
"In 1981, real salaries were 20<lb/>
percent below early seventies'<lb/>
levels he adds. "Now, they're<lb/>
only about 15 percent lower<lb/>
Public college teachers are get-<lb/>
ting the biggest average increases,<lb/>
6.9 percent, while private college<lb/>
professors' average raise was six<lb/>
percent, the study says.<lb/>
"The increase level in public<lb/>
institutions is higher because<lb/>
private institution budgets de-<lb/>
pend mostly on tuition income<lb/>
Hansen notes. "And there's<lb/>
always the usual handwringing<lb/>
about raising tuition<lb/>
The study came out days after<lb/>
a College Press Service report<lb/>
that tuition will be going up<lb/>
faster than the inflation rate<lb/>
again next fall, largely because<lb/>
colleges need more money to help<lb/>
restore faculty buying power.<lb/>
This year, professors at<lb/>
private, Ph.D. ? granting univer-<lb/>
sities are the nation's highest paid<lb/>
teachers, averaging $49,880, the<lb/>
study shows.<lb/>
And men continue to outearn<lb/>
women professors by about<lb/>
$5,000 a year.<lb/>
The study found full pro-<lb/>
fessors now average $39,870;<lb/>
associate professors, $29,910;<lb/>
assistant professors, $24,610;<lb/>
instructors, $19,150 and lec-<lb/>
turers, $22,020.<lb/>
While no school approved the<lb/>
18.9 percent pay boost necessary<lb/>
to bring faculty salaries back up<lb/>
to 1970 purchasing levels, some<lb/>
did give healthy raises.<lb/>
California State University<lb/>
faculty, for example, got a ten<lb/>
percent pay hike this year, and<lb/>
hope for another ten percent next<lb/>
year, says California Faculty<lb/>
Association spokesman Edward<lb/>
Purcell.<lb/>
"But remember, in California<lb/>
for a number of years, there was<lb/>
no faculty salary increase he<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
But, while some research<lb/>
universities and schools in states<lb/>
with booming economies granted<lb/>
above-average raises, schools in<lb/>
economically distressed<lb/>
agriculture and energy states fell<lb/>
behind.<lb/>
"The AAUP report shows na-<lb/>
tionwide averages says Minot<lb/>
(N.D.) Sute College physics Pro-<lb/>
fessor Gordon Berkey. "I wish it<lb/>
were true in North Dakota. In the<lb/>
last two years, higher education<lb/>
faculty salaries have gone up zero<lb/>
percent.<lb/>
"North Dakota depends on the<lb/>
farm and oil economy, and it's a<lb/>
bad time for both adds Berkey,<lb/>
who conducted an independent<lb/>
survey of sute education salaries<lb/>
last fall.<lb/>
And while college enrollment is<lb/>
up this year, sUte-wide, he says,<lb/>
there's little public support for<lb/>
higher education needs.<lb/>
"We haven't fared well in<lb/>
competition for sUte funds he<lb/>
notes. "The public perception<lb/>
seems to be that public (primary<lb/>
and secondary) schools need<lb/>
more and that we're doing well<lb/>
Salary increases in Texas,<lb/>
Maryland, New Mexico and<lb/>
Wisconsin all fell far below the<lb/>
6.6 percent average.<lb/>
"Our increase for this year was<lb/>
3.84 percent says James<lb/>
Hickman, University of<lb/>
Wisconsin-Madison business pro-<lb/>
fessor and member of the Faculty<lb/>
Salary Working Group. "It was<lb/>
far, far below our competitors<lb/>
Hick man's committee had<lb/>
recommeded pay increases of 15<lb/>
percent for Wisconsin faculty.<lb/>
"But we fed good about the<lb/>
report he stresses. "We<lb/>
predicted this, how other univer-<lb/>
sities kept two to three percent<lb/>
ahead of inflation, but I don't<lb/>
know what effect the study will<lb/>
have on state employee pay<lb/>
plans<lb/>
?<lb/>
r ?? Diillfft-yrr<lb/>
mm - ?- ?? ?<lb/>
<pb facs="00057715_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
.WAY 22, 1983<lb/>
1<lb/>
Mayor Responds To Letter<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) ?<lb/>
Mayor Wilson Goode says a let-<lb/>
ter he received from a member of<lb/>
MOVE threatened to burn the<lb/>
radical group's house along with<lb/>
other nearby homes if police<lb/>
launched an assault on the cult's<lb/>
row-house fortress.<lb/>
Goode said Sunday the city<lb/>
received the two-page letter from<lb/>
Ramona Africa, the only known<lb/>
adult survivor of an incident last<lb/>
week that claimed 11 lives, in<lb/>
eluding four children.<lb/>
In an attempt to evict MOVE<lb/>
members from their West<lb/>
Philadelphia stronghold, a police<lb/>
helicopter dropped a concusssion<lb/>
bomb on the structure, and an<lb/>
ensuing fire destroyed 53 houses<lb/>
and damaged eight in the work-<lb/>
ing class neighborhood. About<lb/>
250 people were left homeless.<lb/>
The mayor said Africa claimed<lb/>
MOVE had stockpiled weapons<lb/>
in its heavily fortified row house.<lb/>
He also said the letter warned<lb/>
police would be killed and the<lb/>
house burned if authorities laun-<lb/>
ched an assault.<lb/>
Goode did not explain why<lb/>
police mounted an attack despite<lb/>
the letter.<lb/>
He said the letter was received<lb/>
last Friday by police, and it<lb/>
traveled through official channels<lb/>
until Goode saw it Wednesday or<lb/>
Thursday, The Philadelphia In-<lb/>
quirer reported.<lb/>
The back-to-nature cult, whose<lb/>
members assume the surname<lb/>
Africa, had been a growing<lb/>
nuisance in the neighborhood,<lb/>
residents said. Neighbors had<lb/>
been complaining about filthy<lb/>
conditions and disruptive noises<lb/>
at the MOVE house and had been<lb/>
asking the city to help control the<lb/>
group.<lb/>
Goode estimated the damage<lb/>
from last Monday's assault at<lb/>
more than $8 million, and he has<lb/>
promised new housing for the<lb/>
victims by Christmas.<lb/>
Appearing on CBS?TV's<lb/>
"Face the Nation" Sunday,<lb/>
Goode called for a day of prayer<lb/>
for victims but again defended<lb/>
the police action, saying MOVE<lb/>
had vowed to destroy the<lb/>
neighborhood and threatened<lb/>
him and other city officials<lb/>
But others disagreed, including<lb/>
a Baptist minister who planned a<lb/>
rally against the mayor today<lb/>
near City Hall.<lb/>
Appearing on the telecast,<lb/>
MOVE spokesman Jerry Africa<lb/>
said threats by the group after the<lb/>
bombing were not against<lb/>
Goode's life but his political<lb/>
career.<lb/>
"Among black leadership we<lb/>
are outraged said Rep. John<lb/>
Conyers, D-N.Y on the same<lb/>
program. He called the police ac-<lb/>
tion "the most violent eviction<lb/>
notice in history<lb/>
The American Civil Liberties<lb/>
Union also has criticized the<lb/>
bombing.<lb/>
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Carolina East Mall 756-6078<lb/>
(North entrance - Near Belks)<lb/>
Open AonSat. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Su days 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
1 Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
LADIES' LOCKOUT<lb/>
JACKIE KNIGHT'S<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
? -?<lb/>
?<lb/>
Fabulous Tails<lb/>
for Females<lb/>
Wed May 22nd<lb/>
Doors open 7 pm for ladies onlv<lb/>
50c Wine &amp; Draft 'til 10:00<lb/>
Doors open 10 pm for men<lb/>
Entertainment by the WAI.LLR IAMII Y<lb/>
Los Angeles police chief Daryl<lb/>
Gates, also on "Face The<lb/>
Nation came to Goode's<lb/>
defense, calling him "an inspira-<lb/>
tion to the nation" who had<lb/>
"jumped onto my heroes list<lb/>
Goode called MOVE members<lb/>
"urban guerrillas" who waged<lb/>
"psychological warfare on their<lb/>
neighbors<lb/>
Goode's approval of the bom-<lb/>
bing following a daylong siege of<lb/>
the house has divided the city's<lb/>
clergy.<lb/>
"We're talking about prayer<lb/>
after the fact rather than before<lb/>
the fact said C. Hamilton<lb/>
Robinson, pastor of the Christian<lb/>
Fellowship Baptist Church in<lb/>
North Philadelphia.<lb/>
Robinson, who planned to take<lb/>
part in the demonstration today<lb/>
against Goode, said, "The basic<lb/>
issue is a human rights issue. The<lb/>
right to life takes precedence over<lb/>
property rights<lb/>
Other ministers voiced support<lb/>
for the mayor.<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Bingo-Ice-Cream<lb/>
The student Union Recreetlon Committee<lb/>
l? sponsoring a Bingo-Ice Cream Party on<lb/>
Tuesday. May 2? at 7p.m In the MendenhaM<lb/>
Student Center Muttl Purpose Room Enoy<lb/>
delicious Ice cream and play Bingo for prizes<lb/>
all for only a 25 cent admission tee<lb/>
Scholarship Offered<lb/>
The School of Art. Design Department, of<lb/>
fers the Eastern Advertisinf Federation<lb/>
Scholarship for rising Juniors or seniors<lb/>
The scholarship has been established by the<lb/>
Eastern Carolina Advertising Federation to<lb/>
support and promote the study of advertising<lb/>
by deserving students The applicant must<lb/>
have at leasty a 3 0 grade point, and must in<lb/>
tend to pursue a career in advertising or<lb/>
advertising related<lb/>
Forum on African Famine<lb/>
We all know that there are millions of peo<lb/>
pie starving in Africa, but tew of us really<lb/>
understand the situation Learn how you can<lb/>
be a part of relief efforts TONIGHT at<lb/>
MendenhaM 244. 7 p.m The presentation will<lb/>
be followed by discussion Sponsored by me<lb/>
ECU Campus Ministries<lb/>
Camp Starlight<lb/>
Interested in working with children and<lb/>
young people in a beautiful setting? Camp<lb/>
Starlight is located in the Poconos Mountains<lb/>
of Pennsylvania They need counselors and<lb/>
water skiing instructors For more informa<lb/>
lion contact Cooperative Education, 313<lb/>
Rawl. 757 4979<lb/>
National Teacher Examination<lb/>
There is a special National Teacher Ex<lb/>
amination scheduled tor Saturday. June 22<lb/>
Candidates must contact the testing center<lb/>
prior to June 5 to register for the test To<lb/>
save candidates travel time, you should be<lb/>
aware that tests art also being given at<lb/>
Atlantic Christian College, wnson, N C<lb/>
Weslyan, Rocky Mount, Fayetteville State,<lb/>
and New Bern High School<lb/>
G.P.A.<lb/>
The Counseling Center is ottering, tree w<lb/>
charge, the following session on helping r&amp;c<lb/>
increase your g p a ana still have tun ??,<lb/>
mg Exams Setting yourself Up To <lb/>
Thursday May 23. 1 2 30 P M and iua,<lb/>
June. 4. i 2 30 P M AM sessions wHI oe I g<lb/>
m bright Annex No advance regis?'??ior<lb/>
necessary For further ?nformaon picas<lb/>
call 757 6641<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
ECU'S MINORITY PUBLICATION<lb/>
Has Openings in the following<lb/>
positions:<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/>
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jobs take the<lb/>
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R. eg<lb/>
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Purpose:<lb/>
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Minorin<lb/>
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Publication<lb/>
June 14th<lb/>
EX!<lb/>
BETTER ALI<lb/>
:<lb/>
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AM CAROLINIAN<lb/>
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'lursdav May II 11 M P M and Tue?de.y<lb/>
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? Aght Anne No advance registration<lb/>
-pessary for further information pleas.<lb/>
SAftl<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 22, 1983<lb/>
SIONS<lb/>
PUBLICATION<lb/>
n the following<lb/>
ientatives<lb/>
k EXPRESSIONS office<lb/>
or contact General<lb/>
?927<lb/>
cuits<lb/>
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Again . . .<lb/>
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Quantity Rights ffeservea<lb/>
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Effective thru Sat<lb/>
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IALL WEEK WE WILL DOUBLE 5<lb/>
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FOR EVERY $10 PURCHASE!<lb/>
')<lb/>
(CPS) ? Students entering the<lb/>
job market this spring are likely<lb/>
to face a new hurdle ? drug<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
Companies that for the past<lb/>
few years have tested their<lb/>
employees for drug use are now<lb/>
making students who apply for<lb/>
jobs take the same tests, accor-<lb/>
ding to campus job centers<lb/>
around the country.<lb/>
"It's just starting to surface, in<lb/>
part because more firms seem to<lb/>
be willing to admit they do it<lb/>
says Robert Riegle, assistant<lb/>
director of placement services at<lb/>
Wayne State University and<lb/>
author of a recent article on the<lb/>
subject.<lb/>
Riegle learned of the practice<lb/>
last summer, when a student<lb/>
received a letter from an<lb/>
employer notifying him that a job<lb/>
offer was being withdrawn.<lb/>
"The letter didn't say why, but<lb/>
in person they told him they<lb/>
detected marijuana through the<lb/>
use of urinalysis Rieele says.<lb/>
Riegle says the tests can detect<lb/>
marijuana use up to three weeks<lb/>
after consumption.<lb/>
Moreover, he says companies<lb/>
don't always tell students they're<lb/>
taking drug tests.<lb/>
Representatives of firms con-<lb/>
tacted by College Press Service<lb/>
say they do tell job applicants the<lb/>
tests' purpose.<lb/>
They say positive results do not<lb/>
automatically disqualify job ap-<lb/>
plicants.<lb/>
"Keeping the workplace safe is<lb/>
an increasing concern explains<lb/>
Robert McKee, Atlantic<lb/>
Richfield Company health<lb/>
department director, "particular-<lb/>
ly given that the use of drugs is<lb/>
becoming so prevalent<lb/>
ARCO, based in Los Angeles,<lb/>
plans to begin giving drug tests to<lb/>
applicants later this month, he<lb/>
says.<lb/>
McKee acknowledges the test<lb/>
