<?xml version="1.0"?><TEI xmlns="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0" xmlns:xsi="http://www.w3.org/2001/XMLSchema-instance" xsi:schemaLocation="http://www.tei-c.org/ns/1.0 http://digital.lib.ecu.edu/tei/xsd/tei_P5.xsd"><teiHeader><fileDesc><titleStmt><title></title><author></author><respStmt><resp>Text encoded by</resp><name>Digital Collections</name></respStmt></titleStmt><publicationStmt><distributor>East Carolina University. J. Y. Joyner Library</distributor><address><addrLine>Digital Collections</addrLine><addrLine>Joyner Library, East Carolina University</addrLine><addrLine>East Fifth Street, Greenville NC 27858-4353 USA</addrLine></address><date>2012</date></publicationStmt><sourceDesc><bibl></bibl></sourceDesc></fileDesc><encodingDesc><samplingDecl><p>All quotation marks retained as data.</p><p>All end-of-line hyphens have been removed, and the trailing part of a word has been joined to the preceding line.</p><p>All smart quotes have been converted into straight quotes.</p></samplingDecl><classDecl><taxonomy xml:id="LCSH"><bibl>Library of Congress Subject Headings</bibl></taxonomy></classDecl></encodingDesc><profileDesc><creation><date></date></creation><langUsage xml:lang="en-US"><language ident="en-US" usage="100">English</language></langUsage><textClass><keywords scheme="#LCSH"><list><item></item></list></keywords></textClass></profileDesc></teiHeader><text><body><div type="other">
<p rend="align(centerbold)">[This text is machine generated and may contain errors.]</p>
<pb facs="00057724_0001"/>
?he<lb/>
(Earalmtan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
Vol.59 NoT ?7<lb/>
Wednesday, July 24, 1985<lb/>
Greenville, N.C.<lb/>
8 Pages<lb/>
Circulation 5,000<lb/>
Teacher Shortage<lb/>
May Stunt Gains<lb/>
Painting Scholarship<lb/>
Tony Humpi, ECU News Bur.?u<lb/>
KC I Chancellor John Howell, left, discusses plans for the Edward<lb/>
Reep Scholarship in Painting in the School of Art with retiring pro-<lb/>
fessor Edward Reep. Art School Dean Edward Irvine and pro-<lb/>
fessor Ra Elmore. The $500 scholarship has been established at<lb/>
LCL to honor Reep, who is retiring after 15 years as artist-in-<lb/>
residence and professor of painting. The award will be given each<lb/>
year to a sophomore majoring in painting, and who maintains a 3.0<lb/>
overall grade point average. Reep, an exhibiting painter since 1939<lb/>
had exibitions of his works in the U.S C anada, Mexico, Italy and<lb/>
Great Britain.<lb/>
(UPI) ? Officials say a loom-<lb/>
ing teacher shortage threatens re-<lb/>
cent gains made in North<lb/>
Carolina's public schools, and<lb/>
the crisis could delay implemen-<lb/>
tation of the state's new basic<lb/>
education plan.<lb/>
"It's obvious that we're head-<lb/>
ed for a crisis said Jay Robin-<lb/>
son, superintendent of the<lb/>
Mecklenburg County Public<lb/>
Schools. "This has to be the<lb/>
highest priority in education<lb/>
Officials say the shortage is<lb/>
already being felt in certain hard-<lb/>
to-staff fields, such as math,<lb/>
physical sciences, foreign<lb/>
languages and some vocational<lb/>
fields.<lb/>
Other areas like English and<lb/>
special education may be next in<lb/>
line, education officials say.<lb/>
"In spite of everything we do,<lb/>
we're going to have a terrible<lb/>
teacher shortage by 1990 said<lb/>
Robinson.<lb/>
Officials blame a number of<lb/>
factors for the problem, in-<lb/>
cluding:<lb/>
? The opening of other career<lb/>
alternatives to women and<lb/>
minorities who had previously<lb/>
been the backbone of the teacher<lb/>
corps.<lb/>
 Education reforms that<lb/>
have reduced class size and raised<lb/>
standards for teachers entering<lb/>
the profession.<lb/>
? Increased recruiting of<lb/>
North Carolina teachers by out-<lb/>
of-state school systems.<lb/>
Craig Phillips, state<lb/>
superintendent of public instruc-<lb/>
tion, said the shortage could slow<lb/>
implementation of the eight-year,<lb/>
$627 million basic education plan<lb/>
passed by the General Assembly<lb/>
this year.<lb/>
A cornerstone of the plan is<lb/>
reducing class size, and it calls for<lb/>
hiring more than 10,000 addi-<lb/>
tional public school teachers dur-<lb/>
ing the next eight years. Phillips<lb/>
said he hopes the state's renewed<lb/>
committment to education, in-<lb/>
cluding higher pay, will help turn<lb/>
around the shortage.<lb/>
"Our hope is that we can at-<lb/>
tract, fairly quickly, with the<lb/>
changing image of the profes-<lb/>
sion, more people into the profes-<lb/>
sion Phillips said. "It is going<lb/>
to be tough. But if we're willing<lb/>
to roll up our sleeves, we can turn<lb/>
it around<lb/>
Other education experts are<lb/>
less optimistic. They say the shor-<lb/>
tage could mean a return to larger<lb/>
class size and less qualified<lb/>
teachers.<lb/>
"There will be teachers in front<lb/>
of every classroom, but they may<lb/>
be people with less ability to per-<lb/>
form that job said Ronald Bird<lb/>
of Meredith College, a former<lb/>
research director for the<lb/>
Southeastern Regional Council<lb/>
for Educational Improvement.<lb/>
Survey Reveals '84 Graduates Pleased With ECU Services<lb/>
B HAROLD JOYNER<lb/>
N?wi I-din.<lb/>
W84 ECU graduates revealed<lb/>
in a survey that they are more<lb/>
satisfied with different aspects of<lb/>
college life than 1979 graduates<lb/>
were.<lb/>
The Office of the Vice<lb/>
Chancellor for Student Life con-<lb/>
ducted the survey of students<lb/>
who were enrolled in the Fall of<lb/>
1980 and graduated in May of<lb/>
1984.<lb/>
Citing three areas of the cam-<lb/>
pus ? student publications, food<lb/>
service and student government,<lb/>
Vice Chancellor for Student Life<lb/>
Elmer Meyer said, "I'm pleasant-<lb/>
ly surprised by the three that real-<lb/>
lv improved. Pleased is a better<lb/>
word than surprised. We have<lb/>
put a lot of effort into helping<lb/>
these areas improve their<lb/>
quality<lb/>
Meyer said food services on<lb/>
campus received low ratings by<lb/>
the 1979 graduates, which he<lb/>
agreed. "It was bad ? linoleum<lb/>
floors, butter on the ceilings, old<lb/>
tables ? it just wasn't a nice<lb/>
place to be in he said.<lb/>
Renovation of the cafeteria<lb/>
was sought and Meyer said the<lb/>
success of the improvements<lb/>
showed up the most in the in-<lb/>
crease of voluntary meal plans ?<lb/>
from about 500 students in 1980<lb/>
to 2,200 in the Fall of 1985.<lb/>
Meyer said he has worked<lb/>
equally hard with the students to<lb/>
ensure that their publications are<lb/>
of top quality and that the SGA<lb/>
becomes "the kind of student<lb/>
government that really serves the<lb/>
students without the early back-<lb/>
biting politics that have been so<lb/>
persistent in the late '70s<lb/>
Student satisfaction in Student<lb/>
Health Services was low, Meyer<lb/>
said. Many of the changes did not<lb/>
occur until 1985, long after the<lb/>
the '84 graduates had left.<lb/>
One of the biggest im-<lb/>
provements the SHC did was to<lb/>
initiate a cold clinic last fall.<lb/>
"That cold clinic served 5,000<lb/>
students, which meant 5,000<lb/>
fewer students had to see a doc-<lb/>
tor The Center also hired two<lb/>
new doctors, helping to decrease<lb/>
waiting times, he said.<lb/>
The survey also showed that<lb/>
students were dissatisfied with<lb/>
services offered by the financial<lb/>
aid office. "Since President<lb/>
Reagan has been in office, we<lb/>
have had more difficulty in that<lb/>
area he said. "We get blamed<lb/>
for the fact that the federal<lb/>
government does not give us the<lb/>
material necessary to grant finan-<lb/>
cial aid in time to do it for the fall<lb/>
semester. This has been consis-<lb/>
tent for the last three or four<lb/>
years. Students can't get answers<lb/>
from the financial aid office.<lb/>
They keep calling and it creates a<lb/>
frustration about the whole<lb/>
system of financial aid. I'm sure<lb/>
that was part of the apparent pro-<lb/>
blem there<lb/>
Students were satisfied with<lb/>
services offered by the library,<lb/>
yet feelings towards computer<lb/>
services were more negative. But<lb/>
improvements were not made un-<lb/>
til this past spring when on-line<lb/>
registration began, and the '84<lb/>
graduates did not get to par-<lb/>
ticipate in that, Meyer said.<lb/>
Residence hall life seemed to<lb/>
please the students more than<lb/>
they did in 1979, the survey said.<lb/>
And almost all the students<lb/>
surveyed agreed that the SGA<lb/>
Transit System was satisfactory,<lb/>
though the question was never<lb/>
asked to the '79 graduates.<lb/>
Other results of the survey<lb/>
showed an increase of satisfac-<lb/>
tion in fraternity and sorority<lb/>
life, but there was a decrease in<lb/>
off-campus living in general.<lb/>
Religious life on campus also<lb/>
decreased, but the general feeling<lb/>
towards student union activities<lb/>
increased.<lb/>
Graduates of 1984 were also<lb/>
impressed with ECU's Freshmen<lb/>
Orientation program, as well as<lb/>
Personal Counseling Services.<lb/>
Academic performance also<lb/>
pleased the '84 graduates.<lb/>
The general satisfaction of the<lb/>
campus, Meyer sums up "is a<lb/>
tribute to all the students and<lb/>
staff who have worked to im-<lb/>
prove the services and environ-<lb/>
ment at ECU<lb/>
Colleges May Lose Federal Money<lb/>
WASHINGTON, D.C. (UPI)<lb/>
? There's a big deadline coming<lb/>
for many colleges, and most of<lb/>
them, as they count the number<lb/>
of freshmen who have agreed to<lb/>
enroll this fall, now admit they're<lb/>
probably not going to meet it.<lb/>
Colleges in five states ?<lb/>
Arkansas, Florida, Georgia,<lb/>
North Carolina and Oklahoma<lb/>
? have to make "substantial<lb/>
progress" toward enrolling more<lb/>
black students by next December.<lb/>
If they don't, the Education<lb/>
Department's Office of Civil<lb/>
Rights can stop giving them<lb/>
federal funds.<lb/>
Eight more states ? Delaware,<lb/>
Missouri, South Carolina,<lb/>
Virginia, West Virginia, Ken-<lb/>
tucky, Pennsylvania and Texas<lb/>
? will have deadlines they agreed<lb/>
to years ago sometime between<lb/>
next December and the spring of<lb/>
1988.<lb/>
Educators in those states also<lb/>
are unsure they'll be able to fulfill<lb/>
those agreements.<lb/>
"Speaking for (the University<lb/>
of Oklahoma), the Norman cam-<lb/>
pus will not meet its (desegrega-<lb/>
tion) goals, and this seems to be<lb/>
reflective of the rest of the state<lb/>
says Walter Mason, Oklahoma's<lb/>
affirmative action officer.<lb/>
"We haven't met our enroll-<lb/>
ment goal adds Cynthia Moten<lb/>
of the Arkansas Department of<lb/>
Higher Education. "We haven't<lb/>
increased our overall pool of<lb/>
black students. We've just moved<lb/>
them around from traditionally-<lb/>
May<lb/>
black to traditionally-white col-<lb/>
leges<lb/>
Colleges are losing their battles<lb/>
to integrate primarily because<lb/>
fewer black students are opting to<lb/>
go to college at all, ad-<lb/>
ministrators say.<lb/>
A recent American Association<lb/>
of State Colleges and Universities<lb/>
study found that, while the<lb/>
number of black high school<lb/>
graduates grew from 1975 to<lb/>
1982, the percentage enrolling in<lb/>
college dropped from 31.5 per-<lb/>
cent to 28 percent.<lb/>
The states' problem stems<lb/>
from a 1970 lawsuit filed by the<lb/>
National Association for the Ad-<lb/>
vancement of Colored People's<lb/>
Legal Defense Fund.<lb/>
The suit asked the federal<lb/>
government to help force states<lb/>
to undo the last vestiges of<lb/>
segregation in their schools and<lb/>
colleges.<lb/>
If the states refused, or didn't<lb/>
meet the government's desegrega-<lb/>
tion schedule, the government<lb/>
could cut off the laggard colleges'<lb/>
federal funds.<lb/>
In an early 1970s ruling, a<lb/>
federal court ordered the Depart-<lb/>
ment of Health, Education and<lb/>
Welfare ? the Education<lb/>
Department's forerunner ? to<lb/>
demand desegregation plans<lb/>
from six states, and then extend-<lb/>
ed the order to other states accus-<lb/>
ed of running segregated public<lb/>
education systems.<lb/>
Since then, the NAACP Legal<lb/>
Defense Fund has forced the<lb/>
government to make states adopt<lb/>
ever more stringent integration<lb/>
plans.<lb/>
States had to outline how they<lb/>
planned to attract black students<lb/>
and faculty to predominantly-<lb/>
white colleges.<lb/>
"Most plans were approved by<lb/>
HEW in 1975 says Joe Hagy,<lb/>
Oklahoma Regents state planning<lb/>
