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<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057722_0001"/>
<lb/>
?hz<lb/>
(Eutalinmn<lb/>
vs<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 Nor8 Pages<lb/>
Wednesday, July 10, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
J B Humbert - ECU Phofo Lab<lb/>
In Search Of<lb/>
EC I students suffering from the record-breaking temperatures<lb/>
Hill probablv look for a cool place to get awav from the heat. These<lb/>
two students have found their southern comfort in the J.Y. Jovner<lb/>
I ibrar and at the same time, were able to catch up on studying.<lb/>
Hazardous Waste<lb/>
Findings Debated<lb/>
RALEIGH (UPI) ?<lb/>
Legislators and lobbyists who<lb/>
favor tough right-to-know<lb/>
legislation on access to hazardous<lb/>
substance information say it may<lb/>
be better to forgo passing a weak<lb/>
bill this year and let local officials<lb/>
create their own laws.<lb/>
Last month, the House passed<lb/>
legislation sponsored by Rep.<lb/>
Harry Payne, D-New Hanover.<lb/>
But the Senate last week approv-<lb/>
ed a weaker proposal, which for-<lb/>
bids local governments from<lb/>
creating regulations more strict<lb/>
than state laws. Payne says he<lb/>
will urge the House, possibly to-<lb/>
day, to not agree to Senate<lb/>
changes to his bill.<lb/>
Payne and environmental and<lb/>
labor lobbyists claim the Senate<lb/>
bill, with its preemption clause,<lb/>
could hurt their cause more than<lb/>
help it in getting information<lb/>
about hazardous substances at<lb/>
plants to fire-fighters, doctors<lb/>
and citizens. State officials say<lb/>
workers are covered under North<lb/>
Carolina OSHA regulations.<lb/>
"I believe that preemption is a<lb/>
good idea when there is a per-<lb/>
vasive state effort Payne said<lb/>
Monday. "Everybody's got to<lb/>
play with good rules before it is a<lb/>
good idea<lb/>
Payne said he has sent to 10<lb/>
North Carolina cities copies of<lb/>
his bill, the Senate proposal and a<lb/>
legislative study commission<lb/>
report, which argues for tougher<lb/>
right-to-know legislation than<lb/>
any of the measures approved<lb/>
this session. Payne said he urged<lb/>
local officials that if a conference<lb/>
Producer<lb/>
(In the July 3 issue, The East<lb/>
Carolinian inadvertantly failed to<lb/>
credit The New Republic and<lb/>
United Press Syndicate for the<lb/>
Doonesbury comic strip. We<lb/>
regret the error.)<lb/>
ANAHEIM, Calif. (UPI) ?<lb/>
The producer of the anti-<lb/>
abortion movie The Silent<lb/>
Scream says he agrees with<lb/>
several points raised in a series of<lb/>
"Doonesbury" comic strips<lb/>
satirizing the film.<lb/>
Donald S. Smith, the movie's<lb/>
executive proddcer, on Friday<lb/>
committee, which likely will be<lb/>
appointed to work out dif-<lb/>
ferences in the House and Senate<lb/>
versions, cannot agree to a com-<lb/>
promise, they should adopt strict<lb/>
local right-to-know ordinance.<lb/>
The cities are Raleigh,<lb/>
Charlotte, Asheville, Gastonia,<lb/>
Winston-Salem, Greensboro,<lb/>
Wilmington, Fayetteville,<lb/>
Jacksonville and High Point.<lb/>
Durham is one of the cities in<lb/>
North Carolina with a local right-<lb/>
to-know ordinance.<lb/>
Payne said that if legislators<lb/>
wait until next summer to clear<lb/>
up differences in the two pro-<lb/>
posals and the cities adopt right-<lb/>
to-know ordinances, "it would<lb/>
create a better climate for the<lb/>
bill<lb/>
Christopher Scott, president of<lb/>
the state AFL-CIO, reaffirmed<lb/>
his stand today that local or-<lb/>
dinances would do more for the<lb/>
state than the Senate proposal.<lb/>
Scott has said if the conference<lb/>
committee adopted the Senate<lb/>
proposal, he would urge<lb/>
legislators not to support the<lb/>
measure.<lb/>
Scott and Payne said the pro-<lb/>
blem of resolving right-to-know<lb/>
legislation will fall on the<lb/>
shoulders of business lobbyists.<lb/>
"In the event we cannot<lb/>
resolve our differences in com-<lb/>
mittee, the bill will be left hang-<lb/>
ing Payne said.<lb/>
"Some kind of right-to-know<lb/>
is not right-to-know he said.<lb/>
"Preemption is the $64 question.<lb/>
We want $64 worth of a good bill<lb/>
to justify that price<lb/>
Future Scientists Starting Early<lb/>
First-Year Camp Successful<lb/>
By BRETT MORRIS<lb/>
Staff Wilier<lb/>
A math and science scholarship<lb/>
program for high school students<lb/>
is being offered at ECU this sum-<lb/>
mer in cooperation with the<lb/>
University of North Carolina.<lb/>
"Summer Ventures in Science<lb/>
and Math" is in its first year and<lb/>
was made possible by funds pro-<lb/>
vided by the state legislature.<lb/>
According to Floyd Mattheis,<lb/>
chairman of Science Education<lb/>
and director of Science-Math<lb/>
Education at ECU, the program<lb/>
was designed to provide enrich-<lb/>
tj ment and stimulation for high<lb/>
school students who are in-<lb/>
terested in the fields of math and<lb/>
science.<lb/>
The curriculum consists of<lb/>
math and science courses and<lb/>
several other related topics such<lb/>
as: electronic microscopy, com-<lb/>
puter techniques in the<lb/>
laboratory and field study in<lb/>
geology and archaeology.<lb/>
Students are required to attend<lb/>
six hours of classroom instruc-<lb/>
tion a day in courses that best suit<lb/>
their interests, except for those<lb/>
who are enrolled in the program<lb/>
in ECU's School of Medicine.<lb/>
The field study courses include<lb/>
a canoe trip near Manteo and ar-<lb/>
chaeology and geology field trips.<lb/>
Approximately 1,500 high<lb/>
school juniors and seniors<lb/>
throughout the state applied for<lb/>
admission into the program, but<lb/>
only 600 were accepted. Those at-<lb/>
tending ECU total 104 and the re-<lb/>
mainder of the the students are<lb/>
enrolled in similiar programs at<lb/>
other state universities.<lb/>
Mattheis said he has been ex-<lb/>
tremely impressed with the facul-<lb/>
ty members who have been in-<lb/>
volved in the program. College<lb/>
professors, along with graduate<lb/>
assistants and local high school<lb/>
teachers, have been providing the<lb/>
training for this specific group of<lb/>
students.<lb/>
At the completion of the pro-<lb/>
gram on July 26, students will<lb/>
have a chance to present reports<lb/>
and research projects that they<lb/>
have been conducting within their<lb/>
chosen program. A parent's da<lb/>
will also be held July 26, he said.<lb/>
Mattheis stated that this pro-<lb/>
gram will have long term effects<lb/>
for the ECU campus community<lb/>
and also by distributing a part of<lb/>
the University throughout the<lb/>
state. Students will be "getting<lb/>
some advantageous exposure to<lb/>
programs that they would other-<lb/>
wise not find in their high school<lb/>
curriculums Mattheis said.<lb/>
The program has also benefits<lb/>
students who will be striving for<lb/>
future achievement in science and<lb/>
mathematics in order to provide a<lb/>
service to the state.<lb/>
History Professor Adds To Work<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
The North Carolina Farmers'<lb/>
Alliance: A Political History,<lb/>
1887-1893 has been published as<lb/>
the sixth volume in the East<lb/>
Carolina Publications in History<lb/>
series at ECU. Written by history<lb/>
professor emeritus Lala Carr<lb/>
Steelman, the monograph covers<lb/>
the emergence of the grass roots<lb/>
farmers' organization through its<lb/>
political division which created<lb/>
the Populist party in North<lb/>
Carolina.<lb/>
Dr. Fred Ragan, chairman of<lb/>
the ECU Department of History,<lb/>
says in the preface that the pro-<lb/>
blems North Carolina farmers ex-<lb/>
perienced in the late 1800's "are<lb/>
hauntingly familiar themes even<lb/>
to the casual observer of current<lb/>
affairs The North Carolina<lb/>
Farmers' Alliance was formed to<lb/>
act on the grievances of poor<lb/>
market prices and expensive<lb/>
credit.<lb/>
In concluding her work, Dr.<lb/>
Steelman said, "The Farmers'<lb/>
Alliance left its impact on Tar<lb/>
Heel society. Its nonpolitical<lb/>
achievements were noteworthy, if<lb/>
not spectacular. The order pro-<lb/>
vided a vehicle for social inter-<lb/>
course among rural folk. It<lb/>
dispensed charity to brothers and<lb/>
sisters in financial or emotional<lb/>
distress. It stimulated an educa-<lb/>
tional awakening among farmers<lb/>
and intensified their desire for<lb/>
enlightenment<lb/>
"In the realm of politics the<lb/>
Alliance had real significance. As<lb/>
a liberalizing force in the life of<lb/>
the state, it provided an outlet for<lb/>
minority groups to articulate<lb/>
their grievances and exert more<lb/>
influence than formerlyThe<lb/>
order secured passage of laws to<lb/>
regulate railroads, promote<lb/>
education. strengthen<lb/>
eleemosynary institutions, con-<lb/>
serve natural resources, and<lb/>
reform the judicial system.<lb/>
"The Alliancefor a time con-<lb/>
trolled the Democratic party. In<lb/>
challenging bosses and political<lb/>
machines it promoted a<lb/>
democratization of the political<lb/>
process<lb/>
Dr. Steelman joined the East<lb/>
Carolina faculty in 1955 and<lb/>
taught history until her retire-<lb/>
ment in 1984. She received the<lb/>
A.B. degree from Georgia Col-<lb/>
lege, Milledgeville, Ga her<lb/>
M.A. and Ph.D. were earned at<lb/>
the University of North Carolina<lb/>
in Chapel Hill. She is married to<lb/>
Dr. Joseph F. Steelman, also a<lb/>
retired history professor.<lb/>
Dr. Steelman's primary subject<lb/>
area has been United States<lb/>
history and particularly the<lb/>
populist and progressive eras<lb/>
from 1890 through 1920. She has<lb/>
authored a number of articles<lb/>
and essays in the North Carolina<lb/>
Historical Review and in ECU's<lb/>
Publications in History series.<lb/>
The series began in the early<lb/>
1960s. Previous volumes in the<lb/>
series include Essays in American<lb/>
History (1964), Essays in<lb/>
Southern Biography (1965).<lb/>
Studies in the Historv of the<lb/>
South, 1875-1922 (1966), As<lb/>
Bismark Fell: The Restive Mind<lb/>
of the German Military (1976),<lb/>
and Of Tar Heel Towns, Ship-<lb/>
builders, Reconstructionists and<lb/>
Alliancemen (1981).<lb/>
Nationwide Alcohol Studies Compared<lb/>
By HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
Nw? Editor<lb/>
(This is Part II of an article<lb/>
dealing with alcohol use on cam-<lb/>
puses across America. Part I of<lb/>
the article revealed results from a<lb/>
nationwide survey of universitv<lb/>
administrators concerning<lb/>
policies and regulations of<lb/>
alcohol use. Part II will deal with<lb/>
alcohol use at ECU and the con-<lb/>
trovery of whether a higher age<lb/>
of consumming alcohol will solve<lb/>
the problem of preventing<lb/>
alcohol-related problems.)<lb/>
ECU has not had a major<lb/>
survey on alcohol use since 1980,<lb/>
according to Jerry Lotterhos,<lb/>
director of ECU Alcoholism<lb/>
Training Program and faculty<lb/>
adviser to the Campus Alcohol<lb/>
Drug Program. In that survey, he<lb/>
said, patterns of alcohol use at<lb/>
ECU were examined and recom-<lb/>
mendations were made as to<lb/>
students should do to make them<lb/>
more aware of responsible drink-<lb/>
ing and treatment.<lb/>
Lotterhos said CADP, a<lb/>
volunteer student program frund-<lb/>
ed by the SGA, was one of the<lb/>
primary projects evolving from<lb/>
the 1980 survey. "CADP serves<lb/>
two roles Lotterhos said. "One<lb/>
is a counseling service for<lb/>