detect marijuana up to 21 days<lb/>
after use, jeopardizing someone<lb/>
who can smoke the drug on a<lb/>
WZMB<lb/>
for<lb/>
is now accepting applications<lb/>
DJs 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/>
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 75&amp;r4707 between the hours of 10:00<lb/>
A.M 1:00P.M Monday through Friday.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE<lb/>
The Minority Publication of East Carolina University<lb/>
Purpose:<lb/>
To disseminate personalized journalism.<lb/>
Target:<lb/>
Minority students: those of the campus com-<lb/>
munity differing from others in some<lb/>
characteristic and often subject to differen-<lb/>
tial treatment.<lb/>
Publication:<lb/>
June 14th<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE  THE<lb/>
BETTER ALTERNATIVE<lb/>
LUNCH SPECIALS<lb/>
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weekend, for example, without<lb/>
hurting Monday's performance<lb/>
because the drug's psychoactive<lb/>
effects have worn off long<lb/>
before.<lb/>
That is why ARCO officials<lb/>
are being told to use the test only<lb/>
as a guideline, he says.<lb/>
ARCO adopted the test policy<lb/>
in part becauce it operates several<lb/>
facilities that use hazardous<lb/>
materials.<lb/>
But white-collar firms also are<lb/>
turning increasingly to drug tests.<lb/>
IBM officials, for example,<lb/>
began requiring drug tests for all<lb/>
job applicants late last year.<lb/>
"We feel a paramount respon-<lb/>
sibility to ensure the safety of the<lb/>
workplace for all our<lb/>
employees IBM spokesman<lb/>
Tom Mattia says.<lb/>
Problems with excessive drug<lb/>
use by IBM employees in several<lb/>
departments have caused pro-<lb/>
Market Face Tests<lb/>
blems, Mattia says.<lb/>
He declined, however, to pro-<lb/>
vide examples of safety-related<lb/>
problems among white-collar<lb/>
workers.<lb/>
IBM job applicants get the op-<lb/>
portunity to explain positive drug<lb/>
test results, Mattia says.<lb/>
Other firms, such as General<lb/>
Motors, allow administrators at<lb/>
local plants to ask job applicants<lb/>
to take drug tests. GM's local-<lb/>
option drug policy has been in ef-<lb/>
fect since the early 1970s.<lb/>
At the Adolph Coors Co.<lb/>
brewery in Golden, Colo job<lb/>
applicants take polygraph exams<lb/>
during which they are asked,<lb/>
among other things, whether they<lb/>
have abused drugs or alcohol.<lb/>
Officials at the firms using<lb/>
drug tests declined to reveal<lb/>
figures on the rate at which job<lb/>
applicants test positive for drug<lb/>
use.<lb/>
Riegle says students who learn<lb/>
they will be tested for drug use<lb/>
can also find ways to beat the<lb/>
tests.<lb/>
Beyond that, he is trying to<lb/>
convince employers the tests are<lb/>
of limited value.<lb/>
"There is the potential for peo-<lb/>
ple to lose employment<lb/>
unfairly Riegle says. "You<lb/>
can't tell with these tests, for ex-<lb/>
ample, whether a person smoked<lb/>
pot while on the job, like you can<lb/>
with alcohol tests<lb/>
Occasional marijuana use<lb/>
should not disqualify a person<lb/>
from employment, Riegle main-<lb/>
tains.<lb/>
"If businesses started firing<lb/>
everyone who used pot, they'd<lb/>
lose a lot more people than they<lb/>
expect he asserts.<lb/>
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DRAFTNITE<lb/>
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$1.0018yrs.<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
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Thursday, May 23,1985<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Guys &amp; 18 yrs.<lb/>
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"tnvtipii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057715_0004"/><lb/>
(M?? ?aat (HutnlMun<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton, ommmm?<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, tanavns Eduor<lb/>
Harold Joyner. imm ? Tom Luvender, mm 0m<lb/>
Randy Mews, cm &amp;? Anthony Martin, total Manager<lb/>
Rick Mccormac, 5m??0, John Peterson, o?? A,?<lb/>
Bill Mitchell. o?w? tta Bill Dawson, Aa Manager<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, q- ?d?o, DeChanile Johnson, a r?.<lb/>
May 22, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Apartheid<lb/>
Economic Censure Needed<lb/>
U.S. Sen. Alan Cranston,<lb/>
D-Calif said recently that he wants<lb/>
to "call the roll on racist South<lb/>
Africa" in the Senate within the<lb/>
next 60 days. Cranston intends this<lb/>
to be an integral part of an effort to<lb/>
impose immediate economic sanc-<lb/>
tions on South Africa in a protest<lb/>
against the policy of apartheid,<lb/>
sanctions which are needed to show<lb/>
the South African government that<lb/>
the United States plans to stand<lb/>
behind its verbal protests against<lb/>
South Africa's racist policies.<lb/>
What Cranston proposes to do is<lb/>
to push for a vote on a bill he is<lb/>
cosponsoring. The bill calls for an<lb/>
immediate ban on U.S. export of<lb/>
computers to South Africa as well<lb/>
as any new investments in and loans<lb/>
to the country.<lb/>
The United States, as a<lb/>
democracy, has a responsibility to<lb/>
protect human rights, not only here,<lb/>
but in the countries where we spend<lb/>
our money. In the same way in<lb/>
which stockholders have a voice in a<lb/>
company, the U.S. should and has<lb/>
voiced its opposition to South<lb/>
African policies. But that is not<lb/>
enough. It's obvious that the situa-<lb/>
tion is not changing so we should<lb/>
show our disapproval by withdraw-<lb/>
ing our contributions to the South<lb/>
African economy.<lb/>
As the old saying goes, peoplein<lb/>
glass houses shouldn't throw<lb/>
stones and there are certainly bla-<lb/>
tant examples of racism in U.S.<lb/>
history. Even now, some politicians<lb/>
derive their power from covert or<lb/>
overt racism. But the important fact<lb/>
is that the situation is improving.<lb/>
Furthermore, there is no<lb/>
government-sanctioned racism here.<lb/>
We have fought against racism<lb/>
here and negated many racist<lb/>
policies. Why then should we con-<lb/>
tinue to provide economic support<lb/>
for a country which is practicing<lb/>
policies which we have worked so<lb/>
hard to eliminate?<lb/>
Cranston's idea of banning future<lb/>
investment is a good one. But it is<lb/>
not sufficient. Total divestiture of<lb/>
U.S. holdings in South Africa is<lb/>
necessary to convince the country's<lb/>
government of how serious we<lb/>
perceive the problem of apartheid to<lb/>
be.<lb/>
There are those who say that total<lb/>
divestment will only hurt the blacks<lb/>
who are working for<lb/>
U.Ssupported companies. In the<lb/>
short term, it is possible that it will.<lb/>
But the people it will really hurt,<lb/>
both in the short and the long term<lb/>
are the white owners and managers.<lb/>
These are the people who stand to<lb/>
lose the most if the economy is af-<lb/>
fected.<lb/>
As the situation stands now, the<lb/>
white people, the people who have<lb/>
the power to change the structure of<lb/>
South Africa, have no incentive to<lb/>
change. Although Americans have<lb/>
expressed their disapproval of racist<lb/>
policies, they have done little more<lb/>
than talk. We have the power to<lb/>
make conditions better for the<lb/>
blacks through the exertion of our<lb/>
economic power.<lb/>
In order to annihilate apartheid,<lb/>
immediate action needs to be taken<lb/>
to stop U.S. support of the South<lb/>
African economy. Vocal censure is<lb/>
not effective. Economic censure will<lb/>
be.<lb/>
THIS IS m A TEST, IF THIS HAP BEEN AN ACTUAL EMER0EM1<lb/>
,WVE mn TAKEN OVER gV TEP TURNER,<lb/>
Conservative Assault Questioned<lb/>
By Michael Massing<lb/>
The Not RcpabUr<lb/>
The current conservative assault on<lb/>
CBS continues a long American tradi-<lb/>
tion of network-bashing. Never before,<lb/>
however, have the attacks fastened so<lb/>
obsessively on one network.<lb/>
Sen. Jesse Helms' organization,<lb/>
Fairness in Media, has urged conser-<lb/>
vatives to buy stock in "the most anti-<lb/>
Reagan network in order to "become<lb/>
Dan Rather's boss Ted Turner, the<lb/>
owner of Cable News Network, who<lb/>
regularly denounces the elitism of the<lb/>
broadcast establishment, badly wants<lb/>
to buy a network, but none so badlv as<lb/>
CBS.<lb/>
The charges against CBS made by of-<lb/>
ficials of Fairness in Media and Ac-<lb/>
curacy in Media, another conservative<lb/>
media watchdog, are rarely specific.<lb/>
More often they are vague, visceral<lb/>
judgements about the network's perfor-<lb/>
mance over the years. The people who<lb/>
work at CBS are regarded as un-<lb/>
patriotic, even disloyal. The network is<lb/>
considered disrespectful of authority,<lb/>
especially government. Above all, CBS<lb/>
stands accused of excessive negativism,<lb/>
of incessant criticism of the American<lb/>
way.<lb/>
For proof of CBS's sins, I was<lb/>
directed time and again to a TV Guide<lb/>
article in August 1983. Purporting to<lb/>
measure anti-Reagan bias at the three<lb/>
networks, the study found that CBS<lb/>
cast the president in a negative light<lb/>
seven times more frequently than either<lb/>
ABC or NBC. By seeming to offer in-<lb/>
controvertible evidence of CBS's liberal<lb/>
slant, the TV Guide piece has become<lb/>
holy writ for the right.<lb/>
James Cain, a North Carolina lawyer<lb/>
who helped to organize Fairness in<lb/>
Media, says that the article was a major<lb/>
factor in the group's decision to single<lb/>
out CBS.<lb/>
On closer examination, however, the<lb/>
"survey" is far from conclusive. It was<lb/>
conducted by one individual ? John<lb/>
Weisman, the magazine's Washington<lb/>
Bureau chief ? who viewed a single<lb/>
week of evening newscasts. Explaining<lb/>
the criteria he used, Weisman noted on-<lb/>
ly that he categorized each story "as<lb/>
positive, meaning that it made the presi-<lb/>
dent look good; negative, meaning it<lb/>
made him look bad; or neutral, mean-<lb/>
ing it did neither In other words,<lb/>
Weisman simply used his own judge-<lb/>
ment.<lb/>
For many CBS haters, though, the<lb/>
TV Guide article lends an aura of scien-<lb/>
tific respectability to what they know in<lb/>
their gut to be true. Most can tick off a<lb/>
list of accumulated grievances at will.<lb/>
"My quarrel with CBS started well<lb/>
before Jesse Helms came along says<lb/>
Hoover Adams, editor and publisher of<lb/>
The Daily Record in Dunn, N.C.<lb/>
Adams, a friend of Helms, has sued<lb/>
CBS on behalf of Fairness in Media in a<lb/>
bid for the network's list of<lb/>
stockholders. He cited CBS's goading<lb/>
of Lyndon Johnson during the Vietnam<lb/>
War, its hounding of Bert Lance, and<lb/>
its harassing of Jimmy Carter during<lb/>
the Iran hostage crisis.<lb/>
Adam's inclusion of Johnson and<lb/>
Carter is revealing. The right, it seems,<lb/>
is bothered not only by criticism of<lb/>
Ronald Reagan but by challenges to<lb/>
presidents in general. In this view, the<lb/>
president deserves to be treated not only<lb/>
with respect but with reverence. The<lb/>
journalist's chief tools ? skepticism,<lb/>
inquisitiveness, criticism ? are seen as<lb/>
"rudeness<lb/>
Ironically, the right's attacks agajnst<lb/>
CBS come at a time when the network<lb/>
probably least deserves it.<lb/>
In the last couple of vears, "60<lb/>
Minutes" has more frequently angered<lb/>
liberals than conservatives. In 1982, for<lb/>
instance, the program incurred ' the<lb/>
wrath of organized labor by portraying<lb/>
Coors as a caring, paternalistic enter-<lb/>
prise and absolving the companv of<lb/>
numerous union charges against it A<lb/>
1983 broadcast on the World and Na<lb/>
tional Councils of Churches insinuated<lb/>
that the groups were supporting Marx-<lb/>
ist terrorists. More recently "60<lb/>
Minutes" featured a glowing account<lb/>
of reforms undertaken bv the govern<lb/>
ment of South Africa.<lb/>
But "The CBS Evening News" still<lb/>
gets in its shots. It reported signs of the<lb/>
impending invasion of Grenada<lb/>
challenged administration claims about<lb/>
the threat posed by Nicaragua's armed<lb/>
forces, and raised questions about the<lb/>
safety of Provincetown-Boston<lb/>
Airlines. The program's investigative<lb/>
team has detailed the dubious<lb/>
dealings of General Dvnarr.<lb/>
safety questions about the sweet<lb/>
aspartame, and exposed<lb/>
ment's cover-up of cancer<lb/>
ducted at nuclear weapor ?<lb/>
Moreover, CBS continues<lb/>
passionate pieces on the home<lb/>
hungry, the unemr.<lb/>
castoffs from Rea<lb/>
What doesn't mudi<lb/>
hitting political p ccc<lb/>
Van Gordon Sd<lb/>
CBS news in 1982, tl t I ci ng<lb/>
has made a point I .<lb/>
Washington and into the field<lb/>
freed the netwo t m hav .<lb/>
hearings, press confere<lb/>
appurtenances of official Wasl .<lb/>
But the show is now hea n<lb/>
that cause a chuckle, elic<lb/>
ing a tear I the eve. Ever. Wa<lb/>
Cronkite has<lb/>
gram for growing s '<lb/>
Quantitative media :?j.e are p<lb/>
bably no: the besf ay to determine net-<lb/>
work bias By adjusting the criteria,<lb/>
usually posMbk to probe whatever c<lb/>
sponsor wans But given the right's<lb/>
eager embrace of trie T Guide article.<lb/>
it's only fair to cite another sui<lb/>
recently completed at Ge -<lb/>
Washington University This was<lb/>
one-man, one-week, seat-of-the-p<lb/>
affair; it involved a team of researchers<lb/>
who, over a two-year period, v.euec<lb/>
more than 1,000 items aired on the<lb/>
three networks. In the end. the studv<lb/>
turned up no special slant at CBS. In<lb/>