coordinator. But in 1977, the<lb/>
NAACP again sued, and a court<lb/>
threw out all the state desegrega-<lb/>
tion plans as inadequate.<lb/>
Legal Defense Fund<lb/>
spokesmen, who closely monitor<lb/>
the states' progress, say the<lb/>
government's lax enforcement of<lb/>
the Civil Rights Act of 1964 re-<lb/>
quires them to keep suing.<lb/>
"Right now we're in the first<lb/>
full year of accepted plans says<lb/>
James Turner, a Legal Defense<lb/>
Fund attorney. "Goals have been<lb/>
met in some areas and particular<lb/>
colleges. Most of the goals are<lb/>
very conservative. I'd be very sur-<lb/>
prised if any of the plans are<lb/>
unrealistic<lb/>
But while devising the plans<lb/>
may be difficult, state education<lb/>
administrators say implementing<lb/>
them is even harder.<lb/>
Many blacks still prefer to at-<lb/>
tend traditionally-black schools,<lb/>
and view white institutions as<lb/>
racist, regardless of what affir-<lb/>
mative action programs the white<lb/>
schools have.<lb/>
"The segregation problems<lb/>
have been carried over from a lot<lb/>
of years the Legal Defense<lb/>
Fund's Turner admits, "the<lb/>
perception that some of these col-<lb/>
leges are racist has some basis<lb/>
"Most blacks are unhappy<lb/>
here says Sharri Warnsby,<lb/>
former president of the Legion of<lb/>
Black Collegians at the Universi-<lb/>
ty of Missouri at Columbia.<lb/>
"I don't think any (black per-<lb/>
son) would come here if they had<lb/>
any sense Warnsby told The<lb/>
Maneater, a Missouri student<lb/>
paper. "Everything is geared<lb/>
toward the majority, and the ma-<lb/>
jority is white<lb/>
Hagy adds Oklahoma still<lb/>
fights a racist reputation, pro-<lb/>
pagated by discriminatory legisla-<lb/>
tion only recently removed from<lb/>
the state books.<lb/>
"But one of the big problems<lb/>
we're very concerned about is the<lb/>
decline in the black student<lb/>
population says Wayne Echols<lb/>
of Alabama's Commission on<lb/>
High Education. "It's bad par-<lb/>
ticularly in a state like Alabama,<lb/>
which continues to lag behind the<lb/>
rest of the U.S. in the number of<lb/>
adults with college degrees<lb/>
"We don't know how we'll ap-<lb/>
proach the problem of recruit-<lb/>
ment of students or faculty he<lb/>
adds.<lb/>
But Washington believes that<lb/>
colleges can do better, despite a<lb/>
seeming shortage of willing black<lb/>
students.<lb/>
The declining black student<lb/>
population "is probably a com-<lb/>
plaint of the higher education<lb/>
system from long before.<lb/>
? Double Trouble<lb/>
Oaly one more day left of summer school ,od the Tacatftoa finally<lb/>
negins. A word of advice: be sure to find a cool place to relax dar-<lb/>
ing intercession. Don't resort to putting yourself oat oa a ledge.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0002"/><lb/>
THE I M CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 24, 1985<lb/>
:UX,X-XX"X'X-XX-Xv-VXX-<lb/>
Hot, Humid Days Can Cause Sunstroke, Cramps I HELP<lb/>
As much as we all enjoy the<lb/>
warm weather, ? if not,<lb/>
remember last January when<lb/>
temperatures dropped below zero<lb/>
there are some precautions<lb/>
you should take to avoid heat<lb/>
cramps, heat exhaustion and heat<lb/>
stroke (sunstroke).<lb/>
According to the Student<lb/>
Health Center, heat cramps are<lb/>
sudden muscle pains caused by<lb/>
excessive loss of salt in perspira-<lb/>
tion during strenuous exercise in<lb/>
hot weathei.<lb/>
1 o present heat cramps, the<lb/>
S1K suggests that fluids such as<lb/>
Gatorade or Hawaiian Punch<lb/>
(mix one can with one teaspoon<lb/>
of salt) should be consummed<lb/>
frequently. One should im-<lb/>
mediate!) rest And drink salty<lb/>
fluids should heat cramps occur.<lb/>
Heat exhaustion is caused bv<lb/>
ibilitv of the body to ade-<lb/>
NOTES<lb/>
STATE GOVERNMENT<lb/>
POSITIONS<lb/>
nen and n I n rP encouraged to<lb/>
CO OP pt ? state go. n<lb/>
? '935 Needed are students<lb/>
? Sm and accounting with<lb/>
? ese Dos.t.ons in Raleigh<lb/>
?n contact Co operative<lb/>
 '<lb/>
WRITERS<lb/>
? pay nard worK, great<lb/>
' id out how you<lb/>
? ,nest medium<lb/>
MOVIE<lb/>
- i at 2 p.m 'he College of Arts and<lb/>
I a view ng ot a 30<lb/>
' - wan entitled. Song Of<lb/>
andsrape Dr Rosma Ch.a ot'the<lb/>
Dei r. v? oe presenting the film<lb/>
h has no speaking in il oepicts<lb/>
an anj nas a musical<lb/>
. u-ng Chinese Com<lb/>
?he new Joyner<lb/>
 The public is in<lb/>
quately supply the blood vessels<lb/>
with enough fluids to produce<lb/>
perspiration needed for cooling<lb/>
and meeting other vital tissue re-<lb/>
quirements.<lb/>
One usually sees heat exhaus-<lb/>
tion after vigorous exercise in hot<lb/>
weather. Symptoms will include<lb/>
faintness, weakness, headache<lb/>
and sometimes nausea and<lb/>
vomiting. The skin is pale, moist<lb/>
and body temperature is normal<lb/>
or below normal. The best treat-<lb/>
ment is prevention for heat<lb/>
cramps and decreasing physical<lb/>
activity during hot weather.<lb/>
Emergency treatment consists<lb/>
of lowering the persons's head<lb/>
below the rest of his body, plac-<lb/>
ing him in a cool spot or room,<lb/>
drinking fluids that contain salt<lb/>
and several hours of rest.<lb/>
Heat stroke, better known as<lb/>
sunstroke, is a serious condition<lb/>
in which excessive body heat is re-<lb/>
tained and it requires prompt<lb/>
emergency treatment. It is caused<lb/>
by a failure of the perspiration<lb/>
regulating mechanism. The per-<lb/>
son undergoing vigorous exercise<lb/>
in intense heat may perspire pro-<lb/>
fusely for sometime and then<lb/>
become dehydrated and fail to<lb/>
perspire enough to maintain body<lb/>
temperature. The skin is dry, hot<lb/>
and flushed and the person can<lb/>
quickly become confused, dizzy,<lb/>
faint or even lose consciousness.<lb/>
Sunstroke is a medical<lb/>
emergency ? without treatment,<lb/>
100 percent of those victims will<lb/>
probably die. If prompt and<lb/>
vigorous treatment is provided,<lb/>
almost as many will survive.<lb/>
Treatment should start by<lb/>
moving the person to shade,<lb/>
preferably a cool room and call-<lb/>
ing their physician andor rescue<lb/>
squad at once. Try to check the<lb/>
person's temperature if possible,<lb/>
then attempt to reduce body<lb/>
temperature ? a bathtub with<lb/>
cold water and massaging the<lb/>
skin vigorously will bring more<lb/>
blood to the surface for cooling.<lb/>
Spraying the body with a<lb/>
garden hose and fanning is often<lb/>
effective. Ice should be placed on<lb/>
the head and if the person is alert,<lb/>
offer fluids.<lb/>
If the elevated temperature is<lb/>
allowed to continue, serious per-<lb/>
manent brain and nervous system<lb/>
damage can occur. A<lb/>
temperature of 105 degrees<lb/>
Fahrenheit or more requires<lb/>
treatment, which should be con-<lb/>
tinued until he cools off to about<lb/>
102 degrees. Someone experienc-<lb/>
ing heatstroke should be<lb/>
monitored for several hours,<lb/>
because the condition is so<lb/>
severe.<lb/>
A person recovering from<lb/>
heatstroke can have faulty heat<lb/>
regulation for days, months,<lb/>
years and the rest of his life.<lb/>
Remember, have fun in the<lb/>
sun, but rest, drink a lot of fluids<lb/>
and don't overheat. Contact the<lb/>
Student Health Service if you<lb/>
would like more information<lb/>
about heat related problems.<lb/>
Please note that operating<lb/>
hours for the Student Health<lb/>
Center during intersession will be<lb/>
posted on the front door. Pa-<lb/>
tients will be seen on an emergen<lb/>
cy basis only, and there will be a<lb/>
full-time physician on hand to<lb/>
assist. Students musf show proof<lb/>
that they were either enrolled in<lb/>
second session summer school or<lb/>
intend to be enrolled in the fall<lb/>
before the Center's services can<lb/>
be offered.<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
Writers<lb/>
Needed<lb/>
Call<lb/>
757-6366<lb/>
East Carolina Coins &amp; Pawn<lb/>
Corner 10th &amp; Dickinson Ave<lb/>
We Buv Gold &amp; SUver<lb/>
INSTANT CASH LOANS<lb/>
5 All Transactions Confidential cm&amp;<lb/>
.??&amp;<lb/>
752-0322 TOSS!<lb/>
TOGA PARTY<lb/>
"ON THE LAKE"<lb/>
WED, AUGUST 28<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. gAR<lb/>
m vuVrSt<lb/>
RA Y-BAN WA YFARER<lb/>
Open MonFn 9 AM til 5 30 PM<lb/>
Beecher Kirkley Dispensing Optician<lb/>
315 Parkview Commons<lb/>
Across From Doctors Park<lb/>
Phone 7S2 U44<lb/>
?r<lb/>
pucians<lb/>
CALL US FOR AN<lb/>
EYE EXAMINATION<lb/>
WITH THE DOCTOR<lb/>
OF YOUR CHOICE<lb/>
208 E.<lb/>
Fifth St<lb/>
758-7979<lb/>
Now You Can Have The<lb/>
Portable Picnic<lb/>
At<lb/>
A Special Deal<lb/>
Delivery Available Thru "The Jokes On 6s"757-1973<lb/>
r<lb/>
BUY ANY FOOTLONG SUB<lb/>
AND GET A SIX-INCH SUB<lb/>
FREE<lb/>
Expires 7-31-85<lb/>
H iih This Coupon<lb/>
13V.0<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Process &amp; Print<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
Prom 110. 126. 36mm or disc color print film,<lb/>
per print peg 27?and ?149dev charge (reg 2 98)<lb/>
Example 24 exp . reg 9 46 HOW $4,731<lb/>
limit one roll per coupon<lb/>
I ?rirc?, H-6-8?<lb/>
cPhottMGdd<lb/>
E7<lb/>
asafflg?<lb/>
d At All ;Tat ions<lb/>
No' valid with other offers<lb/>
20 OFF<lb/>
Reprints<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
From 110. 126 35mm or disc color print film<lb/>
Just 89 each i reg 37 <lb/>
1 hour sei-vice<lb/>
Expires 8-6-85<lb/>
cPhti&amp;W&amp;ild<lb/>
E7<lb/>
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no imit<lb/>
3 Day Service'<lb/>
Good At All Locations<lb/>
Not valid with other offers<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Color Enlargements<lb/>
with this coupon<lb/>
8x7 'reg t 250' VOW II 88<lb/>
OxlO reg t 5 00, SDWUIO<lb/>
11x14 ireg Sll 50, WOW 48 78<lb/>
1 10 12 - Sx5 fttS 35mm ar.d disc col, r print film 'nly<lb/>
Intel-negatives a required $x<lb/>
Expires 8-6-85 fJHltAMfili fj E7<lb/>
East Mall 756-6078<lb/>
(North entrance ? Near Belks)<lb/>
Open MonSot. 8 a.m. to 9 p.m.<lb/>
Sundays 12 p.m. to6 p.m<lb/>
j Ask About Our Video<lb/>
Transfer Service!<lb/>
Hi jjjLjk Transfer Service!<lb/>
i?flB I Hour Photo Lab<lb/>
mm<lb/>
OPEN 24 HOURS EVERYDAY<lb/>
600 Greenville Blvd Greenville<lb/>
DOUBLE<lb/>
MANUFACTURERS<lb/>
COUPONS<lb/>
All WEEK WE WILL DOUBLE 5<lb/>
MFC. S (UP TO 50 FACE VALUE i<lb/>
FOR EVERY $10 PURCHASE'<lb/>
pie??n ??? datall in tloie<lb/>
Go Krogering<lb/>
we Redeem<lb/>
All Food &amp;<lb/>
Drug store<lb/>
Coupons!<lb/>
DONALD DUCK<lb/>
Orange<lb/>
Juice<lb/>
419<lb/>
REGULAR OR LIGHT<lb/>
Miller 6<lb/>
Deer ? ? ? cans<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETY<lb/>
Totino's<lb/>
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LAMBRUSCO. ROSATO. D'ORO OR<lb/>
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3ER PARTV PAC<lb/>
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REGULAR OR DIET<lb/>
Pepsi<lb/>
wOI3 ? ? ? NRB<lb/>
$109<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIEY<lb/>
KEEBLER<lb/>
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24 Oz<lb/>
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INCLUDES 8 DINNER<lb/>
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INCLUDES 4 OZ COLE<lb/>
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crapto Of t ,C M,rt 0ni? ?" ??"O?' '0iPOn ?? o<lb/>
EC<lb/>
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n t<lb/>
I<lb/>
Biotechnology<lb/>
cd three res<lb/>
grants totalinj<lb/>
proposed<lb/>
oiotecr ,<lb/>
are Dr<lb/>
parmem<lb/>
don L Jendi<lb/>
of PI d<lb/>
Stew<lb/>
Microbiology<lb/>
par: of the N<lb/>
pel I<lb/>
for<lb/>
and ind<lb/>
in biotc<lb/>
One<lb/>
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Bland <lb/>
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jumbo<lb/>
Lebc<lb/>
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after<lb/>
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club ?<lb/>
asks i<lb/>
V hile man'<lb/>
xenior art nIi<lb/>
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The<lb/>
Sil<lb/>
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? Compie<lb/>
Exomi<lb/>
? Special:<lb/>
l??nses<lb/>
? Eye Glaj<lb/>
? ECU St<lb/>
on mat<lb/>
Convenier<lb/>
Profess 1 on<lb/>
Street<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0003"/><lb/>
ELP<lb/>
NTED<lb/>
Staff<lb/>
Vriters<lb/>
eded<lb/>
? ?<lb/>
.all<lb/>
6366<lb/>
?<lb/>
ss<lb/>
WAYFARER<lb/>
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ptician<lb/>