students who want a short term<lb/>
confidential interview about their<lb/>
drinking. The other role of<lb/>
CADP is educating students<lb/>
about responsible drinking<lb/>
The philosophy of CADP is<lb/>
basically a concept of responsible<lb/>
behavior ? not a group pro-<lb/>
moting abstinence, Lotterhos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
In the national survey, college<lb/>
administrator's prefered a<lb/>
minimum drinking age of 21 or<lb/>
above and 46 percent said they<lb/>
believed a higher drinking age<lb/>
will decrease the frequencey of<lb/>
students drinking.<lb/>
Lotterhos said he thought that<lb/>
drinking alcohol is a long-term<lb/>
cultural and personal behavior.<lb/>
He also said people who drink<lb/>
usually form their attitudes about<lb/>
alcohol use around the age of 13.<lb/>
At ECU, the number of<lb/>
students who drop out of school<lb/>
due to alcohol related reasons is<lb/>
very low, said Ronald Speier,<lb/>
associate dean of students. He<lb/>
said he felt that the raising of the<lb/>
drinking age to 21 will only en-<lb/>
courage the student to find more<lb/>
creative ways of drinking, such as<lb/>
in the confines of his dorm room.<lb/>
"A whole set of problems will<lb/>
come about with the new drink-<lb/>
ing age Speier said. "I think<lb/>
the leaders of this campus will<lb/>
have to become more creative in<lb/>
giving students other social<lb/>
outlets" when the new age goes in<lb/>
effect.<lb/>
Recently, North Carolina pass-<lb/>
ed one of the strictest laws for<lb/>
driving while impaired in the na-<lb/>
tion. Lotterhos said that while<lb/>
the law is very serious, it may not<lb/>
be strict enough. "I do think,<lb/>
though, that more education is<lb/>
necessary for the driver convivc-<lb/>
ted of a DWI. We (society)<lb/>
definitely fail when it comes to<lb/>
informing people about how to<lb/>
drink responsibly<lb/>
Of all the campuses surveyed,<lb/>
almost all reported that their<lb/>
campus offers some type of help<lb/>
to the student who may think he<lb/>
has a drinking problem. ECU of-<lb/>
fers help through CADP and the<lb/>
Counseling Center. But, what<lb/>
about new students coming to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Through the Office of Student<lb/>
Services, Speier said a chapter of<lb/>
Boosting Alcohol Consciousness<lb/>
Concerning the Health of Univer-<lb/>
sity Students program was form-<lb/>
ed to spread information about<lb/>
alcohol use. "We have to treat<lb/>
students like adults he said,<lb/>
"and make them more repsonsi-<lb/>
ble. We also try to offer other<lb/>
choices to drinking ? practical<lb/>
suggestions Speier said the<lb/>
choice for a student to drink or<lb/>
not to drink is more practical<lb/>
than forbidding him to consume<lb/>
any alcohol.<lb/>
Fraternities, dorms, religious<lb/>
groups have access to BAC-<lb/>
CHUS, Speier said.<lb/>
While there is no Univeristy<lb/>
control of off-campus parties, an<lb/>
effort is being made by the Inter-<lb/>
fraternity Council to make frater-<lb/>
nity parties more responsible.<lb/>
Speier said. "There is always go-<lb/>
ing to be parties, but alcohol,<lb/>
education activities have only<lb/>
recently become a part of the<lb/>
fraternity experience<lb/>
The National chapters are also<lb/>
coming down harder on local<lb/>
fraternities concerning rushes<lb/>
and emphasis is being place on<lb/>
restoring fraternities back to<lb/>
what they originally set out to do<lb/>
? having a brotherhood.<lb/>
"Fraternities have rea'ized that<lb/>
rushes bring on 'professional<lb/>
rushers' and that bothers me<lb/>
Speier said. I think once they get<lb/>
alcohol away from rushes, a<lb/>
potential member will see the real<lb/>
reasons to join a fraternity. And<lb/>
then it will have a place in a social<lb/>
setting Speier said that once in-<lb/>
itiation takes place, perhaps a<lb/>
party can be given to the new<lb/>
members.<lb/>
Keeping with the trend of other<lb/>
campuses, Alcohol Awareness<lb/>
month is observed in January<lb/>
One week in October is set aside<lb/>
for informing ECU student about<lb/>
Alcohol and drugs, Lotterhos<lb/>
said.<lb/>
Despite the constant "party"<lb/>
image that ECU may have once<lb/>
held, campus programs and<lb/>
surveys will definitely keep cam-<lb/>
pus leaders on their toes and find<lb/>
other social outlets for students<lb/>
until they reach a legal drinking<lb/>
age.<lb/>
With<lb/>
hailed the decision by Universal<lb/>
Press Syndicate to allow publica-<lb/>
tion of the comic strips, which<lb/>
were withheld for fear newspaper<lb/>
editors would object to them.<lb/>
"While we don't agree with<lb/>
everything Garry Trudeau in-<lb/>
jected into the 'Doonesbury'<lb/>
strips on The Silent Scream, we<lb/>
do agree that American citizens<lb/>
have the right to judge for<lb/>
themselves whether satirical<lb/>
material is suitable for their con-<lb/>
sumption Smith said in a press<lb/>
release.<lb/>
Smith called the decision a<lb/>
validation of First Amendment<lb/>
rights of free speech and freedom<lb/>
of the press and told UPI Friday<lb/>
that he agreed with some of the<lb/>
points raised in the comic strips.<lb/>
Jake Morrissey, associate<lb/>
editor of Universal Press Syn-<lb/>
dicate, Fairway, Kan said he<lb/>
could understand how producers<lb/>
of the anti-abortion film might<lb/>
interpret the strips from their<lb/>
own viewpoint and said he was<lb/>
pleased by Smith's statement.<lb/>
"That can be one of the in-<lb/>
teresting sidelights of satire, that<lb/>
it can be interpreted in such a<lb/>
variety of ways Morrissey said.<lb/>
Smith, who has his own adver-<lb/>
tising agency, said he formed<lb/>
American Portrait Films of<lb/>
Anaheim in 1980 to make films<lb/>
for the pro-life cause.<lb/>
"I wouldn't actually call it a<lb/>
sideline, although my basic<lb/>
business is advertising he said.<lb/>
"I've been in advertising for 20<lb/>
years<lb/>
Morrissey said the syndicate<lb/>
decided in late May or early June<lb/>
to withhold the series of six daily<lb/>
strips on the anti-abortion movie.<lb/>
He said it had been feared some<lb/>
of the 835 newspapers that<lb/>
subscribe to "Doonesbury"<lb/>
would object to the subject mat-<lb/>
ter.<lb/>
Trudeau, author of the often<lb/>
controversial comic strip, allow-<lb/>
ed the series to be published in<lb/>
The New Republic magazine,<lb/>
with Universal's blessing, Mor-<lb/>
rissey said. After that, Universal<lb/>
bowed to subscribers' requests in<lb/>
mid-June and allowed them to<lb/>
publish the series if they wished.<lb/>
In The Silent Scream, a New<lb/>
York obstetrician and<lb/>
gynecologist, Dr. Bernard N.<lb/>
Nathanson, describes and ex-<lb/>
plains of a 12-week-old unborn<lb/>
child being aborted by the suction<lb/>
method.<lb/>
WEUOMZm SK?HrSO&amp;WlT: 7HBPREQUEL"<lb/>
<lb/>
W.mmM<lb/>
1<lb/>
A taste of Trudeau's controversy<lb/>
T<lb/>
??-? ?MMMMfrfJlp<lb/>
<pb facs="00057722_0002"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 10, 1985<lb/>
Professor Receives Prestigious National Award<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
An East Carolina University<lb/>
professor has become a recipient<lb/>
of the highest honor and award<lb/>
given annually by the National<lb/>
Environmental Health Associa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
Dr. Trenton G. Davis, a pro-<lb/>
fessor of environmental health<lb/>
and an assistant to the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic Affairs<lb/>
at ECU, was awarded the Walter<lb/>
S. Mangold Award at the<lb/>
Association's meeting last week<lb/>
in Las Vegas. The award is the<lb/>
highest honor given by the<lb/>
NEHA and recognizes a reci-<lb/>
pient's professionalism, dedica-<lb/>
tion and technical excellence in<lb/>
the field of environmental health.<lb/>
Davis was nominated for the<lb/>
award by the North Carolina<lb/>
Public Health Association's En-<lb/>
vironmental Health Section.<lb/>
A native of Greenville, Tenn<lb/>
Davis joined the ECU faculty in<lb/>
1972 as chairman of the new<lb/>
department of environmental<lb/>
health in the School of Allied<lb/>
Health and Social Work. Under<lb/>
his leadership the department<lb/>
received full accreditation from<lb/>
the National Accreditation Coun-<lb/>
cil for Environmental Health<lb/>
Curricula in 1974. It was reac-<lb/>
credited in 1981 and also received<lb/>
accreditation for a graduate pro-<lb/>
gram leading to a master's degree<lb/>
in environmental health.<lb/>
In addition Davis serves as the<lb/>
editorial director of the Fournal<lb/>
of Environmental Health and<lb/>
was president of the National En-<lb/>
vironmental Health Association<lb/>
in 1982. He was appointed<lb/>
Special Assistant to the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Academic Affairs<lb/>
at ECU in 1984.<lb/>
"I'm honored that the state<lb/>
organization nominated me for<lb/>
this award Davis said. "If it<lb/>
had ended there it would have<lb/>
been a big honor (to be<lb/>
nominated) he said.<lb/>
The award is named in honor<lb/>
of the late Walter S. Mangold,<lb/>
and environmental health pro-<lb/>
fessor at the University of<lb/>
California, Berkley. Mangold<lb/>
developed the name "sanitarian"<lb/>
to describe those who work in<lb/>
waste management and en-<lb/>
vironmental control facilities and<lb/>
helped establish the field as a pro-<lb/>
fession and science.<lb/>
Davis earned his bachelor of<lb/>
science degree (cum laude) from<lb/>
East Tennessee State University<lb/>
in 1966, a Master of Public-<lb/>
Health from Tulane University in<lb/>
1967, and a Doctorate in Public<lb/>
Health from the University of<lb/>
Oklahoma in 1972. He worked<lb/>
for five years as a Sanitarian with<lb/>
the Greene County Health<lb/>
Department in Greenville, Tenn.<lb/>
and for three years on the faculty<lb/>
at East Tennessee State Universi-<lb/>
ty.<lb/>
He is the son of Mr. B. O.<lb/>
Davis of Route 4, Chuckey, TN.<lb/>
He is a graduate of Lee High<lb/>
School in Albany, Georgia.<lb/>
NOTES<lb/>
BINGO ICE CREAM PARTY<lb/>
The StvJ?n? union Retreat,or COflwr, ?<lb/>
s sponsoring another gmgo' ice Oe? a ?<lb/>
Ty on Tu?s July Utri ?t 7 p rr , <lb/>
AAertdenha'i StuOenf Center Vu' P .JI<lb/>
room Aamission is only 2S cents ?nc a cf<lb/>
students faculty staff tn.r aepe-<lb/>
guests are welcome<lb/>
EXAMHELP<lb/>
Trie ECU Counsel.n) Cen'e- <lb/>
help in preparing tor 1'na. e?ai<lb/>
p m in 302 fcr,ght Anne on July<lb/>
yynich will be cowered nciude I me n a .<lb/>
merit, studying effect.wety now tc 4DC. '<lb/>
essay versus ooiective enams m<lb/>
?fittl 'est anmety S'uden?s .<lb/>
fliv.dual.led attention for sp ?<lb/>
they may nave wtn tes prepay"<lb/>
taking For further ntorrra <lb/>
Counseling Cente' a' '57 661 -<lb/>
Ar gn? Annex 307<lb/>
30 Off<lb/>
RAY-BAN<lb/>
Nonprescription<lb/>
Wayfarer and Leather<lb/>
Sunglasses<lb/>
20 Off all<lb/>
prescription glasses.<lb/>
Offer good through<lb/>
July 31, 1985 for all<lb/>
ECU students, and<lb/>
Faculty. ?<lb/>
RA YBAN WA YFAJUiR<lb/>
Open MonFri. 9 AM til 5:30 PM I<lb/>
Beecher Kirkley-Dispensing Optician<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Phone 755-1446<lb/>
plicians ig<lb/>
CALL US FOR AN<lb/>
EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
WITH THE DOCTOR<lb/>
YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
IIK$<lb/>
PI KAPPA PHI<lb/>
Present<lb/>
DRAFTNITE<lb/>
Wednesday, July 10, 1985 9:00-2:00 a.m.<lb/>
Admission $1.50 Guys $1.00 Ladies $1.00 18 vr<lb/>