fact, the project's director, Michael<lb/>
Robinson, recently concluded fi i<lb/>
evidence that "CBS is, in some impor-<lb/>
tant respects, slightly more<lb/>
vative' than the other two networks<lb/>
And, during the 1984 campaign, Robin-<lb/>
son wrote, "CBS proved least critica<lb/>
Reagan-Bush<lb/>
There's an outside chance thai<lb/>
conservatives' gambit could backfire<lb/>
CBS continues to harbor mam top-rate<lb/>
journalists who would like nothing bet-<lb/>
ter than to put the right in us place. Dan<lb/>
Rather in particular is not know:<lb/>
bending, especially to groups<lb/>
Fairness in Media.<lb/>
Few people on campus today<lb/>
remember Patrick O'Neill, the peacenik<lb/>
gadfly who managed to earn the an-<lb/>
tipathy of virtually every conservative at<lb/>
ECU. He was vilified as a Communist, a<lb/>
traitor and even a wimp by some<lb/>
members of ROTC and the College<lb/>
Republicans and today he is serving time<lb/>
in a federal penitentiary. When Patrick<lb/>
first told me that he was planning to<lb/>
break into the Martin-Marietta bomb<lb/>
factory in Orlando, Florida and destroy<lb/>
components of Pershing II missiles, I<lb/>
thought some kind of death wish had<lb/>
gripped his brain. "Don't do it I<lb/>
warned him. "Embalming fluid<lb/>
wouldn't flatter you Even if Patrick<lb/>
and his friends (eventually known as the<lb/>
Pershing Plowshares) did manage to pull<lb/>
off the entire caper unscathed, I reason-<lb/>
ed, the judge was not likely to be lenient<lb/>
with O'Neill since he had already com-<lb/>
mitted civil disobedience four times.<lb/>
So much for history. Patrick is cur-<lb/>
rently considered to be one of the most<lb/>
dangerous men in the Atlanta peniten-<lb/>
tiary where he is incarcerated, though<lb/>
his crime was non-violent, and he will<lb/>
not see the unobstructed daylight for<lb/>
another year and a half. It is hard to find<lb/>
many students at ECU who sympathize<lb/>
with Patrick. Most say that he got what<lb/>
he deserved or at least what he wanted.<lb/>
Certainly O'Neill's brusque and ag-<lb/>
gressive New York mannerisms left<lb/>
some southerners unkindly disposed<lb/>
toward him or at least ambivalent.<lb/>
Whatever the merit of these complaints,<lb/>
Disobedience And Nuclear Arms<lb/>
it is not my purpose to defend Patrick's<lb/>
personality. Suffice it to say that he is a<lb/>
friend of mine who sometimes ticked me<lb/>
off. He has been a valuable source of in-<lb/>
spiration over time and he has always<lb/>
provoked those closest to him to ex-<lb/>
amine their consciences and take action.<lb/>
To know Patrick is to struggle with<lb/>
him and often, with yourself. It is not an<lb/>
easy relationship.<lb/>
One of the reasons Patrick gave me<lb/>
From The Left<lb/>
Jay Stone<lb/>
for the action that landed him in his cur-<lb/>
rent predicament was that he felt that he<lb/>
had to address the truth"of the nuclear<lb/>
arms race. In other words, he felt that<lb/>
since people in the Third World were<lb/>
starving to death every day while billions<lb/>
were being squandered on the arms race,<lb/>
he had to take some action to reverse<lb/>
this situation, an action entailing risk<lb/>
roughly equivalent to that being faced<lb/>
by people in the Third World. For<lb/>
Patrick that meant physically destroying<lb/>
a nuclear weapon and putting his life<lb/>
and his freedom on the lhV. At the time,<lb/>
I argued that such logic was at least<lb/>
slightly off center, if for no other reason<lb/>
than because getting killed or thrown in<lb/>
jail for three years is not an effective<lb/>
way to accomplish one's political objec-<lb/>
tives.<lb/>
Yet in the end I feel I must make a<lb/>
final bow to Patrick. Even if I have<lb/>
reservations about the effectiveness of<lb/>
civil disobedience in an era in which the<lb/>
majority of people don't understand the<lb/>
issues that inspire a militant minority to<lb/>
action, I agree that some action is<lb/>
necessary. Simply sitting back and<lb/>
allowing events to run their natural<lb/>
course is a prescription for disaster<lb/>
For one thing, the technological com-<lb/>
plexity of the weapons involved is mak-<lb/>
ing a nuclear accident more and more<lb/>
likely. The time between pressing the<lb/>
button to fire a nuclear weapon and its<lb/>
subsequent arrival and detonation at its<lb/>
Zf ? ?Feasing each year-This means<lb/>
that countries, particularly the suDer-<lb/>
powers, now have less time to decide<lb/>
whether or not a radar system warning<lb/>
of a nuclear attack is the real thing or a<lb/>
2?&amp;? ,the lag time betwecn firing<lb/>
and detonation continues to decrease<lb/>
the temptation to place all weaponry on<lb/>
an automatic launch on warning status<lb/>
increases. Similarly many weapons such<lb/>
as the cruise missile are so easy to con-<lb/>
ceal that they thwart conventiaonal at-<lb/>
tempts at arms control since treaties<lb/>
establishing ceilings on absolute<lb/>
numbers become impossible to verify In<lb/>
addition, the contemporary trend<lb/>
?25? Z?ng weaP?nry at has tradi-<lb/>
tioiy been non-nuclear with nuclear<lb/>
2?? AT? "M sheUs r ex-<lb/>
ample) makes it more likely that a con-<lb/>
ventional conflict could escalate into a<lb/>
full-scale nuclear war.<lb/>
Perhaps the most potent danger to<lb/>
world peace, however, comes from the<lb/>
proliferation and spread of nuclear<lb/>
weaponry. In the last decade it is known<lb/>
that India joined the nuclear club and it<lb/>
is believed that Israel and South Africa<lb/>
may have as well. It has been suggested<lb/>
that before the end of the century as<lb/>
many as a dozen countries will acquire<lb/>
nuclear capabilities. Some of them such<lb/>
as Argentina and Brazil and Iraq and<lb/>
Israel are traditional rivals.<lb/>
The spread of sophisticated conven-<lb/>
tional armaments to Third World coun-<lb/>
tries has also worsened global condi-<lb/>
tions as more advanced weaponry has<lb/>
had the predictable result of yielding<lb/>
more bloodshed. According to the 1982<lb/>
Sevard's Index of World Military and<lb/>
Social Expenditures, the international<lb/>
trade in conventional arms amounted to<lb/>
more than $35 billion per year,<lb/>
spreading technologically complex<lb/>
weapons of war into the most remote<lb/>
and least developed areas of the world.<lb/>
Ironically, this is happening when pover-<lb/>
ty and hunger in the Third World are ac-<lb/>
tually on the increase.<lb/>
In fact, according to the Index,<lb/>
"military expansionism appears to be<lb/>
the dominant dynamic force in the<lb/>
modern epoch. The continued upward<lb/>
thrust of all basic indicators of military<lb/>
power is in striking contrast to the global<lb/>
economic decline and, the evidence in-<lb/>
dicates, bears a heavy responsibility for<lb/>
it As a consequence, the Index notes,<lb/>
military spending has now reached $600<lb/>
billion per year. If military expans<lb/>
continues at current rates, by the year<lb/>
2000 national governments will hae<lb/>
spent an additional $15 trillion (in to-<lb/>
day's prices) on military defense. T?o<lb/>
nations representing 17 percent of the<lb/>
world population, the U.S. and the<lb/>
USSR, spend half the world's militarv<lb/>
budget, export 58 percent of the arms<lb/>
moving in international trade, and con-<lb/>
trol 96 percent of the world's stockpile<lb/>
of nuclear weapons.<lb/>
Despite the rhetoric coming from the<lb/>
Reagan administration to the contrary,<lb/>
the U.S. and Russia existed in a relation-<lb/>
ship of rough nuclear parity even before<lb/>
the present arms buildup was underwav<lb/>
The absolute number of warheads on<lb/>
Sr?S ?totalled approximately 10,000<lb/>
and the United States' disadvantage in<lb/>
?2221 ICKBMlWaS -othanlom<lb/>
pensated for by the U.S. advantage in<lb/>
submarine SLBMs and lZ r8ange<lb/>
nV nt.Th'e com<lb/>
plexion of each side's nuclear forces<lb/>
could actually be seen to give th?U S ?<lb/>
Ptive <lb/>
are stiU in tKnCmy f ???? whilc thy<lb/>
biMta"sllos) than ? land-<lb/>
JlJZJ. I find<lb/>
It isnde ?bjCCt ?f the ?? r?<lb/>
business as usual<lb/>
Lac<lb/>
(CPS) -<lb/>
aren't working out :<lb/>
leges undc<lb/>
ings, who monit<lb/>
issues tor the<lb/>
Students <lb/>
Washington. D (<lb/>
Indeed, the I<lb/>
choked b a .<lb/>
base, fedei<lb/>
communican<lb/>
apathy and a-<lb/>
Comi<lb/>
Asbes<lb/>
(CP -The new<lb/>
ing college ast c<lb/>
jects cou . ?<lb/>
dangerou<lb/>
right ??<lb/>
A<lb/>
asbestos-rela:<lb/>
forced insure<lb/>
cancel the ab.<lb/>
struction<lb/>
asbestos fron<lb/>
"You cai<lb/>
with no stai<lb/>
knows how to do,<lb/>
Borowski, sp ?<lb/>
Professional Ir.<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
While man<lb/>
ly program<lb/>
cancer-causing<lb/>
dorms, auditoriui<lb/>
and other can- <lb/>
struction con. .<lb/>
take the<lb/>
"abatemerv<lb/>
can't get liabilit) <lb/>
the projeo<lb/>
Many abatement<lb/>
"sprung up overnig I<lb/>
five years since ai j<lb/>
'bad Borow I<lb/>
A few .or<lb/>
perience installing asi<lb/>
get limited c<lb/>
"but it's from<lb/>
panies and for s;<lb/>
long-term p.<lb/>
Short-term<lb/>
cover asbes!<lb/>
claims ten or I<lb/>
Lung cancer. asb?<lb/>
other abevtos-relan<lb/>
generally don't show<lb/>
years after the <lb/>
contact with the matej<lb/>
The federal governi<lb/>
to issue regula'<lb/>
asbestos removal<lb/>
tractors are surpi<lb/>
their liabi:<lb/>
cancelled when : I<lb/>
learns thev 're rer ,<lb/>
"We're seeing v<lb/>
back out of b .<lb/>
no insurance<lb/>
Hunnicutt . V.i<lb/>
Nationa <lb/>
it's becoming a :<lb/>
Mem<lb/>
"Schools can't hi<lb/>
tor without insurant<lb/>
"They have no .1<lb/>
shut the d j<lb/>
with asbestos rev<lb/>
tor can remo i<lb/>
The coe ig<lb/>
affect remoa -<lb/>
Clay, a healtv<lb/>
Georgia<lb/>
Technology 's a<lb/>
'?Worker compel<lb/>
place she saw "Thel<lb/>
people exposed on the<lb/>
building occupa<lb/>
coverage 'alls on I"<lb/>
owner if the contrac<lb/>
it<lb/>
The universr. j<lb/>
South Carolina have<lb/>
money and insured con<lb/>
remove their asbei<lb/>
A dvertl<lb/>
?<lb/>
T<lb/>
Offer:<lb/>
It<lb/>
4"<lb/>
T-<lb/>
??  ? <lb/>
<pb facs="00057715_0005"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 22, 1985<lb/>
msMwe<lb/>
tioned<lb/>
iled the dubious financial<lb/>
-eneral Dynamics, raised<lb/>
about the sweetener<lb/>
id exposed the govern-<lb/>
jp or cancer studies con-<lb/>
lclear weapons facilities.<lb/>
JS continues to run corn-<lb/>
ices on the homeless, the<lb/>
unemployed and other<lb/>
Reaganomics<lb/>
t much appear are hard-<lb/>
i eces. From the time<lb/>
or took control of<lb/>
?v the Evening News<lb/>
of getting out of<lb/>
i into the field. This has<lb/>
? 'rom having to cover<lb/>
terences and other<lb/>
official Washington.<lb/>
i now heavy in features<lb/>
ickle, elicit a sigh, or br-<lb/>
the eye. Even Walter<lb/>
 publicly criticized the pro-<lb/>
ma soft.<lb/>
media studies are pro-<lb/>
nest way to determine net-<lb/>
adjusting the criteria, it is<lb/>
)le to probe whatever the<lb/>
It But given the right's<lb/>
e of the TV Guide article,<lb/>
to cite another survey<lb/>
mpleted at George<lb/>
(University. This was no<lb/>
le-week, seat-of-the-pants<lb/>
flved a team of researchers<lb/>
two-year period, viewed<lb/>
,000 items aired on the<lb/>
ks. In the end, the study<lb/>
special slant at CBS. In<lb/>
oject's director, Michael<lb/>
:ently concluded from the<lb/>
"CBS is, in some impor-<lb/>
, slightly more 'conser-<lb/>
jthe other two networks<lb/>
jthe 1984 campaign, Robin-<lb/>
BS proved least critical of<lb/>
outside chance that the<lb/>
gambit could backfire.<lb/>
es to harbor many top-rate<lb/>
Jho would like nothing bet-<lb/>
it the right in its place. Dan<lb/>
rticular is not known for<lb/>
pecially to groups like<lb/>
ledia.<lb/>
ms<lb/>
 If military expansion<lb/>
Current rates, by the year<lb/>
governments will have<lb/>
fional $15 trillion (in to-<lb/>
rn military defense. Two<lb/>
enting 17 percent of the<lb/>
tion, the U.S. and the<lb/>
half the world's military<lb/>
58 percent of the arms<lb/>
rnational trade, and con-<lb/>
of the world's stockpile<lb/>
ons.<lb/>
Jtietoric coming from the<lb/>
(stration to the contrary,<lb/>
issia existed in a relation-<lb/>
luclear parity even before<lb/>
s buildup was underway,<lb/>
lumber of warheads on<lb/>
ed approximately 10,000<lb/>
States' disadvantage in<lb/>
Ms was more than com-<lb/>
the U.S. advantage in<lb/>
.BMs and long-range<lb/>
to the point, the com-<lb/>
h side's nuclear forces<lb/>
seen to give the U.S. an<lb/>
sea-based and air-based<lb/>
far less vulnerable to<lb/>
tack (an attack that<lb/>
emy's missiles while they<lb/>
ir silos) than are land-<lb/>
analysis then, I find<lb/>
agreement with many of<lb/>
expressed by Patrick<lb/>
mbject of the arms race,<lb/>
le to put an end to<lb/>
(CPS) - -It's clear things<lb/>
aren't working out for black col-<lb/>
leges understates Keith Jenn-<lb/>
ings, who monitors black student<lb/>
issues for the United States<lb/>
Students Association in<lb/>
Washington, D.C.<lb/>
Indeed, the black colleges ?<lb/>
choked by a withering money<lb/>
base, federal aid cuts, muddled<lb/>
communications, b'ack student<lb/>
apathy and desegregation efforts<lb/>
Of Money Hurting Many Black Colleges<lb/>
things that are pushing black students It's serious enough, moreover a ;?. r?   C5<lb/>
that are pushing black students<lb/>
into historically-white campuses<lb/>
? are having their worst season<lb/>
in years.<lb/>
Enrollments at black colleges,<lb/>
after increasing steadily for the<lb/>
past 25 years, have dropped five<lb/>