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B ' 3C ru" out C n it?m<lb/>
ECU Biotechnologists Receive Grant<lb/>
.THEEAST C ARQUNiAN JULY 24, 1985<lb/>
ECU News Bureru<lb/>
RiJil .N?rth Carolina<lb/>
Biotechnology Cente: has award-<lb/>
ed three researchers at ECU<lb/>
grants totaling $30,500 for their<lb/>
Proposed projects in<lb/>
biotechnology. The researchers<lb/>
! Dr. Charles E. Bland,<lb/>
uepartment of Biology; Dr. Gor-<lb/>
don L. Jendrasiak, Department<lb/>
OJ Physics; and Dr. Carolyn S.<lb/>
Stegiicfe, Department of<lb/>
Microbiology. The awards are a<lb/>
part of the NCBC's annual Com-<lb/>
petitive Small Grants Program<lb/>
for North Carolina university<lb/>
and industrial scientists involved<lb/>
in biotechnology research.<lb/>
One of the most innovative<lb/>
proposals was submitted by Dr.<lb/>
Bland, professor and chairman<lb/>
of the biology department. Bland<lb/>
received $20,000 for his proposal.<lb/>
"Development of Techniques for<lb/>
Utilization of Peanut Hulls and<lb/>
Other Agricultural Wastes for the<lb/>
Culture of Commercially Impor-<lb/>
tant Mushrooms With produc-<lb/>
tion of peanut hulls in North<lb/>
Carolina exceeding 133 million<lb/>
pounds a year, Bland proposes to<lb/>
use this abundant agricultural<lb/>
waste product as a fertilizer for<lb/>
production of mushrooms. There<lb/>
has been a sharp increase in con-<lb/>
sumer demand for a variety of<lb/>
mushrooms including the "highly<lb/>
prized" and high priced oyster<lb/>
mushroom, straw mushroom,<lb/>
and Enoke mushroom. Bland's<lb/>
proposed testing facilities will be<lb/>
built in vacant tobacco<lb/>
warehouses.<lb/>
Couple Granted Extra Credit<lb/>
The other ECU proposals that<lb/>
received NCBC grants proposed<lb/>
studies in gene expression and im-<lb/>
munology. Steglich will be at-<lb/>
tempting to produce biologically<lb/>
important molecules in mam-<lb/>
malian cells. Jendrasiak will be<lb/>
experimenting with encapsulating<lb/>
antiinflammatory agents into<lb/>
liposomes for the purpose of<lb/>
evaluating an innovative method<lb/>
treatment. These studies, like<lb/>
many of the projects funded by<lb/>
this NCBC program, are involved<lb/>
in conducting basic research in-<lb/>
vestigations necessary for the<lb/>
future development of<lb/>
biotechnology techniques.<lb/>
Of the eighty-nine proposals<lb/>
submitted, the North Carolina<lb/>
Biotechnology Center funded a<lb/>
total of 32 projects. Institutions<lb/>
funded included Duke Universi-<lb/>
ty, ECU, NC A&amp;T, North<lb/>
Carolina State University, the<lb/>
University of North Carolina at<lb/>
Chapel Hill, Wake Forest<lb/>
UniversityBowman Gray,<lb/>
Research Triangle Institute, and<lb/>
Greer Laboratories.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Biotechnology Center's Com-<lb/>
petitive Small Grants Program<lb/>
provides seed money for universi-<lb/>
ty and industrial scientists or<lb/>
engineers conducting investiga-<lb/>
tions or educational programs in<lb/>
biotechnology. Grant awards<lb/>
range from $3,000 to $20,000.<lb/>
This special program is designed<lb/>
specifically for North Carolina<lb/>
scientists and priority is given to<lb/>
new investigators, established<lb/>
scientists embarking on new lines<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) - - A cou-<lb/>
ple held hostage on the TWA<lb/>
jumbo jet hijacked last month to<lb/>
Lebanon has asked for ? and<lb/>
will receive ? thousands of miles<lb/>
credit to their "frequent flyer"<lb/>
plan, a TWA spokesman said<lb/>
Saturday.<lb/>
Dan Kemmnitz, TWA<lb/>
manager of internal communica-<lb/>
tions, said the airline has not<lb/>
automatically granted the credit<lb/>
to all passengers held hostage on<lb/>
flight 847, which was hijacked<lb/>
after it left Athens, Greece, for<lb/>
Rome. But any "frequent flyer"<lb/>
club member held hostage who<lb/>
asks for the credit will receive it.<lb/>
TWA Airlines Reward Hostages<lb/>
Moslem extremists com-<lb/>
mandeered the jet June 14, forc-<lb/>
ing the pilot to criss-cross the<lb/>
Middle East between Algiers and<lb/>
Beirut, Lebanon, in the 17-day<lb/>
seige covering thousands of air<lb/>
miles. One passenger, a Navy<lb/>
diver, was killed.<lb/>
"We never considered it (giv-<lb/>
ing credit) because we felt it<lb/>
would be in poor taste because<lb/>
it's a commercial program<lb/>
Kemmnitz said.<lb/>
"It was a terrible experience,<lb/>
so it never occurred to us<lb/>
But Arthur Toga, 33, of St.<lb/>
Louis, requested the credit to his<lb/>
frequent flyer program and it was<lb/>
Sidewalk Study<lb/>
Tony Rumple ?<lb/>
ECU News Bureau<lb/>
While many students take to the silent halls of a library to study,<lb/>
senior art student Mike Tyler sets up shop on an ECU sidewalk!<lb/>
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lenses ? All Types<lb/>
? Eye Glasses<lb/>
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Conveniently located in University<lb/>
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University Optometric<lb/>
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Dr. Dennis O'Neal<lb/>
754600<lb/>
Hours 9 a.m. to 5 p.m. Monday-Friday<lb/>
Evening Hours Available By Appointment<lb/>
granted, Kemmnitz said. Toga<lb/>
was held throughout the entire<lb/>
17-day seige, but his wife Debbie,<lb/>
who was pregnant with the cou-<lb/>
ple's first child, was released<lb/>
earlier.<lb/>
Kemmnitz said he wasn't sure<lb/>
of the exact number of miles the<lb/>
Togas would be given in credit.<lb/>
But it would include the flight<lb/>
from Athens to Beirut and back<lb/>
and forth three more times bet-<lb/>
ween Beirut and Algiers, plus the<lb/>
flight from Beirut to Frankfurt,<lb/>
West Germany, and home.<lb/>
He said it would amount to<lb/>
"several thousand" miles.<lb/>
? 'VleeKngVags<lb/>
BACKPACKS TENTS COTS SHOVELS HAM,<lb/>
4MOOCS, MESS KITS CANTEENS FATIGUES VM?<lb/>
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?DISHES WORK CLOTHES 2100 DIFFERENT ITEMS ?<lb/>
? BrowMrs Welcome J<lb/>
t ARMY-NAVY STORE !<lb/>
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Toga is a research assistant<lb/>
professor in neurology at the<lb/>
Washington University School of<lb/>
Medicine. His wife Debbie is a<lb/>
psychiatric nurse.<lb/>
1501 S. Evans<lb/>
r<lb/>
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DROP OFF 2o ib. pi<lb/>
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'Spacious Affordable Luxury Apartments '<lb/>
Professional Management and Maintenance<lb/>
? 2 Bedroom Townhouses &amp; 1 Bedroom Garden Apartments<lb/>
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? Private Laundry facilities<lb/>
? Large Pool<lb/>
? Cable TV. Included<lb/>
? Private Balconies<lb/>
? Convenient To Shopping Centers &amp; Restaurants<lb/>
? ECU Bus Service<lb/>
Directions: 10th Street Extension to River Bluff Road<lb/>
Next to Rivergale Shoppingenter.<lb/>
PHONE 758-4015<lb/>
Studies Begin Now<lb/>
or research, and persons conduc-<lb/>
ting research and development<lb/>
for the purpose of starting or ex-<lb/>
panding a small business. The<lb/>
money provided by the Center<lb/>
allows scientists to conduct<lb/>
preliminary investigations based<lb/>
on new ideas, and if results show<lb/>
promise, to attract additional<lb/>
funding from other private and<lb/>
public sources.<lb/>
The North Carolina<lb/>
Biotechnology Center, the na-<lb/>
tion's first state-sponsored in-<lb/>
itiative in biotechnology, was<lb/>
established in 1981 to further<lb/>
research and commercial<lb/>
development of biotechnology<lb/>
throughout North Carolina. Ac-<lb/>
ting as a catalyst, the Center en-<lb/>
courages and facilitates closer in-<lb/>
teractions among researchers,<lb/>
universities, industry, venture<lb/>
capital, and government. The<lb/>
Center aids in the deve.opment of<lb/>
novel interdisciplinary programs,<lb/>
research, and education; provides<lb/>
assistance to large and small com-<lb/>
panies involved in biotechnology;<lb/>
hosts meetings and conferences<lb/>
centered around biotechnology<lb/>
issues; publishes directories of<lb/>
North Carolina researchers and<lb/>
businesses in the field of<lb/>
biotechnology; and circulates a<lb/>
newsletter that describes activities<lb/>
of the Center's programs. In<lb/>
December, 1984. the Center<lb/>
became a private, non-profit cor-<lb/>
poration. The Center is funded<lb/>
by the North Carolina General<lb/>
Assembly, federal agencies, and<lb/>
business sponsors.<lb/>
I I<lb/>
AT THE<lb/>
E<lb/>
A MUSICAL EXTRA VAGANZA FOR ALL ACES.<lb/>
THE STORY OF A LITTLE BOY WHO WOULDN'T GROW<lb/>
rTJUi?ARUNG CHIKM WHO FLY; TINKE BELL;<lb/>
IAP7AINHOOK; WENDY AND THE LITTLE LOST BOYS<lb/>
OF NEVER NEVER LAND.<lb/>
July 24-27,29-31 ? 8:15 p.m.<lb/>
Matinees at 2:15 p.m. on July 29 &amp; 31<lb/>
McGinnis Theatre<lb/>
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(Corner of 5th and Eastern)<lb/>
v my? "mT rrFrm<lb/>
JOBS<lb/>
Available Fall Semester<lb/>
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REQUIRED<lb/>
COURSE<lb/>
Domino's Pizza Delivers<lb/>
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We make great custom-<lb/>
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<pb facs="00057724_0004"/><lb/>
?ire iEaHt (Earflltntan<lb/>
Serving the East Carolina campus community since 1925<lb/>
John Peterson, omuMmm<lb/>
Jennifer Jendrasiak. mm&amp;Eim<lb/>
H AROL D JOYNER, Srm Edta TOM LUVENDER, n,re?or of A<lb/>
Daniei Maurer. itej, t:dllor Anthony Martin, b, Managfr<lb/>
Rick Mccormac, sparae, John Peterson, emuManaxer<lb/>
BlI I MlTCHEl I , Crcuian.n Manager BlLL DAWSON, Prod1km Manager<lb/>
DtBBlE STE ENS. v. DeCHANII E JOHNSON, M Uchn.aan<lb/>
Jul 24. 1985<lb/>
Opinion<lb/>
Page 4<lb/>
-30-<lb/>
Long before the advent of<lb/>
newsroom computer terminals, -30-<lb/>
was the writer's way of signaling<lb/>
editors that a story was complete. In<lb/>
East Carolinian tradition, -30- is the<lb/>
outgoing managing editor's way of<lb/>
terminating his reign, or sentence.<lb/>
My two years of working for The<lb/>
East Carolinian have taught me a<lb/>
great deal about people and their<lb/>
idiosyncracies, something that<lb/>
could never have been learned in a<lb/>
classroom. I've done more than my<lb/>
share of complaining about working<lb/>
here, but in the end it's been one of<lb/>
the more valuable experiences in mv<lb/>
life.<lb/>
Probably the most persistent pro-<lb/>
blem in running a campus<lb/>
newspaper is student apathy. Con-<lb/>
trary to what people with rose-<lb/>
colored glasses say, a lot of students<lb/>
are apathetic, but then so are a lot<lb/>
of people in general. It can be<lb/>
frustrating to work on a news story<lb/>
and then see hardly anyone read it.<lb/>
It can be more frustrating to be<lb/>
unable to recruit writers on a 12,000<lb/>
student campus. Essentially, what<lb/>
you end up doing is ignoring the<lb/>
apathetic students and concen-<lb/>
trating on the few who are in-<lb/>
terested. Not very altruistic, but<lb/>
realistic.<lb/>
On the other hand, there are a<lb/>
number of people on this campus,<lb/>
some of them students, who are ge-<lb/>
nuinely dedicated to banishing the<lb/>
EZL image forever. It won't be an<lb/>
easy task, and ECU will never be a<lb/>
Harvard, but it's very important for<lb/>
this university that some people are<lb/>
not satisfied with merely being ade-<lb/>
quate. There's certainly room for<lb/>
improvement, but as long as people<lb/>
are persistent it will happen even-<lb/>
tually.<lb/>
As far as criticism is concerned,<lb/>
The East Carolinian has often been<lb/>
a favorite target of critics, ranging<lb/>
from students to journalism pro-<lb/>
fessors. My basic response is that if<lb/>
you aren't helping to solve tVie pro-<lb/>
blem you are part of it. If you must<lb/>
criticize, do it constructively, better<lb/>
yet, come up here and see what we<lb/>
do. We always need writers, but<lb/>
very rarely are approached by<lb/>
anyone willing to commit time and<lb/>
energy. A skeleton staff of students,<lb/>
with classes to attend and<lb/>
homework to do, produces this<lb/>
paper twice a week. The newspaper<lb/>
is a responsibility that they must<lb/>
constantly deal with. You can skip a<lb/>
class if you feel like it, but you can<lb/>
hardly skip a production night.<lb/>
Mistakes are made, after all, we are<lb/>
here to learn, but many good things<lb/>
are done too. The staff needs con-<lb/>
structive criticism tempered by an<lb/>
understanding of how much they<lb/>