10C DRAFT ALL NITE<lb/>
sil?<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057722_0004"/><lb/>
(Bitt iEaat Carolinian<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
JOHN PETERSON, General Manager<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak, ?????? mwr<lb/>
Harold Joyner, v? a Tom Luvender, a, ???<lb/>
Daniel Maurer, ,?,? &amp;, Anthony Martin, ?, m<lb/>
Rick Mccormac, spw John Peterson, MMrw<lb/>
Bill Mitchell. (w?m Bill Dawson, ?u<lb/>
Debbie Stevens, ? DeChanile Johnson, r,<lb/>
July 10, 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
No Pay For Play<lb/>
A College Football Association<lb/>
proposal to provide college<lb/>
athletes with $600 a year for "in-<lb/>
cidental expenses" is something<lb/>
that should not, under any cir-<lb/>
cumstances, be considered by<lb/>
schools.<lb/>
At this point, many college<lb/>
athletic programs have only<lb/>
tenuous ties with the schools'<lb/>
academic programs. Paying so-<lb/>
meone to attend school and com-<lb/>
pete as an athlete would sever these<lb/>
ties.<lb/>
Even if it's often not true, as<lb/>
V many schools exploit the athletes,<lb/>
they temper this with the<lb/>
reassurance that they are, in fact,<lb/>
getting an education. Are they?<lb/>
Often they end up with not enough<lb/>
time to study, or not enough<lb/>
reason or encouragement.<lb/>
To pay these athletes takes away<lb/>
the pretense of their being there for<lb/>
an education. It would tend to<lb/>
make them more of the profes-<lb/>
sional persuasion. Furthermore, it<lb/>
sets a dangerous precedent.<lb/>
Many people complain that<lb/>
athletes just expect to have things<lb/>
given to them because of their<lb/>
Library (<lb/>
athletic prowess, be it money,<lb/>
fame or merchandise. Paying<lb/>
athletes for participation in college<lb/>
athletics will only serve to support<lb/>
this assumption.<lb/>
In actuality, many college (or<lb/>
high school) athletes don't make it<lb/>
big. The competition is fierce and<lb/>
the numbers succumbing to in-<lb/>
juries significant. What these<lb/>
athletes need, more than anything<lb/>
else, is something to rely upon if<lb/>
athletics won't pay off for them.<lb/>
Instead of supplying the players<lb/>
with money while in school, they<lb/>
should be supplied with a better<lb/>
education. The important thing is<lb/>
that they get the college education,<lb/>
not that they are athletes.<lb/>
Athletic ability should be looked<lb/>
upon as a ticket to a college educa-<lb/>
tion, not as a ticket to the possibili-<lb/>
ty of a future monetary payoff.<lb/>
Pay for the athletes' tuition, pay<lb/>
for their books, but don't sub-<lb/>
sidize them because they are<lb/>
athletes.<lb/>
Athletes don't need money as<lb/>
much as they need alternative<lb/>
skills, a way to hedge against the<lb/>
all too likely possibility of a failure<lb/>
to make a lucrative career out of<lb/>
athletics.<lb/>
Recent Hostage Crisis Proves<lb/>
Reagan Tougher Than Carter<lb/>
Shouldn't Be Charge Cards<lb/>
It seems like with almost<lb/>
everything comes with a tax or sur-<lb/>
charge attached to it. However, at<lb/>
least one of the pleasures of life is<lb/>
more or less free, the library.<lb/>
Generally, upon presenting pro-<lb/>
of of residency, an individual can<lb/>
receive a library card free of charge<lb/>
and continue using it free, unless<lb/>
of course, they incur fines.<lb/>
Now someone is out to ruin it. A<lb/>
non-library-loving senator is<lb/>
presenting a bill to Congress which<lb/>
would institute a small fee for each<lb/>
book checked out. This fee would<lb/>
be paid to the book's author as a<lb/>
royalty fee.<lb/>
For some people, the library is<lb/>
the only source of free entertain-<lb/>
ment. For others, the idea that<lb/>
books are free for the borrowing is<lb/>
an incentive to read.<lb/>
As society grows less reading-<lb/>
oriented and more TV-oriented.<lb/>
people need more encouragement<lb/>
to read, not less. Children,<lb/>
especially, can now take advantage<lb/>
of free books. What parent wants<lb/>
to hunt up spare change so a kid<lb/>
can go to the library?<lb/>
Then there is the interesting<lb/>
question of what to do about<lb/>
royalties for some books, bibles<lb/>
for instance. Do you pay royalties<lb/>
to a different church each time or<lb/>
do you just put the money in a<lb/>
trust fund for God?<lb/>
Some of the best things in life<lb/>
are free. That's certainly true of<lb/>
libraries now, and hopefully in the<lb/>
future.<lb/>
sssssssssssssssssssssssssssssss<lb/>
A Thought<lb/>
It is a newspaper's duty to print<lb/>
the news and raise hell.<lb/>
William F. Story<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
Now that the hostage crisis has pass-<lb/>
ed, let's take a few minutes and reflect<lb/>
upon it from a restrospective position.<lb/>
After it happened, what did the govern-<lb/>
ment want to achieve and how was our<lb/>
national interest best served? Let's also<lb/>
take a look at how the American people<lb/>
and some special groups acted and<lb/>
reacted.<lb/>
First, some things are self-evident.<lb/>
Hijacking and terrorism are crimes<lb/>
against humanity and should never be<lb/>
condoned or justified by civilized peo-<lb/>
ple anywhere. No matter how wronged<lb/>
a group of people may feel, to inflict<lb/>
terror, captivity or death upon persons<lb/>
who had no direct control or influence<lb/>
on the real or imagined wrong cannot<lb/>
be justified by any rational religion or<lb/>
philosophy. It does not even fulfill<lb/>
some of mankind's baser motivations<lb/>
such as revenge, since the terror is not<lb/>
directed towards thos directly responsi-<lb/>
ble for the "wrong" and therefore<lb/>
should not appease a vengeful appetite.<lb/>
Our national interest, as expressed by<lb/>
the Reagan administration, was first<lb/>
not to negotiate with the terrorists. This<lb/>
is extremely important, since to do so<lb/>
would place millions of Americans in<lb/>
jeopardy as potential hostages. To give<lb/>
in to the demands of terrorists would<lb/>
create a situation where anyone with an<lb/>
ax to grind could grab a plane load of<lb/>
Americans and get the U.S. to do his<lb/>
bidding. Since we are a world power,<lb/>
this could come from anyplace, any<lb/>
country, anywhere. Secondly, we<lb/>
wanted our citizens returned as soon as<lb/>
possible, unharmed. No deals, and the<lb/>
hostages returned. Reagan did this in 17<lb/>
not 444 days. Since Israel holds the ma-<lb/>
jority of the Shiites, it appears as if this<lb/>
was accomplished without meeting the<lb/>
demands of the hijackers or even the<lb/>
demand envisioned by Nabih Berri<lb/>
when he proposed that the 750 or so<lb/>
Shiites and 40 Americans be<lb/>
transported to a neutral county and ex-<lb/>
changed. Most TV newsmen rated<lb/>
Reagan as the net loser for his efforts.<lb/>
Speaking of newsmen. How many of<lb/>
you were watching as ABC became the<lb/>
Amal Broadcasting Company? I<lb/>
couldn't believe it as I watched<lb/>
American newsmen being used like<lb/>
pawns in an Arab chess game. Some<lb/>
seemed to think they were personally<lb/>
negotiating the release of the captives.<lb/>
One would interview Nabih, giving him<lb/>
as much time as he wanted, then<lb/>
reiterate his comments and say<lb/>
something like "We have now heard the<lb/>
demands. It would seem that all<lb/>
Washington has to do is to ask Israel to<lb/>
release their illegally held Shiitres and<lb/>
the hostages will be returned. So far<lb/>
there has been no response from the<lb/>
White House They made it sound like<lb/>
Reagan was holding things up after they<lb/>
had it all worked out. To them Reagan<lb/>
really blew it when he talked tough dur-<lb/>
ing "delicate negotiations By golly he<lb/>
got them back without humbling the<lb/>
country by kowtowing to terrorists.<lb/>
Nabih was talking tough at first, even<lb/>
threatening to hand the hostages back<lb/>
to the hijackers unless the U.S. gave a<lb/>
quick response to his demands. You<lb/>
might remember that at the President's<lb/>
press conference he evaded most<lb/>
specific questions except one. He was<lb/>
asked, "If Nabih Berri turned the<lb/>
hostages back to the hijackers, would<lb/>
he hold Berri responsible?" His<lb/>
response was a considered almost<lb/>
whispered "Yes He could have said<lb/>
"Make my day The response was the<lb/>
same. No more talk from Berri about<lb/>
turning the hostages anywhere but<lb/>
loose.<lb/>
The Right Word<lb/>
Kirk Shelley<lb/>
Since Israel had announced it would<lb/>
free the Shiite prisoners before the hi-<lb/>
jacking transpired, it's hard to see how<lb/>
the hijackers achieved anything more<lb/>
than lots of TV time and a delay in the<lb/>
release of the Shiites.<lb/>
On a more local level, two ECU pro-<lb/>
fessors were interviewed by the Daily<lb/>
Reflector. Among other bits of wisdom<lb/>
espoused was the fact that th hiiackina<lb/>
was not an act of terrorism, just an or-<lb/>
dinary hijacking. Many people who fly<lb/>
regularly scheduled airlines feel a bit<lb/>
apprehensive about flying. Insurance<lb/>
companies sell lots of policies, good for<lb/>
one flight, by vending machines in air-<lb/>
ports. Now consider flying at 20,000<lb/>
feet or so with a guy running up and<lb/>
down the aisle with a hand grenade,<lb/>
sans pin, shouting in a language you<lb/>
don't understand. Maybe we should<lb/>
redefine terrorism. Perhaps only one<lb/>
American beaten, shot dead and<lb/>
dumped on the tarmac doesn't make it<lb/>
an act of terrorism. MAybe you need 10<lb/>
or at least two to make it really terrify-<lb/>
ing. Maybe we should just thank God<lb/>
and President Reagan that the hostages<lb/>
are back.<lb/>
The press developed an adversary<lb/>
relationship with the government that<lb/>
probably started during Vietnam. Prior<lb/>
to that time, few, if any, newsmen wre<lb/>
actually disloyal to the country. Look<lb/>
at them now. For heaven's sake, most<lb/>
of them are not completely stupid.<lb/>
Most went to college and some learned<lb/>
some things beyond "Hairspray 101"<lb/>
for anchormen. Most profess to being<lb/>
loyal Americans. Then why in the world<lb/>
wouldn't they rejoice that the hostages<lb/>
were returned without capitulation to<lb/>
terrorist demands. Instead they would<lb/>
report rumors, innuendo, supposition,<lb/>
or anything they could find or fabricate<lb/>
to indicate that a deal was made and the<lb/>
release of the hostages was Inked to the<lb/>
Israeli's release of the Shiite prisoners. I<lb/>
think that most could see that even if<lb/>
this were so, it certainly would not be in<lb/>
the best interest of the United States to<lb/>
play up such a story. If potential ter-<lb/>
rorists believe the hijackers won, the<lb/>
newsmen would just be encouraging<lb/>
further acts of terrorism. Why not just<lb/>
report the news? The President says we<lb/>
got the hostages back with no deals.<lb/>
Israel still held the Shiites when the<lb/>
American hostages were released. Israel<lb/>
says no deal was made. Nabih says he<lb/>
has an agreement. Let everyone make<lb/>
up their own minds. Most networks<lb/>
listed the terrorists as winners in the ex-<lb/>
change since their demands were met.<lb/>
Campus Forum<lb/>
To the East Carolina and Greenville<lb/>
community:<lb/>
I want to thank you all for 11<lb/>
wonderful years of association with<lb/>
East Carolina University and this com-<lb/>
munity. It will always remain a source<lb/>