percent in just the last year.<lb/>
And amid cries of racism and<lb/>
even bureaucratic "genocide<lb/>
black education leaders apparent-<lb/>
ly aren't sure what to do about it.<lb/>
Companies Against<lb/>
Asbestos Removal<lb/>
(CPS) ? The newest snafu fac-<lb/>
ing college asbestos removal pro-<lb/>
jects could keep a lot of<lb/>
dangerous asbestos insulation<lb/>
right where it is: on campus.<lb/>
A recent rash of expensive<lb/>
asbestos-related health claims has<lb/>
forced insurance companies to<lb/>
cancel the ability policies of con-<lb/>
struction firms which remove<lb/>
asbestos from existing buildings.<lb/>
"You can't (insure) a process<lb/>
with no standards that no one<lb/>
knows how to do says Particia<lb/>
Borowski, spokeswoman for the<lb/>
Professional Insurance Agents<lb/>
Association.<lb/>
While many colleges have cost-<lb/>
ly programs to remove the<lb/>
cancer-causing substance from<lb/>
dorms, auditoriums, classrooms<lb/>
and other campus buildings, con-<lb/>
struction companies now won't<lb/>
take the removal, or<lb/>
"abatement jobs because they<lb/>
can't get liability insurance for<lb/>
the projects.<lb/>
Many abatement contractors<lb/>
"sprung up overnight, in the last<lb/>
five years since asbestos became<lb/>
'bad Borowski explains.<lb/>
A few companies, with ex-<lb/>
perience installing asbestos, can<lb/>
get limited coverage, she says,<lb/>
"but it's from speciality com-<lb/>
panies and for specific jobs. No<lb/>
long-term policies<lb/>
Short-term policies won't<lb/>
cover asbestos-related health<lb/>
claims ten or 20 years from now.<lb/>
Lung cancer, asbestosis, and<lb/>
other asbestos-reiated diseases<lb/>
generally don't show up for 20-40<lb/>
years after the victim comes in<lb/>
contact with the material.<lb/>
The federal government has yet<lb/>
to issue regulations covering<lb/>
asbestos removal, and many con-<lb/>
tractors are surprised to discover<lb/>
their liability policies limited or<lb/>
cancelled when their insuror<lb/>
learns they're removing asbestos.<lb/>
"We're seeing contractors<lb/>
back out of big jobs because of<lb/>
no insurance confirms Jane<lb/>
Hunnicutt of the Atlanta-based<lb/>
National Asbestos Council, "and<lb/>
it's becoming a nationwide pro-<lb/>
blem<lb/>
"Schools can't hire a contrac-<lb/>
tor without insurance she adds.<lb/>
"They have no recourse but to<lb/>
shut the doors in any building<lb/>
with asbestos because no contrac-<lb/>
tor can remove it<lb/>
The coverage problem doesn't<lb/>
affect removal workers, adds Eva<lb/>
Clay, a health specialist for the<lb/>
Georgia Institute of<lb/>
Technology's asbestos program.<lb/>
"Worker compensations are in<lb/>
place she says. "The liability is<lb/>
people exposed on the job site or<lb/>
building occupants. Liability<lb/>
coverage falls on the building<lb/>
owner if the contractor can't get<lb/>
it<lb/>
The universities of Florida and<lb/>
South Carolina have found state<lb/>
money and insured contractors to<lb/>
remove their asbestos.<lb/>
A dvertise<lb/>
x&amp;<lb/>
"We have no specific in-<lb/>
surance for asbestos exposure<lb/>
comments Dave Rinker, vice<lb/>
president for facilities planning at<lb/>
the University of South Carolina.<lb/>
"We just make sure we deal only<lb/>
with contractors who have in-<lb/>
surance<lb/>
USC, among other schools,<lb/>
conducted a lengthy asbestos<lb/>
search on campus, and " after a<lb/>
substantial amount of time and<lb/>
effort, we're taking steps to<lb/>
remove it he states.<lb/>
The University of Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, meanwhile, has no<lb/>
plans to remove asbestos from<lb/>
dozens of campus buildings<lb/>
despite the concern of<lb/>
maintenance workers who are ex-<lb/>
posed to the substance daily.<lb/>
Penn officials say the project is<lb/>
too risky and too expensive.<lb/>
While the Environmental Pro-<lb/>
tection Agency in June will offer<lb/>
$45 million to local schools<lb/>
boards to help remove asbestos<lb/>
from nearly 30,000 school rooms<lb/>
across the country, colleges have<lb/>
to spend their own money or lob-<lb/>
by their state legislatures for<lb/>
removal funds.<lb/>
Meanwhile, only two com-<lb/>
panies in the country will insure<lb/>
asbestos removal contractors,<lb/>
and Georgia Tech's Clay says the<lb/>
policy costs are prohibitive and<lb/>
claims can be made only in the<lb/>
policy period, usually 12 months.<lb/>
"A (claimant) has to prove<lb/>
symptoms within the policy<lb/>
period when the disease symp-<lb/>
toms may not appear until 20<lb/>
years down the road she says.<lb/>
"With most contractors there's a<lb/>
snowball's chance of keeping any<lb/>
policy 20 years<lb/>
The restrictive policies will<lb/>
continue until guidelines and<lb/>
standards for removal are deter-<lb/>
mined, the PIA's Borowski con-<lb/>
tends.<lb/>
"The federal government<lb/>
should provide standards<lb/>
Borowski insists. "We don't feel<lb/>
the insurance industry should<lb/>
have to be responsible to set<lb/>
them. You can't insure<lb/>
something you can't assess or<lb/>
regulate<lb/>
It's serious enough, moreover,<lb/>
that inside observers are labeling<lb/>
it "the quiet death of black col-<lb/>
leges Jennings reports.<lb/>
Some colleges aren't going<lb/>
quietly.<lb/>
Cheyney University in Penn-<lb/>
sylvania, for instance, recently<lb/>
lost its accreditation by the Mid-<lb/>
dle States Association of Colleges<lb/>
and Schools because it lacked<lb/>
"coherent and purposeful direc-<lb/>
tion, mission and leadership<lb/>
President C.T. Enus Wright<lb/>
resigned the next week, and soon<lb/>
after that two administrative vice<lb/>
presidents were fired.<lb/>
"It's nothing more than<lb/>
cultural genocide to get rid of and<lb/>
destroy black colleges claims<lb/>
former Cheyney student govern-<lb/>
ment leader Cynthia Jefferson.<lb/>
Most of the reasons for the ac-<lb/>
creditation denial "could be ap-<lb/>
plied to any college if you looked<lb/>
hard enough Jefferson claims,<lb/>
adding President Wright was<lb/>
merely a "sacrificial lamb" to<lb/>
appease the accrediting associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Historically-black Knoxville<lb/>
University in Tennessee and Lin-<lb/>
coln College in Nebraska also<lb/>
have lost accreditation this year<lb/>
on similar grounds, Jennings<lb/>
notes.<lb/>
Three financially-strapped<lb/>
black Texas colleges ? Wiley,<lb/>
Huston-Tillotson and Texas Col-<lb/>
lege ? may merge to pool their<lb/>
resources and enrollments.<lb/>
Tennessee State University,<lb/>
meanwhile, is under pressure to<lb/>
integrate its predominantly black<lb/>
student body and have a 50 per-<lb/>
cent white enrollment by 1992.<lb/>
The crises follow last year's<lb/>
financial failure of 119-year-old<lb/>
Fisk University, long regarded as<lb/>
the flagship of black colleges.<lb/>
"Black colleges are facing a<lb/>
problem which has two con-<lb/>
tradictory ends laments Samuel<lb/>
Myers, president of the National<lb/>
Association for Equal Oppor-<lb/>
tunity in Higher Education.<lb/>
Myers says that while black<lb/>
students need black colleges more<lb/>
than ever now, there's a "new<lb/>
threat to black schools that their<lb/>
funding, enrollment and support<lb/>
will decline. The image of black<lb/>
schools is hurt by problems at<lb/>
some black institutions, which<lb/>
adds to the problem even more<lb/>
Only 20 percent of all black<lb/>
students attend predominantly-<lb/>
black colleges, but nearly half of<lb/>
all black students who complete<lb/>
their degrees do so at a black<lb/>
school.<lb/>
"Students in black colleges<lb/>
seem to have a virtual corner on<lb/>
intellectual satisfactions and out-<lb/>
comes during the college years<lb/>
chiefly because of the sense of<lb/>
belonging, support and<lb/>
understanding they receive,<lb/>
claims psychologist Jacqueline<lb/>
Fleming, author of the newly-<lb/>
released book Blacks in College.<lb/>
On white campuses, black<lb/>
students often "fall prey to the<lb/>
feelings of alienation and<lb/>
estrangement, and are less likely<lb/>
to develop motivating relation-<lb/>
ships with faculty or to feel a part<lb/>
of campus life<lb/>
More black students head for<lb/>
predominantly-white campuses<lb/>
anyway.<lb/>
"Ironically points out Har-<lb/>
riott Schimel, spokeswoman for<lb/>
the United Negro College Fund,<lb/>
"the traditional information<lb/>
systems among blacks for passing<lb/>
along the advantages of black<lb/>
schools have become more dif-<lb/>
fused, so many blacks go off to<lb/>
white colleges not knowing the<lb/>
vaiue they could get from a black<lb/>
college<lb/>
Many of today's black students<lb/>
seem more interested in<lb/>
assimilating faster into white<lb/>
society, some sources add.<lb/>
Even on historically-white<lb/>
campuses, enrollment in black<lb/>
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studies courses and membership<lb/>
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And the nation's only national<lb/>
black student lobby group ? the<lb/>
National Organization of Black<lb/>
University and College Students<lb/>
? has locked the doors of its<lb/>
Washington offices and all but<lb/>
ceased operating because of<lb/>
"disinterest and internal con-<lb/>
flicts sources report.<lb/>
Many black colleges today are<lb/>
run by administrators who<lb/>
graduated from white, not black,<lb/>
schools, "and are completely un-<lb/>
familiar with the history and pur-<lb/>
pose of black institutions Jenn-<lb/>
ings says.<lb/>
And as blacks themselves for-<lb/>
sake black colleges, the politi-<lb/>
cians who finance them now<lb/>
question the need for them.<lb/>
"The Brown decision (the<lb/>
hallmark court case which forced<lb/>
integration of public schools) is<lb/>
being reinterpreted in an upside-<lb/>
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ing that we should close black<lb/>
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to white schools says Jennings.<lb/>
In response to all the problems,<lb/>
NAFEO is planning a nationwide<lb/>
marketing strategy for black col-<lb/>
leges.<lb/>
Pepsi Cola officials, in fact,<lb/>
have volunteered "to help us<lb/>
identify the strength of our pro-<lb/>
duct and market it the same way<lb/>
you would market anything else<lb/>
these days says Myers.<lb/>
"We can't sit back in the black<lb/>
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tion that we're needed he ex-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057715_0006"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
MAY 22. 1985 Page 6<lb/>
Chuck Norris Trys<lb/>
For All-American<lb/>
Image On Screen<lb/>
By JAY &amp; ELLIOT KRAVETZ<lb/>
ialrmallonil Photo New,<lb/>
<lb/>
I'll never play a<lb/>
drug addict or<lb/>
an alcoholic.<lb/>
When I do films,<lb/>
whatever the<lb/>
role I play, in the<lb/>
kid's eyes , it's<lb/>
Chuck Norris up<lb/>
there on the<lb/>
screen, not the<lb/>
guy I'm portray-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
? Chuck Norris<lb/>
ns<lb/>
Chicago police and those in other cities.<lb/>
"Attitudes were different there he noted. "Personalities were<lb/>
different. Those guys are tougher, more lively, more outgoing.<lb/>
They joke around a lot more then L.A. cops do, for example. I<lb/>
think it's due to the fact that they are probably put in more dire<lb/>
situations there than other cops are<lb/>
Invasion, U.S.A. materialized as I was reading an article in<lb/>
Reader's Digest about terrorism all over the world and they had<lb/>
done a three year investigation on Iran on how terrorism was<lb/>
building there and they were infiltrating the terrorists into the<lb/>
United States and France, primarily he said. "There are ter-<lb/>
rorists circulating in the United States, today.<lb/>
"I thought, 'Holy mackerel, if they ever got mobilized we could<lb/>
be in a lot of trouble over here he continued. "I wrote the<lb/>
screenplay and that is what the whole story is all about. In the story<lb/>
we have an international terrorist who is hired by a Khomeini or a<lb/>
Qaddafi to mobilize the world's terrorists and he sends them out to<lb/>
every major city in America.<lb/>
'They start blowing up track homes, shopping malls, buses,<lb/>
restaurants, businesses to the point where people are afraid to go to<lb/>
work,they are afraid to go out and eat, they are afraid to send their<lb/>
kids to school and they become prisoners in their owa homes he<lb/>
explained. "Vigilantism sets in and people start protecting their<lb/>
own neighborhoods because with this random terriorism there is no<lb/>
way for the cops to track them down.<lb/>
Chuck Norris feels strongly<lb/>
about the characters he plays. He<lb/>
currently stars in Code of Silence,<lb/>
an exciting action-adventure film<lb/>
about a police detective, who<lb/>
becomes involved both in the ac-<lb/>
cidental killing of a Hispanic<lb/>
youth by a fellow officer and two<lb/>
warring underground organiza-<lb/>
tions vying for control of the<lb/>
total drug trade.<lb/>
"I'll never play a drug addict<lb/>
or an alcoholic he explained<lb/>
during an interview on the set of<lb/>
Invasion, U.S.A in Fort Pierce,<lb/>
Florida. "When I do films,<lb/>
whatever the role I play, in the<lb/>
kid's eyes, it's Chuck Norris up<lb/>
there on the screen, not the guy<lb/>
I'm portraying<lb/>
Norris, who films all his<lb/>
movies on location, felt Chicago<lb/>
was the perfect place to set Code<lb/>
of Silence, which was originally<lb/>
scripted for San Francisco. Nor-<lb/>
noted a difference between<lb/>
Chuck Norris<lb/>
"I work for the government and after our economy freezes I'm<lb/>