do, not remarks made in total ig-<lb/>
norance.<lb/>
Now for suggestions. SGA has<lb/>
naturally had its ups and downs<lb/>
over the years. Hopefully this year<lb/>
will not be negative. David and<lb/>
Chris, it's good to want to do<lb/>
what's right for the student body, as<lb/>
long as you keep their extremely<lb/>
diverse interests and concepts of<lb/>
right and wrong uppermost in your<lb/>
minds. You should both remember<lb/>
that we generally consider people in-<lb/>
nocent until proven guilty. Also,<lb/>
Chris, remember what happened to<lb/>
Spiro Agnew.<lb/>
And then there's the Media<lb/>
Board. I don't dispute the concept<lb/>
of the board, but I disagree with its<lb/>
makeup. I really cannot see how be-<lb/>
ing Panhellenic president, for exam-<lb/>
ple, automatically qualifies an in-<lb/>
dividual to make policy decisions<lb/>
for campus mediums. A board ap-<lb/>
pointed on the basis of their in-<lb/>
terests and qualifications would be a<lb/>
much better idea.<lb/>
Finally, there are the thank yous.<lb/>
First, I'd like to thank Bill Shires,<lb/>
our advisor, for telling me when I<lb/>
did a good job, not mentioning it<lb/>
when I did a mediocre one, and<lb/>
pointing out gently my glaring er-<lb/>
rors. You've been extremely helpful<lb/>
and patient and you've added great-<lb/>
ly to the paper.<lb/>
Then there is the administration.<lb/>
College administrators are frequent-<lb/>
ly portrayed as sitting in ivory<lb/>
towers out of reach of the students.<lb/>
I have not found that to be the case.<lb/>
Chancellor Howell, thanks for<lb/>
returning my calls in record time,<lb/>
always answering my questions and<lb/>
speaking slowly enough for me to<lb/>
get it all down. Elmer Meyer and<lb/>
Angelo Volpe, you've been more<lb/>
than helpful, in addition to being in-<lb/>
teresting and entertaining and pro-<lb/>
viding Yankee accents for my<lb/>
homesick ears.<lb/>
There are two people who have<lb/>
kept me humble, my father and Bill<lb/>
Grossnickle, both of whom never<lb/>
failed to mention the double enten-<lb/>
dres in my headlines and the<lb/>
naiveness of some of my assump-<lb/>
tions, something I needed. You<lb/>
both mentioned my good points<lb/>
too, thanks.<lb/>
Greg Rideout, my bete noire. I<lb/>
didn't agree with your methods, but<lb/>
I did learn about newswriting from<lb/>
you. I will always respect your<lb/>
knowledge of the field, and you are<lb/>
good company in a hurricane.<lb/>
There are two people I never<lb/>
could have made it without ? Mark<lb/>
Barker and Betty Jo Norman. It's<lb/>
no secret that I'm incapable of lay-<lb/>
ing out copy in straight lines, and<lb/>
without these two to do it for me,<lb/>
the paper would have created<lb/>
widespread seasickness. Thanks for<lb/>
staying until 5 a.m laughing at my<lb/>
jokes and putting up with my illegi-<lb/>
ble handwriting.<lb/>
Another behind-the-scenes per-<lb/>
son who deserves applause is An-<lb/>
thony Martin. Anthony gets the<lb/>
details taken care of so other people<lb/>
don't have to worry about them ?<lb/>
no small feat.<lb/>
Harold, you've improved tremen-<lb/>
dously and I think you're doing an<lb/>
excellent job. Maintain your sanity<lb/>
and sense of humor and you'll be<lb/>
fine. Rick, Scott and Tony, I may<lb/>
not always read the sports page, but<lb/>
I still appreciate what you do.<lb/>
Besides that, you've taught me<lb/>
whole new modes of conversation.<lb/>
Dan, you have excellent ideas and<lb/>
you work hard. Keep working for<lb/>
what you believe should be chang-<lb/>
ed.<lb/>
I'd also like to thank Debbie and<lb/>
Doris for answering the phones,<lb/>
taking complex messages and listen-<lb/>
ing to me babble ? <lb/>
Bill D Petie, Tommy and the<lb/>
rest of the crew. You have been ir-<lb/>
ritating and funny, but I've enjoyed<lb/>
working with you.<lb/>
Finally, I'd like to thank two very<lb/>
special people. Mom, who else<lb/>
would save my clippings and send<lb/>
them out to her friends? And who<lb/>
else would have chocolate chip<lb/>
cookies waiting for me at 2 a.m.?<lb/>
Thanks. And Tom, thanks for<lb/>
listening to me, cheering me up,<lb/>
laughing at me and with me and,<lb/>
most importantly, fixing me dinner<lb/>
on production night. You're great.<lb/>
Jay, good luck. You will pro-<lb/>
bably need every skill you possess<lb/>
and some you didn't even know you<lb/>
had. The mythical keys that come<lb/>
with the job have been lost over the<lb/>
years, but I did clean the desk for<lb/>
you.<lb/>
J.J.<lb/>
FtsmvH&amp;SL?o-msmcMrvjC4,<lb/>
Soviet Expansionism Improbable;<lb/>
Military Intervention Unnecessary<lb/>
In my last column I attempted to show<lb/>
that large-scale Soviet intervention in the<lb/>
Third World must be regarded as an<lb/>
unlikely development in the forseeable<lb/>
future. This is true, not only because of<lb/>
the dismal results which the Soviets have<lb/>
achieved in the past by relying upon the<lb/>
militaristic approach to expanding their<lb/>
influence in the Third World, but also<lb/>
because economic trends in that country<lb/>
are against increasing military outlays.<lb/>
In addition, there is of course, the inex-<lb/>
orable fact that the Soviets lack and will<lb/>
continue to lack the military where-<lb/>
withall to carry the day in any region far<lb/>
from the USSR that the United States is<lb/>
prepared to contest.<lb/>
From The.eft<lb/>
Jay Stone<lb/>
For example, in commenting on the<lb/>
power projection capabilities of the two<lb/>
superpowers, Rajan Menem (author of<lb/>
Soviet Foriegn Policy in the 1980s)<lb/>
shows that the United States maintain<lb/>
an advantage in all categories except air-<lb/>
borne troops and merchant cargo<lb/>
vessels. In the case of long-range<lb/>
transport aircraft, not only is the"Soviet<lb/>
fleet considerably smaller, but its<lb/>
payload is only 56 percent that of the<lb/>
United States.<lb/>
The Soviets have eight airborne divi-<lb/>
sions compared with two for the United<lb/>
States, and in recent years some have<lb/>
been used for power projection in the<lb/>
Third World; they were placd on alert<lb/>
when Brezhnev threatened to resort to<lb/>
military intervention in the Middle East<lb/>
on October 24, 1973, and were also used<lb/>
as a spearhead to secure vital positions<lb/>
and set the stage for the entry of Soviet<lb/>
ground forces into Afghanistan in<lb/>
December 1979. In comparison, to<lb/>
American airborne divisions, which<lb/>
possess organic logistics and support,<lb/>
Soviet airborne troops are dependent for<lb/>
these functions on regular army units.<lb/>
This is a drawback that diminishes their<lb/>
utility, except for operations in areas<lb/>
close to the USSR such as Europe and<lb/>
the Northern Tier countries stretching<lb/>
from Turkey to Afghanistan. By con-<lb/>
trast, American forces are better suited<lb/>
for power projection over great<lb/>
distances.<lb/>
In addition, Soviet amphibious ships<lb/>
are decidedly inferior to their American<lb/>
counterparts because they are, on the<lb/>
whole, lighter, slower, and carry far<lb/>
fewer helicopters than American ships.<lb/>
Moreover, the Soviet fleet would be ex-<lb/>
tremely vulnerable if it had to operate<lb/>
outside the range of shore-based aircraft<lb/>
because of the disadvantage which the<lb/>
Soviets have in aircraft carriers. They<lb/>
have only two while the United States<lb/>
has thirteen.<lb/>
Indeed, the writings of the com-<lb/>
mander in chief of the Soviet navy, Ad-<lb/>
miral SergeiGorshkov, suggest that<lb/>
Third World power projection is not<lb/>
stressed in Soviet naval doctrine. While<lb/>
Gorshkov's book, The Sea Power of the<lb/>
State, reveals a strong interest in the role<lb/>
of the American navy in local wars of<lb/>
imperialism, in this work and earlier<lb/>
essays, the major missions of the Soviet<lb/>
navy were defined as deterrence,<lb/>
strategic strikes in the event of nuclear<lb/>
war, countering enemy aircraft carriers,<lb/>
and the advancement of state interests<lb/>
during peacetime through port visits and<lb/>
the maintenance of a permanent<lb/>
presence in various areas. Power projec-<lb/>
tion in the Third World, then, is not a<lb/>
high priority on the Soviet agenda.<lb/>
The real areas of vital concern to the<lb/>
Soviets are related to their obsessive<lb/>
preoccupation with perceived threats to<lb/>
their national defense and their status as<lb/>
a super-power. Clearly, one such area is<lb/>
the U.SSoviet strategic balance, which<lb/>
commands the lion's share of Soviet<lb/>
resources. Two related areas are the<lb/>
European theater and what is veiwed as<lb/>
a looming threat across the 4,000-mile<lb/>
Sino-Soviet border.<lb/>
That the Soviet Union does not place<lb/>
a great deal of emphasis upon Third<lb/>
World power projection, however, ap-<lb/>
pears to have escaped detection by<lb/>
military strategists in the U.S The<lb/>
United States is currently the largest sup-<lb/>
plier of arms and other forms of military<lb/>
assistance to the rest of the world.<lb/>
Moreover,the creation of special combat<lb/>
units such as the Special Forces and the<lb/>
Rapid Deployment Force for waging<lb/>
counter-insurgency warfare illustrates<lb/>
the fact that the American government<lb/>
sees insurgent revolutionary movements<lb/>
as the greatest threat to U.S. interests in<lb/>
the Third World.<lb/>
"Our preoccupation with<lb/>
the Soviet military threat has<lb/>
prevented us from recogniz-<lb/>
ing the role that poverty<lb/>
plays in causing social<lb/>
unrest. As a result, we find<lb/>
ourselves pursuing military<lb/>
solutions to problems that<lb/>
are primarily economic in<lb/>
origin. '<lb/>
Of course, the outlook which gave rise<lb/>
to these policies had its beginnings in the<lb/>
past when the Soviets were, indeed,<lb/>
more aggressive about trying to expand<lb/>
their influence both in Europe and the<lb/>
Third World. History, however, has<lb/>
shown that the Soviet commitments in<lb/>
under-developed regions have been<lb/>
niether sustained nor deep and that the<lb/>
threat of large-scale Soviet expansionism<lb/>
is illusory. During the 1970s the Soviets<lb/>
were thrown out of Egypt and Somalia<lb/>
without a fight. They are presently bogg-<lb/>
ed down in a protracted war ? in<lb/>
Afghanistan and the Solidarity<lb/>
resistance movement in Poland has<lb/>
become an underground institution.<lb/>
Yet, if the Soviets are losing the hearts<lb/>
and minds of Third Worlders the U.S. is<lb/>
faring only slightly better. Our preoc-<lb/>
cupation with the Soviet military threat<lb/>
has prevented us from recognizing the<lb/>
role that poverty plays in causing social<lb/>
unrest. As a result, we Find ourselves<lb/>
pursuing military solutions to problems<lb/>
Doonesbury<lb/>
that are primarily economic in origin<lb/>
The U.S. supplies the miluarv needs<lb/>
of other countries in three basic ?<lb/>
cash sales of military equipmerr<lb/>
and loans, and training program<lb/>
military personnel. American arm<lb/>
porations can sell some weapons and<lb/>
components directly to foreign govern-<lb/>
ments or foreign Firms, however, n<lb/>
large sales of sophisticated equipr<lb/>
like aircraft or missiles, are hand<lb/>
through the government's For .<lb/>
Military Sales program (FMS). Between<lb/>
1950 and 1982 FMS sales totaled more<lb/>
than $116 billion worldwide. D<lb/>
commercial arms sales by private com-<lb/>
panies added another $14 billion, accor-<lb/>
ding to the U.S. Defense Department<lb/>
Until the late 1970s, the United States<lb/>
also poured considerable surm into<lb/>
outright military grants to foreign coun-<lb/>
tries, about $55 billion between 1950 and<lb/>
1982. Economic realities, however. hae<lb/>
caused a shift in policy. Outright<lb/>
military assistance has been increasingly<lb/>
replaced, partly by cash sales of<lb/>
weapons and partly by loans offered at<lb/>
very favorable rates enabling foreign<lb/>
governments to buy American militarv<lb/>
equipment. Finally, the United States<lb/>
has trained more than half a million<lb/>
foreign military personnel since 1950<lb/>
under the International Military Educa-<lb/>
tion and Training Program (1MET), an<lb/>
enterprise that has cost more than $2<lb/>
billion.<lb/>
Yet the most troubling thing about<lb/>
these figures is that American arms sales<lb/>
and military assistance have helped sup-<lb/>
port some of the world's most repressive<lb/>
governments. According to the Center<lb/>
for Defense Information,the United<lb/>