of great pride to have been affiliated<lb/>
with the growth and national acclaim<lb/>
this university and athletic department<lb/>
has experienced.<lb/>
I appreciate your continuous sup-<lb/>
port of me and our program, and 1<lb/>
look forward to hearing glowing<lb/>
reports of your success in the future<lb/>
Pam Holt<lb/>
Assistant Athletic Director<lb/>
Forum Rules<lb/>
The East Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
expressing all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
drop them by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
tions Building, across from the en-<lb/>
trance of Joyner Library.<lb/>
For purposes of verification, all let-<lb/>
ters must include the name, major and<lb/>
classification, address, phone number<lb/>
and signature of the author(s).<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
TlRST OF ALL, LBT MB SAY HOW<lb/>
HAPPY I AMTOBt HBRe IN<lb/>
ADDIS ABABA ON BtHAlf OF<lb/>
? USA FOP AFRICA I<lb/>
I've RBQUBST5PA MBBVNG UJiTH<lb/>
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BB ARRANGBP. VLLBB BXPRBSSING TO<lb/>
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FOODDismBuwiPoua J<lb/>
IF PROBLEMS PERSIST, I PLAN TO<lb/>
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song in me OF me rbfugbb<lb/>
CAMPS IN TI6R5 I<lb/>
WILLTHATBB<lb/>
AVAlLABieON<lb/>
COMPACTPtSCS<lb/>
JMMY?<lb/>
posswcy rr<lb/>
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whether wb<lb/>
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UKB TO KNOW 14HICH OHE<lb/>
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I M&amp; ON (U.S.A. (THAT<lb/>
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Richard Maltbv,<lb/>
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and scholar.<lb/>
Sun<lb/>
The East (<lb/>
Theatre will jo<lb/>
time to the early da1<lb/>
chez Trace whe<lb/>
Broadway musical<lb/>
ber Bridegroom<lb/>
through Saturda.<lb/>
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Based on the nove<lb/>
name by Eudora<lb/>
Robber Bridegroom<lb/>
dance folk-tale ab .<lb/>
looking gentleman<lb/>
plete with countrv<lb/>
dancing, fiddles. bi<lb/>
what one Nev. York<lb/>
called "a rousing<lb/>
for comic adventure!<lb/>
The action take<lb/>
square dance in a<lb/>
Rodney. Mississipl<lb/>
owner of the barn<lb/>
days when the first<lb/>
down the "big mud<lb/>
violin is heard.<lb/>
I L<lb/>
(Editor's Sote:<lb/>
cumstances be<lb/>
the Sightclubs<lb/>
Hotspots will not<lb/>
week's issue, but m<lb/>
week.)<lb/>
On Cami<lb/>
Dirty Harry will j<lb/>
when it is pre!<lb/>
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Admission is C<lb/>
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The Phantoms are<lb/>
ECU after a<lb/>
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formance Spr<lb/>
for a concert<lb/>
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I and athletic department<lb/>
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Pam Holt<lb/>
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or urn Rules<lb/>
p Carolinian welcomes letters<lb/>
all points of view. Mail or<lb/>
by our office in the Publica-<lb/>
ding, across from the en-<lb/>
I ner Library,<lb/>
loses of verification, all let-<lb/>
include the name, major and<lb/>
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THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
JULY 10, 1985 Pan 5<lb/>
Of Barrooms And 'Baby9<lb/>
A Drunken Dichotomy Of A Play<lb/>
By DANIEL MAURER<lb/>
And<lb/>
ANDREW JOYNER<lb/>
Traditionally, making babies<lb/>
has been a springtime sport.<lb/>
Now, the East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre has brought parenthood<lb/>
to the hottest season of the year<lb/>
with their production of Baby.<lb/>
This off-beat Broadway<lb/>
musical comedy, written by<lb/>
Sybille Pearson, David Shire and<lb/>
Richard Maltby, Jr follows<lb/>
three couples through the ordeal<lb/>
of impending parenthood. In the<lb/>
process it blends the uncertain-<lb/>
ties, frustrations and hopes that<lb/>
accompany having a child. Baby<lb/>
is at once sparkling and<lb/>
penetrating in its simple wisdom.<lb/>
The outcome of the Summer<lb/>
Theatre's production, however,<lb/>
is still under debate by our two<lb/>
erstwhile theatre critics, Daniel<lb/>
Maurer and Andrew Joyner. We<lb/>
caught up with this unlikely duo<lb/>
in the Olde Towne Inn following<lb/>
Monday night's performance,<lb/>
where they could be overheard<lb/>
discussing the matter while down-<lb/>
ing $1.30 tequila shots.<lb/>
I'll tell you right here and now,<lb/>
Daniel, that bloody<lb/>
Arlenewhat's her real name?<lb/>
Maureen Kerrigan.<lb/>
Thank you, kind sir. Rude goat<lb/>
and scholar, v'are. Yeah,<lb/>
Maureen Kerrigan sings like a<lb/>
bird, no doubt about it what-<lb/>
soever. Stole the show, she did.<lb/>
Yeah, bartender, I'll have<lb/>
another. Got any lemon?<lb/>
Put out the fire, Andrew.<lb/>
You'll burn the building down.<lb/>
Yes, Daniel, m' boy, it looks<lb/>
like Hell in that little glass,<lb/>
doesn't it?<lb/>
Speaking of Hell, it's the best<lb/>
word I could use to describe<lb/>
Maureen's singing. You could<lb/>
drive a truck through her vibrato.<lb/>
Well, perhaps not that bad, but it<lb/>
does leave a lot to be desired ?<lb/>
like another singer. I must say,<lb/>
though, her superb acting more<lb/>
than made up for it.<lb/>
Before you put out your drink,<lb/>
I need a light ? and a cigarette to<lb/>
go with it.<lb/>
But yes, I do concede that she<lb/>
was one of the highlights of the<lb/>
show.<lb/>
Lights, y'say? God save us,<lb/>
but it's dark in here. Anyway,<lb/>
what character the woman had!<lb/>
It makes me tremble to think<lb/>
about it, really.<lb/>
I totally agree, but it's pro-<lb/>
bably your diseased liver that's<lb/>
trembling. In any case, when you<lb/>
talk about character, you have to<lb/>
talk about Joey Pollock. That<lb/>
man is simply outstanding. He<lb/>
did a fantastic job as Arlene's<lb/>
doting husband What's-his-<lb/>
name.<lb/>
Alan, it was. And for the first<lb/>
time since the Cubs bombed out,<lb/>
you're right.<lb/>
He displayed more poise,<lb/>
depth and professionalism than<lb/>
did the rest of the cast.<lb/>
Jesus Christ, call a doctor,<lb/>
Daniel. You're giving me a cor-<lb/>
onary by actually being right<lb/>
twice in a row. Is there no end to<lb/>
this?<lb/>
None in sight, Andrew, none in<lb/>
sight. But even though Pollock<lb/>
shined brightest, I also liked John<lb/>
Kaczynski as Danny, the college<lb/>
student, musician and father-to-<lb/>
be. His vo;oe may have been<lb/>
miscast ? .he's just not a rock<lb/>
singer ? but he was great as the<lb/>
hopeful and ambitious rookie<lb/>
dad.<lb/>
Actually, O Great One, con-<lb/>
sidering his performance, I think<lb/>
he'd be better as Tinkerbelie in<lb/>
Peter Pan.<lb/>
No, no, I think the boy did a<lb/>
fine job. You just can't stand<lb/>
anyone who doesn't sing like Rod<lb/>
Stewart or yourself.<lb/>
 never laid claim to being a<lb/>
singer, Daniel.<lb/>
And you never should.<lb/>
Damn you and your cat ? who<lb/>
sings better than you do.<lb/>
Andrew, I don't own a cat.<lb/>
Barkeep, another tequila,<lb/>
please.<lb/>
As for John, it whaddunt his<lb/>
voice, bu' rather 'is boyish charm<lb/>
that made 'is overall performance<lb/>
ah, ah, appealin Yeah, that's it,<lb/>
appealin He was 'specially good<lb/>
in the "Fatherhood Blues"<lb/>
routine. He was hysterical dress-<lb/>
ed as a punk rocker.<lb/>
John Kaczynski and Sean McGuirk (from left to right) in the "Fatherhood Blues" routine from Bab<lb/>
Yeah, mate, but didn 't 'is 'air<lb/>
clash with the set a bit?<lb/>
Yeah, I s'pose. The sets were<lb/>
quite effective ? when 'e wasn't<lb/>
on the stage with 'is makeshift<lb/>
Mohawk.<lb/>
I liked the way the set pieces<lb/>
were lit and how they moved<lb/>
from place to place for each scene<lb/>
? sorta like that wall is doin'<lb/>
right now.<lb/>
Yeah, but what I liked even<lb/>
more was the chemistry between<lb/>
Kerrigan and Pollock. They were<lb/>
great together, sorta like Bartles<lb/>
and Jaymes.<lb/>
Yeah, and you know who else?<lb/>
Tracy Donohue an' Sean<lb/>
McGuirk as Pam an' Nick, the<lb/>
childless, but determined couple.<lb/>
Hell, come to think of it, all the<lb/>
couples worked well together.<lb/>
That's probably what saved this<lb/>
production.<lb/>
Well, I wouldn 't go that damn-<lb/>
ed far, Wild Man of the<lb/>
publishing industry. Tell me,<lb/>
why're the bars tools taller than I<lb/>
am now?<lb/>
That's because you're on the<lb/>
floor, Andrew. Please get up;<lb/>
you're making a spectacle of<lb/>
yourself, really. Besides, it's get-<lb/>
ting late; we have a review to<lb/>
write. Oh, by the way, was it a<lb/>
good show?<lb/>
No, but people suould go see if<lb/>
anyway; it'll keep them off the<lb/>
streets ? and out of damn bars,<lb/>
too.<lb/>
Don't be so hard on the Sum-<lb/>
mer Theatre, I thought they did<lb/>
an urn .ah. admirable no,<lb/>
wunnerful job ? for a play about<lb/>
rug rats, that is. Hell, I'd go see it<lb/>
just for Joey Pollock.<lb/>
 wonder if he'll buy us a drink<lb/>
if we give him a good review?<lb/>
We can only hope.<lb/>
Summer Theatre Produces 'Bridegroom'<lb/>
The East Carolina Summer<lb/>
Theatre will journey back in<lb/>
time to the early days of the Nat-<lb/>
chez Trace when it presents the<lb/>
Broadway musical hit The Rob-<lb/>
ber Bridegroom, Monday<lb/>
through Saturday, July 15-20, at<lb/>
fcl? jx.m. in McGinnis Theatre.<lb/>
Based on the novel of the same<lb/>
name by Eudora Welty, The<lb/>
Robber Bridegroom is a song and<lb/>
dance folk-tale about a tall good-<lb/>
looking gentleman bandit, com-<lb/>
plete with country reels, square<lb/>
dancing, Fiddles, banjos and with<lb/>
what one New York theatre critic<lb/>
called "a rousing southern flare<lb/>
for comic adventure<lb/>
The action takes place at a<lb/>
square dance in a large barn in<lb/>
Rodney, Mississippi. As the<lb/>
owner of the barn describes the<lb/>
days when the first settlers came<lb/>
down the "big muddy a lonely<lb/>
violin is heard, then another,<lb/>
then a banjo, until all the<lb/>
characters and the country-fiddle<lb/>
orchestra swarm onto the stage<lb/>
from all directions. The dancer-<lb/>
singers portray the story of the<lb/>
robber bridegroom, a romantic<lb/>
Figure in local legends who steals<lb/>
for adventure. It seems this<lb/>
dashing bandit has two identities.<lb/>
Some know him as a solid citizen.<lb/>
A few know him as a young<lb/>
outlaw whose proudest boast is<lb/>
that he steals with style, whether<lb/>
he's after a rich man's purse or a<lb/>
pretty girl's love.<lb/>
As the action progresses, the<lb/>
bandit falls in love with a rich<lb/>
planter's daughter and they<lb/>
become involved in a classic case<lb/>
of mistaken identities. In the best<lb/>
tradition of fantasy, there are a<lb/>
number of storybook characters,<lb/>
including a wicked stepmother, a<lb/>
magical raven and a severed head<lb/>
that talks.<lb/>
The Robber Bridegromn was<lb/>
written by Alfred Utary, and the<lb/>
music, arranged for guitar, fid-<lb/>
dle, mandolin, bass and banjo,<lb/>
was composed by Robert<lb/>
Waldman.<lb/>
Directing and choreographing<lb/>
wifT be "Judith Haskell, whose<lb/>
regional theatre credits include<lb/>
directing for the Seattle Reper-<lb/>
tory Theatre, Syracuse Stage, the<lb/>
Cleveland Playhouse (where she<lb/>
won the Cleveland Critic's Circle<lb/>
