<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057717_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(Earolmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 No.60<lb/>
Wednesday, June 5, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
System Successful<lb/>
On-line Registration Benefits A11<lb/>
Shapin' Up<lb/>
Bryan Humbert ? ECU Photo Lab<lb/>
Even though summer .s not until later on this month, the recent record-breaking temperatures in the area<lb/>
have brought some people inside, such as this graduate art student. While taking advantage of tne cool air<lb/>
conditioning of Jenk.ns Art Building, the sculptor seems to be shaping up the looks of ECU<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
C a-Ncwi Kdllor<lb/>
Associate Registar Bobbie<lb/>
Alston has termed ECU's new<lb/>
on-line registration system a<lb/>
"success" after evaluating its ef-<lb/>
fectiveness during pre-<lb/>
registration this spring.<lb/>
"We're very happy with the<lb/>
way the entire process went<lb/>
Alston said, "and we hope the<lb/>
students and faculty were pleased<lb/>
as well<lb/>
The system was implemented<lb/>
in March when 50 computer ter-<lb/>
minals linked to a Sperry-Univac<lb/>
mainframe were distributed to<lb/>
various academic departments<lb/>
across campus.<lb/>
This allowed students to<lb/>
choose their own schedule while<lb/>
in from of a terminal rather than<lb/>
select a course only to have the<lb/>
old computer choose another one<lb/>
for them.<lb/>
Alston said the new system vir-<lb/>
tually eliminates long lines<lb/>
because the average student can<lb/>
determine their schedule within<lb/>
five minutes. However, if a stu-<lb/>
dent isn't satisfied with the<lb/>
courses available at the time, he<lb/>
or she can continue to come back<lb/>
until they have adjusted their<lb/>
schedules accordingly.<lb/>
Alston also felt that a smaller<lb/>
percentage of students would<lb/>
have their schedules cancelled<lb/>
because of the ease at which fees<lb/>
and tuiton could be paid through<lb/>
the mail. "Paying tuition will be<lb/>
less complicated she said.<lb/>
"Students receive a computer<lb/>
printout sheet which contains<lb/>
their schedule, activity card and<lb/>
bill all on a single sheet of<lb/>
paper<lb/>
Also, the new system has<lb/>
allowed a policy change concern-<lb/>
ing the cancellation of schedules<lb/>
to avoid disasters such as the one<lb/>
earlier this year when many<lb/>
students could not attend school<lb/>
because they failed to pick up<lb/>
their schedules on time.<lb/>
Schedules will now be mailed<lb/>
back to the student's home ad-<lb/>
dress if they are not picked up<lb/>
before the beginning of the<lb/>
semester, rather than holding<lb/>
them in the registar's office.<lb/>
Since a student has the option<lb/>
of accepting or rejecting their<lb/>
schedule, once entered into the<lb/>
computer as final, all schedules<lb/>
become permanent. There will be<lb/>
no opportunity to add a class,<lb/>
and courses may only be dropped<lb/>
for one of the following reasons:<lb/>
? If a student is failing a course<lb/>
at the time he wishes to drop.<lb/>
? If a prerequisite for a course<lb/>
has not been successfully com-<lb/>
pleted.<lb/>
? If a student becomes senoush<lb/>
ill and has a legitimate medical<lb/>
excuse.<lb/>
An additional feature of the<lb/>
system is that it has been catered<lb/>
to fit ECU's needs. "The univer-<lb/>
sity developed this system instead<lb/>
of using a packaged system<lb/>
Alston said. "At times the system<lb/>
has to be readjusted, but it can be<lb/>
upgraded as well ? it's a con-<lb/>
tinious learning experience<lb/>
For those students who did not<lb/>
register in the spring, the on-line<lb/>
registration process is extremely<lb/>
easy to follow:<lb/>
? Fill out a schedule form with<lb/>
your advisor with no more than<lb/>
18 hours of primary courses and<lb/>
no less than 15 hours of alternate<lb/>
courses.<lb/>
? Have your advisor sign the<lb/>
form.<lb/>
? Determine when you are allow -<lb/>
ed to register (days are designated<lb/>
according to your class rank).<lb/>
? Go to the department in which<lb/>
you are majoring or the registar<lb/>
office and wait until a terminal iv<lb/>
free.<lb/>
? Work out a schedule with the<lb/>
terminal operator with which you<lb/>
are comfortable.<lb/>
? Once you have decided on a<lb/>
schedule, tell the terminal<lb/>
operator to enter it as your final<lb/>
class schedule.<lb/>
Archaeologist Begins Search For Roanoke's Lost Colony<lb/>
(UPI) ? An underwater ex<lb/>
ploration to find the Lost Colony<lb/>
is finding some unbelievers, but<lb/>
one North Carolina archaeologist<lb/>
says his August project is more<lb/>
than a fishing expedition to solve<lb/>
the 395-year-old mystery.<lb/>
"This idea was not any one day<lb/>
revelation said Gordon Watts,<lb/>
director of underwater research<lb/>
in the East Carolina University<lb/>
maritime history graduate pro-<lb/>
gram.<lb/>
Seven years ago, Watts found<lb/>
evidence the Lost Colony now<lb/>
may be within three miles of<lb/>
Manteo, offshore on the bottom<lb/>
of the Roanoke Sound. His<lb/>
discovery was made independent<lb/>
of work by three scientists at the<lb/>
University of Virginia, who in<lb/>
1972 suggested the same theory.<lb/>
In August, Watts and other<lb/>
scientists will spend a week<lb/>
aboard a 25-foot motorboat us-<lb/>
ing sophisticated electronic<lb/>
equipment to peer at the sound's<lb/>
bottom for clues to the settle-<lb/>
ment's disappearance. The<lb/>
mystery of the Lost Colony has<lb/>
puzzled historians since the settle-<lb/>
ment's governor, John White,<lb/>
returned to Roanoke Island from<lb/>
England in 1590 and found little<lb/>
remaining of the colony he'd left<lb/>
three years before.<lb/>
About 100 colonists were gone.<lb/>
Ail Governor White thacovered<lb/>
were the remains of a crude, fort-<lb/>
like settlement and the word<lb/>
"Croatan" carved on a tree.<lb/>
"My personal belief is that the<lb/>
site of the colony is on land, not<lb/>
in the sound said Phil Evans, a<lb/>
ranger at Fort Raleigh, a state<lb/>
historical site on Roanoke Island.<lb/>
"But I certainly applaud Gor-<lb/>
don's effort, and I'd be happy as<lb/>
a clam to have him find<lb/>
something.<lb/>
"It's possible he will find<lb/>
Groups Prepare Freshmen<lb/>
something, and whatever anyone<lb/>
finds will certainly help us here<lb/>
Evans said.<lb/>
ECU got an S8.000 grant from<lb/>
America's 400th Anniversary<lb/>
Committee to make a preliminary<lb/>
search of two areas in the sound<lb/>
north of Roanoke Island. Each<lb/>
site is about a one-half mile by-<lb/>
four miles in area, from 800 feet<lb/>
to 2,500 feet offshore and under<lb/>
3 feet to 12 feet of salt water.<lb/>
Watts said three environmental<lb/>
factors ? erosion, the slow sink-<lb/>
ing of the north end of Roanoke<lb/>
Island and a rise in the sea level<lb/>
? during the last 400 years led<lb/>
him to his "one inescapable con-<lb/>
clusion Watts estimates the en-<lb/>
vironmental changes have shifted<lb/>
more than one half miJe of the<lb/>
island's northern end under-<lb/>
water.<lb/>
"So I feel the colony is pro-<lb/>
bably underwater Watts said.<lb/>
"There's got to be more. It can-<lb/>
not have just disappeared<lb/>
Watts said the artifacts found<lb/>
during Fort Raleigh's reconstruc-<lb/>
tion were not enough to sustain a<lb/>
community. Watts said the fort<lb/>
"could have been part of the Lost<lb/>
Colony, but by no means all of<lb/>
it<lb/>
By HAROLDJOYNER<lb/>
C o-Num Editor<lb/>
"Almost every club (at ECU)<lb/>
that is funded by SGA, and even<lb/>
a lot that aren't, has already sign-<lb/>
ed up to become a part of the<lb/>
New Student Initiation to Cam-<lb/>
pus Organizations said SGA<lb/>
President David Brown Tuesday.<lb/>
"I think it's fantastic that<lb/>
almost all of the campus<lb/>
organizations have signed up. It<lb/>
really shows they are concerned<lb/>
about the incoming freshmen<lb/>
Brown said.<lb/>
NSICO is one of the SGA Ex-<lb/>
ecutive Council's primary pro-<lb/>
jects this summer. The program<lb/>
was organized, Brown said, in<lb/>
order to give campus groups an<lb/>
initial exposure to freshmen<lb/>
orientation students, who will ar-<lb/>
rive next week.<lb/>
Brown explained that during<lb/>
the time freshmen are waiting to<lb/>
have their ID cards made, the<lb/>
multi-purpose room on the se-<lb/>
cond floor of Mendenhall will be<lb/>
open for students to find out how<lb/>
to become involved with campus<lb/>
groups.<lb/>
"I think that a warm hand-<lb/>
shake and a smile mean a great<lb/>
deal more than receiving a manila<lb/>
envelope stuffed full of pam-<lb/>
phlets Brown said.<lb/>
An pre-NSICO meeting will be<lb/>
held Monday June 10 at 4 p.m.<lb/>
for groups planning to attend.<lb/>
Brown said it is very important<lb/>
for one or two representatives<lb/>
from each group to come in order<lb/>
to be informed of last minute<lb/>
details and giving table<lb/>
assignments.<lb/>
Other groups, he said, that<lb/>
have not already registered may<lb/>
notify the SGA office by June 10,<lb/>
but space can't be guaranteed.<lb/>
The program will be offered<lb/>
once to each of the freshmen<lb/>
orientation groups beginning<lb/>
June 13 at 1 p.m. and ending July<lb/>
10 from 7-9 p.m.<lb/>
"The participating groups can<lb/>
be assured that they'll have a cap-<lb/>
tive audience. I can't think of a<lb/>
better way for the freshmen to<lb/>
become involved with student<lb/>
organizations he said.<lb/>
Renovation On Schedule<lb/>
By RANDY MEWS<lb/>
Co-News Editor<lb/>
After suffering the abuse of<lb/>
student living for more than 60<lb/>
years, Cotten Hall is finally get-<lb/>
ting a facelift.<lb/>
Renovation began on May 13<lb/>
in an attempt to restore one of<lb/>
ECU's oldest dormitories before<lb/>
it resumes normal operations in<lb/>
the fail.<lb/>
"We felt it was necessary to<lb/>
improve the dorm's<lb/>
appearance said Dan Wooten,<lb/>
ECU's director of housing opera-<lb/>
tions. "We're completely<lb/>
renovating the entire building<lb/>
According to Wooten, trouble<lb/>
with the electrical system<lb/>
necessitated the renovation. The<lb/>
entire building will be rewired<lb/>
with new light Fixtures, while all<lb/>
incandescent lights will be replac-<lb/>
ed with fluorescent ones.<lb/>
The other major underatking<lb/>
of the renovation process in-<lb/>
cludes the installation of a new<lb/>
heating and air conditioning<lb/>
system. "We have learned<lb/>
through our experience with Jar-<lb/>