States has been a key supplier of arm- to<lb/>
28 out of 41 military-dominated govern-<lb/>
ments around the world with records of<lb/>
severe human rights violations. In the<lb/>
late 1970s, some halting steps were taken<lb/>
by the American government to restrict<lb/>
arms sales to the worst human-rights of-<lb/>
fenders. But many of these restrictions<lb/>
have been lifted under the Reagan ad-<lb/>
ministration.<lb/>
Of course,this policy has been under-<lb/>
taken in the name of anti-Communism<lb/>
and during the time of the Korean war<lb/>
when China had just come under Com<lb/>
munist rule and Joseph Stalin was using<lb/>
the North Koreans as proxies to pursue<lb/>
expansion in East Asia it was somewhat<lb/>
more justified than it is now or will be in<lb/>
the future. For now and in the future, is<lb/>
I have already shown, the biggest threat<lb/>
to U.S. influence in the Third World is<lb/>
likely to arise, not from military aggres<lb/>
sion on the part of the Soviets or even<lb/>
their proxies, but from povertv and<lb/>
tyranny which have so frequentlv shown<lb/>
themselves to be the seedbeds of Com<lb/>
munist movements in the past. The<lb/>
United States, then, should clearlv<lb/>
rethink its foreign policy with an eye to<lb/>
making it more appropriate to contem<lb/>
porary realities. We must offer the Third<lb/>
World a path to democracy and pro-<lb/>
psperity. Yet, we cannot accomplish this<lb/>
end while simultaneously maintaining<lb/>
grossly inflated levels of military spen-<lb/>
ding. We must make a choice about<lb/>
which option we will pursue in the Third<lb/>
World sometime in the near future.<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
MIKE, WHO<lb/>
ISMAROA<lb/>
remooM<lb/>
0UR9BCEPWHIST<lb/>
OTTUBAGENCi.<lb/>
(AJMDOWU<lb/>
ASK?<lb/>
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19<lb/>
UHAJDO iOUMAXB OF ITT 1MAMA'SO05HSIN ON'40. SH&amp;BeSN 7H&amp;A7BWGTDPD THSfVRSOMBmie.<lb/>
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Copeland. the<lb/>
the platinum. j<lb/>
the Police.<lb/>
screaming fa<lb/>
popping ?<lb/>
millions I:<lb/>
it all.<lb/>
"Lawyei d<lb/>
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why societv<lb/>
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bangs things<lb/>
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lanky blond<lb/>
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son of a CIA I<lb/>
Beirut to be. <lb/>
drummer in<lb/>
most popular<lb/>
to the subjec<lb/>
study of rhytftn.<lb/>
"Rhyrhm a<lb/>
important in j<lb/>
said.<lb/>
His fascina:i<lb/>
rhythms coir I<lb/>
music but in the<lb/>
Sti<lb/>
B WARRK<lb/>
Vp?-i?l i I h hi<lb/>
According<lb/>
Sting's first<lb/>
been long oerd<lb/>
The Dream<lb/>
proves that the ct<lb/>
behind the Poli<lb/>
waited a little Ion<lb/>
There are no<lb/>
Summers guitar<lb/>
through the stej<lb/>
Stewart Copelam<lb/>
fact, there is : J<lb/>
album that vagu<lb/>
Police tune except<lb/>
of "Shadows m<lb/>
time it's a psf<lb/>
upbeat tune w<lb/>
keyboard accenti<lb/>
lyrics. "Shadow:<lb/>
side one effect!veil<lb/>
that point, side<lb/>
out slow ? but<lb/>
crafted songs<lb/>
Sttsg and tl<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0005"/><lb/>
aX<lb/>
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essary<lb/>
in origin.<lb/>
nilitary needs<lb/>
" basic ways:<lb/>
mem, grants<lb/>
N,ograms for<lb/>
an arms cor-<lb/>
eapons and<lb/>
' reign govern-<lb/>
weer, most<lb/>
d equipment<lb/>
are handled<lb/>
Foreign<lb/>
FMS). Between<lb/>
totaled more<lb/>
wide. Direct<lb/>
bj private com-<lb/>
I 4 billion, accor-<lb/>
Department.<lb/>
United States<lb/>
rable sums into<lb/>
foreign coun-<lb/>
:veen 1950 and<lb/>
however, have<lb/>
policy. Outright<lb/>
has been increasingly<lb/>
cash sales of<lb/>
loans offered at<lb/>
enabling foreign<lb/>
American military<lb/>
the United States<lb/>
u half a million<lb/>
nnd since 1950<lb/>
Military Educa-<lb/>
rogram (IMET), an<lb/>
ost more than $2<lb/>
:ng thing about<lb/>
American arms sales<lb/>
ave helped sup-<lb/>
nost repressive<lb/>
ding to the Center<lb/>
mation.the United<lb/>
pplier of arms to<lb/>
: minated govern-<lb/>
r!d with records of<lb/>
violations. In the<lb/>
ng step ere taken<lb/>
government to restrict<lb/>
worst human-rights of-<lb/>
?f these restrictions<lb/>
under the Reagan ad-<lb/>
has been under-<lb/>
line of anti-Communism<lb/>
? me of the Korean war<lb/>
me under Com-<lb/>
eph Stalin was using<lb/>
proxies to pursue<lb/>
? il a as somewhat<lb/>
now or will be in<lb/>
ind in the future, as<lb/>
 the biggest threat<lb/>
te in the Third World is<lb/>
jot from military aggres-<lb/>
of the Soviets or even<lb/>
ut from poverty and<lb/>
ive so frequently shown<lb/>
the seedbeds of Com-<lb/>
mits in the past. The<lb/>
then, should clearly<lb/>
kn policy with an eye to<lb/>
jappropnate to contem-<lb/>
e must offer the Third<lb/>
p democracy and pro-<lb/>
cannot accomplish this<lb/>
Itaneoush maintaining<lb/>
levels of military spen-<lb/>
make a choice about<lb/>
will pursue in the Third<lb/>
in the near future.<lb/>
iRRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
U?6 HO. JUST A<lb/>
BAFJEHPBfi<lb/>
t BUTTWLl<lb/>
sriuBe<lb/>
5ACFBP<lb/>
J<lb/>
THE EAST CAROUNIAN<lb/>
Lifestyles<lb/>
JULY 24, 1985 Page 5<lb/>
TW's<lb/>
Music<lb/>
By MIKE LUDWICK<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
Local night owls will have a<lb/>
true taste of the music in-<lb/>
dustry when the Super Grit<lb/>
Cowboy Band tapes its live<lb/>
music video and records a live<lb/>
album Wednesday, Friday and<lb/>
Saturday nights at TW's<lb/>
Nighlife here in Greenville.<lb/>
On Wednesday night the<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band, with<lb/>
the help of WNCT-TV, will<lb/>
tape a live music video. Then on<lb/>
Friday and Saturday night, they<lb/>
will record their live album.<lb/>
Richard Fox of the Chapel<lb/>
Hill-based Location Recording<lb/>
Services will record the audio<lb/>
tracks for both the music video<lb/>
and the album. According to<lb/>
Police Drummer Films Video<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) - Stewart<lb/>
peland, the sole American in<lb/>
he platinum-selling rock group<lb/>
:he Police, isn't interested in<lb/>
aming fans, magazine covers,<lb/>
ping flashbulbs, or making<lb/>
millions. In fact, he's puzzled bv<lb/>
01.<lb/>
1 auyers, doctors and interior<lb/>
decorators, you can understand<lb/>
why society rewards them for<lb/>
uhat they do. But somebody who<lb/>
bangs things in rhythm, it's a lit-<lb/>
tle bit harder to work out the<lb/>
lank blond said.<lb/>
?land's musing on his hap-<lb/>
p predicament, rising from the<lb/>
son of a CIA agent stationed in<lb/>
Beiru: to become a wealthy<lb/>
drummer in one of the world's<lb/>
most popular rock bands, led him<lb/>
to the subject of surprisingly the<lb/>
study of rhythm.<lb/>
"Rhythm and music are very<lb/>
!mr in subtle ways he<lb/>
said.<lb/>
His fascination with how-<lb/>
rhythms coincide, not just in<lb/>
music but in the pumping of an<lb/>
engine piston or the pulse of an<lb/>
electrical current, is the focus of<lb/>
Copeland's latest project, a film<lb/>
called The Rhythmatist in which<lb/>
he stars.<lb/>
Shot in Africa, often with<lb/>
tribes never before exposed to<lb/>
Western culture, the home video<lb/>
is intended to be a "video LP<lb/>
with a plot so loose and music<lb/>
and pictures so interesting that it<lb/>
can be played over and over like a<lb/>
record.<lb/>
A soundtrack for The<lb/>
Rhythmatist is soon to be releas-<lb/>
ed, along with a music video and<lb/>
a single. The heavily percussive<lb/>
music for the film is, to say the<lb/>
least, unusual.<lb/>
"It's in a foreign language for<lb/>
a start Copeland said. "And<lb/>
there's no recognizable connec-<lb/>
tion with the mainstream of<lb/>
modern music, which was the<lb/>
whole point. I wasn't out to do<lb/>
the mainstream, modern music in<lb/>
Africa. I was out there to do new<lb/>
stuff<lb/>
The Police have always forged<lb/>
their own path, thanks in large<lb/>
part to Copeland, who conceived<lb/>
of a rock V roll band "that<lb/>
would be a three-piece unit that<lb/>
you could fit in a taxi and would<lb/>
be independent of everything<lb/>
Its simplicity, and reggae-<lb/>
flavored rock music, made the<lb/>
band an unusual component of<lb/>
the punk-New Wave movement<lb/>
in the late '70s.<lb/>
The Police shunned the in-<lb/>
dustry's "dinosaurs turning<lb/>
down opportunitites to open for<lb/>
big acts like Alice Cooper, and<lb/>
refused record company ex-<lb/>
travagances until they themselves<lb/>
could afford them. They didn't<lb/>
have to wait long.<lb/>
Their first album yielded a top<lb/>
40 hit, "Roxanne in 1979, and<lb/>
each of the four albums since<lb/>
then has been even more suc-<lb/>
cessful. Their last LP, 1983 s<lb/>
Synchronicity, produced four top<lb/>
20 hits, including the stunning<lb/>
chart-topper, "Every Breath You<lb/>
Take<lb/>
Copeland immodestly con-<lb/>
siders the Police the world's best<lb/>
rock group, but said all three<lb/>
members of the band know<lb/>
they're capable of making "an<lb/>
LP that's average. It's very possi-<lb/>
ble and we're concerned that it<lb/>
doesn't happen. It's real impor-<lb/>
tant to us to really be good<lb/>
Although he is an American<lb/>
citizen, shortly after his birth<lb/>
Copeland's family moved to<lb/>
Beirut, where his CIA-employed<lb/>
father was stationed. He was 18<lb/>
before he set foot on American<lb/>
soil again to study at Berkeley<lb/>
and he now lives in London.<lb/>
His political leanings are con-<lb/>
servative, which helps explain<lb/>
why Sting's liberal viewpoints are<lb/>
clearer on his solo album than on<lb/>
any Police record. "He's got to<lb/>
hone his arguments with me<lb/>
Copeland said.<lb/>
He said he will see a Sting con-<lb/>
cert this summer and may even<lb/>
organize some favorite musicians<lb/>
for a tour of his own, although<lb/>
"basically I'm spoiled. I like my<lb/>
group<lb/>
Sting: A Festival Melancholia<lb/>
B WARREN BAKER<lb/>
special lo Th? East Carolinian<lb/>
According to most critics,<lb/>
Sting's first solo album has<lb/>
"een long overdue. To others,<lb/>
The Dream of the Blue Turtles<lb/>
proves that the charismatic voice<lb/>
behind the Police should have<lb/>
waited a little longer.<lb/>
There are no intricate Andy<lb/>
Summers guitar riffs cutting<lb/>
trough the steady rhythm of<lb/>
Stewart Copeland drum raps. In<lb/>
fact, there is nothing on the<lb/>
album that vaguely resembles a<lb/>
Police tune except for the remake<lb/>
of "Shadows in the Rain This<lb/>
'ime it's a pseudo-frolicking<lb/>
upbeat tune with a playful<lb/>
keyboard accenting the familiar<lb/>
lyrics. "Shadows" rounds out<lb/>
;de one effectively since, up until<lb/>
that point, side one has cranked<lb/>
out slow ? but well ? musically<lb/>
poetry.<lb/>
As usual, his voice swims<lb/>
within the beautiful orchestration<lb/>
with a soft, yet piercing, suave<lb/>
delivery ? a form of crooning<lb/>
that sets its own standards and<lb/>
then breaks them. Even when he<lb/>
sings off-key, you could swear<lb/>
that the note could not be sung<lb/>
any other feasible way. There is<lb/>
no Springsteen gruffness or<lb/>
Bryan Ferry trilling in his voice,<lb/>
but his own special way carries<lb/>
the weighty lyrics through the<lb/>
songs dutifully and efficiently.<lb/>
But there's something wrong<lb/>
here. Sting has had a crisis of<lb/>
conscience.<lb/>
That's fine, one might think,<lb/>
an artist is entitled to bare his<lb/>
soul to the critics and the<lb/>
worldevery once in a while.<lb/>
Sting, however, pulls out all stops<lb/>
and writes about a multitude of<lb/>
problems,<lb/>
crafted songs with ponderous For example, "Children's<lb/>
SDDE0<lb/>
s ' mi MiKfi<lb/>
Ml((IK?<lb/>
"tlHIMli,(IK tit ,?,<lb/>
"fEe, d?f rh 'n-rfU?<lb/>
Sting and the world are in a state of precarious balance.<lb/>
Crusade" is a contrastcom-<lb/>
parison between World War I<lb/>
England and the country's cur-<lb/>
rent problems with drug abusers.<lb/>
It's the youth he sings about; the<lb/>
senseless quick death in 1914 and<lb/>
the senseless slow death in 1984<lb/>
Soho. He dwells on the violence<lb/>
of war ("Love Is The Seventh<lb/>
Wave") and the possibility of the<lb/>
US and Soviet Union realizing<lb/>
that their children are depending<lb/>
on a detente ("Russians").<lb/>
Sting ushers in a new "No-<lb/>
Nukes" theme song with the dark<lb/>