"Best Director" Award), and the<lb/>
Alabama Shakespeare Festival.<lb/>
Playing the role of Jamie<lb/>
Lockart, the gentleman bandit,<lb/>
will be Sean McGuirk. a New<lb/>
York-based actor who, with this<lb/>
production, will be making his<lb/>
third appearance in The Robber<lb/>
Bridegroom. Mr. McGuirk has<lb/>
performed leading roles in<lb/>
numerous musicals throughout<lb/>
the US, and his television credits-<lb/>
include "Ryan's Hope "Search<lb/>
for Tomorrow and "As the<lb/>
World Turns<lb/>
Originally produced on Broad-<lb/>
way by John Houseman's The<lb/>
Acting Company, The Robber<lb/>
Bridegroom won rave reviews<lb/>
from the New York critics;<lb/>
among them, Clive Barns of the<lb/>
New York Times, who pronounc-<lb/>
ed the show "sparkling, unusual<lb/>
and an immeasurably in-<lb/>
vigorating musical<lb/>
Tickets are still available for all<lb/>
performances, Monday through<lb/>
Saturday (July 15-20 at 8:15<lb/>
p.m.), and may be purchased at<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre in Greenville,<lb/>
corner of Fifth and Eastern<lb/>
Streets, Monday through Satur-<lb/>
day, 10 a.m. until 8:15 p.m or<lb/>
may be reserved bv calling in<lb/>
Greenville 757-6390<lb/>
HOTSPOTS<lb/>
New Comedy Zone Comes On Strong<lb/>
(Editor's Note: Due to cir-<lb/>
cumstances beyond our control<lb/>
the Nightclubs section of<lb/>
Hotspots will not appear in this<lb/>
week's issue, but will return next<lb/>
week.)<lb/>
On Campus<lb/>
Dirty Harry will make your day<lb/>
when it is presented by the<lb/>
Student Union Films Com-<lb/>
mittee tonight, July 10 at 7<lb/>
p.m. in Hendrix. A box-<lb/>
office sensation Dirty<lb/>
Harry was the most suc-<lb/>
cessful manhunt Film of the<lb/>
'70s. From its chilling open-<lb/>
ing, in which a beautiful<lb/>
young swimmer is<lb/>
murdered by the film's<lb/>
psychotic villain, to the<lb/>
mesmerizing Final confron-<lb/>
tation between Detective<lb/>
Harry Callahan (Clint<lb/>
Eastwood) and the killer.<lb/>
Admission is free to all with<lb/>
current ECU IDs, but only<lb/>
ECU students may bring a<lb/>
guest.<lb/>
The Phantoms are returning to<lb/>
ECU after a highly suc-<lb/>
cessful, well-received per-<lb/>
formance Spring Semester<lb/>
for a concert Thursday, Ju-<lb/>
ly 11 at 9 p.m. on the Snack<lb/>
Bar Patio at M?nd?nhall.<lb/>
Presented by the atuuent<lb/>
Union Special Concerts<lb/>
Committee, the concert is<lb/>
free to all, so don't miss<lb/>
their great sound! Rainsite<lb/>
is Hendrix Theatre.<lb/>
The Graduate, one of the greatest<lb/>
critical successes of ail time,<lb/>
rocketed Duttin Hoffman<lb/>
to stardom. He portrays an<lb/>
inexperienced college<lb/>
graduate who returns home<lb/>
to his affluent, insensitive<lb/>
parents, has an affair with<lb/>
his parents' neurotic,<lb/>
alcoholic neighbor (Anne<lb/>
Bancroft), and ends up fall-<lb/>
ing in love with her<lb/>
daughter (Katherine Ross).<lb/>
Presented by the Student<lb/>
Union Films Committee,<lb/>
this Film is a commentary<lb/>
on American values, the<lb/>
generation gap, and late<lb/>
'60s youth. Admission to<lb/>
the Monday, July 15 7 p.m.<lb/>
show in Hendrix is free to<lb/>
all with current ECU IDs,<lb/>
but only ECU students may<lb/>
bring a guest.<lb/>
A BingoIce Cream Party is<lb/>
scheduled for 7 p.m. on<lb/>
Tuesday, July 16 in<lb/>
Mendenhall's Multi-<lb/>
purpose Room. Sponsored<lb/>
by the Student Union<lb/>
Recreation Committee, the<lb/>
party features a minimum<lb/>
of three different flavors of<lb/>
great! cold! ice cream! and<lb/>
eight fabulous prizes for the<lb/>
winners of the different<lb/>
Bingo games. Admission is<lb/>
free for all with current<lb/>
ECU IDs, but only ECU<lb/>
students may bring a guest.<lb/>
Hotspots is a listing of enterain-<lb/>
ment available to the University<lb/>
community. Any local nightclub<lb/>
or University sponsored<lb/>
organization interested in being a<lb/>
part of Hotspots can do so by<lb/>
contacting the Features Depart-<lb/>
ment of The East Carolinian Sub-<lb/>
missions to Hotspots will be<lb/>
printed only if space allows.<lb/>
By MIKE LUDWICK<lb/>
Sutl Writer<lb/>
The Comedy Zone at TW's<lb/>
Nightlife is bringing good<lb/>
talent to the Greenville area every<lb/>
Tuesday night.<lb/>
The Comedy Zone is the first<lb/>
of its kind in Greenville and is<lb/>
starting to become quite popular.<lb/>
According to Kathy Bissette, who<lb/>
is the manager of TW's, "The<lb/>
Comedy Zone is catching on, and<lb/>
Jane Karam<lb/>
we are starting to get some<lb/>
regulars here<lb/>
When asked about the future<lb/>
for the Comedy Zone,Bissette<lb/>
said that she was going to wait<lb/>
until this fall before making any<lb/>
major decisions about expanding<lb/>
or changing the format of the<lb/>
Comedy Zone. This is because<lb/>
Bissette wants to get the reaction<lb/>
from the ECU students this fall<lb/>
before making any decisions.<lb/>
This past Tuesday night two<lb/>
excellent comedians came to<lb/>
TW's. Jane Karam was the<lb/>
featured comedian and Don<lb/>
Ware was the headliner.<lb/>
Karam was an enthusiastic and<lb/>
energetic on-stage performer. She<lb/>
worked well with the audience<lb/>
and included them throughout<lb/>
the act. Afterwards in an inter-<lb/>
view Karam said that working<lb/>
with the audience "breaks down<lb/>
the barriers" between herself and<lb/>
her audience.<lb/>
Another aspect of her comedy<lb/>
that was quite refreshing was her<lb/>
comedy is clean. "Nobody is<lb/>
respected more than a clean com-<lb/>
edian. I set certain guidelines for<lb/>
myself that I try to follow said<lb/>
Karam. "The people that I<lb/>
idolize Karam continued, "like<lb/>
Johnathan Winters does the same<lb/>
thing, so I thought I would do<lb/>
that also In fact, Karam writes<lb/>
her own material.<lb/>
About writing comedy Karam<lb/>
said, "You constantly have to be<lb/>
paying attention to what is fun-<lb/>
ny. More important, it has to be<lb/>
funny to me, so I can come across<lb/>
as sincere. It is important to<lb/>
know the difference between<lb/>
what is funny to me and what is<lb/>
funny to you<lb/>
Don Ware was the headliner at<lb/>
TW's this past Tuesday night.<lb/>
Ware was a forceful comedian.<lb/>
He was spontaneous, had a<lb/>
steady stream of one-liners, and<lb/>
had the unique ability to create a<lb/>
joke from the most mundane ob-<lb/>
jects. Throughout the act Ware<lb/>
involved the audience and had<lb/>
them constantly laughing.<lb/>
TW's Nightlife has brought,<lb/>
and is bringing, superb talent to<lb/>
the Greenville area. With such<lb/>
comics as Jann Karam and Don<lb/>
Ware, the Comedy Zone is a new<lb/>
dimension to the entertainment<lb/>
scene of Greenville that is a must<lb/>
see. Your time and money will<lb/>
not be wasted.<lb/>
ttgm m i ? ??<lb/>
Don Ware, One of TW's Comedy Zone Comedians.<lb/>
frfrdbrJuiftufyri inT<lb/>
,?? ? <lb/>
f, H? -?. ,<lb/>
<pb facs="00057722_0006"/><lb/>
THEJEASTCAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 10, 1985<lb/>
?(SMSSWMSS<lb/>
- ;?.?<lb/>
i A<lb/>
WSSSS<lb/>
HOME COOKED FOOD<lb/>
Student Special<lb/>
Free dessert<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 $2.2Splus tax &amp; beverage.<lb/>
5 Free Plates With Purchase of Meal Plan.<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/>
WWSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSSA<lb/>
Doonesburv<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
?<lb/>
r. <lb/>
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The East Carolinian 757-6366<lb/>
Why The Crow's Nest?<lb/>
The name Crow's Nest, derived from the top part<lb/>
of a ship, was given to our restaurant to show pride<lb/>
in East Carolina University. Seventeen years later,<lb/>
the Crow's Nest still serves ECU complete Breakfast,<lb/>
Lunch and Dinner meals, 24 Hours a Day.<lb/>
t Come Visit this Pirate Tradition<lb/>
J Soon!<lb/>
Air Conditioned Big Screen T.V.<lb/>
Game Room<lb/>
Corner of 10th St. and Cotanche St.<lb/>
758-2446<lb/>
A LONE WARRIOR SEARCHING FOR HIS DESTINY TRIBE OF LOST CHILDREN WAITING FOR A HERO<lb/>
IN A WORLD BATTLING TO SURVIVE, THEY FACE A WOMAN DETERMINED TO RULE<lb/>
HOLD OUT FOR MAD MAX<lb/>
THIS IS HIS GREATEST ADVENTURE<lb/>
MEL GIBSON<lb/>
Stomno UNA TURNER<lb/>
KENNEDY MILS? Presents<lb/>
MEL GIBSON TINA TURNER "MAD MAX BEYOND THUNDFPnr<lb/>
Music by MAURICE JARRE Dlfector of Photoaaphv DEANiMLFrs<lb/>
WWIen by TERRY HAYB &amp; GEORGE MtuR Oo<lb/>
ftoduced by GEORGE MLLER PpSL<lb/>
B6?On??RNB?PVB???l<lb/>
1 tmmmnmmmm ?&amp;?:<lb/>
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THE ACTION BEGINS WEDNESDAY JULY 10TH<lb/>
AT A THEATRE NEAR YOU<lb/>
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just been na<lb/>
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Bv DAVID Mcl,l<lb/>
Imagine that yaj<lb/>
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with vaiuable mari<lb/>
that can essentiaih<lb/>
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Why would you w<lb/>
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like the one in Greet<lb/>
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tough question, but<lb/>
school swimmers hal<lb/>
are finding themse!v<lb/>
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Their talent, coi<lb/>
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57-6366<lb/>
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show pride<lb/>
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Breakfast,<lb/>
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WAITING fOB A HERO<lb/>
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and TERRY HAYES<lb/>
OGILV1E<lb/>
ED BY WARNER BROS<lb/>
MUNJCaTTONS COMPANY<lb/>
JULY 10TH<lb/>
THE EASTCARd INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JULY 10, 1985 Page 7<lb/>
ECU's Johnson Recipient of Honor;<lb/>
Named To Third Team All-America<lb/>
B TONY BROWN<lb/>
VuiManl SporM<lb/>
ECU'S Winfred Johnson has<lb/>
just been named to the Collegiate<lb/>
America third team All-America<lb/>
squad ' the first Pirate to be so<lb/>
honored since Ron Staggs in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
This award is only the latest in<lb/>
a long string of accomplishments<lb/>
the Pirate pitcher designated hit-<lb/>
ter first baseman has achieved<lb/>
since arriving at ECU in 1983. As<lb/>
a freshman and sophomore<lb/>
lohnson had already started a<lb/>
major assault on the Pirate<lb/>
record books, but his perfor-<lb/>
mance in '85 topped even that ef-<lb/>
fort .<lb/>
He set a new batting average<lb/>
mark (with at least 97 at-bats) of<lb/>
432, increased his own season<lb/>
and career homer records with 22<lb/>
and 51 respectively, as well as<lb/>
ECU records for RBIs and total<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
Johnson also surpassed Todd<lb/>
Evans' previous season-high 64<lb/>
hits with 73 this year, while only<lb/>
striking out 14 times in 46 games.<lb/>
He added 11 two-baggers to his<lb/>
roundtrippers, making a total of<lb/>
33 extra-base hits for the season.<lb/>
The proficient Pirate hitter's<lb/>
1985 statistics placed him fourth<lb/>
in the NCAA in homeruns and<lb/>
RBIs, while his batting average<lb/>
was good for the number 33 slot<lb/>
within the NCAA.<lb/>
In the process of setting these<lb/>
offensive statistics, the junior<lb/>
righthander pitched his wav to an<lb/>
7-5 mark and posted a .975<lb/>
fielding percentage at first base.<lb/>
Johnson's play had already<lb/>
resulted in his being honored as<lb/>