vis and Fleming (residence halls)<lb/>
that air conditioning is in great<lb/>
demand by the students<lb/>
Wooten said.<lb/>
Jarvis (opened 1909) and Flem-<lb/>
ing (opened 1923) are the only<lb/>
two dorms on campus that are<lb/>
older than Cotton. Both dorms<lb/>
have been renovated within the<lb/>
last decade, and both had air con-<lb/>
ditioning installed when<lb/>
renovated.<lb/>
Cotton will be repaired much<lb/>
in the same way that Jarvis and<lb/>
Flemming were, thus completing<lb/>
work on all central campus<lb/>
dorms overlooking the mall area.<lb/>
Other renovations for the<lb/>
dorm include:<lb/>
? Wall-to-wall carpeting in the<lb/>
corridors.<lb/>
? New carpet and furniture in the<lb/>
lobby.<lb/>
? Refinishing the furniture in<lb/>
each room.<lb/>
? Painting the rooms and cor-<lb/>
ridors.<lb/>
Renovation is still in its<lb/>
primary stage, but Wooten is<lb/>
confident that the dorm will be<lb/>
ready for the influx of dorm<lb/>
students this fall. "We set a com-<lb/>
pletion date of Aug. 12, but at<lb/>
the present time we're running<lb/>
ahead of schedulede<lb/>
The dorm will retain its policy<lb/>
of only accommodating female<lb/>
students, although it is still ex-<lb/>
pected many will request Cotton<lb/>
because of the air conditioning.<lb/>
Although exact Figures will not<lb/>
be known until renovation is<lb/>
complete, Wooten estimated the<lb/>
total cost of the project at<lb/>
$700,000.<lb/>
"They (colonists) were loaded<lb/>
for bear he said. "A hundred<lb/>
people would have left potterv.<lb/>
buttons, foundation structures,<lb/>
iron bars, bricks, trunk.<lb/>
Firearms, projectiles I feel<lb/>
there's not enough evidence there<lb/>
for 100 people to have staved a<lb/>
year or more<lb/>
This month, archaeologists will<lb/>
test excavations on land about<lb/>
200 yards from the site of the<lb/>
reconstructed fort that equip-<lb/>
ment similar to what Watts' crew<lb/>
will use this summer has in-<lb/>
dicated showed promise.<lb/>
Counselor<lb/>
Answers<lb/>
Sex Charges<lb/>
A retired counselor at EC L<lb/>
pleaded guilty last Tuesday to<lb/>
three charges of engaging in ll<lb/>
legal sex acts with three teenage<lb/>
boys, The Sews and Observer<lb/>
recently reported.<lb/>
Hosea Dewood "Woody"<lb/>
Lambeth, 61,of Route I. Elon<lb/>
Collet. )leaded guilty as part of<lb/>
a plea-bargaining arrangement to<lb/>
two charges of taking indecent<lb/>
liberties with children and one<lb/>
charge of crime against nature.<lb/>
As part of the arrangement, ap-<lb/>
proved in Pitt County Superior<lb/>
Court, one charge of crime<lb/>
against nature was dismissed.<lb/>
Lambeth was a counselor in<lb/>
the ECU Counseling Center from<lb/>
1967 until June 1983, when he<lb/>
retired. Indictments returned by a<lb/>
Pitt County grand jury last<lb/>
month charged that the incidents<lb/>
occurred in 1979 and 1981 with<lb/>
youths who were 13, 14 and 16 at<lb/>
the time.<lb/>
Director of the Student<lb/>
Counseling Center Wilbert Ball<lb/>
said that Lambeth "had carried<lb/>
out his duties in a professional<lb/>
manner while a counselor at<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Ball also added that the inci-<lb/>
dent was not related to<lb/>
Lambeth's work with students<lb/>
seeking counseling at the center.<lb/>
Smokescreen<lb/>
The warm weather offers many advantages, such as escaping the<lb/>
heat of the kitchen. Seems this ECU student recently bought a few<lb/>
chickens, some brew and a fresh pack of cigarettes and headed out for<lb/>
Bar-B-Que heaven. When does the band arrive?<lb/>
? The television networks have<lb/>
fine tuned this fall's schedule.<lb/>
See Lifestyles, page 5.<lb/>
? ECU trackster is named All-<lb/>
America. See Sports, page 7.<lb/>
m, - , ???- 4<lb/>
? ?? m mmmtiftTmmm<lb/>
<pb facs="00057717_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 5, 1985<lb/>
Announcements<lb/>
Camp Starlight<lb/>
interested in working with children and<lb/>
young people in a beautitul 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/>
tion contact Cooperative Education, 313<lb/>
Rawl, 757 6979<lb/>
? uction Management<lb/>
Positions Available tor construction<lb/>
management maiors with Eastern North<lb/>
Carolina Building Corporation For more in<lb/>
formation, contact Cooperative Education<lb/>
Office. Rawl 313<lb/>
Forum On University<lb/>
Athletics<lb/>
How are a University and its athletic pro<lb/>
gram related to one another? is there a dif<lb/>
ference between how it is and how if should<lb/>
be? Program and discussion by Graham<lb/>
Nahouse, sponsored by the ECU Campus<lb/>
Ministry, Wednesday, June 5, at 7:00 p.m. in<lb/>
Mendenhall 244.<lb/>
INDT<lb/>
Positions exist with such companies as<lb/>
Northern Telecom, Burroughs Wellcome,<lb/>
Perdue, Inc. and Yale Materials Handling<lb/>
Corporation for the 1985 86 academic year<lb/>
Start gaining experience now for your career<lb/>
by contacting Cooperative Education, 313,<lb/>
Rawl, 757 6979<lb/>
National Teacher Examination<lb/>
There is a special National Teacher Ex<lb/>
aminatlon scheduled for Saturday, June 23.<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 . also being given at<lb/>
Atlantic Christ'i .allege. Wilson, N.C<lb/>
Weslyan, Rocky Mount, Fayetteville State,<lb/>
and New Bern High School.<lb/>
Ambassadors<lb/>
We will have a meeting Thursday at 4 p.m.<lb/>
in room 247 MSC<lb/>
Environmental Health<lb/>
Position available for Environmental<lb/>
Health student in INOT with background in<lb/>
safety with chemical company in Wilm<lb/>
ington re?. Salary of S6 per hour and<lb/>
assistance in finding housing. Excellent op<lb/>
portunlty for summer. Contact Co-op Office,<lb/>
room 314 Rawl Bldg<lb/>
Frisbee<lb/>
Attention Feesh and Bison and anyone in<lb/>
terested in playing frisbee this summer in<lb/>
Greenville The ECU Frisbee Club and the<lb/>
Ultimate Irates extend their warmest (hot)<lb/>
invitaion to everyone to come out and whip<lb/>
it. If you don't know how to whip it, we'll<lb/>
teach you Bottom of College Hill, Tuesday,<lb/>
Thursday and Sunday al 5 30 Be there or be<lb/>
oblong!<lb/>
Crossover<lb/>
For the latest and the best in Contem<lb/>
porary Christian music, listen to<lb/>
CROSSOVER this Sunday morning from 6 12<lb/>
noon. This weekend's special features Chris<lb/>
tian Jazz from 11 to noon, with artists like<lb/>
Phil Oriscoll and Kieth Thomas Also, two<lb/>
CROSSOVERWZMB t shirts and two Pizza<lb/>
Hut pizzas will be given away, so don't miss<lb/>
the great giveaways and music on<lb/>
CROSSOVER. 6 12 each Sunday on WZMB<lb/>
SLEEPING BAGS<lb/>
BACKPACKS TENTS COTS SHOVELS nAW<lb/>
MOCKS MESS KITS CANTEENS EaTiGuES .<lb/>
BOOTS RAINWEAR I SHIRTS ENAMElWARf<lb/>
DrSHES WORK CLOTHES 2'OC CHFfEREN' TtM<lb/>
Bro wieri Welcome<lb/>
ARMY-NAVY STORE<lb/>
1501 S. Ivans<lb/>
, tndgkon's<lb/>
y narba k beauty Comgc<lb/>
Serving the Entire Family<lb/>
:<lb/>
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Join the adventure.<lb/>
STEVEN SPIELBERG Presents<lb/>
PUTT<lb/>
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A RICHARD DONNER Film<lb/>
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At M.nd.nholl<lb/>
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"If you have to do laundry<lb/>
do it in style"<lb/>
OPTICAL<lb/>
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Offer expire 62885<lb/>
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SUNGLASSES<lb/>
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Offer Eipires 62885<lb/>
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Phone (919) 757-1559<lb/>
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Greenville, NC 27834<lb/>
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change1 Domino's Pizza VIVI11 V O<lb/>
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Serving Mr. Greenville DELIVERS<lb/>
e) Campus:<lb/>
758-66BO<lb/>
1201 Charles Bl.d.<lb/>
Serving Ernst<lb/>
Greenville:<lb/>
752-6996<lb/>
Rivergate Shopping Mall<lb/>
Hours:<lb/>
11AM-1AMSunThurs.<lb/>
11AM-2AMFri.&amp;Sat.<lb/>
Limited delivery areas.<lb/>
Drivers carry under $20<lb/>
?1985 Domino's Pizza. Inc.<lb/>
33945530.5534<lb/>
L<lb/>
A N<lb/>
D I<lb/>
I G<lb/>
E H<lb/>
S T<lb/>
Wed. June 5th<lb/>
and<lb/>
Wed. June 12th<lb/>
U2 EAST 5TH ST1EET<lb/>
GREEHVILLE, N.C. 27(34<lb/>
(tit) 751-3114<lb/>
LAHNN and LOFTIN<lb/>
Live entertainment each &amp; every Wednesday night. No admission<lb/>
charge for LadiesHappy Hour prices for ladies. Doors open at 8:30<lb/>
p.m.Guests are welcome. "A good time is guaranteed for all<lb/>
&amp;ITK(j<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFTNITE<lb/>
Wednesday, June 5, 1985 9:00-2:00 A M<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies $1 00 18 yrs<lb/>
10 DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
Presents<lb/>
SUMMER COLLEGE NITE<lb/>
Thursday, June 6, 1985<lb/>
Admission $1.00 Guys &amp; 18 yrs.<lb/>
9:00-2:00 A.M.<lb/>
Free for Ladies<lb/>
'Remember, Drinking and<lb/>
Driving dont Mix"<lb/>
5 DRAFT WHILE IT LASTS<lb/>
60 CANS TIL MIDNIGHT<lb/>
85 TIL CLOSE<lb/>
Ultr<lb/>
1 he perfc<lb/>
mertime , i<lb/>
noever, be'<lb/>
your tinu<lb/>
fhere a<lb/>
good u .<lb/>
Tr to a.<lb/>
am to 2 p m<lb/>
most ink<lb/>
ponent I<lb/>
Sight is n<lb/>
il is possible to<lb/>
aKo burnt on a dot<lb/>
The-<lb/>
.an bloc I<lb/>
The PABA I<lb/>
will totaih<lb/>
while 1<lb/>
sorb m<lb/>
Tru<lb/>
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So<lb/>
Compii<lb/>
75i<lb/>
31<lb/>
Eyegl<lb/>
30<lb/>
60<lb/>
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Fra<lb/>
In St<lb/>
30?c<lb/>
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315 Par. em Comi<lb/>
Across From D; 1<lb/>
Phoe 'SI I<lb/>
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13 ?l<lb/>
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Corolii<lb/>
(N<lb/>
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Ultraviolet Rays Dangerous<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 3. .983 3<lb/>
rhe perfect suntan is a su<lb/>
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?owever, before you spend all<lb/>
7HH IIITlt' soaking up the rays<lb/>
there are a ten things thai are<lb/>
;ood to know.<lb/>
fr to avoid tanning from 10<lb/>
am. to 2 p.m. when the sun is<lb/>
most intense. The burning com-<lb/>
ponent of sunlight and uitravioH<lb/>
? is not filtered b clouds, so<lb/>
is possible to get tanned and<lb/>
also burnt on a cloud day.<lb/>
There are now sunscreens that<lb/>
can block out harmful IV light<lb/>