and plodding "We Work the<lb/>
Black Seam This foreboding<lb/>
song talks about nuclear energy<lb/>
with the characteristic wit Sting is<lb/>
known for: "One day in a<lb/>
nuclear agethey may understand<lb/>
our rageThey build machines<lb/>
they can't controland bury the<lb/>
waste in great big holes<lb/>
The big theme, love, is also<lb/>
handled on three of the tracks.<lb/>
"If You Love Somebody Set<lb/>
Them Free one of the rare up-<lb/>
tempo songs, is an essay on how<lb/>
to keep love, and the moody<lb/>
organ-laced "Consider Me<lb/>
Gone" is a throwaway song deal-<lb/>
ing with losing love. The last<lb/>
track, "Fortress Around Your<lb/>
Heart starts out in typical<lb/>
"Blue Turtle" fashion with a<lb/>
slow rhythm, but it later crescen-<lb/>
dos with a good dose of<lb/>
keyboards and heavy-handed<lb/>
drumming on the chorus. The<lb/>
lyrics come out smoothly over the<lb/>
satisfying musicianship showing<lb/>
Sting's penmanship is still in<lb/>
great shape: "While the armies<lb/>
all are sleepingbeneath the tat-<lb/>
tered flag we'd madeI had to<lb/>
stop for fear of walking on the<lb/>
mines I'd laid<lb/>
Mines, indeed.<lb/>
Is there no relief? "Moon Over<lb/>
Bourbon Street" and the in-<lb/>
strumental title track offer dif-<lb/>
ferent themes other than the<lb/>
gosh-we've-got-some-problems<lb/>
lyrics that encompass the rest of<lb/>
the album.<lb/>
"Moon" is based on a passage<lb/>
from Anne Rice's novel Interview<lb/>
With a Vampire. Sting thumps<lb/>
slowly on his double bass while a<lb/>
steady "tish tish tish" on the<lb/>
cymbals create: an atmosphere<lb/>
reminiscent of the 1920s. An oc-<lb/>
cassional outburst from the sax-<lb/>
ophone of Branford Marselis<lb/>
caps everything off well with its<lb/>
turn-of-the-century glee. Really<lb/>
nice.<lb/>
The title track adds needed life<lb/>
to the vinyl with a much-too-<lb/>
short jazz improvisation. Sting<lb/>
lined up several of jazz's whiz<lb/>
kids for the 10-track LP in-<lb/>
cluding, Omar Hakim of<lb/>
Weather Report (drums), Darryl<lb/>
Davis of the Miles Davis Group<lb/>
(bass) and one of the talented<lb/>
sons from the Marselis clan,<lb/>
Branford. Kenny Kirkland, a<lb/>
veteran session man, also makes<lb/>
an appearance with his made-to-<lb/>
order dark keyboard ramblings<lb/>
and occassional playful melodies.<lb/>
"Dream the song, has so much<lb/>
potential for a interesting jam<lb/>
session, but the shortness of the<lb/>
instrumental seems appropriately<lb/>
cut off to make room for Sting's<lb/>
melancholy digressions.<lb/>
The Dream of the Blue Turtles,<lb/>
the album, is a wonderful feat<lb/>
musically. Pete Smith and Jim<lb/>
Scott, the engineers, knew how to<lb/>
handle the ethereal aspects of<lb/>
Sting's music and transfer his<lb/>
moodiness in to a well-recorded<lb/>
album. The sounds are crisp and<lb/>
clean, but<lb/>
the music is moody to an<lb/>
overwhelming degree.<lb/>
According to Sting, he and the<lb/>
world lie in a state of precarious<lb/>
balance. One small shift and the<lb/>
world goes boom. That worries<lb/>
me. Then again, Sting's crisis of<lb/>
conscience wories me. If he puts<lb/>
out another album like this one,<lb/>
he may have a mass suicide on his<lb/>
hands.<lb/>
Fox the state's only mobile<lb/>
studio is being used for this pro-<lb/>
duction.<lb/>
The production of a live<lb/>
music video and live album is a<lb/>
first in Greenville. "This has<lb/>
never been done before in<lb/>
Greenville. To my knowledge<lb/>
this is a first said Buzz Led-<lb/>
ford, business manager for the<lb/>
band.<lb/>
Clyde Mattocks, the leader<lb/>
and one of the founders of the<lb/>
band said, "We want to use the<lb/>
video to promote our album.<lb/>
We can put this music video on<lb/>
cable channels, and we can use<lb/>
clips from the video to promote<lb/>
our appearances<lb/>
As for the release date of the<lb/>
album and video, Mattocks<lb/>
said, "I want to get them out by<lb/>
Christmas. It's best to release a<lb/>
new album sometime around<lb/>
November<lb/>
The as-yet-untitled LP, which<lb/>
Mattocks plans to produce<lb/>
himself, will appear on the<lb/>
band's own record label,<lb/>
Hoodswamp Records.<lb/>
"We started in Greenville<lb/>
said Mattocks when asked<lb/>
about his choice of Greenville as<lb/>
a shooting and recording loca-<lb/>
tion. "This is our home ter-<lb/>
ritory. We came here because<lb/>
we will get the best audience<lb/>
cooperation here. They will clap<lb/>
and holler on cue Mattocks<lb/>
said, "It's because of all the<lb/>
support we've received here that<lb/>
this is the audience we would<lb/>
like to have in our video and<lb/>
our album<lb/>
HOTSPOTS<lb/>
Nightclubs<lb/>
The Attic begins the weekend<lb/>
Wednesday with the high-<lb/>
production rock of<lb/>
Sidewinder. Diamond's<lb/>
mainstream rock 'n' roll<lb/>
will continue the weekend<lb/>
on Thursday. And win-<lb/>
ding up the Attic's hot<lb/>
summer weekend on Fri-<lb/>
day and Saturday nights is<lb/>
Trezor Rex and their<lb/>
brand of commercial<lb/>
metal. Doors open at 9<lb/>
p.m. The bands start at<lb/>
9:30 p.m.<lb/>
Corrigans continues its popular<lb/>
Ladies Night Wednesday<lb/>
with the keyboard music<lb/>
of Carl Rosen. Doors<lb/>
open at 8:30 pm.<lb/>
The Loft presents Lahnn and<lb/>
Loftin and their crowd-<lb/>
pleasing music Friday<lb/>
night, and Saturday night<lb/>
the contemporary music<lb/>
of Tom Jones will be at<lb/>
the Loft. Both acts start at<lb/>
9:30 pm.<lb/>
Premuims and Greenville's own<lb/>
Hot Rockin' Gray Band<lb/>
starts the weekend on<lb/>
Thursday with their new<lb/>
original rock 'n' roll.<lb/>
Then on Friday the Flat<lb/>
Duojets and UV Prom are<lb/>
at Premiums. Finally, on<lb/>
Saturday Premiums<lb/>
presents Foreign Bodies<lb/>
with their original rock 'n'<lb/>
roll. Each night doors<lb/>
open at 5 p.m. and the<lb/>
bands start at 10:30 p.m.<lb/>
TW's Nightlife presents the<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
on Wednesday, Friday,<lb/>
and Saturday night. On<lb/>
Wednesday night the<lb/>
Super Grit Cowboy Band<lb/>
will make a live music<lb/>
video at TW's. The band<lb/>
starts at 9:30 pm each<lb/>
night. Also, every Tues-<lb/>
day night TW's presents<lb/>
the only comedy show in<lb/>
eastern North Carolina ?<lb/>
The Comedy Zone. This<lb/>
Tuesday John Penney and<lb/>
Kodak will be the featured<lb/>
comedians.<lb/>
Hotspots is a listing of entertain-<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.<lb/>
Submissions to Hotspots will be<lb/>
printed only if space allows.<lb/>
Star Wars?<lb/>
Lighting Designer Gary Weathersbee is adjusting the laser used in the<lb/>
Summer Theatre production of 'Peter Pan The laser will play the<lb/>
part of Tinkerbdl in the play. The Production will run from July 24th<lb/>
through the 27th and from the 29th to the 31st at the McGinnis<lb/>
Theatre.<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0006"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 24, 1985<lb/>
50 CA <lb/>
am vm)<lb/>
9N6ULARJT)<lb/>
HIKi <lb/>
TMJOUtPN '<lb/>
MISS IT FOR<lb/>
m worip,<lb/>
HARCJA<lb/>
h '<lb/>
GREAT YOU CAN1 IMAGINE<lb/>
WHAT A RELIEF ITS GOING<lb/>
TO BE TO FINAU YCALL Off<lb/>
THE SEARCH FOR THE PfRFBc 1<lb/>
MAiEANPGETON<lb/>
MTHIWUFfi<lb/>
IMACHAN6EP<lb/>
uOOMAN INFACI.<lb/>
LASTFRJPAY.l<lb/>
MAPE My LAST<lb/>
OFFICIAL PASS AT<lb/>
A WARRJEUMAN<lb/>
OH, YEAH <lb/>
tUHOUIAS<lb/>
mm2<lb/>
i ms m<lb/>
nmsLASTOH.HEY,<lb/>
you, youI'm very<lb/>
jerkFlATTbREP<lb/>
XCT<lb/>
0Jm<lb/>
JL  yj"T<lb/>
7TJ a ?R n tmtm fc <lb/>
68ffi4A wm<lb/>
A. Guy, Brooks, Jim and Sandy<lb/>
Thanks a mil for the fantastic work you guys did this summer. Rest up<lb/>
and put on that creative cap cause this is gonna be a helluva year!<lb/>
I<lb/>
I<lb/>
V<lb/>
.?.?.?.?-?.??.?.???-?? ?<lb/>
Oooncsburv<lb/>
BY GARRY TRUDEAU<lb/>
.<lb/>
  Rg<lb/>
rv<lb/>
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uuhou . n eeen<lb/>
 ON HOW HOP<lb/>
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SO HNAL i LAST tAEEK,<lb/>
RIGHT IN THE MIPPLE Jf<lb/>
ANOTHER PISASTROUS<lb/>
PATE, I JUST CAlLW<lb/>
?"V IT QUITS'<lb/>
I SLIPPED<lb/>
iNTkEMIPPte OUTUJHILE<lb/>
MTE? HE WAS HOOF<lb/>
ING UP THL<lb/>
S LVAJhP 3EP<lb/>
i JirrjArrzv TOi&amp;rvob jo?,<lb/>
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HAVE TO TELL YOU H0<lb/>
Mr ,Zt<lb/>
I'VE RE6ISTEREP<lb/>
A CHINA PATTERN NUFF<lb/>
at duwmmt's IP ly-<lb/>
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Fine Quality Hand Knotted<lb/>
Investment Pieces of<lb/>
Persian Rugs &amp;<lb/>
Other Oriental Carpets<lb/>
657o to 75 OFF<lb/>
Repossessed by the Order of Secured Parties<lb/>
From Several Stores Who Have Closed Down<lb/>
Over 250 Pieces<lb/>
Ah Sizes Large, Small<lb/>
Some Palace Sizes<lb/>
Only One Day<lb/>
At<lb/>
SHERATON GREENVILLE<lb/>
203 West Greenville Blvd.<lb/>
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WED JULY 24 from 10 AM to 8 PM<lb/>
-S?? <lb/>
? ? Ou '?' ?;<lb/>
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v WANBN1 PERSON<lb/>
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(WHAT 5 60i Oi7<lb/>
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So jtY?g4Hlgt4?<lb/>
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about a femes fi?M$?<lb/>
BY BROOKS<lb/>
The Plaza<lb/>
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Ai<lb/>
?<lb/>
?<lb/>
9<lb/>
The Plaza Mai!<lb/>
Greenville. N.C<lb/>
756-4024<lb/>
The Plaza Deli<lb/>
located at THE PLAZA<lb/>
The New Concept In Deli's<lb/>
We Offer:<lb/>
Fresh Squeezed Lemonade and Orangade<lb/>
Daily Specials Orders To Go<lb/>
New Sandwiches<lb/>
Pita Wabbit and English Knight<lb/>
Visit Kurope and Never Leave The Deli<lb/>
Good Music Good Times<lb/>
10 AM-9 PM 756-4024<lb/>
Are He Having<lb/>
Fun Yet?<lb/>
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, 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 $4.07plus tax.<lb/>
DAILY SPECIALS $2.25 plus tax&amp; beverage.<lb/>
Sunday Special ? Turkey and Dressing<lb/>
10 Free Plates With Semester Meal Plan<lb/>
Ba<lb/>
B Rl( '<lb/>
ECU head ij<lb/>
Baker added<lb/>
the Pirate I<lb/>
now anxious!<lb/>
of summer<lb/>
be eligible to p<lb/>
Teffin Bent<lb/>
Sewell signed<lb/>
intent, bnngm;<lb/>
of freshmen rH<lb/>
ECU's two n<lb/>
ship<lb/>
H<lb/>
Sept.<lb/>
Sept.14<lb/>
Sept.21<lb/>
Sept. !<lb/>
Oct.<lb/>
Oct.12 '<lb/>
Oct.26<lb/>
Nov.?<lb/>
Nov.9<lb/>
Nov.16<lb/>
Dec.<lb/>
Benedu-<lb/>
wide recede- i<lb/>
Jacksonville,<lb/>
High School,<lb/>
uide receiver<lb/>
seasons Bene<lb/>
passes for !<lb/>
touchdowns di<lb/>
season in helpn<lb/>
an 8-3 record<lb/>
state playof:<lb/>
Benedict eai<lb/>
mention a!<lb/>
distnc: hon<lb/>
ing pur<lb/>
averaged ai:<lb/>
jeturn in 1984<lb/>
punts for<lb/>
Sewell is a 5-1<lb/>
running bao<lb/>
and played<lb/>
High School. Hj<lb/>
among the top<lb/>
the state, rushu<lb/>
,and five touchc<lb/>
fime starting<lb/>
Wa<lb/>
BOSTON (UP<lb/>
kge basl<lb/>
Vs illiamv spent<lb/>
reported offer t<lb/>
coaching reigns<lb/>
University.<lb/>
A Boston Co<lb/>
said Williams<lb/>
decision -<lb/>
although <lb/>
William Flynn A<lb/>
the Wake F I<lb/>
"I don: kno<lb/>
been made.<lb/>
(Wake Forest<lb/>
permission :<lb/>
I have nothing el<lb/>
between him an<lb/>
Wake Foresi<lb/>
declined to coma<lb/>
"We will not<lb/>
fer Sports lnil<lb/>
tor Ber ?<lb/>
suing no statemi<lb/>
While William<lb/>
say whether<lb/>
made, he dis <lb/>
Boston media<lb/>
from North Cat<lb/>
spoke with unj<lb/>
and attended a<lb/>
North Carolina<lb/>
tion Mondav<lb/>
Mo<lb/>
RALEIGH.<lb/>
Yesterday forme<lb/>
State quarterbat<lb/>
"man told a judgl<lb/>
Jerry Paul pop(<lb/>
Moorman's raj<lb/>
?sleep while a<lb/>
xamined the atl<lb/>
"1 was on tl<lb/>
nd Mr. Paul hi<lb/>
pke this with hi<lb/>
?aid the 19-yt<lb/>
quarterback, dr<lb/>
chest. "I wi<lb/>
confused,<lb/>
hat to do<lb/>
Convicted on<lb/>
man is servini<lb/>
charges of breal<lb/>
dent's dorm<lb/>
in her sleep<lb/>
?orman, who il<lb/>
bid for a newf<lb/>
Paul took p j<lb/>
incompeter<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0007"/><lb/>
iy<lb/>
mrner. Rest up<lb/>
lluva yearl<lb/>
1<lb/>
I HI I-AS I CAROI IN1AN<lb/>
Sports<lb/>
II I V 24. IVX<lb/>
Baker Inks Two Recruits For Fall Campaign<lb/>
B KICK Met ORMA(<lb/>
Niii I44lur<lb/>
( I head football coach Art<lb/>
added two more recruits to<lb/>
Piraie fold last week. He is<lb/>
 anxiously awaiting the end<lb/>
imer school to see who will<lb/>
gible to play in the fall<lb/>
n Benedict and Robert<lb/>
Mgned football letters ol<lb/>