called in because I've run in to this terrorist before while working<lb/>
for the CIA<lb/>
This is the second screenplay Norris has written. He previously<lb/>
wrote Missing In Action.<lb/>
"I enjoy writing screenplays he said. "I especially enjoy it<lb/>
when the character is played by me because I get to bring a<lb/>
character I have created to the screen<lb/>
Whenever possible Norris does his own stunts. In Code of<lb/>
Silence,he actually fights on top a moving "el" train and drives in a<lb/>
chase scene with a limousine. In Invasion, U.S.A he will ride on<lb/>
the outside of a truck through a shopping mall and drive in another<lb/>
chase scene.<lb/>
Norris will soon be working on his first action comedy, called Ci-<lb/>
ty Slickers and another action adventure film called Delta Force.<lb/>
Delta Force is about a 15,000 man force like the SAS in London<lb/>
which operates in America to counter invasion he explained.<lb/>
"We are currently doing research on that now. City Slickers was<lb/>
written by my wife Dianne and is about a contemporary cattle drive<lb/>
and a group of city slickers who tag long thinking it will be fun. I<lb/>
play the foreman of the drive. I think this will be a very funny<lb/>
movie<lb/>
Few actors have the convictions Chuck Norris has both on screen<lb/>
and off. He cares about how his audience feels about him and he is<lb/>
very sincere about his image.<lb/>
"The reason you read so little about me is beacuse I am a<lb/>
homebody he explained. I have been married for 26 years. I<lb/>
married my childhood sweetheart. We have two sons who are both<lb/>
entering the movie business because I bring them with me when we<lb/>
film on location.<lb/>
Murphy's Gay Jokes Found Offensive<lb/>
(CPS) ? Comedian and movie<lb/>
star Eddie Murphy closed out his<lb/>
controversial national campus<lb/>
tour last week in Texas without<lb/>
reference to the sporadic protests<lb/>
that marred several visits, but<lb/>
with a pledge to do another cam-<lb/>
pus tour in the fall.<lb/>
Murphy played to packed<lb/>
auditoriums at Florida State,<lb/>
Florida, North Carolina, William<lb/>
and Mary, Michigan State,<lb/>
Rutgers, the State University of<lb/>
New York-Stony Brook and Pur-<lb/>
due, among other schools, this<lb/>
year.<lb/>
But Murphy's appearances at<lb/>
the University of Illinois-Urbana<lb/>
and Brandeis drew protestors of<lb/>
the comedian's "anti-gay"<lb/>
humor, once even provoking an<lb/>
on-stage response from Murphy.<lb/>
Murphy, who attained recogni-<lb/>
tion on NBC's "Saturday Night<lb/>
Live" and in movies like Trading<lb/>
Places and the current Beverly<lb/>
Hills Cop, first angered<lb/>
homosexuals with some sketches<lb/>
he performed on a cable televi-<lb/>
sion special last year.<lb/>
In the TV special, Murphy<lb/>
makes several references to cat-<lb/>
ching AIDS (Acquired Immune<lb/>
Deficiency Syndrome) by being<lb/>
kissed or just in the same room as<lb/>
a gay person.<lb/>
In addition, he implies several<lb/>
times in his performance that he<lb/>
fears gays making passes and sex-<lb/>
ual gestures toward him.<lb/>
After hearing from gay<lb/>
organizations, Murphy made a<lb/>
public apology several months<lb/>
ago, saying he was not anti-gay<lb/>
and "did not mean to offend<lb/>
anybody" with his material.<lb/>
Since then, the comic has<lb/>
eliminated or softened most of<lb/>
his gay jokes, says Robert<lb/>
Wachs, Murphy's co-manager.<lb/>
It didn't stop some protestors<lb/>
on the current tour, however.<lb/>
Brandeis demonstrators, for<lb/>
example, taunted Murphy into<lb/>
declaring on-stage that he<lb/>
wouldn't donate his appearance<lb/>
fee protestors said it was<lb/>
$60,000, but Murphy's agent<lb/>
won't confirm or deny that figure<lb/>
 to the Boston AIDS Action<lb/>
Committee.<lb/>
"Ha he said to the pro-<lb/>
testors' request, adding,<lb/>
"Besides, it's only $50,000<lb/>
And at Illinois, a group of five<lb/>
anonymous students leafleted the<lb/>
campus several days before Mur-<lb/>
phy's appearance there, asking<lb/>
students to boycott the event.<lb/>
"Mr. Murphy has apologized,<lb/>
but he is still reaping the<lb/>
profits a spokesperson for the<lb/>
group told the campus paper,<lb/>
The Daily Illini.<lb/>
The protestors charged Mur-<lb/>
phy still jokes AIDS can be<lb/>
spread by kissing.<lb/>
Nevertheless, the Urbana show<lb/>
sold out, playing to nearly 8,000<lb/>
students, says Tom Parkinson,<lb/>
campus concert hall director.<lb/>
Indeed, all of Murphy's cam-<lb/>
pus appearances have been<lb/>
"fabulous, outstanding"<lb/>
sellouts, co-manager Wachs<lb/>
reports.<lb/>
"The college kids are going<lb/>
beserk Wachs continues. "At<lb/>
times the noise gets so loud you<lb/>
have to cover your ears. I'm not<lb/>
kidding. It's more intense than<lb/>
the hottest rock act imaginable<lb/>
?<lb/>
111<lb/>
Entertainment<lb/>
Trivia<lb/>
1) In the novel 2001: A Space Odyssey by Arthur C.<lb/>
Clark, what planet did the spaceship Discovery visit?<lb/>
2) What song was number six on the charts this week 20<lb/>
years ago?<lb/>
3) What is the name of Merlyn's owl in T.H. White's<lb/>
novel The Once and Future King!<lb/>
4) In what college newspaper did Garry Trudeau's com-<lb/>
ic strip "Doonesbury" make its debut, and what was<lb/>
the date it first appeared?<lb/>
5) How many publishers did Auther Frank Herbert send<lb/>
his Dune manuscript to before he finally made a sale?<lb/>
6) What was the title of the "Star Trek" episode in<lb/>
which Spock wore a beard?<lb/>
7) In Lewis Carroll's Alice in Wonder Land, what is the<lb/>
caterpillar doing when Alice meets him?<lb/>
8) What three actors established the United Artists film<lb/>
company?<lb/>
9) What was the original title of Garry Trudeau's comic<lb/>
strip "Doonesbury.<lb/>
Chevy At<lb/>
His Best<lb/>
In 'Fletch'<lb/>
By DANIEL M AURER<lb/>
Lifestyle T<lb/>
Pictures, Fletch.<lb/>
With out uttering one profane<lb/>
syllable (at least none that I notic-<lb/>
ed), Chevy kept the humor hot as<lb/>
a comical yet capable in-<lb/>
vestigative .reporter named<lb/>
Fletch. While working under-<lb/>
cover as a vagrant (just one of his<lb/>
many disguises) to expose a drug<lb/>
ring operating on a local beach,<lb/>
Fletch becomes entangled in a<lb/>
seemingly endless web of mystery<lb/>
10) What was King Arthur's nickname as a young boy?<lb/>
What's the difference between<lb/>
an actorcomedian like<lb/>
Chevy Chase and one like Eddie<lb/>
Murphy?<lb/>
Answer: the word F-k.<lb/>
Yes, that four letter synonym<lb/>
for sex that seems to creep into<lb/>
most every comedian's routine.<lb/>
F-k this, or fk that seems to in-<lb/>
voke hysterical laughter in au-<lb/>
diences, and for a comedian,<lb/>
laughter means money.<lb/>
Don't get me wrong. I don't<lb/>
mean to malign the likes of<lb/>
George Carlan, Eddie Murphy or<lb/>
Robin Williams. They're some of.<lb/>
my favorites. But I appreciate<lb/>
more a comedian who can keep<lb/>
me in stitches without resorting<lb/>
to that four letter fiend and his<lb/>
chorttling cohorts. Yes friends,<lb/>
I'm talking about clean comedy<lb/>
? specifically Chevy Chase in his<lb/>
squeaky clean and outrageously<lb/>
funny new film from Universal<lb/>
and intrigue.<lb/>
In his vagrant guise, Fletch<lb/>
stakesout Fat Sam (George<lb/>
Wendt), the local drug pusher, in<lb/>
hopes of discovering Sam's sup-<lb/>
plier. During his stakeout he is<lb/>
approached by a young executive<lb/>
named Alan Stanwyk (Tim<lb/>
Matheson). Stanwyk offers<lb/>
Fletch $50,000 and an airline<lb/>
ticket to Rio. In exchange Fletch<lb/>
meerly has to murder Stanwyk.<lb/>
Sound strange? Now throw in<lb/>
a corrupt police chief, Stanwyk's<lb/>
nch and beautiful wife, a second<lb/>
not-so-rich wife, and two beach<lb/>
combing junkies named Gummy<lb/>
and Creasy. Take these strange<lb/>
and mysterious ingredients, add a<lb/>
good dose of Chevy's whimsical<lb/>
and witty brand of humor, shake<lb/>
MENDENHALL<lb/>
HOTSPOTS<lb/>
The first summer session<lb/>
at ECU is upon us once<lb/>
again, and once again the heat<lb/>
of summer accompanies it in<lb/>
full force. Mendenhall Student<lb/>
Center continues in the<lb/>
fashion of the season by offer-<lb/>
ing an equally hot lineup of ac-<lb/>
tivities and events.<lb/>
This session the center will<lb/>
be showing a kaleidoscope of<lb/>
movies from the Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee rang-<lb/>
ing from such cult classics as<lb/>
Barbarella to the cliff-hanging<lb/>
genius of Alfred Hitchcock's<lb/>
North by Northwest.<lb/>
A wide variety of music will<lb/>
be available for those who at-<lb/>
tend the three musical concerts<lb/>
scheduled by the Student<lb/>
Union Special Concerts Com-<lb/>
mittee. For those who enjoy<lb/>
ESP, hypnotism, and magic,<lb/>
there will also be a special con-<lb/>
cert on slate.<lb/>
Finally, if the heat becomes<lb/>
too much for you there will be<lb/>
a BingoIce Cream party and<lb/>
a Watermelon Feast so you<lb/>
can cool down.<lb/>
The week's entertainment is<lb/>
kicked off this Wednesday by<lb/>
the movie Barbarella. This<lb/>
1969 film, based on a French<lb/>
comic strip for adults, depicts<lb/>
the lovely astronaut Barbarella<lb/>
(Jane Fonda) as a cross bet-<lb/>
ween James Bond and Batman<lb/>
who zaps around the universe<lb/>
in the year 40,000 saving the<lb/>
earth from interstellar evil.<lb/>
Showtime will be 7 p.m. in<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
Admisssion is free to ECU<lb/>
students and guest with a valid<lb/>
ECU ID and ECU Faculty and<lb/>
Staff and dependents with<lb/>
their ECU ID's.<lb/>
On Thursday, the high<lb/>
energy sound of "The<lb/>
Amateurs" will be here to<lb/>
entertain you. Their unique<lb/>
sound includes not only their<lb/>
own music but also the works<lb/>
of other well known artists.<lb/>
The group's selection of music<lb/>
consists of jazz, rock'n'roll,<lb/>
and reggae ? all of which is<lb/>
flavored with their own special<lb/>
rhythm and beat. The concert<lb/>
is to be held at 9 p.m. on the<lb/>
Mendenhall Student Center<lb/>
Patio and is free to everyone.<lb/>
In case of rain, the concert will<lb/>
move to Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
On Monday, Dudley Moore<lb/>
hits the big screen at Hendrix<lb/>
Theatre as he chases after a<lb/>
ravishing blonde in the movie<lb/>
"10 At the age of 42,<lb/>
George Webber (Dudley<lb/>
Moore) spots the girl of his<lb/>
dreams. She is the titillating<lb/>
Bo Derek and on a scale of 10<lb/>
she is an 11. Determined to<lb/>
win her over, Moore leaves<lb/>
behind his relationship with an<lb/>
attractive woman (Julie An-<lb/>
drews) and all his friends so he<lb/>
can pursue his dream girl. The<lb/>
chase is full of obstacles and in<lb/>
the end he succeeds but with<lb/>
unpredictable results. Show<lb/>
time is 7 p.m.<lb/>
On Tuesday, everyone has a<lb/>
chance to beat the heat and<lb/>
relax a little at a BingoIce<lb/>
Cream Party. For only 25<lb/>
cents you can choose between<lb/>
the 3 or 4 flavors of ice cream<lb/>
available or try them all, and<lb/>
eat as much as you want. If<lb/>
you enjoy bingo, there will be<lb/>
eight games scheduled with<lb/>
special prizes being awarded to<lb/>
the winners. This event is<lb/>
sponsored by the Student<lb/>
Union Recreation Committee.<lb/>
The party will be held at 7<lb/>
p.m. in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
Room in Mendenhall.<lb/>
well, and you get a film with the<lb/>
same comic pathos as National<lb/>
Lampoons Vacation or Police<lb/>
Academy<lb/>
Andrew Bergman's screenplay,<lb/>
adapted from the novel by<lb/>
Gregory McDonald, creates just<lb/>
the right blend of humor and<lb/>
homicide. The story offers just<lb/>
enough twists and turns to keep<lb/>
audiences puzzled while serving<lb/>
as the perfect vehicle for Chevy's<lb/>
antics. Meanwhile Director Fred<lb/>
Schuler of Stir Crazy fame kept<lb/>
the flim paced perfectly, never<lb/>
once letting the audience go<lb/>
without a laugh or a plot twist.<lb/>
Fletch is no boxoffice<lb/>
blockbuster. But it offer a<lb/>
brilliant Chevy Chase, one not<lb/>
seen since the early days of<lb/>
"Saturday Night Live Fletch<lb/>
will simlpy lift your spirits<lb/>
because Chevy is at his best, and<lb/>
he's unbeatable.<lb/>
Cnevy Chase plays the wisecrack-<lb/>
ing investigative reporter l.M.<lb/>
Fletcher in Universal Pictures<lb/>
latest comedy release, "Fletch<lb/>
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tccecds but with<lb/>
results. Show<lb/>
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Part) For onl 25<lb/>
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This eent is<lb/>
rred by the Student<lb/>
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will be held at 7<lb/>
in the Multi-Purpose<lb/>
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. -<lb/>
Chas plays the wisecrack-<lb/>
nvestigative reporter I.M.<lb/>
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spgqiKf zi a<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
MAY 22, 1985<lb/>
so tws h poop.<lb/>
iOURORACl lt AND<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057715_0008"/><lb/>
I<lb/>
FHE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
MAY 22, 198?<lb/>
Page 8<lb/>
Pirates Eliminated From EC A C Tournament<lb/>
By TONY BROWN<lb/>
AnlfUBI Sporu Editor<lb/>
The Pirates played probably their<lb/>
best game of the ECAC tourna-<lb/>
ment on Saturday against Iona,<lb/>
but were knocked out of the tour-<lb/>
nament by a late Gael rally which<lb/>
gave Iona a 6-5 victory.<lb/>
After taking an early lead 2-0,<lb/>