I he PABA (Para-Aminobenzoic<lb/>
-Kid) compounds range from I<lb/>
powei to 21 powei rhe 21 power<lb/>
will total.) block the UV light.<lb/>
hile 1 powei lets your skin ab<lb/>
-orb most of the sun's ras.<lb/>
1 he powers are also referred to<lb/>
Sun Protection factors which<lb/>
resents a multiple of the time<lb/>
n takes to get a minimal sunburn<lb/>
on your skin. You should<lb/>
remember that often sunburn<lb/>
does not show up until hours<lb/>
attei you've gotten out of the<lb/>
sun.<lb/>
HEALTH'<lb/>
C0LUM<lb/>
Everyone has different skin:<lb/>
? Fair complexions and red<lb/>
heads have a skin type that is<lb/>
easiL burned and should use a<lb/>
SP1- of 8-15.<lb/>
? Dark haired and darker skinn-<lb/>
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? For those who have a normal<lb/>
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Open MonSot. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Sundays 12 p.m. to 6 p.m.<lb/>
1 Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
between 2-8 is recommended.<lb/>
Many of the sunscreens are<lb/>
now waterproof and stay on for<lb/>
up to 80 minutes. If you are in-<lb/>
volved in water sports such as<lb/>
water skiing, wind surfing or<lb/>
swimming, these sunscreens are<lb/>
also advised.<lb/>
Medication can cause reactions<lb/>
when exposed to sun. Women on<lb/>
oral contraceptive pills have in-<lb/>
creased sensitivity to sun and get<lb/>
splotchy tans due to estrogen ef-<lb/>
fects. Tetracycline, an antibiotic,<lb/>
can cause sun sensitivity so a type<lb/>
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sun exposed areas. Other drugs<lb/>
that can cause sun sensitivity are<lb/>
valium, benadryl, and com-<lb/>
pazine. If you have any questions<lb/>
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The worst thing about sun ex-<lb/>
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for 10-20 consecutive years. Skin<lb/>
becomes leathery and tough after<lb/>
many years of sunning. UV<lb/>
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which can be prevented by using<lb/>
lip sunscreen and avoiding pro-<lb/>
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which is a noncancerous growth<lb/>
on skin but has a low chance of<lb/>
becoming malignant. Enjoy your<lb/>
time in the sun but please<lb/>
remember to use moderation.<lb/>
The Student Health Center has<lb/>
a brochure on "sunning" that<lb/>
provides more detailed informa-<lb/>
tion about medication sensitivity<lb/>
and sun protection factors. Call<lb/>
us at 757-6841 if you need more<lb/>
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?-i?m?iip' ?! ? ulijiii<lb/>
<pb facs="00057717_0004"/><lb/>
Gtlje EaHt (Earnlttrtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Tom Norton, (w?.?,Mr<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, mm fcd?0,<lb/>
Harold Joyner, Co- ??, Tom Luvender, oir?-ror mmu?<lb/>
Randy Mews, cv.? ??, Anthony Martin, MwMr<lb/>
Rick Mccormac. srom?,wr John Peterson, cru Manager<lb/>
Bill Mitchel l , n?to? m,? Bill Dawson, produce Manager<lb/>
Daniei Maurer. iStyles Fdiwr DeChanile Johnson, Ad rtetmam<lb/>
June 5. 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Seat Belts<lb/>
Wear Should Be Optional<lb/>
Legislation which would legally individual's home or car, he should<lb/>
enforce seat-belt wear for drivers in be responsible for deciding the<lb/>
the state of North Carolina is one degree of risk he exposes himself to,<lb/>
way of dealing with the problem of as long as he is the only one who will<lb/>
car-accident fatalities. It is, directly suffer the conseauences.<lb/>
however, not the most effective way<lb/>
and is a violation of the adult's right<lb/>
to make his own decisions.<lb/>
Bowdlerization Business Booms<lb/>
On the other hand, legislation re-<lb/>
quiring seat belt wear for children is<lb/>
an excellent idea. In this case, the<lb/>
It has been proven in many cases decision is being made for someone<lb/>
By Dorothy Wickenden<lb/>
TW New RrpabUc<lb/>
It was a studious ninth grader, not an<lb/>
anti-censorship brigade, who set off the<lb/>
most recent flurry about what kids<lb/>
ought to be reading in school.<lb/>
The culprits were not fervid fun-<lb/>
damentalists but staid corporate<lb/>
that seat belt wear greatly increases who does not yet have the ability or publishers. And the object of censor-<lb/>
?  ? InJiir4rl -1 ? i  I. .I ??? . chin uror n-t -? r;?  C U - ?<lb/>
an individual's chance of surviving maturity to decide on precautions to<lb/>
an automobile accident with less take against a possible accident,<lb/>
severe injuries. Most Americans are This legislation should extend not<lb/>
aware of this fact, if not through only to infants, but to all children,<lb/>
constant media exposure, then including those riding in school<lb/>
through common sense. How they buses,<lb/>
choose to act on this information,<lb/>
however, should be left to them.<lb/>
While the government has a cer-<lb/>
tain responsibility to protect in-<lb/>
dividuals from each other, their<lb/>
responsibility to protect individuals<lb/>
North Carolinians are aware of<lb/>
the fact that wearing seat belts saves<lb/>
lives Positive reinforcement for<lb/>
wearing seat belts has far more<lb/>
potential for being effective than<lb/>
no<lb/>
And<lb/>
from themselves should be limited, penalization for not wearing the<lb/>
In a case such as suicide, someone is belts. People should be given the<lb/>
intentionally trying to harm facts, made to think about the con-<lb/>
himself, usually while in a disturbed sequences of not wearing seat belts,<lb/>
mental state, and should be pro- and left to decide for themselves,<lb/>
tected. However, it is difficult to Government intervention has<lb/>
equate not wearing a seatbelt with place here.<lb/>
an intentionally harmful act such as<lb/>
suicide. Seat belt wear is a precau-<lb/>
tion against a probability, not pro-<lb/>
tection from a certainty. If an adult<lb/>
does not feel the need to take<lb/>
precautions against his own injury,<lb/>
then he should not be forced to do<lb/>
so.<lb/>
Furthermore, it is an infringe-<lb/>
ment on individual rights to legally not so bad as the headline stated<lb/>
enforce seat belt wear. This is Instead, he meant to convey that the<lb/>
similar to saying television sets must problem of apartheid should be<lb/>
be unplugged during an electrical dealt with in perspective with the<lb/>
storm to prevent against possible seriousness of other international<lb/>
electrocution. In the privacy of an problems.<lb/>
ship was not a science of history text or<lb/>
an obscene novel, but the work of the<lb/>
most revered playwright in the world.<lb/>
Daniel Blum, a student at Madison<lb/>
High School in Vienna, Va had seen a<lb/>
Folger Theatre production of Romeo<lb/>
and Juliet, and when he sat down with<lb/>
his Scott, Foresman "America Reads"<lb/>
textbook to write a paper about Mer-<lb/>
cutio's "Queen Mab speech, he<lb/>
noticed some of the lines were missing.<lb/>
For example, the "fairies' midwife"<lb/>
who gallops by nightThrough lovers'<lb/>
brains" is no longer characterized as<lb/>
the hag who "when maids lie on their<lb/>
backspresses them and learns them<lb/>
first to bear,Making them women of<lb/>
good carriage<lb/>
Around the time the story broke in<lb/>
Virginia, a parent in Minneapolis<lb/>
discovered that the same anthology had<lb/>
been altered as well as abridged.<lb/>
Romeo's line in Act V, "Well, Juliet, I<lb/>
will lie with thee tonight was changed<lb/>
to "Well, Juliet, I will be with thee<lb/>
tonight<lb/>
Investigations by a Fairfax County<lb/>
textbook advisory committee, school<lb/>
boards, columnists, and People For<lb/>
East Carolinian columnist Dennis The American Way revealed not only<lb/>
Kilcoyne would like to clarify the that. mtor,e lfhan 3?? !mcs-had bee,n<lb/>
fot ?iL u ? ru- ?7-im: ?? V eliminated from Scott, Foresman's<lb/>
fact that the point of his "The Right "R0me0 and Juliet" - most of them<lb/>
Word column, which appeared sexual allusions ? but that high-school<lb/>
May 29, was not that "apartheid is textbook publishers routinely expurgate<lb/>
Shakespeare. Some, including Scott,<lb/>
Foresman, note in teachers' editions<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
that "abridgements" have been made.<lb/>
Most do not.<lb/>
The overwhelming reaction was one<lb/>
of astonished indignation. Scott,<lb/>
Foresman has received over 2,000 let-<lb/>
ters deploring the practice of "self-<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
SHE'S GOT SOME<lb/>
SORT OF SUMMER<lb/>
JOB AT AN ART<lb/>
INSTITUTE IN<lb/>
5HAN6HAI<lb/>
THAT DEAN<lb/>
HONEY'WAT<lb/>
A PRIMO<lb/>
EDUCATOR i<lb/>
BECAUSE OF PENG'S MODERNIZA<lb/>
TIONS OUR SCHOOLS OFARTARB<lb/>
met AGAIN .FLOURISHING. MANY<lb/>
COMRAPES CONTENPED FOR MY<lb/>
POSITION AT THE INSTITUTE<lb/>
"I FEEL VERY LUCKY, THOUGH THE<lb/>
JOURNEY FROM REP GUARD TO<lb/>
AVANT-GARDE IS PERILOUS AL<lb/>
RBAPY, THERE S MUCH CRITIQUING<lb/>
OF COUNTER-REVOLUnONARy AEG<lb/>
- J- THBTICS"<lb/>
HOUJ'S<lb/>
THIS,<lb/>
COMRAPE?<lb/>
NO, IT'S STILL<lb/>
DECAUEHT TRY<lb/>
PROPPING YOUR<lb/>
SHOULDER<lb/>
GOW MORNING, CLASS, <lb/>
AND UUELCJOME TO THE<lb/>
SHANGHAI ART INSTTTUTE'S<lb/>
FIGURE STUDIES PROGRAM<lb/>
PUB TO A REGENT RELAXATION OF<lb/>
CULTURAL AUTHORITY, CLARES SUCH<lb/>
AS THIS ARE ONCE AGAIN POSSIBLE.<lb/>
I URGE YOU TO MAKE THE MOST OF<lb/>
IMS PARTICULAR UPSWING OF THE<lb/>
' fPENDULUM<lb/>
I AM ASSISTED TODAY BY COMRADE<lb/>
WAN, UJHOUJILL BE STRIKING THE<lb/>
NEW STATE-APPROVED POSES. F YOU<lb/>
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BEGIN. READY, COMRADE?<lb/>
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MAKE A<lb/>
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COMRADE<lb/>
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LISTENING 17$ ART FOR<lb/>
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NCfT HAVE 70 SERVE THE<lb/>
PEO<lb/>
PLE<lb/>
SOSHE<lb/>
SHOULDNTBE<lb/>
BAY0NETTIN6<lb/>
AN EVIL<lb/>
LANDLORD?<lb/>
OF COURSE<lb/>
NOT' LET THE<lb/>
DRAWING<lb/>
BRSATHBl<lb/>
censorship Yet there is nothing new<lb/>
or surprising about the bowdlerization<lb/>
of Shakespeare. On the contrary, the<lb/>
current batch of "censored" textbooks<lb/>
is resolutely faithful to the traditions of<lb/>
Dr. Bowdler and his sister Harriet, who<lb/>
published their first edition of Family<lb/>
Shakespeare in 1807. And publishers of<lb/>
literature anthologies for the public<lb/>