bringing the total number<lb/>
reshmen recruits to 22, filling<lb/>
's two remaining scholar-<lb/>
Sewell played a major role in<lb/>
Plant's district and conference<lb/>
championship squad as the team<lb/>
rolled to a 9-1 mark in 1984.<lb/>
labeled a good blocker with<lb/>
great speed, SewelPs best single-<lb/>
game performance of 1984 came<lb/>
against Past Bav High School<lb/>
when he rushed for 150 yards. He<lb/>
also dashed for a 65-yard<lb/>
touchdown run in the district<lb/>
championship game.<lb/>
Coach Baker said both players<lb/>
are quality recruits, who<lb/>
1985 ECU<lb/>
FOOTBALL SCHEDULE<lb/>
s<lb/>
ept<lb/>
14<lb/>
21<lb/>
28<lb/>
ct.5<lb/>
12<lb/>
Oct.26<lb/>
Nov<lb/>
No.9<lb/>
16<lb/>
Dec7<lb/>
at N.C. State<lb/>
SV TEXAS STATE<lb/>
at Penn State<lb/>
TEMPLE<lb/>
MIAMI(FL)(Homecoming)<lb/>
at Southwestern I ouisiana<lb/>
SOUTH CAROLINA<lb/>
at Southern Mississippi<lb/>
at Auburn<lb/>
TULSA (Shrine Dav)<lb/>
at LSI<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm<lb/>
2:00 pm<lb/>
4:00 pm<lb/>
:30 pm<lb/>
CT<lb/>
6:00 pm CT<lb/>
1:00 pm CT<lb/>
1:30 pm<lb/>
7:00 pm CT<lb/>
Benedict, a 5-11. 155, pound<lb/>
eceiver comes to ECU from<lb/>
ksonville, F!a. and Raines<lb/>
School, where he played<lb/>
ide receiver the past two<lb/>
Benedict caught 17<lb/>
es foi 516 yards and seven<lb/>
uchdowns during his senior<lb/>
on in helping Raines High to<lb/>
- ; record and a spot in the<lb/>
playoffs.<lb/>
Benedict earned honorable<lb/>
ntion all-conference and all -<lb/>
 honors while also return-<lb/>
punts and kickoffs. He<lb/>
?aged almost 27 yards a punt<lb/>
.rn in 1984 and returned two<lb/>
punts for touchdowns.<lb/>
Sewell is a 5-10, a 205-pound<lb/>
running back from Tampa, Fla<lb/>
and p J one year for Plant<lb/>
?ol. He was considered<lb/>
. the top running backs in<lb/>
the state, rushing for 800 yards<lb/>
and five touchdowns in a part-<lb/>
time stanine role for Plant.<lb/>
wouldn't ordinarily have been<lb/>
around this late in the season.<lb/>
"They both have an oppor-<lb/>
tunity to play as freshmen, and<lb/>
are excellent athletes, but had lit-<lb/>
tle problems (that kept them<lb/>
from being heavily recruited)<lb/>
he said. "Benedict was a small<lb/>
receiver and didn't have the<lb/>
academics until his second<lb/>
semester, while Sewell moved to a<lb/>
new school for his senior year<lb/>
Benedict represents additional<lb/>
talent at wide receiver, one of the<lb/>
Pirates' weakest positions, while<lb/>
Sewell is a talented addition to<lb/>
the running back corps.<lb/>
"Sewell is one of the best runn-<lb/>
ing backs we've ever recruited<lb/>
Baker said. "This spring he has<lb/>
three times under 9.8 (seconds) in<lb/>
the 100-yard dash<lb/>
Baker feels the two recruits will<lb/>
add some depth to next year's<lb/>
.squad, but he is also hoping some<lb/>
of this spring's academic<lb/>
Wake Seeks Coach<lb/>
BOSTON (UP1) ? Boston Col-<lb/>
basketball coach Gary<lb/>
uns -pent Tuesday mulling a<lb/>
rted offer to assume the head<lb/>
kching reigns at Wake Forest<lb/>
l niversity.<lb/>
A Boston College spokesman<lb/>
-aid Williams could make his<lb/>
?ion by late Tuesday,<lb/>
-ugh Athletic Director<lb/>
am Flynn could not confirm<lb/>
Wake Forest offer.<lb/>
I don't know if an offer has<lb/>
been made Flynn said, "I gave<lb/>
Cike Forest AD) Gene Hooks<lb/>
permission to speak to Williams.<lb/>
I have nothing else to say. That is<lb/>
between him and Wake Forest<lb/>
Wake Forest officials also<lb/>
lined to comment.<lb/>
"We will not confirm any of-<lb/>
' Sports Information Direc-<lb/>
Bert Wodard said. "We're is-<lb/>
g no statement<lb/>
While Williams also refused to<lb/>
a whether an offer had been<lb/>
ide, he discussed the job with<lb/>
Boston media upon his return<lb/>
rn North Carolina, where he<lb/>
poke with university officials<lb/>
and attended a conference of the<lb/>
rh Carolina Coaches Associa-<lb/>
Mondav<lb/>
Williams, 39, was impressed<lb/>
with aspects ol the job, published<lb/>
reports said. "They have the<lb/>
resources that the Eastern schools<lb/>
don't have. They can do things<lb/>
the Fastern schools really can't<lb/>
do Williams told the Boston<lb/>
Herald. "That makes it tough.<lb/>
"The interest (in basketball)<lb/>
down there is just incredible he<lb/>
said. "Basketball's number one,<lb/>
that 's for sure<lb/>
Wake Forest, a member of the<lb/>
Atlantic Coast Conference, is<lb/>
looking to fill the vacancy left by<lb/>
Carl Tacv, who resigned abrubtly<lb/>
last week after 13 years at the<lb/>
school.<lb/>
Williams has compiled a three-<lb/>
year mark of 63-30 at the Big<lb/>
East Conference school, with two<lb/>
appearances in the NCAA final<lb/>
16.<lb/>
"Gary is an attractive young<lb/>
coach and we like his style of<lb/>
play Hooks told The Boston<lb/>
tilobe. Hooks said at least six<lb/>
coaches were being considered<lb/>
for the job.<lb/>
"I don't want to say a whole<lb/>
lot about this right now said<lb/>
Hooks.<lb/>
casualties will return.<lb/>
"I won't know until at least<lb/>
Thursday who will be coming<lb/>
back Baker said. "There are<lb/>
four or five players who are really<lb/>
close, and they could really make<lb/>
a big difference in terms of<lb/>
depth<lb/>
Going into preseason drills<lb/>
later in August, Baker foresees<lb/>
the wide receiver and defensive<lb/>
line positions being the weakest<lb/>
areas on the team.<lb/>
"The wide receiver position<lb/>
and the defensive line positions<lb/>
both need improvement Baker<lb/>
said. "At wide receiver we have<lb/>
two freshmen coming in and also<lb/>
may switch a quarterback or run-<lb/>
ning back to the position. 1 don't<lb/>
see any freshmen coming in and<lb/>
playing on the defensive line so<lb/>
we'll just have to improve the<lb/>
quality of play among the return-<lb/>
ing players<lb/>
Baker said the offensive line<lb/>
looks good, barring injuries, and<lb/>
he is also pleased with the way the<lb/>
defensive end and linebacker<lb/>
positions are shaping up.<lb/>
Quarterback, a sore spot last<lb/>
year, will be improved according<lb/>
to the coach. "I feel good about<lb/>
our quarterback situation<lb/>
Baker said. "Ron Jones made<lb/>
good progress in the spring, and<lb/>
I'm very impressed with Brad<lb/>
Walsh a freshman who is in<lb/>
school this session<lb/>
Baker is looking forward t(<lb/>
upcoming season even though the<lb/>
schedule includes visits to Penn<lb/>
State, Auburn, I St and a trij<lb/>
in state rival N State Am<lb/>
the home opponents a nth<lb/>
Carolina and Miami I<lb/>
"We could<lb/>
about the schedule I<lb/>
time Bal iid B<lb/>
got the schedule : ing<lb/>
.von help change-<lb/>
have to tighten our<lb/>
?<lb/>
time<lb/>
ECU football coach Art Baker is expecting the offensive line to pro-<lb/>
vide protection for (8) Ron Jones. Jones, a sophomore from Port-<lb/>
smouth. a is one of the possible candidates for the starting quarter-<lb/>
back job. Jones and the rest of the Pirate squad will open the lX<lb/>
season on Sept. 7 in Raleigh against N.C. State. The Pirates will pla<lb/>
their first home game Sept. 14 against South West fexas Matt<lb/>
Players, Owners Seek To Avoid Strike<lb/>
NEW YORK (UPI) Baseball<lb/>
owners lowered their projections<lb/>
of losses through 198S, bringing a<lb/>
lukewarm response from the<lb/>
players' union as the two sides<lb/>
continue to try to beat an Aug. 6<lb/>
deadline in their contract negotia-<lb/>
tions.<lb/>
The owners' bargaining group,<lb/>
which has been trying to mitigate<lb/>
union money demands by show-<lb/>
ing a financial emergency in<lb/>
major-league baseball originally<lb/>
had projected operating losses in<lb/>
1988, for example, at $155<lb/>
million. That figure was lowered<lb/>
to S86 million. Figures for the<lb/>
years preceding 1988 also were<lb/>
lowered.<lb/>
Lee McPhail, president of the<lb/>
owners' Player Relations Com-<lb/>
mittee, said the projections were<lb/>
reduced through some changes in<lb/>
the way the estimates were<lb/>
figured. The biggest difference,<lb/>
he said, was a decision not to<lb/>
declare player depreciation as an<lb/>
operating expense when a team is<lb/>
sold.<lb/>
"I think this was a step in the<lb/>
right direction ' McPhail said<lb/>
after emerging from a one-and-a-<lb/>
half hour bargaining session, the<lb/>
second since the Major league<lb/>
Players Association set the Aug.<lb/>
6 strike deadline July 15. "At<lb/>
least, we have narrowed the dif-<lb/>
ferences between us<lb/>
The revised figures came after<lb/>
the union, during a session last<lb/>
Thursday, presented an expert's<lb/>
report that varied from manage-<lb/>
ment figures.<lb/>
"We're closer togethei on the<lb/>
figures said Don Fehr, acting<lb/>
executive director of the union,<lb/>
"but 1 don't want to dwell on<lb/>
those. We may never agree on the<lb/>
numbers, but we still have to find<lb/>
some agreement on a contract<lb/>
The major issue of these<lb/>
negotiations is a union demand<lb/>
for a 1?3 cul of baseball's $1.1<lb/>
billion network television con-<lb/>
tract to be applied toward pla<lb/>
pensions. 1 raditionallv base-<lb/>
has turned over about 1?3 of its<lb/>
TV money for pensions, but it<lb/>
never has had a TV contracl<lb/>
this sie before.<lb/>
To show the union that it can-<lb/>
not afford such a payment,<lb/>
baseball's negotiators have been<lb/>
trying to convince the union that<lb/>
the game faces grave finan<lb/>
straits.<lb/>
"We can't make a specific pro<lb/>
posal (on the pension issue) until<lb/>
we know how the whole ol<lb/>
baseball's financial problems will<lb/>
be addressed MacPhail said<lb/>
"We can't treat the pension<lb/>
separatelv from the rest of the<lb/>
situation<lb/>
The two sides met informally<lb/>
Mondav morning for about three<lb/>
hours before their afternoon ses<lb/>
sion at the union offices lh-<lb/>
neetmj<lb/>
at the sank j<lb/>
However. lc<lb/>
couldn't estin<lb/>
?<lb/>
since managemei<lb/>
a proposal on the p<lb/>
1 he las: concrete<lb/>
sal was for a<lb/>
try to help reduce team expt s<lb/>
1 ha; proposal eve: drew<lb/>
disapproval of (<lb/>
Peter I. eberroth, ?<lb/>
as a propone<lb/>
he couldn't k<lb/>
salary cap<lb/>
" I he issue ol a s ap -<lb/>
still on the table MacP<lb/>
sa d. "It's soiru<lb/>
believe in. We I trying<lb/>
roll back salai<lb/>
He il eberroth) : no;<lb/>
m favor of some ot the things the<lb/>
clubs have on the table, .vao' h<lb/>
noi m favor of some of the thi .<lb/>
the union lias on the table "<lb/>
Moorman Claims Drug Use Affected Lawyer<lb/>
RALEIGH, N.C. (UPI)<lb/>
Yesterday former North Carolina<lb/>
State quarterback Percy Moor-<lb/>
man told a judge that his lawyer<lb/>
Jerry Paul popped pills during<lb/>
Moorman's rape trial and fell<lb/>
asleep while a prosecutor cross-<lb/>
examined the athlete.<lb/>
"I was on the witness stand<lb/>
and Mr. Paul had his head down<lb/>
like this with his eyes closed<lb/>
said the 19-year old former<lb/>
quarterback, dropping his chin to<lb/>
his chest. "I was scared. I was<lb/>
real confused. I didn't know<lb/>
what to do<lb/>
Convicted on Feb. 19, Moor-<lb/>
man is serving 12 years on<lb/>
charges of breaking into a white<lb/>
student's dorm room and raping<lb/>
her in her sleep on Sept. 1, 1984.<lb/>
Moorman, who is black, is basing<lb/>
his bid for a new trial on grounds<lb/>
that Paul took pills that rendered<lb/>
him incompetent in the cour-<lb/>
troom.<lb/>
"He would usually go get a<lb/>
Coke and take a pill with a<lb/>
Coke Moorman said during a<lb/>
hearing in Wake Superior Court<lb/>
on Moorman's motion for a new<lb/>
trial.<lb/>
Questioned by prosecutor<lb/>
William Hart, Moorman said he<lb/>
saw Paul take pills once at the<lb/>
courthouse and three times at the<lb/>
Raleigh Motel where Paul and<lb/>
family members stayed during<lb/>
the seven-day trial.<lb/>
Moorman's mother, Dorothy<lb/>
Moorman, said Paul got so<lb/>
groggy from pills at the motel<lb/>
that he fell forward into a plate<lb/>
of food.<lb/>
"He just bent over in his<lb/>
food Dorothy Moorman said.<lb/>
"If he was a drinking person, I<lb/>
would say he was drunk<lb/>
Percy Moorman also testified<lb/>
Paul told Angelo Barnes of<lb/>
Wilson to jump up and interrupt<lb/>
the trial.<lb/>
"He said he wanted to display<lb/>
the prejudice in the case Moor-<lb/>
man said. "He wanted him to<lb/>
stand up and protest out loud so<lb/>
the media could see this and act<lb/>
upon it<lb/>
Barnes did disrupt the trial and<lb/>
was arrested for contempt of<lb/>
court.<lb/>