the Pirates padded their margin<lb/>
with one run in the top of the<lb/>
third. Chris Bradberry singled<lb/>
and Winfred Johnson followed<lb/>
with a hit to move Bradberry to<lb/>
third. Johnson went to second on<lb/>
the throw to third, then<lb/>
Bradberry scored on a sacrifice<lb/>
fly by Jay McGraw.<lb/>
Iona cut into the Pirate's lead<lb/>
in the fourth. Glen McElroy got<lb/>
on by a error, moved up on an<lb/>
out and scored on a sacrifice fly<lb/>
to make it 3-1.<lb/>
The Gaels again scored a run in<lb/>
the fifth, but could have gotten a<lb/>
lot more. Nick Salzano doubled<lb/>
to lead off and Mark Davis singl-<lb/>
ed. Bob Zottoli walked to load<lb/>
the bases with none out as Pirate<lb/>
pitcher Winfred Johnson began<lb/>
to struggle. A sacrifice fly<lb/>
brought one runner home, but a<lb/>
great double-play cut the rally<lb/>
short.<lb/>
The constant stranding of<lb/>
baserunners by ECU proved to be<lb/>
fatal as Iona took the lead for<lb/>
good in the sixth. Sam Tolisano<lb/>
started with a two-bagger and<lb/>
went to third on an out. An error<lb/>
on a grounder let him in, then<lb/>
Vinnie Ammirato doubled to left,<lb/>
putting men on second and third.<lb/>
A wild pitch brought a run in,<lb/>
then Mark Davis upped the<lb/>
Gael's lead to 5-3 with a single to<lb/>
right, but rightfielder Jay<lb/>
McGraw's throw to the plate was<lb/>
in time to catch the runner from<lb/>
third, who was tagged out by cat-<lb/>
cher Jim Riley after missing<lb/>
home.<lb/>
Unfortunately Riley was in-<lb/>
jured on the play. McGraw came<lb/>
in from right field to replace him<lb/>
and Mont Carter took McGraw's<lb/>
place. Ironically, Carter almost<lb/>
proved to be the hero of the<lb/>
game, as he got two hits later.<lb/>
ECU narrowed the lead to one<lb/>
in the seventh. Mark Shank singl-<lb/>
ed, and after two outs, Johnson<lb/>
doubled to put the score at 5-4.<lb/>
The Gaels struck for what<lb/>
turned out to be the winning run<lb/>
in their half of the frame,<lb/>
however. With one out, Tolisano<lb/>
bounced a ground-rule double<lb/>
throw-in let him score anyway.<lb/>
Chris Hansen came in on relief<lb/>
at that point and shut ECU out<lb/>
the rest of the way, giving Iona a<lb/>
hard-fought 6-5 victory and<lb/>
eliminating the Pirates from the<lb/>
- j ?<lb/>
I<lb/>
Pirate catcher Jim Riley was forced to leave the game against Iona due<lb/>
to an injury he suffered to his hand making a play at home plate.<lb/>
over the fence. Joe Starace's<lb/>
single increased their lead to 6-4.<lb/>
The Pirates had a chance to tie<lb/>
it up in the eighth, hjit.only could<lb/>
manage one run. Carter excited<lb/>
the crowd with a ground-rule<lb/>
double which at first seemed a<lb/>
possible homer. Mike Wells<lb/>
followed with a single and Carter<lb/>
held at third, but a misplay on the<lb/>
tournament.<lb/>
Winfred Johnson took the loss<lb/>
for the Pirates, dropping his<lb/>
overall record for the year to 7-5.<lb/>
Johnson went 3-for-5 for ECU<lb/>
with a double, while Cockrell and<lb/>
Mont Carter also collected a dou-<lb/>
ble each. The Pirates stranded 11<lb/>
runners during the game, which<lb/>
made the difference in the out-<lb/>
come.<lb/>
ECU got off to a bad start in<lb/>
the ECAC tournament, playing<lb/>
sluggishly in a 7-2 loss to George<lb/>
Mason.<lb/>
Pirate starter Mike<lb/>
Christopher was in trouble<lb/>
almost from the start. After strik-<lb/>
ing out the first batter, he walked<lb/>
three straight to fill the bases. A<lb/>
double down the third base line<lb/>
by Ralph Schmidt gave the<lb/>
Patriots a 3-0 lead.<lb/>
ECU got men on second and<lb/>
third in the bottom of the frame<lb/>
on a walk and a Winfred Johnson<lb/>
single, but failed to score, as later<lb/>
proved to be a problem<lb/>
throughout the tournament.<lb/>
George Mason again tallied<lb/>
three runs in the second to zoom<lb/>
to a 6-0 margin. Christopher got<lb/>
the first two batters out, but pro-<lb/>
ceeded to walk two straight. Ail-<lb/>
American candidate Kevin Burke<lb/>
then slammed a homer down the<lb/>
leftfield line to really put the<lb/>
Pirates in a hole.<lb/>
ECU had a good chance to<lb/>
score in the bottom of the frame,<lb/>
but couldn't take advantage of it.<lb/>
Jay McGraw opened the inning<lb/>
with a single and moved to third<lb/>
on Jim Riley's double with none<lb/>
out. Two strike-outs and a<lb/>
grounder prevented a run,<lb/>
though.<lb/>
Ralph Schmidt added what<lb/>
turned out to be GMU's last run<lb/>
with a homer in the third, making<lb/>
the score 7-0. At that point, a<lb/>
transformer blew, delaying the<lb/>
game for about an hour.<lb/>
When the game finally resum-<lb/>
ed, the Pirates scored a run in the<lb/>
bottom of the frame. Chris<lb/>
Bradberry singled and Winfred<lb/>
Johnson doubled. A ground-out<lb/>
then allowed Bradberry to come<lb/>
home, narrowing the margin to<lb/>
7-1.<lb/>
The element seemed to be tell-<lb/>
ing ECU fans something as the<lb/>
game was suspended in the fifth<lb/>
because of lightning. Chubby<lb/>
Butler came in on relief for<lb/>
Christopher in the sixth, striking<lb/>
out three and allowing one hit,<lb/>
but hurt his shoulder striking out<lb/>
Burke and had to leave the game<lb/>
in the seventh.<lb/>
The Pirates added one more in<lb/>
JOS JORDAN M I Pfco??. I ?f<lb/>
Mark Cockrell (23) beats out an infield hit in the Pirate win against<lb/>
New York Tech. Cockrell was named to the all-tournament team.<lb/>
.? 0 g "M-T -? iW riraies aaaea one more in Bradberrv<lb/>
Pirates Sign Football Pact With<lb/>
their half of the seventh, but<lb/>
couldn't get any closer. A<lb/>
fielder's choce got a man on first,<lb/>
then Mark Shank blooped a<lb/>
single to put men on first and<lb/>
third. With two out Bradberry<lb/>
singled to make what turned out<lb/>
to be the final score of 7-2.<lb/>
Christopher's final season pit-<lb/>
ching record went to 10-3 with<lb/>
the loss, while the Pirates com-<lb/>
mitted two miscues. ECU got<lb/>
nine hits, but few came at critical<lb/>
moments, which left 11 runners<lb/>
stranded in the game.<lb/>
Bradberrv ih the Pirate bat-<lb/>
ters with two hits, while Riley and<lb/>
Johnson each had a double.<lb/>
ECU came back after the loss<lb/>
to George Mason to beat New<lb/>
York Tech 5-4 on Friday The<lb/>
Patriots took the initial lead in<lb/>
the first when Fred Gianelli's<lb/>
double was followed by Mike<lb/>
Frustaci's two-out single, giving<lb/>
Tech a 1-0 margin.<lb/>
NY padded their lead in the se-<lb/>
cond to 3-0. Two s.ngles and a<lb/>
walk loaded the bases, then an er-<lb/>
ror b first baseman Mike<lb/>
See Boone Page Ten<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sporti Editor<lb/>
FOOTBALLL: ECU, in a conti<lb/>
nuing effort to upgrade it's foot-<lb/>
bail schedule, has signed a two-<lb/>
year contract with Syracuse.<lb/>
Pirate athletic director Ken Karr<lb/>
announced Monday.<lb/>
The Orangemen, 6-5 last<lb/>
season and upset winners over<lb/>
then No. 1 Nebraska 17-9, will<lb/>
come to Ficklen Stadium in 1988,<lb/>
while ECU will visit Syracuse,<lb/>
N.Y to play in the Carrier<lb/>
Dome in 1989.<lb/>
"We are very excited about ad-<lb/>
ding a school like Syracuse to our<lb/>
future schedule Karr said.<lb/>
"They carry a national reputa-<lb/>
tion<lb/>
Specific dates and times for the<lb/>
contests have yet to be finalized.<lb/>
Syracuse is the latest addition<lb/>
to a rugged schedule the Pirate<lb/>
football team can look forward<lb/>
to facing in the future. Next<lb/>
season ECU will travel to Penn<lb/>
State, Auburn, LSU, Southern<lb/>
Mississippi, Southwestern Loui-<lb/>
siana and North Carolina State.<lb/>
The Pirates will also have<lb/>
perhaps their most attractive<lb/>
home slate in the school's history<lb/>
as Miami (Fla.), South Carolina,<lb/>
Tulsa and Temple will all visit<lb/>
Ficklen Stadium in 1985.<lb/>
The 1986 schedule with one<lb/>
date still open will include games<lb/>
against Auburn, North Carolina<lb/>
State, Southern Mississippi,<lb/>
Miami (Fla.), South Carolina,<lb/>
Temple, Tulsa, Penn State<lb/>
Southwestern Louisiana and<lb/>
West Virginia.<lb/>
BASEBALL: ECU shortstop<lb/>
Greg Hardison and third<lb/>
baseman Mark Cockrell were<lb/>
both named to the ECAC<lb/>
Southern Division all-<lb/>
tournament team. Both players<lb/>
will return to ECU next year for<lb/>
their senior seasons.<lb/>
The 32 wins the Pirates posted<lb/>
this year under first-year head<lb/>
man Gary Overton were the most<lb/>
ever for a baseball coach in his<lb/>
first year at ECU. That total is<lb/>
only two games shy of the school<lb/>
record that ECU tied last season.<lb/>
Next year looks even more pro-<lb/>
mising as the Pirates will lose on-<lb/>
ly four seniors. Reliever Chubby<lb/>
Butler, first baseman Mike Wells,<lb/>
outfielder Mark Shank and pit-<lb/>
cher Tom Webb all must be<lb/>
replaced. But the nucleus for a<lb/>
strong team should return as<lb/>
Shank was the only regular who<lb/>
must be replaced.<lb/>
Record setting Winfred<lb/>
Johnson, who returns for his<lb/>
senior season, assuming he<lb/>
doesn't sign with a professional<lb/>
team. He has already set virtually<lb/>
every Pirate hitting record.<lb/>
The return of second baseman<lb/>
Steve Sides, who started in '84 as<lb/>
a freshman and combined with<lb/>
shortstop Hardison to form an<lb/>
excellent double-play combina-<lb/>
tion, but missed all of this season<lb/>
due to an injury should make the<lb/>
Pirates even tougher next season.<lb/>
SWIMMING: Pirate swimming<lb/>
coach Rick Kobe has announced<lb/>
the signings of four swimmers<lb/>
who will be attending ECU in the<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
The lone male swimmer is<lb/>
Longmeadow, Mass native<lb/>
David Killeen. A prep all-<lb/>
america, Killieen swam for Kiski<lb/>
Prep in Saltsburg, Pa. A freestyle<lb/>
specialist, Kobe reports that<lb/>
Killeen could swim every freestyle<lb/>
event from the 50 up to the 500<lb/>
and that he has national potential<lb/>
as a Pirate swimmer.<lb/>
 ? 9 J ??? ? ? riiaie swimmer.<lb/>
Ultimate Frisbee A Competitive Affair;<lb/>
The Ultimate Campus Sport For All<lb/>
The remaining three signees all<lb/>
will compete for the Lady Pirate<lb/>
tankers. Charleston, SC, native<lb/>
Patrica Walsh will enter ECU<lb/>
with high school times already<lb/>
under current Pirate varsity<lb/>
records. A junior national<lb/>
qualifier, Walsh swam for the ci-<lb/>
ty of Charleston swim team.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates have also<lb/>
tabbed a pair of swimmers from<lb/>
Charlotte in Susan Wentink and<lb/>
Sheri Campbell. Wetink comes<lb/>
from the successful Mecklenburg<lb/>
Aquatic Club where she was a<lb/>
junior qualifier. Wetink, a<lb/>
breaststroker, also has times cur-<lb/>
rently under ECU varsity-<lb/>
records. Campbell is a diver from<lb/>
Myers Park High. She was the<lb/>
state runner-up on the one-meter<lb/>
board, and has the potential to be<lb/>
one of ECU's Finest divers ever.<lb/>
Angela Winstead of Rich-<lb/>
mond, Va completes the list of<lb/>
incoming freshman. Another<lb/>
junior national qualifier.<lb/>
Winstead swam for the Briar-<lb/>
wood Swim Club and should<lb/>
bolster the Lady Pirate freestyle<lb/>
sprinters.<lb/>
FOOTBALL: Carolina<lb/>
Telephone and Telegraph an-<lb/>
nounced recently the renewal of<lb/>
their scholarship presented at<lb/>
each ECU home football game in<lb/>
recognition of an athlete's<lb/>
academic achievements.<lb/>
Wayne Peterson, president of<lb/>
CT&amp;T and ECU Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
John Howell were present at the<lb/>
presentation of the 15,000<lb/>
scholarship.<lb/>
The ECU Educational Founda-<lb/>
tion presented Peterson with a<lb/>
plaque in appreciation of<lb/>
CT&amp;T's committment to athletic<lb/>
and academic excellence at ECU.<lb/>
By DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
Suff Writw<lb/>
Ultimate frisbee is a sport that<lb/>
combines the passing of football,<lb/>
the cutting, guarding, and<lb/>
pivoting of basketball, and the<lb/>
strategy of soccer.<lb/>
However, although it combines<lb/>
aspects of several sports, it is a<lb/>
truly unique game. Due to the<lb/>
frisbee's aerodynamics, it can<lb/>
curve around or even float just<lb/>
out of defender's reach. It also<lb/>
requires less strength and natural<lb/>
ability to throw long distances<lb/>
than does a football.<lb/>
Ultimate is played by two<lb/>
seven-person teams. The playing<lb/>
field is 70-yards long, 40-yards<lb/>
wide and has two-25 yard end<lb/>
zones.<lb/>
To play ultimate well requires<lb/>
speed, endurance and precision,<lb/>
but that doesn't mean that<lb/>
everyone can't play it. The<lb/>
throws and basic strategy can be<lb/>
learned quickly. Then it is just a<lb/>
matter of practice.<lb/>
Some of ultimate's good<lb/>
qualities include:<lb/>
? it is a non-contact sport.<lb/>
? it is self officiating (no<lb/>
referees).<lb/>
? it can be played equally well<lb/>
buy men and women.<lb/>
? it is competitive, but the real<lb/>
object is to have fun.<lb/>
ECU's ultimate team, (the<lb/>
"Irates") is going into its fifth<lb/>
season this fall.<lb/>
The Irates are sponsored by the<lb/>
ECU intramural department and<lb/>
recognized as the outstanding<lb/>
club of the year during the<lb/>
'83-84 season.<lb/>
The team presently has 20-25<lb/>
active members and travels<lb/>
throughout the state and along<lb/>
the East coast from Virginia to<lb/>
Florida.<lb/>
The Irates went 16-9 last<lb/>
season and finished first in the<lb/>
South Atlantic Ultimate Con-<lb/>
ference, while playing some of<lb/>