schools have always felt constrained to<lb/>
abride and excerpt ? keeping in mind<lb/>
both the sophistication of the students<lb/>
who will be reading them and the re-<lb/>
quirements of parents and school<lb/>
districts that will be buying them.<lb/>
Marlene Blum, a member of the Fair-<lb/>
fax County textbook advisory commit-<lb/>
tee and the mother of Daniel, complain-<lb/>
ed to Sandra Sugawara of the<lb/>
Washington Post, "it's as if (the<lb/>
publishers) have become the arbiter of<lb/>
what children are to read and not<lb/>
read Yet, if anything, textbook<lb/>
publishers have become more fearful<lb/>
over the years about making their own<lb/>
determinations of what children are to<lb/>
read and not read. They have found<lb/>
that they cannot afford to dismiss the<lb/>
clamoring of countless political,<lb/>
religious and ethnic groups to cleanse<lb/>
their books of sexual and racial<lb/>
stereotyping.<lb/>
Jane Bachman, an editorial vice<lb/>
president of Scott, Foresman, guarded-<lb/>
ly told me: "Textbook publishers an-<lb/>
ticipate what may be a troublesome<lb/>
matter. We might be a little paranoid<lb/>
when we put a book together<lb/>
Clearly some things have changed<lb/>
since the heyday of bowdlerism. There<lb/>
is no comfortable consensus, as there<lb/>
was in the Victorian era, about matters<lb/>
of propriety, church and state. In its<lb/>
absence, the public schools have<lb/>
become a stage for various special-<lb/>
interest groups to perform their<lb/>
political dramas. As the requirements<lb/>
for textbooks have multiplied,<lb/>
publishers have honed their marketing<lb/>
skills, and the role of the editor has<lb/>
dwindled. No single sentinel trims the<lb/>
text and upholds moral and literary<lb/>
standards. Indeed, it is almost irrele-<lb/>
vant what the editor believes.<lb/>
Before a textbook comes into being,<lb/>
surveys are conducted, focus groups are<lb/>
convened, and outside consultants are<lb/>
hired. As the book is prepared, armies<lb/>
of reading specialists, instructional<lb/>
designers, teachers and computers<lb/>
zealously watch over it. They guard<lb/>
against unattractive book covers and<lb/>
ethnic slurs; they monitor "curricular<lb/>
congruence" (text, workbook and<lb/>
teachers' guide must complement each<lb/>
other) and "readability" levels<lb/>
(vocabulary words and number of<lb/>
syllables per sentence are tabulated ac-<lb/>
cording to grade).<lb/>
When the book is finally published, it<lb/>
is subject to review and complaint by<lb/>
concerned citizens and put up for<lb/>
"adoption" by state and local textbook<lb/>
advisory committees equipped with<lb/>
complicated checklists of requirements.<lb/>
In this Byzantine method of patching<lb/>
together textbooks, the integrity of an<lb/>
single story or play ? not to mention<lb/>
the needs of students ? often gets lost.<lb/>
Certain particularly troublesome items<lb/>
have been virtually abandoned ?<lb/>
among them Shirley Jackson's famous<lb/>
short story, "The Lottery" (too<lb/>
violent), and "the Merchant of Venice"<lb/>
(anti-semitic). Publishers have gone to<lb/>
absurd lengths to accomodate disparate<lb/>
interest groups and varying state<lb/>
guidelines. Elsa Walsh reported in the<lb/>
Washington Post that in a chapter from<lb/>
"Tom Sawyer which appears in Ginn<lb/>
and Cos sixth grade reader "Flights of<lb/>
Color the colloquialisms have vanish-<lb/>
ed; the grammer has been cleaned up;<lb/>
Tom's oath of "honest Injun" has been<lb/>
removed, and most references to boys<lb/>
or men have been changed to children<lb/>
or people.<lb/>
A story called "A Perfect Day for Ice<lb/>
Cream" was included in Scott,<lb/>
Foresman's 1985 eighth grade an-<lb/>
thology only after the words "ice<lb/>
cream" had been deleted from the title<lb/>
and a scene about a trip to the ice-cream<lb/>
parlor had been eliminated. The reason,<lb/>
apparently, was California's "social<lb/>
content guidelines" for textbooks,<lb/>
which warn against references to junk<lb/>
food. McGraw Hill's seventh-grade<lb/>
"focus" anthology has expunged from<lb/>
"Rip Van Winkle" not only difficult<lb/>
vocabulary words here and there such<lb/>
as "dismembered but the reference to<lb/>
"obsequious and conciliatory" men<lb/>
who go home to "shrews" and "ter-<lb/>
mangant" wives.<lb/>
Textbook publishers and school<lb/>
boards have become so accustomed to<lb/>
coven bowdlerization that they ap-<lb/>
parently came to forget it was even go-<lb/>
ing on. The Virginia state board of<lb/>
education, for one, had been happily<lb/>
buying the disputed Scott, Foresman<lb/>
textbook series for years until a ninth<lb/>
grader and his mother objected to its<lb/>
cavalier treatment of Shakespeare. As<lb/>
for teachers, the good ones have always<lb/>
had more faith in their own judgment<lb/>
about what is suitable for their students<lb/>
than they have in the prepackaged selec-<lb/>
tions of mass-market textbook,<lb/>
publishers. Some have even taken ad-<lb/>
vantage of their books' flaws.<lb/>
After Daniel Blum's discovery, his<lb/>
teacher supplied the students with the<lb/>
full text of "Romeo and Juliet and<lb/>
discussed the anthology's cuts in class.<lb/>
Covert or open, censorship is a doomed<lb/>
enterprise, for it stimulates precisely<lb/>
that dangerous urge it set out to crush:<lb/>
curiosity.<lb/>
Greenville Summers:<lb/>
Innovation Needed<lb/>
By JENNIFER JENDRASIAK<lb/>
Good afternoon boys and girls and<lb/>
welcome to summer in Greenville, a<lb/>
wonderful experience designed for<lb/>
testing the limits of boredom and its<lb/>
partner of necessity ? creativity.<lb/>
Picture this scenario: A small town in<lb/>
the vast desert of rural North Carolina,<lb/>
a town which in the summer is kept at<lb/>
the comfortable temperature of 95<lb/>
degrees (and 90 percent humidity). The<lb/>
nearest entertainment is either in<lb/>
Raleigh or at the beach ? a two-hour<lb/>
drive in either case ? if you have access<lb/>
to a car. I'm sure this sounds familiar to<lb/>
you.<lb/>
Now is the time for all students to<lb/>
organize. It is bad enough to be in sum-<lb/>
mer school. It's worse to be in summer<lb/>
school in a town where the biggest<lb/>
entertainment on Friday afternoons is<lb/>
driving by the dollar theater to see if the<lb/>
movie has changed. Entertainment<lb/>
choices are limited to movies or drink-<lb/>
ing. Since Greenville does not exactly<lb/>
have a plethora of movie theaters, and<lb/>
bars in the summer have a lot in com-<lb/>
mon with extremely noisy saunas,<lb/>
something needs to be done.<lb/>
The solution? Demand some enter-<lb/>
tainment. If Greenville does not pro-<lb/>
vide the amenities of life in an exciting<lb/>
city, they should be imported ? this is,<lb/>
after all, the 20th century. No ocean?<lb/>
Let's build one. Maybe someone could<lb/>
get the surplus roadsalt from all the<lb/>
snowstorms we've never had, dump it<lb/>
in the Tar River and acquire one of<lb/>
those wave-making machines they use<lb/>
at Arizona's beaches.<lb/>
Greenville also needs more people.<lb/>
Maybe some sort of culture exchange<lb/>
would be a good idea. Students who<lb/>
wanted to spend a week in New York<lb/>
City could change places with residents<lb/>
?2ST?? Villagc for "? weeks.<lb/>
It would add a whole new dimension to :<lb/>
ate here (and in New York)<lb/>
The heartache of summer in Green-1"<lb/>
2l?l? dcfcatcd-  important<lb/>
Amg is that we all work together - be'<lb/>
Sg, absUrd - but do<lb/>
Sylve<lb/>
A Re<lb/>
By JAY A ELI ion Kl<lb/>
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Netn<lb/>
NEW YORK (I p<lb/>
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Before the net I<lb/>
what the industry c<lb/>
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outline.<lb/>
Monday: The en:<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
7<lb/>
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ooms<lb/>
u and complaint by<lb/>
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e and local textbook<lb/>
ees equipped with<lb/>
? sts v: requirements.<lb/>
e method of patching<lb/>
ks he integrity of any<lb/>
- not to mention<lb/>
i ? often gets lost.<lb/>
rticularlj troublesome items<lb/>
rtually abandoned ?<lb/>
Fackson's famous<lb/>
'The Lottery" (too<lb/>
d the Merchant of Venice"<lb/>
Publishers have gone to<lb/>
to accomodate disparate<lb/>
s and varying state<lb/>
Walsh reported in the<lb/>
at in a chapter from<lb/>
i hich appears in Ginn<lb/>
grade reader "Flights of<lb/>
oquialisms have vanish-<lb/>
has been cleaned up;<lb/>
"honest Injun" has been<lb/>
 nd most references to boys<lb/>
ten changed to children<lb/>
 Perfect Day for Ice<lb/>
ncluded in Scott,<lb/>
1985 eighth grade an-<lb/>
il after the words "ice<lb/>
n deleted from the title<lb/>
about a trip to the ice-cream<lb/>
been eliminated. The reason,<lb/>
was California's "social<lb/>
ndelines" for textbooks,<lb/>
r against references to junk<lb/>
Graw Hill's seventh-rade<lb/>
ithology has expunged from<lb/>
Winkle" not only difficuit<lb/>
words here and there such<lb/>
bered but the reference to<lb/>
us and conciliatory" men<lb/>
me to "shrews" and "ter-<lb/>
wives.<lb/>
k publishers and school<lb/>
e become so accustomed to<lb/>
wdlerization that they ap-<lb/>
ime to forget it was even go-<lb/>
fhe Virginia state board of<lb/>
for one, had been happily<lb/>
disputed Scott, Foresman<lb/>
leries for years until a ninth<lb/>
his mother objected to its<lb/>
;atment of Shakespeare. As<lb/>
s, the good ones have always<lb/>
faith in their own judgment<lb/>
is suitable for their students<lb/>
e in the prepackaged selec-<lb/>
mass-market textbook<lb/>
Some have even taken ad-<lb/>
their books' flaws.<lb/>
aniel Blum's discovery, his<lb/>
iplied the students with the<lb/>
"Romeo and Juliet and<lb/>
he anthology's cuts in class.<lb/>
pen, censorship is a doomed<lb/>
for it stimulates precisely<lb/>
rous urge it set out to crush:<lb/>
rs:<lb/>
d<lb/>
summer have a lot in com-<lb/>
extremely noisy saunas,<lb/>
needs to be done.<lb/>
ution? Demand some enter-<lb/>
If Greenville does not pro-<lb/>
lenities of life in an exciting<lb/>
should be imported ? this is,<lb/>
the 20th century. No ocean?<lb/>
" one. Maybe someone could<lb/>
irplus roadsalt from all the<lb/>
is we've never had, dump it<lb/>
r River and acquire one of<lb/>
le-making machines they use<lb/>
Ys beaches.<lb/>
lie also needs more people,<lb/>
me sort of culture exchange<lb/>
a good idea. Students who<lb/>