The Daily Reflector's male player<lb/>
of the year and one of the ECAC-<lb/>
South players of the week. He<lb/>
was the co-favorite to win con-<lb/>
ference player of the year as well,<lb/>
but was finally beaten out for the<lb/>
honor by George Mason's Kevin<lb/>
Burke.<lb/>
"Winfred Johnson is one of<lb/>
the best baseball players East<lb/>
Carolina has ever had said<lb/>
Pirate assistant coach Billy Best.<lb/>
"He not only has power, but hits<lb/>
for a consistently high average as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Best, who serves as the hitting<lb/>
instructor for the team, feels<lb/>
Johnson's strength is the ability<lb/>
to hit all types of pitches. "He's<lb/>
one of the best breaking-ball hit-<lb/>
ters I've seen the assistant<lb/>
coach said, "but he can hit<lb/>
fastballs just as well<lb/>
"One day the young man's go-<lb/>
ing to make his mark in the<lb/>
pros head coach Gary Overton<lb/>
stated. "It may not happen right<lb/>
away, but it will happen. Win<lb/>
fred's simply a very good hitter.<lb/>
He played excellently last year<lb/>
and even better this season<lb/>
Although Johnson wasn't<lb/>
drafted by the pros this year, it is<lb/>
a virtual certainty that continued<lb/>
play of this caliber next season<lb/>
will assure him of a high draft<lb/>
pick in 1986.<lb/>
Manwaring Concludes<lb/>
Expects Even Tougher<lb/>
Good Recruiting Year;<lb/>
Schedule Next Season<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sports I- dilur<lb/>
ECU women's basketball<lb/>
coach Emily Manwaring has<lb/>
completed what she considers a<lb/>
"great" recruiting year with the<lb/>
signing o junior college transfer<lb/>
I innette Tucker.<lb/>
Tucker, a six oo power for-<lb/>
ward from Roxbury Community<lb/>
College in Boston, Mass averag-<lb/>
ed 2" points, 25 rebounds and<lb/>
three blocked shots a game last<lb/>
- ;aon.<lb/>
She was named junior college<lb/>
All-America and first team all-<lb/>
New England in the New England<lb/>
Conference. Tucker chose ECU<lb/>
over national champion Old<lb/>
Dominion and Penn State.<lb/>
"1 innette Tucker is an im-<lb/>
mensely talented and experienced<lb/>
player and makes this a great<lb/>
recruiting year for us Manwar-<lb/>
ing -aid "She is the athlete we<lb/>
needed for an immediate con-<lb/>
tribution on the inside and wuTBe<lb/>
a major factor in accomplishing<lb/>
our team goals of a top twenty<lb/>
ranking and a berth in the<lb/>
NCAA's<lb/>
"1 innette (Tucker) is going to be<lb/>
a power player Manwaring<lb/>
continued. "She has offensive<lb/>
abilities and also will be a domi-<lb/>
nant rebounder in our con-<lb/>
ference<lb/>
Tucker, who has a 35-inch ver-<lb/>
tical leap, will team with<lb/>
sophomore forward Monique<lb/>
Pompili to form possible "dual<lb/>
dunkers" for the Lady Pirates<lb/>
next season. Pompili has already<lb/>
dunked since the season ended<lb/>
and it is said that Tucker can also<lb/>
dunk.<lb/>
Tucker joins five other Lady<lb/>
Pirate newcomers in<lb/>
Manwanng's initial recruiting<lb/>
season. Tucker, 55" guard<lb/>
Delphine Mabry and 5'10" for-<lb/>
ward Cathy Ellis will all be<lb/>
juniors next year.<lb/>
Mabry was a starter during<lb/>
the 1983-84 season, averaging<lb/>
10.4 ppg. She played a major role<lb/>
in leading the Lady Pirates to the<lb/>
championship of the first ECAC<lb/>
South women's tournament.<lb/>
Pam Williams, a 58' guard<lb/>
along with 6'1" center Rose<lb/>
Miller and 62' center Gretta<lb/>
O'Neal will all be freshmen next<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Williams, who was a 'cammate<lb/>
o Alma Bethea at Goldsboro<lb/>
High School averaged 15.7 ppg<lb/>
and 8.7 rebounds in her senior<lb/>
season.<lb/>
Miller, a 6'1" center from<lb/>
New berry High School earned<lb/>
3-A all-state and all-star honors.<lb/>
She averaged 20.7 ppg and 16.4<lb/>
rebounds as she set a school<lb/>
record for most rebounds in a<lb/>
season and game with 362 and 26<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Manwaring feels that the good<lb/>
results she has had in recruiting is<lb/>
due in part to the success her<lb/>
team had on the court last year in<lb/>
winning both the conference<lb/>
regular season and tournament<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
"I think our successful year<lb/>
was a real attractive reason for<lb/>
people to come here she said.<lb/>
"Players want to go to schools<lb/>
that are not only successful on<lb/>
the court, but academically suc-<lb/>
cessful as well<lb/>
Manwaring is especially proud<lb/>
of the fact that she had four<lb/>
players make the Honor Roll (3.0<lb/>
grade point average) and two<lb/>
more make the Dean's List (3.5<lb/>
and above).<lb/>
"We have a full time staff<lb/>
handling academic advising for<lb/>
athletes she said, "and they do<lb/>
an excellent job of advising and<lb/>
monitoring the progress of our<lb/>
basketball players<lb/>
Senior forward Annette<lb/>
Phillips and Therese Durkin both<lb/>
made the Dean's List, while Chris<lb/>
O'Connor, Crystal Grier, Shelley<lb/>
Ridgway and Lorrainne Foster all<lb/>
made the Honor Roll.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will open the<lb/>
season on Nov. 22-23 in the Ten-<lb/>
nessee Tech Tournament in<lb/>
Cookeville, Tenn. The University<lb/>
of Georgia and Tennessee join<lb/>
ECU and Tennessee Tech in the<lb/>
four-team tournament.<lb/>
Georgia was the runner-up in<lb/>
the NCAA tournament while<lb/>
Tennessee Tech and Tennessee<lb/>
were both NCAA participants<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
In addition, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will travel to Norfolk, Va to<lb/>
take on the defending national<lb/>
champion Old Dominion.<lb/>
Coach Manwaring likes the<lb/>
idea of playing the big name<lb/>
schools and feels the schedule can<lb/>
only benefit her team.<lb/>
"One of our goals will be to<lb/>
defend our regular season and<lb/>
tournament championships she<lb/>
said. "With the type of schedule<lb/>
we play, if we do well we'll get<lb/>
some national notice<lb/>
Winfred Johnson became the first Pirate baseball player to earn all-<lb/>
America status since 1975 with his outstanding play this past season.<lb/>
Johnson also was named to the all ECAC South team.<lb/>
ECU women's basketball coach Emily Manwaring (far left), has a laugh at her basketbaMmp! Manw<lb/>
can afford to smile after finishing up an outstanding recruiting year by signing Linnette Tucker.<lb/>
Pirate Golf Recruits Look Impressive;<lb/>
Should Make Important Contribution<lb/>
Mark Arcilesi, an all-conference performer returns for the Pirates.<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sports Mtof<lb/>
ECU golf coach Bob Helmick<lb/>
has signed six golfers to letters-<lb/>
of-intent. Included among the six<lb/>
are two members of the North<lb/>
Carolina state championship<lb/>
team and a transfer student from<lb/>
the Big Eight.<lb/>
Mike Nadau and John Chap-<lb/>
man, both of Raleigh Millbrook,<lb/>
led their squad to the team title as<lb/>
both finished in the top five in-<lb/>
dividually at the state high school<lb/>
tournament. Chapman also cap-<lb/>
tured first place in the North<lb/>
State Golf Championship earlier<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Chris Winkel, a native of<lb/>
Algoona, la comes to ECU<lb/>
from the University of Arkansas.<lb/>
Although Winkel is a transfer, he<lb/>
will be a freshman eligibility wise<lb/>
and will be eligible to play in the<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Jeff Davis of Sycamore, 111<lb/>
Pat King of Doylestown Pa,<lb/>
and Jon Decker of Black Moun-<lb/>
tain, N.C. round out the list of<lb/>
incoming players.<lb/>
ECU coach Helmick is pleased<lb/>
with his incoming freshmen and<lb/>
feels some will make an im-<lb/>
mediate contribution to the team.<lb/>
"I think John Chapman,<lb/>
Michael Nadau and Chris Winkel<lb/>
will all be excellent additions to<lb/>
our team he said. "All of them<lb/>
could possibly see action in the<lb/>
fall next year<lb/>
Helmick is excited about the<lb/>
prospects for the upcoming<lb/>
season with the freshmen signees<lb/>
providing depth to go with some<lb/>
talented holdovers.<lb/>
All-ECAC South performer<lb/>
Mark Arcilesi returns along with<lb/>
Mike Bradley, the team's MVP<lb/>
the past two seasons, and Paul<lb/>
Steelman. Arcilesi, Bradley and<lb/>
Steelman will all be juniors with<lb/>
two years of eligibility remaining.<lb/>
Other returning golfers include<lb/>
sophomores David McKenzie and<lb/>
Chris Riley, along with Kelly<lb/>
Stimart.<lb/>
The Pirates will play in four<lb/>
tournaments in the fall which will<lb/>
include some of the regions top<lb/>
golfing schools.<lb/>
ECU will compete in the<lb/>
MacGregor Golf Classic in<lb/>
Pickens, SC; the John Ryan<lb/>
Memorial Golf Tburnament<lb/>
hosted by Duke University, the<lb/>
Wolfpack Collegiate Invitational<lb/>
and the UNC-Wilmington Fall<lb/>
Invitational.<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to get-<lb/>
ting into our fall schedule<lb/>
Helmick said. "We'll try to get in<lb/>
as much practice time as possible<lb/>
and experiment with the line-ups.<lb/>
getting everybody some tourna-<lb/>
ment experience<lb/>
Helmick says his team has the<lb/>
ability to have a good season and<lb/>
is expecting good things from his<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
"We'll be as talented as we've<lb/>
ever been, but you can't place<lb/>
talent on the scoreboard he<lb/>
said. "You must produce?which<lb/>
is where we've failed in the past<lb/>
One key area for the Pirates<lb/>
this fall is that they will have<lb/>
some talented upperclassmen to<lb/>
lead the way for the incoming<lb/>
freshmen.<lb/>
"We have three strong<lb/>
elements returning from last<lb/>
year's team? and they will haved<lb/>
to carry us he continued. "The<lb/>
remaining three spots will be<lb/>
determined by how everybody<lb/>
plays when they come in<lb/>
Pirate Tankers Stronger With Proven Vet s<lb/>
By DAVID McGUINNESS<lb/>
St?ff Wrilw<lb/>
Imagine that you are a top<lb/>
swimmer. You are an individual<lb/>
with valuable marketable skills<lb/>
that can essentially buy you an<lb/>
education at a good university.<lb/>
Why would you want to pick a<lb/>
school (and swimming program)<lb/>
like the one in Greenvile, N.C?<lb/>
On the surface this seems like a<lb/>
tough question, but talented high<lb/>
school swimmers have been and<lb/>
are finding themselves drawn to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Their talent combined with<lb/>
sweat and dedication, have led to<lb/>
a program that is good and<lb/>
steadily improving. "Our strong<lb/>
recruiting during the last four<lb/>
years is really starting to pay off<lb/>
now ECU head coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe said. "For the first time we<lb/>
have a really solid veteran team<lb/>
Solid is right. While most<lb/>
teams hope for three or four<lb/>
good returning seniors, the Pirate<lb/>
men will field five.<lb/>
"Seniors Kaut, Pittelli,<lb/>
Hawkins, Cook and<lb/>
Robaczewski will help give us the<lb/>
depth and experience we'll need<lb/>
to achieve our goals Kobe said.<lb/>
Goals form the crux of Coach<lb/>
Kobe's philosophy. "Nothing<lb/>
with substance can ever be<lb/>
achieved without a truly defined<lb/>
goal Kobe continued.<lb/>
His goals for the Pirates this<lb/>
season are threefold: to have a<lb/>
winning season, to win the Col-<lb/>