the top U.S. teams. Among their<lb/>
opponents were the 1985 No. 1<lb/>
ranked "Tunas" of St. Louis,<lb/>
Mo. The Tunas boast four world<lb/>
class sprinters on their squad.<lb/>
The Irates also played the No.<lb/>
1 team of 1984, the "Refugees"<lb/>
as well as "Mr. Pouce one of<lb/>
the top teams in N.C.<lb/>
The Irates host four frisbee<lb/>
competitions each year:<lb/>
The Natural Light Ultimax<lb/>
tournament each fall and spring.<lb/>
The Natural Light Flying Disc<lb/>
Classic (a freestyle event).<lb/>
The Annual Frisbee Golf tour-<lb/>
nament.<lb/>
In addition, Irate members<lb/>
promote frisbee as well as com-<lb/>
munity spirit in the Greenville<lb/>
area. Irates went to Greenville<lb/>
area junior high schools to give<lb/>
ultimate clinics. They also<lb/>
donated time to help at this year's<lb/>
Special Olympics.<lb/>
The team's primary purpose is<lb/>
to have fun and promote frisbee<lb/>
in the Greenville area. However<lb/>
as vice-president David Bar-<lb/>
nhardt said, "Our ultimate goal<lb/>
is to promote world peace<lb/>
through frisbee disc<lb/>
This Fall, the Irates will gain a<lb/>
sister team when the new<lb/>
women's club begins its first<lb/>
season.<lb/>
"It's a light-hearted, fun sort<lb/>
of sport. It gives you a chance to<lb/>
let loose and get rid of frustra-<lb/>
tions Ultimate women's team<lb/>
member Jennifer Hughes said.<lb/>
The formation of the women's<lb/>
team does not mean that women<lb/>
are not welcome to play with the<lb/>
men's team though.<lb/>
Anyone interested is invited to<lb/>
Play at the bottom of college hill<lb/>
on Tuesdays, Thursdays and<lb/>
Sundays at 5 pin. This includes<lb/>
faculty, staff and any other<lb/>
Greenville area residents as well.<lb/>
So come on out and participate<lb/>
in one of the most enjoyable<lb/>
sports in the country. It's a great<lb/>
way to get in shape, develop a<lb/>
skill and have fun at the same<lb/>
time.<lb/>
Lak<lb/>
INGLEWOOI<lb/>
? Some "pure<lb/>
and a fractured dl<lb/>
put the Los Ange<lb/>
excellent positioi<lb/>
their fifth Nati<lb/>
Association Chai<lb/>
in the last six ye<lb/>
The Laker<lb/>
by beating the J<lb/>
tonight at the F<lb/>
they've won 23<lb/>
games ? in the f 1<lb/>
Western Cor <lb/>
Angeles has a<lb/>
series and the<lb/>
without leadm<lb/>
English, whc<lb/>
thumb ii - .<lb/>
Should the I<lb/>
would plaj c ' <lb/>
Cun<lb/>
Sixe<lb/>
PHILAD1<lb/>
Coach B<lb/>
predicting a ve<lb/>
Eastern Con <lb/>
his Philadi<lb/>
the Boston Celt<lb/>
Boston Ga<lb/>
The "6e:<lb/>
115-104 here Sun<lb/>
being swept<lb/>
series for the<lb/>
franchise" 24-e<lb/>
tory in this CM<lb/>
would force<lb/>
night in P<lb/>
Cunningham i<lb/>
not awed by, the<lb/>
become the fi<lb/>
Basketball Ass <lb/>
come back fi<lb/>
the fifth team I<lb/>
:??:<lb/>
Clas<lb/>
SAL<lb/>
FOR SALE Ve- si<lb/>
10 Speec 9 Months of<lb/>
dition. S12C Ca 751<lb/>
WAN<lb/>
ROOMATES NEEI<lb/>
female roomates n<lb/>
2 bdrm apt a Sa1<lb/>
Call Karen at 756 31<lb/>
ROOMATE WAN<lb/>
responsible roorna'tj<lb/>
at Ringgoia Towers<lb/>
Completely 9 u r<lb/>
conditionec access<lb/>
Call 757 636? as, fo<lb/>
SUBLET A prot<lb/>
coming to Green (<lb/>
June 15 July 15.<lb/>
University Desire<lb/>
house Will pre<lb/>
References Call 752<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT<lb/>
campus Available<lb/>
a month and ' utility<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT<lb/>
nished apartment<lb/>
752 7212 or 756-0174<lb/>
PART TIME HELP<lb/>
airport is accepting<lb/>
part time emptoym?<lb/>
15 and ending June<lb/>
consist of aircraft r?<lb/>
port maintenance<lb/>
previous aviation<lb/>
required-civilian c-j<lb/>
further information<lb/>
between the hours<lb/>
PM, Monday throug<lb/>
ROOMATE MCI<lb/>
bedroom apt one b<lb/>
pus. Furnished and<lb/>
in a waterbed N<lb/>
session Call 757<lb/>
MIS<lb/>
Ultimate<lb/>
i rapidly becoming p0p-mr on theCSS?<lb/>
SAVE THIS AD: If I<lb/>
inf to Charlotte any<lb/>
the summer, I'm 6ti<lb/>
me ? call at 7S2-4225<lb/>
BICYCLES PAINTI<lb/>
to make your old bit<lb/>
simply change the cc<lb/>
more information. 7J<lb/>
<pb facs="00057715_0009"/><lb/>
merit<lb/>
the Pirate win against<lb/>
li-tournamenl team.<lb/>
vhileR iley and<lb/>
I . lou I<lb/>
? tfter the loss<lb/>
i Mason to beat New<lb/>
4 on Friday. The<lb/>
the initial lead in<lb/>
when Fred Gianelli's<lb/>
fas followed by Mike<lb/>
two-out snge, giving<lb/>
'he se-<lb/>
gles and a<lb/>
"d f nen an er-<lb/>
an Mike<lb/>
rtoone Page Ten<lb/>
ise<lb/>
freshman. Another<lb/>
nal qualifier,<lb/>
swam for the Bnar-<lb/>
im Club and should<lb/>
' Lady Pirate freestyle<lb/>
ALL: Carolina<lb/>
e and Telegraph an-<lb/>
Irecently the renewal of<lb/>
plarship presented at<lb/>
home football game in<lb/>
on of an athlete's<lb/>
achievements.<lb/>
Peterson, president of<lb/>
rd ECU Chancellor Dr.<lb/>
? ell were present at the<lb/>
tion of the 15,000<lb/>
U Educational Founda-<lb/>
ented Peterson with a<lb/>
n appreciation of<lb/>
:ommittment to athletic<lb/>
:mic excellence at ECU.<lb/>
n the ECU<lb/>
f<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 22, 1985<lb/>
Lakers Hope To End Series With Victory<lb/>
INGLEWOOD, Calif, (UPI)<lb/>
? Some "pure helter-skelter"<lb/>
and a fractured digit have helped<lb/>
put the Los Angeles Lakers in an<lb/>
excellent position to qualify for<lb/>
their fifth National Basketball<lb/>
Association Championship Series<lb/>
in the last six years.<lb/>
The Lakers can earn their spot<lb/>
by beating the Denver Nuggets<lb/>
tonight at the Forum ? where<lb/>
they've won 23 of their last 24<lb/>
games ? in the fifth game of the<lb/>
Western Conference finals. Los<lb/>
Angeles has a 3-1 lead in the<lb/>
series and the Nuggets will be<lb/>
without leading scorer Alex<lb/>
English, who suffered a broken<lb/>
thumb in Sunday's game.<lb/>
Should the Lakers win, they<lb/>
would play either the Boston<lb/>
Celtics or Philadelphia 76ers for<lb/>
the NBA title.<lb/>
Philadelphia beat Boston<lb/>
115-104 Sunday to avert a sweep<lb/>
in their Eastern Conference<lb/>
series. The Celtics, trying to<lb/>
become the first team to win suc-<lb/>
cessive league titles since they ac-<lb/>
complished the feat in 1968 and<lb/>
1969, can clinch the series in<lb/>
Game Five at Boston Garden last<lb/>
week.<lb/>
The Lakers, meanwhile, put<lb/>
the Nuggets on the brink of<lb/>
elimination by winning a wild,<lb/>
120-116, decision at Denver on<lb/>
Sunday.<lb/>
Los Angeles took the lead for<lb/>
good on a tip-in by James Wor-<lb/>
thy with 20 seconds left to make<lb/>
it 118-116. But that doesn't come<lb/>
close to telling the story ? Wor-<lb/>
thy's tip-in capped a bizarre<lb/>
39-second sequence that Michael<lb/>
Cooper called "pure helter-<lb/>
skelter<lb/>
During that period, the Lakers<lb/>
kept shooting, missing, and get-<lb/>
ting the ball back. Kareem<lb/>
Abdul-Jabbar had missed twice,<lb/>
Worthy once and Cooper once<lb/>
from close range before Worthy<lb/>
came up with what proved to be<lb/>
the game-winner when he tipped<lb/>
in Cooper's miss.<lb/>
"It seemed like the ball was<lb/>
loose for an hour said Denver<lb/>
coach Doug Moe, whose injury-<lb/>
plagued team had three guards on<lb/>
the floor at the time. "We tried<lb/>
to get the ball off the boards<lb/>
there, but we just couldn't. It was<lb/>
one of the most frustrating se-<lb/>
quences in my basketball career,<lb/>
an unbelievably tough way to<lb/>
lose<lb/>
No foul was called on the play<lb/>
though several players on both<lb/>
sides hit the floor and each other<lb/>
in pursuit of the ball.<lb/>
"Nobody got away with<lb/>
anything flagrant said Abdul-<lb/>
Jabbar, who finished with 29<lb/>
points, 12 rebounds and eight<lb/>
assists. "Besides, who were they<lb/>
going to pick ofot? There was a lot<lb/>
of contact<lb/>
Said Moe: "You don't expect a<lb/>
call at that time. The Lakers were<lb/>
leaping all over us, but if we had<lb/>
been on their backs, we wouldn't<lb/>
have been expecting a call<lb/>
either<lb/>
The Nuggets had one more<lb/>
chance to tie the score, but<lb/>
Abdul-Jabbar knocked the ball<lb/>
away from Danny Schayes, and<lb/>
Byron Scott made two free<lb/>
throws with five seconds left to<lb/>
complete the scorir<lb/>
English, who averaged 30.4<lb/>
points a game in the playoffs and<lb/>
scored 28 points in 26 minutes<lb/>
Sunday before he suffered a frac-<lb/>
tured thumb on his shooting<lb/>
hand late in the third quarter, is<lb/>
one of several injured Nuggets.<lb/>
Calvin Natt, Lafayette Lever<lb/>
and Mike Evans are nursing knee<lb/>
injuries, Wayne Cooper has a<lb/>
strained rib ligament, Elston<lb/>
Turner a sore hamstring and Dan<lb/>
Issel a deep thigh bruise.<lb/>
"If we had everybody healthy,<lb/>
we would be up 3-1 Natt said<lb/>
after scoring 28 points Sunday.<lb/>
"We have 12 guys, and six are<lb/>
hurt (actually seven) and the<lb/>
Lakers are at full strength. We<lb/>
almost beat them today,<lb/>
anyway<lb/>
It didn't appear that the Lakers<lb/>
would need Worthy's heroics<lb/>
when they had a 116-110 lead,<lb/>
but the Nuggets tied it on three-<lb/>
point field goals by Turner and<lb/>
Evans, the second with 1:01 left.<lb/>
Then the scramble began.<lb/>
Abdul-Jabbar acknowledged<lb/>
that the Lakers had some good<lb/>
fortune in the late going, but add<lb/>
ed that they had something to do<lb/>
with it.<lb/>
Cunningham Seeks Seven Game Series;<lb/>
Sixers Must Win Tonight To Stay Alive<lb/>
PHILADELPHIA (UPI) ?<lb/>
Coach Billy Cunningham is<lb/>
predicting a seven-game NBA<lb/>
Eastern Conference Final series if<lb/>
his Philadelphia 76ers can beat<lb/>
the Boston Celtics tonight at the<lb/>
Boston Garden.<lb/>
The 76ers beat the Celtics<lb/>
115-104 here Sunday, and averted<lb/>
being swept in a post-season<lb/>
series for the first time in the<lb/>
franchise's 24-year history. A vic-<lb/>
tory in this evening's contest<lb/>
would force a sixth game Friday<lb/>
night in Philadelphia.<lb/>
Cunningham is aware of, but<lb/>
not awed by, the 76ers' chore to<lb/>
become the first team in National<lb/>
Basketball Association history to<lb/>
come back from a 3-0 deficit and<lb/>
the fifth team to rebound from<lb/>
3-1 in a seven-game series.<lb/>
"This team has had its back to<lb/>
the wall many times Cunn-<lb/>
ingham said. "You know we've<lb/>
been in the reverse situation that<lb/>
Boston's in right now. We've<lb/>
been up 3-1 on Boston and lost.<lb/>
"That's why I emphasize to the<lb/>
players that I believe if we can go<lb/>
up and get the next one, which we<lb/>
have the ability to do, then we're<lb/>
talking about a seven-game<lb/>
series<lb/>
Since 1979-80, when Larry<lb/>
Bird joined the Celtics,<lb/>
Philadelphia is 3-15 in Boston<lb/>
during the regular season, and<lb/>
5-8 in playoff games.<lb/>
In 1981, the 76ers went up 3-1<lb/>
in the Eastern Conference finals,<lb/>
but lost the next three. In 1982,<lb/>
the Sixers won the seventh game<lb/>
of a series from the Celtics in<lb/>
Boston.<lb/>
The Celtics, however, have<lb/>
won 19 of their last 20 home<lb/>
playoff games, losing only to Los<lb/>
Angeles in the first game of last<lb/>
year's finals.<lb/>
Cunningham held a meeting<lb/>
during Monday's practice in<lb/>
which he discussed "little con-<lb/>
cerns of ours, that we have to im-<lb/>
prove on in certain areas, how we<lb/>
can play better basketball<lb/>
The coach said he was pleased<lb/>
with the offense Sunday,<lb/>
especially in the final period<lb/>
when Boston made a belated ral-<lb/>
ly.<lb/>
"I still think that in the second<lb/>
half we could have done a better<lb/>
job defensively. We haven't been<lb/>
able to sustain it as long as we'd<lb/>
like to in the third and fourth<lb/>
periods against Boston he said.<lb/>
But Cunningham was happy<lb/>
with the rebounding in the only<lb/>
Sixer victory. "We didn't allow<lb/>
as many easy second shots as we<lb/>
have. We still gave up some easy<lb/>
opportunities to their big<lb/>
people he said. "It's just going<lb/>
to boil down to those little things<lb/>
that we have to make sure we cor-<lb/>
rect<lb/>
ATTIC<lb/>
THUR.<lb/>
Maxx<lb/>
Warrior<lb/>
 Ladies Night<lb/>
SAT.<lb/>
The Point<lb/>
Fleetwood Mac Videos<lb/>
Friday in Concert<lb/>
NIGHYHAWKI<lb/>
Sunday Tentative Memorial Day Special<lb/>
K.tt<lb/>
? rSgk<lb/>
1 v<lb/>
I I t 1 .<lb/>
vOOGO<lb/>
I l ? 1 I<lb/>
I i I<lb/>
VAV.Y w<lb/>
&amp; tk<lb/>
PET<lb/>
VILLAGE<lb/>
DONNA EDWARDS<lb/>
Owner<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
We Carry A Complete Line<lb/>
of Dog, Cat, and Fish Supplies<lb/>
Master Card and Visa are accepted and financing is<lb/>
available.<lb/>
511 EVANS ST.<lb/>
GREENVILLE, N.C. 27834<lb/>
PHONE 756-9222<lb/>
ioocoooeocooocoocoocosoooocccoco!<lb/>
MAGAZINE<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS<lb/>
Publication Schedule<lb/>
SUMMER 1985<lb/>
First and Only IssueJune 14th<lb/>
Submissions are welcomed. Deadline for all<lb/>
pubUshabJe materials 5 PM Wednesday May 29<lb/>
Send Expressions your stories, photos, and adver-<lb/>
tisements. All material is submitted at the Expres-<lb/>
sions office in the Publications Bldg.<lb/>
EXPRESSIONS MAGAZINE<lb/>
THE BETTER ALTERNATIVE . . .<lb/>
Production Days are May 30, 31, June 1,2,3.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Men's 23 " Univega<lb/>
10 Speed. 9 Months old excellent con<lb/>
dition, $120. Call 757-3517 after 3.<lb/>
WANTED<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/>
ROOMATE WANTED: Seeking<lb/>
responsible roomate to share B unit<lb/>
at Ringgold Towers for the summer.<lb/>
Completely furnished, air-<lb/>
conditioned, accessories included.<lb/>
Call 757 6366, ask for Dan.<lb/>