spend a week in New York<lb/>
change places with residents<lb/>
hch Village for several weeks. -<lb/>
dd a whole new dimension to 5:<lb/>
fmd in New York),<lb/>
tache of summer in Green- l<lb/>
e defeated. The important-<lb/>
it we all work together ? be ?<lb/>
be absurd ? but do <lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
JUNE 5, 1985 Page 5<lb/>
Sylvester Stallone:<lb/>
A Real-Life 'Rocky'<lb/>
B JAY &amp; ELLIOTT KRAVETZ<lb/>
InlmatloBaJ Photo new,<lb/>
In Rambo: First Blood Part<lb/>
II, Sylvester Stallone<lb/>
returns to the character of John<lb/>
Rambo, the tough and determin-<lb/>
ed etnam war hero which he so<lb/>
excitingly portrayed in First<lb/>
Blood. His next project will be<lb/>
another return to an old<lb/>
character, Rocky Balboa in<lb/>
Rocky IV.<lb/>
"Rocky IV will take on inter-<lb/>
national overtones rather than<lb/>
more or less the Philadelphia<lb/>
area Stallone told us on the<lb/>
Vancouver set of Rocky IV. "I'll<lb/>
be fighting a Russian. In the<lb/>
Rocky movies we tend to simplify<lb/>
the complexities of getting two<lb/>
men into the ring. In a movie I<lb/>
just write it and he shows up into<lb/>
the ring. It's wonderful<lb/>
A week after this interview,<lb/>
Stallone began a publicity tour<lb/>
for Rambo, which ended with the<lb/>
actor being hospitalized in St.<lb/>
John's Hospital in Los Angeles<lb/>
with a sever case of the flu. Pro-<lb/>
duction will resume on Rocky IV<lb/>
shortly after his release.<lb/>
As Rambo, Stallone is again<lb/>
reunited with his former com-<lb/>
manding officer, Trautman,<lb/>
played by Richard Crenna.<lb/>
Released from prison, Rambo is<lb/>
asked to embark on a dangerous<lb/>
mission to locate American<lb/>
P.O.Ws in a Vietnamese jungle<lb/>
prison. In the aciton-packed<lb/>
adventure, Stallone has ample<lb/>
opportunity to demonstrate one<lb/>
of his pricipal fortes-the ability<lb/>
to get his audience rooting for the<lb/>
success of the underdog.<lb/>
"I've never been pushed to<lb/>
such a physical limit before in a<lb/>
movie said Stallone. "I insisted<lb/>
on doing my own stunts in the<lb/>
movie bacuse life without<lb/>
challenges would certinly be bor-<lb/>
ing<lb/>
A consummate actor, writer<lb/>
and director, Stallone, in less<lb/>
than ten years, has amply<lb/>
demonstrated his considerable<lb/>
and varied talents to the delight<lb/>
of the general public as well as his<lb/>
motion picture peers.<lb/>
"I think the day of the one-<lb/>
dimensional performers is draw-<lb/>
ing to an end he explained.<lb/>
'Today, actors have to be involv-<lb/>
ed in everything. The actor may<lb/>
turn in a fine performance, but<lb/>
six months later, when he sees it<lb/>
on the screen, it isn't the way he<lb/>
did it ? a wretched misinter-<lb/>
pretation of what he thought at<lb/>
the time. An important actor has<lb/>
to have the power to impose his<lb/>
ideas about the film to anyone<lb/>
connected with the filmmaking<lb/>
process<lb/>
Rocky, his first major role, not<lb/>
only set box office records, but<lb/>
won an Academy Award as "Best<lb/>
Picture of the Year also bring-<lb/>
ing Stallone Oscar nominations<lb/>
for "Best Actor" and "Best<lb/>
Screenplay Only Charles<lb/>
Chaplin and Orson Wells had<lb/>
ever been so honored.<lb/>
"I have a certain philosophy<lb/>
about movies he said. "I think<lb/>
we'll have even more of a revival<lb/>
of good, old-fashioned movies.<lb/>
There's a definite formula in<lb/>
reaching audiences: provide them<lb/>
with heros and heroines who pull<lb/>
themselves up by the bootstraps<lb/>
and out of the depths of<lb/>
despair<lb/>
Since that blockbuster,<lb/>
Stallone has continued to show<lb/>
his versatility in such films as<lb/>
Rocky II, F.I.S.T Paradise<lb/>
Alley, Victory, Mghthawks,<lb/>
Rocky III, First Blood and<lb/>
Rhinestone. He also directed<lb/>
John Travolta in Staying Alive,<lb/>
and co-wrote the screenplay for<lb/>
Rambo: First Blood Part II.<lb/>
'The use of the word superstar<lb/>
is the industry's, not mine he<lb/>
said. " I don't walk around<lb/>
thinking I'm a star. Webster's<lb/>
Dictionary describes a star as a<lb/>
ball of gas, and I think the word<lb/>
is inappropriate to describe ac-<lb/>
tors. Anyway, it's not me<lb/>
Born in New York City,<lb/>
Stallone grew up in the tough<lb/>
Hell's Kitchen area where self-<lb/>
reliance was the mark of survival.<lb/>
When he was only 11, his parents<lb/>
were divorced. As a youth, he<lb/>
was expelled from three schools<lb/>
as a troublemaker. At 16, he went<lb/>
to a special school for boys in<lb/>
suburban Philadelphia. Here, he<lb/>
began acting and became a star<lb/>
football player-thus embracing<lb/>
two of the things which have sus-<lb/>
tained him: sports and drama.<lb/>
"I was not an attractive<lb/>
child Stallone recalled. "I was<lb/>
sickly and even had rickets. My<lb/>
personality was abhorrent to<lb/>
other children, so I enjoyed my<lb/>
own company and did a lot of<lb/>
fantasizing. I didn't have a<lb/>
suitable artistic outlet.<lb/>
Everything came out in physical<lb/>
challenges, like leaping from roof<lb/>
to roof. I had all the sensibilities<lb/>
of a Quasimodo in those days<lb/>
After high school, Stallone<lb/>
spent the next two years instruc-<lb/>
ting at the American College of<lb/>
Switzerland. It was here that he<lb/>
became serious about his ambi-<lb/>
tion to become an actor.<lb/>
'T was told by my teachers that<lb/>
my brain was dormant, and I<lb/>
took it to heart and channeled a<lb/>
tremendous amount of energy in-<lb/>
to my physical development he<lb/>
recalled. "My father once told<lb/>
me, 'You weren't born with<lb/>
much of a brain, so you'd better<lb/>
develop you body "<lb/>
On his return to the U.S he<lb/>
enrolled as a drama major at the<lb/>
University of Miami, gaining ex-<lb/>
perience as an actor and ten-<lb/>
tatively taking his First steps as a<lb/>
writer. Only three credits short of<lb/>
graduation, Stallone left school,<lb/>
determined to seek an acting<lb/>
career in New York.<lb/>
"I knew 1 was a natural actor<lb/>
when I came on stage and truned<lb/>
a tragedy (Arthur Miller's<lb/>
"Death of a Salesman") into a<lb/>
comedy sensation he recalled.<lb/>
"I was very comfortable and for<lb/>
the first time I was doing<lb/>
something not illegal and soul-<lb/>
satisfying<lb/>
But, it was not as easy as he<lb/>
hoped. Although he landed a few<lb/>
stage parts, Stallone found he<lb/>
had to support himself with such<lb/>
odd jobs as cleaning the lion<lb/>
cages at the Central Park Zoo<lb/>
and theatre usher.<lb/>
"I had been flatly rejected by<lb/>
every agent in New York City and<lb/>
lost out on what seemed like<lb/>
5,000 auditions Stallone recall-<lb/>
ed. "I still can't laugh about it; it<lb/>
was a cruel experience.<lb/>
"When I didn't think I was go-<lb/>
ing to make it as an actor, I<lb/>
though I'd better start learning<lb/>
about writing he continued. 1<lb/>
kind of educated myself. Part of<lb/>
it was just to kill time, but I was<lb/>
broke then, living in New York,<lb/>
and the library was warm and<lb/>
there were plenty of books to<lb/>
read<lb/>
Increasingly he turned to<lb/>
writing, churning out screenplays<lb/>
at a phenomenal rate and waiting<lb/>
for his big chance. That oppor-<lb/>
tunity Finally came in 1974, when<lb/>
he was cast in The Lords of Flat-<lb/>
bush, along with other unknowns<lb/>
such as Henry Winkler, Susan<lb/>
Blakely and Perry King.<lb/>
"Before Rocky, I cleaned out<lb/>
lion's cages he explained. "I<lb/>
wanted to be shepherd, and if I<lb/>
found an opening for Viking, I<lb/>
would have loved to do that. So<lb/>
you can see, fantasy is very im-<lb/>
portant to me, but reality has a<lb/>
way of intruding in my life<lb/>
With the money earned from<lb/>
that film, he left New York for<lb/>
Hollywood, where he began once<lb/>
again the incessant rounds of<lb/>
casting offices, managing to get a<lb/>
few small parts in films and on<lb/>
television. During that period,<lb/>
every spare moment was spent<lb/>
writing.<lb/>
"Writers are the ones that have<lb/>
more insight than anyone else<lb/>
about their scripts he said.<lb/>
"Unfortunately, writers tend to<lb/>
Sylvester Stallone<lb/>
be more introverted than anyone<lb/>
else, and it is their point of view<lb/>
that tends to get lost. You<lb/>
couldn't call me an introverted<lb/>
writer. I try to write things that<lb/>
are colorful<lb/>
On his 29th birthday, in 1975,<lb/>
Stallone's wife presented him<lb/>
with a small birthday cake and<lb/>
told him to make a wish on it.<lb/>
"My wish was to get us out<lb/>
he recalled. "I suddenly realized<lb/>
that the only way I was ever going<lb/>
to accomplish that was through<lb/>
creative discipline<lb/>
To that end, he turned once<lb/>
more to writing. He had recently<lb/>
seen the Muhammad Ali-Chuck<lb/>
Wepner Fight in which Wepner,<lb/>
widely regarded as a second-rate<lb/>
contender, held on for 15 rounds,<lb/>
becoming one of the few to go the<lb/>
JAY KRAVETZ<lb/>
Intertat'onai :3no,o Nen-<lb/>
distance with Ali. Stallone took<lb/>
the fight and created a stor<lb/>
around it, complete with a<lb/>
character for whom "going the<lb/>
distance" meant more than<lb/>
winning a fight.<lb/>
"Because I'm an extrovert. 1<lb/>
don't have to run around in<lb/>
circles, torturing myself wonder-<lb/>
ing if I have a good idea he<lb/>
said. "I just throw it out there<lb/>
and see if it works<lb/>
Several producer- offered to<lb/>
buy his screenplay but wanted a<lb/>
big name for the title role.<lb/>
Stallone refused.<lb/>
In spite of a bank : . . . e of<lb/>
barely SI00.00, Stallone held out<lb/>
for himself and won.<lb/>
"I make my living with mv<lb/>
mind he said "My muscles "i<lb/>
consider merely machinery to<lb/>
carry mv mind<lb/>
Networks Prepare Fall '85 Line Up<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) ? The<lb/>
three networks have announced<lb/>
the new lineups for the 1985-86<lb/>
season, which gives them all sum-<lb/>
mer to make changes in the bat-<lb/>
ting order.<lb/>
Before the networks indulge in<lb/>
what the industry calls fine tun-<lb/>
ing the schedule, here is the basic<lb/>
outline.<lb/>
Monday: The entire schedule<lb/>
remains the same as last year - the<lb/>
only unchanged night of the<lb/>
week. CBS has a strong lineup<lb/>
with "Scarecrow and Mrs<lb/>
King "Kate &amp; Allie<lb/>
"Newhart" and "Cagney and<lb/>
Lacey but these shows can be<lb/>
beaten by a stronger movie on<lb/>
NBC, which is preceded by<lb/>
"TV's Bloopers and Practical<lb/>
Jokes ABC has "Hardcastles<lb/>