Superior Court Judge James<lb/>
Pou Bailey, who heard the<lb/>
original case against Moorman,<lb/>
testified Monday that Paul was<lb/>
unusually moody during the trial,<lb/>
sometimes seemed unattentive<lb/>
and once appeared to fall asleep.<lb/>
Bailey also questioned some of<lb/>
Paul's trial tactics, including ex-<lb/>
cusing only one potential juror<lb/>
and calling a witness who con-<lb/>
tradicted the lawyer's own open-<lb/>
ing statement to the jury.<lb/>
"I have known Mr. Paul for a<lb/>
long time and the most unusual<lb/>
thing about him is that he is<lb/>
unusual Bailey testified.<lb/>
Paul, subpeonaed as a state's<lb/>
witness in the hearing but yet to<lb/>
testify, denied falling asleep.<lb/>
A drug expert "testified that<lb/>
Paul behaved like a drug user by<lb/>
bouncing from doctor to doctor<lb/>
complaining of a migraine<lb/>
headache and obtaining<lb/>
painkillers, sleeping pills and<lb/>
other medication during the<lb/>
course of the trial.<lb/>
"It's a pattern commonly seen<lb/>
in people seeking drugs of<lb/>
abuse said Dennis Moore,<lb/>
director of a chemical dependen-<lb/>
cy treatment center in Asheville,<lb/>
when questioned by Moorman's<lb/>
new lawyer, Roger Smith.<lb/>
"The pattern of going to dif-<lb/>
ferent facilities and getting dif-<lb/>
ferent drugs added on top of one<lb/>
another is a pattern of drug seek-<lb/>
ing.<lb/>
Moore said the quantity of the<lb/>
drugs Paul obtained, combined<lb/>
with drugs he was already taking<lb/>
to prevent migraines, would be<lb/>
enough to impair his mental<lb/>
abilities by the end of the trial.<lb/>
Three doctors took the stand to<lb/>
testify they gave Paul medica-<lb/>
tions during the trial that includ-<lb/>
ed the painkillers Percodan,<lb/>
Vicodin and Fiorinal, and<lb/>
Dalmane, a sleeping pill.<lb/>
Paul also got injections of<lb/>
Demoral before and after the<lb/>
trial and told nurses at Rex<lb/>
Hospital that medications he<lb/>
took every day included Tofranil,<lb/>
an anti-depressant, and Librium,<lb/>
an anti-anxiety drug similar to<lb/>
Valium.<lb/>
Questioned by Hart, all of the<lb/>
witnesses said a patient with<lb/>
recurring migraines could<lb/>
develop a degree of tolerance to<lb/>
the medications.<lb/>
Paul said in an interview he has<lb/>
been plagued by migraines since<lb/>
age 11, and goes to the closest<lb/>
facility available when a painful<lb/>
headache strikes. He said he<lb/>
always tells doctors to call his<lb/>
New York doctor to verify the<lb/>
treatment he gets to prevent<lb/>
migraines but they rarelv do.<lb/>
"You have to look for<lb/>
something if you are going to<lb/>
make a case of incompetent<lb/>
representation Paul said of the<lb/>
drug abuse charge. "It's just not<lb/>
true<lb/>
Percy Moorman also testified<lb/>
that Paul once dug Moorman's<lb/>
discarded prescription bottle con-<lb/>
taining a pain pill out of a<lb/>
wastebasket in a room, put the<lb/>
pill in his mouth and said the bot-<lb/>
tle could be used for evidence.<lb/>
? k<lb/>
I<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0008"/><lb/>
THE EAST CAROLINIAN<lb/>
JULY 24, 1985<lb/>
WANTED<lb/>
Summer Bums Top Good, Bad &amp; Ugly<lb/>
EARN EXTRA MONEY WHILE<lb/>
ATTENDING CLASSES: Students<lb/>
wanted to provide notetakingtutor<lb/>
ing services for disabled students on<lb/>
campus. For an application contact<lb/>
Handicapped Student Services Of<lb/>
fice, 212 Whichard, or Program for<lb/>
Hearing Impaired Students,<lb/>
Brewster A 114.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Paid positions<lb/>
now open for news, features and<lb/>
sports writers at THE EAST<lb/>
CAROLINIAN. Apply early as<lb/>
number of openings are limited. Call<lb/>
757 6366 or stop by 2nd floor Publica<lb/>
tions Bldg. to fill out an application.<lb/>
HELP WANTED: Aerobics Instruc<lb/>
tors for the fall Experience re<lb/>
quired. Contact Cathy at 758 9584<lb/>
photogragher NEEDED: Ex-<lb/>
perienced photographer needed to<lb/>
take black and white photos. Call<lb/>
758 4844 for details.<lb/>
FOR RENT: One bedroom unfur<lb/>
nished with kitchen with appliances,<lb/>
large den, utilites furnished, two<lb/>
blocks from campus, male students.<lb/>
Required deposit, $160 monthly.<lb/>
Call:752 5778 after 5:30 p.m.<lb/>
ROOMMATE NEEDED: Profes<lb/>
sional relocating to area. Is seeking<lb/>
a graduate student or med student to<lb/>
share 2 bedroom apartment. Please<lb/>
contact by postcard or phone: Lou<lb/>
Fillman, 1521 16th Ave, Apt. U, Bir<lb/>
mingham, ALA. 35205.<lb/>
Work (205)934-4407 or<lb/>
home-(205) 930 0527.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT 2 room fur<lb/>
nished apt. Call 752 7212 or 756-0174.<lb/>
ROOM FOR RENT: Room for rent<lb/>
with Christian couple. Call 752 7217.<lb/>
ROOMS FOR RENT: 2 rooms<lb/>
available for rent now Private, a.r-<lb/>
conditioning, $125 per month plus 13<lb/>
utilites, (gas, electricity, phone) re<lb/>
quires 1 year lease. Call 752 8499 bet<lb/>
ween 9.30-2.30 p.m. Excellent loca<lb/>
tion The Blue House across street<lb/>
from campus.<lb/>
SITTER NEEDED: Young Lady to<lb/>
sit for seven nights Aug.4 through<lb/>
10. $100 for week. Call 752 7246.<lb/>
WORK NEEDED: Will do odd jobs<lb/>
at minimal cost. Really need<lb/>
money! Can you help? Call 758 4370<lb/>
or 757 6927 Ask for Ruben.<lb/>
WANTED: Last name for Nancy.<lb/>
Blue Eyes; I have something of<lb/>
yours from the Sandbar Party. Jeff<lb/>
? P.O. Box 1365, Morehead City<lb/>
28557.<lb/>
FOR RENT: Two bedroom duplex, 3<lb/>
blocks from campus. Stove, refrig.<lb/>
and carpet. $190 monthly, l yr. lease<lb/>
and deposit. Call 752 5778.<lb/>
ROOMMATE WANTED: Female<lb/>
roommate wanted. Non-smoker.<lb/>
$175 monthly, utilites included. Call<lb/>
752 1642<lb/>
COLLEGE REP WANTED:<lb/>
Representative wanted to distribute<lb/>
Time Inc. and other publications'<lb/>
"student rate" subscription cards at<lb/>
this campus. Good income; no sell<lb/>
ing involved. For information and<lb/>
application write to: Riverside<lb/>
Marketing Services, 816 Orange<lb/>
Drive, Silver Spring, Maryland<lb/>
20901<lb/>
PERSONALS<lb/>
I STILL NEED A RIDE TO D.C.I If<lb/>
you are headed toward the<lb/>
Washington D.C or northern Va.<lb/>
areas THIS WEEKEND, please give<lb/>
me a call. I will have very little gear<lb/>
and will help with gas. Call 757 0430<lb/>
after 2 p.m. and ask for Betty Jo.<lb/>
Also can be reached at 757 6366.<lb/>
Leave name and number.<lb/>
By JEANNETTE ROTH<lb/>
Staff Writer<lb/>
The time has come to say good-<lb/>
bye to second summer session<lb/>
and along with it the champions<lb/>
of this session's intramural ac-<lb/>
tivities. Upsets have plagued this<lb/>
session's events as only one No. 1<lb/>
picked player was able to over-<lb/>
come the challenge from his op-<lb/>
ponents.<lb/>
Percy Edwards, who captured<lb/>
the one-on-one basketball title,<lb/>
stayed on top throughout regular<lb/>
play and into tournament action.<lb/>
SALE<lb/>
FOR SALE: Fire-engine red tandem<lb/>
bike, with foot brakes and headlight.<lb/>
Greet for families. Price negotiable.<lb/>
Call 757 0430.<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/>
FOR SALE: 2 bedroom 2 full baths,<lb/>
12 x 65 Peachtree Mobile Home.<lb/>
Very good condition. Convenient to<lb/>
ECU. $7500 or best offer. Call<lb/>
443-1339.<lb/>
?IKE FOR SALE:Mens 27" blue<lb/>
Motobecane 10 Speed. Excellent con-<lb/>
dition $100 Call 758-0781<lb/>
In the finals he defeated Ling<lb/>
Sirarman.<lb/>
In co-rec volleyball action, a<lb/>
major upset occurred as No. 1<lb/>
ranked Good, Bad and Ugly<lb/>
bowed to the talents of the Sum-<lb/>
mer Bums in a see-saw battle for<lb/>
the championship, each game<lb/>
came down to the wire as the<lb/>
best-of-three match wasn't settl-<lb/>
ed until the third game. In the<lb/>
end, Summer Bums scored the<lb/>
upset and defeated the defending<lb/>
spring and first session cham-<lb/>
pions 15-12.<lb/>
Stay awake for this one folks,<lb/>
the PI Kapps, picked to follow<lb/>
the Basebenders on the softball<lb/>
diamonds, took the lead in the<lb/>
league and walked away with a<lb/>
second-session championship. A<lb/>
three-way first place tie awaited<lb/>
the Pi Kapps in Tuesday action<lb/>
unless their bats could do the<lb/>
talking.<lb/>
And they did, as the fraternity<lb/>
brothers ? led by Captain David<lb/>
Hawkins ? scored a dozen runs<lb/>
and defeated their opponents for<lb/>
the championship. Harry Night &amp;<lb/>
the Days, Basebenders and Not<lb/>
the Commandos all fell to the Pi<lb/>
Kapps.<lb/>
The only champion that re-<lb/>
mains to be crowned is the IRS<lb/>
tennis tournament winner. Still<lb/>
fighting it out for the title are top<lb/>
seed Tom Kiehl, Mike Ludwick,<lb/>
Randy Meetre and Chris Heyde.<lb/>
Kiehl will face Ludwick, while<lb/>
the number two and three seeds,<lb/>
Meetre and Heyde, hit the courts<lb/>
for a chance at upsetting Kiehl ?<lb/>
if he can overcome Ludwick.<lb/>
Results will be posted Thursday<lb/>
in room 204 of Memorial Gym.<lb/>
When fall rolls back into town,<lb/>
check into the IRS schedule and<lb/>
participate in your favorite activi<lb/>
ty ? there's plenty to choose<lb/>
from. Aerobics, outdoor recrea<lb/>
tion, aquarobics, flag football<lb/>
and plenty of other special event<lb/>
are your's for the asking.<lb/>
Pick up a handy pocket calen-<lb/>
dar and an IRS handbook so you<lb/>
can be up-to-date on the latest<lb/>
registration dates for our events.<lb/>
It all begins with the annual bike<lb/>
race in August<lb/>
rni.<lb/>
ass-si. JJ555 WITH<lb/>
" m I TO WALL<lb/>
OPEHSUHDWSa<lb/>
TIL<lb/>
CRISCO<lb/>
Shortening<lb/>
<lb/>
3<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
an<lb/>
198<lb/>
P&amp;Q<lb/>
Sandwich Bread<lb/>
LIMIT ONE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00 OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Tomato Catsup<lb/>
'M<lb/>
3100<lb/>
24 oz. ?<lb/>
loaves ?<lb/>
LIMIT THREE WITH AN ADDITIONAL 10 00 OR MORE PURCHASE<lb/>
CRISP N' TASTY<lb/>
Jeno's Pizza<lb/>
MARKET STYLE<lb/>
Ground Beef<lb/>
5 lbs. or more<lb/>
Ground<lb/>
f SfcMfc ' Fresh<lb/>
t Daily<lb/>
 TV<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE<lb/>
BONELESS<lb/>
Beef Rib Eye<lb/>
t<lb/>
?<lb/>
'<lb/>
Whole<lb/>
i tf ; 9-12 ,b.<lb/>
l. r<lb/>
avg.<lb/>
USD A<lb/>
CHOICE<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
DIET PEPSI ? MTN. DEW<lb/>
Pepsi Cola<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
BEEF<lb/>
WAREHOUSE PRICES<lb/>
MORTON<lb/>
vvM<lb/>
SAVE<lb/>
50<lb/>
c z<lb/>
 .<lb/>
2ltr.<lb/>
btl.<lb/>
09<lb/>
A?<lb/>
Pot Pies<lb/>
3100<lb/>
8 OZ. ?<lb/>
pkgs. ?<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE<lb/>
Cubed<lb/>
Beef Steak<lb/>
U.S.D.A. CHOICE BONELESS<lb/>
Rib Eye<lb/>
Steak<lb/>
lb<lb/>
398<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
30<lb/>
Grape Jelly<lb/>
DEL MONTE<lb/>
Pineapple Juice<lb/>
MT OLIVE SWEET<lb/>
Salad Cubes<lb/>
ITALIAN ? FRENCH ? 1000 ISLAND<lb/>
Kraft Dressing<lb/>
NORTHERN (<lb/>
Bath t Wv<lb/>
Tissue<lb/>
PLAIN<lb/>
Brawny Towels<lb/>
ALL VARIETIES<lb/>
French's Potatoes<lb/>
CONTADINA<lb/>
Tomato Paste<lb/>
KELLOGG S<lb/>
Froot Loops<lb/>
REGULAR ? LIGHT<lb/>
Coors ?j<lb/>
Beer - WJ<lb/>
2<lb/>
jar<lb/>
46 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
jar<lb/>
'6oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
SNOWCROP ORIGINAL<lb/>
Five Alive<lb/>
GREEN GIANT NIBBLERS<lb/>
Com On The Cob<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
Morton Dinner<lb/>
FROZEN<lb/>
swt <lb/>
ctn pi<lb/>
6<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
2<lb/>
49<lb/>
A&amp;P Lemonade<lb/>
FROZEN , ?<lb/>
A&amp;P<lb/>
Pizza<lb/>
ASSORTED VARIETIES<lb/>
Sealtest Dip<lb/>
KRAFT<lb/>
American Singles<lb/>
HUNGRY JACK<lb/>
Pillsbury Biscuits<lb/>
IN QUARTERS<lb/>
Shedds Spread<lb/>
TAYLOR<lb/>
California<lb/>
Cellars<lb/>
12 oz<lb/>
can<lb/>
6ct<lb/>
11 oz<lb/>
Phg<lb/>
4<lb/>
602.<lb/>
cant<lb/>
PRODUCE SPECIALS<lb/>
WE'VE GONE PLUM CRAZY<lb/>
GREEN ? BLACK OR<lb/>
Red<lb/>
Plums<lb/>
RED ? WHITE ? BLUE<lb/>
Grape<lb/>
Sale<lb/>
r SAVE<lb/>
r ? '<lb/>
lb.<lb/>
79<lb/>
99<lb/>
GENERAL MERCHANDISE SPECIALS<lb/>
50 OFF<lb/>
Listerine Mouthwash<lb/>
MENNEN<lb/>
Speed Stick Deodorant<lb/>
32 oz<lb/>
btl<lb/>
DELI SPECIALS<lb/>
CORNED BEEF OR<lb/>
V<lb/>
3ttr<lb/>
btl<lb/>
5<lb/>
49<lb/>
Pastrami<lb/>
MOT PEPPER<lb/>
Cheese Loaf<lb/>
EGG ft POTATO OH DUTCH<lb/>
Potato Salad<lb/>
2<lb/>
sm 189<lb/>
299<lb/>
299<lb/>
89<lb/>
<pb facs="00057724_0009"/>
</div></body></text></TEI>