onial Athletic Conference Cham-<lb/>
pionships, and to qualify a swim-<lb/>
mer or swimmers for the NCAA<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Kobe has also utilized goals in<lb/>
recruiting. "Four years ago we<lb/>
were basically trying to build an<lb/>
entire team he said. "Now we<lb/>
can use our recruiting dollars to<lb/>
pick and choose swimmers who<lb/>
are good in our weaker areas<lb/>
While lacking the large<lb/>
recruiting budgets that some pro-<lb/>
grams receive, ECU has many<lb/>
qualities that make it attractive to<lb/>
potential swimmers.<lb/>
ECU has an attractive campus<lb/>
and many of its academic pro-<lb/>
grams are highly rated nationally.<lb/>
In addition, the swimming pro-<lb/>
gram has a good national reputa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
However, according to Kobe<lb/>
what many recruits seem to like<lb/>
about ECU is its people. "Once<lb/>
recruits come and spend time<lb/>
with the team, they usually like<lb/>
the kids so well that they decide<lb/>
to attend he said.<lb/>
The last two years have seen an<lb/>
exceptional amount of incoming<lb/>
talent at ECU. For instance<lb/>
Bruce Brockschmidt, one of this<lb/>
season's freshmen, led the men's<lb/>
team, barely missing qualifying<lb/>
for the nationals.<lb/>
"This year's freshmen will<lb/>
almost completely replace our<lb/>
lost seniors Kobe said. "Our<lb/>
only weak spots will be in the<lb/>
backstroke and diving<lb/>
Although most of ECU's talent<lb/>
comes from the Mid-Atlantic and<lb/>
Florida areas, there are also peo-<lb/>
ple on the team from throughout<lb/>
the country, as well as other na-<lb/>
tions. One of Peru's best, Chema<lb/>
Larranaga, made great contribu-<lb/>
tions to the team during his years<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
ECU has been drawing<lb/>
talented swimmers and Kobe<lb/>
makes it a point to get everything<lb/>
out of their ability. "We have no<lb/>
right to be as fast as we are<lb/>
Kobe said. What he means is that<lb/>
the Pirates have exceeded<lb/>
everyone's expectations in terms<lb/>
of performance.<lb/>
See SWIMMING, Page 8<lb/>
MMV<lb/>
<lb/>
v<lb/>
- ? ? ? ft J? ? ??<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057722_0008"/><lb/>
V.<lb/>
57-6366<lb/>
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ide<lb/>
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ELL and TERRY HAYES<lb/>
OGJLV1E<lb/>
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MM. Mi AT MS v T"jmpan<lb/>
JULY 10TH<lb/>
I HI EAS1 i ROI INIAN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
JL 1 10, lvx Page<lb/>
ECC's Johnson Recipient of Honor;<lb/>
Named To Third Team All-America<lb/>
Bv 1()N BROUN<lb/>
ECU's infred lohnson has<lb/>
usi been named to the Collegiate<lb/>
merica thud team All-America<lb/>
lad ' the first Pirate to be so<lb/>
red since Ron Staggs in<lb/>
1975.<lb/>
- award is only the latest in<lb/>
oi accomplishments<lb/>
U hei designated hit-<lb/>
first baseman has achieved<lb/>
ng at ECU in N83. As<lb/>
Freshman and sophomore<lb/>
 had already started a<lb/>
sault on the Pirate<lb/>
- 5, but his perfor-<lb/>
N topped even that ef-<lb/>
Wi: new batting average<lb/>
U least 9" at bats) of<lb/>
.432, increased his own season<lb/>
and careei homer records with 22<lb/>
and 51 respectively, as well as<lb/>
1(1 records for RBIs and total<lb/>
bases.<lb/>
Johnson also surpassed Todd<lb/>
Evans' previous season-high 64<lb/>
hits with 73 this year, while only<lb/>
striking out 14 times in 46 games.<lb/>
He added 11 two-baggers to his<lb/>
roundtrippers, making a total of<lb/>
33 extra-base hits for the season.<lb/>
1 he proficient Pirate hitter's<lb/>
1985 statistics placed him fourth<lb/>
in the NCAA in homeruns and<lb/>
RBIs, while his batting average<lb/>
was good for the number 33 slot<lb/>
withm the NCAA.<lb/>
In the process o( setting these<lb/>
offensive statistics, the junior<lb/>
righthander pitched his way to an<lb/>
7-5 mark and posted a .975<lb/>
fielding percentage at first base.<lb/>
Johnson's play had already<lb/>
resulted in his being honored as<lb/>
The Daily Reflector's male player<lb/>
of the year and one of the ECAC-<lb/>
South players of the week. He<lb/>
was the co-favorite to win con-<lb/>
ference player of the year as well,<lb/>
but was finally beaten out for the<lb/>
honor by George Mason's Kevin<lb/>
Burke.<lb/>
"Winfred Johnson is one of<lb/>
the best baseball players East<lb/>
Carolina has ever had said<lb/>
Pirate assistant coach Billy Best.<lb/>
"He not only has power, but hits<lb/>
for a consistently high average as<lb/>
well<lb/>
Best, who serves as the hitting<lb/>
instructor for the team, feels<lb/>
Johnson's strength is the ability<lb/>
to hit all types of pitches. "He's<lb/>
one of the best breaking-ball hit-<lb/>
ters I've seen the assistant<lb/>
coach said, "but he can hit<lb/>
fastballs just as well<lb/>
"One day the young man's go-<lb/>
ing to make his mark in the<lb/>
pros head coach Gary Overton<lb/>
stated. "It may not happen right<lb/>
away, but it will happen. Win<lb/>
fred's simply a very good hitter.<lb/>
He played excellently last year<lb/>
and even better this season<lb/>
Although Johnson wasn't<lb/>
drafted by the pros this year, it is<lb/>
a virtual certainty that continued<lb/>
play of this caliber next season<lb/>
will assure him of a high draft<lb/>
pick in 1986.<lb/>
Manwaring Concludes<lb/>
Expects Even Tougher<lb/>
Good Recruiting Year;<lb/>
Schedule Next Season<lb/>
B Rl( K Mc ORM-U<lb/>
I . I w omen's basketl<lb/>
i mily Manwaring has<lb/>
i - . nsiders a<lb/>
yeai with<lb/>
? ?. sfei<lb/>
nette Tuet er.<lb/>
t six 1 o p ' ei I oi<lb/>
R - bun c ommun<lb/>
. Mass . a erag-<lb/>
25 rebounds and<lb/>
? . -hois a game last<lb/>
?<lb/>
. im all-<lb/>
New 1 :<lb/>
? .?? . hose II<lb/>
i<lb/>
I uckei is an im-<lb/>
: expei ienced<lb/>
this a great<lb/>
I r us Manw;<lb/>
ithlete we<lb/>
eded  con-<lb/>
tribution on the inside and will be<lb/>
mplishi<lb/>
f<lb/>
berth in the<lb/>
M <lb/>
fuckei o be<lb/>
1 i Manwaring<lb/>
ffensive<lb/>
I als ill be a domi-<lb/>
in our con-<lb/>
has a 35-inch v er-<lb/>
will team with<lb/>
: a ai d Monique<lb/>
Pompili to torm possible "dual<lb/>
dunkers" for the I ad Pirates<lb/>
next season. Pompili has already<lb/>
dunked since the season ended<lb/>
and it is said that Fucker can also<lb/>
dunk.<lb/>
I ticker joins five other Lad)<lb/>
Pirate ne w comers i n<lb/>
Manwaring's initial recruiting<lb/>
season. Tucker, 55" guard<lb/>
Delphine Mabry and 5'10" ten-<lb/>
ward C at by Ellis will all be<lb/>
juniors next yeai.<lb/>
Mabry was a starter during<lb/>
the 1983-84 season, averaging<lb/>
10.4 ppg She played a major role<lb/>
eading the 1 ad Pirates to the<lb/>
ionship of the first ECAC<lb/>
ith women's tournament.<lb/>
Pam illiams, a 5'8" guard<lb/>
th 6' 1" centei Rose<lb/>
M llei And 6'2" center Gretta<lb/>
I Neal will all be freshmen next<lb/>
on.<lb/>
V illiams, who was a teammate<lb/>
Alma Bethea at Goldsboro<lb/>
High School averaged 15.7 ppg<lb/>
and 8.7 rebounds in her senior<lb/>
i on.<lb/>
Miller, a 6'1" center from<lb/>
Newberry High School earned<lb/>
; all-state and all-star honors.<lb/>
She averaged 20 ppg and 16.4<lb/>
rebounds as she set a school<lb/>
record tor most rebounds in a<lb/>
season and game with 362 and 26<lb/>
respectively.<lb/>
Manwaring feels that the good<lb/>
results she has had in recruiting is<lb/>
due in part to the success her<lb/>
team had on the court last year in<lb/>
winning both the conference<lb/>
regular season and tournament<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
"1 think our successful year<lb/>
was a real attractive reason for<lb/>
people to come here she said.<lb/>
"Players want to go to schools<lb/>
that are not only successful on<lb/>
the court, but academically suc-<lb/>
cessful as well<lb/>
Manwaring is especially proud<lb/>
of the fact that she had four<lb/>
players make the Honor Roll (3.0<lb/>
grade point average) and two<lb/>
more make the Dean's List (3.5<lb/>
and above).<lb/>
"We have a full time staff<lb/>
handling academic advising for<lb/>
athletes she said, "and they do<lb/>
an excellent job o advising and<lb/>
monitoring the progress of our<lb/>
basketball players<lb/>
Senior forward Annette<lb/>
Phillips and Therese Durkin both<lb/>
made the Dean's List, while Chris<lb/>
O'Connor, Crystal drier, Shelley<lb/>
Ridgway and Lorrainne Foster all<lb/>
made the Honor Roll.<lb/>
The Lady Pirates will open the<lb/>
season on Nov. 22-23 in the Ten-<lb/>
nessee Tech Tournament in<lb/>
Cookeville, Tenn. The University<lb/>
o Georgia and Tennessee join<lb/>
ECU and Tennessee Tech in the<lb/>
four-team tournament.<lb/>
Georgia was the runner-up in<lb/>
the NCAA tournament while<lb/>
Tennessee Tech and Tennessee<lb/>
were both NCAA participants<lb/>
last year.<lb/>
In addition, the Lady Pirates<lb/>
will travel to Norfolk, Va to<lb/>
take on the defending national<lb/>
champion Old Dominion.<lb/>
Coach Manwaring likes the<lb/>
idea of playing the big name<lb/>
schools and feels the schedule can<lb/>
only benefit her team.<lb/>
"One of our goals will be to<lb/>
defend our regular season and<lb/>
tournament championships she<lb/>
said. "With the type o' schedule<lb/>
we play, if we do well we'll get<lb/>
some national notice<lb/>
Winfred Johnson became the first Pirate baseball plaver to earn all-<lb/>
America status since 1975 with his outstanding pa this past season.<lb/>
Johnson also was named to the all ECAC uith team.<lb/>
J I HUMBERT ICU ?M?o lot,<lb/>
ECU women's basketball coach Emily Manuring (far left), has a laugh at her basketball camp Manwarin"<lb/>
can afford to smile after finishing up an outstanding recruiting year by signing I innette I inker.<lb/>
Pirate Golf Recruits Look Impressive;<lb/>
Should Make Important Contribution<lb/>
Mark Arcilesi, an all-conference performer returns for the Pirates.<lb/>
By RICK McCORMAC<lb/>
Sporti Editor<lb/>
ECU golf coach Bob Helmick<lb/>
has signed six golfers to letters-<lb/>
of-intent. Included among the six<lb/>
are two members of the North<lb/>
Carolina state championship<lb/>
team and a transfer student from<lb/>
the Big Eight.<lb/>
Mike Nadau and John Chap-<lb/>
man, both of Raleigh Millbrook,<lb/>
led their squad to the team title as<lb/>
both finished in the top five in-<lb/>
dividually at the state high school<lb/>
tournament. Chapman also cap-<lb/>
tured first place in the North<lb/>
State Golf Championship earlier<lb/>
this summer.<lb/>
Chris Winkel, a native of<lb/>
Algoona, la comes to ECU<lb/>
from the University of Arkansas.<lb/>
Although Winkel is a transfer, he<lb/>
will be a freshman eligibility wise<lb/>
and will be eligible to play in the<lb/>
fall.<lb/>
Jeff Davis of Sycamore, 111<lb/>
Pat King of Doylestown Pa,<lb/>
and Jon Decker of Black Moun-<lb/>
tain, N.C. round out the list of<lb/>
incoming players.<lb/>
ECU coach Helmick is pleased<lb/>
with his incoming freshmen and<lb/>
feels some will make an im-<lb/>
mediate contribution to the team.<lb/>
"I think John Chapman,<lb/>
Michael Nadau and Chris Winkel<lb/>
will all be excellent additions to<lb/>
our team he said. "AH of them<lb/>
could possibly see action in the<lb/>
fall next year<lb/>
Helmick is excited about the<lb/>
prospects for the upcoming<lb/>
season with the freshmen signees<lb/>
providing depth to go with some<lb/>
talented holdovers.<lb/>
All-ECAC South performer<lb/>