and McCormick" and football.<lb/>
Tuesday: This is one of NBC's<lb/>
strongest nights - "The<lb/>
A-Team "Riptide" and "Rem-<lb/>
ington Steele" - so the lineup<lb/>
stands pat.<lb/>
FUm producerdirector Stephen Spielberg, is set to produce ?<lb/>
weeUy half-hoar anthology for NBC called "Amazing Storks<lb/>
CBS has scheduled<lb/>
"Hometown" from 8-9 p.m. - a<lb/>
1980's comedy series, inspired by<lb/>
the movie The Big Chill, about<lb/>
what has become of some people<lb/>
who went to college in the Ws.<lb/>
It may be too sophisticated for<lb/>
the 8 p.m. time slot. CBS follows<lb/>
with a Tuesday movie, which will<lb/>
be pitched to appeal to women.<lb/>
ABC has imported "Diff'rent<lb/>
Stokes" from NBC at 8 p.m a<lb/>
move that drew a cool reception<lb/>
when announced at the ABC af-<lb/>
filiates meeting in New York. It is<lb/>
followed by "He's the Mayor a<lb/>
new sitcom about a black mayor,<lb/>
"Who's the Boss? "Growing<lb/>
Pains another new sitcom, with<lb/>
Alan Thicke as a psychologist<lb/>
practicing at home so he can care<lb/>
for the kids while his wife works,<lb/>
and "Moonlighting<lb/>
Tuesday night looks safe for<lb/>
NBC unless CBS mounts a really<lb/>
good movie.<lb/>
Wednesday: This is ABC's<lb/>
night, thanks to "Dynasty" and<lb/>
"Hotel which get a new 8 p.m.<lb/>
lead in next fall with "The In-<lb/>
siders an action-adventure<lb/>
series about two maverick under-<lb/>
cover reporters.<lb/>
NBC presents its 'two-hour<lb/>
sermon" - "Highway to<lb/>
Heaven" ana Robert Blake's new<lb/>
"Hell Town followed by "St.<lb/>
Elsewhere The sermon shows<lb/>
have appeal, but aren't in a class<lb/>
with "Dynasty<lb/>
CBS has an all new Wednesday<lb/>
lineup: "Stir Crazy loosely<lb/>
based on the film of the same<lb/>
name; "Charlie and Company<lb/>
starring Flip Wilson and Gladys<lb/>
Knight in a middle class black sit-<lb/>
com ripped off from "The Cosby<lb/>
Show "George Burns' Comedy<lb/>
Week an anthology spiced<lb/>
by Burns' monologues, and "The<lb/>
Equalizer a stylish adventure<lb/>
starring Edward Woodward. The<lb/>
network can't do worse than last<lb/>
year's weekly Wednesday<lb/>
disaster.<lb/>
Thursday: NBC sticks with<lb/>
"The Cosby Show "Families<lb/>
Ties "Cheers "Night Court"<lb/>
Mr. T<lb/>
and "Hill Street Blues CBS<lb/>
sticks with "Magnum "Simon<lb/>
&amp; Simon" and "Knots<lb/>
Landing ABC goes with "The<lb/>
Fall Guy "Dynasty II: The<lb/>
Colbys" and "20-20 The<lb/>
"Dynasty" spinoff will be an ex-<lb/>
pensive gamble.<lb/>
Friday: CBS owns Friday,<lb/>
thanks to "Dallas" and a<lb/>
weakening "Falcon Crest The<lb/>
night has a new 8 p.m. opener<lb/>
with great possibilities ? "The<lb/>
Twilight Zone NBC opens with<lb/>
Knight Rider followed by<lb/>
"Misfits of Science about some<lb/>
bizarre superheroes, including a<lb/>
rock star who can shoot lightning<lb/>
out of his fingertips. NBC's Fri-<lb/>
day winds up with "Miami<lb/>
Vice<lb/>
ABC offers a comedy lineup ?<lb/>
"Webster "Mr. Belvedere<lb/>
"Benson "Mr. Sunshine" ?<lb/>
followed by a new cops and<lb/>
gangster series, "Familv<lb/>
Honor "Mr. Sunshine" is<lb/>
about an irascible blind professor<lb/>
? a funny show but a hard com-<lb/>
edy premise to sell.<lb/>
Saturday: CBS caters to the<lb/>
Saturday night movie habit,<lb/>
following "Airwolf' with movies<lb/>
geared toward a male audience.<lb/>
ABC has moved "Love Boat" to<lb/>
10 p.m reserving the 9 p.m. slot<lb/>
for Robert Wagner as a jet-<lb/>
setting insurance investigator,<lb/>
"J.G. Culver At 8 p.m<lb/>
there's "Hollywood Beat a<lb/>
"Miami Vice" ripoff gone west.<lb/>
NBC opens with "Gimmie a<lb/>
Break "The Facts of Life<lb/>
then a really funny new sitcom<lb/>
called "The Golden Girls starr-<lb/>
ing Bea Arthur, Betty White and<lb/>
Rue McClanahan, and "227<lb/>
another black middle class com-<lb/>
edy, starring Maria Gibbs.<lb/>
"Hunter" ends the evening.<lb/>
Sunday: CBS sticks with its<lb/>
high-rated "60 Minutes<lb/>
"Murder, She Wrote "Crazy<lb/>
Like a Fox" and "Trapper John,<lb/>
M.D ABC has "Ripley's<lb/>
Believe It Or Not a new<lb/>
action-adventure show called<lb/>
"MacGyver and its Sunday<lb/>
movie.<lb/>
NBC also has a Sunday movie.<lb/>
It starts the evening with "Punky<lb/>
Brewster" and "Silver Spoons<lb/>
Next come two new and intrigu-<lb/>
ing half-hour anthology shows ?<lb/>
"Amzazing Stories produced<lb/>
by Steven Spielberg, and an up-<lb/>
dated version of the original<lb/>
stories from "Alfred<lb/>
Hitchcock<lb/>
That's the new season as an-<lb/>
nounced in May, but as surely as<lb/>
April showers bring May flowers,<lb/>
May schedules give nay to revised<lb/>
editions.<lb/>
For entertainment this week.<lb/>
Hendrix Theatre is once<lb/>
again the place to be. Wednesday<lb/>
night the movie Shampoo will be<lb/>
playing, and the following Mon-<lb/>
day night, The Jerk is the<lb/>
featured film.<lb/>
The movie Shampoo is a com-<lb/>
edy based on the world of an ac-<lb/>
complished high style hairdresser<lb/>
in Hollywood who is just as ac-<lb/>
complished in seducing women<lb/>
and romantically juggling his<lb/>
clients. Warren Beatty stars as<lb/>
the seductive hairdresser named<lb/>
George.<lb/>
The climax of the story occurs<lb/>
when Beatty's clients (Julie<lb/>
Christie, Goldie Hawn, and Lee<lb/>
Grant) converge at a party he<lb/>
happens to attend. At that point.<lb/>
he learns of the true perils of Don<lb/>
Juan-ing and his fashionable<lb/>
world begins to crumble.<lb/>
On Monday night, the cool,<lb/>
sophisticated comedy of Sham-<lb/>
poo gives way to the outrageous,<lb/>
off-the-wall antics of The Jerk.<lb/>
Steve Martin is hilarious in this<lb/>
rags to riches to rags to  you<lb/>
guessed it  riches again story.<lb/>
He plays the simple minded<lb/>
Navin Johnson who is the white,<lb/>
adopted son of a black<lb/>
sharecropper.<lb/>
The fun begins when he recon-<lb/>
ciles himself to the fact that he<lb/>
must stay this color forever and<lb/>
sets out to find his identity.<lb/>
Along the way he bumbles<lb/>
himself into creating a fortune<lb/>
for he and his girlfriend (Ber-<lb/>
nadette Peters).<lb/>
Both films are at 7 p.m. and<lb/>
are free to ECU students ?d<lb/>
guest with a valid ECU ID and<lb/>
ECU faculty, staff and<lb/>
dependents with their ECU ID's<lb/>
ytm ?n ?ct? iu nim<lb/>
M I<lb/>
<lb/>
- m ? I ?<lb/>
 ?ii m<lb/>
<pb facs="00057717_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JUNE 5, 1985<lb/>
HOWS YOUR VV'<lb/>
DKAutNO I THINK W?<lb/>
PROGRESS LM6ETTING V<lb/>
INS UN' THERE COMRAPE<lb/>
INSTRUCTOR.<lb/>
Continued From Page 4<lb/>
YOU ARE INPEEP1 WHAT o<lb/>
A REMARKABLY CONTR0U?P v<lb/>
REAIPERJN6. YOURMOPULA V<lb/>
WNS FAIRLY RIPPLE ACROSS <lb/>
TUB PA6E'<lb/>
YOUR APPRBClA TION (k<lb/>
ANATOMY 15 FLAWLESS<lb/>
EVEN YOUR THUMBNAIL<lb/>
SKE TCHES AT THE TORRES I A,<lb/>
A MASTERY OF Fl6<lb/>
URE PRAWIN6'<lb/>
IN FACT I THINh<lb/>
YOURL RIAPY TO Oh MO,<lb/>
START PRAlAllNb COMRAPt<lb/>
TRACTORS I AM NOT<lb/>
WORTHY'<lb/>
A PLEASIN6 SENSE OF BALANCE<lb/>
ANPPROfVRTlON LOOSELY RE<lb/>
OEZEV, BUT All IS IN HARMONY<lb/>
HICBLY' PONE.COMRAPE<lb/>
ITJUhT SOMEWPY<lb/>
CAME TOME ?l ?t<lb/>
T CALL IT POLIO.<lb/>
LU&amp;ISM"<lb/>
i wADerijim<lb/>
mAMJEV TO TELL<lb/>
YOU HOW NATURAL<lb/>
W6MC&amp;Vll<lb/>
tVP YOUR POSES<lb/>
THANK YOU.<lb/>
COMRAPt<lb/>
I'VE SEEN A LOT OF WESTERN<lb/>
MOVIES LIKE LASHPANCS"<lb/>
ANP"SPRIN6BREAK" SO THAT'S<lb/>
HOW I KNOW HOW TO PUT MY<lb/>
30PYINTO POSITIONS OF TOTAL<lb/>
HARMONY '<lb/>
7<lb/>
 YOURL SORT OF<lb/>
A LOVE 60PPESS PONT<lb/>
AREN'r YOU. 1ELL lHE<lb/>
COMRAPt'? OTHERS<lb/>
C5&amp;'ri&amp;a-<lb/>
Man-O-Stick<lb/>
BY JARRELL &amp; JOHNSON<lb/>
Walkin' The Plank<lb/>
BY A GUY<lb/>
VtCY.SAHDY.CooL,<lb/>
PAtNflNfr<lb/>
X esf&amp;iAuy ukc iw yo?<lb/>
HAVE iMdLJDEX) fcocfcS IMT0<lb/>
Vl<lb/>
ase You to?KXr tuact 6&amp;ftg.<lb/>
PR?5gA3rr?i -THE eH?t?KAk-<lb/>
0fc Mte Yo; Q&amp;eb&amp;b fc?<lb/>
0 lr4A?rrfS-riAD0r4WrV of<lb/>
1WE K?CK5"Wrm rf5 4YfA80UVl<lb/>
T2? PAuOT KDCV.<lb/>
Classifieds<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Room<lb/>
mate wanted as soon as possible to<lb/>
share a two bedroom apartment at<lb/>
Oakmont Square. Private Room,<lb/>
pool, tennis courts, laundry<lb/>
facilities. Call 756-8503 after 6:30.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: To share<lb/>
2 tedroom townhouse with 1 other<lb/>
person. mile from ECU on 5th St.<lb/>
$145 per month plus utilities. Heat in-<lb/>
cluded in rent. 830-1306.<lb/>
NEEDED: Art student with silk<lb/>
screen-print background. Call<lb/>
756 8801.<lb/>
ROOMMATED WANTED: Need<lb/>
female roommate. Private room,<lb/>
AC, near campus, $107, one third<lb/>
phone, utilities, cable. Must be neat.<lb/>
Nonsmoker. No pets. Call Lori or<lb/>
Diana: 752-1001.<lb/>
NEEDED: Seeking responsible<lb/>
roommate to share B unit at Ring-<lb/>
gold Towers for the summer. Com-<lb/>
pletely furnished, AC, accessories<lb/>
included. Call weekdays before 3 PM<lb/>
757-6366. Ask for Dan.<lb/>
NEEDED: Part-time instrument<lb/>
man-party chief and draftsperson<lb/>
for local surveying company. Ex-<lb/>
perience required. Call 752-5998 for<lb/>
appointement.<lb/>
NEEDED: America's largest inven-<lb/>
tory co. needs H.S. graduates to take<lb/>
inventory in the Greenville area.<lb/>
Work 10-20 hours per week.<lb/>
Weeknights and weekends. Start at<lb/>
$4.50 and hour. We will train. Call<lb/>
collect on May 30th between 10 AM<lb/>
and 3 PM, 787-0591.<lb/>
HOUSE FOR RENT: House for<lb/>
rent: 6 bedroom house near univer-<lb/>
sity, 305 E. 14th St. Summer or long<lb/>
term rental. To be renovated. $350.<lb/>
758-5299.<lb/>
MALE ROOMMATE NEEDED:<lb/>
Needed for 2 bedroom Apt. Call<lb/>
after 3 PM, 757-3131.<lb/>
VIDEOS, VIDEOS, VIDEOS: Want<lb/>
to videotape a party, wedding, or<lb/>
other memorable occation&amp; Call<lb/>
Tamara after 3 PM at 758-9016 for<lb/>
more information.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
MISC<lb/>
BICYCLES PAINTED: CALL JIM<lb/>
FOR MORE INFORMATION.<lb/>
758-3861.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Men's 23 " Univega<lb/>
10-Speed. 9 Months old excellent con<lb/>
dition, $120. Call 757 3517 after 3.<lb/>
FOR SALE: RCA VHS VCR for $200.<lb/>
Pioneer sx-780 receiver-55 wch<lb/>
$125. Hitachi HT-405 turntable, DD<lb/>
with new ADC cartridge- $110. I<lb/>
negotiate. 752 8483.<lb/>
FOR SALE: Commodore VIC20<lb/>
computer with all hookups and some<lb/>
extras including: 6 game tapes,<lb/>
cassette storage recorderplayer,<lb/>
joystick, modem with terminal pro-<lb/>