SUBLET: A professional couple<lb/>
coming to Greenville for a month,<lb/>
June 15- July 15, to work for the<lb/>
University. Desire to sublet a nice<lb/>
house, will provide deposit.<lb/>
References. Call 752-0306.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: One block from<lb/>
campus. Available after June 1. $75<lb/>
a month and ? utilities. Call 758 9856.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT<lb/>
nished apartment<lb/>
752 7212 or 756-0174.<lb/>
; Two room fur<lb/>
for rent. Call<lb/>
PART-TIME HELP: Pitt-Greenville<lb/>
airport is accepting applications for<lb/>
part-time employment starting May<lb/>
15 and ending June 15. Duties will<lb/>
consist of aircraft refueling and air-<lb/>
port maintenance. Some type of<lb/>
previous aviation experience is<lb/>
required-civilian or military. For<lb/>
further information, call 758-4707<lb/>
between the hours of 10 AM and 1<lb/>
PM, Monday through Friday.<lb/>
ROOMATE NEEDED: Two<lb/>
bedroom apt. one block from cam-<lb/>
pus. Furnished and you get to sleep<lb/>
in a waterbed. Needed for second<lb/>
session. Call 757-3666 after 11:15.<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
SAVE THIS AD: If you plan on go-<lb/>
ing to Charlotte any data throughout<lb/>
the summer, I'm desperate, so five<lb/>
me a call at 7S2-22S. Ask for Rich.<lb/>
?ICYCLES PAINTED: If you want<lb/>
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simply change the color, call Jim for<lb/>
more information. 758-3861.<lb/>
?p<lb/>
<pb facs="00057715_0010"/><lb/>
<lb/>
10<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
MAY 22, 1985<lb/>
Boone, Hardison Combine To Dump N.<lb/>
t<lb/>
Continued from Page Fight<lb/>
Sullivan let one run in. Mike<lb/>
Chesney singled to right, scoring<lb/>
one more before Pirate<lb/>
rightfielder Jay McGraw's throw<lb/>
to the plate caught another Tech<lb/>
runner at home for the third out.<lb/>
Pirate shortstop Greg Har-<lb/>
dison closed the gap to 3-1 in the<lb/>
bottom of the third on a homer,<lb/>
but Tech quickly matched that in<lb/>
the top of the fourth. A bad-hop<lb/>
single over first started the frame<lb/>
off, then after the runner moved<lb/>
to second on an out, Gianelli<lb/>
singled to make it 4-1 Tech.<lb/>
Pirate hurler Daniel Boone<lb/>
began bearing down in the fifth,<lb/>
striking out the side. It seemed to<lb/>
fire up the ECU hitters, as they<lb/>
narrowed the gap with two runs<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
To: All faculty, staff and summer<lb/>
school students<lb/>
Re: Summer intramural recrea-<lb/>
tional programs<lb/>
The staff of the East Carolina<lb/>
Department of Intramural<lb/>
Recreational Services cordially<lb/>
invites you to participate in any<lb/>
or all of this summers exciting ac-<lb/>
tivities. Included in the first ses-<lb/>
sion alone are seven intramural<lb/>
events from putt-putt golf to<lb/>
slow-pitch softball.<lb/>
Although registration for the<lb/>
first four events has already pass-<lb/>
ed, you can still be a part of 3 on<lb/>
3 basketball, putt-putt golf and<lb/>
the Ayden Country Club Golf<lb/>
Classic. The last day to register<lb/>
for 3 on 3 basketball is today so<lb/>
make your way to 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym and give us your name. Se-<lb/>
cond session has 6 activities for<lb/>
your enjoyment so prepare now<lb/>
for all the action.<lb/>
Aerobic exercise classes are<lb/>
also being held this summer.<lb/>
Classes will meet Mon.thru Fri.<lb/>
at 5:15 p.m Tues. and Thurs. at<lb/>
4:00 and 6:00 p.m and Sat. at<lb/>
11:00 a.m. Registration for se-<lb/>
cond session aerobics will be held<lb/>
June 19,20,21. Tune and tone up<lb/>
with intramural aerobics.<lb/>
The outdoor recreation center<lb/>
is also alive this summer and full<lb/>
of activities. Not only are you<lb/>
eligible to ride the range at Jar-<lb/>
mans Stables but you have the<lb/>
opportunity to backpack and join<lb/>
the IRS Whitewater rafting crew<lb/>
for these two fabulous summer<lb/>
adventure trips.<lb/>
As you can see, the intramural<lb/>
department is packed full with<lb/>
adventure, fun and competition.<lb/>
For more information regarding<lb/>
this summers activities, pick up<lb/>
the summer recreation packet<lb/>
calendar, come by room 204<lb/>
Memorial Gym, call 757-6387 or<lb/>
listen every Thursday to the sum-<lb/>
mer edition of the Tennis Shoe<lb/>
Talk show hosted by Stephanie<lb/>
Luke. WZMB is your contact<lb/>
with intramurals and rock and<lb/>
roll.<lb/>
Sincerely,<lb/>
ECU Intramurals<lb/>
P.S. Participate rather than spec-<lb/>
tate.<lb/>
IRS<lb/>
Hours<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
M-W-F 7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
M-F 12noon-l:30p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
M-F 4 p.m7:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sun. l p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th 9 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M-F 3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
T-Th 10 a.m12 noon<lb/>
T-Th 1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th llp.m7:00p.m.<lb/>
Friday 11 p.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. 1p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
EQUIPMENT<lb/>
CHECK-OUT CENTER<lb/>
(Memorial Gym 115)<lb/>
M-Th 11 a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 11 a.m5:00 p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. 1 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
MF 1:30 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
T-W-Th 2 p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
RACQUETBALL<lb/>
RESERVATIONS<lb/>
M-Fl 1:30 a.m3 p.m. (in person)<lb/>
M-F 12 noon-3 p.m. (phone in)<lb/>
? Operational hours adjusted in<lb/>
accordance with the seasons.<lb/>
in the bottom of the inning<lb/>
Greg Hardison doubled down<lb/>
the third baseline, Chris<lb/>
Bradberry got on with a weak in-<lb/>
field single and Winfred Johnson<lb/>
walked to load the bags. One run<lb/>
scored on a double-play, then<lb/>
Mark Cockrell singled to bring<lb/>
Bradberry in, closing the margin<lb/>
to 4-3.<lb/>
The Pirates rallied again in the<lb/>
sixth to tie it up. Langston walk-<lb/>
ed and was pushed to second by<lb/>
Mark Shank's sacrifice bunt.<lb/>
Mike Conklin came in on relief<lb/>
for Tech, but after getting one<lb/>
out, gave up a run scoring single<lb/>
to Johnson.<lb/>
NYT got a hit from Tom Boyce<lb/>
in the bottom of the frame, but a<lb/>
good defensive play by center-<lb/>
fielder Bradberry kept him from<lb/>
going to second. Boyce was then<lb/>
cut down trying to steal second.<lb/>
The Pirates finally took the<lb/>
lead 5-4 in the eighth with what<lb/>
proved to be the final run of the<lb/>
game. With one away, Johnson<lb/>
singled to centerfield. Jay<lb/>
McGraw and Mark Cockrell<lb/>
walked and Mike Sullivan hit a<lb/>
run-scoring single over the short-<lb/>
stop's head, but the inning ended<lb/>
with three ECU runners strand-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
Boone's pitching victory gave<lb/>
him a 5-1 final record for the<lb/>
year. Hardison led the Pirate hit-<lb/>
ters with a double and homer,<lb/>
while Bradberry, Johnson,<lb/>
Cockrell and Sullivan had two<lb/>
hits each.<lb/>
ECU loaded the bases on two<lb/>
walks and a single in the seventh,<lb/>
but left the runners stranded, as<lb/>
the Pirates continued to miss<lb/>
crucial scoring opportunities.<lb/>
"It seemed we were playing<lb/>
our best after we beat UNC-<lb/>
Wilmington Pirate coach Gary<lb/>
Overton said. "We maintained<lb/>
our intensity and drive, but we<lb/>
just didn't get the right hits at the<lb/>
right time in the tournament.<lb/>
"We also failed to maintain<lb/>
our starting pitching staff he<lb/>
said. "In a tournament situation<lb/>
you have to be on top of your<lb/>
game and we weren't.<lb/>
"Winfred Johnson hit ex-<lb/>
cellently for us and Bradberrv<lb/>
continued his good season per-<lb/>
formance also the coach said<lb/>
"Daniel Boone was excellent in<lb/>
relief and I thought Robert<lb/>
Langston did a fine job as well<lb/>
"Overall ve had a very fine<lb/>
baseball year Overton added<lb/>
"Any time you win more than 30<lb/>
games in a season you have to be<lb/>
pleased. I believe (freshman) Jav<lb/>
McGraw lived up to what I ex-<lb/>
pected of him in his first year He<lb/>
dropped a ball in the tournament<lb/>
that cost us a run, but he threw<lb/>
runners out at home twice also<lb/>
"I'd like to thank the fans who<lb/>
supported us throughout the<lb/>
season stated Overton. "We<lb/>
really appreciate their support<lb/>
fill -ggss- Birljif WITH<lb/>
WAKIWWSE<lb/>
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wXlltojwallprjce<lb/>
50c<lb/>
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4. ffiffiBBS<lb/>
JANE PARKER<lb/>
HAMBURGER OR<lb/>
ANN PAGE<lb/>
Hot Dog Buns Mayonnaise<lb/>
0<lb/>
3100<lb/>
8ct. I<lb/>
pkgs I<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00<lb/>
OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
X 47<lb/>
DIET PEPSI ? MTN. DEW<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
<lb/>
w<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
fe<lb/>
24<lb/>
V<lb/>
w<lb/>
2ltr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
05<lb/>
32 oz.<lb/>
jar<lb/>
68<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
0<lb/>
Ground Fresh<lb/>
Daily<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
71??<lb/>
5<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00<lb/>
OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
FLAV-O-RICH<lb/>
Ice Cream<lb/>
? SAVE<lb/>
?? UP TO<lb/>
1 130<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
DOUBLE Q<lb/>
Chunk Tuna<lb/>
V<lb/>
!?<lb/>
12 gal.<lb/>
ctn.<lb/>
159<lb/>
V<lb/>
VS<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
lbs. or<lb/>
more<lb/>
lb<lb/>
88<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
Pork Loin<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00<lb/>
OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
<lb/>
ON HORMEL SUPER<lb/>
 SELECT<lb/>
Supto Whole<lb/>
-91 lb s 5-7 lb. Avg<lb/>
. lb.<lb/>
OO<lb/>
in<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
SAVE 4<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
G0H ?<lb/>
42<lb/>
2<lb/>
?<lb/>
6.5 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
88<lb/>
0<lb/>
Fox Pizza<lb/>
SMUCKER S<lb/>
Grape Jelly<lb/>
HUNTS<lb/>
Manwich Sandwich Sauce<lb/>
35' OFF LABEL<lb/>
Quaker Quick Grits 5<lb/>
LIMIT TWO WITH<lb/>
AN ADDITIONAL<lb/>
10.00 OR MORE<lb/>
PURCHASE<lb/>
SPAM<lb/>
Luncheon Meat<lb/>
VAN CAMP<lb/>
PorkN<lb/>
Beans<lb/>
LONG GRAIN<lb/>
Comet Rice<lb/>
BEEF FLAVOR<lb/>
Tony Dog Food<lb/>
A4P<lb/>
Plastic Wrap<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
Bounty Towels<lb/>
REGULAR ? LITE<lb/>
Coors ??<lb/>
32 oz<lb/>
jar<lb/>
15.5 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
bag<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
990<lb/>
89<lb/>
99'<lb/>
1<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
50<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
10<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
70<lb/>
OQSAVE<lb/>
?- UP TO<lb/>
15?<lb/>
Beer<lb/>
?fTW ctn. of<lb/>
?6 o<lb/>
rr 12 oz J<lb/>
cans ????<lb/>
39<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
v ,v "oz-<lb/>
Up pkg.<lb/>
AAP FROZEN<lb/>
Orange Juice<lb/>
8 INCH APPLE ? DUTCH APPLE<lb/>
Mrs. Smith's Pie<lb/>
BIRDS EYE<lb/>
Corn on the Cob<lb/>
PET RITZ MULTI-PACK<lb/>
Pie Shells<lb/>
BUTTER-ME-NOT ?.? 1<lb/>
'SAVE <lb/>
 UPT0 I<lb/>
Biscuits<lb/>
LIGHT N LIVELY<lb/>
Cottage Cheese<lb/>
KRAFT PROCESS<lb/>
American Slices<lb/>
SUNNY DELIGHT<lb/>
Citrus Punch<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
Grated Parmesan<lb/>
WINE<lb/>
Paul (wH<lb/>
Masson'<lb/>
59<lb/>
0<lb/>
<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
U.S.D.A. INPECTED FRESH<lb/>
Fryer Leg Qtrs<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
26 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
12 ct<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
5ct.<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
99<lb/>
1<lb/>
0SAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
30<lb/>
PRODUCE SPECIALS<lb/>
WSAVE<lb/>
UP TO<lb/>
30<lb/>
i? . -<lb/>
99 ?<lb/>
15"<lb/>
1<lb/>
99<lb/>
?pro<lb/>
30<lb/>
LARGE CALIFORNIA<lb/>
Iceberg<lb/>
Lettuce<lb/>
? SAVE<lb/>
 UPT0<lb/>
Vv<lb/>
<lb/>
V<lb/>
300<lb/>
heads<lb/>
only<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
4<lb/>
5ct.<lb/>
5 oz.<lb/>
cans<lb/>
89<lb/>
RED RIPE<lb/>
v SAVE l<lb/>
Family Pack ?Lj<lb/>
Tomatoes<lb/>
 w<lb/>
26 oz.<lb/>
Pkg.<lb/>
79<lb/>
C<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
ctn<lb/>
8 oz<lb/>
pg<lb/>
64 oz<lb/>
jug<lb/>
8 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
79<lb/>
119<lb/>
99<lb/>
2<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
?fit<lb/>
20<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UPTi<lb/>
20<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
UPT?<lb/>
15'<lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE SPECIALS<lb/>
ROLL ON<lb/>
Ban Deodorant<lb/>
MOUTHWASH<lb/>
Listerine<lb/>
15oz<lb/>
24 oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
1<lb/>
2<lb/>
1"<lb/>
395T5<lb/>
40<lb/>
DELI SPECIALS<lb/>
1.5 Itr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
BUY ONE POUND OF WHITES QUALITY<lb/>
Boiled Ham ,b 2.<lb/>
GET ONE POUND<lb/>
Potato Salad FREE!<lb/>
99<lb/>
m?n .1 ??i ?.<lb/>
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