Mark Arcilesi returns along with<lb/>
Mike Bradley, the team's MVP<lb/>
the past two seasons, and Paul<lb/>
Steelman. Arcilesi, Bradley and<lb/>
Steelman will all be juniors with<lb/>
two years of eligibility remaining.<lb/>
Other returning golfers include<lb/>
sophomores David Mckenzie and<lb/>
Chris Riley, along wrth Kelly<lb/>
Stimart.<lb/>
The Pirates will play in four<lb/>
tournaments in the fall which will<lb/>
include some of the regions top<lb/>
golfing schools.<lb/>
ECU will compete in the<lb/>
MacGregor Golf Classic in<lb/>
Pickens, SC; the John Ryan<lb/>
Memorial Golf Tburnament<lb/>
hosted by Duke University, the<lb/>
Wolfpack Collegiate Invitational<lb/>
and the UNC-Wilmington Fall<lb/>
Invitational.<lb/>
"I'm looking forward to get-<lb/>
ting into our fall schedule<lb/>
Helmick said. "We'll try to get in<lb/>
as much practice time as possible<lb/>
and experiment with the line-ups.<lb/>
getting evervbodv some tourna-<lb/>
ment experience<lb/>
Helmick says his team has the<lb/>
ability to have a good season and<lb/>
is expecting good things from his<lb/>
squad.<lb/>
"We'll be as talented as we've<lb/>
ever been, but you can't place<lb/>
talent on the scoreboard he<lb/>
said. "You must produce?which<lb/>
is where we've failed in the past<lb/>
One key area for the Pirates<lb/>
this fall is that they will have<lb/>
some talented upperclassmen to<lb/>
lead the wav for the incoming<lb/>
freshmen.<lb/>
"We have three strong<lb/>
elements returning from last<lb/>
year's team? and they will haved<lb/>
to carry us he continued. "The<lb/>
remaining three spots will be<lb/>
determined by how everybody<lb/>
plays when they come in<lb/>
Pirate Tankers Stronger With Proven Vets<lb/>
Bv DAVID McGUINNESS<lb/>
Staff Writr<lb/>
Imagine that you are a top<lb/>
swimmer. You are an individual<lb/>
with valuable marketable skills<lb/>
that can essentially buy you an<lb/>
education at a good university.<lb/>
Why would you want to pick a<lb/>
school (and swimming program)<lb/>
like the one in Greenvile, N.C?<lb/>
On the surface this seems like a<lb/>
tough question, but talented high<lb/>
school swimmers have been and<lb/>
are finding themselves drawn to<lb/>
ECU.<lb/>
Their talent, combined with<lb/>
sweat and dedication, have led to<lb/>
a program that is good and<lb/>
steadily improving. "Our strong<lb/>
recruiting during the last four<lb/>
years is really starting to pay off<lb/>
now ECU head coach Rick<lb/>
Kobe said. "For the first time we<lb/>
have a really solid veteran team<lb/>
Solid is right. While most<lb/>
teams hope for three or four<lb/>
good returning seniors, the Pirate<lb/>
men will field five.<lb/>
"Seniors Kaut, Pittelli,<lb/>
Hawkins, Cook and<lb/>
Robaczewski will help give us the<lb/>
depth and experience we'll need<lb/>
to achieve our goals Kobe said.<lb/>
Goals form the crux of Coach<lb/>
Kobe's philosophy. "Nothing<lb/>
with substance can ever be<lb/>
achieved without a truly defined<lb/>
goal Kobe continued.<lb/>
His goals for the Pirates this<lb/>
season are threefold: to have a<lb/>
winning season, to win the Col-<lb/>
onial Athletic Conference Cham-<lb/>
pionships, and to qualify a swim-<lb/>
mer or swimmers for the NCAA<lb/>
championships.<lb/>
Kobe has also utilized goals in<lb/>
recruiting. "Four years ago we<lb/>
were basically trying to build an<lb/>
entire team he said. "Now we<lb/>
can use our recruiting dollars to<lb/>
pick and choose swimmers who<lb/>
are good in our weaker areas<lb/>
While lacking the large<lb/>
recruiting budgets that some pro-<lb/>
grams receive, ECU has many<lb/>
qualities that make it attractive to<lb/>
potential swimmers.<lb/>
ECU has an attractive campus<lb/>
and many of its academic pro-<lb/>
grams are highly rated nationally.<lb/>
In addition, the swimming pro-<lb/>
gram has a good national reputa-<lb/>
tion.<lb/>
However, according to Kobe<lb/>
what many recruits seem to like<lb/>
about ECU is its people. "Once<lb/>
recruits come and spend time<lb/>
with the team, they usually like<lb/>
the kids so well that they decide<lb/>
to attend he said.<lb/>
The last two years have seen an<lb/>
exceptional amount of incoming<lb/>
talent at ECU. For instance<lb/>
Bruce Brockschmidt, one of this<lb/>
season's freshmen, led the men's<lb/>
team, barely missing qualifying<lb/>
for the nationals.<lb/>
"This year's freshmen will<lb/>
almost completely replace our<lb/>
lost seniors Kobe said. "Our<lb/>
only weak spots will be in the<lb/>
backstroke and diving<lb/>
Although most of ECU's talent<lb/>
comes from the Mid-Atlantic and<lb/>
Florida areas, there are also peo-<lb/>
ple on the team from throughout<lb/>
the country, as well as other na-<lb/>
tions. One of Peru's best, Chema<lb/>
Larranaga, made great contribu-<lb/>
tions to the team during his years<lb/>
at ECU.<lb/>
ECU has been drawing<lb/>
talented swimmers and Kobe<lb/>
makes it a point to get everything<lb/>
out of their ability. "We have no<lb/>
right to be as fast as we are<lb/>
Kobe said. What he means is that<lb/>
the Pirates have exceeded<lb/>
everyone's expectations in terms<lb/>
of performance.<lb/>
See SWIMMING. Page g<lb/>
i<lb/>
? .<lb/>
<pb facs="00057722_0009"/><lb/>
8<lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 10, 1985<lb/>
Intramurals<lb/>
ByJENNETTEROTH<lb/>
Suff Writer<lb/>
With two and a half weeks left<lb/>
in second summer session, the in-<lb/>
tramural action continues to get<lb/>
as hot as July's sultry weather.<lb/>
In recent IRS putt-putt action,<lb/>
10 contestants hit the mini-slopes<lb/>
of Greenville's putt-putt golf<lb/>
course for what ended in some<lb/>
steamy competition! A mere six<lb/>
strokes divided the first, second<lb/>
and third place finishers.<lb/>
James Russo ended the event<lb/>
Swimming<lb/>
Program<lb/>
Successful<lb/>
Continued From Page 7<lb/>
ECU'S success over the past<lb/>
two seasons is reflected in a 34-17<lb/>
combined dual meet record,<lb/>
despite a modest budget in com-<lb/>
parison with man1 opponents<lb/>
who are swimming powers. The<lb/>
Pirates also had 25 qualifiers for<lb/>
the nationals, while setting 18<lb/>
varsity and 15 freshman records<lb/>
over this same period.<lb/>
While winning is the main goal<lb/>
of every coach, Kobe finds many<lb/>
other aspects of the job equally<lb/>
rewarding. The comraderie bet-<lb/>
ween the coach and staff helps<lb/>
make his duties seem really wor-<lb/>
thwhile.<lb/>
"I really enjoy just being with<lb/>
the team Kobe said. "Of<lb/>
course every day there's a new<lb/>
problem for someone, but help-<lb/>
ing the kids with those problems<lb/>
is really satisfying. The people on<lb/>
my team are bright, funny and<lb/>
fun to be around.<lb/>
'That kind of reward gets you<lb/>
through the tough times Kobe<lb/>
added, "but there's nothing like<lb/>
watching them kick ass at the big<lb/>
meets after working hard all<lb/>
season<lb/>
M-W-F<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
M-F<lb/>
Sat.<lb/>
Sun.<lb/>
SWIMMING POOLS<lb/>
Memorial Pool<lb/>
7 a.m8 a.m.<lb/>
12 noon-1:30 p.m.<lb/>
Minges Pool<lb/>
4 p.m7: p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
1 p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
WEIGHT ROOMS<lb/>
Memorial<lb/>
M-Th 9a.m7 p.m.<lb/>
Friday 9 a.m5: p.m.<lb/>
Minges<lb/>
M-F 3 p.m7 p.m.<lb/>
SPORTS MEDICINE<lb/>
SERVICES<lb/>
T-Th 10a.m12noon<lb/>
T-Th i p.m4 p.m.<lb/>
MEMORIAL GYMNASIUM<lb/>
M-Th 11 p.m7: p.m.<lb/>
Friday n p.m5: p.m.<lb/>
SatSun. l p.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: p.m.<lb/>
Sat Sun. l p.m4p.m.<lb/>
OUTDOOR RECREATION<lb/>
CENTER<lb/>
M-F 1:30p.m5 p.m.<lb/>
TTh 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/>
with an overall 76, capturing<lb/>
third place honors. Ling<lb/>
Sriraman waJked away second<lb/>
with a 74, while David Howell<lb/>
took the championship trophy by<lb/>
shooting a spectacular 70 overall.<lb/>
It seems as though July<lb/>
volleyballers are on the real<lb/>
beaches of North Carolina as on-<lb/>
ly two squads will compete in this<lb/>
session's co-rec competition on<lb/>
'Tyler Beach But who could<lb/>
have asked for two better spiking<lb/>
powers in last session's first and<lb/>
-i ??????in i-<lb/>
SALE<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/>
' ?  ?"?? ??"<lb/>
PROFESSIONAL TYPING<lb/>
SERVICE: All typing needs.<lb/>
Call 758-8241 Of 758 5488.<lb/>
second place finishers, GOOD,<lb/>
BAD &amp; UGLY and SUMMER<lb/>
BUMS. GOOD, BAD &amp; UGLY<lb/>
will be going for their third<lb/>
straight title with spring semester<lb/>
and first session victories already<lb/>
under their belts. On the<lb/>
otherhand, the SUMMER BUMS<lb/>
are going for the upset and<lb/>
should give the GOOD, BAD &amp;<lb/>
UGL La run for their money. All<lb/>
the co-rec action begins this<lb/>
week.<lb/>
More than just the volleyball<lb/>
?r,r.r,wj,j?MM,MmffAW?<lb/>
courts will sizIe with stars as IRS<lb/>
one-on-one basketball begins<lb/>
tonight. Six hoopsters have<lb/>
entered the tournament to date.<lb/>
Sneaker Sam has been seen<lb/>
scouting the competition and has<lb/>
chosen Percy Edwards as this ses-<lb/>
sion's top hopeful. But off the<lb/>
putt-putt links and on to the<lb/>
court sinks Ling Sriraman, who<lb/>
ranks third in the competition.<lb/>
No doubt, Sneaker Sam will stay<lb/>
abreast of the action until the<lb/>
crowning of this session's cham-<lb/>
pion.<lb/>
Don't forget to sign up for the<lb/>
seasonal softball finale. Register<lb/>
in room 204 of Memorial Civm or<lb/>
call 757-6387 this week.<lb/>
You can still ride the open<lb/>
range of Greenville ? just pre-<lb/>
register with the IRS and head<lb/>
out to Jarman's Stables on<lb/>
highway 43 for a full hour oi<lb/>
horseback riding. With your ad-<lb/>
vance registration the cost of the<lb/>
affair is reduced from $8.00 to<lb/>
$5.00, including transportation<lb/>
&amp; Ugly<lb/>
on the intramural shuttle to Jar-<lb/>
man's ? as long as four more<lb/>
cow pokes are willing to<lb/>
Register in room 204 Memorial<lb/>
Gym.<lb/>
I istcn to tins weeks Tennis<lb/>
e I alkshow I hurs ar ; :<lb/>
and 5 30 i 91 I WZMB<lb/>
for the latest in intramui<lb/>
lion. Your hostess, Stephanie<lb/>
I uke will keep you up to d itc<lb/>
all the fun and cxcitemei<lb/>
summei<lb/>
:<lb/>
zzzzzzmzEzzzzzzzm22zzzzzE2mzszzmz<lb/>
 v 7 THROUGH SAT JUI<lb/>
?4UUiFFE??PLEHOLESAtE?S<lb/>
rCCprTVE SUNDAY tncffREDFORSl1<lb/>
N0T AVAILABtt<lb/>
? he wh<lb/>
I vim<lb/>
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vmm LTO WALL<lb/>
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0PEH SUNDAYS 8<lb/>
3f OFF LABEL<lb/>
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12 oz<lb/>
ctn<lb/>
 SAVE<lb/>
99c20c<lb/>
79c 10"<lb/>
1M20C<lb/>
49c20c<lb/>
89<lb/>
 SAVE<lb/>
99 206<lb/>
loo 206<lb/>
8920<lb/>
79? 20<lb/>
 SAVE<lb/>
i 131 ,<lb/>
tnwu<lb/>
nqp<lb/>
-<lb/>
PRODUCE SPECIALS<lb/>
CALIFORNIA<lb/>
RED OR WHITE<lb/>
Seedless<lb/>
Grapes<lb/>
DELICIOUS <lb/>
Fresh S<lb/>
Blueberries<lb/>
Health &amp; Beauty Aids Specials<lb/>
NOXZEMA<lb/>
Skin Cream<lb/>
BLUE<lb/>
Alka Seltzer<lb/>
2 5oz<lb/>
size<lb/>
26 ct<lb/>
pkg<lb/>
99c<lb/>
189<lb/>
DELI SPECIALS<lb/>
Natural<lb/>
Light<lb/>
WINE<lb/>
 <lb/>
39 Paul<lb/>
?t Masson<lb/>
SAVE <lb/>
20 i<lb/>
'?,?<lb/>
1.5 ttr<lb/>
btl<lb/>
3<lb/>
99<lb/>
BUY A LB. OF<lb/>
Boiled<lb/>
Ham<lb/>
y?SS?XirSSSl, w),<lb/>
'<lb/>
AND GET A LB. OF<lb/>
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lb<lb/>
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