gram cassette, Programer's Aid,<lb/>
memory expansion cartridge and<lb/>
reference manuals. $200. Call An-<lb/>
thony at 757 6366 or 752-0291.<lb/>
Tooth<lb/>
i4cnmv a iT?s.<lb/>
wai, iic mh fmmartMnmiSt<lb/>
RiAMG W? COMIC1 $HlF$, ST0UN AM G0LP,<lb/>
SOT f(X 15 UWS OR FOUGHT MN0Nf CT<lb/>
a6V w V6W smr, mm, m m? isrr<lb/>
mi nm arm<lb/>
ov RPOOKS<lb/>
Summer Student Specials<lb/>
MonToeWed.Thur.Fri.&amp;Sat<lb/>
SpaghettiCountry Cookin'LazagnaSeafoodRib<lb/>
$3.95$3.95$3.95$3.95$595<lb/>
All specials include 2 vegetables and fresh baked rolls.<lb/>
Other daily specials available.<lb/>
Show student I.D. and recieve 50C off.<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
Deli<lb/>
w<lb/>
The Plaza Mai!<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
756-4024<lb/>
The Plaza Deli located at<lb/>
THE PLAZA<lb/>
Offers a New Concept In Deli Foods<lb/>
We Offer<lb/>
Fresh Squeezed Lemonade and Orangade<lb/>
Daily Specials Orders to Go<lb/>
Happy Hour 5 til Closing<lb/>
Good Music Good Times<lb/>
10 AM-9 PM Mon. thru Sat. 756-4024<lb/>
Are We Having Fun Yet?<lb/>
?????? - ? ? ? ?)? ? ??<lb/>
B3S3S3SSS3S3S3S38S3S3S:<lb/>
ww<lb/>
HOME COOKED FOOD<lb/>
3<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
Free desert<lb/>
with purchase of any regular size plate<lb/>
LARGE PLATE with all you can eat vegetables and<lb/>
a big serving of meat for $4.07 plus tax.<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS $2.25plus tax &amp; beverage.<lb/>
512 E. 14th St. Near Dorms<lb/>
Call for Take Outs ? 752-0476<lb/>
OPEN 7 DAYS A WEEK 11 AM - 8 PM<lb/>
'yvsy'yyxyyj<lb/>
SSSsSsSSSS<lb/>
?'??"???? n<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Movie: Shampoo<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
Movie: The Jerk<lb/>
7:00 p.m. Hendrix Theatre<lb/>
I.Ds Made<lb/>
11:00 a.m. - 12 noon Multi Purpose Rm<lb/>
Wed. June 5<lb/>
Mon. June 10<lb/>
Tues. June 11<lb/>
REACHING OUT TO SERVE YOU<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
Mr<lb/>
5C5C5f:5C5JC5KC5K5c5fC5K ?<lb/>
!<lb/>
s<lb/>
JX'l Mikehristoph<lb/>
.eague team. The ?ihei<lb/>
?<lb/>
Ml<lb/>
McNei<lb/>
NCA<lb/>
B RK KMc( OR<lb/>
; ECl tracl<lb/>
frc- - 1<lb/>
look foui<lb/>
00-metc<lb/>
D!x?? I tract<lb/>
ireekc ? d n An i<lb/>
His fourth p .<lb/>
earned him V I<lb/>
as the top<lb/>
even: are named<lb/>
America -<lb/>
' McNeil finish<lb/>
Qualifying ht<lb/>
10.2" <lb/>
In the final- McNe<lb/>
to a I<lb/>
for his fourtl <lb/>
Scott of the Ui<lb/>
pessee finished<lb/>
100-meters with a I<lb/>
of 10.02 seconds C I<lb/>
rtissouri captured sec<lb/>
with a time ol<lb/>
Thoma- Jefferson<lb/>
edged Mcneil by th <lb/>
second, c<lb/>
with a time<lb/>
In the overall<lb/>
lion. Ark 1<lb/>
title with 61 pom W<lb/>
State was second -<lb/>
followed h Ba<lb/>
point<lb/>
ECU finish d<lb/>
with<lb/>
McNeil -a a- the<lb/>
track-ter compel -<lb/>
Finishing<lb/>
NCAA a- v-e <lb/>
Ail-America<lb/>
doe-r<lb/>
legiate trac ?<lb/>
Local<lb/>
B DAVID McGIM<lb/>
Mmf? Unlr<lb/>
Thi<lb/>
difficult. gru<lb/>
ing sports in existence<lb/>
bine- swimming,<lb/>
running in an al<lb/>
race to the finish.<lb/>
It take- a sp. <lb/>
cept the demand-<lb/>
make- upon the human<lb/>
and p-che. The ersi<lb/>
quired for the -port d<lb/>
tremendous amount <lb/>
willpower and stamina.<lb/>
One of the unique thij<lb/>
ding the -port is that j 04<lb/>
compete against the<lb/>
ticipant ou competj<lb/>
yourself as well to see<lb/>
much pain and suffer<lb/>
bod can take.<lb/>
In the first leg. col<lb/>
swim one mile. A- soa<lb/>
exit the water, thev hoi<lb/>
and ride 20 miles. If th;<lb/>
kill them, they finish<lb/>
kilometer (6.2 miles) ru<lb/>
People compete in<lb/>
on different lex els. For<lb/>
goal is merely to finis<lb/>
strive to cut their times<lb/>
possible and hopefully<lb/>
rank among the world'<lb/>
Barry Scott and NolaJ<lb/>
are two Greenville<lb/>
from the latter categol<lb/>
who is a junior at Q<lb/>
Gaubert recently comp?<lb/>
Youth Unlimited Trial<lb/>
High Point, NC, wl<lb/>
finished second an;<lb/>
respectively in their agt<lb/>
The event is one of t<lb/>
and most competitive ii<lb/>
<lb/>
 ? ?<lb/>
 mm w?w<lb/>
f i?iw a n ?<lb/>
?IMHk<lb/>
<pb facs="00057717_0007"/><lb/>
?v PonpKS<lb/>
. ISN'T ?<lb/>
m mi<lb/>
pedals<lb/>
Fn &amp;Sot<lb/>
$5 95<lb/>
?f( )(tS.<lb/>
? <lb/>
3&amp;383S3SSH<lb/>
bk . id<lb/>
;?<lb/>
<lb/>
June 5<lb/>
June 10<lb/>
June 11<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
<lb/>
THE EASTCAROI IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JUNE 5, 1985<lb/>
Page 7<lb/>
ECU Paces All-EC AC Team<lb/>
With Four Players Selected<lb/>
Kl's Mike<lb/>
I eague learn<lb/>
Christopher, who went 10-3 this season, was one of four Pirates to make the ECAC-South All<lb/>
The other Pirates honored were Chris Bradberry, Greg Hardison and Winfred Johnson.<lb/>
ECU placed four players on<lb/>
the 1985 all ECAC-South<lb/>
baseball team announced yester-<lb/>
day, the most of any school in the<lb/>
league.<lb/>
The Pirates earning all ECAC-<lb/>
South honors were junior out-<lb/>
fielder Chris Bradberry, junior<lb/>
infielder Greg Hardison,<lb/>
sophomore pitcher Mike<lb/>
Christopher and junior first-<lb/>
baseman-designated hitter Win-<lb/>
fred Johnson.<lb/>
Johnson, who earned a spot on<lb/>
the all-league team as a<lb/>
designated hitter, finished the<lb/>
season hitting a school record<lb/>
.432 while also setting season<lb/>
school records for hits (73),<lb/>
RBI's (75), home runs (22) and<lb/>
total bases (150).<lb/>
Bradberry, from Wilson, NC,<lb/>
also ended the season batting<lb/>
over .400 (.405) as he and<lb/>
Johnson became the first two<lb/>
players in ECU history to hit over<lb/>
.400 with 97 or more at bats.<lb/>
Hardison, from Farmville,<lb/>
finished the season hitting .316,<lb/>
as the Pirates' shortstop set a<lb/>
season standard for doubles with<lb/>
18.<lb/>
Christopher, from Dinwiddie,<lb/>
VA, paced the Pirate pitching<lb/>
staff with a 10-3 record. His 10<lb/>
wins equalled the school mark for<lb/>
wins in a season. Christopher<lb/>
also set a school record for most<lb/>
consecutive wins as he won his<lb/>
first 10 starts of the season.<lb/>
This was the second con-<lb/>
secutive vear Johson and Har-<lb/>
dison have earned all ECAC-<lb/>
South honors. The selection of<lb/>
Christopher and Bradberry to the<lb/>
all-league team was the first time<lb/>
for both players.<lb/>
All four players were in-<lb/>
strumental in leading the Pirates<lb/>
to a 32-14 record, and their se-<lb/>
cond consecutive ECAC-South<lb/>
regular-season championship.<lb/>
The Pirates' 32 victories was the<lb/>
second highest total in the<lb/>
school's history, and could be im-<lb/>
proved upon next season as all<lb/>
four should return.<lb/>
Bradberry, Hardison and<lb/>
Johnson all will return for their<lb/>
senior seasons, while Christopher<lb/>
will be back for his junior cam-<lb/>
paign.<lb/>
McNeil Runs to Fourth In<lb/>
NCAAs; Named All-America<lb/>
B RICK McC ORMAC<lb/>
sports r ditor<lb/>
ECU trackster Lee McNeil, a<lb/>
freshman from St. Pauls, NC,<lb/>
look fourth place in the<lb/>
100-meter dash in the NCAA<lb/>
Division 1 track meet held last<lb/>
weekend in Austin, Texas.<lb/>
His fourth place finish ovei-J<lb/>
earned him All-America honors<lb/>
as the top six finishers in each<lb/>
event are named to the All-<lb/>
America squad.<lb/>
McNeil finished second in his<lb/>
qualifying heat with a time of<lb/>
10.2" seconds.<lb/>
In the finals McNeil improved<lb/>
to a 10.11 finish, which was good<lb/>
for his fourth place finish. Terry<lb/>
Scott o the University of Ten-<lb/>
nessee finished first in the<lb/>
JOO-meters with a winning time<lb/>
o 10.02 seconds. Chidi Imoh of<lb/>
Missouri captured second place<lb/>
with a time of 10.04 seconds.<lb/>
Thomas Jefferson of Kent State<lb/>
edged Mcneil by three tenths ot a<lb/>
second, capturing third place<lb/>
with a time of 10.08.<lb/>
In the overall team competi-<lb/>
tion. Arkansas ran away with the<lb/>
title with 61 points. Washington<lb/>
State was second with 46 points,<lb/>
followed by Baylor with 37<lb/>
points.<lb/>
ECU finished in a tie for 43rd,<lb/>
with a total of five points.<lb/>
McNeil was the only ECU<lb/>
trackster competing in the event.<lb/>
1 inishing in fourth place in the<lb/>
NCAAs, as well as being named<lb/>
America is something that<lb/>
doesn'l happen to very many col-<lb/>
late tracksters, and even fewer<lb/>
in their first year of competition.<lb/>
McNeil said he didn't expect to<lb/>
do so well, especially in his first<lb/>
year at the college level.<lb/>
"It has really suprised me<lb/>
McNeil said. "The older guys on<lb/>
lee McNeil<lb/>
the team have helped me out all<lb/>
year, to keep me running right<lb/>
Going into the finals, McNeil<lb/>
and Pirate coach Bill Carson felt<lb/>
the key to his (McNeil's) perfor-<lb/>
mance would depend on how well<lb/>
he got out of the blocks.<lb/>
"Coach Carson told me that if<lb/>
I got out of the blocks pretty-<lb/>
good, I would place high<lb/>
McNeil said. "1 was a little ner-<lb/>
vous in both races, but 1 got a<lb/>
good jump out of the blocks, and<lb/>
just ran pretty good<lb/>
Saying he ran "pretty good"<lb/>
has to be one of the<lb/>
understatements of the year.<lb/>
McNeil's 10.17 finish in his quali-<lb/>
fying heat was not only a school<lb/>
record, but was the fastest time<lb/>
ever turned in by a collegiate run-<lb/>
ner in the state.<lb/>
McNeil then lowered his new<lb/>
record by six more seconds in the<lb/>
finals. The previous best was<lb/>
10.18 run by N. C. State's<lb/>
Harvey McSwain.<lb/>
"It was an outstanding effort<lb/>
on the young man's part ECU<lb/>
coach Bill Carson said. "I really<lb/>
felt, given the right cir-<lb/>
cumstances, Lee could have even<lb/>
done better. The runner in lane<lb/>
seven next to him in lane eight<lb/>
false started, so he (McNeil) real-<lb/>
ly didn't have anyone to run<lb/>
against. His first 40 (meters)<lb/>
might not have been as good as<lb/>
they could have been ? but he<lb/>
reallv turned it on the rest of the<lb/>
way<lb/>
Carson was extremely pleased<lb/>
by McNeil's record setting per-<lb/>
formance, especially after the<lb/>
team's tragic auto accident early<lb/>
in the season.<lb/>
"There were 41 sprinters there<lb/>
and Lee finished fourth. It was a<lb/>
great performance Carson<lb/>
said. "He was the only who kept<lb/>
running after the accident and<lb/>
was forced to practice by himself<lb/>
? he deserves all the credit<lb/>
Next on the agenda for McNeil<lb/>
is a chance to compete in the<lb/>
Track Athletic Conference meet.<lb/>
A good performance there would<lb/>
land him a slot on the South team<lb/>
in the National Sports Festival<lb/>
later this summer.<lb/>
Boyette, Young And Graves<lb/>
Make Academic All-America<lb/>
Three members of the 1985<lb/>
ECU softball team have been<lb/>
selected as Academic Ail-<lb/>
Americans by a vote of the Col-<lb/>
lege Sports Information Direc-<lb/>
tors of America. The ballot was<lb/>
an at-large selection including<lb/>
several spring sports.<lb/>
Junior Stacy Boyette was the<lb/>
only repeat performer among the<lb/>
trio. The native of Hopewell, Va,<lb/>
copped first team honors for the<lb/>
second consecutive year. Boyette<lb/>
had a record of 6-7 during the<lb/>
year and was also the third<lb/>
leading hitter for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates. Boyette has maintained a<lb/>
3.98 grade point average while<lb/>
majoring in chemistry at ECU.<lb/>
Pam Young, a Senior from<lb/>
Ferndale, Md, was named to the<lb/>
honorable mention category.<lb/>
Young led the Lady Pirate pit-<lb/>
ching staff with a 16-5 record<lb/>
while finishing fifth on the squad<lb/>
with a .210 batting average.<lb/>
Young is a physical education<lb/>
major with a 3.78 grade point<lb/>
average.<lb/>
Robin Graves, of Chesterfield,<lb/>
Va, was also named honorable<lb/>
mention. Graves is a pitcher and<lb/>
first baseman for the Lady<lb/>
Pirates and compiled an even<lb/>
.200 batting average. She drove<lb/>
in 16 runs during the season, the<lb/>
second highest total on the team.<lb/>
Also a physical education major,<lb/>
Graves has a 3.97 grade point<lb/>
average.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates are coached<lb/>
by Sue Manahan and finished the<lb/>
vear with a 24-17-1 record.<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
f<lb/>
4<lb/>
4<lb/>
c<lb/>
J<lb/>
Lady Pirate pitcher Pam Young was selected honorable mention<lb/>
Academic All-America for her performance this past season.<lb/>
Local Triathietes Training Hard For USTS<lb/>
B DAVID McGINNESS<lb/>
stiff Writer<lb/>
The triathlon is one of the most<lb/>
difficult, grueling and challeng-<lb/>
ing sports in existence. It com-<lb/>
bines swimming, bicycling and<lb/>
running in an all out continuous<lb/>
race to the finish.<lb/>
It takes a special breed to ac-<lb/>
cept the demands this sport<lb/>
makes upon the human anatomy<lb/>
and psyche. The versatility re-<lb/>
quired for the sport calls for a<lb/>
tremendous amount of individual<lb/>
willpower and stamina.<lb/>
One of the unique things regar-<lb/>
ding the sport is that you not only<lb/>
compete against the other par-<lb/>
ticipants, you compete against<lb/>
yourself as well to see just how<lb/>
much pain and suffering your<lb/>
body can take.<lb/>
In the first leg, competitors<lb/>
swim one mile. As soon as they<lb/>
exit the water, they hop on bikes<lb/>
and ride 20 miles. If that doesn't<lb/>
kill them, they finish with a 10<lb/>
kilometer (6.2 miles) run.<lb/>
People compete in triathlons<lb/>
on different levels. For some, the<lb/>
goal is merely to finish. Others<lb/>
strive to cut their times as low as<lb/>
possible and hopefully, one day<lb/>
rank among the world's best.<lb/>
Barry Scott and Nolan Gaubcrt<lb/>
are two Greenville w.a. ?<lb/>
from the latter category. Scott,<lb/>
who is a junior at ECU, and<lb/>
Gaubert recently competed in the<lb/>
Youth Unlimited Triathalon in<lb/>
High Point, NC, where they<lb/>
finished second and fourth<lb/>
respectively in their age groups.<lb/>
The event is one of the largest<lb/>
and most competitive in the state.<lb/>
Triathietes came from all over the<lb/>
United States to compete.<lb/>
Scott Molina, of San Diego,<lb/>
ranked tnathlete in the world.<lb/>
Scott and Gaubert finished<lb/>
with times of 1:50 and 1:54<lb/>
Nolan Gaubert (left) and Barry Scott, are two local triathietes trying<lb/>
to make it to the United States Triathlon Championships.<lb/>
California won the race in a time<lb/>
of 1:36.55. Molina is the No. 1<lb/>
respectively. In a field of 670 par-<lb/>
ticipants, Scott placed 24th and<lb/>
Gaubert 48th.<lb/>
They averaged about 10 miles<lb/>
per hour in the run, 22.5 mph in<lb/>
the bike race, and completed the<lb/>
one half mile swim in 14 minutes.<lb/>
Both Scott and Gaubert come<lb/>
from athletic backgrounds. Scott<lb/>
began running while in the<lb/>
Marine corps, while Gaubert was<lb/>
a swimmer and ran track during<lb/>
high school.<lb/>
Thanks to their different<lb/>
backgrounds, each man has a dif-<lb/>
ferent "best event Scott is<lb/>
strongest in the running event<lb/>
while Gaubert is prefers the<lb/>
swimming.<lb/>
The two train together every-<lb/>
day. They swim about four miles,<lb/>
bike 100-125 miles and run<lb/>
another 25-30 miles per week.<lb/>
"Training together helps us to<lb/>
improve our weak areas<lb/>
Gaubert said, "Since we each<lb/>
have different strengths<lb/>
However, while they work<lb/>
together in training, in competi-<lb/>
tion ? it's every man for himself.<lb/>
"In the race we treat each<lb/>
other just like any other com-<lb/>
petitor said Scott. "One of the<lb/>
things 1 like most about the sport<lb/>
is there is less luck involved.<lb/>
"Not only do you compete<lb/>
against yourself, you compete<lb/>
against others<lb/>
In addition to requiring a great<lb/>
deal of training, the monetary<lb/>
costs of being a triathlete is also<lb/>
high. Some of the major expenses<lb/>
which must be met are the cost<lb/>
and maintenance of very expen-<lb/>
sive racing bicycles and the equal-<lb/>
ly exhorbitant cost travel.<lb/>
To help with the expenses,<lb/>
both men are sponsored by area<lb/>
businesses. Scott is sponsored by<lb/>
Pantana Bob's and Gaubert is<lb/>
sponsored by the King and<lb/>
Queen.<lb/>
In addition, both are now<lb/>
sponsored by Peeler's Sports and<lb/>
Trophies. Both Scott and<lb/>
Gaubert wish to express their<lb/>
thanks to their sponsors, whose<lb/>
support make their training and<lb/>
competing possible.<lb/>
Diet is another important fac-<lb/>
tor in triathlon performance.<lb/>
Both men eat a well balanced diet<lb/>
of highly nutritional foods, and<lb/>
apparently it is working. Both<lb/>
haiP rating heart rates of under<lb/>
eludes a one-mile swim in the<lb/>
Neuse River, a 20-mile bike race<lb/>
and a six-mile run.<lb/>
Soon after, they will race in<lb/>
one of the more prestigious<lb/>
events in the country, The Dan-<lb/>
ville, Virginia Triathalon. This is<lb/>
a qualifying event for the United<lb/>
States Triathalon Series (USTS)<lb/>
championships held in Hilton<lb/>
Head, SC, as well as the Iron<lb/>
Man Triathalon in Hawaii.<lb/>
"Our next big goal is to do well<lb/>
enough in Danville to qualify for<lb/>
the USTS championships in<lb/>
Hilton Head said Scott.<lb/>
This is a lofty goal indeed.<lb/>
So? afthp Bmj hMcjp in th<lb/>
' 7n the race we treat each other just<lb/>
like any other competitor. '<lb/>
? Barry Scott<lb/>
50 and are about five percent<lb/>
body fat.<lb/>
Prior to a race they load up on<lb/>
carbohydrates and fluids. The<lb/>
carbohydrates help give them the<lb/>
long term energy they need for<lb/>
the exhausting race. The fluids<lb/>
help prevent dehydration.<lb/>
While some athletes rely on<lb/>
special nutrient fluids during the<lb/>
race, Scott and Gaubcrt drink<lb/>
water.<lb/>
"The electrolytes in those<lb/>
other drinks are not absorbed<lb/>
quickly enough to be used in the<lb/>
race Gaubcrt said, "and water<lb/>
quinches thirst better anyway<lb/>
Scott and Gaubcrt will both<lb/>
compete in the upcoming New<lb/>
Bern Triathalon. The event in-<lb/>
world will be competing against<lb/>
them.<lb/>
With over 500,000 triathietes in<lb/>
the U.S and paychecks of one<lb/>
million dollars plus, competition<lb/>
will be incredible.<lb/>
In addition not all triathlons<lb/>
are created equal. The Iron man<lb/>
in Hawaii consists of a 2.2-mile<lb/>
swim, a 112-mile bike race and a<lb/>
full 26-mile marathon.<lb/>
It takes even the best triathietes<lb/>
well over eight hours to complete<lb/>
this race and many do not finish<lb/>
at all.<lb/>
If training and dedication are<lb/>
good indications of success, Scott<lb/>
and Grubart should not only<lb/>
finish, but finish among the top<lb/>
athletes in the race.<lb/>
-<lb/>
<pb facs="00057717_0008"/><lb/>
jTHE EAST CAROLINIAN JUNE 5. 1985<lb/>
SEE DETAILS<lb/>
AT GREEHV1LL<lb/>
E a&amp;P STORE<lb/>
Km s .? ??ir?TXVIin<lb/>
Will<lb/>
WANTMOST<lb/>
WALI ? WALL PRICE<lb/>
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ITU IS<lb/>
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TIL<lb/>
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P&amp;Q BRAND<lb/>
KELLOGG S<lb/>
Sandwich Bread Com Flakes<lb/>
3100<lb/>
SAVE -<lb/>
31? 3 i<lb/>
,t - 24 oz.<lb/>
? loaves<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00 OR MORc PURCHASE<lb/>
REGULAR-UNSCENTED<lb/>
25c OFF LABEL<lb/>
Tide Detergent<lb/>
swt <lb/>
Tt : . t<lb/>
VW 9,ant<lb/>
N size<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00 OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
DIET COKE-TAB<lb/>
Coca Cola<lb/>
?- <lb/>
2ltr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
plus<lb/>
deposit<lb/>
Vienna Sausage<lb/>
BEEF -CHICKEN ? SPANISH<lb/>
Rice-A-Roni<lb/>
Coffee Creamer<lb/>
A-1<lb/>
Steak Sauce<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
89-io<lb/>
69cio<lb/>
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WELCH PURPLE<lb/>
179<lb/>
42c<lb/>
10c i<lb/>
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French's Mustard<lb/>
DECORATED-ARTS N FLOWERS<lb/>
Scottowels<lb/>
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16 oz<lb/>
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big<lb/>
roll<lb/>
42 oz<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
834?<lb/>
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99c3Ao<lb/>
1?S<lb/>
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IN QUARTERS<lb/>
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i SAVE <lb/>
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ctn<lb/>
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1 5oz<lb/>
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BUY ONE POUND OF BAKED<lb/>
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GET ONE LOAF OF<lb/>
French Bread FREE!<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057717_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>